HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-07-03 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa'
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FRIDAY AFTERNOON; JUtY· 3, a970
, -. . • • I • •• •
~Set >to· ·B·Jas1 : Ott·. ' . ' . . . ' . -
.Co~ntg Free of Smog
. '
. ' . Over Fourth ··Holiday . . . . l
• • lXOll -ee s ar1s
\ • VISO on ___ o -as
~
• • • .· .Says Bruce
N.11ne S1nk·s Viet· Boat Will Have
I ' ' . \ ' ' '
....:.:4S:of .50 ~a:n · ngers._ Q.ie :j~ Rive~ T.r~edy. ·Fle~µity
SAJGOK {AP) -A pou ipr rlwr !llrlDlnr lllicb In the ltlem Rap.• -lo baUle1 and ·tlie .,......,.. .· . 1 , 1 • ·: • 1
MargljrefWeiler · 5, Coi!a ·Mes~1;cahies away rocket,shaped fire-
W91'klP assortments from local pjr,J?technic stand. Margaret and h~r ~ily doubtless will put the fireworks to good use Saturday m~cele
brating Independence Day. From the look on·ber·face, she'-can hardly
wait.
Marine Seized as ·suspect
lb San Clemente Slay,ing . .
By JOHN ·vALTERZA
1 OI ltlt DlllY PllM Sflff
sin Oemenle "'police early today ar4
r~ a 19-)'ear-okl Camp· Pendleton' Mllillie In the tnU. and bl1jd&eon slaying ,
ol ".MNJ. CoMr! Lynn JOhnson, 20, the
~nt mother be.at.n and stabbeo! '
to death more than two weeks ago.
Marine Pfc. Frankie Wayne Mellino,
John Wayne Wins
Court -Judgmeni · ·
O'n Wild Goo8e
aUached lo Headgu4ri.'erS' Company, ~
cond Battalion,. Second JnI~try Training
Regimert, was booked on murder
~es about ·1 atm. today after more
than two·weeks o{ intensive investigation.
. Detective Lt. Robert Mason • and his
partner
0
Leonard GOOdwin arrested the
young serviceman at 12:50 a.m. at an
undisclosed apartment In San Clemente.
Thus far po1ice .11y the young Marine
has made no Jt.atement.s about the case
to officers, and the intensive prbbe into
the case is continuing.
Joining in the post-arrest work in the
ease will be military authorities at Camp
• Pendleton, who have already been con-
suKed,
. But despite. tbe military aspect of
the· case, officers 1 Said legal action in
Movie •a<:tor John Wayhe1 Of'·N.ewport . ·the caflt.wtltreraahl.1n.clvlllan·hands.
Beai;b won a court judgment Thlq!td~Y Jt, his , net ·yd. ~. s~ifi~ •whether
which requires an insurance company MelliM wlll ·be a~a~gned on Monday . . · . or whether . an indictment · chargtng · to pay $74,509 cover111g damages to .his murder will.' ·bif1 ,OOgttt · ihrou&ti the
yacht-, Wild ~-Ofarige CouDty Grand.Jury. 1 ,
The diesel-powered . yacht wall run Police speot all day Thursday !etklog.
agraDd in San 'Diego Harbor on May -warrants in Ule case, and sUU wDl mount an Jntemive • seafch for 1three 19, • while und<!r chmer to tnterpact cr(tical Items in the i::pe. , 1 • -:
Corpc:waUon. .. The knife used Jut June,11 lo Ill{, 1 ~ lrmlrance companf, P ~·Ci f i C MNJ. Johnloo. still iJ.~.
lndoinnlty Company, conte..Scd its policy , '1>e waU.t belongin('lo the 20-yeat-<ild
on· t»e yacht only covered the craft wife of a~ VieVwn vt!ltran was not ·
v.·~ used for pleasure, not whu under found by · pollct in her apartment at
charter. But Los Angeles Su~rlor Judge 411 Monterey Lane.
Robert Kenny saw it differently and And several oUltt critical piects ot
he.kl the compa11y liable. __ e_'lidence,.stilLhue.nolbeenJocated.
Wl}'ne, earlier had tiled a atlt against Jnterviews ot c6er .potential ·wlwssea: ln~ct Corporallon •l,\<io( 172~ . and !OUl'Ces · --· ol th<m 'Ill of .
dam.,es and $3t2'6 for· ~of con--the state -will also CQnllnU,f, of11cers
tracl because they d!dll't return-the said. .. . • ' · l
yacht ~til almOlt 1 monlt\_ after the. De.tecl.ives are. nOW mating plans to
end ol lhdi...111)1 c:hirttr'~ (kt SUSPECI\ I'••• I)'
... .
I 1 ~~~~~--~-..___~:t ~
boot 111ui:1t a.~ Jlllne Jml -,.,.,,,,, ~ tn northwest Cambodia and A14 u Ille Cambodian and Soulh Vlei-: ; B,, lllCIJW,.Jll,.\4,· , , •· ~· ,
>I. ol the ~ Sono lodsJ di tlll!! ~ attaca on government ,..... tf"'!IP 1oa:,:1, ana, ~ ., ., ..... •"I' "!'rt " 1 blewup;ldlling4lolthell0Vietmu1-troops near ,llle ~I ~llOk .lll 1 lllCld.llld • ~ .. ~>-Nl>tn<ll .~meet••l!an -
drillans aboard, a· government 1poW. TU<o. ""'.Ill ol l'luait' hm,. and:f?ey· I-I ~ -~ ·-~-1 • Ci-te·'S,tllldoy with· David' Jkuce, ~ aM~. Vleng, eut ol the capital: · cw,,.,.-new.•~·· · '· . ' · · N4 new chief U.S. negotiator If. the
The mining occurred on a branch of Sweeps by South Vletnamese troops QuesUonedaboutrepo:tsfromBangkot ata~Pariltalks«ia 10·vietnam
the Cua .. Viet Riv~ less than · a mile nor:tfi of, Phnom Penh re4u~ed , the threat , that the Thai alr fC!rce i:tad~~ matJnc in his' renewed" ~ flild Utl~
from Door Ha, ttie bo1t's de<lllnation to .Phnom, Penh for the moment, tbe bombing at(ackl.and alYrecoopalssanee solutiOPfortbe ·IndodtiDawir Mr'Niml
about nilie miles touth oJ·the DMZ. 1pokesmln1uld.1 1 • mhsiona. In eariibodil, the ·sP,kesman has said that~ vete ' dip.lomai
'Ibe rtyer.ts regtilarly patrolled by U.S. But the sweeping forces w.re unable sald'rthere 1had been no. That aitlita'.ry' ai ' ha . fat fl '~rt ~o sentin •
and Soulb Vietnamese boats and North to bring. the Vlei ·cone Ud North Viet-acUrity In the 00\JlllrY to dat.. · · · · w" ve gr •• 'Y pre I
Vietnamese mines in it have sunk or ' · the U.S. ~lion at. ~'1',15. • · ·
damaged a number ; of boats. But the The P~1dent has e~ Sftlstao-•
loll today WU belie'"'1 to be the largest. RQl·lda'y r.L....· edle'tlon' lion will! the rate of Vletnanuzallon •. South Vietnamese otr1Cials also .,.. _ C. r .. . As the South Vietnamese grow strong
nounced Ille .withdrawal ol a brigade · · •nou,gh to defend tbenuelves, tho Preat.
ol -_ belieen I llOO ·•iid 2 000 s· . · · 0. M. ~ · . dent l•uuu~ ~ •Ill be •. '°"IW .
men -·from Cambodia.' reducing 'the o ........ n . 60. . ' o' f;o' ~I ~•ts , advmary f" Hanoi at the confennce total oomber of South Vietnamese troops 11 ~ () I ' ~ table tl1ln ls the •U.S. •
in the neighboring cowiGy to about Tl>e ljorlh V~ and Viet Coog,
25 ooo •however, thus far have replied to the
in . Phnom Peli'I, the cambcMlan M D.. Th. . W' k nd f!esljient 's appell •by' in ' effect sayina:
mand kkt oiwly .ninforced Communilt Ire;. A mtslber,ct the VJet Coot delegaUop capital the <Canibodian mllltary com-. . ay. .:In. ·. . .· is. · e·e e .. ' .· . · . . lint 8'I U.11. ~ out,,ol Vie-.
diVisions are preparing for a major new • said ~ .confei:ence "can never make
offensive and already are ~ving ans.ult any progress" until the U.S. accepta
troops in to position in one key area. By Ualted Prt11 lattrnatlOaal of the group, said nearly halt· of the · the Viet 'Cong peace plan' . and ,Pulls ~
A .spokeaman -.. ld Cambodian. and Vacationers drove the ·naUon'l!i high~ accidents and ·lnjurles Involved clas's C Amerlcm"'troops oul.• · ' ,
South Vietnamese troops are "ready for ways• today ·.i.1 ..... tun and rtlaxation· fir~ks· -smal!Jf·I rec r: a'c I( e f'S, l 'llW! 'Piestdent plam •no partlclpatJon
anything." He added that the enemy .... 16 • sparkler, Roman candles and totlntafbs. • ln Independence Day .ceremOnles. . , threat to Phnom,P,enh bas "needed C<IDo over the Fourth .of July weekend. . . , . , , l . After. <tay;i of. ,cpncentratlon·on fo're!P
sld<rably." llet\f"" W ,and MO , of lh;"11 bi!fead ' ' aff"'" -<apped by ·hlo 'Wedn"9daf ·n1gi;1
The 1poiresman-said another major would flild death; the NationaLSMety :E.asy .B, reatL,: "'-'' 'g.'·. loreJgn .pollcy :ilialoguemt.levis19n;the '
threat ls developing around Kompoo1 Council aald. .\nd. the ooun<:U pndicted, .l.llJI · Prioid<n~ ·w · turned 'att.""°1'·' lo ·
Thom, IO·mlles n0rt1'·ol Phnom Penh, betoi..;; l7;0oo•and ll,OOO . .i.Old suffer domestic problems. · ·• wl.th.. fresh enemy-troop1~ mov1n;· b:ito · • F · 1 ~ _ • ·tia· · · He met Thursday with •--olficl&ls
position outside Ille city, Tbe lllP•Y di>ablliig lnjurlei. · ,Or 'lAIUil ·ns · of Ille Offk<: <ii Budg<t and M";:;.gement,
between KmlPoGI 1bam and Phnom 'nle holiday began for the council •t Diiector Georae P. Sb.dts, Depu:ty Direc.
Penh was atill doled delpite efforts 8 p.m., local time Thursday and ends Q ' 4th H Jid · tor· Caspar Weinberger and Associate of several Cunbodl•• boltallom lo dear midnight Sunday. . . •. • • _Ver : 0 . 'Y' Dii:e<tOr.Aroold B. Web«, 1 , .,
it. . The eou· I ~--Iden How d Pyle . ' • . The I three I were •IW(l'TI in aJmg wtlt A month-~ siege of Korn-Thom nd r= 1 ar Orange Countlani can exped relaUvely . new Labor Secretary James Hod-
'!as broken ur-late June after ~.s. taid that during a normal 78-hour easy breathink over 'the 'Fourth of 'July of Noi1hridjt·-1'bursdiy morning on the
fighter-bombers made beaV)' aJr .trikes weell:end at this timed year th~ count holiday,,acconling to Orqe County. Air ·lawn outslde the Pruidenl'a San C..
on enemy PoSiUonr around the town. mounts lo about 510 pei-sons dead in Pollution Control authorities.· . (See"NIXON Pa1e 'ZJ '
This was the first reported direct U.S. traffic accldents. Last· year's 'three-day · 1 F.int stqe Bll\Oi ~1 in',..Lol · . '
mDitary lntetvenlion on !loo side o1 Independ--Dly •••end. accounted , Angeles 'l'bu,...y· did not ~bly ! ! · · ·
P(tmler Lon Nol's troops, affect Ille Qr.,,. Coast ""'"' • , 0r .. de '.
The sPokesman also reported more for .ff0.9 de~~ ~IJ ttco~ show. , Orange County Airport~ Colla M~ 9 ,
CHP ·Working
Over Iloliday . ,. California Highway patrolmen
$8.tioned in Or;µige County have
a ntesHge for errant holiday
Week~torists. .. 1'Df the fact that we are
wor without pay (the state
senate baa yel to approve Gov.
Reagan'1, IU billi<ll budget) we
all arrived on the job at 5:45
o'clock this momirC heeds heid
high, shoulders back, eyes alert
to -with the heavy holiday
traffic. •
"~~ or not, we are sworn to
and lilll viiorojiily inlor« the
traff)( Jaws on ,the COW1ty's
freew1ys and~!'ll''· 1 n d hopefully save · "J'j v e 1,''
patrolmen wa _ ,,f
f
"Motoriit.S m~ take special care to readings were beloW · the 9ChOol lmOI
drlVe defen,iveJy" over~ holiday, Pyle warning ·level 1bursday and are expected
. '!fd.. ...... l A> , '· .. • •• • , 1 • .to ... ·be •• ~er today and' independence
In addition to dangers on the hlghwa)'I. ,O.y.. . ,_ .•
· the' nlt.ionat"Fire P?OteCuOn. AssoclatlOn The or.one concentraUon In the air
-J1c•.!t tO.OOO _.J90Rs, many of them ' reached .21 parts per million at the
Y.1"'!' 'I"" ~ w . airport. and .18 fn Costa Mesa, according
chiidren, would aiatfer ai!rioUs injuries to Douglas Jeffrey, air PolluUon engineer.
from f~ks during the.weekend. Ttie highest reading Jn the county·
'l'1>e NFPA i'8id five pe:rsons were was .41 In La Habt~." A: .35 reMift1 .•
killed and lhOusaiidt Injured In 1981 Is the 1ebool smog warning level In
because they IJlriored the Jwanls ol Orange County. , , .• · ' " :
home flmrorkl. ·C-j>l malmiJll and • 'liie Pollution Cona.I Dlatr!ct 'forcnt · .
bllJidneu were....,.""'!, the JilFPA oaid. ·relaUvel~ lower ""°' rndlnc• today Omits S. Morgan, pneral manager .and on lbe fourth as a result of windl
' ' anlictpated for later this afternoon.
Israel Touris1n Up
JERUSALEM (AP) -Moro than
200,000 touristl Visited larael Jn the llrtl
six '.months of lt'TO -•-..1. ~ tile
over the same period last year, Tourism
Minister >.1oshe Kol announced today.
He said 95 planes carrying 81000
pasaen1el'1 used Tel Aviv's Jnternational
Airport Thursday -setting a one4ay
llraelt r<COtd.
' U might be sdvlsable lo stay: COii
ot Los Angel~ over the Weeklnd,
however. The ozone concentraUon reich·
ed .11 parts per mlllldo In the Well
San Gabriel portk>n Of Los Angeles coun-
ty at noon Thursday. A rlnt sla(e 1lert
was canctlled at 3~30 p.m. ' · ·
11te alert made· 1970 the · smoggiest
year In the history ol Los Angtles so
early In the season. ·
A first stage smog alert Is a warning
to motorlatl t.o avoid unneoeuaey.travel.
...
· Weather · . • . I 'I , l n•n be 1 bang up FQUrth ol July,,
weal.her.wise, .with sunny.skies and
temperatures Jn the 80s, sUpplng
back Into the 70 range along the
coast over the weekepd.
INSIDE TODAY
Y Oii ain Mbt a i:Nu:kina gOod
time at "Inv of th< .·.,..v, Jirt-
10oTkl thoWs · around Orang1
Co••'11 o!i -the Faukh oj Julv.
Thttfr{ oU 'listed in the Guide
to Fun ~oh,mn 'fl todot1's Week·
tnder. ....... " ·-...
C•lltlnl .. ' ft~···"""' .. ~~IRI UJ ' ,, _,_..,. • "'-..... lltottwr_,. 1).lt -.. ·-1)-11 ,_ u 1\ll•hilMI " DM'llMtlnt • ....... ...,, ··-• ....... • •111i.nc1, ... • '""""'' .. ..., '" -" ·--•• ... .._ • .... _ . ...
_, ~-----~.L.__· ____ ~~-----'-----·--'· (_~ __ --'_..._-_-_
I
' DAILY PILOT s
Democrats ' .
Still Delay
ew Budget
' . "\
~ (UPI) -Domanding
... -for achoob In ncl\MC•
-.... sericte llem0<7all today
·~· fO< the lhlrd atrallht
Goo. Ronol!I· R.a&an•s .-.!
lilllcib -budc<t-Damocrlllc , Ltador Geortl•
~ said be is prepared to wait
&tdinltely for Reagan to agree to the . . .....
'"If tt takes months, I'm ready to
• k," the San Franciaco lawmaker
ilw newsmen Thursday night after the '"1ite refused lo approve the "l"lldlng
iaa&e on the second attempt. "I have
-)elieve we'll stand fllt. •
Republicans scheduled a
alion vote on the defeated bill
today. Sea. Fred Marler, (R·Red·
), the floor m&na&tr f« it, said
llil''wu "aptlmistic" pl Rllfin& flnol ....... ;~ Senate, on a.,._25-13 vote, rejected
til-r aj,Dditure JtcHram nve hour a after
t!te Aaembly approved It an a 112-15
vote. It takes 27 votes to P38' a budget
in lhe uppen, -· GOP leaden · considered aending an
amboJJmc:< for bedzldden Sen. Richard
j~ Do1wt1 of -· but de<ided agalnllt !l>e plan. They thouglot tt might ""°"""' a Democrat lo 1Wlldi hi!
vote. .
A cutuptoudte vefsion of the budget
written by a second eooference com-
mittee proposed Sl02 million more for
schools and certain iuarantees in state
ftllanciJla: that Democrats al!o demanded.
-BpecifjcaJly, the compromise says the
state wiU pickup additional welfare COits
to counties caUled by I n c r e a • e d
...,loldl. ·It alao . provides that any
tn«1<Y vetoed out cl lbe budaet by
~-governor would revert to tbe state
ts=h<><>I hmd,
But Moscone noted the language does ndt fOrce the administration to spend
int money. He said that could take
Mother . appropriaUon bill unless such
a mandaile is written into the budget.
"l'be spending program compromise . ilso guarante•· the 100,000 s t a t e
employes, who "Went to work as usual
~r1oi lbe budget imposoe, will "' paid ~ with · any _, debts the stale
i"!ll up while it w11 budgateu. "":'1le situation was nearly identical to
~ yur: only then it was assembly
-... --anded and got,..,. money from 11<11m in lbe bUdget titer
•. Jbre6<1ay ]!oldout.
"1bla year, Senate DemocralJ want at
--·" miilloo for~ odlooi districts, and SIY their reol goal
~ ·1211 million In new old ..
......,,.. for Ille pernor, -
, ...... 11 Democrllii: ""'""" · of:fl.Ce In a penona.l peraualoo
. d1 Rea1M'a :•'pol!tion is the
Jies -bffn!"
iftle. ·goil!lllor bu llld he hu --R lo ...-in the budget and that · DmldcrMic demands for e'llra ~ '(DGDey would ~uire an incJ'eaee
Ji .tuea tlils yeor.
-:... t _., ' . Bal' Island Ferry .• ' ' .
To Be Landmark
• The Balboa to Balboa Island Ferry, a
loni·tlme attraction In 'Newport Harbor
be dedicated ln September 811 an of·
hlllorlcal landmark by lbe Newport
H1atorical Society. •
~ far. the .dedication are 1oinl
ad following dty coondl donation ol
to (llll'Cbue ·• bronze plaque for the
, accordln& to 1J0Ciety board member
k ·Barnett. ~·lbe ·¥ two yeart, hl!torlcal )iµxl-kf ba .. ·heen placed by lbe society
lhe Balhoo Pavilion and lbe Dory
'Fleet.
DAILY PILOT
. _ ..... "--,: , .......... ,.. ,...... .. ...,.
~c..t" "n e . S.. ~I_...
" 01111 COAn f'UILIJHOIG_COM'°AN'I'.
' J ltoDort N.· We" ~ .... , ..... """"""
J1c~ It. Cwrley
Vite ,.,..:OW.I ..... ee-et ~
. ' '
lheflltt ICH¥il
""" TliOflltl A. M,MrphiR•
M-e"'9 E"llor
Rich1~ P. Ni ll
SOul~ Or-C-ty t:•ltw
.,...~-
• (Mii Md.: »O Wut • .., Slrtitl • • .......,, s.-.:11: nu w1111 ••IM' a.u1,.,.,..
• • • u+iM a-11: m "-" ,,.,....,_ · • .. """'""*" ... (fl, inn l•tdl .,....,._, 1 • ;, .... C""'9111it:JNNerllllEIC_,...,.•ttt· .. . • . .. . .,
~I
Friday, July l. 1970
"
July 4t)J Parade
IL-I
•
" ~
• i c g
" ,--,--'~
THIS IS ROUTE FOR FOURTH O~ JULY PARADE
Huntington Be1ch Extr1vaganu Starts at 11 a.m.
Reports on Trip
Pat Nixon Heads Drive
To Aid Stricken Peru
By PATRIC)( BOYLE
r~ CM --~~PllltttMI
P~ Nixon Will leave San Clemente
for W a.shington next week to meet with
a goop that is coordinating private
contributions to help Peru recover from
its disastrous earthquake.
'Ibe First Lady, who returned to the
family home here Tuesday after a three··
day mercy mission to Peru, will report
on her trip and provide informaUon
on current rEillef needs in Peru.
Giving the report herseU will be just
_ another example of her personal touc.h
that was parUcularly evident ~n she
· traveled to euthquake-ravaged Peru.
During .the three-day trip, she delivered
nine tons of Telief au pp lies and displayed
America's hearUelt .sympathy for the
thouian<b ol Peruvian indians who
surVlved the disa.!ter.
And she brou"gbt back the message
that Americans mll8l continue to help
the 801000 refugees to rebuild their
homes.
1'le Pen.ivian m1Mion came about from
a discussion w\U'I her husband on June
20. shortly 'after the disaster.
"I talked about the great destruction,"
Mrs. Nixon , recalled. "I really w~ed
I could · do ...,.JblnR. · I said I'd llke
to make the trip dowri."
"fine. Why don't you?" she said her
· husband replied. So ahe did six days
'later. , ld c:>tM:r first ladies tiave attracted war
attention -EIW!OI' Roosevelt for her
p>d deeils aDd concep\, Jacqueline Ken-
nedy for her glamorous lm•te. Lady
Bini Jollnson for her e!foris lo imprOVO
· the environment. But none bad ever tried aucb a person-
to-person mercy mission of human con-
cef'll and diplomatic side-effect...
Eveo Peru'a exoUcalty beautiful first
Frot11 P .. e I
NIXON ...
mente office .
"Wt ari very proud, ~ of us '!ho
are catifomians, to have the swearmg
In ceremoolea take place here," said
the Ptl'ident. The -,ew OBM chiefs were pluclced
from other federal po.'IUI to run the
new a.gency. It replaces the Budget
Bure.au >nd ls ,fxpected to combine
budge<-maklng wllb evoluatlon ol lbe
effectiveness ol federal pl'O(ram1.
Aft.er lunch Thursday. the Pm:ktent
held another domestic confertnce with
Shultz, White Houae oldes H. R.
Haldeman, John 0. Ehrlidlman, Robert
It Flndl and Donald Rwntfekl, director
ol tbt OUlce ol Economic Opportunity.
lady, Consuela Yeluoo. had only viewed
the dramallc devastation biah tn the
Andel from a htilcopltt.
But when Mrs. Nixon' declded to see
first haoo the destruction, the two finl
ladles flew in a C-130 Air Foree car10
plane to a lhort dirt runway high in
the Andes.
"I don't think any First Lady has
ever been in or out of any airstrip
rtmotely like that," said A1r Force
General Vernon Walters, Mrs. Nixon's
interpreter. ''I think you've flown a com-
bat mission .. You should ~t combat
pay," he told the First Lady.
From thert, 1he two women helicop-
tered over the valley to Huaraz, a
devastated town of 20,000 where sbe
toured the rubble-filled streets. She spent
two hours there, getting the story of
the disaster from the survivors.
"J. wanted to see the people," the
President's wile explained. "I think they
need all the encouragement they can
get . • • too often they feel aid ii im-pe l"90fl al • I It
In Latin America where lPfl'lt&nces
mean M much. Mrs. Nixon added a
humane dimension to the "Yankee" iJn.
age.
Special Election
Set for Sc hmitz'
·Seat in Senate
Gov. Reagan bas scheduled a special
election Stpt. JS to fill the 34tb Diltrlct
State Senate seat vacated by John G.
Schmi\z (R-Tuslin), who wu elected
to Congress Tuesday.
The governor's office announced Thun.
day that a primary electJon will be
held Aug. 18 in 'Ute Orange County
district. If any candkfate rtcelves a
majorJty of all the votes cast, he will
be declared e*=ted and the September
runoff would be cance"lled.
Schmitz won a special election to fill
I.he Hoose of Reprtsentat.i•es !Nt left
vacant by the death of Representative
J'mes Ult In Mardi. ·
State Republican Chairman Dennis
Carpenter, a Newport Beach attorney,
walked away with the GOP nornlnaUon
to succeed Schmit: in November and
wu erpected to defeat Democrat Dwight
W. ~1Jze. a Garden Grove bu.slnnaman.
If Carpenter llhould win the special
elect!on. and if the le1lilative tesslon
ran Into mld·Au(U.St he could provide
Republicans with the 2115l vote they need
for much of lhj! P<lldlnl lefllslallon.
They now hold a one-man ma}orlty In
the Senate, 20 lo Ii,
Middle East Heats Up
Israe lis Kill ·Nin e A rabs ; Guerrillas Bomb '
By U.Uted Pre11 lnternatlooal
An Israeli army patrol killed nine
Arab guerrilla infiltrators from Jordan •
Thursday nigh!, but guerrillas stepped
up their attacks today and hurled bombs
in Hebron and the Gaza $trip. Israeli
planea bombed Egypt for the Uni con-
secutive' iiay and Cairo 11\d two raider•
were 11bit." ..
Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban,
in the first official reaction to President
Nixon's statement on the Middle'Eist,
called it "an inle"mationally important
expression of American Middle East
policy," but the Arab world w,u angry
and said Nixon was pro-Israel.
Arab newspapers said Nixon had
jeopardized the chances of his own peace
initiative' with his Wednesday night
remarks pled1ing to maintain the power
balance In the Middle East. And the
Al·Fatah guerrilla organlzallon said it
meant he would give warplanes to Israel.
"We tell Mr. Nixon -do not dream
or finding in the Middle East anything
other than you are finding in Southeast
Asia," the Al-Falah newspaper said in .
Amman. ·
Eban's statement delivered at Tel
Aviv's Lydda Airport ~ he fiew In
from London said Nil:on had "clearly
continued tlle lllrmfllb ol llll'aol Is lo
beenwr.d_a_l8'"1-1d
invite a war."
Ho Nld olber Important points of Nix·
on 'a ttat&nents were his "clear recogni-
tion of the dangers of Sovlet ln-
tervenUon" lftd that the crux of the
Middle Eaat problem wu that tbe ·Arm
"wint to drivt larael into the sea.'1
Iaraell fteftPBPen satd
0 Nlmn'• words
remain to be telted apmat.deeda and:',
that tbt key Ult ii -IJl;ael pis
jet planes and other weapoory. Muriv
sald despite the statement some Israeli
ofriclals think the latest U.S. peace in-
itiative should be rejected.
There were these developments in the
li&htlng: ~ -Cairo said 3 Israeli Phantom and
Sk)'hawk warplan struck military posl·
lions on the Gulf of Sutt, the Great
Bitter Lake and the southern and
nOrthem sectors of the Suez Canal for
five and a haU hours today. Egypt
said two planes wert "hit" but gave
no other details and did not ~y Whether
they were hi~ by mi!slles or conventional
Divided VotingTaskForce
Favors Lease of Machines
By JACK BROBACK
01 !"'-tl•ll't' I'll•! SI•"
After almost one month of hassling,
the Orange County Vote ·Systems Task
Force Thursday evening voted 4 to 3
to recommend that 40 Cubic vote co~
ting machines be leased for $60,000 to
~ In tabulati"g about 40 percent of
the county's ballota In the Nov. 3 General
Election.
The existing C.Oleman Vole Tally
System will be used to coUJ1t the other
60 percent of lhe vole.
The task force recommendation is to
be made to the county supervisors, prcr
bably Tuesday, by Chainnan Cecil
Marks.
Thursday's session, the fourth on the
ve1iJlg vote counting subject since the
fouled up June 2 primary was q u i e l
and short compared to the previous
argumentative sessions.
Vigorously opposing the use of the
Cubic vote counte rs were Joseph Irvine ,
Will Lindsay ~ Marks. They ar~ believ·
ed to favor voting machiDes 1Uch as
the AVM or Shoup which immediately
tabulate ballot! at the precinct level.
VoUng for the Cubic tall were Hirui
Vogel, Geor1e Brokate, ~ra. Janice Boer
and Henry Quigley. Three task force
members were absent.
Cubic is aimllar to the Colemu system
but with one major difierence -it
utiUus the traditional p1per ballot and
reads them electronically but does not
produce the troublesome punch cards
as the Coleman does. It reads the ballota
and immediately posta the result.
Cubic's best feature is the deceJt.
trallzation of ballot counting. Each of
the 40 machhles will be placed in all
outlying location and can tabulate votes
from ten to 12 precincts.
County Citrt William st John said
the machines, if approved by the
su pervisors, will probably be used iA
such areas as San Clemente, and Sait
Juan C&pistrano and some OOrthern coun-
ty points. ·
Members of the task force favoring
the Cubic system do l50 because it utilizes
individual ballots which Cl.II be band
coulllted later if HCessary.
antiaircraft guns.
-An Israeli ,spokepnan said Arab
auenillu llnlck ill occup.ct Het>rno,
wouniiio, •It cl\lfllano. irtJb a hind . .. artnade. There were three hand grenade
attacks in occupie8· Gaz.a City and one
.that exploded in a tna.rket place kJUecl
CXM Gaza Mab and wounded four others.
-An laraell Aripy pallOI killed nlnl
Arab inflitra"'" In Ibo JO<dan Valley
two mJ1es nort!i ' cl tile Dud sea. A
apolceaman !f;llci tllelr , --and ...
ploolvtt •we fiund near 'the~ bodiel
and there were no I1raeU casualties.
From Po9e l
SUSPECT ••.
travel to Texas and poSslbly Michigan,
Mrs. Johnson's home state, to tali: to
sources in the case.
Officers declined to specily exaetly
which tip last Wednesday night led lo
the arrest.
1'ley also have not found whether
Marine Pfc. Mark Johnson, 19, husband
of the slain woman , knows the suspect.
Johnson has been in Mk:hlgan since
accompanyln1 his wlfe's bixly back ~
for burial last June 22.
A .,polygraph test and more than a
dozen hours of interviews Qt the youni
husband ruled him out as 1 1UJpeet
quickly after the crime.
Mrs. Johnson, eight wee ks pr_gnant
with what would have been Uiecouple'a
first child, was beaten severely In lhe
face with a large kitchen stool, then
stabbed in the neck, breast and abdomen
by her killer. ·
Her nearly nude body was f o u n d
tprawled on the bed of the couple'•
modest, ground -floor apartment in San
Clemente's pier bowl resort area.
Her husband unlocked the front door
of the flat about 21 hours after leavin1
his wife for guard duty at a S a n t a
Ana helicopter base and found her J1ude
body sprawled on the bed in the livin1
room.
Mrs. Johnson"' had been dead more
than 2( hours.
· Evidence of sexu·ai molestation wu
Inconclusive, c o r o n e r ' 15 UivesUga.tor1
discovered later that night
They said only that "evidence of violent
&exual activity was not evldtnt."
A specific time of death also proved
to be a puzzle In the case. Examiners
could only specify a 1eneral time period
for the killing -perhap11 before dawn
of Juae 11. •
The majesty of the Mediterranean
is captured in Henredon's
eapri
SUMMER SALE
feafuring H1nr1d on', Capri
This fabulous collection o! Henredon's furniture
to include dining, bedroom & occasional, all at sale prices.
Drexel Furniture is offering their famous Esperanto collection at
substantial saving s.
Heritage is reducing its exciting Madrigal collection.
' Henredon, ·Heritage & Drexel will also ofrer their outstanding upholstery at substantial savina:s .
Lamps, pictures and accessories will also be available al reduced prices .
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
NEWPORT 81ACH
1727 Wostcllff Dr,, 642·2050
OPEN FR IDAY 'TI L 9
INTERIORS
Profe11ional lnterl•r
Designers Avallablo-AID-NSID
"' LAGUNA IEACH
345 North Co.,t Hwy, 49~5S1
OPEN FRI DAY 'TIL t
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Bu~i~ngton Deae~
EDIT ION
:VOL'. 63, NO. '151, •SECTIONS, 34 .PAGES •
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• • FRIDAY, JULY J, 19_70
• ..
• • Yoar Bo•eto'WJI --
Dally Pa(H'r ·
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• TEN CENTS
July ·4th . Parade Viet Exp_losi()n K.ills 45
•
Pas~.enger.-B·oatSunk hy Mine_ ~n ·River . ' . .. . ~ -~ .....
• •
< z E g
~ ~.-"U
THIS IS ROUTE FOR FOURTH OF JULY PARADE
HvntJnston Beach Extri1v191nu St1 rt1 •I 11 1.m.
l
Skies Over Huntington
To Light Up Saturda y
The ePJemeral beauty ti more than
$3,000 wor111 ol llreworb will spnad
over Huntnigt.on Beach ski~ Saturday
night as a .climax to the city's annual
Independence Day Parade.
Bruce Kfliger, a Jicensed pyrotechni-
cian for the Atlas Fireworks Co. in
ForUna, said the fiery display would
Include aeria l shells ranging from three
jnchs to eight inches in diameter which
will hurl their hnnine9ceot charges 600
feet in1o the air. '
• CGiloidered ctancerow e>plosiYU, they
will be lramported lo Hmtqlon Beach
Satlrday and set up in mortar hoses
ao tile municipal plu Imm which they
will be shot off around 9 p.m.
Bob Rivas, co-diairman of a Jaycee
committee organizing the di!plays, said
the lbow will be about one hour long,
twice as long as la!t. year's.
company .who could come up with the
"mmt inches" in terms of the rocket_,
and aerial aliens.
"We had a Ii.We-trouble deciding how
l two-inch sVenpu compared to a two-
inch double bluttr, so we just added
up the inches,'' Rivas said. "And th is
year we have about three and a hair
times lhe inches we had last year."
He said the fireworks S>ould be visible
from every pa_rt of the city since most
of the pyrotechnics are of an aeri al
rather than static nature.
"The pier will be. cloeed off past the
first tier. It wooki bt too dangerous
to get any closer," he *8id.
"I was out amoog them last year
and it was like being nei:t to a bazooka
gcing off. You jlllt fight them aod nm.
Tnese things are like mortars," he said.
SAIGON (AP) - A pauenger river
boat lllruc~ a lloatlni mine ju.I IOUtb ·
of •. the Demilitarlud Zone -today and ·
blew up, killing 41• ol the llO Vletnameoe,
civilians aboard, ·a governinent sPokes-
mao. announced.
. The mining; OCQl.rred on a .br:anch of
the CUa Viet· River leis thin a ·mile
frpm Dong Hf, the bOat'a de1Un1Uon
ibout nine miles south of the DMZ.
'The river is regululy patrolled by U.S.
and South Vietnameae ' boat. and North
Valley School
_Overcrow~g
To ~nd by '72?,
By TERRY COVILLE · · or,... Deltr , .... ,.,.
Double sessiom, portable clasarooms
and crowde:t classts are expected to
be forgotten phr .... by the year · ll'lll
in the Fountain Valley School District.
The dre.im ol tdeqUate classrooms
for every child Jn ·.·~ district l)inges
only on the. stability <I. current state-aid
for school construction, according to
school official!:. ·
Jack Mahnken, amnlniltrator of
busines.'I services for Ute district, .ooUlned ,
plam Wednesday for con.strUction of.
three elementary llCbools by !I'll!.
The ·nrst is Mejola School in Fountain
Valley •. Mahnken told 9Cbool tnsatees
he ""!*' it, would ·-'Its doon da. ~' 0.-lfl~ ..1, .:..~C...'lliL ·'-8di0alwlli __ .,.,.,
wlihln, Ila :1ralla hr• no· Jlild'l)lL 11
litl in the 1tCtJtn boHided b; ll1'£Wnt
and Bushard· 'ltriets and" Ellil and omleld, 6\'111\les. . .
.-or loallliualllll the ·-• win
be -f l.II mJll1aa wltb '"-t "°"" ing ln>m both the ledctal. and llate
governments. /'
Oka School in HunUngton Beach ts
the next one district officials hope to
· open ID 1972 -perh8JIS in J anuary.
It will house 720 students at a site
on Education Lane and Yorktown
A venue. Cost of comtructian of Ob
.. $950,ooO.
"Our 1chanc.s lo build thil IChool de-
pend. on the aale ol .-er hitch o!
state bonds," Mahli~ sajd . , "
1be la!I ICbOol Is Talbert Elemtntary.
planned hr 780 studenta with a tentaUve
opening dale ol MMch, 19'12.
"This ont depends! on our abl.llty to
~re st.ate funds in the apr:lng « It'll/'
htahnken said. He.didn't feel there was
muth danger in Josing any of the three.
Talbert School will be boonded by
B\.lshard and Magnolia streets and
Garileld and Yorktown 1venues in Hu~
tlngton Beach.
"Tilbert will be the last school needed
in the ·Huntington Beach portion of our
district, '1 Mahnken added. The FCUlta.in
Valley School District covers mo11t of
Fountain V.alley and that part of Hun.
tington Beach north ol Adams Avenue
and east ol Beach Boulevard ..
· Once Talbert is complered the district
"'ill have 16 schooll built, with only
seven remaini.ig to complete th t
district's total number of•schools.
• 11We have one in e'ch quarter Rdion,'1
Mahnken explained. "Our pbiloeophy is
to have schools k>cated where all children
can walk to them and where a stning
community identity can be devdoped."
Dlstrict .voten have approved $1
million for school construction. That,
plus funds from state and federal lp\U'CH
'is all the district expects to need to
bqild all of its remaining ICbOOls; diltrict
officials say, In the interests of providing the lll06t
spectacular show, Riv as said the Jaycees
awarded the fireworks contract to the New Peace Env oy
•
CHP Wo rking
Ove r H oliday
California Highway patrolmen
11atloned in Orange Cowity have
a message for errant holiday
Weekend motorists.
"Despite the fact that we are
working without pay (the !f.ate
tenate has yet to approve Gov.
Reag11n's M.6 billion budget) we
all arrived on the job at 5:45
o'clock UUs morning head.I ...btld
high, shoulders back, eyes alert
12._ cope with the heaY)' bollday
traffic.
"Pay or not, we are sworn to
and will vlgoroualy enforce the
tr•ffic laws oo the county's
tree.ways and highways, an d
hopefully save some 11 v e I 1 • '
p1trobnen w a.med.
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By RICHARD P. NALL
ot ._, Dlf'Y PNM Sllff 1 ,
Presidebt Nixon ·is · to JJ.e;et in. Sin
Clemente Saturday wltli David' Bruce,
his new chief U.S. negotiator at the
stalled Parla tolb on poace In Vietnam.
In hil renewed push lo find pol!Ucal
90Jutlon for the lndochlnl war, Mr. Nixon
..bas said that Bruce, a veteran diplomat.
will hi" great Oexlblllty ID P,...,..,i
the U.S. pooltlon at Parlf.
The Ptesldent has expressed satlsiao-
tion with the rate of VietnamliaUon.
As the SOulh Vietnamese grow strong
enough to defend the1n1elves, the Presi·
dent his qgested they will be a kllliher
adversary for Hanoi at the Conference
table than is the U.S.
11>e Nri v-and Viet c.n1.
however, 1:hwi far have replied lo the
•
President's appeal by In effect saylnc:
first get U.S .. troops !JUt. of Vietnam .
A member ol the 'Viet Cong delegation
Said the c0nfereoce "can never lnake
any progress" until the U.S. accepts
the Vitt Cong peace plan and pulls
American troops out.
. The President plans no participation
In independence Day ceremonies.
Alter days o't concentraUoo on fortitn
alf•lrs capped by his WednescloY nigbt
fon:lgn-policy dialogue on televiskMl, the
President has turned attenUon to
domesUc prcb'.e ms. .....___
lie met Thursday with" lop o!llctal1
of the O!lk:o ol Budeet 11111 Mailigement, lilrector George P. SIMIJU, Deputy Dlftc.
tor Cup1r Weinberger and Aalodate
Dir<elor Arnold B. Weber.
1be three wen -.. ID 1laq with
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Tentativ~ ID-SQt
'lboo), IO miles north o! Phnom Penh,
with~ !re.sh -enemy troops · .moVing iq!p.
jios!Uon· oulalde the city. The bfghw81'
betw"l'n Kop\pong Thom and Phnom
Pem WU •Ull closed despite effort.
Of 1tveral Cambodian battalions to cleat it. . .
A monlh·long siege of Krimpong Thom
was broken in late June after U.S.
fighter·bombers made heavy air strlkU
O;D enemy positions around the town.
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J~n~ .:D ·9e. ;Body
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. Myst~ry Solved?
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.. ,.~'PHJ • ' . ~ ' ... ' ' ' ·, . . " . , I .. I • •' " • • rlioma&· ·lf'i.t.6ri,
' ~ • • • ' • • I ' '
llunuligliJ n: .GJ, · . ., :.
li~s'·'·in .. Vietnam ~ • • j • • : •••
LPfct; 'Itiofuas 1 Wat:IOn. of''!Hliatqtolt
8-b ~-iiilOd 111·.Ciloii In vi«.
nam.
Anny 81111lorit1e• hive notl!I'!! bit
parents, Mr.,~am ,.Mrs. Davkl' Watton,
tllOZ Oi:ford Drive, that .1bei!' 1llCllt was
);ll]ed on a lllgbt patrol June SI.
Pfc. ·watson, a J r a du 1 t e of
WeotmWter lllC!l sdioOI, 1'31 20 )'Ura
old. He Wilt ll'J buried •I 'wii6nlmter
MemOrial Park Mon<tay after 1 p.m.
. !m'lces ~ the P .. k Family Colonlal
Funeral, llome.· . . . -. . .. . . .
1be fOk11<r Js """ived b)I two bro~,
David , 22, anf:l• :.Vllllam, JS: iiil'Diiiit,
20 months. • .
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Demoerat .Slated .
For. VISTA Po~i
Easy B:teathlil,g . ·
For Countians . . . . . . '. . .
Over 4th a9:µd·ay . .
Oranp Countlam can npeCI felaUvely
easy breathing over the Fourth of July
hollday, according lo Or..,. Cow>ty Air
PollUtloo Colrtrdl authorlll~. .
First stage ~g readinp in ,Los
Angeles Thursday did not ·medllrubly
affect the Orange Cont area. ·
1be Whlla H..,.. la expected lo name Orange County Ah'pori and ca.ta Mesa
Richard. D. Blumenthal.• a .ff.year-old readings were below the tchool ·llDOI
DemoCrat, ,as dt~r of 'ihe 1VolUnteers . warning level ThlJJ'JdaY and 41r:e e.xpected
in Service lo' America .(:VISTA): wlthlD bt be lciwer today and ~
about a month. . .... ". . . -Day. . 'BIUJl\00~" pr-yt cOriJpletllll six '!be -conca.tratloo .ht ~ air
moothl·ol r•rve ~in·1ht 1'1~ readied J I 'port> Per milllOO at1 the Cori>o at' •Camp. Ltjtmle, N.CI, 'Wll 'Ind 'u in c..ta'Mioa acoorilln1
formerly, en 'the •tall 1 o1 :Whlla .ff..,. · ~glas Jj,a;ey ilr pollutto'n lllli1noer.'
coumelor Daniel Moynihan'. · • . · · 1lie hlghOtt: 1'admg 'in' the C<\'Dltr
The post: ·tubject 'lo · Sena!• '. Cl"" . 41 In La Habra. A .3$ reOdb!g •
flnnation, pays· t31 •. ooo a-:1'#-•nd is ;:..:u~ sCboOt lmOI 'wirninC lew:l in
now held by acUng Jljrectof Jtol!ert !AD<· oiance Couijty. • -' •
· • · ·'Ille Pollllllon Control D1ttrict lorcut
. relsUvejy.·-lower 'linof · rtldlll(J .loclay
ah4 oa •the !Om1h al a mull All. Winds
antlclpatejl !of later tllil ~-:-:-'
ft' rillllit. be advlslble • lo otay out or Loo Angeles over the wetl<,ond,
however: The cane concentratiqn retch-
..... 57' part. per " mlllJoll In the l'!ll '
San Gabriel portloo al Loo AnJ<les ...,..
ty al 0000 ~. A Dnl llap alerl •-~ "-'•-J ·-WU ..... IJod_a\~:ltp,m .• L'·~ t new ·~ ·-·-z -, · '!lie alerl ,.... Jilt ""' --o! Northrldp Thui'lday m~ron the : . in the hlslOry ol Loo Ancello oo
lawn out.Ude the. President'11 San· Cle-• ~ ln tile -..,. · . ., : ~ · 1
menla office. · A !Jnt ltaft mioc aleti. II a wal)llne .
"We are WO"~PfOUd. U.. ~1~.-who to motoriltS to avoid unneeessat7 traveL
are Californians, to haft the IWftrin& • • 1 • • • • •
Jn bren:iolfles ta:ke pl"lct!'· liert," 1Nld ' ~· • '
the Pretldent. ' • No Trash -Collection ·
1be new 'OBM chlefl .,..... plul:ked 1 • • •
from other !ederaf poOta lo 'run' the B h • 'F urth' new 1geney. It nplteet the Budget In eac . on 0
Bureau and ts e.rpttted to combine
· bu~maklng wtth eval11ati0n « the
efrectivtness of federal progi'ams.
After lurich Thursday, the Pmldent
held another d,omestic confettnte wtth
SlnilU, Whl1e HOlllO aideo H. R.
Haldeman, John D. Elrltcbman, ~rt ll .. F1i!ctr ..... Dooolcl RWnllekl, ~
. al Ille Office alE<onomlc ~.
• 'Jber< will be no truh co~ Satur· ,
day In HudlllCIOO Beldl or · Fowitain
Valley. • ~ --~
-~I company u-lodoy that they woold make the colleotloo
!tun · SalurdaY'• ""'te, wl>lth · lllecll
norihem ilunu,.ton Btoch, -w-., ..,,
and a ring the rorpse had on itS finger.
'According to information obtained frorn
the w~an, Mattie M~ker traveled f
~cle circles, was an ei:cellent poof
player, dated fr~uenUy and may ha'('e'
come from N<rth Carolina.
She alao believed her \o be married
md to have some friends in the Lona
Bead!. area, Cale~.
Cale aald today that he is not com·
pletely siti5fied with • the fderitlflcation
~t tha~ he. would lean toward the
woman~• explknation.
· Hunting(on Beadl detecUv~. for whom
~ unlll01Ved mUI1fer c~ h a I -
ncneented a -two-year '°"' budachl,
are nmr lrJbtg lo subotanUate the kl • 1111-.-• •
. ,
$~,OOO :in Pot
Seized , in Raid . . . -. .
On 2. R~Ul.ences
OetectlVea from the Huntington Beach
potice narcotlct,'del&lf today ionlbcated
about .$2.000 worth o! .._njwma an~
other diup in a pte-dawn , raid on two
l>omes. -
Police saJd theY believe the conliaband
A'U intended to add a little more spark.It.
to_ Fourth of Jilly· celebrations planned
lo the cHy thJs Salilrday. · '
-Acting On tips from the department'•
Special Enlorcem"'I DetaU (SEO) detec·
tlves Jack Relhholtz and Carl Vidano,
search warra'nts Jn harid, conducted the
raids betWeen 3 a.rh. and 4 a.m. •
At I03 Main St., they arrested three
a&.lJts . and one juvenile ror possession
of narcoUCJ and confiscated a small
quantity 'ol marij uana and If' cigareUe
roller.
·nie. big haul, however, came later,
at 409 california St., where detectives
said Uley uncovered three kilos of m·ari..
Juana, 200 table'3 <i. LSD, about three
ll"l1ll ol hashish and numerous otber
udldentified capsules.
'Arrated at the Callfurnta Street ad·'
dress on auspidon ol pouessing narcotk:s
and sUSJ>iclotl of pcmeaslng marijuana
and dihleroos drugs for sale were Gary
o. Olteihues, 20, Debbie Sue Wllllam1,
21, Claudia Jean Ray, 18, ·and Blake
A, Smith, 21. · ,
Rdnholtz sa\d they encounlered J'lO"
r-In either-raid.
0r .. ge Coan 1
,. r Wear,ltter
. It'll be a heng up Fourth ol July,
--· with llUllll)' lklet' and temperaturet In the IOI, 1lipplaf
hick IDlo the 70 nnc• along Ilia
coat over the weekend.
INSmE ,TODAY
Yox am Moc a crocking good
tiine at anv oJ &he manti Jire·
workl 1hows around Orangtt
Countt1' o-n the Fourth oj Jult1 •
·Theu're alt U.tted in the Guids
to P'Un·column in to<kzt1l.s \Veek·
ender.
11 Ml'lllt
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l DAILY PILOT H s d Lim.ii . \~ ~ -; .
Reqliest Set
·Middle East ·~~lle~ts Up
Israelis Kill Nine ·Arabs; 'Guerrillas {loffi:b .
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For Council:
"" •• .. ia-_. ~ number of residents in Hun-
'l!!I""' Be8cb hope to slow down the
poce of traffic along Indlanapols A venue.
t-!Jbe:r have a petition with 52 signatures If'~ to the city council Mmiday
~ ,.questin,"a 111a1U.um ~ lbrilt
of 40 ,miles per boor along Indianapolis
.tn>m Kelv!Jlgrove Street to Beach
Boulevard.
0 The area isn't posted oow so cars
J.iP' by at 65 miles per hour or faster,"
Mr&. C. D. Tyler, 20521 Minerva Lane, ·
claimed.
Mn. Tyler stanod passing the petition
after abe 'tilked with seve?al neighbors,
wbb ·~ coocern om·trafflc lale-
1)'. Jn the area.
"We comtder it a residential street, IRif the cltj-says 1t•a-an anmat highway.
We'd like the limit at 30 mph, buf
qj>mntly 40 ii ·•a low u they will . -..,_µ ---. --
Mn. Tyler said li1nen. of the petition ,,,... a!! rqilt<rad votera. "We oould
"'et -ailnatures, but we thou«ht ::;i, regial<reil -... • could sigo the
pttition."
A grwp of ~ resi<Jer:it.s will attend
M'Onday's council session, starting at ~"30 p.m., according to Mrs. Tyler. ·
.. ilvie just' want to Jet tfle oouncil know
ft are very concerned. We hear brakes
squeal all day and half the night. It's
joSt a matter of time before .something
serious bappem:.'' .. ..
Top of tbe Pier ,. .
Proposal Before
e«>uncil Monday
'"the Top <!I the Pier redeve~1t 6 -is eipected _ to ~e up for ~oo lp!n 1t the Huntlnato• Beach .
a/Uncil ?DeeUng Mooday.
D(ll.'I' PILOT
0
"""': W .,.. ~
MARGARET WEILER, 5, STqtKS UP _FOR f:pURTH
' 6 Major Fireworks Shows
' • 1
By u.IW PNu lllte""lloul -and said Nlion waa Jll'C>lal'lel. canflrmed the ltttnllh of Israel Is to
ha eniured because· 8 wuk Israel would
Invite a war."
Ao Iarull army patrol killed nine , Arab newspapers lald Nbul had
Arab guerrilla infiltrators from Jordan jeopardized the ch~ of bis own peace . ' in itiative with hiS Wednesday night Thursday night, bul guerrillas stepped remarks·ptedglng to maintain the power He said other important . points of Nix·
on'1 stateinents were1ds "clear fecogni·
tion of the dangers of Soviet ~in
iervention" and that the crux of the
Middle East.problem was that the Arabs
"want to drive Israel into the sea."
up their attacks today and hurled bombs balance in the Middle East. And the
in Hebron and the Gaza Strip. Israeli Al-Falah guerrilla organization sald it
planes bombed Egypt for the 43rd con-meant he would give warplane! to Israel.
secut.ive day and Cairo nld two Talders "We tell Mr. Nixon -do not d!'e..am
were "hit." of finding in the Middle East anything
Israeli Fi>reign Minister' Abba Eban, other than you are finding in Sout~east
in the first official reaction to President Asia,'' the AJ·Fatah newspaper uld in Israeli.newspapers said Nixon:'s Words
remain to be tested against deeds Jnd
that the key test ls whether Israel gets
jet planes and other weaponry. Maariv
said despite the statement aome Jsraeq
officials think the latest U.S. peace in;
ttlative shouJd be rtjected. ot
Nixon 's statement on tbe .Middle East, Amman. .
called It "an internatianally imP,Ortant Eban's statement delivered at Tel
expression of American Middle I East Aviv's Lydcla Airport as he new in
policy," but the Arab world was angry from London said Nixon had "clearly
Robb to Be Arraigned There were these developments in UH!
figllling:
'
On Jbortion Charges
-Cairo said 34 Israeli Phantom and
Skyhawk warplanes struck military .pos~
lions on thf: Gulf of Suez, the Great
Bitter .Lake and the southern ahd
northern sectors of the Suez Canal Jot
five and a haU hours tod,ay. Egypt
Dr. Robert Cumming Robb or Laguna
Beach has been ordered to face Superior
Court arraignment July 9 on felony abor·
tion charges.
The court date was set by Judge
Byron K. McMillan .immediately after
th.e jurist rejected ' 'nli.irsday attorney
Moses Berman 's arguments that furUler
Valley Opposes
Coast Freeway
Route Changes
Fountain Valley is against halting the
propo5ed Paciflc Coast Freeway in Hun·
tington Beadl.
Councihnen adopted..,_a resolution Tuea.
day night opposing. the plan by State
Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R •
Newport Beach) which would stop the
proposed freeway in the vicinity of Beach
Boulevard and Adams Avenue.
prosecution ol 1he Art· COiony physician Slid two planes were "hit" but gave
is unlawful since the tame charps had no other details and did not say whethef
been dismissed by a municlpel court they were hlt by missiles or conventional
judge. antiaircraft guns.
And Judge McMillan -also-threw out--~ lsraell-.sJ?O,ltesman. said Arab·
Berman's plea that the Orange County guemllas struck In occupied Hebron,
·Grand Jury was not qualified to indict wounding . 19 civilians with a hand
Robb because it did not truly represent grenade. There v.:ere three h~d grenade
the community ln terms of racial social attacks in occupied Gau City and one
economic aOO religious factors~' ' that exploded in a market place klJled
Judge McMiJlan tlelivered his double one Gaza Arab. and wounded fo~ other.~.
barreled ruling after Berman umuc--An lsraelt Army patrol killed nine
cessfully tried to have him removed Arab 1!1filtrators in the Jordan Valley
from the proceedings 85 prejudiced two miles ne:t" of_ the Dead Sea .. A
against his client. spokesmap said their weapons and ex·
Judge William s . Lee quicltly rejected plo"sives were found near their bodies
that argwne11t in a n e i g h b o r in 1 and there were no Israeli casualtJes.
courtroom and sent Bernian back to
Judge McMillan for an equally speedy
rejection of the arguments he filed last
April I. •
Dr. Robb, 67, of 34567 Scenic Drivt,
Dana Point, was indicted by the Grand
Jury on charges of inducing rniscaniages
in th,ree women patients.
A Good Racket
In Huntington
11le cOuncil will decide whether to '19thoriae EconomiC Re!eardt Allociates oJ .. Los Angeles to update their feasibility
an.Jysil of exponsioo of the Parkiag
Aiie.hority in view of the JteW" appraisal
To Light Up Orange
''We don't want another freeway com-~ Ing in and dumping traffic into the \:468St--Beach ~ ~dams ~ea, 11 Mjiyor Edward Just said tlus mornmg.
' Badham's purpose is to keep the Coast
'Mle indictment revived the chargea
that were dismissed by Judge Paul Maat
who threw the allegations out of Santa
Ana Murricipal Court with the ruling
that Cilifornia's Therapeutic Abortion
Act of 1967 was unconstitutional.
It's nOt too late to 1et in an a new
sports "rlltket" in Huntington Beaob.
Theft's still time to sign up for ttie
Huntington Beach Open Tennis Tourna-
meie .
Tuesday is the final day to registe!'
for the toilrney, scheduled for July 18-19
and July 15-26. Entry cards for the
event; SJ)OM<ll'ed by the Pacific Sands
Temis Club and the Huntington Beach
Rercreation Department, are available
from the Fecreation Department, 17th
Street and Orange Avenue.
al the p-Opetty. Six major fireworks shows will light t"n>e appraisal fixes the value or the Independence Hall beginning at 10 i.m.
Actor Don DeFore will narrate a pageant
depicting 11 scenes from American
history entitled, "America, the Great
, which covens. five downtown up the Orange Coast area on July 4
rom Sixth Street to .Lake street, from Seal Beach to Laguna.
~.OllO. moi:e tho!! a mlJl\oo d<>~a Pyrotechnic displays will be held at
thlh the first est1n1ate. • · Newport ot.ihes, fhmtingt.on Beach 'pier, Adyenture." .
The plan calls for leveling the blocks Lagwia Beach, Anaheim st a d l um , iild buildirig an 1,800,space parkflg lot. Disneylind and Long Beach.
Santa Ana activities include a 9 a.m.
parade down Main Street followed by
an address by Maror Loren Griset. 1be DowatOwn Property Own e r • Sefr 'the •weekender seCtion of today's
M&ociattoo, meanwhile, hal botllJed the DAILY PILOT for further information
city staff that It baa algoed up 40 perceiit on local fireworks displays.
The fourth annual "City of Vision
Paradeu in La Palma will feature a
fireworks display at dusk. Buena Park's
Bellis Park also ~s a pyrotechnics
display, as Well.as rilerton High School .
ol"tbe property owners: ?'11~ to commlt ·Other Independence Day activities in
Janll lo private -IQpilent ·" ••• ~ Co!intr.iinclude ··the Huntlnaton , llrltt cl llelnl Up "AO pen;nt, 'eeaCbl 01ndeponiimc. Day Parade, now
the 'l"".P""1 by .Jllly 1. was ~ • 1A .!15118tbJ•yw, 'l'he ·~d~ will take , ~ ~~·'!I wmm,..,. ~ pllc&,ll.11 •·Ulv·l)i .... cfrcuJar route,: •pt.~ty ...... lbal. prlvat4 ,II!' froOI.~! ~ar'.W.¥•!n .Street. ·, . · , 'tio;Wil do the J&. rKJiitl!i Berty:-Finil will . present·
at 8 p.m. .
A beauty contest will be he;ld at 7
p.m, In Lquna Beach l!fegjiaid head-
quarters. 175 N. Coast Highway. Miss
Laguna Beach Lifeguard will be ·cro?t11f!d
at the Independence Day acli\titj~s. ~ •• ~ ~, aoaJ. is:Mi ~'ll ·pe-t •1lpetat1o11 !Patrioli8n": at Iha park'• fl: the ~ blocbj bJ'l Qcl 1 and ~· . !. 4 . ' . . .
ire pj.llq·ati lrith that,"~ T8!?J0,0
,.·, ;(' , • .~ • • • • • ~tlan~t, .. id .lrid1y. "W•'.!I;. 21'.M ... ' .. s . . H "ld .. ~::~~~~=..~owy,; , .·~ . fir~ uspects , e, .-: ~-
~;drofoil Trip In .,Vw __ ·.·_· ·i 0 _ T. ·:~. ·~her Case
Plaits Delayed r
·~* . ' . ' ' ,.
A 16-year-old boy am a 3l•year .. w· local authoriti .. by prollalion offlc~
,.,.., lluntlncton -<lllmber "' ~ hos. bee.i t.emporm;Uy foiled . li!,n el!oru. to lpolllOI" a )lydrO!tU lilP to CaJoli!la froni"tlle M~lpa! Iller;,
~}tlll trip -edledtlle,I fdr July . ~-~ Cbomber mll!Oll'' Ralph Kiser. tne"r.iD :wlll ~ delayed'about»i''
tD an ovllilaul on tbe1t rese:ve .
ii . will be ~. tor ll>em
ve ~ a new date ~." Kh!tr
'Y.Ol]t'!l ~·wvingrtime on a marl· iQ Norwalk earlier this week to .face
juana arrest will . bt m&rgeH ·u ac· charges as an ac!Ult in the murder·kidnap
cessories In the brutal butchering of of Mrs. Brown .
MfJl1-0n Viejo. tetcher Mrs. ·Florence -Otristopher "Gypsy" Gibboney, 17,
Nancy Brown. ·-· another .drifter, now being held in
-; · jbe. arrests . "rtiurs~y of ~elanie Portland, Ore., where he haS begun to
·Daril:eb, 31, in •jall far a week on the fightextraditiontoOrangeCounty,where weea cbllrge, and an··unlden-tilied IS.year-he will face piosecution as an adult
·019. tbOY·"wraps up the arrests" in the in the Brown case ..
bizarre cpse of the death of Mrs. Brown, -Arthur C. "Moose" Hulse, 16, of
allegedly murdered at the hands of a 11461 ·Dolan 'St., Garden Grove, a .high
rpvine, loosely-knit band of -young school student specified as ~ principal
... , drifters. , in the June 2 hatchet mu'rder ,of Carlin
-l1J!jlij~l,1i1 . ~ COAlT ,.Ullllti; G~~AH'f
, ' ltobtii N. 'Wtt4 •
""lillfll '"" l>uel':iw
U•tk R. Cllf'I.., '
"~ ""l!Hnl Mid ~1 ·~ Tho111•• Ktevll
EollOI'
1h-•• A. Mvtplrii~e
M.lllf011!Q l!O;rer
Al•11 Oirki11
W.:t Ol•llff ~ty Ed~r
' Al\i•rt W, l•f•1.
.t.HOC:l•I• Ed!lor
Hll!'Jlllfe• a..11 Off/N
11115 lt1,h loul1v•r4 .
•111•1 A44,..pt 1.0, 1011 i90, t264t
°""' °""" • "-ai9dl:lmF-1.t.-, ~ ... ! J» WM! .. ,. Ctrttt li:ii!!!!oi I .... 2111 W•t 1&"9l IOllllYMI
ltfl """"'* at Horll'I ti (i"lli'IO ""'
·-
.Shet:Uf's U. Ricliard Drake sakl the during a S50 holdup in a Santa Ana
pair Charged as aoces!OrleS in the. deaths service station.
were .pippointed -after interrogation ' of -The D8niels wOman, wtw aMertedly
. . f~ · othtr drifters wbci are beink. he!!f . roved.'-without a pennancnt dwelling in
1 in jaSi -. t;>ne· -for the hatchet: slayjni: tne Santa Ana area and• started serving
o(' eervice statioo. manager Jerry Carlin; a· ilx-month term for mar i j'u an a
~. three. c:ibers for the impulse jdlllpg of. • poe~sio!l a week ago in. Orange ~ty
J,Jrs. . .Brown. -Jail. A' complaint seekmg charges of
-/
The printjpals in1the cues are: a{ding and abetting after a felony ~as
-ste~n Craig H'urd, ~. no addms, · been cOmmitted will ht sought against
who is. the iA]leged unofficial leader of·' her today.
the roving ·Crowd ,of a)leged pill users.. -The IS.year-old Santa Ana boy releas-
He facei charges ol. murder and ki~ ed to his parents arter his arrest. He
in the Brown cue. He ·was arrested will face the same charges as the Daniels
a~r ·a 'foot ch&ae in Norco laW:, last woman, LL Drake said.
i: "The w.·o pickups last night closes w~ ·Hennan Hendrick Tl)llor, 17, also the bOok on the suspects in the case/'
d. no known address, turned over . to Drake said today. • The' roundup of the six· persons began
exactly a week ago when two detectives
from the Santa Ana Police Dt!parjment ~ pn)birig "the Carlin case ...... received
an infonnaot's Up leading to the arrest
of a ·youth in Santa .. Ana ·who later
was ruled out as a suspect, but who
yielded information leading· to the Sil'
arrests.
''· Tennis. Classes
•
Set for Beach
Interested in learning how to play
te,Mis? 'The ijuntington Beach Recreati~n
Center is still taking potentJaJ tenrus
players in its summer tennJs program.
Marina Higli School classes are
scheduled for July 6 through July 27
aod Golden West College classes are
slated for July 7 through July 28.
Edison High School tennis classes begin
July 13 and Huntington Beach High
School cl as$es are scheduled for July
H.
Classes include n~ hours of in-
gtruction at $4. For further information
contact the RecreaLlon Center at 536·52St.
The murder of P..frs. Brown, police
said. alleged ly took place in an Orange
grove in Irvine where the victim wats
forced tG drive alter being stopped by
the group on Sand Canyon Road and
the Santa Ana Freeway.
The band had left their stalled car
near the freeway offramp and shortly
aftetwllrds allegedJy forced their way
into the teacher·s car.
Mrs. Brown was: on a trip from paying
s corfee shop tip for a teacher's mteting
in Mission Viejo to a PTA meetin1
In El Toro.
I
Freeway out of Newport Beach.
"We don 't favor any deletion ol part
of the freeway. It should go all the
way through," JU.9t said.
Fountain Valley will send copies of
lts resolution to the tranaportation com-
mittees of. the 9tate Senate and Assembly
and to local legislators.
Pool Open on Fourth
Golden West C.ollege's swimming pool
will be the only city~perated pool open
on Independence Dly, aoctrding to tbe
Huntington Beach Recreation Depart·
ment.
The cards. and fees, Which are $4
for singles and $5 for doubles, rnust
be returned by fi p.m. Tuesday.
The majesty of the Mediterranean
is captured in Henredon's
eapri
f
SUMMER SALE
featuring Henredon'1 Capri
This fabulow collection of Henredon's furniture
to include dining, bedroom & occasionaJ, all at sale prtces.
Drexel Furniture is offering their famous Esperanto collection al
substantial savings.
Heritage is reducing Its exciting M1drigal collection.
Henredon, Heritage & Drexel 'vill also oUer thel.r outlt1D~ing upholste,ry, at ~ubltantial savings .
Lamps, pictures and accessories will .iso be available at reduced prices.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
·NEWPORT BEACH
1727 Wo1tcllff Or., 642·2050
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
l'
INTERIORS
Profe11lon1I Interior
O..lgnora Av1ll1bl~IO-NSIO
)
" LAGUNA BEACH
345 North Co11t Hwy. 4'4·6551
OPEN F_RIOAY 'TIL 9
'
. -' ' '
~
Frld1y, July J, 1~70 H DAILY PJLO·r~
Budget Still Stymie~
Democrats Demand More School Funds
SACRAMENTO (UPIJ -IJ<mandiog
more moneY for ICho8b in exchange
tor their votes,, Smite Democrats today
stymied paasqe for the 'third straight
'· day of Gov. Ronald Reagan's record
16.11 blllloo state budget.
Wlaere Have Pantlaer.s Go1ae?
In case you hadn't noticed , a 35-year-old Southern
California traditiofl has ended. Black Panther fire-
worKs stands are a thing of the past. A spakesman
for the Pyrotronics Corp., which also owns Red
Devil fireworks, said a lot of people thought, incor-
rectly, that there was a connection between the mili-
tant Black Panther party and the fireworks stands.
So the name was changed to Wildcat. The fierce em~,
blem appears to be a tiger. Some of the fireworks
sold at the stands still carry the old Black Panther
label, however. ·
Marnie Seized as Suspect
In San Clemente Slaymg
By JORN VALTERZA
01 the D•llY l"llol Sl1ff
San Clemente police early today ar-
r ested a 19-year-old Camp Pendleton
Marine in the knife and bludgeon slaying
Brutal Beating
Of County· Man
Jails 2 Suspects
Two Weslll)insler men have been jailed
by Garden Grove police and charged
with the vicious be&~. on a n
unemployed bartender early Wednesday.
officers reported.
In Orange County jail scheduled to
be ,.arraigned Monday on charges of
assault with intent to commit murder
are Gerald R. Caron. 29, of 14941
Newland SI., and Joseph F. Auger, 38,
of 14082 Shirley St. Both are unemployed
construction workers, police !laid. ·
The victim , Douglas Ray Snyder, 37,
or 7691 Trask Ave., Garden Gro~. is
still in crilical condition in the intensive
care Uni t of Palm Harbor Hosp ital.
Police said shorUy after officers were
called to the Blackbird Street and Garden
Grove Boulevard area 11i·here. Snyder was
badly beaten an unidentified man called
headquarters and asked if the victim
were d'ead. An officer replied in the
negative.
"He will be next lime,'' the caller
reportedly threatened and hung up.
Officers said Caron was picked up
(or questioning Wednesday night and
Auger booked Thursday afternoon.
Residents of the area where the
crime was committed said they saw ty,·o
men, one beating Snyder with his hands
and feet and the olher acting as a look
out.
Police sai d they suspect that Caron
beat Snyder as Auger kept watcl1.
of Mrs. Connie Lynn Johnson, 20, !he
expectant mother beaten and stabbed
to death more than two weeks ago .
Marine Pfc. Frankie 'Vayne ?i.1ellino,
attached to Headquarter!! Company, Se-
cond Battalio n, Second Infantry Training
Regiment. was booked on murder
charges about I a.m. today after more
than two weeks of intensive investigation.
Detective Lt. Robert ?.1ason and his
partner Leonard Goodwin arrested the
young serviceman at 12:50 a.m. at an
undisclosed apartment in San Clemente.
Thus far police say the young Marine
has made no statements about the case
to officers, and the intensive probe into
the case is continuing.
Joining in the po&Wrresr work in U1e
case will be military authorities at Oamp
Pendleton, who have already been con·
sulted.
But despite the military aspect nr
the case, officers said legal action in
the case will remain in civilian hands.
It has not yet been speci(ied whether
Mellino will be arraigned on Monday
or whethe r an ind ictment charging
murder will be sought through the
Orange County Grand Jury.
Police spent all day Thursday seeking
warrants in the case. and still will
mount an in tensive sea rch for tltrte
critical items in the case.
The knife used last June 16 to !!lab
Mrs. Johnson still i!I mi!!lsing.
The wallet belonging to tile 2Q.year-old
wife of a Vietnam veteran was not
found by police in her apartment at
416 Monterey Lane.
And several other critical pieces of
evidence still have not been located.
Interviews of other. potential witnesse!I
and sources -some of them out of
the state -will also continue, officers
said. ·
Detectives are now making plans to
travel to Texa!I and possibly Mi chigan,
Mrs. John son's home state, to talk to
sources in the case.
Huntington Beach Youth
Winner of Angel Conte~t
Christopher Rideout I!! an 8-year-0ld,
freckle·faced boy from Huntington Beach
who avidly reads the OOLY PlLOT
sports pages.
tle wants nolhing more than to be
1 professio111al baseball player some day.
And he'd like to meet California Angels'
left fi elde r Alex Johnson while he's
waiting to grow up enough for £ale
to place him in the big league lineup.
Next Wednesday night he'll get part
of hi.s wish.
The letttr Chris wrole was declared
the winner in the Early Bird Boftus
contest presented by the DAILY PILOT
in conjunction with the new!!lpaper's 2-for-
J Nlte.
shortstop Jim Fregosi as ". . . a great
baseball player and a really cool gu y."
-Karl Jacobso", 10, of 1019'l Valley
Forge Dri ve, Huntington Beach. His
"favorite Angel" was Chico Ruiz. picked
by Karl for his abilily to "come of(
the bench Ice cold to pinch hit and
come through with a base hit."
-Karl's brother, Keith, 71,,, of the
same address. He selected Alex Johnson
€or, among other reasons, being " •.•
a good sport. He doe!ln't get mad when
he strikes out." ·
Highways Filled
-But Over ~QO
Won't Come ~k
By United Prest International
Vacationers drove the nation 's high-
\V.ays today seeking fun and relaxation
over the Fourth of July weekend.
Between 560 and 660 of them in!ltead ·
would find death, the National Safety
Council said. And, the council predicted,
between 27,000 and 31 ,000 would suffer
disabling inju;ies.
The holiday began for the council at
fi p.m.. local time Thursday and ends
midnight Sunday.
The Council President fioward Pyle
said that during a normal 78-hour
w~kend at this time of year the coont
mounts to about 510 persons dead in
traffic accidents. Last year's three-day
Independence Day weekend accounted
Ior 6°1 deaths, c;oµncil. records show.
"Motorists must take special care to
<lr!ve defensively" over the holiday, Pyle
said.
In ad?ition to dangers on the highway!!,
the national Fire Protection Association
predicted J0,000 persons, many or them
children, would suffer serious injuries
from fireworks during the weekend.
The NFPA said five persons were
killed and Ulousands injured in 1969
because they ignored the hazards of
home fireworks. Cases of ma iming and
blindness were reported, the NFPA said.
Charles S. Morgan, general manager
of the group, said nearly half of the
~ccidents and injurie!I involved clas!I c
fireworks -small firecra c kers
sparkler, Roman candles and fountains'.
Meeting Planned
By First Lady
On Quake Relief
By PATRICK BOYLE
OI 1111 D•lf'f 'II•! Sl1ff
Pat Nixon will leave San Clemente
for Washington next week to meet with
a group that is coordinating private
contributions to help Peru recover from
its disastrous earthquake.
The First Lady, who returned to the.
family home here Tuesday after a tbree-
day mercy mission lo Peru, will report
on her trip and provide Information
·on current relief needs in Peru.
Giving the report hersell will be just
another example of her personal touch
that was particularly evident when she
traveled to earthquake-ravaged Peru.
During the three-day trip, she delivered
nine tons of relief supplies and di!lplayed
America's heartfelt sympathy for the
thousands of Peruvian indiam whO
survived the disaster.
And she brought back the message
that Americans must continue to help
the 80,000 refugees to rebulld their
home.s .
The Peruvian mission came about from
11 discussion with her husband on June
20, shortly after the disaster.
"I talked about the great destruction ,''
?i.1rs. Nixon recalled. "J really wished
l could do something. I said I'd like
Senate Democratic Leader George
Moecme said he ia prepared to wait
Indefinitely ror Reacan to agree to the
swap.
"If it taket monlh.s, J'm ready to
do It," the San Francisco lawmaker
told ne\\'smen Thursday night after the
Senate refu!!led to approve the spending
package on the second attempt. "I have
to belleve we'll stand fast"
But Republicans s c h·e d u I e d a
reconsideration vote on the defeated bill
f« today. Sen. Fred Marler, (R·Red-
dtng), the floor manager for it, said
be was · "optimistic" of gaining final
passage.
1be Senate, on a ~13 vote, rejected
the expenditure program five hours after
U1e As-seitibly approYed"""it"-on a-62·15
vote. It takes 27 votes to pass a budget
in the upper house.
GOP leaders considered sending· an
ambulance for bedridden Sen. Richard
J. Dolwlg pf Atherton, but decided
against the plan. They thought it might
encourage a Democrat to switch his
vote.
A compromise version of the budget
written by a second conference com-
mittee proposed $102 million more for
schools and certain guarantee!! in state
financing that Democrats also demanded .
Specifically, the compromise says the
Military Plans
U.S. Pullouts
llONOLULU (AP) -Top military
strategists meet here for five days begin-
ning Monday to plan the logistics of
withdrawing 50.000 men from Vietnam
by Oct. 15. Such a withdrawal would
reduce the le vel of U.S. forces to 384,000.
The conference, announced Thursday
by Adm. John S. ~1cCain Jr ... Pacific
military commender. follows President
Nixon's June 3 announcement concerning
additional U.S. troop deployments from
Vietnam.
Baby Gets New Liver
MONTREAL (UPI ) -An II-month-old
baby who received a new liver in
Canada's first liver transplant surgery
Feb. 12 has been released from Notre
Dame Hospital. The baby, a boy iden-
tified only as Benoit, su!fered with
cancer ol. the liver when admitted to
hospital in January.
stale will plclrup l<ldlllonal ·wtUare coot.
to counUes c&U5ed by I n c r e a 1 e d
caseload!!. lt alto provides that any
money vetoed out ot the bUdilet by
the governor would revert to the state
school fund. ·
But M09COne noted the language does
not force the admhdstraUon to spend
the money. He aaJd that could take
another appropriaUon bill unless such
a mandate i!I written into the budget,
The spending procr1m "'°°mpromlst
also guarantees the 190,000 1 t a t t
employfs, who went to work 11 111q1I
durillg the budget Im-. will he ~d along with any other debta Ille 1111(6'
rang up while it was b:udgetJeu. 'Mt
The situation was nearly 11'entlcal ~
last year, only Ulen it was auembly:·
Democrats who demanded and got mos~
money from Reagan in I.be budget after• a three-day holdout. ,... ••
e
Divided VotmgTaskForce1:
·-
Favors Lease of Machines ·:'.
By J~CK BR!lBACK
OI llM O•llY Pllitt tt•"
After almO.St on. month or husltng,
the Ora11ge County Vote Sy.stems Task
Force Thursday evening voted 4 to 3
lo recommend that .a Cubic vote coun-
ting machines be leased for '60,000 to
aid ln tabulating about 40 percent , of
Special Election "
Set for Schmitz'
Seat in Senate ·
Gov. Reaga,(I has schedqled a special
election Sept. 15 tq· fill Ute 34tb District
State Senate seat vacated by John G.
Schmitz (R·Tuslin), who was elected
to Congress Tuesday.
The governor's o(Jlce announced Thurs·
day that a primary election will be
helct Aug. 18 in the Orange County
district. If any candidate receives a
majorH.y of all the vote s cast, he will
be declared elected and the Septenlber.
runoff would be cancelled.
Schmitz won a special election to fill
the House: of R~presentatives seat left
vacant by the death of Repre!i.entative ,
James Utt in March.
Stale Republican Chairman Dennis
Ca rpenter, a Newport Beach attorney,
walked a\vay with the GOP nomination
lo succeed Schmitz in November and
was expected to defeat Democrat Dwight
W. ?i.1ize, c. Garden Grove businesmian.
If Carpenter should wln the special
election, and if the legislative session
ran into mid·Augusl he could provide
Republicans with the 21st vote they need
for tnuch of the pending legislation.
They now hold a one-man majority in
the Senate, 20 to 19.
..
the county's ballots in the Nov. 3 General.
Election. I
The existing Coleman Vote · TalJJ~
System will be used to cou11t the o"then
60 percent or the vote .
The task force recommendation Is f.o?
be made to the county supervl"sors; p~
bably Tuesday, by Chairman Ceci
1i1arks. "1
ThurSday·s session, the fourth on I~
veit.ing vote counting subjec.~ since UlC\
fouled up June 2 primary waa q u t e t
and short compared to the previQUI.
argumentative sessions. : •
Vigorously opposi11g the .use of ul,.
Cubic vote counters were Joaeph Irvine,,
Will Lindsay and Marb. They are bellev4
ed to favor voting machines such a1
the AVM or Shoup which hnmediater
tabulate baUoLs at tbe precinct lev~. ..e.
Voting for the Cubic tests were Hata:
Vogel, George Brokate, Mrs. Janice soe#.
and Henry Quigley. Three tan forci-
members were absent.
Cubic is similar to the Colemaa sy1~
but with one major difference -tf
utilize!! the traditional paper b~llot and
reads them electronically but does no\
produce the troubleSome punch cardi
aS the Coleman does. Il reads the ballpt(
and ~Immediately p(,sts tile result. •
Cubic's best feature i!!I the dece~
tralization of. bal\ot counting. Each o~.
the 40 machines will be placed in ~
outlying locatiori' and can tabulate vote$
from ten to 12 precinc_ts. .,
County Clerk William St John said
the machines, if approved· by ~
supervisors, will probably be u~ !"i
such areas as San Clemente, and sa
Juan CapiSlrano ind some northern COW\··
ty points. . '
Member!! of the tas~ force fa"vori""-
the Cubic system do sO becawrejt utili!p
individual ballots which Cin--'be haJ¥I.
counted later if necessary. ·
As winner of the 11bonus." Chris, of
21002 Ocean Ave., gets foUT tickets for
some future home game or tM Angels,
• baseball autographed by the Ange~
player!! ind -best part o( all - a
chance to meet his favorite Angel be fore
tile game next \Vedncsday evening at
Anaheim StRdium.
Judges selected the letter written by
Chris Rideout on the basis of its apparent
sincerity, because of Its simplicity and
its originality. Here is the eatire text
of the Jetter:
"My favor1te Angel Is Alex Johnson
because I like to set (sic) on the third
base Jilte and watch him.
to make the trip down."
"Fine. Why don't yoo?" she said her
'husband replied. So she did six days
later. This is one way out of poverty.
Letters from three olhcr Orange Coast
area boy ~ -'""'0 of them brothers -
Wt'.!re selected by judges for runner-up
honors in the Early Bird conte~
Each of lht lhrtt letter-v.•rilers wiU
rcetive two ticket~ to future Angel games
of their choice. The runners-up are;
. "He is a good left fielder and he
hits good, too.
"And t th.Ink he likes kids.·•
Chris will attend the game with his
across--the-street neighbors, Mr. and Mrs.
Guy R. Smith. and bis mother.
The Smiths have ofteR taken him,
she added, Chris said he wants to repay
his good neighbors.
Other fint ladies 'have attracted world
attention -Eleanor RooseYelt for her But, fike every shortcut, it's a long4
good deeds and concern , Jacqueline Ken-h 1 nedy for her glamorous Image, Lady s 0 ·
Bird Johnson for her efforts to improve . A mon's real hope is to learn. He
the environment. needs the basics that will get him o
But none had ever tried such • penon-decent job. ~non mercy mission ot humM con4
• A group of Gos C.Q.mp0n~"employ-
cern and diplomatic side~fccts. I Th •
Los Angeles Sen1lce Center. Other
Gos Company people are helping al
service centera in Eost Los Angeles
and Venice.
They work evenin.gs~ teaching.
Bu•i ness English. Arithmetic. Anything
tho t will help somebody get-a job.
And they'll teach anybody who
want$ to learn.
Gas Campany people don't get
any pay for this work. Exceptsotiilao-
tion. But they believe
that everybody ought
to have a fighllng
chance.
Sdorl Cllllin 611 c_,
A'°""'_., el '"""'' ll"'""t (".,_....,, w.·,.1.....-1"' In .. ,...,.., -Ronnie l,e11:rson Savago, 10, of 380
E. 16th St., Costa Mesa. He aclect.ed
"Now that 1 ha\le won four UckeU,''
he said, "I'm iiolng to take Guy And
Becky .(the Smltha) lo a baU aame."
Even Peru's exoUcalty beautiful first ees havE\,volunteered to he • ey v.e
lady, Consuela Velasco. had °"Jy viewed ioined volunteers from other buS•·
the dramaUc d"astation high In Ille no.,.. working al the South . Centro I
Andes lromahelkop(tt, ----------------------------------------
.I ' I
, I
'
f OAJLY fll:OT Frldlf, July 3, 1970
'Honor · America' Festival ·set HEW Cu~
But Leftists Score R ally al" 'R ight Wing Political S how' 3 Schools'
U.S. Funds
CC-11941 1W "'-O.llY "lift $!1lfl
Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Mayor F.
. Pmr Clements has decreed com·
missioners should appear at their
July 21 meeting wearing Bermuda
shorts and sport shirts. Clements
said Tuesday he laid down the de-
cree in keeping with the image of
the city as a: resort." Seventy-two-
year-old Commissioner Edmund R.
Burry said simply: I don't like it." •
Thret! ·Atlanta t ef!n-agers spent
a monih cleaning «P a 10-block
aection of· Nanct1 ·creek. in the
city's northwestern section. The
25 tcuckloods of junk collected
by Rhodes Haverty, 15, Bill
Ew£n9J 16, and Bob Murphy, 16,
inclitded:
-1,390 ·beer and so ft drink cans.
-10.! old car ti res.
-164 used golf bolts.
-264 buckets.
-A record player, a wheel•
barrow and a fertilizer 1p-recdtr.
• The Kolhapur, India district mag·
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The nation celebrate. !ts IHlb b~lhday
Saturday with the traditional fireworks
dilplays, pi<nics and cratocy. The z.r,..1
fettivitles wiU be in Washington, D1C.,
where thousands of per&an1 are beading
for Hooor America Day events.
SPQMOl'I of Honor America Day, who
ilk:lude evangelist Billy Graham and
entertainer Bob Hope, . ~timate that
more than 200,000 will participate Satur.
day in memorial and p a triotic
Cfttmonie$. at the nation 's capital.
Going to Washington for the Honor
Amerlca-Jndependence Day celebra-
tions is a 17-car train reserved for
J,200 persons from New York City· a
traJn bringing 400 persons fl'<llll Rich-
mond, Va .. and a 500-<:ar motorcade
brincing many ethers from the same
area; 1!,..chartered plane can-ying 150
high ocliOol pupils from the Dalla!, Tex.,
area, and many others fmn other parts
of the country. .
Graham Aid at a news o:inlerence
Friday, 'lHonor America Day is not
far hawks and doves , or Democrats
or Republicians, or black or white. lt
is all of us together. It
A special two-minute salute throughout
the nation, with church bells chiming,
train whistles blasting and motorists
sounding their horrui: at J 1 1.m. local
time, was urged by ttie Honor America
sponsors.
· Boy Scouts ln Yirwinia, carrying an
Amerlcan flag on a baton, were nmning
from Williamsburg to the national
~apital. They plan to be there whl!fl.
Graham conducts: religious services at
the Lincoln Memorial. Hope will lead
the activities, Including a Bta11e l!lhow_
and firewu'ks display. ·
Beauties Arriv e
WASHINGTON (AP) -To one veteran
antiwar ora:aniur the JuJy Fourth
"Honor America" exlravagania ln the
nation's capital "ill the kind of thing
tha& took place In Hitler's Germany."
"It's all there -folkrole, aectarian
polltic11, just like Nazi Germany. It's
&eary," stewart Meacham says, "It
really is."
Meacham's advice to the Jeft:
"Stay away from It. Any attempt to
get into it makes it more Interesting
and builds It."
Generally, th~: organized left seems
to be following Meacbam's counsel and
is Ignoring· the event.
But no one cao aafely predict the
reaction d. the di~ganize1f left -that
coDectioO o( ragtag revolutionaries, Yip-·
pies, politicized hippies and street people
who band together Wlder names like
While Panthers, the lJ~Against-the-Wall,
tbe STP.
"There's a lot of people coming,"
said a tall young man with long brown
hair and a sleeping bag strapped to his
back. "And there's going to be a lot
of political disagreement."
To the far left, the organized , the
unorganized and the di sorganized
segments included, the production featur·
ing Bob Hoe and the Rev. Billy Graham
is a political show, pure and simple,
and a right-wing one. at that.
"It's a disgraceful erploitatlon of
religion by an administration using this
kind of thing as a means to prop itself
u p,'' s aid Mea c ham , a
former Presbyta"ian pastor w~o helped
build Jast November's massive antiwar
demonstration in Washington.
Originally. Abbie Hoffman planned to
call the nation's Yippie tribes to the
capital for a "Festival of Life" on the
Fourth.
•
WASHINGTON (UPI) HEW
SecreUry Elliot L. Rldludaon aft.r
only nine days in office, has ~end
federal funda cut olf lo three Soulietn
ICbool diotricts for failing lo desegTegslo tllelr odtools .
"11Us ill a vf'!ty decisive action on
the part ci Mr. Ridtardson," Hid one
HEW civil rights official at the Depart..
meat d. Health, Education and Wellare.
But ottter HEW &OW'Ces denied tb.tt
the move indicated tllf! department. waa
!hilting emf:ilasis from court acliol). to
fund cutoffs to achieve school desegrega·
t.ion:.
Rk:Nrdson, who pn:mi9ed at a news
ooo€erence Jl.ttle ZS that he would use
in "appi:opiate" caees the cutoff pro.
cedure w>lely UJed during the J~
administration: said 1bunday he would
maintain communicatkins with the three
Soothem disiricts in hopes of 'bringing
them into compliance.
Affected, by the ooler aN! the Hendry
County 8Qard of Public Inltruction in
• La Belle, Fla.: ~ County Schoola
in Chester, S.C., aOO Nacogdoches
Indepen®nt School O i s tr i c t in
Nacogdoches, Tex.
Until Thursday's fund cutoff wa s an-
nounced, HEW had used the procedure
only once since. the administration an·
nounced in July, 1969, that it would
rely mainly on coort suits to force
desegregation iilstead of cutoffs.
The action was announced on ttle same
day-that Sen. Walter F. Mondale (D--
Minn.), accused the Nixon administration
or "statistical gimmickry " in claiming
that one million black scbool children
in the South will be f:.!ll'Olled in integrated
school systems in September.
lstrate drafted 150 .policemen Mon-
day night to drive an elephant
named 11 .. chl BOhodur back to his
stable. Barchi, a prize possession
of the" Maharajah of Kolhapur,
threw off his Mahmout driver while
being taken to a pond Monday for
a-bath. The elephant then roamed
the city's streets, smashing a rick ..
shaw and a scooter, toppling a pow-
er pole and knocking down fruit
stalls.
spE.ial -events have been schecbiled
frOm California to Maine. In Hawaii,
the nation's youngest state, an Honor
America parade will be held at Waikiki.
The parade chairman, Robert Cole, nys
"there will be no banners, no· &igns,
just flags." •
Maine Gov. Kenneth M. Curtig has
proclaimed "Operation Patrlotim" for
2 p.m. Saturday, uking the state's resi-
dents to "join with their fellow Ameri-
cana In • minute of meditatiorr, reflect-
ing on the common bleMing of ci~
ship.''
Miss USA, Debbi~ Shelton, ·pulls back her hair as Miss Germany,
Irene Newmann. watehes on their arrival in Miami Thursday for the
Miss Universe pageant. The new,.Miss Universe will be selected July
11 at Miami Beach.
But after "Honor America" Day was
announced Hoffman canceled his hap-
pening. One close associate explained,
"Abbie thought it would be a massacre."
Another sOurce said the decision was
political and would have been made
with or without "Honor America" Day.
Mondale, chairman of a select Senate
committee on equal educational op-
J>ortunities, said in a statement lhal the
administration failed to say how many
schools are desegregated in eadl district:
classified as desegregated or whether
schools classified as integrated "are
something less than 99 percent black .'' • A Miami boy named Dorothy,
who says he has gotten into several
fights because of his name. was sentenced ·Friday to two months in .
fail for hitting a man named Cash.
Miami Municipal Judge Arthur Hut ..
toe passed sentence on Dorothy L.
Woodw•nl J r., 19. after Woodward
was convicted or striking James
Cash, assistant principal of AUapat-
lah Junior Hi~h School. Hultoe said
Woodward, who was not a student
at the ecbool. was visiting a girl-
friend at the time of the fight.
SEATO Assails
N. Vie~ Action
In Cambodia
McGovern 'Equal Time'
Rejected by Networks
Renn ie Davis, another of the Chicago
7 conspiracy trial defendants, made a
spoofing attempt . to get the an-
tieslablishment included on the Honor
America Day program.
He propo5ed , among other things, that
poet Allen Ginsberg, a New Left gutu,
be given equal time with Billy Graham ,
and that the Washington Monument be
sloshed with a many-ci>lored coat of
washable palnt for the occasion.
Abrams Surgery
Said Succes s;
Rec ove ry Starts
• •
TM countu gavt Charlotte,
N.C., Memcrial Hospitat 96 pint&
of con/ilcaU:d liquor Monday. A
hospital tpoktsmcn raid tht
whilket1 will bt wed to makt
"bism.u,th mu! bourbon,''. which
ht dt'tcribed.a.r tM toorld'1 btit
btd&ort lotion.
• A judge sentenced a 58-year-old
messenger for the British Broad·
casting Corp. (BBC) Tuesday to six
months in prison for hoarding more
than 40,000 letters to the BBC over
the past two years. A lawyer for
William Newby told the court New-
by meant no harm and simply liked
collecting things. A psychiatrist'•
report to the court said Newby had
an "overdevel()J>ed collecting in· atinct. II • Duririg Monday night's Dade
City, Fla., city commission meet·
Ing, somebody noticed the City Hall
drapes ablaze.' A fellow smoking a
cicar bad inadvertedly touched his
&togie to the curtains. Water was
tossed on the drapes and nobody
was injured. The fellow witll the
cifar was Dade City Fire Chief
Roel-re.
MANILA (AP) -The Soulbeul Alla
Treaty Orgarllal.icn todoy condemn«!
North Viel.Dame&e military attacks in
Cambodia ·and offered , all pcosible
..... -. to dipl<metic efforts to restore
peace thore. But it offa:'ed no military
aJd to the beleoguered Cambodian
llOVomm<lll, teovq tllOI to Its Individual
members.
A comm\lOOlue issued at the tnd ol.
the 15th annual meeting of the alliance'•
council cl ministers urged a ' 0 political
10lution bMed on Cmnbodia'• desife to
~MIS aoYereWaty and neutrality."
The communique 8!JPlauded the efforts
of a number ol. naUons to bring about
a diplomatic oolution and the witl!dnlwal
of au lottign lluojii!rom Qonbodia.
'Itit MMret..y-ceneraI of the alliance,
Jeeus Vargas, told newsnen the Cam-
bodian govemmeat had made no req-
f<Jr mJlilaey help f""" SEATO, Mid
"there ia nollq SEATO can do -
we mll!t respect Cambodia'• neutrality."
Oambodla is not a tnember ol. the
11lianc<, 1'tlldl inclµdes the United
States, Thailand, the P h i 1 i p p t n e 1 ,
Pakht.an, Australia, New Zealand, Brit·
ain and France. The .SEATO treaty
makes aid against aggtession available
to Cambodia, Laos and South Vietnam,
but they have to ask for it.
. Secretary of. state William P . .Rogers
told the delegates Thursday the United
S-does not favor SEATO military
Involvement In Cambodia.
I NEW YORK (UPI) -The notion's
three television networks plan to present
programs offering varioUll viewpoints on
foreign &ffalrs, but· they won't give Sen.
Georges. McGovern (0.S.D.), equal time
to respond to President Nixon's plan
for peace.
The networks -ABC, CBS and NBC
-'.lburlday rejected McGovern's de-
mand for time to explain the "amend·
ment for ending the war" he is co...
1pon.soring with Mark O. HaUield CR-Ore.)
. Nixon appeared Wednesday night in
a "conversatton" wittl senior newsmen
from the "'1;works in Los Angeles.
McGovern chargid the President, during
the program, was "dlasing the same
illusions that have bedeviled us in
Southeast Asia for 10 years."
Leonard H. Goldenson, president of
Amrrican Broadcasting O:impanies Inc.,
sakl AaC News will present a prime
time program next Monday featuring
Democratic National Comm it tee
Chainnan Lawrence .F. O'Brien, Sen.
Edmund-S. Muskie CO.Maine ), and Rep.
Henry S. Reuss (!).Wis.)
"'lbese three distinguished members
ol. the Democratic Party wilJ have (he
opportunity to prelett their Points of
view on the important Issues Of the
day.'' Galdenson said in a telegram to
M~ern. He also said the network
has presented contrasting viewpoints on
subjects Nixon discussed.
Robert V. Evans, vice president and
general counsel of Columbia Broad.
casting System lnc. said McGovern's
request did oot "qualify under Ule equal
opportunity provisk>n" ol the Federal
CClm.municatloos Act ''since thit pro-
It's Hot Traveling. East
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•
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vision is limited to political candidates."
Evans said CBS had attempted to
interview McGovern on the subject of
Nixon's appearance, but was informed
the Senator was unavailable.
He further 58..id in 'a telegram to
McGovern tha t Sen. J . William Fultfright
(D·Ark.), a leading antiwar Senator,
would appear Sunday on the CBS news
interview broadcast "Face the Natin."
Evans also said Sen. Frank Church ( 0-
ldaho), appeared on a June 30 broadcast
that examined the Cambodian situation
and expressed his views on constitutional
resJX:>nsibilities of the President.
And NBC PreSident Julian Goodman
said the network has scheduled a one-
hour program next Thursday for a
discussion of issues relating to the
Southeast Asia war, including the
McGovern-Hatfield amendment.
"Spok esmen for diffettnt points of .view
will be invited" for that program, Good·
man said in a telegram to McGovern.
"In view of the scheduling of this
~pecial program anCI the other op-
portunities that have been afforded in
regular and special programs for presen·
talion of varying points of view on
these is.sues ... we respectfully de<:line
your request."
Ex-slave, 128,
Kno:ws Histo ry;
Was Part of It
Da vis didn 't push his suggestions for
long or very loudly: He had another
purpose in mind . "We wanted to show
it up as the right-wing thing that it
is. Now the hell with it," he said.
Soviets, Arabs
Study Requests
For Armaments
MOSCOW (UPI) -The b!p-ranking
soldiers and diploma ts ~Egypt and
the Soviet Union today worked on details
vf further Soviet military aid to the
Arabs, with possible guktance from the
Commu nist Party Central CommJUee,
diplomatic sources said.
While President Gamal Abdel Nasser
of Egypt relaii:'ed and had "medical
checkups for his chronic sciatica and
diabetes, the sources said, two sul>
committees of military and diplomatic
experts negotiated the detajls of his
requests for warplanes, missiles and
manpower.
The central c<>mmittee is the ultimate
authority of the Soviet party and it
met Thursday for the first time this
year. The officially published purpoise
was discussion of plans to boost
agrlcultural production.
SAIGON (AP) -Gen. Creighton W.
Abrams, commander of all U.S. forces
in Vietnam, underwent surgery OU.
morning for Temoval of his gall bladder
in a U.S. military hospital in Japan,
• ' J the U.S. Command announced. ADrams
is 55.
"The operation was oompletely auc-
__. oessfu1," die announcement said. HGen.
Abrams is rece1v1ng normal
postoperative care and is making 1ood
progress in his reeovery from ~
surgery ."
The Surgery had been scheduled for
M:1me time, and Abrams entered the
hospital in Japan two days ~go, the
statement added.
The command said Abrams will return
to Saigon after a convalescent leave.
Mrs. Abrams and three of the couple'•
children, Bruce, 9; Jeanne, 16; and
Eliazbeth, 14, flew to Japan and were
present at the hospital during the opera.
tion and will slay with the general
unUl he is released.
Abrams has been the top ""'11r!Wnder
of U.S. kr'ces in Vietnam sin<:e July
3, 1968. He served &s deputy commander
under Gen. W.rlliam C. Weetmoreland
foc nearly a year prior to moving into
the top spot.
He gained a reputation during World
War JI as a tank rommander and served
in the U.S. 4th Armored Division from
that time it was activated in 194.1 until
V-E Day in 1945.
BARTOW, Fla. (UPI) -Old Charley
Smith isn't really sure his birthday is
Saturday, but the one time handyman
for Jesse James knows for certain
he was first sold,.as a slave o• July
j ,
Nixon Number I
• in Te ens' Top Ten Agnew, Hope
Charley, wizeaed and balding, will be
128 Saturday. The years are by his NEW YORK (UPI} -If there were a rebellion against the es·
count; the date is compliments of the tablishment by the nation's youth, it hardly could be detennined by
federal government. the results of a poll of teen·agers. They picked President Nixon as
Charley says he remembers when he their most popular American, and Vice President Spiro T. Agnew was 12 years old he was enli~ aboard was 9th . .
a wood en sailing shi p not far from --t-Mom and dad came in second and comedian Bob Hope ran
his home i11 what ls no\v Libya and third in the survey by the electronic computer programming insti·
brought to the United States. tute in which the closest thing to a hippie, yippie or rock singer Was
A11d he remembers clearly that it television star Bill Cosby.
was a July 4th -the United Stales Cosby placed 10th and last , and the only Negro named. was only 78 then -when he "'as placed R I ed Th d th II d ed on the au ction block in New Orleans e eas urs ay, e po . was con uct among 4,000 high
and sold as a slave to a Texas rancher. school juniors and seniors tbroughoul the country. They were asked
"t took th e same name as him _ to list the 10 living Americans they most respected and were given
Charley Smith,'' the Negro says. ..1 300 names of well known persons in such fields at politics, sports en·
tertainmcnt and science. ' worked and lived la his ranch house In Texas. Additionally the teens were permitted to write in any living
"I remember when President LinC(lln Am erican candidates not on the list. ~
called fretdom day and 1 was J ree," Besides parents, other write.in s tions included favorite
said Charley, "I never was treated like teachers, who ranked sixth, and "no ch · " appeared frequenUy
a slave, though. 1 Jived in my dad'~ enough to give Jt seventh place.
house just like his threfi boys aod two The winners in order of popularity were:
girls did. That's what J called Mr. Smith 1. President Nixon
-dad." 2. Parents
Charley today slls in his li ttle "stn re" 3. Bob Hope
where he lives and stlls i;ort drinks 4. Astronaut Neil Armstrong
3nd recall!! his past years in a sure 5. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy
voice. ' -6. Teachers
"l rlidn't read my history, I knew 7. No choice
it," he boasls. 8. Billy Graham
Charley still v.·ears two belts. One 9. Vice Pre$ident Splro T. Agnew
hold! up bis trou5ers and tilt otller 10. Bill Cosby
Is where he used to wear his gunbelt.
\ l
-.-. ~
' DA!LV ,!LOT s I,
•
Reshuffle
In Kremlin
Reported
·Bomb Blnsts Rock Hippies ·oip
LONDON (U PI) -The
posslbilily ol a lop le""I
Kremlin resdiuffle g al n e d
support today from a cryptic
Soviet report from Moscow.
_ The report said Oommunist
party chief Leonid S. Brezhnev
is ill and hinted at possible
changes In th e leadership.
The report came from Vic-
tor Loois, the Soviet journalist
who in the past h a s
foresfladowed major , dlanges
in Russia, including the outser
o( Nikita S. Khrushchev from
the premiership.
....
•
Brezhnev has been absent
from the Supreme Soviet or
the Russian Federation and
may cmcel his lldM!duJed visit
to Romania. He is . said to
be suffering from high blood
pressure.
"W,.tern obs«.vers have A-~ Away We Go liad to draw their own con-•.U
clusioos about a possible
UPI Tel-...
Kremlin reshuffle," i o u is Comedian J 8.ckie Gleason, 53, is shown with his
reported. titide-tc>-be, Beverley McKittrick, 37, at his home
The reshuffle r:wnors, he ad-in Wentworth, England. The couple will marry Sa~
ded in his dispat.dJ to the urday, j ust 10 days after Gleason's divorce from his
newspaper Evening News. wife of 34 ye ars.
"would gain probability" if _::.::,::_:::_:::_::=::...-----~------
Brezhnev fails to aUend the
plenum ol the Communist
party's Central Committee.
However, Brezhnev has
i;ince attended the Central
Committee meeting. But hi~
tri)> to Butiiarest apPare~yl
i~ still uncertain, if nof unhke-
Jy.
There have been repeated
"' reports in the past of a
Kremlin reshuffle this year.
They are either ignored by
the Kremlin or d e n l e d
outright. '
Penn Rail
Probe Slated
Jobless Rate Drops_
First Time in Year
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
nation 's unempkiymeot rate
dropped in June for the first
lime this year aJthou!ll an
additimal 1.3 mi 11 i on
Americans g o u g h t un&Uc-
cessfuUy to find jobs.
The seeming contradiction
was afMibuted by the Labor
Depar1ment Thursday to th e
fact that the number of adult
wome\i and teenagers seeking
toward the four percent mark.
The nlllllber of unemployed
Americans totaled 4.7 million
Jasl. month, a rise of 1.3
million over ~'fay. The civilian
labor force increased 2.3
million to 84.1 million.
WASHINGTON (AP) -A work fe!I tar below ex-
full-scale investigation of the pectalions.
The government said the in-
crease in the labor force -
those Americans working or
actively seeking jobs -was
much -6maller tlian had been
expected. The Labor Depart-
ment had predicted 2.5 million
teen-agers would seek work
Northern I re land
BELFAST, Northern Ireland
(UPI) -Several bomb ex-
plosions rocked Belfast and
Londonderry toda y and the
British government annou~
iil London it would keep troops
here as Jong as necessary and
with orders to shoot back ii
fired upon.
Two bomb blasts audible for
six mites ripped apart a
British army recruiting center
in Belfast early today and
aronists set fire to a Roman
Catholic school. l n LAn-
donderry, a firebomb exploded
against a house but did little
damage.
British Home Secretary
Reginald A-1audling, speaking
in the House of Commons in
London after a two-day visit
to Northern lreJand, said Bri-
tain was determined that
violence would not succeed
and there would be no change
in Nortilern Ireland's status
v.rithout ~ the consent of the
people 'here.
Nationalists in Norther n
Ireland have been fighting for
retum of the northern pro-
vinces known as Ulster to the
Republic of Ireland. Former
Laborite Home Secretary
James Callaghan tpld Com-
rTions the ouUawecl .Irish
Republican Army llRA) and
extreme "Protestant bodies"
were the "small. dark evil
forces at \\·ork'' in Northern
JreJand.
An unexplodt!d bomb was
found attached to the head-
quarters of the Protestant
government unionist party oo
the oUler 1ide ol the city
when wires were seen prcr
truding from a doorway.
In London, police raided five
homes and seized machine
guns, rifles and ,rriQre 'than
20,000 J'Ol.Md's • of ammunition
they said they believed were
to be smuggled into Northern
Ireland. Eight persons were
taken in for questioning.
One man v.·as hospil..alized
for shock in the l a.m.
recruiting center b o m b I n g
which broke windows i TI
neighboring buildings and lit-
tered the streets with glass.
Damage from the fire at
St. Joseph'l Roman Catholic
Primary School, a quarter
mile from the recruitment
center, was not serious.
· Six persons have died in
t:he violence that broke out
last We:f!:kend ever the lm-
prisonnfent c f Bernadft!e
Dev\M, a Roman Catholic civil
rights leader and member of
the Brilisti Parliament, for her
part in last y'ear's rioLs.
Supporters of the Rev. Ian
Paisley, a Protestant militant,
marched t.c the home of
Premier James Chichester-
Clark outs ide Belfast Thurs.-
day night and delivered a peti·
tion demanding his resigna-
tion.
Capp Can't
Oppos e Ted
CA~1BRIOGEl, Mass. (UPI )
-Cartoonist Al Capp says
he cannot run against Sen.
Edward t.1. Kennedy in the
November election because of
Massachusetts' voter regislra·
tion laws .
Capp changed hiS registra·
tion from Democrat to
Republican sometime in the
past few months. Hence, he
cannot meet the requirement
that a candidate be a
registered party member £or
at least a year.
He said he would remain
interested in stale politics and,
as' a parting shot, criticiz.ed
Massachusetts.
"A state that doesn't object
to a visit from Abbie Hoffman
or Jerry.Rubin but does cbject
to a visit from the vice presi-
dent Is not a healthy .J(ate,"
he said.
50,000 at Pop Fesiival
BYRON, Ga. (VP!) -
Sweltering Jong-haired hippies
akinny-dipped in EcheecMee
Creek near iht Middle (dorgia
Raceway Thursday on the eve
of the second AUanta lnterna·
tional Pop Festival.
By nightfall, more than
50,000 young persons from
throughout the United States
were crowding int.o "the
world 's most expen.sive soy·
bean patch" where at 3 p.m.,
EDT today more than twice
that number were expected
lo 2ssemble under a blazing rn for tile start of the blaring
hard rock festi val.
Youths set JJP tents and
swigged &oft drink! 6y the
truckload ptk>r to the start
of the: event.
Temperatures aoared over
100 degrees for the .second
consecuUve day, aendini hip-
pies -male and female -
scrambling into the coolln&
waters of the Echeconoet
Creek.
The festiva l is officially
advertised to run through Sun-
day night, bot 'promoters aaid
a benefit performance pro-
bably will be added Monday, ,
the benefits going to combat ~ .
drug abuse in Atlant,'s hippie '
district.
Gov. Lester Maddcx ordered
slate troopers and agents of
the Georgia Bureau o (
Investigalion into the plywood-
enclosed festival area just of( •
tourishjamrned Interstate 75, ,..
• •'
Tod1y, f rid1y, it'• tho FN!ntieramen ind Joanie;
S1!).lrd1y.J Billy P.li-.e; Sund1y, Tb11 Ch1p1rr1l Brother•
-j1Ht l few of the m1ny et.i.r1 •PP"•rins 1t Knott'•
1ummer •long r.old~n C.w1k1dt1 of Country ind
V.'e!tern J\l111ic. Firework• on the like in Fiettl Vill110
e~ery ni1ht!
r • . ,
1
'
" ,.
•
Penn Central is being under-The department a Is o
taken by the Interstate .~m-reported, without elaboration,
merce Commission follow1ng the j<lbless rate for Negroes
In eM"!y June but the actual
number WI! ooly two million. -· '
the railroad's petition for rose from eight to B.7 percent!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.!
re organ I z at ion Wlder last month, returning to the
bankruptcy Jaws. April level after a dip in May.
IOC Cllairman George M. -The noo.white unemployment
Stafford said Thursday the rate w~ seven percent a year
commission i;taff had, been no and 7.1 percent in Mardi
reviewing the firm 5 a<:· 1970. The 15"-year low in eounttng practices and finan-
cial transactions for several noowhite unemployment was $.7 percU.t in February 1969. w~~i.itution of a formal in· The overall unemployment
vestig.ation •.. will allow the rate for June was 4.7 percent,
commission to examine the rompared with five percent
operating practices er the in May ~. 3.4 percent a
rallroad and will also give year ago. N I x o n ed-
it access to the records or ministration officials h • v e
t.he Penn Central's affiliated -predicted the rate will hit 51,t
compmries," be said. percent befcre d~ again
Dropping In
Sky Diver Surprises Folks
BELLEVILLE. Mich. (UPI )
-Barney and Janet Lastinger
have a son who is a sky
diver, among other things.
Thursday night he dropped in
on them for the first time
In six years -from an
altitude o! S,SOO feet .
"I Uioughl ~·d come back
east for a visit and surprise
my parents," said Barry
Lastinger, 27, who has been
living in Calirornia. "I was
going to make my l,OOOlh
jump and I wanted them lo
see it."
Friends got the Laslingers
to go to the ninth hole oC
the executive goU COUl'5e here
with a phony story that Arnold
Palmer would be there. Barry,
an electrical engine e r,
motorcyclist and black-belt
karate experi who's been sky
diving for _eight years, ar·
ranged to fly over the golf
course.
He landed oo the green with
his parents watd'lin' I n
amazement.
"I hope you weren't disap.
pointed that I wasn't Arnold
Palmer," B~rry said as ,he
folded his black and orange
nylon parachute and peeled
oil his jump suit.
RED DEVIL
ASSORTMENTS,
FROM $2.95 TO $49.95
FltT#Orb fJll)' b1 t-.:•HY aold, pot•••••d or d!Kh•rt•d only Witllln cltln lll'tl•r• nl• I• •IMO,.
lrtd,
* ~IYCIWIITAILl11-NIV.T10/llAT ' * MD DlV!LITMDS lVUYWHlllt.
•
s .A
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•
FOOD
and
BOWLING
3 BIG
DAYS
FRI., JULT l
12 NOON te 1 A.M.
SAT., JULT 4
t A.M. te I A.M.
SUN., JULT 5
9 A.M. t• MIDNIGHT
FOOD
S,.cl•I ~•nu, Items
from • Hamburg1r to a
Compl1tti Meal. Pay rq·
ul•r price for 1st Mtal,
1ach 2nd Meel of equal
price or lower, PAY
JUST A PENNY I I I I
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Pay the regular prlc•
for the lat (3rd, Sth,-etc.I
game .• , the 2nd , 4th,
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26H HAHOR ILYD.
COSTA MUA 545°1112
•
II CHILDREN AND
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9-UMONTHS I 2.62-.,,. 1.21
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rold,upCOfll('lliW I ,,, I
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YOU $$$$1
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"
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-----....... ----------..... ~ ..
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~----""""""'-------~---. •
• • • •
•
..
•
-....:: -------------------_-.,,.__--.;;,~ ...... ;:;;;;::~-=--=--:::;:--::===-===========~;::;::;::;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiii~iiiii:::iji;;;:;iiiiii;;~
' • ' • DMLY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Jury Service Is Vital
" I
La\v and order descended In rather une xpected
fashion on the streets of Westminster recenUy.
The la\Y was section 227 of the California Code of
Civil P rocedures and the order, carried out by uni·
formed deputy marshals, says citizens m ust report
promptly for jury service.
The officers literatly ·recruited qual ~fied jurors .orr
the streets. citing a cou,rt order issued under section
227, and telling the startled residents to hasten to \Vest
Orange County Muo icipal Court.
The situation, '"'bile mildly comic. was ~ot co mmon.
Nevertheless it did serve as a useful reminder of the
service that jurors provide. Serving on a jury is a high
exercise in citizenship.
The action al so reminded citizens of Ute need for
such service: the court requ ires 100 potential jurors
each Tuesday and Thursday, the days set for jury trials.
Those who act as j urors a re making an important
contribution to their government. They are owed more
than the judges' ~ratitude.
The CHP Roadblocks
'fhey may raise the body tetnperature of the mo-
tor ist, but vehicle inspections by the California High·
way Patrol are a great value. . .
Not only do they pinpoint mecha nical trouble which
could lead to accidents. but they also provide a free
nlechanical check of your car.
h1ost motorists rarely pay a ttention to their au.to·
mobile unless it requires gas or oiJ. And busy service
station a ttendants rarely take the time to tell the o'vner
everything that's wrong with it.
While the func tion of the West Orange County CHP
•• -roadblocks is lo save lives, their 2~plus point checkup
will also tell you if your mufflers""'are rusted through,
your headlights out of alignment, or if your engine is
discharging excessive amounts ot blue smoke, a good
indication tliat it is due for an overhaul.
Roadblocks are only unpleasant insofar as they re-
quire a IO-minute delay and that the owner is obliged
to have the malfunctions corrected.
. You can't tell the Highway Patrol to, go awa}'.' and
II1at you'll fi x your car when tl's convernent. Their at-
titude is that unsafe cars don't belong on the road. And
they're right. '
Developing Cultural Life
The cultural life, often unheralded, is not being
neglected in Huntington Beach.
Evidence that this is so can be found in the many
activities sponsored by the library and in the grand
plans for the city's future central library.
Further, thp" a re two live theaters in the city and
several active.~ leagues ..
Art is getting a particularly big boost, and it's com-
ing from businessmen. They have put up $2,500 in prize
money for a statewide art contest.. sponsored by the
city and Jnternational Art Scholarships.
Called Prospectus Art/'70, the exhibition \Viii be
presented in the mall of Huntington Center Sept. 13-25.
More than 1,000 are expected to enter before the July
10 deadline.
Another benefit of the exhibit is that $5,000 in schol·
arships will be granted as a resul t of t he competition.
Such teamwork, enterprise and generosity picture
Huntington Beach in a pretty good cultur al light.
·English Grat1ti1aar and Spelling Are Cockeyed Crosswalks
Time to Rationalize Them
Among uneduc·ated people whose
language is described as "substandard"
the verb "to be" is orten cOnjugated
as follows:
Singular Plural
Jst person I is • we is
2nd person )'Ou is you is
3rd person he is they is
Educated people find this conjugation
extremely. I u n n y.
However I should
like to ask the read.
er, if he has been
tempted to laugh. to
control himself for a
minute.
In th e standard
conjugation of this
verb there are four di£ferf:n~ forms to
be learned: I am,
thou art, he is, we
are, you are, they are. In the substandard
conjugation, however, there is only one
form, usable in all six situatjons. Now
a fundamental principle of efficiency
is to get the most do11e with the least
effort, using standard. interchangeable
parts. We use electrical coitnection~ of
the same size and design whether we
are plugging in a toaster, a table lamp,
a radio_. or a hair dryer. It \\'Ould
be silly to have plugs of different kinds
for each item lo be connected. The
substaRd.ard co njugation of the verb "lo
be" is. from this poi.nt of view. a great
improvement over "good English."
INDEED AN EFFICIENCY engineer
coold make many helpful suggestions
about the English la11guage. If the usual
way ol maklng a past tense is to add
"ed" to the end of a verb, why Bot •
make the principle general and say "run-
ncd. "rided." "swimmed," "gived." "sit·
led." etc.7 Many of the errors in English
made by young children, from whom
those examples are drawa, result·simply
from the facJ tllat child i'en are a great
deal more logical 'than th e Engli'sh
language.
English spelling, which is about the
most cockeyed system in the world.
provides even greater opportunities for
the efficiency engineer. To ha ve to write
"sewing a seam" makes about as much
sense as writing "gewi11.g to bed." If
we have learned lo read correctly the
sentence, "There was a tear i• his
shir t and a tear in his eye," how would
we go on from there to figure out
how to pronounce "fear,'' "pear,"
"bear," "beard," "heard,'' "'heart," and
"rearm"?
\VHl ', THEN, DOESN'T Congress ap-
point a commission of linguistic ef-
ficiency engineers to go to work ud
rati onalize the Engl ish language? It is
to the lasting credit of President
Theodore · Roosevell that he at least
tried to do something about it. He
ordered the government printing offict
to use simplified spellings for a large
number of words. But all he got for
bis pai•s was an enormous storm of
public protest. When hJs successor, Presi·
dent Taft, was inaugurated in 1909, the
New York Sun bade Roosevelt farewell
in a malicious one·word editori al,
'"MIRU!" ·
The Chicago Tribuae under the late
Colonel Robert R. McCormick use to be
pretty hot oit spelling reform, but since
hi! death It! ardor has cooled. It still
uses "tho,'' ~'altbo,'' "thru," "lhruout"
and ''burocracy." But "buro" is gone-
and so are "sherif' and "tarif" anJ
"frate rate."
IT'S TBIE SOJ\fEONE look up the
cudgels again for rational grammar
and rationa' spe,tling. The advantages
are obvious. ~h a dece11tly phonetic
system school hildren would be saved
hundreds of lUons or houri of dri ll.
With simpler conjugations, -millions of
people would be saved the em·
barrassment of realizi11g that they have
said "it don't" in front of someone
they shouldn't ha ve said it in front of.
Tea.s of thousands of English teachers
would look younger.and live longer.
But help is on the way, if 11ot for
our grammatical system, at least for
our spelling. Someday soon a phonetic
typewriter is going lo be invented -
it may already be in the development
stage. Such a typewriter will not be
able to distinguish between "~ight, "site"
and "cite." It will print all three in
tht same way. But no confusi on \\'ilr
result, as some believe. 1£ you doubt
this, dictate to a skilled stenographer
the sentence, "I can cite you many
examples o! building sites chosen on
first sight."
By S. l. Hayakawa
President
Su Franciaco Stlf.t C.Ollege
Man and Supermarket
One ot life's little ordeals for a mere
man is supermarket shopping.
It is for him more a test of endurance
and survival lhan of character.
For if there is one place in the modern
world where woma n doesn't have to
11truggle to obtain equal rights. it is in the
average supermarket. 'I'here, in tilt unen-
ding war between the se xes, she has
every advantage ; man is at every disad·
vantage.
A grown man is as out of place alone in
a supermarket as a ~year-old child at a
picnic of banshees and harpies. There is
something about his presence there that
arouses the killer instincts in veteran
women shoppers,
THEY TAKE our on him all the pent·
up wrath they have felt in centuries of
submission to male dominalion.
All a guy making his first trip through
111 supermarket has to do is to innocently
11sk a lady where the cans or dog fnod
are. A look of unholy glee crosses her
-----
Friday, July 3, 1970
The editortal page of Ille Doily
Pilot seek.I to inform. ond stint·
ulatl reoders by pre.sen U11 g tlifs
NWJPOP'T11 opinioftf and com·
menta"fl on topic• of tnttrest
and liQ rUficance, by providing 11
forum for the e.ipre.tsion of
our riodm' opinions:-and blJ
J>f'"•thiq t he divers« vitw-pomu o/ informed observers
ond ipokt~n on topics of the
®•·
Robert N. We~d. Publisher
,.... ' ••
lial Boy le .
face a'l she deliberately misdirects him
to the frozen vegetables department.
Then by whis pered Word and eyebrow
gest ures the ladies pass the news about
him along
"This guy's a greenhorn. Let's give
him the works." From that moment on
his progress through the store is a marcb
of debacle.
If he tries to buy a steak, four ladies:
:;urround the fresh meal counter shoulder
to should~r and keep him away for 15
minutes 1vhile they chal.about household
problems.
IF HE REA CllES for a container or
rre sh milk. it is snatched from him by a
fcminii\e hand am! he turns to meet the
J;n11Jing fangs of a victorious vamplrr.
If he starts to ask a 60-year-old biddy
old enough to be his mother just where
the store hides the tomato juice, she is
likely to reply in stentorian tones:
''Are you trying to gel fresh wilh me.
young man ? Fve a good mind to alap
your face. It'~ getting so a girl isn't safe
anywhere anymore."
U he heads for U1c nearest checkout
counter. half a dozen women elbow him
out of the v.'ay. They sho1v him no mercy,
they yltld him no quarter.
But their chief educa tional weapon in
reducing him to a quivering jelly is the
wire pushcart. After he has gone less
than 50 feet Int o the store he (eels like a
squirrel on a lhroway during the ru:sh
hour.
THEY IJOU> TO Lhe exact center of
ti}\ roadway and crash into hi m head on,
i;:cn<liog T1alf or his own groceries Oylng.
They lie: in ¥/ai~ and ambush hlm on tht
turns. They smash into him from be hind
every time he pauses to select an item.
They chivvy him, harry him, stare at
him, glare at him, and every time he
opens his mouth to apologize, they bawl
him out -just because he's a man and
there. When be finally limps out, he finds
he's bleeding from half a dozen pushcart.,
cuts and his legs are bruised from ankles
to knees.
"I spent two years in the infantry. but t
never saw a battlefield quite like that,''
said one man, recalling his first visit to a
supermarket. "I ker.: looking for a fox·
hole to dive into, but there. wasn't any. I
would have surrendered, but the \Vomen
shoppers in that store didn 't seem to
want to take any male prisoners alive."
A man is fairly safe if he accompanies
his \vile to the supermarket -the ether
ladies recogni1.e he has been capt ured -
but any fellow who .has to go it alone
ought to get a cQmbat medal for each
trip he make."\. And· a government
disability pension If he lasts a lull year.
Dear
Gloom'"
Gus:·-
• Don't buy a Fifth for the Fourth.
July Fourth is Independence Day.
'\ -G. S. T.
Tlllt fMlllN Nlltftt N•tffT" •lfwt. ""
llMtU•ril'F ...._ .t lfll R~,·-· St!lllf
l'tllt HI ...,,. .. oi..mr •11 .. O.llr f"lltl.
Give a False
, ·Safety Sense
f
! Mailbox t ;
To the Editor :
CrOSS\Valks ·can kill our children by
giving, the m a false sense of safety.
.Everyone knows that cars are supposed
to -at crosswalks that ha\'e people
in them. Yet, there is no rea l protection
in a crosswalk, because there is nothing
that can actually ma ke a car stop.
In ord er for a car to stop, the driver must
l 1) recognize the need to stop, (2) decide
to stop. (3) be able ·to stop, and (4)
actually stop.
The tragedy in Orange the ot her day
spotlights the near tragedy in my own
family. as well as thr...Jl lher incidents
I see all too often.
LAST l\10NTll my eight·year-old sen
\\'as struck while in the crosswalk at
Bushard and Slater (which has a fou r·
1vay stop). He was wa!~ing his bicycle
across while cars in the right lane and
the left.hand t urn lane waited for him.
A third car attempted to make a "rolling
stop" in the rem::iining lane, slidin~ into
my son's bike. Fortunately. the bicycle
was betv:een him and lhe car, and
the only injury was to the bike, even
though the boy wa s knocked down.
In addition, I had previously forbidden
my children to use the crosswalk across
Magnolia between \Varner and Slater
because of the frequent near misses
there. Just today T \Vas wailing to make
a Je£t turn at that crosswalk, but I
was also waiting for children to cross
the street. \Vhile the children \\'ere in
front of me, a car sped past as if the
driver did not even see lhe childr('n
coining.
IT SEE~1S TllAT drivers automatically
assume that a crossing is clear unless
they see someone in it. I don'l think
they really look very hard. especially
when other cars tend to block th e view.
Our police department can hardly sit
and watch each intersection 24 hours
a day. However, perhaps increased en-
forcement cou ld be possible through
limited. use of personnel such as aux-
iliaries or meter·maid·type employes.
Perhaps your paper can help educate
our local drivers and children that the re
is nothing abou t a crosswalk that
automatically stops cars. Crosswalks do
not stop cars -only the driver can.
DON YEITER
LC!tlers tram rtader.s are u:elcomt.
Normally writers should convey tltelr
messages ill 300 words or less. The
r igltt to co11dense letters 10 Ut space
or eliminate libel is reserved. Alt lcL·
h~rs mmt tnclude signature and mail·
iiig address. but rinmcs may bt wi ll!·
lltld on request if sufficient reasou
1.<t cpparent. Poetry will not bt pub·
lished.
Tl1e11 We Hop e
Press Comn1ents
Dun~mulr, Calif., Ne\\'$: "\\'hen man
ls wUUng to become ~If.reliant. lhritty,
productive in his "'Ork. honest. in his
business, fai r lo his employes, honest
in politlcs Jif that Is possible). then •·t may hope to balance the consu1ner
goods and their production with in come
• • • and be able to buy what we
WM! and need. and have 11 little Jett
for I ta.in)' day."
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Zoology: Basic
Ideas Changing
Speaking of animal populations, as I
was the other day, reminded me that
eve n the fiel d of zoology has see·n some
startling breakthroughs in knowledge
lately.
\Vhat has come lo be called the
';knowledge exp!o.
sion" is by no means
limited to such ne\Y
and recondite areas
as atomic physics
or molecular biol.
ogy. Our old friend,
t he naturalist. is
lea rning a Jot more,
loo.
In the J as t t"'o
deeades, according
lo mammalogist ~1aurice Burton, some
basic ideas have changed even in the
relatively stable field of zoology. For
instance . it was customary to divide
animals into "diurnal" and "nocturnal,"
meaning those who hunled by day aml
slept by night. or vise ve rsa.
SO'V \\'E KNO\V that this division
has been more man·made than God·
given. Some "night" animals have been
sho\Vn to be active part of the day
during certain times of the year. and
some smaller mammals are neither
diurnal nor nocturnal, but divide the
24 hours into alternating periods or rest
and action in 4· or S.hour cycles.
(As far as the "crepuscu lar" animals
are co ncerned. like bats, which operate
in twilight, we have· learned more about
thei r sonic devices of hearing in the
last 20 years than in the preceding
2,000). -
NOT 01'\LY llAVE the old categories
of day an d night fallen, but the eating
habits of ani1nals are now seen to be
Jcs~gid and exclusive than zoologists
used to .believe -that some mammals
were carnivores, others herbivores, and
still others insectivores.
Some traditional meat.eaters ingest a
high proportion of fruit and vegetables,
while even typical vegeta rians like cattle
and deer are now known to eat flesh
or carrion. Recent investigation of red
foxes indicates the large amount of grass
and wild fruit they consume.
\VHAT JS HAPPENING in roology
seems to be a "li berating" knowledge
from the old deterministic thi nking o!
the past. Some animals have local diets,
scme have seasonal prelerences -even
idiosyncracies lik.e humans -or whims
and fads. Prof. Burton tells of a goat
and a OOg led together, with the goat
invariab ly eating the dog.food, and the
dog preferring the goat's rations.
In the subatomic \Vorld of physics,
we are leaming that nature is less
rigid, less uniform, less iron·handed, than
v:as formerly believed. So, too, in the
world or living things, we arc learning
that the subhuman species are more
individualistic, more "personal," as it
were. then the mechanists used to thlnk.
There is a larger place for whimsy
in th e universe than philosophers have
dreamed of.
Who's Our Tyrant Now?
America was born of rcvolutiofl . ll
ls a revolution ary nation now.
So saf our resident revolutionaries:
And they are correct -except in the
way they mean it.
America was indeed born of revolution.
Revol ution against an individual tyranny;
a tyranny with a history of "repeated
Injuri es and Usurpations'' matched ia
number only by the repeated "Petitions
for Redress" by the injured colonies.
The American revolution was guided
by "a decent Respect to the Opinions
or i1ankiltd." II sough t to secure and
nurture those sc lf~vident and unalienable •
rights by which all men are endov:cd
by their Creator -life, liberty, and
the pursuit of happiness.
TO EFFECTUATE that revo lutilltl
against tyranny, to ensure those rights
of all manki nd, the men of 1776 mutu~lly
pledged their lives, their fortune!, their
sacred honor.
Today's American revolutionaries~
They pledge other people's lives.
They urge other people to kill lheir
parents. to revolt for the hell of il,
to become criminals, lo "disrupt e:vcry
institution, break every law."
Dtar George:
\Vhy don·l we ever see windmJlls
an farms any more?
SAM R.
Dear Snm R.:
And people ask me y,·hy I don't
v.·rite more about sex ..•
\Veil, Sam, to get right to youl"
problem. the answer is that back
hl the old days whe n windmills ..
were seen freque ntly the coun·
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Guest ·Editorial I
Pledge their fortufteS?
Abbie Hoffman 's two books n •
anarchistic revolution already have earn.
ed him close ,to $100,000 in royalties, ad-
vances •. movie rights.
ONE ~ERRY RUBIN paperback ha.1
earned at least $45,000 already. and
its publishers expect it to do four ttme1
that much eventually.
A new American Revolotiofl~ A new
1776? No, Today a revolution, a riot, iJ
"a party!"
The reat. continuing An1erican Revolu·
tion is that which has brought us change
lhrough Constitu lional methOds ; which
has substituted respect for disdain ol
our fellow man : \.\•h.ich has overturned
obstacles to liberty and the pursuit cl
happiness that comes from opportunltJ
accepted and used \.\'Cit
We have no Tyrant this July 4.
\Ve have only wou ld·be tyrants.
CaUfomle Feature Servio&
try was sparsely populated. Now
that lhc popula tion explosion has
couic alons. tht:!re just Isn't enough
\rind for everybody lo have a
windnilll .
Sam. No offense. Bul v.•ill you
y,•rlle lo Abby In lhc Juture?
<Learn to face Life with Sf)uarc
obliqueocu. l..(!t GMrge teach you
Sideways Thlnkb1g.)
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JoOl!ANl l'IASTINGS,.642..Qtl """'· ""' a. mt • , ... ' . .
F.i·reWorks
--Beg i·n Year
·_ New officers and members of the Seal Beach Woman's Club ·have
turned out en masse to staff the qlub;s fireworks' booth at Zoet~r School.
1 The booth is one: or the club's major funding events of the year;
'and atl ·proceeds are returne4·tC> the community in service and educa-
. tional projec;ts. . . . · 'The_ new officers were· install~ durmg a tea taking place m
the cOmmilnity center. ·
Accepting the gavel and responsibiliti~s of presiden~ for. the cotn-
ing· year wps Mrs. Henry Schadee, a res1d~nt pf u.e CJty smce 1961,
She hqs serv.ed the club as first vice president and dean of chairmen,
treasurer, health and welfare and children and yooth·chalrnum·during
her affiliation.
She also has been .active in the Seal Beach PTA and bas served
as a member of the Huntington Beach Union High School Dutrlct's
Citizen's-Advisory Committee al)d has been active with Girt Scouts.
Her daughter, Mari, is a junior at Huntington Beach High School.
Serving with Mrs. ·Schadee will be the Mmes. Paul Miller, James
Jay and Arthur Anderson, vice presidents; Charles Ishmael, co~s ..
·ponding secretary; John Doane, treasurer, Marx .Dressler,. auditor;
Melvin Kavin, parliamentarian; .Lawrence Spurgin and Miller, co-
ordinators, and Miss Helen Rowe, recording secretary.
Mrs. Thomas Crowley served as tea chairman. and assisting. were
the Mmes. Fred Lusk, Albert Sylvia, Leonard Flint, Hubert Tyler,
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Howard Van Ausdeln and Jinunie-Phelan. _,,.
Honor~ guests at tbe .installation were Mrs. Vernon Cunningham,
president of the California Federation of Women's Clubs, and Mrs.
Hubert Tyler, CFWC pre5ident's aide.
PLANNING AH EAD -Picking the best city location for their
fireworks booth are (left to right) Mrs. Henry Schadee, president;
Mrs. Paul Mill.er,, first vice. president, and Mn. Helen Rowe, re--
cording secretary of the Seal Beach• Woman'• Club, Club mem-
bers will join 1he new officers in atafiing the booth, one of tht
group's pnncipal fundirig evenl8 of the year. Proceeds enable the
club to carry on Us philanthropic projects in education and .com-munity service. ·
Gardeners Sli p Into New Club Year
Getting right down to the '"1nitty.gritty" are new-
officers and members of the Huntington ·View
Branch. Women's National Farm and Garden As.
Eociation (left to right) the l\fmes. AJ Manier•, vice
president, Cu_rtis SliearHardt, \Villiam Roberts,1pr.es~
!dent, and Cbarlei CochraM. The women were in-
stalled during a potluck dinner in the Christ Presby-
terian Church by Mrs. Lester D. Kelley, past presi-
dent and \ founder of ·the national association in
Cali!oinia.
Entries Float Off the Dra wing Board
Two entriee are· planned by tile WOm.n•• Dlvlaion,
Huntington Beach Chamber o( Conunerce, for to-
morrow's 66tb annual Fourth of July Parade. Put-
ting finishing touches to the designs are' (left to
right) Mrs . ll!amie Seltzer, co-chairman; Mrs.
Louise Jenkjns, chairm·an,. and Mrs. Neil Pear~
main. Ont ear will carry Mrs. Jake Slawart, Wom-
a~-th .. )'Nr, and James DeGuelle, Man«-th•
year. The other car, entered In the conimunity llOfV·
ice catnoey, will emphasize the cttx1s·youtb1groups
wlth 'the theme, Youth F:igbl8 Pollution: • . . . . • • •
Young ~st R·~ad~r Provid ~s a
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Birthda.y Present for An n.·
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I 'wrote to
)'tKI mce before -10 years ago. Yoo
were aeektng your youugest reader. I was
I years old al the time. I said I didn't
have anY problems bul maybe .1 was
your yoongest reader, and -as il turned
out. t was! You printed my picture
in The Dally Oklahoman. I'm iur'e you
don't remember me but my name is
Nancy Ann Counts. I am sending the
clipping rrom JO years ago lo rerresh
you r memory.
I graduat~d from Dover High School
Jn May --valedictorian of my class.
This summer I am altending Oklahoma
State University, ·
l wanted you to know. Ann Landers,
Iha& I bave read JOW: "'1wnn reliiiP.ialt
AN N LANDERS ~
and JOU }\ave. had· a strong influence
on my life. You have taught me many
things -not only thMWt YOU) column, ~
but through yaur books, "Since You
Ask Me," ''Teenagers aod $e;t" and
"Truth Is Stranger." I have been
fortunate to have had such ·wonderful
parents. God hla been good to m~ 4
Please lreep up 'Ille ·WOO<J~ul work.
YOU bclp 30 many peopJtl 1nd _ J'!°' •
J.lCllionn a Y"1'1, Yaluable 1111'.1.b. •
Sincerely, NANCY ANN COUN'rS
DEAR NANCY: Whal a beauWul let-
ter ! Thank you M very much. lt will
appear dte Clay before my blrtbday which
is eh Fourth of July -a1 a prese11l
to mytelf.
DEAR ANN ·LANDERS : l was happily
married for 24 years and the mother
of 1ix children. ~ husbend paS9ftd away
iuddtlilt> -nu. .... ~ ...
person.al beloollnP. I --he had bad a ml!tress for al leut lift )'08l'I.
l debal<d ' fur ................ to
whether I should get in touch wllh the
woman. Finally I decided I had to m .. t
her, so I gave her a call and invited
' her to my home. 1'te woman looked
grief-stricken and much older than I
~ad Imagined. She told me she had
known my husband before the war -
· that she loved him and tte loved her.
He married me instead because we wtte
oCficlally engaged and he felt it was
his m«al obllgaUon. This woman mar-
ried shortly-after sbt and her husband
have seven children. •
·How could 1 ' hav• been "' blind!
l •loood IQ IMJlllnd • 9111Jllle'Jlr allll ••
I WU llire be ntumod lbal .loYO. Now
I CID't even pray in peKe. WheMwr
I Bee hi5 ftoe l 1ee her face, too.
1 can'& eat or lleep. I'm afrakl I
will become ill and die and no Olle
will be here to take 'tare of my children.
Plea1e help me. -LOST EVERYTHING
DEAR LOST: Yoo wlD recover from
tblt blow btc1uae YOI •••t. .Vtur
cbOdru ~ JM ind )'Ollr cannot flfl
them. Talkln1 .. , your ilrief wit~ a
lheraplsl mJPI ... oldol ~ ...... ,_
lnl1ba9d wu He tf tllolt. rare peeple
wbt w11 IMe 1o compvtmelltllbe hil
ffle tololly. If .loo wu -a pemn
lift affalr1wtdl tllts wemaa wu ·•· bg
..peralo llld 1pon fTltn )!It f1mU, Ille.
h ... 9Q ... , ... 1111 .......
,,...JomMI H ,,... .. ,.,.., "'' -_...,. .. _... IL<loMr.ct_.Glll_
CONP'ID!'Rr!AL TO IN LOVE WJT1I
A DENl'IST: Hang up yoor track .......
Dearie. Don't call b1rn unless )'OU, ha\lt
a toot.hlche. A man runs fl!ttst wtu
a womari Is chaslna: lllm.
. Whal b f-b k~! •• tt W-C!
'llllo -Id .. t ,tbe _., --
Ule boy tr ·u.e «trl1' Caa 1 1 • • • I• 1 weddfa& ~? Reed Aaa t 11l11('
boolld, ''T-qe Sn -'T• W"'1
lo Cool ll" kM, M -II eo1o ...
I lonJ, .. K-lddmoed, _,.. lomlopo
111 ... II 1llt DAILY l'JIDI',
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J• DAll.Y PILOT
Peeri ng
Around
I
IN 'lOllN lw the -.C
al --...... Allan lo
Gloria -~ al """' ....... Buch .. LL Cal.
Wllllam (Roi.) and Mn. Allan
ml family al Natick. Ila& P'oDoorinl lhe ...mllng, Ille)'
will bolldoy ID Hawaii ml
... 1'1•1•itol'
Cll:.~ll:BBATING their
...... ........_,.ID the
.._. Caoile. ~
Amlria, .... Mr. ad -..
·--Joos al Newi**I Beach. Friends of the
mople .... -lo join them for the fativMiea ID the
Cllllo Which WU the r.tliDg
'far the "Scuxl cl Malie. ..
' HONORED on lhelr ...... wedcfh!llnllv....., ... 11r.
ond Mn. F.chrin F. KJdlbmt:
al Bil Bear Late and lialD...a
City, Ariz. -.... 1llelr • ..,......, the Mmes. l!dwln
Conry ud Gene Leeper ·Sr.
of Costa Meoa and Georp
Word ol Big Bear LUe.
MillNG lhe Sanla --BiltmOre their vlCalion bead-
quiltifi bllvt --Mr;-and-
Mrs. Charles Leml d Foun-
tain valley' Mr. and . Mn. .
1-nf Shane of lluntiJlll<n
-lhe w. R. Scbollel and
1111 ol Newport Beach and
nowlyweda Mr. ad Mn.
WID1am R. Pstton ol Newport
Beach, -booeymoooed ID
-Blrblra. PBll:llD.ENT ol tho__
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Friday, Ju~ 3, 1970
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Your Horoscope
Leo : Detect All
SATURDAY
JULY -4
By SYDNEY OMARR
TEEN DATING BIN'l'S•
MuJ lonlPt dlacu• natltn
and pelttlei. Caacer ud Lee
Yie u leaden. Ideal dale nip!
• tndadel 1 • l • eoaventlam,
tbeatrlcal pr•dactlon •
Aqurtt1 .. eooceraed about
wllelMr ..iau.ui, la to be
permueal
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Change, travel and varie\y -
these' are featured. You find
creeilve ouUe.L You get aid
from one who appeared to
be on the fence. Be receptlve.
What you need is presented.
TACRUS (April 20-May 20):
By tonight, you learn Where
you It.and -and why, Thii
ts a time to be meticulous.
Acerbic remark! will de.feat
your own purpose. B e
thorough without being a bore.
GEMINI (May ii.June 20):
Obtain hint from Tluru.1
message. There a.re tasks
which require your personal
attention. Holiday atmosphere
pr.e.vaUs. Bui Y®.mu.rt_realiz.e..
that carele:s.me.ss today CO'Jld
prove costly.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Cycle continues high -you
ca n obtain what you need if
persistent. Exude confKience.
Money seems headed your
way. Welcome opport{Jnity by
displaying sense of
responslbilily.
of public. Fine for new starts
in new dlrectioos.. Stresa
o r I 1 i nal~ .,Jndependence.'
Le.ad rather than follow.
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sept. 22):
Romance, Intrig ue are
featured. On negative aide,
there is 1<>5Sip, innuendo.
Stand tall. Don't waver from
principles. Your chances for
success are enhanced l r
discreet.
UBRA (Sep!. ~!. 22):
.By tonight you know who
means what · to you. There.
is transfonnation from make-
believe. to reality. Sel!-decep..
Uoo goes out nearest window.
Yoo learn how to fulfill hopM
and wishes.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
You prove a meaningful point;
your prestige. rises as resull
Now is time to plan ahead.
Take advantage of obvious op-
portunities. Discard advk:e ot
timid indivicNal who lives in
pas!.
SAGI'ITAB.IUS (Nov'. 22-
Dec. 21): Some may claim
you are delving into areas
which represent danger. Key
is to be true -to yourself.
Welcome new contacts,
challenges. Message from afar
proves stimulating.
~CAPRICORN (Dec. n:Jan.
19): Close tie with one who
vacillates may get tiresome.
Today your patience is te!ted.
Strive to arrive at conclusion
which is based on maturity.
Don't risk something of value
for nothing.
Calllunla Federation o I
Wmnm's Clabo, Mn. Vernon TOTING THE BAG -The 18 Girl Scout. of Orange Cowlty who
Omlnp•m of Loo Alamltol will be partkipjlling in PAVE Four,• wcation and enjoyment pro-
preolclod on:r a *"' board gnm Monday, JUiy 6 -Friday, July 17, are making tol8 bags for
ouk>l-<tal8 guests. At wort are (left to right) the Misses Shirley
Collom, Elizabeth Berte and Deena WesL
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You
are perceptive. You detect
trends. You get finger on pulse
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-F e b .
18): Ue low. Permit others
to take initiative. You gain
moot u-Jgh quiet observa-
tion. Be UDObtrusive. You
learn and can apply knowledge
in profitable manner. Don't
force issues. m..tilli In Fresno Jime IS-11. _::._ ___ -';.;, '-• ..,-"'.'---='-...:...-'----='---"-------
Mn. Cwrinlflam b a I '
-Seek and S1lare .. the theme for her two .year
ienn. She reeenUy · returned
from the General Federation
of Womtn'• Clubs Convention
in San Antonio. Tex.
GRADUATING from the
Lm Aqeltl Career Academy
u a medical aailtant was
Mlss Gayle Brown or Costa
Meaa. The daughter of Mr.
mxl Mn. Wllfrld B r o w n
ncelved tralnln( t n n·
mnlnatlcio procedures, eleo-
~apby, analomJ and --IK!lll.
Artist Illustrates
Watercoloring
A demonstra ti on in
wat«tokr will b e .::.-
companied by a general lec-
ture when Rldiard V. Johnoon
appeoro at the m<O!ing of the
HWlllDCfoo .Beach Art League
taking p~ at 7:30 p.m. Mon-
day, July I, in the recrtltioo
ceote<. J-who inJtrucUd In
-oil and water color at
Orange Coast College, began
paintinc in early childhood.
He trained al On.11Nni's, and j
Jludied oil will! Nicholl Feehln
and s.m Hyde Harris. lllJ
watercolor ltudiel were with
Ra Brandt, Roh<ri E. Wood,
George Poat, Milford 7.ornea
and Bane Miller:
The 1ril!t'1 paDinp are
"" eshlblt tlvouj!llout the United Slates In both public
and private ooUections.
Arts, Woman's Role •
Meet ing
Capped
A 'Nig party and special in-
duct.ion for new members Mrs.
PISCES (Feb. 11-March 20):
Hobby pays dividends. You
are rewarded for doing whit
<COmes naturally. Cr e a ti v e
juices flow. Red tape snaps;
door of opportunity is ajar.
Enter. Explored by Scouts Paul Billitzer:, Mrs . Milton IF TODAY IS Y 0 UR
Experimentation and ex-and Page.art of the ~!asters Ronney and Mrs. Neil Levitt BIR'I11DAY you are. patient
kr·"-iii be nurt ed and "'--·land. higltligbted the meeUng of the enough to piece together P .......,, " ur '-'&-><~,. Orange Coast Chapter, B'NaJ vatious elements which even-
Monday, July &, through Fri-Among the 18 Orange Coun-B'rith Women. tually lead you to major goal.
day, July 17 at Chapman ty girls aUending the event The group celebrated its New start this year was right.
College when II S<nlcr Girl will be the U...... Shirley siatll birthday yesUnlay dur-By July, you will be mora
Scout& from the _ ... tes Collom ol Newpcxt Beach, Ing a ~ in the Newport stlible ID anolional and f1nan.
Elizabelb Berte ol Fountain Riviera c~. C o 1 ta cial areas. participate in P1v1 . Four, a Valley, Deborah Warning of Mesa. IP _______ ___
JlrOll'•IL ol orts for ._.,,, Seal Beach and Deena' West Hooting the wig party was J & J UPHOl.STUT
..i eojoyment. of Huntington Beadt Jim Gilbert ol Hlllllill(t<Jn 11ie girls will live a Mrs. James Hook ol Mission Beach.
d!nmt.wy l~e ..i partlcipote Viejo is director ol the event A<I d I t ton a I lolornmm
In -bllOpl, i........ and am Mrs. C. A. H..-ry of San regarding the chapter mey be
MUNSI IUA&.IT'I", tfn'eMIT'I",
SIRVICL CUPTSMAMSHIP.
WI lfKI •IAVTIPUL PURllfTV1l• W• ACCln au.LL.Ill ...
fi<ld trips. Clemente is a msnber ol the obtained by cal1ing Mrs. Sy '4Z·517' '464011
·Eastern
Ceremony
Links Pa ir
He has received awm"'ds
lrom the Traditional Artlsl8
Guild: Laguna Beach Art
AssociatiOll ; Long Beach Spec-
trum Club and 1>e1ert Art Takes W1'ng Center, Palm Springs. One of ·
his most important works ill M t s 1 ·carol Frances
a mosaic in the Sll'ICtuary S of the Grade Methodist haw of Newport
'!be llwme ls ezploring the, _:ad:u'.'.'.lt'.:.stal~'.:.f. ______ KJ~ugm~a~n:., -~'.'.:'.:'.:'.:..' ---~~~~~~~~~~ role ol women in the arts. I·
Visits have been pll!lled to
the Lof Angeles Art Center,
Uct, a tmjor drf.Ss firm,
greeting cm! company, the
Laguna Beach Art Festival
New Gold
Gleaming
In Cubes
3days
only! Jacqu.line Ruth Wingert Orurch, Loog Beach. Beach, daughter of Mr.
became the bride m Leonard Members are invited to aub-and Mrs. Cecil V. Shaw
M. LUly Ill o1 Newport Beach mit one painting, a atilHlle, of Lubbock, Tex., has
during a double ring e<remOOY which will be Judpd, and become a stewardess
In Cl-~ Meth o d I 1 t pl1111 will be revealed for the ~--ch•uAr~ ... ·... v e'""'' annual Art in the Park witli World Airways, a . "'"" , .... 'lli_n, a. ....-. ch Parenla of the couple are day taking place July 12. arter airline. An art ---KAREN Ll NDROTH
Autuit Bride
Rite Da te
Revealed
the Jollll A. Wingerb ol major at Orange Coast
McLean, Vs. and Mr. and D College, Miss Shaw will
Mn. Leonard M. Lilly Jr. es igners serve aboard 707 jets
of Newport Beach. flying to Osaka, Japan. New jewelry at Cartier Attendents were the Misaea features rings cut out of gold
Pairlcia Ann WingerL Nancy Repr ieve and various parts of cubes and al<amlag dl!CS of
Helm and Karen Douglas and Europe. bed top Id Mn. Debbie Gosbin. others gold perc a narrow go
were the bridegroom's father Solian -~dbranl'n· •No;..,t or JO 8 h 8 b ~Dinh Van, French-Viet.-and Demi& Rowland, Russ --e a c a es Ekeblad and James Wingert. designers· Interviewed by the namese jewelry designer at
The bride attended Pleiffer Cootour Council who a e Every Wednesday at 7 p.m. Cartier, believes j ewe 1 r Y
College and the University of members keep the innerwear members of TOPS Be.sch should be a limple line, well
Mr. and Mn. Reynold Lin-Maryland. Her husband is a industry going. Babes convene in Huntington dOf'le. .
droth of Newport Beach have graduate of Newport Harbor The designers supported Beach High. School for pro· His bracelets neatly ~ctr~
announc:ed the engagement of High Sobool and the Univeni-, undtrplnlings for their softer' grams. For infarmatio~ the wrlru with geometric c1r-
tbeir dau,hter, Karen Lin-ty of Southern California. He slinkier, longer, sezier-lhan· regarding the next meeting c\e and square cutoua and
droth to John Vallely ol. iJ cumntJy in the c.oast ever coUecUoas for fall and date and time telephone Mrs. chuAky cubes and hoops of
Balbol. Island. In te Guard Reserv!. winter. Henry Cord Meyer at 644-0838. gold. An A-15 wedd g Ila '•10--;;o;;;;;;;i;ii;;;;; ____ ~;;;;-------.,;;;;;;;ii;;;;iiiiiO;;;;ii ____ ;;;;;ii _______ _,,
tn Geneva Pre 1byterI1 nll
Omrcb. Laguna Hills ....
nvealed during a dinner party
.ooldratlng the brldwlecl'•
birtllday.
Miss Lindroth is a graduate
fJf Newport Harbor High
School and Orange Coal!
Coll •.
Her fiance is 1 gradtl8te
of Corona d<I Mor High
School, OCC and UCLA. A
member or the NCAA cham·
pion basketball team a t
UCLA, he will pley with lhe
Atlanta Hawks In the fall.
Cl ea n Curl ers
Wash curlers and hair ac-
c:eaorles in a basin al warm
_..occ•kNlly.
Na mnoves film formed
II; mtural bah' ollo and balr
cn.inl·
Open Saturday, July 4th
And Every Sunday
4th of July
SPECIALS
CHOICE BmER
DRESSES
1/3 OFF
,,
11 :30 A.M. TO 4:00 P.M.
--SAT., JULY 4-SUN .. JULY 5 ONLY·--
250/o DISCOUNT
ON ALL FABRICS WHEN ·
TOTAL PURCHASE IS OVER $10.00
LUTESONG $498
POLYESTER
OUR NEW LOW PRICE . . . .. • • • • . .. YD.
CREPE RADIANCE $)29
POLYESTER
OUR NEW LOW PRICE .. . . .. . . . . .. YD.
THE FABRIC FOR LAWRENE NIXON'S
WEDDING GOWN WAS PURCHASED HERE
New,
breathtaking
8x10
LIVING
COLOR
PORTRAIT
C fo~reporho;t
photographed 1'1 .r. Uving Color J "1 Joclc I. Nhnbl•, Inc.
""' 50~ handling
It ... u.s.
Tr.dtrn1rk
and d11fvery • Choose from oclvol fini.shtd
portroits--not proofs.
; E Your money back if this isn't the most lifelike • xlra prinh available ot reason-
portrait of ytNr chikl •ver. Not just on okl· .., obi• pric.s. No obllgot~n to bvy.
ioshioned tinted or colored picture, but • Groups token at 99e per child.
"Uvin9 Color"( TM complet~ portrait cOIMS' • Ate limitr 5 w..kl to 12 yean.
oliv....-coptured in amazing full-color realism • Umit1 one Ptf' child-
with Epstman Professional Ektocolor film. two .,.r fcmity.
•
Wedn esday, July 1 throuCJh
Sunday, J uly 5.
HUNTINGTON BEACH SANTA ANA NORWALK
H iOQfl' I t iMKtl boll!IVIN b•h!OI ........ 9"fffft lll
phona 714-192-6611 phone 547·61~1
~ ,_ ' .
(
l"'Mrltl •t 1'1$0""lll 'al~.
phone 161-0911
I
. -. ..
•
Fountai•• ~alley
• • EDlflON
.
..
: • . .
~
• • • . .
Te11r Bometewa:
' • • • • J •
:· ... -.y~_Paper _j
-
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• ' ' '
)'01.:. 63, NO. 158, 4 'SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFOR~IA FRIDAY, ,JULY-J, ·1.w.: TEN CENTS"
• ---.. .. .. . .. ... , . . .__.,
.·July 41h :P•rade
.. . .. --. .. r
Viet Explo$ion ~ l{ills 45
l[_J Passeng~r .JJoai S.un~ by )Ji~ ;on ltiver . ••
, .. _,,. "
r
SAIGON' (AP) - A passenger river
boat -a floatlnJ mine just .... lh
ol . the 'Demill~ 1.ooe l<!i•Y and
.blew:up, ldllq 48 of the IO Vie~
dvlllan.s abo~, a toverim>ent si)ote,~
Thom, IO mllq north ol Phnom 1'911i,
"wjth fre'1! "-Y trOQps · moVlilr ln1'
poetilon . outside the clty: The lllpwfl
~ Kofnpoog Thom end Phnom' _,
P~ ·WU -atill ClORd ·dapilo dforta. • man lllDOUnCed. ·
;Tbe.mfnlnl-occurred OI\ a branch of
the Cua Viet River lesa than ,~ mile
fl'OIQ Dong 'Ha, the b0at'1 daot!Oatlop
about nlne miles eouUi of the' DMZ.
The.river if rigullrly P.trolled·by U.S.
and Soulb Vlelnlimeie'boats ...i North
~~~~---'
Valley' ~chool·
Ov:ercrf!wding
To End .by .'72?
By TERRY COVILLE · ·
• OI tlllll, Dlffr PllM ..... "' . . ' Double ....ions, Poflabl• clalofooms
and crowdecl clulN· are. espec1ed to
be f~.,.uet· ~ by th& ,.., • 1113
in the Fountain ValleY'ScboO! District. . .
The dream of ' adequate clala'OOm!
for every . chlld · in the diatrlCt' hinpa
only on th& stablllt:r<ci 'cilr?ent lllte-akl
for !Choo) comtructloD, acCordinl: to
~1· offidals. ....
Jack Mahnken, a<mtiniilrator o f
business Rrvlces for the dlltrict,: odUlnad .
plaM Wednu(lay !or COllltructlon of
lhree elemeotary IChools liy 11'12o
'Ibe first ia 'Moiol1 School in Fountain
V a1leY. • Mab•bn told .ICMol lrustee1,
he hoped It , wOOld open 'Its _, In·
........:.~ "··-· . . .· ' . __.....,..._ .... illl.&.. ., ' ' • . ---wlllltillr•:~-: -·\Ill !·-··~-·-· \!~ lltslnthellllClkla l>•iodO"by-
iblt' -· -'and -Ellll and
Of aeveral Cambodian batt8uoas to ~ IL . . · · ••
A month·lool siege of Koin-Tbonl: ,. .... broken In tat< June after ·u.s.
flgbter·bombers ,made heavy air strtas.
~a enemy ~ti~ns -uound· the town... ", __ _ .. '
.....
Ja:qe ;~·Poe ~ ·,iody
' -.Myste~y SOiv~d? ·.'
arid a· r!nc the corpae .had on Its fln&Or.
· A~lo.lri0fl!l8llon olltalned f>ult.
the:: WPQl&.q, Matl.ie Meeker traveled JR
~~le clrcl8!f, WM ap exce!}ent pogl.
player, datad freq...,Uy and may baf' ~ Jrom North Carolina. 'c
She allo 'beUe""1·her to be~
and ~io h~~ SOIJM! frleods in the Loni ~~,Cal~~· • cale. lfid tqctay· that Ile. ls not cmt·
pletely· satllfted '*Ith tlie ldentlftcaUon
llQ\ Shilt Ile wquld lean toward the ~·i ~!~_;.,. '
' llnnt)nstgrj ~ detec'uves: (or,.,.... the'.. wiaolvJ<I .. milrder • .,,,. h a a ~ ··'-IOiig'~ • .., riitw 1l>'li>l:.i;\'~ ··~ --·· ' .. ' .. ! ' • ~
I
~ .rr:z::c ~ ~ lrill
he -••ii• with -1 ...... ( Ing !nm bolh the -ral and l)a e .. ..,,,.,,.....
Ii~ :m;:P,oi < .. , '::
. .:"fl'''.,_
THIS IS ROUTE FOR FOURTH OF JULY PARADE
Huntl"1ton 8Hch Extr•v•11nu Starts at 11 a.m.
Skie_s Over Huntington
• •
To Light· Vp Saturday
' .
Thi ephemml beauty of more than
$3,0llO worth of fir<works wtll spread
over Huntnlston Beach aides Saturday
night u a climu: to the city'• annuaJ
100..,.ndeqco 0., Parade.
Bruce Kru1<r, • lic<nJel! p)'TOl<dlni·
ti.art for. the AUu Fireworks Co. in
FoalaJfa, Aid the fiery display would
11\cJude aerial tllelll rangilg from lhr<e
fnclll to elgbl -. Jn cliamlltt wblcll
wt11 lllJTI their -t c:l*pa IOO feel Into the ilir. • . •
(Jomldtred ~ erpicistve1,' they
~;u be """""°""" to Huatlngtoo Bead! Sabrday and let up in mortar boxes ·
on the munictplJ. J'er fn:m which they
will be Bhot oft around I p.m.
Bob JUvas, co-dlairman ol. a Jaycee
eommlttet orpoiJl.ng the displays, aaid
the -wllf be about ..,. hour long,
twice n Ione u 1-t, year's. ,
company who could oome op with the
"tnOlt inchea" in term~ of the rockets
and aerial lbelll.
"We Md a tiUle troobie decicinC how
a two-lncb svenr.U comperod lo a 1w ..
inch double bl..ter, ID we just· added
up Uit illches, 11 Rivas llid. "And this
yW we have about three ind a half
Umes the inchel we had last year."
He Mid the fireworb lhould be vllible
l(llllt every pan of the dty since moot
ol Iii. pyr«eclWcl are ol en .. rial
rather than 1tatic 111tw'e.
''The pier wUI be doaed Oil pill the
first tier. It would be too ~·
lo get any ~oser.'' he aaid.
''f was out unong them last year
and it wu like being next to a bazooka
going off. You just llgllt them and run.
These thinp are lib mortars," he said.
ota. School.1 in Huntington .Beach· ,is
the next one district officlala hope to
open In 1113 -perlla111 In January.
Jt .will house 720 students at a site
on Education Lane and Yorktown
A venue.1 Cost fl conatrucUoo of Oka
II ltlO,ooi>. '
"Our cbaias to build tllis llCbool de-
pend on the Mle ol anothb batch of
state borida,"'Mafulktn aaki.
'Ille lul sdiool II Talbert Elementary,
planned for 110 studelU with '' tenlltive opentq dal< Iii IWdl, 11'12,
"'lbll oae dependl on our ability to
secure stat< funds lnAllt 1prlila of 1171,"
Mahnken said. He cUdn~t "feel ther;e was
much danser In lollnl eny of the lhree.
Talbert School will be bouilded by
Bushard and Magnoija streets · and
Garfield and Yorktown avenues in H~
tingl<ln Beach.
"Talbert will be the last achoo! needed
in the Huntington Beach portion of our
distrtc\," Mlimllen added. Tbe FOIBltsln
Valley, School District covera most of
Fountain Valley and that pert ol Hun·
Ungton Beach north of Ad&m.1 ~venue
IDd east of Beach Boulevard.
Once Talbert is complet<d the dlltrtct
will have 11 schools bull~ with only
seven rem1inm1 to compiete t be
district'• lota1 number or IChoo1I.
"We ?fave one in' each quarter llCilon, ''
Mlluittn esplalned. "Our pllllooophy js
to have scbooll localod where all dllldren
can walk to them and 11ilere a lltronfl
community ldl!ntlty ... be developed."
District voten lave approVld II
mUUon for IChool construction. That,
plua funda ftom atate and federal llOUn::ff
II 11! the district expects to need to
build all of Its mnalnJns sdlooll, dlllrlct
olflclall uy.
ln the interests ol. pro'¢ing the most
1pootocuill" Dlw, Riv• Aid' ll10'Jay<ees
a Warded the fir'ewoclts · contract to the' New PeaC!e EnvOJI
norn.
Army 1uh>rili~ hive · notill~ ~Is
perenti, Mr: IDd 1Mn. Devid ·wataon,
6902 Ol:ford\Drive,'·thlt ·their IDft wu
killed•Clll a nigbl patrol JUDe %4 •.
Pfc. Watson, a gradu·ate of
Westmlneter HI~ SChool, was 20 1''"
old. He wtll be btried at ~Westrrilnittr
Memorial' Park Monday after 1 ·p.m.
servtc.. at the Peek Family Coloolal
Funeral" lfome, . . . . .
1be spldier is survived by two brothers,
David, 22, and William, 18, and Diane,
20 n\onth!. . '
Democrat Slated ·
' '
For" VISTA 'Rost . ' . .
The White HOUie Is expeCted to n1me
R1chard D. Blu.menthll. a 24-y8ar-old
Demoicrit, as director of' the Volunteers
In Servlco lo Aintrlca "(VISTA) ·within
about a month.
Blumenthal; ·presently completllll!' six
mo-of ..... rve,,.abtlng In lhe·,Milrlne
eo.p. at Camp Lejeune, N;C., wis
lormerly . on• the · •~ff of While H-
couralor Danlel Mofnlban.·
The poil, ' sub)«t lo Sell!lt• f'OI".
firrilathll'I, p1y1 '31,000 a yeer . and I•
-hold. by adinl" director Rllberi,Lane.
' ' ..
·E~sy Bt eatlµng :
.. • I > ' I
_.for .. ~untians . . .
Over 4th Holiday
, ..
Orange c.bunUat11 C111 e1pectfftlailvely
.., breathing ·over the F.ourth..of July
h0Uci1y; aCcordlre to orance Collnl)' Air
Pollutlon"Cootrol authorltle1 .... ·
· Flnlt · 1tise imog reedlngs In · Los
A111eles' 'l'hursda)" did 'not ineasurtsbly
atfect Q'fl Qfinge ~ area. '
Or'anse Cl>Unty AJrpori and"Cosla M ...
ttadlllfl'" Were below the . lll:hool. lllllOll
wlfllln&. lerel 'Jl'tu.ra~Y. and. l!l'9 .expei:ted to ' be lower tod1y end -llidejiendenco
Da ' . ' '. Y,· ; ' • ... • ' n.e. ot0ne ~1ilon In the' air
readied JI pv\s per mlll!On at "the
airport; and JI In' cOeta r.(esi, ·~
to 0ou1Iu Jdl,.y, air polluUoit ..,,mter:
'The hlgl\est . mcllnl In ' tlie ·county
wu .41 In La H1!ira. A -.16 rudtn(
11 the "sdlOOI lli'nlll waining · i-1 In
0.-anp "<;oiinl1.-• • • ·
CHP Working
Ov~r Holiday
· 'The ~u,tlon Control Dlltrtct !orqst
relatlkeb" loWei' -..,,.. ·mcllnli· today
and on 1\1\e lourtl1>•< a re.WI ol .-
antlc!pa'l'f fir taler· 'thll .ii...._.
' ' . . : . It 'might . \it. Id-le to stay out ··Nixon, Bruce Talks ··.S·Iat.ed · ~:1~~:~:=:i~~
CaHromia ffighway , patrobnen° · "'
stationed In Oranse OoUnty h>ve
a message for errant holiday
weekend motorists.
.. Despite the fact that we are
world~ without pay (the ltate
,ltfllte hai yet to •pprove Gov.
J1e11an'1 IU billion budlel) we
ill 1rrived on the job a\ 5:45
o'clock this morning hudl lleld
hlgll, -Iden bock, eyes alert
to cope with the lleavy holldly
traffic.
"P1y or not, we 1re sworn to
and ·will v1&010.1J1y m!orce the
traffic 111'1 on the county'•
treew1y1 and highways, 1 n d
hoPefully save ~e .I I v e 1 , ' '
J>lltrotmlD warued.
I ·-
By RICHARD P. NAIL .. .. .... ~-......
President Nixon ls to meet in San
Clemente Saturday with DivJd Bruce,
bJs new chief U.S. nttotiator at the
stalled Part! llilb.oo·peace In V.letnam.
In his ,_,,.d puJh to find polltlcal
solution for the lDdochl1'I war, Mr. Nixon
,_ Mid tbal.Bruoe, a veteran diplomat. wm ..... 1'1111 llalblllly Jn ~· the U.S. poslflon at Paris.
The Pral-·bu el}imaed llallll ...
tion. with the nla ol Vletpamhatlon.
Al the South Vi.tnamae lfOW strong
.-lo clt!end tbOmsel\oes, the Pres!.
dent ... 11111-they will be a louillef
adverury for HancN 1t the conference
tsble than Is the U.S ..
The North Vletna,,,_ end Vlei Cons,
however. &bus far have replied ' &o the
~ • •
Prtlklent'• appeal by In effect 11ytn1:
!Int s<t•U.S. ~ (l\11 of Vietnam .
A member ol the Viet Coog cleleglllon
sakl the confertnce "can' neVer make
auy pf'Oil'HS" unUI the U.S .• lt'Ctpt.s
the Viet Coog peSC< plan and 11Ulls
American troops out.
The Prtsklent P\1DS no participation
in Independence Day ceremonies.
After d1y1 of ooncentration on·fortlgn .ailn capped by his w~ Nflht '
'lortlp pol!C)"dlalope"' -.. !he ' Prasl!l«ll has turned -tlon ~ '
clome!llc problems. -
He -'llluraday with top olflcts\1
of the Office cl Budlll llnd Mailagement,
Director C....,. P, tlllulb, Dopaty Dire<>
t0< Caspar Welnberaor and "-lat<
Director Arnold B. Weber.
Tbe -were .. oln alma with •
' -
San G1brtel portJon.l>f 1"" Anl!"la caun-
' ty at noon Thuraday. A f1nt Ital!"• a1eri
__ , ·"--.. ~~ ... -Jomes u...o_··-· was carll'tlled at,3~• p.rn, "' ·===• • ·-· -· ~-., ......... 'The Olert mada .!tl!O the ~ ol Northrldse 'lhlrlday lmomin8 on th~ yur In the hlotOry ol"Lot Anl .,
laWri outalde the 1Prtaidet1t'f ~ r,Cle, early in·~~· · , '. . '
men!< -Office. · ' · , • ' A !lrat. ltai!< ll110I alert II t 1'arnl!'I
'."'We 11re very ~. thole'! di U&'"1'bo to rnot«itb to avokl unnecessary \ravtl:
are Californians, to have \he swearlni • , · .• · · , · .,.. ... ·; , ,
tn ceremonlei like p)lce>.1bere,"t •Mid 1 -•
the Prellidenl · '. • . . °NO' ·'I:rash Collettion · 11/<' ne.. o~ chlefl 'f''"'l 'pklctld ' 1 • -• , ,,... o1ber · re<teril jiqlli • .,, , ..m ~lht , , , h. . •F ..... h' n.w :qenc1o ... u 'n\ptae., <tlfe ·lluditt In Beac .on . o ... • . Bure~u ad la·~, i. eolntine , : ,1 ·', • 1 -, l 1 "bUllgtt.makbil' w111i evihrallan'' c1 ·Ille · Then.will.be oo tru11 pillec1Jorl Satur:
tffectfverleis of fedenl ~1ml.: • , .day 'In Humrcton Be~ or F-ln
. AfLer lUnth ' Thul-adey, the Pt..sdant Valley. ; · • · "·
held another --lc ·conlminto• !l;lth . -~1 -pany an~
Shulb, White \louse aides H. R. tottay that they woold mall• the collecllor)
Haldemen John D. Elitllctimn,' 'Robert . from • Satunli):'1 route, which llfecll
H. Pinch Ond· DOnald lluntllold, dlnlc!Or _,. Hllllbicloo ~. next ·w-
ol lllo.OJ!lce ol Eaioomlc~. <!01•. -....... , ,
' . . . -... .
I ~ (· • -~-l ·" I
. '
Seiied:·i1f ·Raid · . . , . :.: : , .. " .. . ' . . ' ' ..
Ok. 2; l(esi4ences·
' 'Det<ctlvei !tom the Huntlniton Buch
~, rlari;otlcs' \fetall today ·confllcalod
about . ~.OllO '1'!lrih ol marijuana end
other drup· Jn a pre-dawn raid on.. tn
holnea:.1 . . -. . ' ~ollce laid they believe the cootralland
iru Intended to edd a little more sparkle
to. Fairrili of .luJy Celeliralloni" planned
1n1io< city !hls"sAtunlay. :
Actlnt 1111 U111 from the departmea1'1
Special Elifoictmen( De!<ll (SED) deteo.
Uves ~ick hl~ltz. fnd Carl 'VldanO,
~h warranta in hahd, conductetl lbe
raids between 3 a.m. and 'f aw. • -" ' . ' ,. ~. At " I03 M'"1> St., they arrested !hrje
adults · and one juvenile !0< ·-liih
of. ~tics .and. conflacal.ed 1 1m.IJI
quaM!ty cl marijuana and a clpretto
rollel'. · ' 4
• ' ...
. The big hauL ·howevtr, came later,
at 409 .Cahfomia s~. where detectlvU
said they uncovered three kilos cl mari-
juana, :ioo tsblets · o1 um; about thl'M
gran11 cl huillsh and numerous obr
rinldentlfled capoula.
: Ar'relied at the CalUornia Street ad-
drm: on Slllpk:ion al polltsdnc nar~1
and ,IUSpJdon 0( poeMalng marljµana.
and dangerowi dnlp fOr lale were G•rJ
0. OsterOO.., 20, Debbie Sue WllllAJ?ll,
II, Clfliudla ' Jean Illy, 11, · and Blab
A. Smi~, at.. ·~
• llelnholts "111. th!!y .encountered t>O ~nee in ~tber r&Jd. . ~ ·
eo.n:
, .'w~.ltt .. er 1 ' . I
11'11 be a "'°' np Fourth of Ju!J, r
wealbenria, wltll ~ 1~el and "
temperatures In the IOI, 1UJllli!rl•
blck Into the· It range along the
coat over the~ weekend.
INSmE TODAY ••
Yott am hatM a cracklAg good '
ti,.. ct OftU o/ thf "'"""U fl,..
too1"'1 1h·0109 around Oro"Of
County on .ur.'Fo•rth .oJ Jlllu.
Thc11'r1 au lifted tn the. Guide '
to '"" columlt ht toda~'• Week·
<nd<f. ' ' I · · . ....... ' " -' ... ,_ ' --... ' ''-""""' ' -·-• a-..... ••JtWt 1P.1t \ -" _,, 1a.11 -n ·-• i 'OM:•W-I -... , -I -• ...,.., .... • :."'~..:.::--... i::::w~. 11 •• • ·-.....
'
r
•
' DAI\-Y PILOT H
·~d,;imit
I • Reqllesi Set-·
-' .. ii For Counc ... ,,
!:A. lari? pumber of residents Ill Hun-_ ~-8each hcpo to slow down th•
pace of traffic along Indianapolis A veno .
~ hive a petiticrn with 52 si.gnatur J&
m'li>r•i1t. to tile city cooncil Mooday
.lliii.i -Ill( a maximum ..,.;<I Umlt iri6 miles p<r hour along lndlanlpoli•
from Kelvincro.. Street to Belch
Boulevard.
".The area isn't posted now 60 cars lit by at 65 mJle11 per hour or faster,:•
Mrs. C. D. Tyler, ~l Minerva Lane.
claimed.
·Mn. Tyl<r start<d -in( th• petition
after lhe talked With several heighbar1
wliJ spre11ed ciooc«n over trattlc llfe-
ty In tlJe area.
. 0 We conPdtr jt a residential atreet, 1l6! 1lli cl(y •ya It's an arttrlal highwiy.
We'd llke the limit at 30 mph, but
aifjJareoUy lO 11 11 low as Ibey will .,... .• '
MnJyler satd 11,W. <i the petition
wre all rqillend \'Olm. "We could
Ill« 30MOO · licnatum, but "" thought <l!llY ~ volon could alp tile pOutlon." -
-·-~-4-group-Of the -residents will attend J'l(llJl!ay., councll ,.,.ion, >tarting al
~:~ p.m., accordi~g to ~-Tyle~. _
' nwe just want to Jet the 'eotmcll know .;t~ are very coocemed'. We hear brakes
~I all day and haH the night. It's Jll!t a matter 'ol time before llOIDething
lliious bappiu/' '
•
.-:o -
Top of the Pier _
.t:f_ . .,.
Propo~ Before
f..ouncil Monday
' ":Ibo ·Top ol the Pier redevelopmW
expected to rome up for
•fain al Ille Huali!Jifol Seacb
COimCJJ .ri>eettng Monday. .
llio council will decide whetber to ~ .. EoonoDJic lle•areh Auoclat.a
ol.Loa ·'Angeles tO updalo their feasibility
l\l!aJysia of expan11on of the ParkiJJg
A'tllhority In view of the ..,. appraisal
Qf. the Jl"OP'rlY. > appraisal flxe1 the value of the m• 'fhich co\'ers five daWntown
from 51'111 Street lo Like Stree~
MJOOJM», more than a million. dollar•
lil&her tban the lint estimate. .
_The plan calb for levellna the block&
*d.buildlng an ),800-space parklq lot.,
,,The P1'llltown 'Proper(y Ow n e rs
ASSOCi&bon; meanwblle, bu' notified tht
city staff 1!111 it hu '1,ned up lO percent
the prope,ty °"'""' willing lo commit
ir lalJd.•• private def-nt. -" ;..l:. J:•""-''•\.i )to v~( .-.... --up ---ly by July I was slV6Jl
a ~Uoo • al~ wllllnill811 '.bf ~ril*it....V awnora ·tllal pr[va!O ti> .. . . -do llie jOb.-•
-"Ollr -~ .b to collecl 71i percent ~ tile ft.f, blocq In' . 0.:L. 1 and wa
we.~"" )'Ill\ t!Ja~".Roberl 'Mry, 4iaocl-prlildent, said today. "Wt'll 1ii .it' the' council -meeting MOIJday;
thoutb~. to auwer any questions." ,... _._._
Jly~foil Trip
Plans Delayed
•
. HWJlltWloo SeadJ Chamber ol · · hu. been tern · u !Oiled . JIOl1ll y
ill. e11orta to -a by<lraloll
to Catallna I""" tile Municipal l>ier .. t~ol trip ""' eclJeduled for . July
· biit d>!Jmber m111ager Ralph KlJtl'.
d lie run will be delayed about a
k. . "' ""· Doe tD an ·overilauI ca their f'elfl"Ve
' , lt will be neceaary for tlJUn
e Us. a new data later," Kiser
i·M1£1ijiliD
outtd1 COA1r ,.uaL1iH£9 cbM,AN'f ~ · lolitrt N •. Wull
•• Pra!Cl.iit •!Id p~
' • J1ck It Cw1l1'{
Y1cji "'"'""' • ...._ ~61 ,,,......,.
Tli•m;:i!'~~a .
'fhell'l11 A. M1lf,hl!lt
Mtl'ltt1119 IEliifllr
Alt~ Oirki~
Wl:lr 0.111tt CollnlY •dlttr
. AllHrt W. l1t11
MMCllll ffltlll'
. tt..m ......... Offtc,
17171 l11th l1wltv1'4
M;Jrr., A''''''' ~.o. •·· 1to, t1t4• . ' °"" OfffMt ' . ·~ 1tttt11 m .,.., .. , •-. c.ii. '"'91 GI WU! ltT Strtott M~I -..ctii :It'll w.t tt!Mt teu,_.,.N .... ~ * Ntrfh.11,tlflln. ll:fll
•
, ·~ I' ' DAILY Pl\.OT PM .. IW Orw kllMIOll' •
MARGARET WEILER, 5, s.TOCKS UP FOR FOURTH .
.6 Major Fireworks Shows
To Light ·Up Orange Coast
Six major fireworks shows will light
up Ule Orange Coast area on July 4
from 5'a1 Beach to Laguna.
Pyiotec!Jnlc displays wlil be !J<ld at
Jiewport Dunes, Huntington Beach pier,
Lagwia Beach, Anaheim 1 ta d I u m ,
Dlsoeyland and Long Beach.
See the Weekender section of today's
DAILY PILOT for further lnformall90
on local fireworks displays.
Olber~pt1denee Day aetlv!Ues in
Orange ~ • lnclude the llWJlin&lo•.
l!eacb J~e Day Parade, .nqw
In ltl,llltll ,.,,,., The _parade wlil take
place at, µ ·~ In a circular route. frtim Like Park 1" Main Street. .
· Knott11 Berry ·Farin wlll prtll!nt
"OperatiOn · PatflotlJm" 1t the p1tk's
Independence H•ll beginning at 10 a.m.
Actor Don DeFore will narrate a pageant
depicting 11 scenes from American
history entitled, "America, the Great
Adventure."
Santa Ana activities include a 9 a.m.
parade down Main Street followed by
an address by Mayor Loren Griset.
The fourth armual "City of Vision
Parade" In La Palma will featuie a
fireworks display at dusk. Buena Park's
Bellis Park also has a pyrotechnics
dlsj,iay u well ea Fullerton Hlgh School
at 8 p.m.
A beauty contest will be held at 7
p.m. In Laguna Seach llr'IUatd head.
quarters, 17$ N. Coast Highway. Miss
Laguna .. ch·Li!eguard will be crowned
at the lndep!ndence Day activities.
2 More Suspects Held
ln Vie.io Teaeher Case
A 16-yelNlld boy am a 31.year-0id
womml already ~ time on a mari-
juana meet:~ wiH. be. charged ts ac-
cessories in the brutal butchering of
Mm:lon Viejo teacher ·Mrs. Flortnce
Nancy Brown.
· 'l1lt · arreats Thursday ()f Melanie
Diniels, 31, .in jail for a week on the
weed charge, and an untdentilied 18-year-
old boy ''WraJ)I up the arrests" in the
bizarre case of the death of Mrs. Brown,
allegedly murdered at the hands of a ·
roving, Ioooely-kn!t band of young
drifter• ~ Sheriff's u .. Ridlitrd Drake said il)e
pair charged as aocessories in the deaths
were ~ed. aft.er inte1Togation of
'lour olher drifters .w!Jo are being beld.
In jail -... ~ tlJe haldlet ~lying
of aervioe statlm manecer J~rry Carlin;
ihree otlJen for Ille. lmpuloe killing or
Mn. Brown.
Tbe prtncipala in the cases are:
-Stephen Craig Hurd; _20, ~!> addrts5,
who ls the alleged unofficlal leader of
tlJe roYing crowd of alleged plil users.
He face1 charges of murder and kidnap
in the Brown cue. He was arrested
after a foot cbale Jn N~co late last'
-k.
-Herman Hendrick Taylor, 17, also
of no kmwn address, turned over to
Tennis Oasses
'
Set for Beach
lnterested in learning how to play
tennis? The Huntington Beach Recreation
Center is sUll . taklne poWntJal tennis
players in its summer tennis program.
Marina Hl&h School classes are
schedUled for July 6 through July 27
and Golden West College classes are
sltted for July 7 through July 211.
Edl80lt High School te.Mis classes beein
July 13 and Huntington Beach Hlgh
School classes are scheduled for July
II.
Classe1 Include nine houra ol in-
atruction at '4. For further lnfO(mallon
contact tlJe RecttaU"" Centtr at 136-!.ll9.
local authoriUes by probaUon officers
in Norwalk earlier this week to f11.ce
charges as an adult in the murder-kidnap
of Mrs. Brown.
-Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney, 17,
anOther drifter, now being held in
Portland, Ore., where he has begun to
fight extradition to Orange County, where
he will fact prose(ution as an adult
in the Brown case.
-Arthur C. "Moose" Hulse, 16, of
11481 Dolan St., Garden Grov.e. a high
school student apedfled as a principal
in the June 1 hatdtet murder of Carlin
during a $50 holdup 1n a Santa Ana
servke station.
-'Ille Daniels woman, who assertedly
roved without 1 J)emlanent dwellln1 .in
the Santa Ana area and .started serving
a six-month term for m a r i j u a n a
possession a week' aio In Oran-ge County
Jail. A complaint seeking charges of
aiding and 8.bettlng after a felony his
been committed will be sought agelnst
her today.
-The I6-year-0ld Santa Ana boy releas-
ed to his parents after his arrest. He
will face the same charges as the Daniels
Woman, Lt. Drake said.
1'The two pickups last night closes
the book on the suspecta In the · case,"
Drake aald today.
'The roundup of t:he stx persons began
exactly a week ago when two detect.Ives
from the Santa Ana Police Department
-problng the Carlin case -received
an Informant's Up leadin1 to the arresc
of a youth in Santa Ana who later
was ruled out as a suspect, but who
yielded tnfonnation leading to the six
arrest.a.
The murder of Mrs. Brown, -pol ice
said, allegedly took place in an Orange
grove in Irvine where lhe victim wals
forced to drive after being stopped by
the group on Sand Canyon Road and
th,e Santa Ana Freeway.
The bend had left their stalled car
near the freeway offramp and shortly
afterwards allea;edly forced their way
Into the teaciher'a car.
Mrs. Brown waa on a trip from paying ·
1 coffee shop tip for 1 teacher's meeting
in Mission Viejo to • PT A meetine
In El Toro.
Miqd.Ie East H~~t~ Up
Israelis Ki.ll, Nine,·A~abs;-Girerr-illas iJomb ' . ., . .
By Ulltod Pre# J.o~nalfoll&I
An laraeil mny patrol killed nlll•
Ar-.b .guerrl11a ' WUtratots from Jordan
Thursday night, bul guerrillas stepped
up their attacks today and hurlf!(I bombs
in Hebron and the Gaza Slrip. ··Israeli
planes bombed Egypt for the 43rd con-
. sectltlve day ,and Cairo aa1d two raiders
were "hit.". .
Israeli Fote!gn Millister · Abba Eban,
Jn Uie first oUJclal reaction to Presl~ent
Nixon's statement on Ule Middle East,
called It "aft internationally important
expression of American Middle East
policy," but the Arab world was angry
and said Nlron 'll'U pro.-1:
Arab newspapera Mid N~ h~ Jeopardized the chancea of his own· peace
biitiative with ' his Wednesday night
remarks pledging to maintaln the power
balance in the Middle East. And the
Al-Falah guerrilla organization aa)d.... it
meant he woo)d give wirplanes to Israel.
"We tell Mr. Nixon -do not dream
of findlpg In the Middle East anything
other Ufan ·YOU are finding in SGuthe&st
Alia,0 the Al-Fat.ah new1ppper Aid in
Amman ..
Ebari'.11 statement delivered tt Tel
Aviv'1 Lydda Airport is he flew in
from London llid N~ bad '!clearly
Robb to Be Arraigned
On Abortion Charges
Dr. Robert Cumming J!obb or Laguna
Beaeh has been ordered to face Superior
C.OUrt arraignment July 9 on felony abor-
tion charges.
11ie court date-was set by Judg~
Byron K. McMillan immediately after
the jurist. rejected Thursday altorney
Moses Berman's arguments that furUler
proseculion of. the Art Colony pbysici~n
11 unlawful 1lDce: the seme charges had
been dlsmined by a mw»dpal court
judge.
And Judie McMillan also threw out
Berman's plea that the Or.ange County
Grand Jury was not qualified to indict
Robb because, it did not truly represent
the community Jn terms of racial, social,
.... economic and religious factors . ·
Judge McMi'llan delivered 'hia 'do1,1ble
barreled ruling after Bennan unsuc-
cessfully tried to have him 'removed
from the proceedings as prejudiced
a&ainst his client.
V alwy Opposes
Coast Freewp,y
Route Changes
Judge William S. Lee quickly rejected
that argument in a rietghborlng
cciurtroom and sent Berman back to
Judge McMUlan for an equally speedy
Fountain Valley is against halt ing the rejection of the argumelJt.'li he filed Jut
~ Pacific Coast Freeway in Hun-April 1.
Ungton BeadJ. Dr. Robb, 67, of 345&7 Scenlc· Drive, 1
COOncihnen adopted a resolution Tues-Dana Point, was indicted by the Grand
day night opposing tbe plan by State Jury .on charges of inducing rnlscarriages
A$emblyman Robert Badham ( R -in tllree women patients.
Newport Beach) which would stop the The Indictment revived tie charges
proposed freeway in the vicinity of BeacQ that were dismissed by Judge Paul Mut
Boulevard and Adams Avenue. . ;who threw the aUegatiom out of Santa
"We don't want another freeway corn:-Ana Municipal Court with the rulln1
Ing in and _d_umping tr~ffic into dle that California 's Therapeutic Abortion-
Beach and Adams area/' Mayor Edward Act of 19&7 was unconstltuUonaJ. Just said this mwning.
Badham 's purpose is to keep the Coast
Freeway out of Newport Beach.
"We don't favor any dtletlon of part
of the freeway. It should go all the
way through," Just said.
Fountain Valley will send copies of
lts resolution to the transportation com-
mittees of the state Senate and Assembly
and to local legislators ..
Pool Open on Fourth
Golden West College's swimming pool
will be the only city-operated pool open
on Independenct Day, according to the
H·untington Beach Recreation Depart·
menl ...
. conf1rmed the llnnl!li al .Jariel ls to
bl9: ensured because a weak Israel would
Invite a war."
He said otlfer Important polnta of Nill·
on's •tatements were fils "clear recognl·
tlon of the dll]rers of Soviet in-
tervention" and that the crux of the
Middle East problem was that the Arab•
"want to drive Israel into the sea."
J,lraeU newspapers: said Nixon'• words
rernalll lo be le9ted a1alnlt deedl ,and
that the key test It l'bellier Israel 1eta
jet planes and othef weaponry .. Ma~i'I
said despite the 11taternen~ •me Jsrie1l
official! think the lafat U.S. peace in-
itiative should be rejected.
lil.ere were these developments in tbe,
ng11t1ng: .
-Cairo said 34: Israeli Phantom and
Skyhawk warplanes struck military poai-
t.ions on the GuU of Suez, the Great
Bitter Lake and the southern and1
northern sectors of the Suez Canal for
five and a half hours today. Egypt'
said two planes were "hit" but gav.t
no other details and did not uy whilher
they were hit by rniuiles or conventional
antiaircraft guns.
-An Israeli spokesman said Arab
guerrillas struck in occupied Hebron,
wound ing 19 clvlllans with a hand
grenade. There were three hand grenade
attacks In occupied Gaza City and one
Ulat eiploded in a market place killed
one Gaza Arab and wounded four othtta.
-An Israeli Army P,&trol killed nine
Arab infiltra tors in the Jordan Valley
two miles north of the Dead Sea. A
spokesman said their weapons and ex-
pl~lves were found near their bodJea:
and there were no IsraeU easualUet.
A Good Racket
In Huntington
, lt's not too Jate to get in on 1 new
·sports "racket" in Huntington. Seidl.
'"*"'s still time to aign up for tbe
Hunt!Jl81on Beach Open Tennis Toorna· ment.
Tuesday is the final day to reaister
for the tourn~y, scheduled for July 18·11
and July 2'-28. Entry cards for the
event, spontored by the Pacific ~
Tennis Club and the Huntington Beach
Refcreation Department, are available
from the· Fecreatlo,n Department, 17th
Street and Orange Avenue. · 1
The cards and fees, which ere M
for singles and ts for doubles, mutt
be returned by g p.m. Tueaday.
The majesty of the Mediterranean
is captured in Henredon's
•
eapri
SUMMER SALE
featuring Htnredon's Ctprl
This fabulous collection of Henredon's furniture
to include d.lning, bedroom & occasional, all at sale pnces.
Drexel Furniture is offering their famous Esperanto collectj.on at
i;ubstantial savings.
Heritage is reducing It& exciUna Madrigal collection.
Henredon, Heritage & Drexel will also offer their outstanding uphol~tery at subltanUal savtnga.
tamps, pictures and accessories will also be available ~t reduced prices.
NEWPORT BIACH Profanlonal lnttrlar
1727 Waotclllf Dr., 642·2050 Daolintrt i.vallablt-AID-NSID
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 .
LAGUNA BIACH
345 North Coil! Hwy. 494-4551
OPIN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
l'tl•111 T•ll ,,_ MNt ef O~ c •• .,., M0.11•1
• •
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I '·
,,
I
..
I .. . -. 'Ne Yo .. ·BemetoWa
-~ . ---·*
:VO~. 63, NO. 1581 -4 SECTIONS, 3-4 PAGES
• • ·D.\11,. y ,., .. o,. ,.... • .:.:~
·MARGARET WE'ILER,.5; STOCKS UP f OR FOURTH ·
, • l ' ' ' .,...,..,....;,' • ,<\. ,i. I ~~f
• ~--~ ... I fM~
6 Major -Fireworks Sho~s
'
To Light Up Oran ge Coast
Six major fireworks shows will light
up the Orange Coast area on July 4
from Seal Beach to Laguna.
Pyrotechnic · displays will be held at
Newport Dunes, Huntington Beac~ pier,
Laguna Beach, Anaheim s t a d 1 u m ,
Dlfne:Yland and Long Beach.
See the Weekender section of today's
DAIL y PILOT for further information
on local fireworks displays.
Other lndependence Day aetlviHes in
Orange County include the H~_n
Buch Indepel)dence Day Parade, •now
Jn ita 66th year. The parade will take
place at 11 a.m. in a circular route,
from Late Park to f\.1ain Street. ,
Knott's Berry Fann will present
110peratlon Patriotism" at the park's
Independence Hall beginning al 10 ,a.m.
Actor Don DeFort will narrate a pageant
depicting 11 . scenes from · American
Flower Street·
Flowers 'Pot'
• F)owers apparently aren't the only
thlncs growlng on Flower Street in Costa
Mesa.
Police said they arre.sted Timothy 1'1 .
Warren, 24, of 169 Flower Street, 'lburs-
d&y after watching him v.·ater four,three-
foot marijuana plants In his back yard.
warren was booked on suspicion ot
pouessing and cultlvathlg the ·. illfgal
med.
CH P Wo rking
Over 1-f oliday
C31ifornia Highway patrohnen
statl<ined in Orange Counly have
a message ror errant holiday,
weekend motorists. .
''9e!pitc lhe fact that we are
working ~·ltboot pay (the state.
senate .has yel to approve Gov.
Reagan's $6.6 billion budget) we
all arrived on the job at 5:4$
o'clock thl1 morning heeds held
history enlilled, "America. the Great
Adventure."
Santa Ana activities Include a 9 a.m.
parade down Main Street followed by
an address by Mayor Loren Griset.
The fourilf ;innual "City or VJ.sion
Parade" in Li Pllma will feature a
ftfeworks display at dusk. Bueha Park's
Bellis Park also has a pyrotechnics
display as well as Fullerton lligh School
at a p.rn.
A beauty contest will be held at 7
p.m. in Laguna Beach lllcguard head·
quarters, 115 N. Coast Highway. Miss
Lagun'-Beach Lileguard will be crowned
at the Indep(!ndence Day activities.
' .
Dy ing lowq. ~O)'
Gets Last Wish ,
Disneyland To ur
Little Billy Long made it to Disneyland
today. The 7-year-old from Des l\1oines,
Jowa, who doctors 'say is going to die
because of 8'11 inoperable brain tumor,
"'as greeted by Disneyland characters
on his arrival.·
His other dream, to meet comedian
Red Skelton, wlll be realized ~tonday
mo rn l n g when Governor Reagan's
limousine picks up Billy and his family
to take them to Slcelton's Cathedral City
home for a visit.
Billy's family first learned or the tumor
1'11 1967, shortly before Billy's falher
was killed in a plane crash. l!is step-
talher, James Exline, said he drOve
all Thursday night lo reach Qisncy.land
at the appointe<t tou r: time of 8 a.m .
The visit was made possible by lhe
people of Des Moines who , after learning
that Exline was selling · hi1 fumit.ure
"to make the trip, dona.led $2 ,SOO; to
t.he family. • ·
Beaches Crowded .
On Warm F1-iday
hJgh, shoulders back. eyes alert People tn blthlnc sulls outnumbered
to <Ope witll tho heavy holiday those without today in N<Wporl Bt1ch.
traffic. City life~• •e~ltrialcd lh;e belch
"Pay or not, we are . .sworn ,to crowd waa 90.JOO persons as many had
and will vigorQWJly enforce .. ~ the day off from work slnCt Ult Fourth
traffic Jaws on the county's '-of July fails on Saturday and i.hot tim·
rreewa s and highways, and peralures Inland had ttie effect of driving
hopefully save some Ii v e s,'' people to the t>each.
patrobnen ~an:,ed. Traffic, as usual, choked many city
streets.
I
• ........ _
• • ORANGE ' COUNTY, ·CAllflORNIA "TEN CENTS.
'' -. . -!.; • • • ' . .. . .
'.i
" . ' -' ~· ~' . j 1 ' ' :..
Passenger B~t-$:«rik iit:·Ati~~~~ River·
1•• --.~jr • 1>' j ,".1-"\ ••,••-• ... :;,;.. ', ' j
SAIGON (AP) -'A·-rtver
boat auucll: • flollblg. mine just IOUth
of tho Demlllteriud Zone today llMi
blew up, killing 41 of the 50 Vietnamese
civilians aboard, a~sovernme:nt spokes·
man announced. . . The mining· ~ on 1 brlncll of
the Ctla ~ Viet River-• leis · than ·a mile
from .Dong Ha, ~ boat's d!'l.til\ltion
ibout nine miles llOUth of the DMZ.
·The river is regularJy patrolled by U.S.,
and South Nietnamae-hoall-·North . ' . .
lrvine~Backs
Coast Route, . . . .
Raps B~<µtanl
By THOMAS FORTUNE °'"" ...............
Tbe • trv'ine eomp&Qj has written :..
letter to Nie Senatorl\lll<lof_pb oili\et,
chalnnin of the SeMte Tri~'
Committee, saying. that Pacific Coal!
Freeway Is needed to handle Loe1l tnlllc.
The letter' saya the Irvino 'COmpiiiy•
Is opposed to Assemblyman Robert.
Badham's ·bill·' to ·dtlete 'tho ·piOnned.
freeway. '11\at 'Wioµkl be "bcieb bn-
practlcal JOO ~~le,''· w r I t e s
Gordon Jones, author of the Irvifte lta\e-
ment
The bill by-Badbam (Miewport
Beach) pu!ed the APenbly a · to •
nine days ago and now is ,endJna action
in·the. Senate. · , ·
. A llimillr --·bill ~· the
u:::,.blf.:c.. ~··1Y •• ~.!_,r.:.~J m ,uv.:~~ :_.., jii •
ly WU killed by Collter (ll-Yr<ka), who
never let it oul of hll TranapO<llUon
Cmunltlee.
Janel, who Is tl'le· ti-vine ComplaJ'•
en¢neer:ing planning directer, sent c:optM
of his !etter to the mayors of Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa, the county ro.d
commluioner and tbe state Division of
Hi«hways.
The Jetter says ~ Irvine Compa.ny
Is concerned about the freeway route
eut of Upper Newport Bay where dt
passes tlroul!h ll'Vine Company pl-operly.'
It notea that traffic stlldlts by the
state, ·the cotU1ty ~ the. company's
own traflic comultanl project 1'5,000
cars per day usln« Pacific Coast
Freeway and Pacific Coast Hlgliway com.o
bined in 1990. . (){ tlie 1'5,000' daUy trips, 115;000 wLD
either have a 'delCIAation of ·Of ~ate
frorii Newport Beacti, the Jetter cla!m1.
Jn addition, 95,000 trips dafly wtthln
the city are ?'C)jected for the Coast
Hiqhway corridor.
"The eUminatlon or this vital ~IY
Jink W01ilrl result in the eventual tr1mc
m.rangulation of Orange County'• growtnc
('<'Asta! ·commuiliUes," .)'ones wrltee.
"The magnet o(.a#ractlon exl.stl ln th is
areA .aM the. .traffic will come to ua
uiltil our local roads are choked."
The letter notes-the city of Newport
· lfeach signed ·an agreement Jor the ,
nrecise freeway alignment • 9' the
Upper Bay In 111!58._
It says th~ Irvine (!ompany }tu ~
ed mucb.,of its Land f'""' ~ty
In orde.r to ensure I.hat the route could
be maintained. lt saya the company
has \\iorked to integrate the freeway
as an asset rather .than. i dilnJPUve
tS.. Fl\EEl\'AY, Pa .. II .
Newport Yout h's
Remains Home; . .
Shot in Ala ska
The b:Kly of Timothy Edward Rlu,
22, who died last Sunday of a gunshot
wour.d in the head In Kodiak , A!Mka,
has been brought home to Newport Beach
by. his rather, John C. Rau.
The boY's m~r satd the cause of
tho deat.i, Ls under Lnvestlgallon by pl<
troopers in Ala6ka.
Rau, a Corona de:I Mar High School
g;,,.iua\e. was critically wounded bY 1
single shot In' the held. A gw1 not
known to be hia~wu found in the room
and lhe famil y said there wu no sp-
' pafent reuon for him to t1~ l].il_ qp
Ille.
Rau and the two other }'OUths Wert
v.;orklng in ..1 Kodiak cannery. fl wu
a high-paying seuonal job,
Mrs'. Rau said the family f!!:d>a!llY
will hold prlvfle "'veolde ..mce. at
Paci fic Vlew Memorial Pm'i.
VI-mines In 111 have smk or. mand'·sll11>n.W1r~ ~ 'Illom, • ir:lll" ·north of Phnom l'<M; .
d•mijje«I a:~ of ' boats.-But lbe dlvlsKins{~ ~~ ~ir~-mi~w with; frt~\ ttnemy troops ·movtni into [ toll_~ wuJeUeved to -be ll!<Jargest.-· Oll•Mlve t.il•i!re•a:,.,. ~It poslUon Ol\(sfde tlle city. The hl...._11': SOu~ 1 VWiimese otr1e1ali also an-· • \.=':;;;: • • ,-..,: -~, • a-•..-noUDiild ~ -"--wWrawaJ ~ of_... 'a lif:iga6e troOpl b),ig•J>Ol!i\ort. in!!°! '..-.~ • r I b:eiWte:D JCc;mipong 1borq and -Phnom I
of ~ -I be-n: 1,000 llMi 2,000 A . spo~in11n, ~ ~, ~ P<nh was •till closed despite effotll :
men -from . Cambodia; redudng the South'Vltinemoe \tllQ~ ·~'lor of_ ~veral C.ambodian battallona to clW : ~ 1ll!ilJllJlr ~89<tth Vietnam ... tz:oops ~.''~,-ad\l.t!l'\tli ~_.,. it. · · . ., •' I
Ln . tho I ~g <0untry .to about threo.No Pln~n P<intl' :~'-·A month-Lonj '/•Se of Kom,.;,i n.im : . u;ooo~ l l -~ 1lder&W:~·· " _ ,. ..-:-~-' ·i . was ltjken m late 1June •!ter U.S.'
'ID;. Phnom t Pe[li, the Carhbodiati -ni.~ ~an' fiald;~~pf f!gbter-bombers f¥de ))eavy air .u1ku ; ~" tho j;ombodJan · milltily com-• uu-.at' 'Js"\.~elopill~ on eaemy posJlfons around tho ....._, ·~ . .::~ : •t ~ ;, ..... : '..."' " ..... .; ~;~_, . • " ;;: ' • •" ':.-r '-c ' ~ • · • ' I . -l)~th DeJ~ys ·;
~Pe~'.~ay ·
, Ca8e. D~ision
. I I •'
DAILY llL~T Stiff,,... B••~ ttites' .· ... , , ..... · · '.' ..
' I ' ' • • '·• ·~1hlk Wiie. holds Bl tile ;. J anleS .'.ijodgSbn4talfe1 oa'thiof ~o~ce _ ss :Pre&l-·
.den! Nil\od',s new,sf!efl#ry' ¢1 labor.-Fed~rill Judge Thµrmand ·Clarke
of Newport Beach ·administered. oath ·.of bffice Tuestt8y~ moinJrlg ·on
lawn ,of 'WeS,tem WhJte,ffouse in Sait Clemente. H.Odgson Was uhdefa. ~ecretary of -Iabor',pi'lbr-' ti> ,e)evation. \( ·fcmlulr-Ndrt)lrtdge rdld~nt,
he . w&s 'at one· tlme 'vice Rr'esident for industrial relatiofls .for'" Locka
he:ed. , • . . ·. .. . ' ' I · '
AzimuthAnne~ Decision·
• . ' I .. J • ,·
' . Postponed by Planners.'o;: . . ' .
A decision on Azimuth, EqliltieS Inc.'s l>J>PO&inl' the . anne~lon .. iMartiO 'la! a
.lf!llllcoilon 1 .. prezonln(· o1 .property •f>8<"' rese8roher -1o< Astropo..er: the
'"'.which they plan to erect $40 mllllon McDnnnell-Dougiaa Corp>raUon dLYll!oo
in .. office bulkllnp ~ a hotel was which .rlow occupies the . PkiPeitY. ~·
po8tpoiJed Thuriday_ nlCht by Newport fmuth is In escrdw :to bu)'.. A-
Beac!> p\annlng ~~Lonert., hai 1ir'v0<! al ·a1!0rne1·to'"'1inutll Vice
Ad.Mm was held oil two weeks until Prakk~t Robert Hlrich in~priVate. mlt-• l I f t ., •"
the next comriil.-ton. meetlrig beCause ·ient ' · •. 1 i· 1 • • •
a . majority of the planners wire not · Commilllon· M~. Gardocr G\,;a. In
prepared to · vote'. Three of the· seven architect, neW 'tn frotp a trip·. to· 'Utt
commialbn memben· ha~e to sit the ~ · (.'08lt ·arid dtQVe 'dlitctly ' to~ lbe
hm'lng out because of .pot,entlal CDn!lict meeting .befofe 1 &:o!ne;i lone:·, Hi .. ,aid
oC ~terest and · .a fow;th 1 was · out :.~ he ·needed 1 time · to i'tvtew the latest
towri all week and not up on latest ,~1 !ft riCaryf to t!)e ~:
developments.' · Comrntssiontrs who were ~"to
Mimutll 11 .... ting ""'1ng that woul4 ~ui.;. ttie' l"itter win JOhn 'Jall!i'kY ~ lb project\ called NoWpait Plaza. Jr.; J~·Watson iod·Cul;I'~-' "• . ·
tt the .jir0pert1.-· lie annexed to the .••. ,. • 1 ,
city' ol Newport BellCh. PrefAinlng La ' · · ' ···way of ietllhg tile· jump"for develop-·-De~·oc· . r-' at SI' i..•-::1. merit lmmedlately, Ujloii' BJinexatlon. ' ' ll.l _. ~
1be annaaUon ·quatlcxr will be:· taken ' ' · 1 ' • •
ui> bi''"~--'Clty ·co(inctfm<l\ .F .. t :. "'rnST.A "p· '. 't
Mondi)' nlglit llMi tile countrLocaJ.Ag..,. ' ·Qr ·' ,, . . . . ~
cy FormaUon·!Coinrnimion 'on 'Wed-. .,, 1 ~ .:· ,...... •
l)Olilay. , .• · ' . ~ ~ HO!J~ Li 61111'11\1 )'l l!llft<
Spokesmen for :Azimuth 111id they· were ·IUchml • o Bhlmenthal · a a.,...-old ready.to procted btrt'~ ,,auldn't.uk: ,. '· · · · • .. ,
tho planninf commisaiOntn to come to \!_emocr!l• ... di~ ol Ille.~'
1_dicl&1Gn,they wero.·not rtMy-i.«1111<,--'In ~·to ~-(VJS'!'A1~-~
A,spoitlfn.Ur for. ~ .ln'lqt--CdmlfltlY, a~.a . ..maat(i. ','-;. r, '•· i. '"/.,'"! ,
whldi ~·p.e'11tnehUiln ol property : B!umentl..l,.flf't""l1,' .,,.,ff<pn, '!'
11, Llad ,NOJ;Vtd ror -tho r'~ city, ol .-4111 o1 reo,rvt'tilinl'li tn Ille lbrjl\o lllvbif,::.not 06J«s,1'o;tlie:d.i1'y. < • ·r·-· 11 r·mp Le'-•~ •N.C . wU 'l1fe p1am\nl commllolonen who -,,... ~ ,.. ' ' ·-~ ,
•
BJ. TOM •BAIU.EY .. • ot'a.. Dlitr ,.... ...... T
' Dell!>· IUP,pod IA lodey' \o ~the
UPf!'r Newport .BaJ la<1d nap trial
and ilelaY 5-"" Court Judge Claude ltf. Qwtns: ruUnc :on an 1uJt that-l'Jlll"k·
ed 1 courinJom belUe. llMi ,ibe airi"I Of dlarg'3 of fr,11Jd.
San. Francisco Alklrney Phillip lleny
~v~ Judet ·~ ltll11mom1ng that
l1il rl)Other Ln law'& .1oog fight .. -
...,.... ended ~Ly_l!!!loy in Ill Ootland-
hoopital. • •
.B:err)' •. wbo rtpresen~·a aroup 'ot
Newwt-Beoch hOm.oWners in-the Jud
trade trtal, has been flyil!I to Oakland
II lll,i. and reiurning lo Or,angt County
~zt '111<(1'11ingl •Ince the . trlal -.. a week ago.
: It 11· ~ .tl)at ,_al _1 ... wil'~beld:durlnc·t!>e .. ~ ...... ~ ' • ,11eny_ , ........ llme·to..,,._,.
----l!Mi Jui!lo °"""' Immediately qfted to' halt !iis rullnc
dMll at leoot: Moqday. · ' llll'rt Llbocted lrvlne Compony, 1i.
lomq'.ltoloert w....., ond lleplty A~
lornej Geiiet-al JI)' Sbavel.oon for · the
itite 1 'Jbunday by char&Jng the IrvJne
Company with fraud m tts:preparation
<it nfdei\ce . that ...... pl'.tlllOled · lo the
Stale' Lands Cdmmlsoion. -·~ were pplQI holes Jn evidence
preseMed be{ ore the commission," Berry
told Judge Owens. "The Irvine Com[fany
was guil ty of fraud when Jt represented
to the commluion ,that the public only
had ICC"8 to 1,090 feel Of Upper BaJ .
frolQie rien Jn fact ·it bad accels
to more .Ulan 50,000 feet." .' .
B«ry l!TKUed that "thlt .... the type
ofi fhlng" tflat ied the state 1.agency
to approye the. land ..Wap ln NoVember
1917.
Tlie commtsslon eni1 .. sement of tho
trading of f57 acres <>I county owned
tidelands for 450 acreS of Irvine uplands
wm based on "scanty information
carefully presented and a lot of otl\er
iriformqUon that w:as carefully concealed
by the Irvine Company," he alleged.
Warren ·cormrnDed ile cpiv1a cl.
fraud and reminded Jodge Ow~J ~th1t
"this is the lint. occ'9ton that wch
a charge bas ,been inlAoduced Ln to
. UW.:law!Utt 1 ..
~·it has never been cOnlained in any of ,ihe pie~· and It ls regietlable
· that it 1hould have been ralJed now," IJt...-i!f. "I need !iiinlly aay that, thore
hai never . been any element of fraud
by my cllealri the .ctlon."
· Shavelson ·condemned Berry's charge
as "very unfair."
"Friud must be pleaded and ·with
• grOat d .. l of parllcul•111y ,'' the slate
lawyer reminded Judp <>wens. i.
Berry came met io 1altt Warren am
Deputy Col!DLY C:OU-1 Robert Nuttmail
(S.. BACK BAY, Pqe I)
' .
Ora•ie
. .W:eatller
• • • '. t
It'll be a balll up Fourth ol July,
weltherwlae, with lllnn)li lkln and
temperaturea in the 1>11 slipp1n1
back· intO .. lJle r '10 1 range alone tht
coast over the> weeJi;end. I.
INSmE TOD-'Y ' Yov. can Mw a cracking QOOd
time a& a~u of the manu fire·
eoorka 1"°111 around. Orange
Coun~ on the Fo'¥rth oJ JUllf •
T}ltV're aU Ulted in the Gvtdc
to Fun· eolum.n in todail'• Wn~
ender.'· · -. ·
......,. 'n
~\It t"f g::,u. -~ -" ·-'" ----. -' Rau also ls 1urvived by two brolhel'.1,
Steve of Mendodoo tnd Randy of U'9 r
family home at :11117 Celtlellt Pllce.
feel iber thould not vote art of. Georp fonverly on, '"° •\llf of Wblla -Brwn, William . Martin , and Doh 'couns'elor Dan~I MOynlhan. ~.. ,. ,
Adtl-. Brown,11 cleon of tile t:rtduote The post, l!Ubject to S<nat~ ·-Scttool of Adtntnlstration.· •It UC lrvlqe I nrm8Uon, pays. tsa.000 • )'tlr and· ll
and the university hu tall0n I )>Cllil(o\t now .Jleld by, ''!'tln&.dlrecto1" .lloborl: )AM.
""""''""' . -.. •L--. •.
'
"
•
•
-...---·---· ---'
Under
••
!i-Oont.«aed """ poalble delay in con·
itrucuon ol the entire C.0.stal Frttway
(t''the Newport Beach segment is remov-
~. ~una Beech dty cooncUmen, ad·
joumed lbelr Wednesday evening -
IO I :» p.m. Tuesd1y fe< !urlJ!er
-on d. Ille problem.
c.ouncilm111 Edward Lorr u r Jed
"alron.6 adioft" by the city in the face
of Assemblyman Robert Badham's bill,
ndlJ headed for the State Senate calling
rOr removal of the portion of the route·
that would cut aCT06S Newport Beach.
'''Ibb leaves the Laguna Beach seg-
ment hanging in limbo," said Lorr, •'and
~delay in -d. the freeway
could lel'OUlly Increase our traffic pro-
~--We fouil>t le< tlllJ rout. and i!ftuch ol our fudsre planninf hutp orl
U."
.'.City 1o1._. Jomeo "D. Wheaton
tOld the council ~e and. City Engineer
~~h Sw~eany will be meetin1 Monday
' State DiVlaloei of Highway officials
Loo Angelet in .n ott.mpt to obUln
JnformMJon on tbe state's intention.
_Wheaf.9n said he would agree that Oie council could adopt a resolution ex-P:e-mg its views md address it to
senator R•rid olph Collier'• Tnn,,pOn.tion Commltttt, whJch now
will ltudy the Bldham bill, but suaested
Mr .a.ion mlibt well be delaye\l wrtU
.it.r Ille Moodaf meMinc.
. · ·-aton poin1ed out lllat the bUI d,..
j\\Jt directly olfect Ille Llfuna portioa
Jj('the fneway. •
• "It iloes not man that Ille portion
/II. Ille ir-ay 10Ul!I d. Buck Gully
ln• Corona dtl Mar will not be buill."
-Aid. ''111!1 II all port of the
enUte ttate-freeway 1J1tem and it would
be poalble to c!Jrecl !he C«ona dtl
Mar tr.way down MacArthur Boulevard ioa1ll •ia Buck Gully and the adopted
jiljand roUt. II the Newport S.ach M(•
mtftt.~af the Colstal Frtew•y were re-~Ovtd ..
Pli:.orT • notAd that -e have been ill-
lllft08I where a whole route wu lbelved
~olproblem1 lncertaln areu. ·.Sweany Hid the Board of Supet'Vllon
liid ~ a iwolullon urainl oon-
mictloo of the lneway "and the Orang•
County Rood Deportm..,t II urging ua
' -&o ro alon1, but alnoe we have the
-ocheduled July I K probably
fllDUJd be better to wait." ·
• Qiy Atlllmr/ Jock . J. Rlmel pointed
oat b:t trenrey OJt.tzactioa hu c<n-
tinued oa eHher aide of Santa Barbara
4o1p1to that tlty'1 bloctlnr d. the route
tllmllh the city itaelf.
• Cowlcilman Roy Holml Hid he '!l1"0ed
''with 1be iiplrtt ot Mr • .Lorr'• f9I01ut1ot••
...i ~ adjouninent until alter
_..., wllll hitbwiY ollldail, at
-~cllyodlc>l"couJd,
i '11!1" .i.::.;.. ... d. I!>< coundl ._i. • clilJlinue jllo )llOlta: '!"ur Tueaday. . , : "* * * . ,......PflfleJ
FaEEWAY •..
-in Ila planned communltieo. one ...ii of Ille· 1n1ne eompany
m...ay Planninl. Jonet wrote. II the
)ocallon of Fasblon Jsllnd ond Newport
Center in lie ·al'ff oL the conver1erice
vi the Con>no del .-and Pacific Coos!·
.frwwayl.
I.
'Conductor Taken Ill.
,• l,ONDOi'j' (AP) -Olin Ki<mperer.
' , Girmui to~•·"u stricken ill
t ~ and canceled bis appearance
· Lo0d0n'1 P..Uval Hall. . ·
'Ibe renowned eonduetor of London'•
· -· Orcheltra wu to have
dad Beetbovin'1 Chol'li Symphoriy
Ille bell.
.................... --------...
• . ' DAILY PILOT
J OUHOl"C:O.UT PUILIUOWO COM,ANY
t: " l •Mti H. W•.41
"""""' ..... "'*'"""'
J •• 11 1. e.-1..,
Yb ....... tMll0-11~
Ttt.11111 K• ... il ··-n.1111• A. M1tt,lli~•
M"'9glrlf £1111w
n .... ,, '•''""• Hr-JllOlt 9MCll <Hy l!dlltW
"""""' ..... O'fflce 2211 ,Wttt 11!~1 .. ~l1•1rd
M1lli11 ..Y4,...u ,_o. l et-111s, t2••> --
. frldoJ, Juli J, 1'170
..
•• •
'
,
Tl111 15 ROUtl! ,OR FOURTH 0' JULY PARADE
Huntl"1ten.M1ch .l •tr•va1anta Sf1rt1 at 11 a.m.
' , .. : • ' • <"
Nixon Sets Envo y. Meet
To Discuss Paris Talks .
17 RICB.UU>P. NAIL
.; OI "' ....,. Pltlt l1rlff
~t Nhoo II to moot In San
Clemf nte Saturday" with David Bruce,
lii1 ..,. dllef U.S. ·nqotiator at the
elalled Parll lalb GD peoce I~ Vletnom.
In ' Its ,.., ••• d """' to find polltlcal
1alutian for the. Indocblm war, Mr. Nll:on
has tlid that BrUct, a veteran .diplomat.
wpi hll•e :greet f1t:1ibfllly in presenting
the U.S. poeitioo at Paris.
The President has expreMed. satisfac-
ticli With the rate -of VietnamiuUon.
M. · the South Vietnameae groW strong
enough to defeDd themselves, the Pr:e1i.'
c1eet 11es ....,..ted !hey ,.;11 be a tous\>"
adyenary· 10< Hanai ·at the conlerw1ct
table than ii the U.S .
The North Vietnamese and Viet Cong,
however, thus+ rar have rep.litd to the
President's appeal by in effect saying :
first get U.S. tr~ out 0£ Vietnam.
A m<mber d. Oie Yi!! Cont de!egation
said the confererice "can never make
anY progress" unUI the U.S. as:aJpls:
the Viet Cong peace plan ahd. pulls
"-
Private Str eet
Bid By Ir vine .
Ni xed ·by Panel
nie lrvine Compeny's requeat to maU
Ill strtttl in their planned Big Canyon
golf course home development pllivate
was turned down unanimously Thursday
nl&ht by Newport Beach plannln1 com-
mtsslonen. , •
'The cornmiAiOll approved tbe Irvine
Company's subdivialOJJ map for 117
ham.Sites with the condition that at
least die main street through the
development, Big Canyon Drive, remai~
public.
The plannin& col'l)mission members lef~
it up to the city council to decide whether
side streets also should be public. •
The Big Canyon development is north
of Fashion Island and sooth of ford--
Philco's Aeronutronlc plant. It has been
the site of much earth grading in the
past. year in p~paration for the 1011
COW'leJ, .
City Planning Directs>r Larry Wiison
~ he Is ·sure city councilmen will
want to hear from the poHct chief in
deciding whtt.ber streets ahould be public
or pr1vat:t.
He said if the street.I are to be public
they will have ·lo bt In accordance with
what is t:nforCeable under the Callforn la
Vehicle Code, which means no bum ps
to slow trafnc or pnstlng of exorblta'nUy
1low •Pffd limits 1uch 11 IO miles per
hour.
Richard B. Smith, o{ Tµstiu, 11 to
be the developer for lht 117 homes and
Wllliarruon artd Schmid, or Santa Ana,
the enalneers for the 1ubdivlslon layout.
'·
Amerfcu l1'00pl ooi.
'Ille P'reeldent plans no particlpotlon
in lndependenee Day ceremoolea.
After days of concentraUon on foreign
affalr1· c.~pped by his Wednetday night
forelp poliey dialogue oo television, the
President hu turned attention to
domesUc problems.
He met Thursday with. top officials
of the Office of Budget and Management,
Director ~rge P. Shultz, Deputy Direc-
tor Caspar, :Weinberger and Assodate
Director Arnold B. Weber.
The three w.ere SW<rn in a1ong with
new Labor Secretary James Hodgson
of Northrldp 'J'h.ursday morning on the
lawn outside the President's San Cle-
mente o!fl~.
"We are very proud, those of us who
are Californians, to have the swearing
in ceremonies take place here," said
the President.
The new OBM chiefs were piucked
from 01her -federal post.s tc> run the
new agency. It replaces the Budget
Bureau and is expected to combine
budget-making with evaluation of the
effectiveness of federal programs.
After lunch Thursday, the President
held another domestic conference with
Shultz, White House aides H. R.
Haldeman, John 0 . Ebrlichman, Robert
H. Finch and Donald Rumsfeld, director
of the Offl" of Economie Opportunity.
Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said
Thursday that Mr. Nixon was very pleas-
ed with the live TV dia)QIU.e on foreign
poll~ in which three network.!· an-
chormeti quesUoned him.
Friday. Night
· Film Shows Se t
Weekly films from the Orapge County
film library will be screened Frkh1y
nights in a program ,sponsored by the
Newport Beach Library and Fashion
lsland AS80CiaUon.
Films such as "'Moods of Surfing,"
"Ski Outer Limit.I','' and the N1tional
GeograP;hlc Society's "Yankee Sails
Acron Europe" wiU be featured in the
program which is scheduled to Open
July 10 with the surfing movie.
The films will be shown every Friday
nlght at 9:30 p.m. in tht courtyard
in rront of Penney 's, Admiuioo is free.
Yigilante Justice?
,•
SAN DIEGO (AP ) -A bandit flee ing
with $715 from a 8111k ol America
branch ·was narrowly missed by a car
1s he darted across a busy street 'nlurs-
dft,>'. But a passing motorist plowed Into
an FBJ agent"& car. The aaent wasn't
hurt.
•
Middle East ·Heats Up -
Isrcielis Kill Nin e A rabs ; Guerrillas Bomb a,u_,_ .. __
All 1.-uu 111111 paltol killed nine.
-Arab auerrW., ln!Ut;ators from Jordan
Thursd11y · nlg}lf, but guerrillas stepped
U'1 ·thelr attacks today IJld hurled bombs
In Hebron aod the Gaza Strip. Israeli
planes bombed Egypt for the 43rd con·
secutive day ,and Cairo said two raiders
were "hit.''
Israeli Foreign Minister ' Abba Eban,
tn the first official reaction to PrtSldent .
Nixon's statement on the Middle' East,
ca lled it "an In ternationally important
ex pression of American Middle East
policy," but the Arab world· was angry
and said Nixoll' was p~lsrael.
Arab newspapers said Nixon had
jeopirdized the chances of his own peace
in itia tive with his Wednesday night
remarks pledging to maintain the power
balance in the Middle East. And the
Al-Fatah guerrilla organization said it
From Pqe l
BACK BAY ••.
for what he described as •'con!tant digs
and repeated Innuendos against my
client'• (a homeowners gr o u p led by
Newport Beach engineer Frank Robin-
son).
"If th.is goes on," he told Judie O\.vens,
"thert is going to be an eX'J)losion on
my part. I will not tolerate these con-
tinued attacks oo the character of my
clients."
ft was not clear to courtroom observers
what prompted Berry's .outburst or whn
was responsible fM the-comment. he
descrlbed. Judge OY.rens appeared to
share th.at opinion.
"I don't Utinlr: anything has been said
for you to get upset about." he told
Berry. "If anything like that had oc~
curred, it would have been dealt with
properly by thls court and if something
happens to upset you, I wish you would let t.he court know.
"But f can think of noth ing that has
been said here that you should be of·
fended about," the judge added.
Berry made no further comment. He
left lhe courtroom for Orange County
airport. and his Oakland plane with oo
explanation of the commcnt.s that Jed
to hi! charges.
Berry and altomey Duffern Hel1ing
fer County Aud it.er Vic Heim argued
throughout the afternoon that they should
be alklwed to introduce into the trial
evidence that was, they claim, never
placed before the State Lands Com-
mission .
mllllt hi WeWd ,tV.-,irarp'SEI' II i.'111.
"We tell Mr. Nbon -do not drtam
or "finding fu the Middle' East anything •
other than you are finding in Southeast
Asia," the AJ-Fatab newspaper uld In
Amman.
Eban 's statement delivered at Tel
Avlv'1 Lydda Airport u be flew in .
rrom LondOn sald Nl1on hid *'clearly
confirmed the_ ttrength of Israel 11 to
be ensured becau1e a weak Inel would
invite a war." -
He Hid other Important points of NII•
on '1 ltltemenfl were hll "clear recognt-.
tion ol the 1 danpr1 of Sov1et In-
tervention" •nd that the crux of the
Middle East problem wu that the Arabs
"want to drive Israel lnlo the sea."
Israeli newsp.tpen II.id Nlmn'• words
remain to be t•ed a1ainlt deeda and
that the key tut Jt whether Israel 1eta
jet plane1 and other weaponry. Maariv
-...,.. tllo ........ -1-aoll ~la think fbe lai.t U.S. peace fn,
llotive should be re)tclad.
There were these c1tvelopments In the
fisht1n1:
-Cairo 11.ld 34 Jara~U Phantom and
Skyhawk warplanes at.ruck military pOsi-
tions on the Gulf Of Suez, lhe . Gre1t
Bill« Late and the southern and
northll'l! aector1 of the SUH Canal for
five and a hall houri today. J!'.cypt
uld two pl1nei were "hit" but l•ve
M other detaila and dkl not aay wht:ther
they were hit by miMUe1 or conventional
utJalrcraft pa.
-An 1-aell , opal<_,. Hid Arab
ruerrlllu atruct in occupiad Hebrotl,
wounding 11 civilians with a hahd
srena<fe. Thett ..... three hand lfl'ODlde
attack.I in occupied Gaza City and Ofle
that exploded In a market place killed
one GUI Arab and wounded fvur olhert \
' )
Harbor District Vote
Bill Faces Committee
The bill to put cHmolutlon o< expanelon
of the Orqe County Ha-llittrict
to a vote oi the people ii Uted to
be bea.rd by tfte it.ate Senate's Govern-
ment Ofganiutional Ocmmlttee ne1t
Thuraday, July 9.
The meesure, co-authored by
A..emblymen John V. Brlg1 (R·
Fullertoo). K<meth C«y CD-Anaheim)
and Robert Burke CR-Huntington Beach)
paaaed the Asoeml>ly by 12-2' vole April
23.
Bal Island Ferry
To Be Landmark
The Balboa to Balboa Island Ferry, a
Jong-time · attraction Jn NewJl9l1. Harbor
will be dedicated ln September a1 an of-
ficial historical landmark by UJe Newport
Beach Historical Society.
Plans for the dedication are 1oi.ng
ahead (ol\owing city council donation of
$130 to purch1se a bronze plaque for the
si t.e, according to society board member
Jack Barnett.
In the Jut two yeara, historical land-
marks have been placed by the society
at the Ba1boa Pavilion and tht Dory
Fishing Fleet.
Senate action on the bUI hao been
dellyW N!Veral time.a while the Oran1e
County -11( lttiliat«s busied
tbemaelvet with other mitten.
The mtulft ca.Lls for a two-choke
eleotkin with vokrs to decide either
to -ve the tpedal Harbor i>lsbict
and allow il to .becu11e jlllt .anod>er
department d. county 10Vemnent or
to •>pllld ii• function to Include ...
qulsitlon ond operlfl!>n d. lnllllld regional
parts and r<a'eallonlll ......
The Senate Gov11 11nerUl Organb.ation
Committee -wa1 headed by Sen. Jctin
Schmitz (ft.Tustin) unUI hi.I elevatio n
to Congre·ss in the June 30 apedal elec-
tion. A new ctialnnan hM not been
named.
If the legislation nrvivea lie Senate
tut and II oiCned by the -rnor.
the date for the election muet be 1et
by "°'111ty supervilors. Severar times
In· Ille paet Ille boaro has voted 4-1
to expand the d1*1ct rather than
dillohie it.
'Ille bill, if pateed Mid limed. wlll
not tab effect until SIO days after tM
Lecialature ad)oi..ns and may not qualify
for the Nov. 3 General Election ballot.
But auperviaora have the authority to
call a apecial district election in con-
nection wiCh the November vote:, and
thus 1ave the expenee of a special elec·
tion ~t spring.
The majesty of the Mediterranean
is captured in Henredon's
eapri
'<./
SUMMER SALE
fe aturin9 Henra do n's Capri
This fabulous collection of ·Henrt:don's furniture
to include dining, bedrootn & oecasional, all at sale prices.
Drexel Furniture is offering their famous Esperanto collt:ction at
substantial savings.
Heritage is reducing its exciting Madrigal collection.
Henredon, Heritage & Drexel will also ofter their ou,tstanding upholstery at subatantiaJ savings.
Lamps, pictures and accessories will also be available at reduced prices.
DEA LERS FOR: HENREDON DREXEL -1-jERITAGE
NEWPORT l !ACH
1727 We1tcliff Dr., 642·2051!
OP!N F~IDAY 'TI L 9
r
INTERIORS
Proft 11lon1I lnttrler
0.1lgnara Ava llablt>-AID-NSI D
" LAGUNA BEAC H
345 Nor th Cou t Hwy. 494-6551
OPEN F•IDAY 'TI L 9
..... .._Toll Fl'M Mett .t ONllfl C•trllfy 140·124)
'
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Reslluffle
In Kremlin
Repoi:ted
LONDON (UPI ) -The
(IOOllbllily of • top 1, .. 1
Kremlin resdluffle g al n 1 d
support. today from a cryptic
Sovie! report from Moocow.
The report said Communlst
party dtio! Leonid s. e ... .m.v
is ill and hinted at poyible
changes ln ttle leaderS"iip.
The report came from Vic·
tor Louis, the Sov)et jnumali!lt
who in the past h 11 I
foreshadowed major changes
Jn Russia, lncluding the outset ·
ol Nikita S. Khrushchev from
tbe p<emiershlp.
Brdlnev has ~ sbsenl
from the Supreme Soviet of
the Russian Federation and
may .cimcti hia 8CMduled visit
to Romania. He Is Hid 1o
be suffering from high blood
I"""""· "Western observeni have W 11
had .. draw their own COO· And Away e uo·
clusionl'I aboul 11 possible
VPIT ....... t+I
Kremlin reshuffle," LC'luls Comedian Jackie GleaM>n, 53, is !lhown with his
reported . bTide--to-be, Beverley McKittrick. 3? •. at his home
The reshuffle rumors, he ad· in Wentworth, England. The couple WJIJ marry Sat-
ded in his dispatch tn the urday. just 10 days after Gleason'• divorce from his
newspaper Evening News , wife of 34 years.
"would gain probability" U --"''--"'--'--"----------------
Bre:zhnev fails to aUend tM
plenum of the Communist
party's Central Committee.
However, Brezhnev h a s
lrince attended the Centr;il
Committee meeting. But hi"'
trip to Bucharest ;ippare~ly
i11 still uncertain, it not unlike-
ly.
There have been repeated
• reports in the past or g
Kremlin reshuffle thii; year.
They are either ignnred by
the Kremlin or denied
outright.
Penn Rail
Probe Slated
Jobless Rate Drops
First' Time in Year
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
nation's unemployment rate
riropped in June for the first
time this year aKhouah fin
additiooal J .3 mi I I i o n
Americans sought unsuc-·
eessfully to find jobs.
The seeming contradiction
was a',tribuied by the Labor
Department Thursday to the
fact that the number C'lf 1dult
women and teenageri; seekinc
work fell far below ex-
pectations.
The department ~ I 1 o
toward the futr pet"cent mark.
The number of ooemployed
Americant totaled 4.7 mHlion
last month, a rise or 1.3
million over May. The dvili111n
labor fu'ce increased 2.3
million t.o &ti million.
The government said the in-
erea&e in the labor force -
thMe Amer~ans working or
actively seeking jobs -was
much 1m1ller than had been
expected. The Labor Depart·
ment had predicted 2.5 million
teen-agers . wooki seek wotk
in Nrly June but the 1ctual
!)umber was only two million.
Northern I re land
BELl,AST, Norlhern Jrtland An unr..1ploded bomb w111
(UPI) -Sever1il bomb ex· found •ttached to the head-
d quarter& of the Protntant plMions rocked Relfast an govemmtnl unk>nist party oo
Londonderry today and the the other aide ol the city British government announced in London it woulrl keep troops when wtr'ei were seen pro-
here as long as necessary and truding from a doorway.
with orders to shoot back if Jn Lruidon, politt raided five
fired upon. homes and M:ized machine
· TwG bomb blasts aurlible ror guns, rifles and more than
six miles ripPed apart 11 20,000 rcw.Mds of ammunition
British army recn.tiftng center they 11id they believed were
in Belfast early today and IG be smuggled into Northern
aronists set fire to 11. Reiman Ireland. Eight persons were
Catholic school. t n Lo"" teken in for questioning.
donderry, 11 firebom!> exploded One n1an was hospilalized
against a house but did little foe shock in the 1 a.m.
damage. recruiting center b o m b i n g
British }£ o m e Secretary which broke windaws i n
Reginald Maudlinc, !!peaking neigJlbtring bolldlngs and lit-
in the Hoose of COmmons in tered the 1treet.s with glass.
LondGn after a two.<11y visit Damage from the fire at
to Northern \]re.land , said Bri· St. Joseph's Roman Catholic
tain w,:1s determined that Primary School, • quarter
violence would not succeed mile from -the recruitment
and there would be no change center, w11not11erloo1.
in Northern· Jreland'1 status Six pe:r90n5 have died in
without the C1)!lsent of the die violence that broke out
people here. last weekend over the im-
NatiBnalists in Nor I h er n • prisonment of Bernadette
Ireland have been fighting for nevlM, 11 Roman Catholic civil
return Gf the northern pro-rights leader and member ()(
vinces known as Ulster to the the Briti!ti Parliament , for her
Republic o~ Ireland. Former part in last year's riots.
Laborite Home S e c r e t 11. r y Supporleni oC the Rev. lan
James Ca\lagha'O told Com-Paisley, 11 Protestant militant,
mons the ouUawed lrish marched to the home o{
ltepublican Army (IRA) and Premier Jame:i Chichester·
extreme "Protestan t bodies'' Clark outside· Belfast Thurs·
were the "smal l, dark evil da y nil{hl and delivered a peti·
forces at work" in Northern tinn demanding his resigna·
lreland. tion.
I
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
full-scale invesligation of the
Peno Central ls being under-
taken by the lnlerstate Com-
merce Commission following
the railroad 's pt:Ution for
reorg11nltat1on undtt
bankruptcy laws.
rtpOrted, without elaboratk>n,
the jobless rate for Negroe1
rose from eight lo 8.7 pereentl;o;iiiiiiiiii-------.1
last month, returning to the
April level after a dip in May.
• The nonwhite unemployment
rate was seven percent a year
ago and 7.1 perttnl :in Mardi
1970. The IS.year low in
nonwhite unemployment was
5.7 percent in February 1969.
ICX:: (J)ainnan (~ge M.
St.afkrd 11aid Thur9C:lay the
commission 11taff hsid been
reviewing the f i r m ' 1 ac-
counting practices and finan-
cial transactions for several
weeks.
"Institution of a formal in-
vettigatioo ••. will allow Ule
commi111ion to examine ttie
operating pracUces of the
railroad and will also give
fl access tn ttie records of
the Penn Central's affiliated
companies»' he sald.
The overall memp)oyment
rate for June was 4.7 percent,
compared with five perce1t
in "May and 3.4 peccent a
year ago. Ni,; on 111d·
ministration officiali; h s v e
predicted the rate wHl hit S"'li
percent before droppine again
Dropping In
Sky Diver Surprises Folks
BELLEVILLr:, Micll. (UPI)
-Barney and Janet LaM.ing@r
have a llOfl whcl is a sky
diver, among othtt t.hing11.
Thursday nii;:ht he dropped in
on them for the first time
In six years -from an
a.Jtitude of 5.500 fl!et.
"I thought I'd come hffck
ea11t for A visit 11nd 11urprise
my parent.ii," said Bi1rry
Lastinger, 27. who has been
living in California. "I was
going tn make ~y 1,0001.tl
jump and J wanted I.hem to
see lt." ·
Friendi; got the La~linger~
to go 1o the ninth hole ol
the e:a:eculive golf coorse here
wiUl a phony story that Arnold
Palmer would be there. Barry,
an electrical engineer,
motorcyclist and black-belt
karate exper' who's been 1ky
diving for eight year1, ar·
fanged to fl y over the golf
coorse.
He landed on the green with
his parents \\'atd'ling, 1 n
amazement.
"! hope you weren't disap.
pointed that t wasn 't Arnold
Palmer,'' Barry aid a!ll he
folded his black and arange
nylon paradiute and peeled
off hi s· jump suit.
RED DEVIL
ASSORTMENTS
FROM $2.95 TO $49.95
s
A
·L
E
FOOD
and
*eWLING
3 BIG
DAYS
,.,., JULY J
12 NOON t• 1 A.M.
SAT., JULY 4
t A.M. te 1 A.M.
SUN., JULY 5
t A.M. t• MIDNIGHT
FOOD
Speci1I Menu, items
frem • H1rnbur11r t. •
Compl•t• Me.11. Pay Y.,.
ular price for 1st Meal,
each 2nd Meil of 1qu1I
price or lower, PAY
JUST A PINNY I I I I
BOWLING
Pay the r11ul1r pr lee
fer tho ht (3rd, 5th, etc.)
1•m• . • • tha 2nd, 4th , ,th, •fc., game JUST A
PENNY I I I I
NO LIMIT
I CHILDREN AND I TODDLERS I 1 SHIRT and I SHORTSETS
9.1?~10N111 S I 2.61·· 1e1.1.21
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I•
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I 5.10
I SAVE
I HALF
-
Friday, Ju~ !, 1170 . • --DAILY '1LCT s I ..
Capp Can't
Oppos e Ted
Hippies Dip
50,000 at Pop Festival
BYRON, Ga . (UPI) -
Swe~rlng lon1-h1ired hippies
NIY·dlpped In EchecOMH
Cree\: near the Middle Georg ia
Jtacew1y Thursday M the eve
of the aecond AU1n1a lntem1-
tion11ll Pop Festival.
ol the event.
Temper1tur11 aoartd .C'lver
UJO d<grw I« th• ~
coneecuUve d1y, ltftding hip-
pies -male and femal~ -
tcramblln1 into the cooling
w1ter1 ol the Eclieconnee
Creek.
The fe1tiv11I Is orficially -
11dverti1ed to run through Sun-
day night, but promoters sa.id
a benefit perfonnmce pro-
bablf will be 1dded Monday,
the benefits gC"1in1 to combat
drug abuse in All1nta.'s hippi1
district. .
By nl,titfall, mGre than
50,000 young pe.rsoM from
throUghout the United States
were crowdln1 into "\.tie
wt1rld '1 most expensive soy·
bean pitch" where at 3 p.m.,
EDT tod1y mort than twice
that numbtt were expected
to a98emble, under 11 blazing
tun for ltle start of the blaring CAMBRIDG E. Mass. (UPI) h1rd rock festival.
Gov. Lester Maddox ordered
stat.e lroopert ind agents. of
the Georgia Bure11u o f
Investigation Into the plywood·
enclosed festival area just off'
-Cartoonist Al Capp says Yoolh1 tet up tenl!I .and
he cannot run ajr:lalnst Sen. swiaged IOfl drii1ks by the
Ed..:ard P.1 . KennOOy in the truckload prior to the st11rt
November electioo beeau!lt o( -=------==--tourist-jammed Jnt.erst1te 75,
Massachuse!M' voter registra-
tion Jaws .
Ca pp changed his .recistr•·
tinn from Deinocr1l to
Republi can sometime in the
p11st few months. Hence, he
cannot meet the requirement
thal a c11ndidate be a
registered party inember for
at' least a year.
He said he would remain
interested in stale politics and ,
as a parti_ng lihot, criticized
Massachu setts.
"A stale that rioc:sn't object
ln 11 visit from Abbie Hoffman'
nr Jerry Rub iri hut OOes object
lo 11 visit frnm the vice presi·
dent Is not a healthy If.ate,"
he iutiri .
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GIRLS SHIFT
DRESSES ·
Colo rful Co non
De1igru
Many iryles
SIZES 7· 14
$ 11
I SAVI I HAif i
llG.
2.J6
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CAMP SPECIAL!
COLEMAN FUEL
List 1.49
c
SALE IAL
• Sto\·n, lantun'
• Burru clean; ..oo't clo1
UMIT121•11. ••r cttf11t11r
. .
I
I
I
T<Mi1, )'tl~I.,, il'1 1h .. J'ronli~r•men 1nd }Nni~:
S1111rrl1y, Rilly !II""; ~11 11<1~'" Th11 ChaJ11rr•I flr111.h~r•
-;11~t 1 ~w of 11i~ m1ny tl •r< 111pe1rins ~1 Knot!'~
111111m~r l11n1 C.nlrl~n C1•1!r1d., of Cnu111ry ind
Wttll~''" ~lu1i~. t'irtwork• on lht lake In f'lttta VUJ1111
· ertcy 11i1h1 !
AND MORE
MANY OTKH ITEMS
REDUCED TO SAVE
YOU1$$$1
\
•
GRANT PLAZA
I
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• 1 •
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P'1,.wor~• ''"' h• lea•llr ..01111, po•,••••d o• df1eti•11•lll o"tr Wllhfn Citl .. ""her• ttll It t U\llt,. lied,
KONA
LANES. IROOKHURST & ADAMS e HUNTINGTON BEACH
* IOI.I> IY CHARrTAILE DlteANIZATIDNI AT * 1W> D&VIL STANDS MRTWlt£ftL
' -.._., "'>•
•
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• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE
A Little More Charm . -
•
Phil Tozer. president ot Davey's Locker 11porUish-
1.n·g boats, bo~gbt himse1f an old ferrr._ and converted
It to a plush river boat called the Pavilion Queen.
He asked Newport Beach city government if he
could sell cocktails aboard and have musical enter-
tairunent dur.ing sightseeing tours ot the harbor.
That was in December. Seven months later and
now into the summer season. Tozer hasn't gotten an
answer.
City officials are co.ncerned about permitting poten-
tially noisy floating taverns because of ~e harbor's
primary recreational nature and the i:as1dences all
along tbe shore. City Attorney Tully Seymour has
drafted a proposed ordinance to control such opera-
tions.
But it has been a s lo\v process. So \\•ith summer
season business at hand, Tozer is asking for a tempo-
rary permit while the ordinance is pendmg.
Tozer has been chartering his pleasure ~at to_pr.l·
vale parties, which is permitted. He says bis music 1s
not heard 50 !eet beyond the boat. It would seem Tozer should be given a chance to
prove himsell while the city is mulling over the ordin-
ance: U his boat proves a nuisance the permit always
can be taken away.
Up to now, Tozer's new operation seems to be doing
nothing but adding a litUe charm to an already
charmed bay.
City-Schools Cooperation
The city of Newport Beach has more library books
than library shell space.
Newport-Mesa School District is short of funds to -
slock the library at the new EastbluU Elementary
School. _,
So when the school opens in September it will have
on its shelves 5,000 city library books and Newport Beach
city librarians on its stall.
The school district will pay the librarians' ialaries
school days and on Saturday the city will have the first
children's branch of th• city library system.
In about three years when the city headquarters
library Is built at Newport Center the city system will
have the shell space lo take Its books back. ll's-hopecl _,
the school district by then will have funds to stock thCJllC"""
Eastbluff School library. . .. In the mean·tbne, the sharing of the library facih·
ty is a Sood arrangement. .
It is another example of city-schools cooperation
already seen in joint use of ~ariners Park and _city recre-
ation program summer sWlm lessons at the high school.
Not a Good Mix
The Balboa Island Impi;.ovement Association again
is .asking for increased police patrol or the island.
Association members apparently even are \villing
to hire o!f.duty Newport Beach policemen for extra. foot
patrol to more stringently enforce O!di~a'!Ces aga!nst
ri~ing bicycles on the boa~walk and p1cruck1ng or bnng-
tng ~ogs onto the. beach.
This )>Oses serious questions.
ShoulCI a community assOciation hire city police and
in . effect become their boss by tell in~ the policemen
\Vhete they want the enforcement emphasis?
· The community group would be imposin~ its judf!·
ment. over that of the city police chief and the City
Council which has the responsibility of detennin.ing the
degree of' police service.
Residents of Shoreclilfs and Cameo Shores have
from time to time hired deputy sheriffs and private sec-
urity police ll). patrol at night. These communities are
semi-private, however,
Balboa Island, with its commercial areas and public
beaches. is inescapably public.
Security guards in public areas could. indeed, harm
the overall law-enforcement picture. Their actions can
mix too easily with the regular police activities -caus-
ing confusion in the public eye. N
English Granamar and Spellita9 Are Cocke11ed
• Why Did They
Want This Time to Rationalize Them
Among uneducated people whost
language is described as "substandard"
the verb "to be" is often Co1jugated
as follows :
Singular Plural
1st person I Is we is
2nd person you is you is
3rd person he is they is
F.ducated people !ind this conjugation
estremely f u n n y.
However I should
like to ask the read-
er, if he .has been
le!nJ?ted to laugh, lo
contl'ol bimseU for a
minute.
1n th e standard
ronjugaUon of this
verb there are four
different forms to
be learned : I am,
thou art, he is, we
are, you are, they are. In the substandard
?Sl·ugation, hoY.-ever, there is only one
f usable in all six situations. Now
• f amental principle of efficiency
is to get the most done with the least
effort, using standard, interchangeable
parts. We use electrical connections or
t.he same size and design whether Y•e
are plu~g in a toasler, a table lamp,
a radio, or a hair dryer. It would
be silly to have plugs of different kinds
for each item to be connected. The
,;ubstudard conjugation of the verb "to
be" is, from this point of view, a great
improvement over "good English."
INOEED AN EFFICIEt'iCY engineer
could make many helpful suggestions
about the English la11guage. If the ll!lual
way of making a past tense is to add
I
' . •' --. .:·.
''ed" to the end of 1 verb, why llOl
make the principle general and say "run-
ned, "rkied," "swimmed," "gived," "sil·
led,'' etc.? Many· of t.he errors in English
made by young children, from whom
those examples are dran, result simply
from the fact that children are a great
deal more logical than the English
language.
English spelling, which Is about the
most cockeyed system in the world,
provides even greaW opportunities for
the efiiciency engineer. To ha\•e to write
"sewing a seam" make! about as mUch
sense as writing "gewlRg to bed ." If
we have learned to read correctly the
senlenct , "There was • tear i111 his
shirt and 1 tear in his eye," how ·would
we go on from there to figure out
how to pronounce "fear," "pe:µ-,"
"bear," "beard," "heard," "heart," and
"rearm"'!
WHY, THEN, DO~'T CongreM ap-
paint a commission or linguistic ef-
ficiency engineers to go to work ud
rationalize the English language? It is
to the lasting credit of President
Theodore Roosevelt that ht at least
tried to do someUting about it. He
ordered the government printiag office
to use simplified spellings for 1 large
number of wor<ls. But all .he got for
his paills was an enormous storm of
public protest. When his ~r. PresJ·
dent Taft, was inaugurated in 1909, the
New York Sun bade Roosevelt farewell
in a malicious one-word editorial,
"TIIRU!"
The Chicago Tribuae under the late
Colonel Robert R. McCormick use to be
pretty hot on spelling reform, but since
his death iU ardor .hu cooled. It still
uses "tho," "altho," "thru," "thruout'" ·
and "burocracy." But "buro" is gone-
a11d so are "sherif' and "tarif" and
''frate rate .•·
IT'S TIME SO~IEONE took up the
cudgel& again for rational grammar
and rational spelling. The advantages
are obvious. With a dece11tly phonetic
system school children would be saved
hundreds of millions of hours of drill.
With simpU:r oonjugatioos, millions of
people would be saved the cm·
barras!lnent of reatizj11g that thiy have
said "it don't" in frotit of someone
they shouldn't ha\·e said It in front of.
TeJlS of l.housands of English teachers
would look young'er and live longer.
But help Is on the way, ii Ml for
our grammatical system, at least for
our spelling, Someday soon a phonetic
typeY.Titer is going to be invented -
it may already be in the developntent
stag_e. Such a typewriter will not be
able to distinguish betweeR "sight, "site"
and "cite." It will print all three in
the same way: But no confusion will
result, as some believe. If you doubt
this, dictate to a skilled stenographer
the sentence, "I can cite you many
e1amples of building sites chosen on
first sight."
By S. L Hayak•w•
Pretkle.nl
Su Fruclaco State Colle1e
Man and Superm;irket
One or life's little ordeals for a mere
man is supermarket shopping.
It ii for him more a test of endurance
and survival than of character.
For if there is one place in the modern
world where woman doesn't have to
struggle to obtain equal rights, it is in the
average supermarket. There, in the unen·
ding war between t.he sexes, she has
every advantage; man is at every disad-
vantage.
A grown man is a!I out of place alone in
a supermarket as a 3-year-(Jld child at a
picnic of banshees and harpies. There Is
something about his presence there that
arouses the killer instincts ln veteran
women shoppers.
TREY TAKE OUT on him all tht pent-
up wrath they have felt in centuries of
submission to male domination.
All a guy making his first trip through
1 supermarket has to do is to :nnocenlly
ask a Jaay where ll'le cans of dog food
ire. A look of unholy glee crosses her
..... ~
Friday, July 3. 1970
Tiu tditorflll page o/ the Do ilv
PiWt itekl to inform and 1tim-
lllak readm bt1 prtscnttng thi.s
M10ipaptr'1 opink>ru 9n.d coni.-
~ menia'l' on topics of irit1reH1
. and rigntficance. bt1 prouiding d
forum for the ezprelrion of
oMr r1adtr1' opinions. and b11
JWt11ntinq t1l1 diverse vieto-pointl oJ infonMd obstrvera
ofld 1pok«imen Oft aopib of the dov.
Rob<rt N. Weed, Publliher
,,
face a~ she deliberately misdirects him
lo the frozen vegetables department.
Then by whispered word and eyebrow
gestures the ladies pas.. the news about
him along
"This guy 's a greenhorn. Let's give
him the works." From that moment on
his progress through the store is 1 march
of debacle.
If he tries to buy a steak, four ladies
surround the fresh meat counter shoulder
lo shoulder and keep him away fo( 15
minutes while tbey chat about 'household
problems.
IF HE REACHES for 1 container of
fresh milk, it is snatched from him by a
feminine hand ancl he turns to meet the
smiling fangs of a victorious vampire.
If he starts to ask a 6G-year-(Jld biddy
nld enough to be his mother just where
the store hides the tomato juice, she is
likely to repl y in stentorian tones:
"Are you trying to 1et fresh with me,
young man? I've 1 good mind to slap
your faet. It's getting so a girl isn't safe
anywhere anymore."
If he heads for the nearel!t checkout
counter, halt a dozen women elbow hlm
out of the way. 11\ey shOY.' him no mercy,
they yield him no quarter.
But their chlef education;;il weapon in
reducing him to a quivering jelly Is the
\Vire pushcart. After he has gone lt.!3
than 50 lcet Into the store he reel& like a
squirr el on a thruway during the rush
hour.
THEY llOLO TO the esact center of
ti~ roadv"'Y i nd crash Into him head on,
•ending half or his own groci!rie& flyinc.
'Ibey lie ill wai~ and ambush blm on Ibo '
turns. They imash inta him from behind
every Ume he pauses to select an item.
They chfvvy .him, harry him, stare at
him, glare at him, and every time he
opens hls mouth tc apologize, they bawl
hlm out -just because he 's a man and
there. When he finally limps out, he finds
he 's bleeding from half a dozen pushcart
cuts and his legs are bruised from ankles
to kntes.
"l spent two years In the infantry, but 1
never saw a battlefield quite like that,"
said one man, recalling his first visit to a
supennarket. "I ke~'. looking for a fox-
hole to dive into, but there wasn't any. I
\\'OUld have 5urrendered, but the women
shoppers in that store didn't seem to ·
1vant to take any male prisoners alive."
A mati is fairly safe if he accompanies
his wile to the supermarket -the other
ladies recognize he has been captured -
but any fellow who has to go it alone
Ought to get a combat medal for each
trip he makes . And a ~ment
dis ability pension If he lastl! a full year.
Dear
GI001nY
Gns:
1'hoM Newport' Chamber t)1pes Y.'ho
havt scotched the Fllght of lhe
Snowbirds ought to go fly a Khe.
-O.A. M.
tlttt fHtwl Afllctt N l fm" ~ 4.t
llKftMl11r ...... .. tltt lll'&'s.t-. t-"
l'ttr HI ""''°' .. tlMlll' .,., DllfJ f'lltl,
Freedom?
Guest:Report
By LOUISE COOK
At-111.C l'r111 Wrl!ff
NE\V YORK -YO'u can lead me
to McSorle)4;, but you can 't make n1e
drink.
Far be it from me lo sneer at the
efforts of those women who finally broke
lhe 115-year-()Jd sex barrier at f\fcSorley 's
Old Ale House in Green,vich Village. ..
They've won the right to stand in
the sawdust, belly up lo the bar and
quaff thelr ale with the men.
What puzzles me is why they'd want
this somewhat dubious pri vilege.
Women are never really at their best
in bars. Now wait a minute all you
women 's llbe.ralion members. I'm 11.ol
saying the gals don't have a right to
get just as drunk and make just as
big fools of themselves as men.
BUT AIOST BARS -real two-fi sted
bars, that is -just aren't designed
for distaff drinking.
Try perching on a bar stool. Chances
are your legs aren 't long enough. Hois t
yourself up anyway. With I.he midi there
isn't toe much peril to modes ty .•
Now find a place to put your purse.
Before all you militants do away with
that little feminine frippery you'll have
to find a place to carry the money
with which you'll independenlly pay for
your own drinks. And the key to your
ilKlependent apartment. And all those
independent credit cards -in your
name. No "~1rs." in front.
PUT TllE P.URSE on the floor and
you can't reach it. Put it on the bar
and get a sneering. "Lady, 1 gotta
serve drinks .her,. fl.iove that thing."
Put it in your lap and it falls jnto
the sawdust.
The art of drinking isn 't much easier.
That hearty mug of ale -no fair
cheatillg and ordering an apricot brandy
sour -is designed for male mitts,
not feminine fingers. And nolhing looks
sillier than an ale drinker who hoiSts
the mug with two fists, kind or like
a toddler sipping his milk.
If you're looking for conversatioR, the
bar ain 't the place. Unless your taste
runs to "Another cold one" or "Two
more over here."
WHAT ABOlIT ea vesdropping 011. those
tales of v.·oe poured out to the bartender.
legendary amateur psychiatrist? Close
yOur $yes, imagine the voices arc 11.n
octave higher and you might as l\"e ll
be 11t U1e beauty• parlor listening to
h1rs. Jones re1ale her halrdres.ser.
Entertainment means t e I e v i s i o n ,
preff!rably two sets. each tuned to a
different sports event. Don't try to liste n .
. Just grunt with the crowd.
ff this is frtedom to lhe feminists,
they can have it. I'll slither off rny
stool remembering the v.·ords of Aesop:
"Better beans and bacon in peace, than
cakes and ale in fear." Or iJI a liberated
1al0011.
Quotes •
hfarion Kam Yin Ltr:, elected t\Uss
Cbluiowa U.S.A. 11 S.F. ttrtmony -
"Women &hould have equal rights In
business, they should be aggressive In
busin6Ss, but they should never forget,
once they 1et home, Lhat lbey arci
women."
J
Z~ology: Basic
Ideas Changing
Speaking or animal populations, as 1
was the other day, reminded me lhat
even the field of zoology has seen sorne
startling breakthroughs in knowledge
lately.
What has come to be l'SJlcd lhe
''knowledge explo-
sion" is by no means
limited to such ne w
and recondite areas
as atomic physics
or molecular biol-
ogy. Our old friend,
t h e naturalist, is
learning a lot more,
too.
In the la s t 1wo
decades, according
lo mammaloglst r.1aurice Burton, some
basic ideas .have changed even in the
relatively -slable field of zoology. For
instance, It was customary to divide
animals into ''diurnal " and "nocturnal,"'
meaning those who hunted by day and
slept by night, or vise versa.
NO\V WE KNOW that this division
has been more man-made than God-
given. Some "night" animals have been
shown to be active part of the day
during certain times of the year, and
some smaller mammals are neither
diurnal nor nocturna l, but divide the
24 hours into alternating periods of rest
and action in 4-or 5-hour cycles.
(As far as the "crepuscular" animals
are concerned, like bats, which operate
in twilight. we have learned more about
their sonic devices of hearing in the
last 20 years than in the preceding
2,000).
NOT ONLY RA VE the old categorie!IJ
of day and night fallen, but U1e eating
habits of animals are now seen to be
less rigid and exclusive than zoologists
used to believe -that some mammal~
were carnivores, others herbivores, and
still others insectivores.
Some traditional meat~aters ingest 1
high proportion of fruit and vegetables,
while even typiCal vegetarians like catt.Lt.._
and deer are now known to eat flesh
or carrion. Recent investigation of red
foxes indicates the large am.ount of grass
and \\'ild fruit they consume.
\\'llAT IS llAPPENING in zoolo,).
se~ms to be a "liberaLing" knowledge
from lhe old deterministic thinking of
the past. Some animals have local diets,
scme have seasonal preferences -even
idiosyncracies like humans -or whims
and Cads. Prof. Burton tells of a goat
and a dog fed together, y.·ith 'the goat
invariably eating the dog-food , and the
dog preferring the goat's rations.
In the subatomic world of physics,
we are learning that nature is less
rig id, ltss unlfonn, less iron-handed, than
v.•as formerly believed. So, too, in the
\\'Orld. of living things, we are learning
that the subhuman species are more
individualistic, more "personal ," as it
were, then the mechanist& used to think.
There is a larger place for whimsy
in the universe than philosophers havt
dreamed or.
Who's Our Tyrant No ·w?
America was born of revolutio111. It
is a revolutionary nation now.
So say our resident revolutionaries.
And they are correct -escept in the
way they mean it.
America was indeed born of revolution.
Revolution against an individual tyranny;
a tyranny with a histOry of "repeated
lnjurics and Usur pations" matched iR
number only bj the repeated "Petitions
for Redress" by the injured c:Olonies.
The American revolution was guided
by "a decent Rl!spect to the Opinioos
of Mankind ." It sought to secure and
nurture those sell-evident and unalienable
rights by which all men arc endowed
by their Creator -li fe , liberty, and
the pursuit of .happiness.
TO EFFECTUATE that revoluti on
against tyranny. to ensure those rights
of all mankind. the men or 1776 mutually
pledged their lives, their fortunes, their
sacred honor.
Today's American revolulionaries1
They pledge other people's lives .
They urge other people to kill lhtir
parents. to revolt for the hell of It.
lo become criminals, to "disrupt. every
inslitutiol'I. break every law."
!
, GuC!Jt Editorial
"
Pledge their fortu11es?
Abbie Hoffman's two books o a
anarchJstic revolution already have earo-
ed him close lo $100,000 in royalties, ad-vances, movie rights.
ONE JERRY RUBIN paperback has
earned at least $45,000 already, and
its publishers expect it to do four timea
that much eventually. .
A new AmericaR RevolulloR'! A new
1776? No. Today a revolution, a riot, ii
"a party!"
The real, con tinuing American Revo)u.
tion is that which has brought us change
through Constitutional methods; which
has substituted respect for disdain of
our fellow man ; wh.ich has overturned
obstacles to liberty aftd the pursuit of
happiness that comes from opportunltJ '
accepled and used well.
\Ve ~ve no Tyrant this July 4.
We hllve only would-be t:Yrants.
Callrornla Feature Strvk:t.
1--------B11 Geor9e --------,
Dear George:
Why don "t wt ever see 1'indml.Jls
on farms 8ny more ?
SAM R.
Dear S3m R.:
And people ask me v.hy I don't
write mort about sex ...
\VelJ, Sa m. to get right l.o your
problem, the an.!lwer Is that back
t;i. the old days "'hen wind1nllls
11i·c:rri seen rreque!ltly the coun-
'try was i1pars~ly populated. Now
that the population explosion has
come along, there just i$n't tnougb
'''ind ror everybody to ha\'e a
"·indml lJ.
Sam. No offense. Hut wi ll you
"'rite to Abby in the futurt'l'
I Learn lo face life with ~uare
obliquent$.'5. Let Gcor,e teach you
Sideways Thinking.)
). •
•
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_,/
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I
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"
1.
'
I•
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'
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I\
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. .
/ . . ~ ' . ' t
14 Young WomeA Se lecte d: f or oe b>Ut
•
.•
,
The walerfnlnl homo ot Mn. Royal. D. Tucker was a llltJnr'
Jetting 1or · 111e ~I tea when Cbildr•'• Home Sodoly
debutanles and their mothen wen lntroduced1and h0f1!>red.
The pl'OHllteei will make their formal bow lo s«iety during ·
the 17th annual Debutante Ball, to take pla<:e Dec. 2a in lh• Bal·
boa Bay Club. 'lbe boll is a· blgbHght ol the holiday -.on end
a sponsored by the Newport Harbor Auxiliary ol CHS. . ·,
Debutantes and their parents; are Miss· Carol)'.n 1P~rose
Anderson, Mr. and ·Mn. Edmund Gilmour" Andersdn Jr.; Miss·
lleborah Ann· l19yle, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Morris Boyle Jr.': Min ·
Sherry Cameron, Mr. aod Mrs. Merton Kirk Cameron Jr.·:· Miss·
Susan Lee Chapman, Mr. and'Mrs. f:dward Thomas Cha~n Ill,
and Miss IJzabeth Whitney Crowner, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rowe
Crowner.
More are Miss Betina Philip Echternach, Mr. and Mrs. John
Nelsoo Echternach: Mila Julie Ann Jarvis, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Peters Jarvis; Miss Jan Kawamura, Mr. and Mrs. GenjJ Gene
Kawamura; Miss Byna LOuise Mackel, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Kinsley Mackel, and Mlis Ann Murdy, Mr. and Mrs. John A.
Munly III.
Concluding the list are Miss Dalynn Smith, Mr . and Mrs.
Cared. Noel Smith: Miss Sally Clare Storch. Mr. and Mrs. John
Arthur Storch; Miss Martha Allan Trane, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Hood Trane, and Miss Betsy Lynn Young , Mrs. James Warren
Young and the llile Mr. Yood~. .
. Following the aMouncement a.nd introduction of the new
debutantes, tea waS served from a formally 8pPotnted table. Ar·
rangements of spring blossoms decorated the table and were
placed throughoot the home.
Welcoming-the honored gu_ests were Mrs. Richanl A. Sewell,
auxiliaiy president, and Mrs. Alfred V. Jorgensen,_ ball chairman.
Serving on the ball commiUee are tlie Mmes. Wilson V.;Wood·
man, debutante chairman; John Killefer, presentation; Herbert
W. Kalmbach, decorations; Robert Diemer, invitations; William
Blanton, reservations: TerreJI L. Root, tees and coffees; Fred M.
Swenson, hostesses; Delbert Van Omum, preball partv: We11ace
Gerrie. ~rograms: Lee Sammis, pbotogniphy, and ·DonBld E.
Swedlund, public relations.
Debutantes, chosen by a small grotlp of patronesses, are
selected on their own mertt through scliolastic achievement ai
weU as participation in civic and service -activities.
OAU.T PILOT ....... "" LM'..,_
LOOK ING AHEAD .-Eagerly anticipating the next six months, . "Home Society debutanWl (left lo right). the Misses Martha Allan
which will be filled with a round of parties, entering college and Trane, Deborah Ann Boyle, Lizabetb Whitney Crowner and Dalynn
the'liigbligj!t -their formal bow to society·-are 1970 Children'•' Smith.
~
STEP ,ORWARD -
Crossing the bridge to
womanhood as th e y
take a major !iitep in
that direction are (left
lo right) Miss Sally
Clare Storch and Miss
Julie Ann Jarvis who
will be pres~ted to scr
ciety Dec. 28 during the
17th annual Children's
Home Society Debu-
lante Ball.
..
GAIETY MIRRORED
-Bouffant smiles ol.
(left to right) Ille Miss·
es Sheny Cameron, Su·
san Lee Chapman and
Ann Munly reflect their
excitement of being se-
lected as 1970 ChU-
dren's Home Society
debutantes.
BEA. ANDI llsON~Edihlf';
,.;111y, """ a. 1m " ,..,..,
Yol).ngest . Reader Provides a Birthday Present for Ann
OEAR ANN LANDERS : 1 wrote to
.., 5before -10 yearr. ago. You
~ s ·ng your youngest reader. i·was
• Jel11I ol t the time. I said I didn't
~ any problems .but maybe I .was ..no youngest reader, and -as it turned
.t. I was! You printed my picture
• 'lbe .Daily Oklahoman. I'm sure you
"ln't remember me but my n a m e is
~ncy Ann Counts. I am sending the
l(lpping from IQ years ago to refresh
'IOUI' memory.
l. graduated Irom Dover lflgh School
11 May -'t!aledlct.oMan of my class.
this summer I am atlendihg Oklahoma
State Unlvenity.
f .. wanled you to know , Ann Landers,
thAt I have read your column religiously
ANN I.ANDERS
and you have had a strong Influence
on my life. You have taught me many
things -not only through your· column.
but lhroogh ·your books. '"Since' You
Ask Me," "Teenagers and Sex'' •nd
"Truth ls Stranger." 1 have been
fortunate to have hatt such wonderful
ptrents, God has been good to me.
Please keep up the wonderful work.
You help so ma11y people and you
petform a very valuable service. -
Sincerely, NANCY ANN COUNTS
DEAR NANCV: Whit a beauUflll Jet.
terl ~ yoq IO very mack. U will
appear the day before my Mr11tday wtdck
ii the Foarll. ef JR.ly -II I pmut
to myteU.
DEAR ANN LANtlERS: I was haJll'ily
married }fqr 24 years and lhe mother
of sir children. My husbaft(I passtid away
1uddenly. While aotiia lltrou&h h!J
pero0nal beion,inp, I -be bad
had a mistral for at least five years •
l debated for several weeks as to
whether I lhOuld 'get in touch with the
woman. Finally J decided I bad to meet
her, so I pve her a call IDd. invited
her to my home~ 1be woman. k>oked
grief-stricken and much older than l
had im>gined. She told . me she had
known my hullband before tbt war .-
that she loved him and be loved her.
He married me instead becatiae we wtre
officially engaged and he felt 'it was
his moral obllgaUon. 11lil woma11 mar-
ried ahortly-afte.r ahe and her husband
have seven children.
How could J ha•e been ' so blind?
I 'ioved ·tJ1¥ huabanct ao Completely abd
I WU IUl't be retuned that )ave. New
I can't even pray in peace. Wheftever
I see hJs face I see her face , too.
I can't eat or sleep. I'm aftakl I
will be<ome Ill and die and no one
will be ,here to tUe care of my chUdren.
Pleaae help me. -L05T EVERYTHING
DEAi\ LOliT: Yoa will .._,. ,,.,.
tbit blow bec1ue Y" ••I. Yev
dilldrai -)'911 ud ,.., ...... 1111
tbem. Talk.11& •• yoar lrief wldti 1
tberopbt mfpl be '"""'1. Pt ...... )'911r
ha1bolnd "'' tH If .._ rare ~ wbtwu•a.&e•~Ms
life totally. 1f lie wu llld a ptreon
hl1 lffalr . wldti tM1 wtm11 w1a a •1111
~pa;rate nd 1pn1 front 'hla famll:r Uft.
n to •• w11 dlmlal111ed 1111 '°" tor
you. I am 1191 •-Phi la ,....,,.
Illa aaf•l-11 -""" .. ..,... . it. Good lldi ad Goll Wm.
CONFIDENTIAL TO IN LOVE WITH
A DENTIST: Hang up your tnck "'-·
Dearie. Don't calL him ~ you bav•
a toothache. A man runa'I--
a WODl!lfl ls chasin& him.
Wllal Is Fruc~ -IT l a II -T --.. 1,__ ... __
Ute bty tr tM girl? Can a s a. •• t 11 •
weddbl&.. llleeeed? ReM Ma 'aad1n'
beoldet, •-ree..1e ks -Tn 1rtn
la Cool IL" -. .--la ct1a .. • ~g. HU·achlre•led, 1tamPfJll ..... •
ID con al Ille DAILY PWYf. '
+
,
-. . r'·a -
'J.I DAILY PILOT
Peering
·Around
IN TOWN foe , tho ....&Im,
-fl Uieir aon Johll AlllO to
Gkn1a Alarcon West of H11no
Uogton · Beacll ·are LI. Co~
1l1lliam (Rel.) and Mrs. Allao
aad family of Natick, Man.
"'1owlng the wedding, they
wtD holiday In Hawaii and Ju Francbco.
CELEBRATING their
.,iden anniveraary In the
Jl'uocbl Ca3\le, Sa!Jburg,
Aaltria, were Mr. and Mrs.
Wendell Mansur Jonp ol.
Nowport Beach. Friend> of the
touple were invited '° ]oJn
them for the festlvMJ.ea in tbe
clltle which was the setting
fer the "Sound of Mwlc."
1 RONORED on their golden
Wldding anniversary were Mr.
and Mr>. Edwin F. XJellburr fl Big Bur Lale and Bullheod
City, Ariz. Hosts were tbelt
~ters, the Mmes. Edwin
Conry and Gene Leeper Sr.
of Costa Mesa and George
Wanl·of Big Bear Lale. ~ .
MAKING the Santa Barbara
BUtmore their v1eaUon ~ad
quarters have been Mr. and
Mn. Charles Lend of Foun-
ta!n Valley, 14f'. and Mra.
Leonard Shane of Hunllnp11<
Beach. the W. R. SchoDel and
ICll of Newport Beach ~
newlyweds Mr. and ~·
William R. P.U.O of Newport
Beach, who honeymooned In
Ilda Barbara.
PRESIDENT o! the
'---"'
Your Horoscope I
'Leo: Detect All
SATURDAY
JULY 4
87 SYDNEY OMARA
TEEN DATING BINTS:
MMy Mols!K -.. u.. ud ,.._ c-r lllld ....
mu!Mden.lllNldate llPI
........ ,, .. -!loo,
tMatrteal p rtd a et I••·
Aqw1i, 11 ·--I •k nla_.., 11 le lie _.. .
AlllD (Marcb 11'Aprll It):
Chante, travel and variety -
thele are feolured. You llnd
·creative outlet. You 1et aid
fn>m one who --to be on. tbe fence. Be receptive.
Wbal 1"11 need II -led. '
TAUllUS (April JO.May II):
By tonight, 1"11 learn where
,.. lfand -and wily. Thil
11 a time lo be metkuloul.
Acerbic remarb will defeat
your own purpoae. B e
thorough wl1boul being a bore.
GEMINI (May IL.June 11):
Obtain hint fnm Taunll
masaie. 'lbere a r e tuka
whlch require )'OUr penonal
attention. Holiday ltmoepbere
pn!Vaila. But 1"111111111 mUze
that carel......, today oouJd
prove costly. -
CANCER (June II.July II):
Cycll contlnuet hirh -you
can obtain. whit you need U
penbteot. 'Esude conlldence.
Money aeema :l>l'lded your
way. Weloome awortunJty by
dl1playin1 teDH of.
rapooalblliiy.
of public. Fine for new start.a
in new dlrectiool. Su.a
o r I I I nallly, lnde~
Leid raiber thin follow.
VDIGO (AU(. 13-SePI. II):
Romanct, tntrtsue are
featured. On neg1Uvo llde,
there 11 -Ip, Innuendo.
Stand tall Don't waver from
princlpleo. Your chancel for
1Uccesa are eMahctd l t
dlacreet.
LIBRA (Sepl. 13-0ct. Ill:
By toolght 1"11 bow wbo
meana what to you. 'lben:
k translonnatlon fn>m make-
bellovo to reality. Sell-dec<p-
Uon roet out neamt window.
You learn how to fulfill hopd
and wllhe1.
SCORPIO (Oct. JS.Nov. II.):
You prove 1 melnin"1rl point;
your presllae r11es .. nw11.
Now is lime to plan ahead.
Tate advantare of obviow: op.
portun!\les. Dhcard advice of
thnJd indivi&lal who lives in
pelt, I
SAGmARIUS (Nov. II·
Dec. II) : Some may dalm
you are-delving-into areaa
which represent ilanger. Key
b to be true to youneU,
Welcome, new contacts,
challenges. Message from alat
proves stimulating.
CAPRICORN (Dec. n.Jan.
It): Cloae tie with one who
vacillates may get t.lnlome.
Today your pallenee II t<oted.
Strive to arrive at cmq_u,m
-is bued 00 IDllUrlty. Don't risk IOO!ethlng of value
for nothing.
AQUARIUS (Jan. JO.}' e b .
Callfomia Federation of
out-ol-atate gueata. At work are (left to right) the Misses Shirley
Collom, Elizabeth Herta al)d Deena WesL
Women's Clubs, Mrs. Vernon TOTING THE BAG -Tho 18 Girl Scout. of Orange County \vhci
Cumingham of Los Alamitos will be participating in PAVE Foqr, a voCation and enjoymentpro-
presided over a state board gram Monday, July 6. Friday, July 17, are making tote bags for meeting in Fresno June 23-26. -"-----'"----'---_o.:_-"---'-----=----=-------
LEO (July4Aug. ll):'You
are perceptive. You detect
trend>. You ae1 Dnaer on pu1ae
II): Ue low. Permit otben
to take initiative. You gain
moot thmrgh quiet ohoerv•
lion. Be unobtrmlve. Yoa
learn and can apply knowledia
In prolllable manner. Doo'I
force ilsues. M.rs. CUnningham b a 1
dKieen 'Seek and Share as the
thtme for her two-year
term. She recentJy returned
.from the General Federation
al Women's Clubs Convention
bl San Antonio. Tex.
Artist Illustrates
Watercoloring
Meetir:ig
Capped
A wig pert)' 111<1 special lb-
duction for new nwrnbers Mn.
Paul Blllilzer, Mrs. Milton
Experimmtellon 11111 ex-mid Page\lnl of tile Muters Rooney and Mn. Nell LaVitt
plontioo will be nurtured and Dislleyi.nd. highlighted the meeting of the
Arts, Woman's Role
Explored by Scouts .
PISCES (Feb. lf.Man:h 11):
Robby J>l)'I dlYidezicll. You
are rewude4 !tr dOli1g what
comet naturally. Crea t I v e
julc:a flow. Red lope 111apo;
door of Ol'PO'blnlty la ajar.
Enter.
GRADUATING from the
Los Angeles Career Academy
•• a medical assistant was
Miss Gayle Brown fl Costa Mesa. The daughter of Mr. A demons.tr at ion in Orange Coast College, began
and Mr.s. Wilfrid Br own watercolor wtll be ac-.Pfdnting In early childhood.
received training , Jn ex· companied by a general lee-He trained at O>ouinard'.s, and
omJnatlon rocedara;-mc;·-Me-when 1Ucbar4 V. Johnoon otudied oil with Nicholl Feehin · trocardiogra~y, anatOmy and appears at the mating of the and Sam Hyde Harris. His
otbtr medical skills. HllJ!-llngtoa Beach Art League watercolor studies were with tllinf place at 7:!0 p.m. Mon-Rex Brandt, Robert E. Wood,
Orange Coast Chapter, B'Nai Moodoy, July I, lllrouch Fri-Among the 18 Orange Coun-B'rlth Women.
IF TODAY IS YOUK
BIRTHDAY 1"11 are pellent
enough to piece lo(etbet
.varlouJ element. which eve~
tually lead you to major pl.
New start tb1.s year waa ri&ht.
By Ju1y, you will be more
stable in emotional and finan-
cial areas.
day, July 17 at Chapman ty girls attending the event 'lbe group ctlebrated its
College when gg Seni« Girl will . be the Misses Shirley sinh birthday yesterday dur4
Scouts frun the west.em staies Collom of Newport Beach, ing a meeting in the Newport
participate in Pave Four, a Elizabeth Herte of Fountain Riviera clulilouse, Cost a
Valley, Deborah Warning of Mesa. i jiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiii;i ~am of arts for ""8lion Seal Beach and Deena West Hosting the wig party was J • J UPHOURIY day, July 6, In the recreation .George Post, Milford Zornes
center. · and Barse Miller. iinl eQjoyment. of Hunlingtpn Beach. Jim Gilbert of Huntmston
'Ibe atrls will live a Mra. Jmnes Hook fl. Mission Beach. M:;:!:c:~~~::,1:.1'• Johmon, who instructed In The 1rtllt'1 pa.lntings are
· both oil and -oolor al oo exhibit througbwt the
tb'mkory Ille IDd pcticipate Viejo is direct« of. 'the event Ad di tl 0Da1 tm«mation •• LUC• ••AllTll'U.. l'UllflllTVQI
in wabbupt. lecUns IDd and Mn. c: A. Harry of. San regarding the cblpter lmJ' be · •• """ CNA1.S.Q••• _ Unit.d Stales in bo1b public
and private collections. lleld lripl. Cl<mtrite k a manbe< of the obtained by ~ Mn. S, '42·517' 646-1011
'!be theme II ext>k>'lnr the'. ~od~ult~-~·------~KJ~U~IJll~lll',_, ~-~~· ---~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ role of -in the an..1·
----KAREN LINDROTH
Au1u1t Bride
Rite Date
Revealed
Eastern
Cer,emony
Links Pair
He has received awards
from the Tradilional Anlsls
Guild; Laguna Beach Art
Astoclatlon; Lone l!Nch Spec-~.c~hn ~~One~ Takes Wing
hi1 most important works is Mt 1 s Carol Frances
a mOlalc in the sanctuary f N of the Grade Methodist Shaw o ewport
Jacquellno Rut!> , Wincert <liurch, Loor Beach. Bea<:h, daughter of Mr.
bocamo tile bride of Leooard Membera are lnvlled to oub-and Mn. Cecil V. Shaw
M. Lilly III of Newport Beach mil ooe painting, a IJflll-llfe. of Lubbock, Tex., has
during • double ring cetOll10I\)' which will be Jtl!lged, and become a stewardess
In Cl--~-Method I t plana will be revealed for the u~-I wl" World Airway•, a <Jiurch, Ar~ VL eighth 111111ahlrt In the Park w
Parent.I ol the couple an day taking place July U. charter airlin~. An art
the Jcim A. W.lngerts « major at Orange Coast
Vklla hi,. -plumed to
Ille IAlo ~ Art c.nter,
UC!, a major -firm, rnrollnll cord oamplllY. the
Lag\lllO Beodi Art Festlval
New Gold
Gleaming
In Cubes McLean, Va. and Mr. 111<1 D College, Miss Shaw will
Mrs. Leooard M. Lilly Jr. esigners serve aboard 707 jets of Newport Beach, N je 1ry t ~-~•--Attendents were the Mines flying to Osaka. Japan. ew we a \Al~
Pabida Ann Wingert, Nancy Repr1"eve and various parts of felturel rlnp cul oul ol gold
Hehn mid Karen Druglu and .Europe. cubea and glellniq dllCI ~
Mrs. Debbie Goobln. Others gold percbed alop norrow l!"N :ire~='= ~111 •~d br:.N•;.,t o! 10 Beach Babes ~!Dlnhvan,Frencl>Vle~
Ekeblad and Jama Wqert. de~gners l>t.rvlewed by the nameoe jewelry dell-· at
The bride attended Pfeiffer Contour COuncil who• e Every Wednesday at 7 p.m. Cartier, believes j ewe 1 r Y
Coll-e and the Uni -~ty J memben keep the inn<nvear members or TOPS Beach 1hould be a limple line, well Mr. and Mn. Re~ld Lin-~ Vgu w r
J,..., Maryland. Her hwlband ii a lnduatry JOing. Babes convene in Huntington dOlle.
droth of Newport Beach have graduate of Nn,xrt Harbor 'ftle dealgnerl supported Beach High School for pro-HiJ br1celeta ne1Uy encircle
annowlced the engag~ment of High &Dool and the Un!verst-lmderplnainp: for their softer, grams. For infonnation the wriN with 1eometric cir·
their daughter, Karen Un-ty ·ot Southern Califoml1. He llinkier, lan&"r, ae:der-lhan· regarding the next meeting cle and aquare cutouts. and
droth to John Vallely of b cumntly in the Cout ever oollectlOu for fall and date and time telephone Mrs. chuUy cubes and booPI of B~~~isweddlngdat<,.;;;;Guard;;;;;;;;;;;;Reoerve.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;wln;;;iilB;ii;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ll!iiii;;;;;;;;;;H;;;;e;;;;nry~Co;;;;rd;;;;;;M;;;;e~yeriiii1iit6#-0838;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;i;ll";;;;ld;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I
In Geneva Pre 1 byte r la nll
Crureb, Lquna llillJ WU
revealed during a dlnner party
celebratln( the brldHlect'1
~lrlhday •.
Mis.s Lindroth is a sraduate
of Newporl Harbor High
School and Orange Coast
College.
Her fiance M-a graduate
of Corona del Mar High
School, OCC and UCLA.
member ol the NCAA .... .no
pion buketball a I
UCLA. be will play 1th the
Atlanla Hawks In the fall.
Cl~on Curlers
Wash curlera and hair a<>
~es 1n a basiJI of wmn
--looally.
+ Tbb remova film formed
bJ notural hair oils and hair
• 11rc.
' \ •
Open Saturday, July 4th
And Every Sunday ,
'1th of July
SPECIALS
CHOICE BmER
DRESSES
1/3 OFF
11 :30 A.M. TO 4:00 P.M •.
--SAT .. JULY 4-SUN., JULYS ONLY--
250/o DISCOUNT
ON AJ.I, FABRICS WHEN
TOTAL PURCHASE IS OVER $10.00
LUTESONG $498 !u~~!~~!~~RICI . . . . . . • • • • . • YD.
CREPE RADIANCE $]29
POL VESTER . '
OUR NEW LO:>'f PRICE .. . .. .. .. .. • YD.
THI FABRIC FOR LAWRINI NIXON'S
WEDDING GOWN WAS PURCHASED HIRE
' .
New,
breathtaking
8x10
LIVING
COLOR
PORTRAIT
3days
o.nlyl
'
C r.11 .. ...,..;,' ................ ,. i lMng Cotor J' t.y Jadr I, Nimble, Inc. ,... U.S.
T,.a~rtl
-50¢ handll119
and delivery • Choose from octual fini1hed
; portrai~t proof1.
Your mon.y back if this isn't the most liWike • • &.tra P!1nft C¥Oil~I• ot reason·
portrait of your child ever. Not Just an old-. . able pnctf. No obligation to buy.
fashioned tinted or colored picture, but • Gtaupt token ot "' per child.
1'1.Mng Color"I The complete portrait tomes • Ao• lim1h S Yt'ffk1 to 12 years.
afive--coptured in Gmazing full-color realism • Umlts one per chlld-
w;1h EpWnon Professional Ektocolor film. two per famrty.
Wednesday, July 1 through
Sunday, July 5.
HUNTINGTON BEACH SANTA ANA NORWALK
ldlllftr 11 bttdl boulf,,..N br .. IOI 11 IWM1"11111 '"""''-' ti nerw.111 "Yll,
phone 714-192-6611 phone S47a41 phon1 168-0911
. '
--
..
•
I .
. ..
•
•
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' . Cosa.Mesa •
·VO[ 63, NO. 152, 4·SECTIONS;40 PAGES
'
i. '
· M:cl(~enz.ie Retires
·, .
City Manq,ger Facing Long Recovery
' ' • ! 1 I ' •
LEAVING ,COSTA MESA
~sup.r Chief' McKenzie
By ARTB\.lR. R. VINSEL retiremenL--in-McKenzie's acreer.
1 °'"" o.ttr "-'...,. He Contracted1.pclio wblle a meinber
Stricken by a Cerebral hemOrrhqe of .the Los Angdes -folice Depertn\~t
four montlJ;S ago•and DO.W•Jaclna: a long· and retired as a ~ve sergeant tenn 1 cop val~. Coa!a t,fesa Cl{y bef
Afall.ager Arthur ,R. MCK~e· ii· retil-1,na. ore recovtting ,_,,d ' accwlinl the
His decision waa bued on llls dOctor's Costa· Mesa police chief assignment.
recommendatiori. and his ·chanc~ for His bout With the crippling disease
returning to the ~level jOb he has led ~m to work -en.t.busiuticaUy . a!l
httO: since August, .J965,' In the immediate Orange County dlairman of· the annual
futu · March' of Dimes campaign for many 're., . ff "They tell me r:n be all ria:hh but years.
-ttie ,Unie elelllfllt is too much, i11 doubt McK,nzie, one of ttie most popular
iii leave .._it ha•g for a prolonged among city orficials, bec'ame ~ily
periOd," he said. manager on Aug. 1, 1965, earning furn
No definite date ha s been &el, since the nickname "Super Chief."
his application for retirement and long· He \Vas promoted from polic.e chier
term disability benefit.! ls currently being to director of public safety in 'mi«J.1964
handled by internal committees Of city and further elevated to acting city
governmen t. ~ ... manager, then ·formally assigned to the
The SZ.year~ld McKenz.it, hired Sept. J>06l.
30, 1953, aa Costa Mesa's first police Robert L. Unger's -z:e,.ignation· to enter
ch~. plans a . prolonged vacation in private business left Arlit Schwart% as
Mexico with his wife. acting city manager for several m(Xllhs
Acting' City Manaier Fred Sorsabal before McKeniie WI! promoted the
ls expected to be; the choitt lo &ucceed following spring.
McKenzie as the top appointive officer He has been uridergoing extended
in the munidpal.govemment. testing and therapy Jince suffering the
'nle st.rolie McKenzie suffered '1-arch stroke March 1, a mild attack tha\
l, at first, thought to be less serious sent him to his phySician the next day.
than specialists ultimately determined, complaining of headaches and slight
bas ·led to the second medlcaDy·induced (Set l\lcKENZIE, Page Z)
{r {r {r
Hanoi Confirms Prisoner Mesa Leaders
List; 33.4 Held in Vietnam
'NEW.-YORK (UPI ) -T·h re e
Ani.Micins Who visittd.·Hanoi as ~vate
lndivi<!,uals reported locjay · tllat · North
Vietnamese govl!rnmeiit olficiats· J:,on.l
finned a list of 334 American prisoners
of War 'compiled 1:fy a New York' peace,..
group and stated that It waa complett.
· It was the first reported North Viel·
namesi comment on the list drliwn up
by 1 the Commillet.. of Liaison with
farriilies of servicemen detained In North
Vietnam, which is headed by Mrs. Cora
Weiss. The commi ttee su bmitted the list,
baseCI on letters received from tht:
prisoners before December, 1969, to
Hanoi ror verification last April but
it· met with silence.
Confirmation of the list was reported
by a spokesman for Kenneth Kirkpatrick
of the American ltriends Service Com·
mittee, Seattle; Prof. Mark S. Patshne
of Harvard University, and Prof. Egbert
W. Pfeiffer o(the University of Mon~a.
who were in Hanoi earlier this month.
1'be -apokesmen '8id the travellers Wj!.re
told all the men were safe .and .would
Remember 1940
' '
At Harbor High?
be repatriated when the war · Is
terminated.
lhfoiinlUal. •v1Uab1t'" in• Wasbtncton
lndicited that the Departinent of.
Defan.9e'1=oL. known pr~a. ol .,,.; ~it. . ably twpr than th.It
verified "' ' r
Jlldoi ltressed that the wives ol inlu-
ina: U.S. servicem"en shouJd desist from
traveling to Paris, Loas and other points
where North Vietnamese have represen·
tatives to learn of their husands' fate
Pecause all captured Americans ac·
counted for were on the list, the
spokesman said.
Appartmtly this did no1 lake into ac-
count soldiers. who have been captured
since April 7. Tbe spokesman aaid Hanoi
did not accept 47' letters out of the
769 that Kirkpatrick and his companklns
took· to the North Vietnamese capital
with them on the grounds that they
were addressed to men who were not
on the list.
The· Cornm.ittet oC Liaison was
established last December by agretment
between the Hanoi gOvemment and Mrs.
Weiss, wife of 1 New York attorney,
to arrange letter communication between
the prisoners and their families. The
PCWs are permitted to wrilt one letter
on a six line form each month and
receive one package every other month.
Do you remember all your old croaies NEW YORK (AP) -. Here Js. the Jn tbe class of 1940 at Newport Harbor 4 High? Ifs· almost~time-to-gei-ready-to-· list of Californian's reported eonfifmed
see them again · -30 yea rs later. by Hanoi as an a'ccUrate r.<!Unt of
Three 1940 graduates, Sparkes McClcl· American prisoners of war being held
Jan, June Mickelwait, and Virginia Ros· in North Vietnam. The list, with home
sier, are planning a class rewiion for towm following the names was provided
Nov. 7 at the Balboa Pavilion. to the Associated Press by Mrs. Cora
If you are a 1940 graduate of Newport \\'eiM, bea~ of a New York-based peace
Harbor High or you \now of some, Jet group called the Cqmmittee of Li1iaon
McClellan kn<JW at Ma-2624. • (See POWs,.~p Z)
Mesa Women's Court Stay
I ' •
On Dri1g Sa.le Raps Starts
. A fight by two Costa Mesa housewives
to get judges to impose maximum
penalties for those selling drugs' moVed
into ~ge County Superior Court today.
The lwo women, Jeanne Armflndo
and Sally Jardine, will be present. .as
o1:14ervers during arraignments · o f
petsons arrested for selHhg dh.iis who weft rounded up in the Operation
Harvest, the largest drug raid, in Orange
Cotrnly,·hekl one.month--ago.
Presiding over today's deliberations is
Judge James F. Judge: They wtr,e set
to~begin at 1:45' p.m .. in division five
of ,Superior Court .
"As observers, we think we will " be
tiuite effective," said ~1rs. Jardine. "It
15tarted In the east and judges besan
l:landing down stiffer pena1Ue:; when they
k:1ew interested cltlzel}S were watching
Ulem." ,
''We are not trying to pressure judges
but we are concerned that they are
llOl even handinr d o w n minimum
1cn1enca ln many, caes hivol ving drug
pusher5," ·she said.
The two Co6ta ~1e:it1 women will be
aceompanied to court by two olhtr C9fl"
cerned mothers from tht La Habra area.
All four. ot them will .be wearing badges.
· which say "Citizen Courtroo m
Observer/' Before moving into court today, the
WOIMll wiU have over S,OlilO stanature.s
on a.petiti<M directed t t Orana:e County
District . Attorney Cecil Hicka Ind the
offi~ of seven Superior Court judges.
The petition calls ror muimum ,penalties
under the Jaw to. be applied to those
in the l1lqal aaJe !JI ,drugs,
"I'm sure thal ihe -pel!Uon LI 'Well
mouvated," Hicp Mid 'lburaday. "Bu\.
I think that they-doo't ruliu that tha
common practice ol Orange. County Is
maximum sentmcta for U-peddllnc
drugs."
"The ooJy quarrel I have with the
petition is Ole 11t'IY it is worded implies
something less la happening than what
is actually being done," he Slid. '
The women hope to bave colltcttd
some tS,000 5ignatures by Sept t, when
it will be presented to the district at-
torney and the jud1'9. Similar peUU0111
(See COURT, P•p I)
• •
Give Praise
To McKenzie
Sorry, bul coocernrid that ~ cJ,evole
himleU· to •«'I~ ~la IM"'"telvie
leaders and city officiU, today .dtUverld
.. -.. -of l CC<ilalld"<lo ~City·
Manager Art llCKemJt.
The ros~ includes : fonntt miyors.
managers, and the man who lucCeeded
him as police cblef.
l\fayor Robert M. Wilson. aware of the
deci1ion along with fell ow councilinen.
has been in city 1overnment in aome
capacity as long ~ McKenzie ha3 been
employed.
"I don't think we've had any more
loyal, dedicated 'servint of the people
that I can recall," laid Mayor WUllOO .
"One of his 'problems' perhaps, was that
he wanted to be everywhere at the aamt
time to make sure everything WM dont
right. _
'"He's a man with such a strong mind
and constitution that one ol theae days.
I expect he will rtaain Ills health."
Fcrmer Mayor ·Alvin L. Pink~: ''I
worked With him two terms, longer than
anybody else now on the council. It goes
without saying that when you lose a
man like Art McKenzie after losing one
llk.e Charlie Prie.st. you leaye a void that
will be hard lo fill."
Former Mayor Willard T. JOrdan : "Ht
developed, from the very beginning. orie
of the best cities in the· state as far a!'I
1 'm c<>ncerned. He's been' a fine civic
employe, a great. dedicated· individual.
t d reel much worse it he was leaving
the .city, but he will continue to bt active
in the community. We wish him the best."
Fonner Mayor John Smith : "He was
the best around. He wu tops in his fie.Id,
not only with the politicians, but with
personnel of the police department:"
Fonner Mayor Claire M. Nelson : "I
was on the fint city council and one ot
those who brought Art McKenzie lo Coeta
Mesa as chief or politt. I arways felt it
' was a wise decision. Certainly, "he proved
himself to be a very efficient public
1ervant.''
Former City Manager Arlie Schwartz:
''I hive admired his ability as an 1dmin-
Jstrator, ffOIJI the lime he assumed the
, o£fice ol the fint chief or police throufh
the years of hls numerous dutieS. He ha s
earned the high regard, reapect and ad·~
miration or all, whether public officials
or. citizen!. He bas served Jong and well.''
Forme r City Manager Robert U111er ~
''He worked for me directly in his eight
years as police chiet I 'wish he could
have retired some other way, but if any·
one can come through somethlnc like
this, ~rt can." .
PoUce Cldef Roger Neth: '1J've worked
for him nfariy 17 years, as pa~l,nia11.
commander, ~ahd department heed, He
has , taught me .a lot d. thi111a, not only
about .nnllce"WoftD\t(""fi<iw to Oeal with peopl~<-.
"He had a very deep feelina: for the • peopae "1>o worked under him-but al·
ways without sacrificinc the e:fficltncy '
of ttie department.
"Thil," Chief Neth concluded, "should
be 1treS!ed."
. 'India ~nfster .Quits I
• NEW DEi.ill (UPI) -1ndli'~ lertlrn j
minister, DineJJh Singh, resl&ned today
when Prima Min<er Indira Gandhi at.-
tempted to move. him to 1 les&er poaL. ·
...
'•
. • • • • • •.; I • ... • D.t.IL'I ~1L01 .,,_. ._ .,.. .., .....
'HOLD UP , LIZZIE •. WE'RE A·HJ'ADIN -FOR J'f!E P..EA PATCH '
In San Clemente, T~ Pr .. icle"t RW-1' V(ith1• LHy Driver
"
t •
·Nixon 'Glad to : Be Baek1
President Raps Senate· 'lsQlation' in :County Gr.eeting
•
..
By RICHARD P. NA,U. . ·
Df Ill• O.llr ''lff ll•ff
'10n Saturday-I'm attendin1 mY. niece's,
wed din a," .the Pr~ident said cheerily.
Galifo.mia : .• ;. · parUCularly on such 1 should do what 1the House (Of Repratn-
beeut1fuJ day;" said the President. tatives) does. nfey should get out. in """'
"When I heard " tl\e tein~atUre W1Li the countr:y and 1ee whit 'the•country
Touchc!Own of ~ir Force. ~le on · the ·
hdt ·Er Toro' }Jnd\pi Q "'If. TOU~
,,...... ii bat.il'Msidal.'."lftloli ,,.uMll
h0hte.f111n& ·.., lo!San Clemerite ,to give,
neume.n ~ •ier;s on .topk:s .;.:ranging
from the weather to "intelllect'ual incesf"
in Wl.shlnlton.
103 degrees) bere,..:l fell that '.wu ~•· . is thinking. .
Uttit ."~ .bl\t you know, we".hi(e~ dQo . Ht-said the ~lt WWld.1'aft: 1beetJ
heat 19 CIJlllrnia.'; ~. . 1t;'J_,i'~ ~ in411i ·noe,tion Jn , .... ~;..
Querlod •l)iboo<P S>e,,11 ~ r<'TII• He referred IO tlie tJnmderooo ._,.. lll•111o11~·1 """alb lbolill'.lllO,~ of. •bout 12,0GO ~-who.~
Mr_ Mb:on 'Mid.~ "l\M.Vel" ~-his 21-thinuti ililk'., tbete ""m.inj-*-t:
"1>,at the l;eoate "'7• r,r· -~ olice. evtty mlJlule.
cuclldlli411 ,Hy. ·'". ' ~I ., .r "! Qve ahn71 -ftilnd 1bat ill '.'>m .r .. ..,, pd · IO 1et back to "lioaloll!Dei l 11111)& they-(/k~), C'"9 NDGIJ, "-9 Ii
Prominent Mesa n,,;,iid~r.:: Pat ~ill~FO:~
• ' ' • ' • j 1 ' ..
' ' Ray Dike, 67, SJ!>cc~mbs:
Well·known Costa Mesa builder Ray
Dike died Thursday afternoon at i Hun· ·
tington Beach hospital ·after •suffering a
heart attack. He wu 87.
A licensed rul estate broker since
1924, Mr. Dike was president of Dike,
Drliger and Lownes, a South Pasadena
firm unti1 '1949.
He became chairman of ,the board at
Dike and Colgrove in 1950, building more
than 10,000 homes in the Harbor Area
during a 20-year span.
He was a director of the Building tn-
du!try Association or califomla a former T
member of "the board of' direct~rs ol both
the Home Builders AssoclatiOJ'I of Lo! An-
geles, Orange ahd Ventura Counties and
the 'Building Contractors Associa,tion ot
of.ange County. .
He' was alao a member or the steer ..
Ing committee of the Builcljn1 lndualty -•lion and . the Mortpge 'Flnanc•
Committee of the .N•tl0n81 Aaaodatlon
of Home Bullden. "
Mr. [)Ike was lctivt In the Newp;rt
Harbor lOwaatl .club,, ezecutiVe director"'
of the Orante ·Cout YMCA, 11nd a mem-
ber of the balboa Bay. Club.
Mr. Dike ii survived by~ wile Helen,
and hi1 30n, Don, 1 Gor.ona de! Mar r:eal
estate broker.
Memorial service! will be h~d at St.
'
'
State .ArtfMeet '
J
On .P~ru R,~Iief
During ~er .VfSit
' ' '
· ~fr~. Ricbard Nixon plans to fOctll
attention on • the rellef;needs of e~
~~trl,c~ Peruvf!n .citizens dwin&
he< lhtee<lay vi.it next w.eJr to " the
SOulh1American'nilUon.,; .
She will carry blankets, chUdren's
. clothing. and other su~pU~ when she
-Jeaves Sunday for the 'beleq;uered coun.
tty,
The First La~y will join' forces with
Mrs. Juan Velasco, wife of the Penmiin
presidenl, . in · sea rchin& out ~ -neec11•
of the thousands of • homeless dijrblg
the brl!.f st;ay which will end Tuelday
moi:nipg. , · ·
Mrs. Nixon plans to tour the cOialtll'
area.S dev·astated ·by the Ma'y 31 'earth.
qUake in a U.S. military helicopter. She
will view the damage at Ctiimbote on
the ground.
' Mn. Nixon visited Peru-in 1951 w~
her husband was then '(ice-president and
made an official '\our or Latin AmeriCa.
Nimrreturned alone to Peru in •1117.
The Fir&t Lady. !Will stay at ~' ·
American ·embauy in LUna and · 1
dine quietly .with '"'mbassador and M •
Tayklr ~lcher the night of her arrlval"I
Oruge Coast
Andrews Presbyterian Church in .Newport
Beach at 12 p~m. Tuesdax. Mr. Oike will
be burled' in New Orleans; La.
The family suggests tributes in"!orm
of donations to the Ray Dike Fund, Or·
ange Cout YMCA.
Extend~ J)eadline ' "WeadH!l" ·
\ :
·Mesa .Maµ Killed
So thit all .artJJ._ may hrVe ample
time to ·aet lhelr-.,;rks Into ~
Ari '70, a atotewi<!o,art.CIOntest ~
by the city of lllnUncton _, Mid
Int~ Arl)1.Scbol•niiplo. 't lie
'deailUne """"~"'-"*-J'*• Z7toJulyJI. ~ . . J
.A Co3ti Meiaman.1\ .. !dlled 'llnlrodlf ll)le--II ·~ ...... -otternoon ,,.heli .hlo ear °'eitumecl nine ~ l,JlllO lllbto; wbo wtU com~ Jot
m\1., east 'Of A'mllet In S.. Bernardino's l!l.IGO ii): prl.le; money, don.w ·by
hi8h desert coon&ry, c.tttomfa lllpway bullnellmen Jn·\tlle .Hunti.,.... ,_,.
pjtrolmen repQrt.ed todlt. -area. Tbe ~ center la fOcated
WUU.m A. Glhtloo, a, of 240I Oraqe •I room 'lllZ of i-Goldtn Wnl Collqe
.<Ve., was westbo\tnd en Intentate 40 ll(JJsic luUding ...
when !Mo crdlsed the center line, colllcllng Competltloa "111 be held on the mall
w)th the irtar wheels o(. '! 1tml-truck of the + Huntlntgon Center, Sept. 13
ll1ICI trailer, CHP officers said. , • thtough 2i,and fl! ls .. J>ected thai IOO,OGO fill vthicle glanced off ·the trailer pertons will view Utt various exhlbil8. .
•lid ll"'Ot lnlp the opel! daor\' lo< • • ~n , additional, ~.Olil will be •wat!led f~rtli In a circle belort: ®(!)Inc lO ,,.l th •laden\" artlji1 during !he competliion
baclt Ori 1.he roadway. • 1 . -"','•$..-wet~ This ·money fl" be donajed
11e "'as pronounced <kad on 1 arrival · by' bul\niu irnm throughout orange.
at ~boy llospltal, coroners report. Count~." f , •
' . I
' . I 1 It'll· ceo1 off (to 1bout 70 degrees)
~long the1coast this weekend while tpe inland fofk will swelter 'uiic.ler 1 Qo.degree tempef&tUfes whllC &uiJ·I
ny skies prevail throughout.
INSIDE TODil'Y
A backward glo:ncc at a bWfl
·and productt~ live. &.hfatu 1ca.
'.aon along Utt 0ta11Qe 'Coast .ii
: taktn bu tnteTt.tdnmeni tditor
·Tom Tit tu in hi1 1-nUnnilti'on
1col"mtt in ~~'• Wcikll&der. . . . .
'"'"' C1Hf!HN :it """"' M-» ,,1__,.,., ,.
Cl•lflH ,_, ,,... .. _. .........
If Dr•"" c..tr1 I ;C~•
• Deftlil "'9tkH ,....,..,, ... 11 "........ • .. I S,l-tt.,,.,_ II ' , .... ' ~,.
1•11 '"'" ,..,...., ... 11 •Plfl-
HM'ttct't .t.fll'IL._,.. ........ -~LlffltMt '""""'"
•
• U ~ r 11411 u . w .. "*' ' ' ~··'"-•1• ..............
• w.......,\ ..
. '
. \ l ·' • 0
'
. .
J CAil Y l'llOT , c
OueProbe
Continues
lnVeltlpUon continues lbday into an
e~lon and fire at a ~la Mesa
laundromft TutMiay, while firemen
di-tbe p!'OCUI th1L trJuered the
f<t,OllO blUt la chillln11Y c<>m-plac< •.
Rap o>Ued with a cbemlcal IG!vell
were pt.ced In three wa&btr& at the
fadllty tn the VIN Sboppl.. C.oier,
tbeD a ,cltaniil.1 compound we adde~
and tbe votatlle vapota rnlJ.ed. ..
A spark from one or the wahui
apparently touched off the devastatin&
blut thet wrecked tbe laundromat and
he'avlly damaeed an adja~ k a r a ! •·
ltUCHo ud: care, inJuriac one weman.'
••it happena 'rather frequenUy. We're
juat lucky we havenl had an up~
w...:·;aplltnod ·-Cbltl, llOlj (!dtm1n, '
He Aid c1uotni tnd"'1rlal cloths -
belleved Jn..,lved In -melntenance ill. tbe ·Tueaday ca• -In llUDdrtlmala ·
11• a frequent occutl'tllCI in tbe Hirbor
A<oa.
Police and llre JJ!Vlltlf~l!!!l ~ ... k.
Ing a .oort, ltncky, Sl'ly·balred \ftlD
wflo filled ·the w11Mr1 with the lJt.
flammable comtM.natioo •hortly blfOre·
the exploslOll.
He ii only wanted for queationln1 to
establllh the preclae ca1.111 ud a.id m·
future prtveation.
• • •
Fenced In
Costa Mesa police officer TQJll-. t.e.zat meas~res a'c:
cidenr scene af 23rd Street and1/ewpprt ,'Bpljlevafd.
Accident occurred about 9:20 this morhin& when
driver Ronald E. Crawford, 31, of 1745 Orange Ave.,
'
' . CIAILY ,ILOT SlfH l'llltlJ
Cra ed in~o fence . narrowly missing tree. Crawford
"fold Affic Oficers he swerved to avoid a truck pull-ing ou f a private driveway and lost co.ntrol of the
car. He s not injured , according to police reports.
Ex.City Manager Recalls Hearing Set
On Obscenity. McKenzie Police Interview
Mrs. Lorraine Nellon, 5.1, of 840 Center !~~~ ~~·~~ :QI'~~ One-time city manager George Coffey air,'' I told him. "Submit your ap-
aiid mlMr lnjurles. · bu ~wn Art .McKenz:le longer than pllcaUon."
Accusation
J uly 10 has been set as the date
for a hearing on a demurrer filed on
behalf of Ernie A. Smith, a UC Irvine
student charged with disturbing the
peace · when he allegedly used obscene
language while speaking before a student
rally at the campus.
"We have no realOft to believe it an~y else in Costa Meu., except, A handful of application.! was received
wu anon,,. added Coleman, 11yiq: of, count, Mrs. McKenzie. by the fledgling city govermnent and
ha&ardoua use of chemical · .,Jventl ii Coffey ioday temlnlsced about how ei:ami/laUo~ were administered, fGI·
Oltt of• the leadJbc caUJes tl. acddtntal be met the retirfni city manager while lowed by an oral board convened. in the
explosion ud fires in Amtrica. both were taking graitt1ale studies in old water department office.
"This is a kin'd of home-brew practlce 1952 at USC and McKenzie was teaching Coffey said he almost bumped into
of dry cleaning which ii extmnely police science at El Camino College. a young Orange County Sheriff's Depart-
bazardous," ht conUnued, saylnf 'the "He had been retired from the Los ment deputy who was jusl leaving after
danger cannot be over..e.!Umated. Angeles Pollet Department because of a not-~oo-enthusiastic hearing board fin-
Smith, ;1 Black Students Union officer _,
at UCI, was prote.!Ung' the lack or student
response to the killing of two black
Jackson State students at a May IS
.No one bu been able to establish poJio and we got acquainted on campus ished questioning him.
the idenUty of the workman who unln· and later took classes together," recalled "J;le had been eliminated," Coffey said
1·1 trl ~ tbe bl st • .i.... Colley, of 410 Broadway. today. ltntiona Y Pf'o::u • • spra,. .. oa 'Wh "The man that puses that deserves rally when the obscene .remarks were
repcirtedly made. ---· g ed ·•··do of pJa1a .. 1as1 up to M ' en I was appointed the first city JI g ilN~ • 1e .. • .. the i'ob," whistled the deputy, who turned fe t d tbe h I nt.r manager, sald Coffey, wh o finally e aroun s opp ng ce · out to be Clinton Wright. who became Apparentlv women in the audience ob-•w h 10 ooo J ad • h ... retired in 1957, "Art called and said / e ave , e s we re c ecr.1ng chief of nnJice in Huntington Beach and .--..,led to the language and UCI Police t " Chi f r-1 Jd ' he wanted to be our first police chief." 1•v J"'-ou • e ....., eman sa · "J can't jwit pick iyou out of thin later Fremont, Calif., Coffey explained. Chief Robert Heavy filed a complaint with
"Poor guy 11 probably hidine out. CofJey said great care was exercised the District Attorney 's Office. June 4
&eattd to death," added another firem111.. 1;r i:.r '1:r lo De certain the examination board Smith was charged with twu counts of
The. roof of the bullding at West 19th remaine? unaware that ,he had known disturbing the peace by the DA's office.
Street aid Placentia Avenue llgged bad· f'rona Page 1 McKenzie at the use cam~us. Smith has said he will call upon pro·
ly £ollowln1 the 12:'8 a.m. explosion "I did~0't want a~y 'old school buddy' minent Negroes to testify that his
&{Id -.noo wu Bet U the structural M KENZIE charges, be explained. la nguage was not obscene and is used
damage figure. r C • • • "I fe lt then and have fel t that Art was commonly in the black community.
Latlndromat tq,ulpmt11t -primarily very competent and capable,'' Coffey A language student and an announcer
washer• 1t the fro6t ol. ~ shopping numbness. · cootinued, adding his appoinbnent lo for the campus radio station, he said
center .... 'l;:"" IUdlilld su,p d ....... ~ +I ~J ~ radiMt. in t~-.. ~~-~e Of· his language was colloquial and "in the while drytr1 and other lqWpme'nt at "toUnty Marth of Dimes campaign, flee rs StandaidS aM' "trilhli1i. ·PJ'Oves parlance of the black community."
tbeftar were hardly touched. McKenzie i.!I a Boy Scout leader and thL!i. Smith also has raised the question
t ,.,...-·;...1
row_s_ ...
With Families of servicetnen oeiitned ·
in North Vietnam •. Mrs. Weiss said the
1wnben wtre aerial numbers.
frequent consultant in the area of justice of why he was the only one charged.
ind law enforcement. He 11 a graduate ~ He claims other student speakers at
ol the FBI Academy. Newport Charges other rallies have u.sed similar language He wis ·appointed last year by without being prosecuted. .
Governol' ,Reagan in the California Com-UCl 's Academic Senate gave Smith
mjssion ~e_ace Officer Standards and For New Trees a vDte of confidence in their regular
Training .'.l~T) an agency Of erperts meeting June 3 when , according to
· Who set the ' eiptc~d level of excellence Gordon Shaw. physics instructor, lhey
among stati lawmen. Newport Beach city government has "approved by an Gverwhelming majority,
McKenzie Obtained his bachelor of long required thal trees be planted in ii motion supporting s(udents' right of
Wilford
D,ielO
• CALIFORNIA
Ke.,. Abbott, 30!1739,
M:ience degree at .Los A·ngeles Stale new housing tracts. Now the city will free speech and urging the Chairman
San· Collea:f and hi.! master's degree from charge developers a fee for plantin1 tof the Irvine Division ) to set in motion
the Universify of 'Southern Ca!Uomia, them. procedures In behal! of Mr. Ernie
Everfltt
Clara
Alvare1 Jr., 6"124, Sant.a
: Anthony Cbt,rl" Andrews, FR.1116551.
Chico
; Frtderkk C. Baldock Jr., 8MG>,:
?:.einon ~va . ; ·
Rober1' W. Barnott, FR I !.OU ,.,
Hawthorne · ~
: Cole Black, 5&U87, San Dieao
' T•rry ·i... Boyu. ,F'~l~, Via&lia.
Michael Lee Brazelton, FV3148&90,
Long Beach
Philip Neal BUUtr. 847398. La Jolla
Willi am Wallace Butltr, 3133430. San
Rafael .
Carl DeMis Chambers, FV3133401,
Yuba City
Arvin Roy ctiauncy, 8147ia, Lemoart
Claude Doua:las Clower, 60647, San
Dl•go
James Quincy Collin!, 2M. Atherton
Michael PAW Cronin, 6689$2, Berkeley
F.dward Qale Estes, '664M, Lemoore ' .
DAllY PllOT
both in· Jl9lice science. City councilmen Monday night in· Smit}\."
.He wa:; also trained in accounting, troduced an ordinance that will req uire Shaw is head ing a movement to help
manqtmerlt and nlated fields during $3 be :Paid by tract developers tor eac~ raise money for Smith's defense. "Of
bia caleer, interrupted by polio and then tl'ef: pl&nted to meet c.ity specifications. the litera lly dozens of public speeches
resumed ·ai literally. the father of the nit· charge is tor the cost of Inspecting made during the last lwo months at
Calta )feu. PoUce Department. to see that the trees are planted ri&}ll Irvine, also using 'obscene' language one
wonders why only Ernie Smith is being
prosecuted?" he asked .
U.S. Diplomat Named
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Rober t
1'1cC!inlock, a veteran of nearly 40 years
in the U.S. Foreign Service, was , con·
firmed today by the Senate as th'! U.S.
ambassador to Venezuela. McClintock,
60, a native of the state of Washington,
was nominated April 2. The post in
Caracas has been vacant about a year,
•
N~~-,N!flatmare 1 . _
.... . ? I I '
.-Vote · Count~ earn
·Strikes. Out Too'"
By JACK BROBACK
01 .. OtllY l"lltl lt•lf -
"FrUstratlon" is Ute word lor tl'le
Orang~ County Votina Systems Tlsk
Force.
The 10-member lfOUp, with · lhree
absent·, met Thurada;y fOf' the third time
In an .attempt to remtdy the . ce111ty:1
ailing vote coUJ1Ung 1ystr.m.
The tesutt was the same as be:fore.
They failed,
The group Hrst voted Th\U'ld.11 :to
rescind its declston of a week a10 to
accept free use of 200 Shoup votini
machines for the November General
Election. That would have been sufficient
to cover o,ply IO percent or tht county's
1,022 precfnt1, ·
And before the tasl: force could vote ~
on a new molion to leue 40 Cubic.l
paper ballot COWIUnl machlnea to cover
40 percent of the county, two members
walked out leaving the group without
a quorum. and J>Owerles1 to make a
final deeislo'n.
Thursday's actiOn ma rked the second
time the gro4.P has rever1ed itself .and
left the county's elections department
just w.here · it was sfter the chaotic
Fram P"fl" l
NIXON ..•
Wa!hington we tend to lead vuy Utoli ted
Jives," the PJ'esjdent said. "We reed
newspapers, look at television. and talk
JUll< Primary, • ' .
· Votts: from that /la.sco were 1\0t com-
pletely cOuntid for almost two weeks.
The V~ng 11y.!lte¢s group d~id~ Jqile
9 to rent 1.IXXI Automauc V o t.1 n g
nes (AVM) to cqver-half of the
S preclncl!. But thli decision was
ed a week later because of con.
fusP, over what reaUy had been voLed.
Olairman Cecil Mark.!, frustrated by
th• turn of events, called another
mtet.jng for neit Thursday at 3:~ p.m.
at' which time it is hOJ>#!d the .. problem
can finally be rteolved. , . ,
COunty Clerk William St John, return-
in1 from a vacation durina: which he
said he had bet.n ill with a a.lnu.!1 infection,
pleaded with the group Thurlday fer
"some JOl't of action."
Tut force members at first seemed
inclined to l•t toni<thing done but 1111
U!ual caofwlon foll~ed.
.\ftet rescinding the Shoup offer, tut
force member Will Lindaay, a Fullerton
engineer, moved to lease 1,<m AVM
machine1 u St John had orla:inaUy 1u1··
gested after the primary. H111 motion di~ for Jack of a aecond.
Plane Strikes
North Vietnam
In Retaliation
to each other. SAIGON (UPJ ) -'A U.S. Navy jet
"There Is a aort of intellectual inceat bcrnbed .an anti.aircralt lite deep inllde
North Vietnam. ln the first American which really reduces the level ~ the air strike north of the demilitarized
·dialogue and you have to 10 to the (DMZ ) in a month, the U.S. Military
country now and then to get a real Command said today.
feeling of what people are thlnkin1. . Military epokesmen said the J)Uot of
"WJ.shingtol] is part of the country the A7 Corsair fighter-bomber was
but it is not all of the coLMtry anymore ordered to attack the site Thursday
than any capitol is all of the country ." when antiaircraft gunners took "h0stlle
actions" against the reconnaissance The President had a plug for Sen. aircraft it wa_s escorting.
Ge<irgc Murphy {R-Callf), who accom-In Cambodia, mil itary spokesmen
panied him calling him "my Senator and reported Communist forces launched a
my good friend .'' full-scale attack before dawn today on.
Referring to MUrphy'11 uncoming cam-Korn~~ Speu, the major town on the
high\YIY linking th.e capital of Phnom paign against Rep. John Tunney CD-Penh wit h the country's only deep sea
Calif.), the President said. "He'1 eager port and oil refinery.
for the battle, I think California should The command said the gun.site bombed
give him a vote of confidence." in North Vietnam was northwest ol the
Some of .'\he hlghli&hta: of the c011.stal city ti Vinh, 135 miles north
Pre.!ldent's plans while in San Clemente of the DMZ that dlvide1 the two Viet-
. 1 d nams. Results ol the attack were not
me u e: " ,. . • I. . deten;11ir1ed, s_pokesmen said, but there
-Attendanqe s,u.r;a_r l"'!?i~ atpe j . waj llO Unia1e to the Anl<rlcan pion••·
Newport Beach wedding of his nl!ee, Jt was the first air strike agalnst
Lawrene Mae Nlxon, 28, school teacher North Vietnam since May 25 when U.S.
and daughter of the Preildent'i brother, planes raided gun positions that had
Donald, fired on reconnaissance aircraft near
-A conference Mond1y with Secretary Oong Hoi, which is south of Vlnh. Earlier
of Stat.e Rogers before Rog~rs 'lea~es in May, American planes raided North
for Asta and England to meet with Vietnam's southern panhandle regions
new leader1. in a weekend series of mlsslona that -~ live. •telev ision conference on U.S. sou~ces described as a response
foreign policy July 1 at 7 p.m. (PDT) to incr~asin.g ho,,Ullties by the North
With Howard K. Smith of, ABC, John Vietname.se along the DP.tZ. .
Ch11ncellor of NBC and Eric Sev1reld
of CBS. Press Secretary Ron Zie<r
said ~ live TV session ls unique in
Presidential history.
-A report to the nation Tuesday from
his Western White House on the Cam-
bOOian situation. It will coincide with
withdrawal of U.S. troops from that
aspect of the Indochina war.
-A pool.side luncheon in San Clemen te
today with editors, publishers and broad-
cast executive.! to explain and solicit
support for his Southeast Asian policies.
-Mrs. Nixon's departure Sunday with
a plane load of supplie1 (or survivors
of the tragic Peruvian earthquakes to
demon.!ltrate U.S. coneern.
The Pre!id ent sald-al ·El Toro Thurs-
day that he will leave his: home overlOt>k-
ing the Pacific Ocean to retum to
Washington a week from Mond8y.
From Page l
COURT •••
are spnngm1 up in Los Angeles,
Riverside and San Diego Counties.
To date, the Orange County petition
has received the support 0( three county
coMervati ves. Aasemblyman R o b e rt
Badham CR-N ewport Beach),
Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R-Orange
and San Bernardino Counties), and State
Senator John G. Schmitz (R·Tustin ).
"We are happy that they ha ve endor!ed
our petitions. but we don't want to
get into politics," Mrs . Annando said.
"We want anybody who is concerned,
regardless ol politics."
Ou.IOI C.0.Uf 'UILIStHNO CCM,ANY
I l191rl N. W•ttl
"rald.,1 •"II 1"11111111•*'". SUMMER SALE
J 1clr l . c~,, • .,
Viet ,.,.fl"'-'1 ffOll 0-11 111.1,....., STARTS WEDNESDAY, JULY lit
T~•~•• 1e,,,,;1
fllllr '
c .... MtM Offlle
JJO W•1t ••v Strttl
M •• u .. , "'""••111 r.o. ••• 1 s•o. •1•1•
Otllef OHie"
,._,, •••~"' nn w .. 1 11111111 1111,11..,1••
.._.....,, l11c:to1 ll7 '••at .,_
"'""""'""' lttell! 1111J l11cri ,,.., ......
S.11 Clt-!1: JU N91"111 I I (11'11,.. lllMI
' '
Do"'t wait, come In today and mak• yeur Hlectien1. l1c11l1nt
v1lu11 featurM in all tf our fine llMt. DRIXIL eff1r1 ISl'IUNTO
lncludlnt dining, bedroom and occatlonal. HENltEOON is promoting
CAPRI, and OFFICERS CHEST compi•I• and HE~ITAGE ts reducing
MADRIGAL. All thrM comptnl11 wlll also rHuct their outttan41ng
upholstery colltctlon1 av11l1bl1 In any of hundreds of u11hel1t1ry
fabrics.
' I
OollL.' ,,IL.01 ,,..._ h tr.t klllMlfW
Three for the Fou1atain
Jt wa·s hot and dad "'·as In the Costa h-Tesa Civic Center taki~ care
of some bo ri ng old bu siness. so triplets Paulette. Lyle and Harry
Bernett. 6, Santa Ana , cooled their heels outside Thursday. On a hot
day, what better use for a lountain ~ -·
' ... ~ ........
Lamp 1cctlffrlt1 encl ,1cture1 wlll alM 1111 en ult. Now 11 the
time to m1k1 ~ur Mltctltn of tht flMtt furniture av1ll11Jlt 11tcl 1t
rMuctcf prices.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DRIXEL -HE~IT AGE
7IJ11111 "
NIWPORT BEACH
1721 WHtcliff Dr., 642·2050
OPEN FRIDAY 'TtL ·9
INTElllOllS
LAGUNA llACH
Prolual•nal lnltrior 345 N•rlh CNol Hwy. 4944151
O..l1n•rs Avallablo-AID OPIN ,.!DAY 'TIL 9
I'll• .. , ... ,,.. ....... o ..... c.,..., 14 .. 11••
I
I
I
' ) DAll.V ,UT IS
Prisoner Return
Saigon Victory
Veto Politi~al H~y
PARIS (UPI) -South Viet·
nam hid not.ched a tactkal
victory today over North Viet-
nam at Ule peace talks.-
The SOUlb persuaded the
north t& accept the 'return
of .12 sick and wow>ded North
Vietnamese priloners.
Pemocrats Make Hospital Bill Issue
only "Vielnamese patriots de-W A S 111 N G T 0 N (UPI)
tained illegally." lt said they -DemoCrall amred notice
had the right to live aftywhere today they plan to make Pres.
in Vietnam. ident Nlxap'• almost certatn-
The Communists said the to-be overturned veto of the
prisooers must be released al $2.71 billion Hill-Burton Hos-
the border or in North Viet-pltal construction bili a major namese territorial water 1 . under "suspended military ae-Issue in the November elec.
tivity" "rather than being · tions.
escorted to Nort,h Vietnam by 6,000,mi"le The Senate quickly sched.
Red Cross personnel as pro-uled a Vote Tuts<lay on over-
'
eddlnl that "ObvtoutlJ, they must be defeated at the polla thoucht It wu Jn the interest this Novembet."
of !heir .conltltuenta •I thlt In ~ House, Rep. Ray ·•--." ~·~ J\ladden, (0.lnd.), warned Re.
. "Today. they lined up be-publlcarui that voters Nov. ~
hind the Repu_bllcan president • woq_I~ remember what be said like little toy SOidiers," he would be viewed ail a GOP
said. "The 18 Republicans stand again.st health care.
NOT ALL CHURCHES
ARE DYING .
' Many (Jre alive and well!
Here are the sltns
-tr A HAPPY CR:OWD . f:r MANY VISITORS
f:r LOTS OF NEW MEMBERS
-tr CHANGED LIVES Hanoi had refused f o r
months to accept repatriation
of the prisoners because it
has never admitted it! trOops
are operaUng in lhe sooth.
'the North Vietname se
deleption to the peace con-
fer<ooe llUlOWl<ed Thursday
it would take the prisme.rs.
though beln&: careful to avoid
~-~-~~--~-Hanoi barred Red · cross Roiver Gets Tbunday •a•in pa...ct ~
personnel so "no persons could measure on 1 2'7t-to-18 roll call
Prison Term Ordered
For'Bernadette Devlin
profit by penetrating illegally LJ S V • vote-27 more votts than the
into North Vietnam territory." • • isa two-thirds ma~ity required. BELi'~. Northern Jrtland Lord McDtrmott . rejected her
FIRST CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
-~ bnpllcaUon that they were
ooldief1.
Hanoi said the men were
· The Soot~ Vietnamese, in It was the first time in 10 (AP) -··'Ille BeUast Appeal appeal against the sentence.
what they said was a MIA.All (AP) -"I've got years the House had voted to Cour1 ruled today that Her defense lawyer then ap.
"bwnanitarian gesture" had a man here who says he just override a presidenUal veto. Bernadette Devlin must go to plied fo r permission to take
tried for nearly a year to rowed from England,,, ·the Sisty-s e v e n Republicans prison. the appeal to the Lords , Ip
get the North Vietnamese to joined 2l2 Democrats to pass A warrant for her arrest London, and this ··was turned accept the prisoners. , U.S. lmm\gratkln'°fflcer &aid the bill, "the objections Of the was to be Issued later today. . down today.
Hanoi Onct!: suggested they into the ~ephone\ "And he President to the contrary not-'Ibe 'COW'l rejecledoan ap-Miss Devlin won re-election
U N Lead be release d where they were doesn't have a visa." withstanding." Only three plicaUon. fnim Miss Devlin, . fn'the British gener&I election • • et•s and allowed to return unarm-Having received approval Democrats-Reps. William M. the younaest member of the last Wftk, and she is not
ed and on foot through the from his superior, the officer Colmer, (Miss.); O. C. Fisher, BrltlJh H~ of Commons. evnocted to lose her seat
M k 25 h war zone ''lf they wished ." hung up and issued a 90-day (Tex.), and . John Q. Marsh, to, a~al to the House of .. .,.. al• l visiting pennit to Britisher (Va.)-suppqrted the veto. Lord .... -. . because she goes to prison. The prisoners were not 8 t De t' h 1 a against a s1x-mooth The House of Common!i will Sidnev. Genders. u mocra 1c c a rman gl h discussed" in Thursday's 72nd-J.. Lawrence F. O'Brien announc. sentence ven er for in-have to vole whether she re·
A • session of the peace con-Genders had just completed ed that &8 of the 95 r.OP mem-cltement to rioting and rioting. mains a member; and it DlllVCl•Sal•y ference. The North Viet-a 6,000..mlle solo pull across ben: who voted.against the bill The House of ljlnls is Bri· seems most unlikely that with
namese an.nounced UlC ac-the Atlantic in a rowboat 19 would "be primafy targets for taln's highest court. the threat of renewed religious
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI} -ceptance of their return in feet, nine inches long. Dem~ratic candidates" in The 23-year-old Ro m a n warfare hang i n g over
The U.N. General Assembly a statement lo newsmen His welcoming party wa:i1 November. Catholic militant was first Northern r re I a nd • the
flew across the nation for afterward. the crew of a police patrol "I find it curk>us that 88 of sentenced in Londonderij last legislators would inflame the
HUNTINGTON BEACH
MAIN AND ADAMS
1:30, 11 :00 and 7:00
Fastest in Weot
\.
ceremonies today marking the 'Ille peace talks conlinued boat. They directed .him to these cynical Republicans vot-Dec. 2% for her activities Roman Catholic minority by
25th aMivenary of the peace without movement by either U.S . customs and immigration ed in favor of the act only tv.•o du ring street flghttng last fall. ousting the young woman who
or1antlation's charter. side. Chief Amer ican officers. • and a half weeka ago," O'· On Monday, Nor t 'a er n has come to be known as
Celebrating started Thurs-negotia lor Philip C. Habib said Genders, St , said he made Brien said in a statement, lrtland's lord ch t e f justice, their Joan of Arc.
Buy It. Stll It. Try tht fastest mponst In the West .against yeur
own c:lotk. Trst Dl1M1·llnt Ads, wfltre the action Is, In Saturdat1
DAJLY PILOT.
day with a champagne recep-"Again today we made u clear the trip to show that a man ~r~:::::~:~~~~~~i~~~~~~iii;iii;iii;;iiiiii;;;;;;-:;;;;;;;;.:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ tion Jiven by Mayor Joseph that at these meetings we isn't washed ~p at SO.
Alioto in the city hall rotunda, are ready for serious negotia-The sturdy-built Britisher
acroga a boulevard from the Uons. but they are not finished the v o y a g e from ~ £R'
War Memorial Opero llnuse prepared fur that kind of Penzance, England, to Miami H£l:D o M£ i-t • •. wbert the blue-bound charter discussion." in 166 .rowing days. '&'. wu drafted apd the Veterans --------------------
Bullding _where it was signed ~-------------------, JU
• quarter century ago . o..aoA Y
On her orrlval here, Mrs. M n 1 , JULY 3
Angle BrooU or Litieria , the "f1l,DAY •
assembly'• pre~d•••. said, There's something very to to 1:30 p.m.
"The United Nations ~ m>n's 10•.30 Q,!n•
best hope. rogardless of its eo1mforting about the Audi. lhortc:omings."
Ship Wrecks
Drawbridge
NEWPORT NEWS, V a .
(AP) -A st.ea cargo barge
being towed upstream slam·
med into the James River
Bridge before dawn today,
jamming the draw bridge
meChantsm and closing the.
41k-mile toll facility for six
hours.
The State Highway Depart·
ment said ttie bridge, llnking
Newport News and Isle of
Wlgbt ·eounty. reopened at 10
a.m. and estimated damage
at Pl.In> to $40,000.
Traffic over the bridge,
which bridge Supt. B.R. Belote
estimated at 2,500 to 3.000
can daily between 5 a.m. and
I a.m., temporarily wa s
rerouted through Norfolk and
the Hampton Roads Bridge
Tunnel to the south. Traffic
flowg ac~ the bridge from
U.S. 17 and 258.
hs seats
.~were designed by an
orthopedjc surgeon.
Test drive it today.
1 It's more of a car
than you think.
CHICK IVERSON
F'ORSc:He I AUDI
900 W!!Sf Coast HithWay /Newport Bead!
6'«i·9391
ORM&~ COOIITT'S.AUTHOlllZEll O!Al!I•
THE BIGGEST SHOW OF ITS KIND W~ST OF THE MISSISSIPPI!
THE OIU HO!iSltOl 11 SOllTHfRI CAUFORllA!
• PAClED Wffil MORE FEATIJRES FDR BETTIR LIVING!
.. 11' FUSntE EllTIRE COffVENTIOfl Coot:R!
• ME£1Tll' DESIGNERS IN IHE~ FUll SIZI
D!CORATDll ROOMS! '
• EV!RYTMIN6 FOii THE HOME& GARDEN'
• SUl ••• AWOllllllflOWERS. •••
llllfic ,a.IL 11!J '°"" lnt"Nlllll h11!Jil\t •lt!r.
!Ills. ......... llellltf\ Inn 21 torei1~ ..... ..,...a,,.•ii;lls!Jllfanl '
. ..
• St! ..• a.LM "WllE lMIG"' UlllllTS .•••
,.... ....... ll-tl«'1c •*'• Hin! 'Iii
................ "lfAlllt" ... m..~ __ ... Famaus Australian artist will caricature 1 00 visitors dally -10:30 a.m. • 2:30 p.m.
, sm ... MaMOUS......,. ll(llrt .•• ,,.....,.,... a. .... .., • ..,,. .......... Wt~· .. Llliliitiatlllll. (bf ---• sm ... M-....IWl.F"CMUllt .•.
"t*~ .. clil~.---101 .. _"' lillllll'ill.... . .,..._. .,,L •• ... ,.... ... .,, C...litim
• Et ... 3PJ1ICtG' CUii& •.. ....... ,.... .... '>'* ClldW! [lKtJp.
ta. c..-.. * 4 ....... 1111 All·lltttri: Set-..
JUNE
20·28
A GEORGE COLOURIS PRODUCTION
IPOISOllD IYI Th• Orang• County Bvildera
A11ft. and Th• Orang• County Chapter of th•
8ulldlng Industry A11oclotion.
'
SHOWllOORS: S· ti fl.I . WEEW'!'S
llOON -lJ PJI. SATURDAY I SIJllDAY
ADULTS
JUNIORS
• • • $2.00
••• 1.00
~-'''"' ..... ~
SAYESOc
srtCIAl DIKOVWT tKlm AYAllAIU
Alt At PH,\ l(TA MAll1Clf$ ••• THlllfTY
Ol!UG S TOl(S UNITED CAU•. 8AN~S 0,
Ol!ANGf COUNTY ' YOUll C:Ull1GAN MAN
,
..
. '
•
GORDON CURRIE "the World's Top Caricaturist"
will be "in person" at Uie Pleasant Corona del Mar . ' .
offi,i:e of Mutual Savings. Also on exhibit will be 'his
fabulow "FACES DF FAME GALLERY". You've seen
him on NBC's "Today" and "Tonight" shows, "The
Steve Allen Sbow,11 and other network TV shows .
FRE·E!
y.., OWN,.,.,.......... .....
hM c.nt.•1 ............. If ,......
' ...................... 11, ......... ,......_ -,..,, ...,
......... AL I O ........... ._ .. ..... .., .................... ..
•.-.!I'-'• .......... c.., ....... "
fHI tie M, MUTUAL U.Ylfll•S.
Now, meet lhe man who bas caricatured Presidents
Eisenhower, Truman, Kepnedy and Nixon, General de
Gaulle~ the Duke ·of Windsor and hundreds of other
world celebrities.
Y D U can also be caricatured. in a S P E C I A L
SOUVENIR FOLDER, ABSOl.UTEL Y FREE.
W.R.SammOM
StJtior Vie• Pf'uide1te
RegioMl LocaM~tr
-Robert D. A.ton
Vi.cc Pntidnt
Brondll0141¥er
MUTUAL
SAVINGS .
adlama•11aeiatian
CORONA DEL MAR
2867 Ea'st Coas't Hi9hw1y
Telephone : 675°5010
] Blocks South of MacArthur Blvd.
' '
I
•
•
• DAD."l' .:eo..oT EDITOBIA.I. PAGE
' 17 Ye.ars of Cjtyhood
Only tho oldest ojd-timen·of the city may mark ita
passing on their cal~ndars, but this week 11 the 17th
anniversary of COila Mesa'• lncorporation.
Back on June 29, -1953, th"e community wasn't much
to look at, nor to Uve In, c~ t.o p~ent lltandards.
The chan1es have sometimes been alow and in more
nce!ll ye3,';l( so .fast and frequent on· occasion that I\
becomes · cult to keep track of them.
The changes, for the most part, have been ~ward
the better, and all it takes to prove this is a scan through
old news paper files , city archives or library shelves and
hi storians' notes. The first City Council w11i1 swqm in after a camprugn
that won cltyhood by a bare 400~ with partial a!'"ex·
ation by Newport Beach or Santa Xna -or retention of ~ , One can find them chronicled, in fact, in Costa
the status quo -the alternatives. •
Mayor Cbarles TeWinkl9 llld Cotancllmen Bert Smith
Walt Miller, Claire Nelson and Bnlce Martin laced a
monumenW job. No city hall existed. The poliCA! depart·
men! wu a Un aback. Shantytown building codes pre·
\railed and were poorly eia.forced. Only 16,185 persons in·
habited the city. ·
All that baa ch'angOd dnisllcally for the better and
most of it ;. directly attributable to being incorporated. ~e borne rule issue came up first in 1947 .and failed.
BUt when 1be issue wu revived five years later it car·
ried. '
A few areas of town still have no sidewalks but in
1963 paved streets were even luxuries. Today the undis--
tinguisbed buaine11 district has been expanded and new
developments have pushed Costa Mesa's annual sales
. tax income far above that of Newport Beach.
Our civic center complex, used recently a1 a·.movie
aet for Ill ideal Ima••· stands 11 a monument to the foresld>t of those early leaders. · The treasury Is he8lthy compared to the months
after.June, 1953, when the Globe Herald, forerunner of
the Orange Coast DAILY PILOT, printed municipal.legal
advertising free . . ·
Today, the city has a varied citizenry of 75,000, with
an average annual income of $10,000, giving a $3,235
per capita buyin• power.
This will feed an estimated 1970 taxable retail sale•
figure of'$252.8 million.
Academic
Inbreeding
.ShoublEnd
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
lmpudeact1 fl a trail wb!ch enables
I man llttlpi Jn I bul to flirt
with a womah wbo ii: ltand.ing.
L.A.
~ It 1' incredible """' 1111111 -ts. especlallY ill presu,lous colleps one!
anJversities, have beea penmded by
their teachers U.t American 10Ciety ,
II rottlin to the can. llow ... IUCb
Tiii• ...._ ,...... ,....,.. .......... _....,.,,. ......... ..., . ., ......
....... "'" ... ....., ... Oelfr ~ ....
,•
a Jaloe !deli lie .llold lo an otllerwfle
brlliit aeneraliaD? ll!mllO "1 lnculca•na.
lo studeota the _,plloa tbal Ibo
--Cul rejection o f "middl&<IMI
.. 1 ..... one! -blotllullooa i. a
llallmark of iDlelJecb••' ~
Are there anr csm-today ca
which •tudenll .,. DOI belnc .,b~led
dally to this aatt-t11tellect ual
brainwashin( bf rad!cal lacallyT Of
course there are. They jUst don't make
beadlines.
f I DELIVERED TllZ commencement
address recenf:ly at '
just such a COU!Je.
F r o m the rollin&
!illls of the Slnta Lu-
cia chain ol 1ftOdD,:
talns by the Padfic
coast, the California
S t a t e PolJtecbnic
College at San Luis •
Obispo has attracted
mofe than 11,000 stu.
dents to trus spar~
lY populated one!
beautiful smog-free aru. of the state.
More than J,300 students recelved
masters and bachelors degrees In a
ceremony that overflowed the 7 ,000
1eat .iadium. CaJ Poly, as it Is popularly
known. ls, like my own tnstltutlon, San
Frmcbco State College, one of the 19
Callfornla state colleges. Unlike most·
of the others Jt did not evolve from
normal &ehools and Lt.achers colleges.
Nor bu it assumed the mantle of
Kademic respectability by calling itseU
a "liberal arts" college.
Instead Cal Poly grew up from a
UttJe state vocational school established
by .the Legislaturt in 1901. ln the 33·year
period from 19:\1 lo 196e Cal Poly was iulded by the late Julian A. McPhee,
a giant among education&] leadeN in
California. He fought an uphill battle
to make oceupationaUy.centered college·
level education an acceptable partner
with the a0<:alled "liberal arts." He
rettred it 70, having served 33 years
as presidenl He died a yeaF-later.
DESPITE ITS ftlERGER. into the
California state college system , ?ifcPhee
Work Education
'
'matotalned the !nd!vlilusllty, peraOoal!ty
and local ou1onori>y of Cal Poq. By
la• · Cal Poly can orter liberal ar1I
--. Bat the empbu!a II oe . ..,
aipallond education lead!q' to -· la q:rtculture, englDeerlnc, business,
home -1c:a and other applied fields.
Emf an Englilh .,.jor finds himself
la the 0 iiehool of 1.pplied arts.".
Cal Poi)< bu ahraya 10U1bt !oculty.
members •ho have both stout academic
records and pract!cal experience In Ibo .
prof-and OCCU)>lllions dlrectlJ
ISIOdaled -the -tllOy teacll. Thil ~ -.. to Presktent
Robert E. Kennedy, for IO yean a
!acuity member of Cal Poly and a dlsd·
pl<'of Julian McPboO, squares with SOl!ljl
recent aclenW1c reaearch into what can
be done to Improve all IDIUtutionJ of
higher educljlob. · •
• I' DI\. KENNEDY CALLS' al1eotioa to
a reconun<lQdat!on made by-I •
psycbolog!AI and psychiatrists who
worked with Joeepb Kitz In a four
yeor llully of Siamord and UC Berkeley
graduates: Or.I of their· conclusions:
''Present facu1Ue1 tend to represent onlt
one segment olhumanlly, primarily peo-
ple with strong cognitive orientation and
the tendency to uerclse thou1ht in a
non·applied faahlon. The s t u d e n t 1
represent a much larger variety or m.
terests and oilentalion .•. Yet they
art secregated ·from much of the adult
world, so that In a perlod Jn life when
they are ~arly open to change,
they are seclilded . from pol<nUally
slgnillcant ·adults." •
The conclusion loi !ht stui!y one! Presl·
dent Bob Ke11"'41'1 opbll~, based on
a :JO.year observation of r'e$ults at Cal
Poly, are basica11y the 1ame: Colleges
and univer'slties need a considerable
diversification of the kinds of people '
with whom we ~g our studebts in
contact. We must stop the academic
Inbreeding o{ appointing to university
faculties men and women who have
never worked In •ny productive Jabor
outside of their years as students.
graduate students rd teachers.
WHAT BE'JTER rttODEL could there
bt: for some college student he:adina
into a career fn engi~ring than a
licensed engineer who has 11Uccessfully
Press C"ommenta •
~ built bridges, dams and high rises before
' deciding on a seconcl career as a colle1e
) teacher? People of thia kind, in all
walks of Ille. frequenUy have a great
det:ite to teach and Lo be in contact
wtth young peopte. Such I a c u 1 t y
0 mode11" at Cal Poly lnlluence their
lluden11 not only through l.helr In·
ltlleclUol knowledge, but also • throulh
the wildom t.hey have 1ained from prao--
Uc1l eiperience.
La11e Parll, Jori, News : "Vocational
education ta al>lolutely eueotlal to our
continual lfO"lh. ll la not and ne'ver
Jw been the o.cluaiwe jurlttUcUon of
Ille lonn1! educallon l)'ltem. U.S. lo-
dllltrY'a ln-pianl and on.Ibo-job tralnJnc
IUggelt that tbtre art w o r II: a b 1 e
flternaUveo to' our lnadeq111te public
.ocatlcml educational system. BU!lness
and Industry must suume the leadership Joie in '•ork ectucaUon'. U we are to
t..ve 1 suffldent """'ber Of adequately
&rained worten, (nstead of h3rd~e
nnnployed, then 1echnlcal s~lr~ m1lct
lie IM1llred by edue1ion, J>ll1'nl1, i nd
memben of AndUltry. Through this c:im·
bimd dlcn w can de¥elop lhe skill•
De< I 11111 II ...., Mml"kl lf'OWlnll",
Perhaps that's what all colleges need
-especially Jiberil art.. colleges. t.fore
profeuqrs who art ac~alnted with the
world outside the class:t. Fewer pro-
fessors who live in t t dream world
In which the Peace and eedOm parties
seem the only logical ch~ce.
By 6. L Hayakawa
I P~•hk•t
lul'rudtct-c.llep
Mua's own history hook, which goes to pre~s this ~um: mer. ·
The changes have been !or the better' in virtually
every upect of conimunity life and it is mostJy. because,
when the crossroads of incorporation was reach~ 17
years ago, the right path was taken.
Luckily, the margin of 400 1'oters had foresight.
' A Proud Achievement
It may seem old fashioned, but Huntington Beach
is agaill going to celebrate the Fourth ol July with a
parade -with apologies to no one.
The city· is one of the few to keep allve ·the tradllion
of celebrating Independence Day with a public display •
Jt will be a day of patriotism and fun.
The Jajrcees hi\ve put in many hours on.this year's
event with the result that it will be the largest ever.
There will be 3,400 participants, at least 22 floats, 18
marching b'ands, prancing horses and high stepping
baton twirlers.
The festivities will be capped by an hour-long fir~·
works display from Municipal Pier at dusk ..
. ' "Achievements of Our American Youth"' is the
theme. The parade itseU · promises to be a proud
achievement for both the Jaycees and the city of Hunt-
ington Beach.
c
1'0VR. ENEMIES WANT US SIX FEET UNDER ANI> OUR
fRIENt>5 Wfi.Ni VS To $ETTLE f~ Tl-IREE.1
Could· Degrade Vser's Credit Status . '
Credit Card's Destructive · Pow.er
A recent study conducted by two Gros~
moot Junior College students concerning
the destructive power of abused credit
cards revealed a few interesting points
that could degrade t.he credit card user'•
credit status if he is not ca reful.
There are two main points thal en-
compass this power of ' destruction and
they are: First, the consequences ol
lost or stolen credit cards; and , second,
thi: hlddeiialingers of µnsoli cited credil
cards.
The first point IO consider is the
degrading effect'-of one's credit status
if he 11 not able to cover, flnanciall1,
the purch1ses made with a lost or atolert
credit card'. 'Mle fini"ncial responsibility
usually lies solely on the shoulders of
the card owner until written noUCicatioo
is received by the card ia.!uer and this
coukl entail large sums of money owed
1! the lou wu not discovered im·
mediately.
1UE SECOND POINT is the hiddeo
dan1er of W190licited credit cards sent
throua:h the mails every day without
the knowledge or the addressee. This
paint is linked to the first point, but
contains one main difference. If this
card was stolen prior to the receipt
by the addressee, there would be no
way to report Its losa. Here the addressee
is onti! agaJn responsible for any abuses
of th is card because the use or this
card by anyone· indicates lo the issuer
the accqitance of the credit.
We are not attempting to discourage
or even stop credit card systems; but
we are demanding that goverrunenlal
legislatJon , on both federal and state
levels, be enacted to protect the con-
sumer {ram fraud and unntteSSlry waste
of consumer income. Also, we suagest
to the credit card holders to be mor•
careful In transactions ll.!in8 credit cards
to protect themselves.
TO &TRESS THE importance ol ..
B11 George --.,
Dear George:
Don't you think it's awful that
censors In aorpe places are allowed
IOt only to· act, but to write about
how muc;h good they are doing?
What are .Y~ going to do about
a II these pro.censorship arUcles,
George?
ANNOYED AMERICAN
Dear AA~
Well. I called a meeting o{
several freedom-of.speech lovers.
We were going to try to pass
a law against letting articles for
cen!JOrship 1ppear in the press,
but after we sat around thinking
a~t It, we..all went home.
Dear George:
I try to make breakfast ht·
tereaUn1 for my husband -u
occlllonal onion salad or a surpri1111
l\lch as toasted goose live~1 and Ju.st this mornlna he pr1cucslly
threw my oysttr fritters at me.
Do YoU think the hohe)'mOOll U
over?
TEARFUL BRIDE
Deer Ttarful Bride:
Honey. perhaps you've gotten In
a bit °'-a rut even this early
ln manit&e. Why not vary lhe
11me old diet Of onion Hlad and
oysters for break/a1 t with
something exotlc like bacon and
eggs. Men are fuMy, you know.
(Send your problems to George
and let him do your ll'Orrylng.
Then y0u'll REALLY have
aornethin1 to worry about.)
i 't . I , . .. ~ ail~x '1 ·"'" ~... .
' """""' (
Letters trom readers art u:elcomt.
NormaUy writers should convey their
messages in 300 words or less. The
right to condtmt letter• to _fit space
or eUminote libel fl relfrvtd. AU le~
ters must include dgnature and mail·
ing address, but t1amt1 ma11 be with-
held on request if aufficimt reason
is apparent. Poetry will not be pub-
lished.
legislation and protect.ion, one. fact can
be pointed out: In one year there: are
some 200,000 declared bankruptcies, and
of tbis fjgure, 92 perti!nt are personal
(other than business). They are ali linked
W either over-a:tended credit or abused
credit made available through the use
of credit cards.
It 1s time for legislation to protect
the consumer now, not in the future.
GEORGE C. JOHNSON
GARY L. KIDD
'l'e• •1111 Toast' Diets
To the Editor:
Thank you for run11ing the article:
"Senility, Bad Diet Linked," by Dorothy
Wenck, Orange County Home Adviser,
(The women's .page, June 17)
"Tea and Toast" diets must lead to
bad health in any age bracket. Jn the
elderly area, th.is type of food intake
is not very ofte11 a ~-se of least
resistance. It is a n~. ·in con-
sideration of spiraling food costs and
the draa: of pre-WlaUonary incomes as
sources of e:s:pendilure in the market
place.
Older folk, as well as the younger
1eneraUon w i t.h whom we hive more in common than mtght be supposed,
are pretty well aware of their nutritional
needs.
Bt.rr WHAT CAN be done when thtre
just isn't enough cash to meet dally
living costs! The "eat proteins" warniq
of good medical men must , be ignored.
One iubstitutes, sniffs meat counters,
but just does not buy. And then, boom!
An expensive convalescent program is
in order and costs there must generally
be borne by government. And --
the government is us all-the people !
As a ranch operator: I found that
farming was more hazardous than a
Las Vegas game. He re, humans are
being ·mechanized out of business. as
workers. And often as a necessity. And
ranching isn't the only area where rob(Jts
are taking over to rlhe detriment of
the human-rac~ in tot8.I. ·
I R. M. JOHNSO N
YES Is s..,amped
To the Editor:
The Youth Employment Service of the
Harbor Area is well ajoog on a summer
program of finding jobs for young people.
Scores of teenagers conlinue to apply
tor work and an encouraging number
of local businessmen,imanu{acturers and
homeowMra 4 are phoning in with job
offers. ·-.-
YES is SUctf!Ssfully filling these jobs.
In fact , we're aw,p.mped! Our one and
only paid employe, Director Florence
Hayos, is putting in overthne but still
can't handle all the business this
worthwhile project is generating.
THEREFORE, YES is putting out an
urgent call for volunteer staffers. The
hours are: 1~2 : the location is the Boys'
Club; the work is challenging, excltiDC,
rewarding and appreciated. Only the pay
is Jacking! Coinpletely lacking!
Men and women, and Y 0 U N G
PEOPLE are invited to step forth and
become involved. If this sounds in-
te~. call Florence at YES head·
quahers, 642-0474, or myself, at 548-5990.
JfM WOOD
YES Chairman
EllfJlneer• AllfJered
To the Editor:
tiJ~ ~=y. towO:: f~r~iec.!._~o~t
Handbills and the Law
Richville was a qWet, wealthy &mall
town. ltfost residents took long vacat.ioM.
Richville also had a high number of
burglaries. So the city passed a number
ot laws for better lighting of home11
and streets, and providing for more
Police, and special patrols. It also pu9ed
a law that no one could throw handbills
or other papers on private residtnUal
land wilhout the owrier's consent.
Randolph Bunt ran • neighborhood
paper with ads and a few }qcal ntws
Items. He claimed the local law violated
his rtgbt to free 'Jlt<Ch. He cballenged
the law In court but he looL
THE ORDINANCE did not bar a
publlaher from leavlng papers at a home
&hat accept.I them . Nor did Jt keep
him from asklna the owner'• consent
to leave papers. · Throwlnc )>llper• on another's property
wilhout his consent Is like standing on
the person's front porch. hoping to catch
eome peopJe who might listen. No one
has the rl&ht to litter another's property
under 1 claim of "fret speech."
In another case:, Palm Springs paS5ed
a law that barred use of eound trucks
without a police permit. Jt 11so limited
their use to four hours 1 day, and
said the trucks had to move at least
ten mijta an hour. To the court this
restttcUoo wu too broad. "Free speech
.,. l llt. • • • t ....
r Law 'in Action • •
Is worthless unless there are meaningful
ways to express i~" the Slfpreme Court
saJd.
ANOTHER CITY tried to limit giving
free pamphleU-on public streets. lt sald .
the readers Uttered the streets after
reading them. The court thought this
ordinance invalid; the city cbuld ban
llttecin.g. But giving pamphlets to the
public Iles within the scope of free
speech, Slnct Thomas Paine's tifne, the
free preu hat been a 11.9efUJ we~pon
in defente of liberty.
You cannot restrict tho.9e who 10 from
door to door handlna out religious or
pollUcal Information. You can to from
door to door to see If you can get
willing listentrs.
SollelUng money for charily has no
such protectlon. Tht law regards It not
Rs "speech," but as a comnierclal ac-
• th•lty. Ordinances limiting door to door
salesmen ire: gtnerally valid.
Note: California Uitvyers of/tr l11i1
column so 110" mo11 k11 ow about our
laws.
'
. 1
Beach," by Thomas Fortune, as ft Ip-1
peared in ''Your Community,'' the DAILY 1
PILOT supplement of J\Ble 11, please ;
be advised that several ol us in the.;
engineering department of the "beautiful
and changing city of Newpprt Beach'' \
are quite angry and put out. ·
Pl~ase be advised that the employes ,
of this department are fightine to be •
re~gniied for what they have done, !
do, and can do and be recompensed J
for. It seems that the poll~ and fire··
departments are the only ones that Cit ·
credit for their efforts. I
I HAS ANYONE ON your 1taff ev<' j
checked on working • conditions. job (
qualificaUons, job requirements,. money ~
and time spent to meet these qualiftc1· i
lions, responsibilities and their com-·
parative pay scales? •
Do we need to unlfonn ourselves, blow
\Vhistles and sirens to be noticed? Be -,
fair, be democratic -if you praise .
one, praise us all. !
WILLIAM BORREGO :
PrinCipaJ Engineering Aide :
'
Sen•tor Jtl11rph11'• Job j
To the Edllor : :
We are ~ lucky to have a man like i
Senator Murphy as our represe11taUve; :
for based on his most re c e n t ;
performances I am SW'e that he wtll ,
be able to compete successfully with j
most other senators in the art of 1 doubletalk. ,
Senator Murphy a.MUl'ed us that hi!I :
job with Technicolor took no time away ·
from his duties as senator, but since .
he was paid about halt what the :
senatorial po6ition pays, I must assume :
lha( he did about half as much work •
for Technicolor as in the Senate. (What's :
half of nothing?)
YET, WHEN IT came to oblta'.ing the ;
law with regard to Wonning 1'e SEC · or his stock manipulations, he tnfonned
us that he could not take the time
from his senatorial duties to comply. ·
Now that Technicolor has n e w
management, hopefully Senator l\turphy
will have sufficient time to at least
make bls public releuu consistent.
R. H. TUFFIAS
Quotes
' Gleu s. Dam~e, Csancel1or, eaw. I
State C0Ue1e1 -"Our society has allow· I
ed its freedoms to be misused by those 1
who \.\'ould destroy the freedoms ."
Leighton R0Uln1, director, Cultural Af.
ratrs lnslltute, Santa ,Barbara -"The
only privileged young person is the one
who has had to face something not easy
to race, and has triumphed."
----
Frid a y, June 26, 1970 ,
The editorial pogt of tlte DaUg
Pilot 1eek1 to inform and stimo
ulatt rtadtr1 bu prcs1nti110 this
munpaprr's optnfonl at1d com-
mc1Uary on to¢cs of fnttrti i
and tiQflificanct, by providing tl
fon'm for the tzprtuion of
cur readers' opbtk>ni, and b~
pre&tntlno the dlvt"• uitw-
point1 of Informed ob&tr\ltT&
ond 1poke1men on topic1 of tlte
day.
Robert N. \Vced, Publisher
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Saddlebaek
' ~DITION
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' I · Yoar Bemeta.1n1 '· Dally Paper
Y8~· 63, )l6. '1'58 , ~ SECTIONS, )~ PAGEs _____ -"'-__ o_RA_._N_G_E _c;...o..:;u_NTY_. _c_A_LIFO_R_N_1~_-_______ F_R_ID...;.A_Y._.J_. u_LY_3'.;..· '..;,'f'.;..' o_' _. );,....,.......;.·_· ___ .....;.· __ TE_. N __ e .... eNTS_ .
'' ' Marine· ~ .. ·Held
" • : $
i'1. . , 'l{illing
• • OI · S·an ·,·Clemente Wife-
-~~ixoll-'S~ts
• ·-j · I ,1 • • • 14 ~ , OU.fJP,. Ill').,. ....... l
·" 'iAAilOA'tlETwEiLEit. 5,'.rrOi:KSll,P. F.l1a'POullTH ; · . . ' ~ . : ' . ) .
Envoy Meet
In Clemente
By RICHARD P. NAU.
Of .... D111r Plllt ltlff
President Nixon is to meet in San
Glemente Saturday with ' David Bruce,
his Dew dUef U.S. negodator at the
stalled Paris talks on peace in Vietn&m.
In his renewed pu!h to find political
solution for the Indochina war, Mr. Ni.ion ~s said that Bruc:e, a veteran dtplorriat,
will have great flexibility jn presenting
the U.S .. pooition at Paris.
The President has expressod satWac--
tioq · with 1:he -rate ,of Vle~tion.
As tl\e . Soi.Jib v1et.rtamese gi-ow atroni
enough to defend themselves, ·the Prut.. ~t has suggested they wm be a tough<r
adversary for Hanoi 1t the conference
table than ii the U.S.
The North viemam... and Viet Caig,
however, thus far have replied ·to the
Pres.i<tent'a ap~ by in effect uytq::
Qnt gtt u.~ out ol VJetnom.
' ,
A ~r ol .~ Viet ~K. dO!egatioo
said the .<ojlf~' "cm ..,..... JDIU
a)ly. prosteSo'' ~ 11\0 U.S. aeo.pts
tbe Viet <lalic -ploa·'md f"lls l,morican. "-e11t. ' I
. '!be Prrildent piail,' no particlpadon
, in IDClepeodmce D11 ceremciDiea.
~Major Fireworks Shows
' •) .
TpLiglit Up ·orang~ Coast
Si)" major fireworks shows will light
up 'the Orange Coast area on July 4
from Seal Beach to Laguna.
Pyrotechnic displays will be held at
Mission Viejo,
Capo Highlands
Reqdy for Fourtlt
MJssiori Viejo and their nf.ighboi;s
across ihe freev;ay at Capistrano
Hl.;ilands are both planning a lively
Fourth of J'uly .• ·
The }Ugh.landers will begin with a
parade at 10 a.m. which. will form at
, the corner of, Valencia and EriCIOn Way.
The parade will go down Pike, right
on dlamplain, left on Olarlemape, right
on DeSale left on Earn.rt, left. on
Erl<;oon. ri~ On Eam.rt, npt .. ,J:as
'
Bolsaa and left into Tasmm. .. .
The weaving band of paraders will
end at Costeau Park where games and
races will take place between t and
4 p.m. Those interested in participating
in the games are asked to sign up·
in the parkfat1ooon.
An all-community baseball game for
meri and women will be played between
4 and &::io p.m., followed by a Jiicnic
dinner and fireworks display. ~
In t MisSiori' Viejo the d8f will bej'in '.
with an Orange Crate Derby down La
Paz Road al 10 a.m. followed by a
ctxbmunitJ , pic nic at 5 p.m. on the
d{lvtng ra~ge at . Mission Viejo Golf
cOdne. ~Entert.ainll}enl will be climaxed · by ·
the firaworki display ..
t I '. ~~works Blaic
m.s_Clemcnte
t A · Silfl,. Clemente boy, his ·slingshot and '• lighted firi:works fountain 1~ed
fire Jate 'MlUMldaY night 1n a brush
blue which lncbed toward sewral homes
for • time.
Fire Otlef ~tertoo Hackett said the
JS.year-old youth started the lirush fire
alon1 the 400 block ol Avenlda Presidio
-across from the fire station. -when
hn lilhted the fire-belching !ountain, then
tried to !lend If toward Our Lady fl.
FaUma Catholic Church using a sllng-
abol.
It landed halfway and caused' the blaze
covering several acres before fareme n
put Jt out.
NewPort Dunes, HunUngton, Beach pier,
Laguna Beach, .Anaheim s t a ii l u m ,
Disneyland and Long Beach.
See the Weekender ,section of today 's
DAIL Y-PlLOT for further informalioo
on local fireworks displays.
Other Independence Day activities Jn
Orange County include the Huntington
Beach Independence Day Parade, now
in its. 66th year. The parade will take
place at 11 a.m. in a circular route,
trOm..Lake Park to Mair) Street.
Knott's Berry Fann will present
"Operat)Qn PatriO,tism" at th, park's
Jndeperidence Hall beginning ot 10 a.m.
Arj,or Don Dt:Fore will narrate a pageant
depicting 11 scenes from American
history ent!Ued, ••Amelica, the· Great
Adventure."·
Santa Ana· activities include a 9 a.m.
parade down Main Street followed by
· an address by Mayor Loren Grisel .•
.nM! fourth amiuaJ "City o[ Vlsicrt
Parade"· 1in La P1tm1 wUI teature a
fireworks di.spl1y at dusk. Buena Park's
Bellis Part also hu a pj'rotechnlcs
display as well as ,FuDerton Hl&h School
at 8 p.m. '
· A beauty eonte;t will be hild at 7
p.m. in Laguna ,Beach lifeguard .head.
quarters. 175 N. Coast Highway. Miss
Laguna Beach Lifeguard will be crowned
at the JDdepe~ Day acUvltles.
John Wayne Wilis
~urt Judgment
On • Wild Goose
Movie actor John Wayne· Of NeWpOrt
Belich Won a cOw1 jud;inent Thur.sdiy
whic!) requires ·an .iJ11Ul'~e FQITIJ>ilrp'
to pay $74,509 cqveriac: djlmagFs. to his
yacht, Wik! Goose. ·' · 1 ·
The diesel-powered y-¥bt was run
aground in San Di.ea> 'Hirbor ·on ·May
J9, 1969 while under charler lo t'n"'teipacl
Corporation. , •
The insurance ~y,.Paciflc
Jndemnlty"Oapony. -ita policy
on the yaebt ooJy cofered the <:raft
when' used for plel.5Ul"t, not whhi under
charter. But Loo ,Ugtles Supe~or Judge
Robert Kenny saw it differenUy and
held the company ltible.
Wayne, earlirr bad fUed a suit against
Joterpact Corporation asking $721000
damages and pg,250 for bre1eh of con·
tract because they didn't return lhe
yacht ufltll almost a mont}'I afler the
i nd of Utt flve.-da.y charter period.
After days of concentration on foreign
off airs ~pped by Jq_ Wedn-y. nJ1ht
foreign policy dialogue on television, the
President has turned attentkln to
domestic problems.
He met ntursday with top officl.al1
of the Office of Budget wid Management,
Director George .P. Shultz, Deputy Dlrec~
tor Ctspar Weinberger and Associate
Director iArnold B. Weber.
The three were sworn in· along with
new Labor Secret.aly James Hodg90n
or Northridge Thursday moiuing on the
lawn outside the President'•. 5an Cle-
mente office.
"We are very Jl'OU.d. those of us who
are Californians, to hive the rwearing
Jn ceremonies late place here," Mid
the President. .
The new OBM chiefs were plucked
from other federal posts to run the
new agency. It replaces the Budget
Bureau and ls expected to combine
budget.making with evaluation of the
effectiveness of federal program1.
After lunch Thuni\ay, the President
held another domesUc conference with
Shultz, White H-oldes H. R.
Haldeman, John D. Et.'llchman, Robert
H. Finch end Donald RumJfeld, director
Of the Office ol EooocmJc Opportuntty.
Laguna Senior
Robin Oliuer ·
Going Abroad
Robin Oliver, pretty bk>rxie ll-year4d
1970 graduate ol Laguna Beach HlaJ!
School, today was notified she will leave
July 16 for Belgi um in the American
Field Service Americans Abroad pro-
•gram.
"Wow, I can hardly belleve it," Ille
exclaimed upon receiving the news by
telegram this morning from AFS head·
quarters in New York.
Miss Oliver, a top scholar and active
student In Laguna High's ClaS! of 1170,
is the daughter of "Mr. and Mrs. Blalt
Oliver of 505 Anli.a St. ·
She was selected IS a finalist last
November In the AFS Americans Abrot1:f
program. -She is the second LaKUna High
student a~gned tbi1 year to a year-\ong ,
program overseas. Junior Tom ·Murpbine.
left for the Republic of Panama In •
April. He i111 studying in Panama City.
Mi!I Oliver will bet'ome one of 1\500
U S~ students selteted this year for study
in forelgn counlries under t.bt AFS pro.
gram.
She has 12 days to prepare for her
departure.
While at Laguna High, Miss Ollver
served as co-chairman of the campus
American Field Service chapter. She
Ja currently worklnc at Benton's Coffee
Shop. She will return to Laguna Jn July
ol Jl7J after ber year Jn Belgium.
. ' -..... ~
Probe Nabs .
~ . . ' .....
. Pen.dleton ' . . ..
l 9'!year..Ol(J
•By JORN VALTl!RZA ' .. "" °""' ., .......... "
San · Cle~e police ea:cly today at·
~ a. 19-yelr.:O.kl Camp· P~
· _ Martne.m the laille and bludgt0n ala:rt~
.«·Mrs: Conilie Lynn Johnton, 20, tll8
expect&nt mother· beaten and ltlbbed
to.death more.than two weeks ago. • ..
Martrie PfC. Frankie Wayne Metli09,
auached to Headquarters Company; ,So-
cood Battalion, Second Infantry Tralninl'
Regiment;. was booked' on fuurdftli
charges abOOt t ,.m. 'tOd,ay after mor:f
.;.. th,an'.two w.eeks of intensive.Investigation. ~ ~'lJYe)l: RO~rt 1 M~ and hil
(M\11.ner Leonard Goodwin amsted the
young ser\.lceman at : lZ: 50 a.m. 1t Ill
w)d~sed apartment in San pem~te.
~ far poll~ say the young Marine
h4S ~;-no;~tenlen\I about. tl)e cue
.. om"'", al1d the Jnl<nflvo prolie mto
the eue ta. coni.inulng. • .JolQiiJi.Jii ti>< JIOIHrr:el! work•Jn ,tho ~ will ~ mill,tary a~UiorlU.. ~t ~ -· ·""° ..... already -""" WW. ' .
. lint deipite u.e inlDtarJ 'ui*t .al
!lie ·-· , oflicero said .leJI"!' IC!Jon. la ttie Cl!! wUt mniin In ctvlllan 1ilnds.
. • OAflY1l'ILOTl...,:,i; ••
Jl liU ·nor')'et '~ ~med -MelJJno will be arraigned on Monday
or whether an ind:lcbnM . charging
mll£!ler will be '°""'t through tllo' Oranwe Cowity Grand.Jury. · Bis.ioril! Rit~~:. "'·· · .·, . :. ·:~· ',:, · ·.
As' hii -~,,;:hO!ds.BJble: Jaines HOdgJOP'tiik'l'!J. cmUt' ol ~fice,\l~.f-i.'m!
. denl Ni,,on's new se~retjlry 'of labor. Fedefai;; uilge ·Thunnhnet 'Clttke
ol Newport . !leech adlnini stered . oath' ~ office Tuesdjly ·mornilig. on
la.wn Of· W.estern· Whit~H0u$e 1in .San ·Clemente: ,Hbdi(IJ'tl was tuJldt.i'-se'cretary of labor Pri!li'. to elevation. A, fo.noer No~e res.id.enj,
he was at one· time vice1 pre1ident !or industrial relations for1:Lock·
heed. ·' · . ' ' ' '
Cotincil OKs La~ger ·~ite : . . .
For Packed Council .:Mrets ' 1 • ; I • •
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Ot I~• 0.llY Piiot 11'ff
With Laguna Beach City Council
meetings threatening to r-ival "Oliver·!"
and the Pageant of .the Masters as
crowd gatherers, councilmen this wettk .
adopted, an ordinance pennitting legal
adjournment to 1 a r g e r quarters if
necessary.
It was'" further agreed that "'a .. loud
speaker should ' be ·installed outside
the present council chambers to take
care of smaller overflaw crowds.
ReCent coUncil meetinP . Coiic&ni1
urgency ordlnancm; housing Inspections
and other items o[ particular interest
to residents have been attracting record aud~ences to the meetings. · ·
on more than one occasion, listeners
have • jammed the ' ais les and ·stood
shoulder~shoulder arounil.the walls o(
the couricll chamber, but tfJe fire deJiart·
j ' I ' '
CHP ... W or~in'g
Over Holiday.
' ' I ' cauforflla Higl}way ' patrolmen
staUOned In Orange County have
a lntssage· for errant holiday
weekend motorists. ~ ·
•
11be!pite the fact Uuit we are
-~Iii ·wiµ.put pay (!he 'llalf..
senate has yet to approve 1UOV"t,,
· ll"8an'• 16.6 billion blldget~·ir• ,
. aU ~•ed on ·the. job , at , l :G
1 e'c~k· this· momi?& ~ heW
high, ~!'\,bl<;!<.. ey111 .alert
to 'cope wltll tile beovy ·~· traffic. •
ment takes.a poor view ol this.
The cham'bei"1 maxllnaim capiclty, 115
persons, now has · 'been posted on· the
. door and firemen. carefully count noses '' 1.[. knd bar lllfUler: 1entpr w:hen UJC piax·
imwn has1bee'n retched .. · • •
Interested ~1uzens' then ~~ obilaed
to pick up what they can hear through
,,open .. -?ndows.· .. · ,
on one ~ec<nt oceulon, ,men argency
ordlnancesl Were up fOr· dlJcuukn, '100
peraons turned up· and the meeting was
adjour~ to the high och!>oJ oud,itorlum.
Since the. m\ll)klpal ~ specllleo the
time and place for ~8!. councR meetin~s, f 7~30 Jt.m. ~ the n~ tfM1
thinl lfedntsday Of 'each 11110tlth In'. City
Hall coq,ncll chaml)en ~ ihbf: . was some doiJbl ··I to · fJie lf~aillr ol 1UCh
an .a~joW'IDllent , , , ·
1hif'.however, · wu 'tU:eri."care .of. In
a new: 9"lln!""" l\Cl<'Pled ·b~ tlle· ClO,UJICR
Wedneld'!J'· nlll>t .and IJ'l!'li!ally pa;mlt·
Ung adJOlllJl!n<lll . to -other 9uartera JI
necessary. 1 • • , , 11 • 1
• The new ordinuce11Jio· penisua use
of .ar ''CiJh.lent · calerida~· ro strelmUne
voting o0 .routine' '!Tlltter!I n d
'-Jan!Ua the oltldol onler o1;buitnta1
to coolohn with the mJinlcipol.code: • ·
~City Manager J,.... J>'.'.~ton pr~ the 'new on11..nce. "llijor •
!Ucbonl Cl(\ dberg' ·qaestl~llie n.m about Id· "'~to other · " · Whe~J.~1'/oed it shWil 11e: hi: cludb\,' dii( jlist 'tO tU:e.care <( ~
problems, bul In onter tO. jllli1IJ tho
<'OOncil tii . ~ a• 'le(ol ~
e1-$ewliett-1n t1le ~veii~'a 'Cl...,, lucft 1•
as a. fir" · "1oold ' nuii.e )ti J/npoosJble
to· use the regul!r council ctN.mbtr. ·
Police •pent ali day Thursday ,..~Jnf
warrants, ht . the case,· and · itlU wUL
mount an Jn'temlve search for three
critical items. in the case. .
The laille used last ·June 11 to ·lltab
Mrs. Johnson "still is misaing.
. The 'l'•llet ~longing to the 20-)'.tar-old
wife ot a Vietnam · veteran wu not
f\)1111d by ·ponce Jn ~r aportment a&,
411 ¥onterey Lane, . ;
. And 1evera1 op.er· cr_itlc1t pJeces ti.·
evidence still hav, not -located.
· lntei'vldvs Of' oO>er· pitei\tJaJ wl-. a.net eources ~ IOme of Utern out or
the state -wilr olao CODtlnue, Offlcen
said. · '
.. Detectives ~ now maklpg plant: .tO •
travel to Texas and poss.ib1y )IJchlpri,
Mn. Jolmaon'' home otate,. to. tall: " (Seo SUSPECT, Pap Z)' '
' .
FishiJig, Skiing ~.'.
Gear Clcan'cd Out
Laawlan WJIUam R. Lula Is a deep sea ·llsliiDg and ·water aklinl enthu&1utt
but he 'll pro~b!Y mive to. forget lbc\"'
b1J favorite sports this summer.
Police report a burghar entered Ill
open car pol1 at Lutea' aplrtment, JtlDl
N. Coast Highway while lAitel was 1way
al work and removed ftlhlng and wat.w
akllng eilutpment valued 1at "51. •
u.ted u mJss1n1 are two l&rp marlin
fbhiq rods, each 'worth ft50 a boo tt
tackle for marun ·filhins, a j;ir· ol. wat.r
1kls and orie alnlle 1kJ. . ,,
Caut'
' • l
.. We11tlter
' 11'11 be • baJ11 up Fourth Of Ju!r,
weatherwiae, with IUm)' lklet Ud #
te'mpUatures in the ·IOI, 1Ui>Plnl t
back lnto the ·70 ranee •lone ~ '1
coast over lhe weekend.
INSWB TOD.\ 'l'.
You can Jlavt a craekf1'0' OOod tim~ -at anv> "ol thtl frimlr1 /frt• :
to01k• 1how1 arovM Onmgc '
Count11 on the 1ovrth ol J.av.
They're (VJ tilted i1' tilt Gtddt ~
to Fun ccNl(mtt fn todav'1 1V ttk· '
ender. I · ' 1 ' . ' -JI -.... , .. _
' --.. .-..... ' _._ • • ·-•M =· ,,.,, ...... p .." "Pay or not, we-•e sworn to
and will vlgomllly . «lforce. . tlie
traffic Jaws OD ll)e 'coonty1s
freeways and · illlifta.)'1, and
hopefully save: llme .I I v e s 1
1 1
Patrolmen 'wamed." •
Goldberg sold' Jaler he •-'<! t'l' to
arrange a loud -speaker outside th! cham-
be; . as "'°" as ~ble bec!ouoe ado 'joummenl ma'y not a!W1)'1 be .Poulble'.
"We don't klfow In ldv~ .how many
.people are coming,''. he ea plained,. "11111 1
It'• not always J.IOll!ble tO pt a largt
'enoligtl place at the last mlnut.e, '°
• ,......,. a opeaktr wUI belp ........ '
-p --• --• 1Hlwkl P11t • -.. , .. ,__ •
.......... • -... -• ----•" ...
"111 IP fl ....
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lt DAILY PILOT SC Frldq, liil1 3, 1970
Murder ~q~pe cts Rea <th Six; Two More Nabbed
. ' . . \ ~
A 16-year-old boy and a 31.year-old wert ~nted alter tntemipllon ol
al-1y oerviol Ume on a lllirl· • lour ~ cJr1!len ~ .. beinl held
...... wtll be dlorled .. ..,. In j~-... filr hi· -~ .. fn tile brutal butchering ' ol .; aenlce ltatloo -J.•."l' Clrlln;
Miasion Vlejo teacher Mrs. Florence tiitee othe~ for hi lmp&lle ·killli!c of
loCol aulbor!lleo by proWtoa olfloera
in 'Norwalk earlier thil wetk to lace
c:har1oa at an adult In the murdet-lddnlp
o1 l\ln. Brown.
,
1
-Naocy Brow11. Mrs. Brown.
'1be arrest.a Thursday of Melanie 'Ibe principals ln the cases are:
.DaliieJs, 31, in jail for a week on the -St~en Craig Hurd, 20, !lo address,
-anitiopher ''Gn-Y'; 0~1 17,
_, dri~. -bek1c held ·In
Portlaod, Ore., where. ht' baa beaun. to
ti&ht extradltioo to Orange County, where
he will face ptQSecution as an adult
in the Brown case.
JI
~ charge, and an unid~ied 16-year-who is the alleged unofficial l!ader of oJi .. boy "wraps up u.e· ~m·• in tbe the roving crowd of alleged pill users.
bf.tone .,... ol tile -of Mri. Bn>W11, lie ,fac'es charges of mu-and kidnsp
1t(ilaedly murdered at the 'bands of a .In tbe Brown ease. He was arrested
rO!lnl, Jooeely·laii bOnd ol young ~r a loot chaae In Nerco late last
drfh.en. week. "'1 !!*:If• Lt. -lll<hard DrUe. aaid the -Herman Hendrick Taylor, 17, also
~ c:Urged as aocetlOl'ies in the deaths of DO koown •ddre5:', turned over to
• ~oncern Felt . •
tLaguna ·Delays
~Freeway St·udy
i: P,nctmed over possible delay in con-
strilction of the ertire Coa&tai Freeway
if the Newport Beach segment is remov-,.
ed, J.atuna' Beach city councilmen ad·
joumed tbelr Wednesday evening ~iorr
to_ 4:30 R,m. Tuesday for further
discussion oi Che problem.
Councilman Edwaid L«r u r g e d
"strong nction" by the dty In the face
of Assemblyman Robert Bidham's bill, now headed for the State Senate calllng
for removal of the portion of the route
that would cut lcr<lClll N..,,.rt Beach.
· '"Ibis :leaves the LegUna Bead! eeg-rr!eft hlqinf In limbo," said Lorr, "and
any delay in comtruction of the freeway
could serously increase our traffic pro-
blems. We fought for this route and
nfuci! ol our future planning hangs On
it."
'City Manager James O. Wheaton !ol~ the council he and City Engineer
Jpsepb Sweany will be meeting Monday
wf),h State Division of H1ghl"8Y officials
Ui'Loo Anleles In .. attempt to obtllln
m6re: Information on the state's intention1 Wheaton aaid he woold agree that ' u. coimcll could adopt a resolution ...
pressing 11.s views and li(ldress It to ~nator Randolph Colli er's
~on Commlttee, which now
wjll study the Badham bill, but suggested
"!'Y action mig!it well be delayed until al!fr the "lond•y aieetina· Wbeafun pointed out ht tile blll .1 ... nOtdirectly~~tlheL'i)lnaportloo
ol the tmway.
~• 0 11 does not ~ Iha! the poi'tiM
the ireoway aouth ol Buck Gully ' .
' In Corul8 de! Mar will ni>t be built,"
Wh-said. "'!Ill• la aU part ol the
entire stat.e freeway system and it would
be ~ble to direct Ille Corona de!
Mar freeway down MacArlihur Boulevard
soutll via Buck Gully and tile adOpted
inland_.. route if the Newport Beach ae1·
ment or the Coutal Freeway were re-
moved" • .,
1-,_ dial lllere have been in-
stances where a whole route w• lbelved
beawie of )ll'Olil-In c:«taln ......
Swtlll)' Mid ~ 8oanf. ol l\IJperv!Jora.
had 'adople;d a reooluUOG urging cono
struction of the freeway "and tbe Oran1e
County Road l>epartm«it la urging ua
to go alonl, ~ul olnce we have the
meelinf icheduled July I M prWmly
would be better to wait."
Clty All«ney Jack J. Rlmel poii""1
out tllat -ay COl1llruction bll ...,.
tlnued on el11>er •Ide ol Santa Barbara
despite that clty'a bloCking of the route
throogtt' the city ltlell.
Councilman Roy Holma aaid he agreed
"witb the &pirit of Mr. Lo{T'a raolutim••
and ouqesled adjournment unUI alter
the meellni~wlth hlahw&Y ofllciala, at
whidi tlnie appropriate city acllon could
be diacualed.
UoT and tile -ol the ooundI ....... to-· lie JDMl« 1111111 Tueoday.
" Burglar Suspect
Hel~ at Gunpoint
-Arthur C. "Moose" Hulse,, 16, of
114&1 Dolan St., Garden Grove. a high
school atudent sptlCi{ied ~ a principal
in the June 2 hatchet murder of Carlin
during a $50 holdup Uf a Santa Ana
service statioo.
-The Daniels woman, who assertedly
From Pagfl I
SUSPECT •..
sources in the ca1e. .
Officers declined to specify exactly
which tip last Wednesday night led to
the arrest.
They also have not 'found whether
Marine Pfc. Mark Johnson, 19, husband
of the slain woman, knows the suspect.
Johnaon has ~ ·in Michigan since
accompanying his wife's body back home
tor burial last June 22.
A polygraph test and more than a
dozen hours of. ~terview1 9f the young
husband ruled ~1m out u a 1USpect ,
quickly alter the P"ime. .
Mrs. Jqhnton; 'ight week! ~J'~gnant
with what would ·Have. been tfte .. eouple'a.
first ~ltd, was beaten se~f#eb:, lo ~
face with a large kltchen:1 1toolr then
stabbed 1n the oeck, breast and'~bi:lom.en
by her killer. .
Her nearly nude .body wu f.ound
sprawled on the bed ol the coupl,.'1
modeal, ground-floor apartment In San·
Clemente'! pier bowl reeort• ma. '
Her hu1b.OO unlocked the" front door
of tlie flat ·~~> 28 hours. after leaving
his wife for guard duty at a Sa n t a
Ana helicopter base Cid tOWMI her 11ude
body sprawled on the bed in the living . . " room.· ~· ~ · ..
Mtl. Johnaon had· been dud more
than u hour• ..
Evidence of sexual molataUon wu
lncooclullve, ~or on er 1 st-vistlgators
discovere;d rater that •ighf. "~
They .. id only that ~~evidence of violent
aexual acUvlty Wa1 not evident.•:
A specific time of death aho proved
to be a· puule Jn the case J;:1amlner1
coul!i only specify a general Ume period
for the killing -perbaP, before dawn
of Juae 16.
The murder created a tevere case
of jitter• In ~ ahoclced community,
taking place oaly hours alter the bu~
chered and partially eviscerated body
of a pretty MIDon Viejo schOol-teacher,
Mn. Florence Nancy Borown, 31, was
discovered in the hills ilong Ortega
Highway.
Police through subsequent weeks often
disclaimed speculaUoa that lbe two kill~
lngs might be linired.
Six youthful suspects · have beell ar--
rested tn the Brown murder after a·
ld Pepper Tre.e
ives Its Nam e
A San Clemente patrolman answering
a burglar alarm call after midnight
at ShQr~iffs countey" club arrestfl(I a
n.elng buU)ary auapect at "1~
today. l . . .
. tip ~ again, -led lo dayliglit In the
o Aaguna Lot
.The IOCIO!>t pepper le<e Iha.I gr~
tbe entry to the old Lquna Playhoose
obd waa c:aref"11y pr<served when the
~year-old tbeater was razed. will give
ils ...... to the .... city parking lot
th be'~ at the Oceon /.venue
Ille.
, Bids for pevln.J! tile '';'epper Tree
Parking Lot" were-presentea to the
city oouncil this week, with SUlly-Milltr's
1pw figure of 110,115%.65 accepted for
"" job. t nds was about $'100 above the
~·s estimate and submantially
ie.low the high bid of $12,974. t:n>e Pepper Tree Jot will run ~gh oc,an Avenue to Fore91. Avenue,
a coop!i!' of old commercial
i
dinp also were razed to expend
perking area.
Jot wlll provide 37 spaces and
I inclu9e the new 11)-0our meters for
~l'.!~and~ buslnesa people who re-
,.;, ow~1 all day.
DAILY PILOT --H--i..p.. .._. ,.....,, v.ii., ,a........ s.c .....
o«MIQI COAST PUILllM1NG COMP.AMY
a.obort N. Wotd
P'rulclen1 •!Id """'U~l\tl'
. ~ J•tlr It Curlty
Vb Pre•'.llMI Ind Getitr.i Mtrlf9e<'
lho!l'l•I Kotvll
Ellltor
Tho111ts A. Mu•phin1
M-.1"9 Edll~
ltichot4 P. Noll
$6\lth OrAfllllo C-ly EdllOr ........
Co!ll M-i flt Wt1t 11r 51'"' tl..,_,1 St«ll; 2211 Wstl 1111161 lollltvlN
.. U11;N hltll\ m ~1 •-•11111t""'"" llMdll ltf1S lttdl ~rd a..°"'*"': W Hll'tfl El C8"'1rtt ""'
_l __ _
Clyd~"Conway S'teve111, 29, of 113 Calle
Pri,_,, iclenUfled u an . emplO\'O ol
the country club, wJS booked after mid-
night on charges cJ burglary.
Patrolman Mike Reischl said ht
answered the alann call at 12:04 a.m.
and as his headlights illuminated an
open masonite door they picked up • .
man in gloves tossing a small bundle·
under a trash. bin,
The bundle contained more. Ulan $200
in cash.
Reischl said the arrest was without
lncideb.t.
, "I pulled Ille shotgun an~ just said
you can come out now'."
Reports on Trip
lnvesUgatlOn. ,
. San '.Clemente police, however, co;n-
ducted interviews with jOme arrestees
in the Brown CaJe late last week flS
a lo•r·shol possibility.
Baby Gets New Liver
MONTREAL (UPI) -An 11-mO!llikild
baby who received a new liver in
Canada's fin;t nver tramplant surgery
Feb. 12 has been released from Notre
Dame Hospital The ~aby •. a boy iden-
tified only a1 Benoit, suffered with
cancer of the liver when adrtiltted to
hoopfla1 in January.
Pat Ni~on Heads Drive
To Aid Stricken Peru
By PA11\ICK BOYLE
Ot tltt. D~ll1 '"" lfllff
Pat Nixon will leave San Clemente
for W.ashington next Week to meet with
a group . that is coordinating private
contributions to .help Peru recover from
itt1 dlsastro~s earthquake.
The First Lady, who returned to .t~e·
family home here Tue!lday after a three~
day mercy mission to· Peru, will report
on her trip and prOVsde information
on current _relief needs in •Peru.
Giving the report hersel! will be Just
anothet example of bet' personal touch
that was particularly evident when she
&raveled to earthquake-ravaged Peru.
During the three-day !rip, lbe delivered
nine tons of relief wppUes and displayed
America's hearUeU sympathy for the
thousands of Peruvian Indiana who
aurvived the disaster. k
And she brought bac the mesSage
that Americans must continue to help
the 80 f000 refugees to rebuild their
horn ...
The Peruvian mission came about from
a discussion with her husband on June
20, shortly after th'e disaster.
"l talked about the great destruction-,"
Mrs. Nixon recalled. "I really wlahed
I rould do eomething. I aaid I'd like
to make the trip down.'1
"F1ne. Why don·t you?" aht said her
husband repliia S0'11t did ·strdayg
later. -
Other tint ladies have attracted world ,
attenUon -Eleanor Roosevelt for her
11"9cl deeds and (!)O<ern, Jl<'queline Ken-
-
nedy for her glamoroos Image, Lady
Bird Johmon fof her · eficrts to improve
the environmenL
But none had ever tr'ied such a person.
to-person mercy mission of human con-
cern and diplomati'c slde-effecis.
Even Peru's e10Ucally btauUful first
(ady, Consuela Velasco, had only viewed
the dramatic d!vastatlon high in ' the'
Andes from a helicopter. rt::"?-
But when Mrs. Nixon decided to see
first bane the destruction, Ule two first
ls dies ' flew ln a C·l30 Air Force cargo
Plane to a short dirt runway hlgh in
the A~des.
"I don't think any First Lady has
ever been In or out of any airstrip
remotely like t.hat," said Air Force
General Vernon WaJters, -Mrs. NixOn•s
interpreter. "I think you've flown a com·
bat mission. You sbould g!t corni>at
pay," he told the Firsl Lady.
From there, the two women hellcop.
tered ovtr the valley to Huarai, a
deva11tated town ol 20,000 where she
toured the rubble.filled street!. She spent
two hours the.re, getUng the 1tory «
the disaster from the rurvivors.
"I wanted to see the people, 1' the
President's wife e1plained. "f think they
need all the encouragement they can set . . . too often they feel akf is im·
personal."'
tn Latin Amttica where appearances mean Ml much, Mrs. Nixon added a
humane dlmenslon to the "Yankee" im·
age.
-
.
A L
roved without. a per:manent dwelling In
the Santa Ana aret and started. strvlng
a Ill-month term for marijuana
pouelllion a week qo ln 'Orange County
JaH. A complaint ,..ilng charges ·of aldinll bDd abettlnc l(ler a felony has .
been commlttod will be sought agalruit
her today.
-The l~year-old Santa Ana boy relea4-
ed to hia parents alter Iris arrest. He
will face. the same charges as the Daniels
woman, U . Drake said. "The two ·Pickups last nigtW cloaU
Ul~ tp>k on the suspects in the case,"
l)ralce said fA!day.
1be rounCilQ) of the siJ ptrson, be&an
exactly-a week> ago when two detectives
from the Santa Ana Police Department
-problng \,he Carlin case -received In lnfonnant'4 tip leeding to the amet
~ •• youth In San'-Ana """ '-*' was nded out as a slllJleCt, 6ut who
yielded lnformaUon leading to the six
arrests.
The murder of Mrs. Brown, police
said, allegedly took place in an Or1t1ge
grove in Irvine where the victim wats
forced to drive after being stopped by
the group on Sand Canyon Road and
the Santa Ana Freeway.
The band had left their stalled car •
near the 1reeway offramp and lhortly
a~ardl allerecfly IOl'lled their way
int<f th~ teacher'• car.
Mn. Brown was on s trip from paying
' coffee shop tip for a teacher's meeUng
In Miiiion Viejo to a PTA meelloil
In~ Toro .
It II alleged the grou]> foroecl the
. woman to drive to the Orange grove
where her kiUers used a mUitary surplus
Kabar knife (a seven-inch version of
a Bowie hunting blade) to kill her.
·Mrs. Brown's ~ was dumped in
a shallow grave near El Carlso Village.
The knlfe was tossed out of a moving
car along the santa Ana Freeway near
Tustin.
And the woman's ·ltation wagon was
driven to the Santa Cruz area, aban· '
cloned, 'Ulen put to the torch. .
·State Budget Still Stymied
.,
Democrats Demand~ng Mor e Mon ey for Sc hools
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Demanding
more · money for schools in exchange
for their votes, Senate Democrats today
stymied W.!188ge for the third straight
day of GOv. Ronald Reagan's record
$6.59 billion state budget.
Senate Democratic Leader George
Moscooe said . ~e, is prepared to wait
indefinite))' for Reagan to agree to the
sy;ap,
"If it takes months, I'm re~ady to
do it," the San Francisco lawmaker
told newsmen 'ftlursday nlgbt after tht
Senate refUJed to approve the opending
package on the second attempL "I have
to believe we'll stand faet, II
But Republicans a c he du 1 e d a
reconslderaUon vote on the defeated bill
f"' today. Sell. Fred' Marler, (fl.Red·
ding), the floor manager for it, .saJd
he was "optimistic" ol gaiting final
pas98'.e·
· The Senate, on a 2.5-13 vote, rejected
the expenditure program five hours after -
the Assemflly approved~ it on a 82-15
vote. It takes rt votes to pa!s a budcet
in the upper house.
GOP leaders · ®OSider¢ aending ap
ambulaoce for bedridden Sell .. Richard
J. Dolwlg of Atl>erton. but decided
against the plan. They thought It might
enco&rage a Democrat to switch bis
vote.
Robb to {le Arraigned
On Abortion Charges
A compromise version of. the budget
written , by a second conference com-
mlttee proposed s102 million. more tor.
schools and certain guarantees in state
financing that Democrats also demanded.
Spec.Uically, the compromise aay1 the
state will pickup additional welfare costs
to counties call.9ed by i n c r e a 1 e d
caseloads. It also provides that any
,money vetoed out ol the budget by
the governor would revert to the stite
Dr. Robert Cumming Robb of Laguna
Beach bas been ordered to face Superior
Court arraignment July 9 on felony abor·
t.ion charges.
The court date was set by Judge
Byron. K. McMillan immediately after
tbe jurist rejected Thursday attorney ·
Moses Berman's arguments that further
pr'osecution of the Art Colony physician
is unlewful since the same charges had
been dismisied by a muoicip'al cnurt
judge.
And Judge McMill8.n also threw out
Berman's plea that the Orange County
Grand Jury was not qualified to. indict
ROOb becauSe it did not truly represent
the conlrpunity in tenns ol racial, social,
economic and religiou.s factors.
Judge McMillan delivered his double
' barreled ruling after Berman unsuc-
cessfully tried to have him removed
from . the ,Proceedings as prejuciloed
against his client.
Judge William S. Lee quickly rejec:led
that argument in a neighboring
courtroom and sent Bermm back to
Judge McMillan . for an equally opeedy
rejection of the "'1!1lffi"JU be filed last
April 1. .
Dr. Robb , 67, d 34567 Scenic Drive,
D~ P<Ji.nt, was indicted by tbe Grand
Juryoo charges of inducing m1scarriage1
in three women patients.
The indictment revived the charges
that were dismissed by JDdge Paul Mast
who threw the allegatic:a out ot SantJ
Ana Municipal Court with the ruliitg
that California'• Theniipeutic Abortion
Act of 1967 was unconstltutional.
-&ehool fund.
But Moecone noted the language does
not ·force the administration to spend
the money. He 'said that could take
.another approprlat:ion blll ,,ulless such
a mandate is written into the ')>udget.
The spending program compromtae
also guarantees the 191l,OOO I t a t e
employes, who went to wo'fk as usual
diliing the budget Impasse, will be paid
along with any other debts the stat.
rang up while it was budgetless.
The situation was nearly identical to
last' year, only then it. was assembly
Democrats who demanded and got more
money from Reagan in the budget after
a three-day holdcul.
. Thia year. Senate Democrats want at
•least another $16 million for bard..pressed
.chool. districta, and say their real '°'' is $282 million ·tn new aid. ,
The maj esty of the Mediterranean
is captured in Henredon's
eapri
SUMMER SALE
fe1turin g Htnrtdon's C1p_ri
This fabulous collection o! Henredon's furniture
to inc~ude dining, bedroom & occasional, all at tale pnces.
Drexel Furniture is offering their famous Esperanto collection at
substantial savings.
Heritage is reducing Jts exciting Madrigal collection.
Henredon, Heritage & Drexel will also offer their outstanding upholstery at suh~tantiat savings.
Lamps, pictures and accessories 'vill also be available at reduced prices.
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 WostcUlf Dr. 642.2050
OPEN fRIDAY 'TIL 9
Prof0Hlon1l lnta~lor LAGUNA BEACH
Deoltnora Avollablo-AID-NSID 345 North Coast H~. 494-4551 . OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
l'lttN Ton ,,.. M• el o,... c....., 14f.12•J
.,
...
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• Yo'Dr BoliietOWll-.
' ' ·· t a guna<Beaell . .
Dally P aper ' . . . -• EDIIl10 N .~
.:, .~: * V~t. 63, NO. 158,,4 S~tlONS, 34 PAGE , • -~ ·~ FRI DA'(, JULY' 3, .19?p-'.•:· TEN CENTS .. . .':..::::::::::!;;;:;:;;;""..:;":,.,..~~~-:--~~..,..~~~..:....~~~~_.:~.:..:~~.:..~~.,...,..~~~'~~-;.-1!.......:.•c.i.•~·...;~:......:..,;.,""'-;:-~~~~~~-.:~,,....:..~ .... ~ •. .. - -.. ,, :-.~... .· " w;r;; ~1· •.. ~;... ·~ ~
·Marille
y
·· MJ.RGARE'I' WEILER, 5, STOCKslJP' FOR FOURTH
• 'I
~'Maj or Firew~rk s S~ows
. '
To Light , Up Or ange Coa st
.
Si~,major fireworks shows will light
upc tBe Orange Coast area. on July 4
from 1Seal Beach to Laguna. Py1)>lechnic displays will he held at
•
Mf.ssion Viej o,
Cap o Highlands
Ready for Fou rth
Mission ~Viejo and their neighbors
acroa the freeway at Capistrano'
Hi~s ire both planning a lively
Foiirlh of Jilly.
The . HighJlnders will begin with a
parade at 10· a.m. which will form at the corner of Valencia and Ericson.Way.
The ' parade :will go down 'Pike, r.ight
on Cf)amplain. left on Charlemagne, nght
on DeSale, left on Earhart, left on
Ericson. right On Earhart, right on Las
BoJsas and left into Tasmin. . .
Newport Dunes, Huntington ~ach pier,
Laguna Beach, .Anaheim st a d l um ,
Disneyland and Long Beach.
See the Weekender section of today's
DAILY PILOl' for further information
on local fireworks WSplays.
oiher Independence Day activities in
-Orange County include the HunUn&ton
Beach Independence Day Parade; now
in its 66th year. The parade will take
place at Jl a.m. in a circular route ,
from iLake Park to Main Street.
KnoU's Berry Fann .will present
"Operation Patriotism" at the park's
Independence Hall beginning at 10 a.m.
Actor Oon..DeFore will ·narrate a pageant
depicting 11 scenes from American
history entiUed, "America, it>e Great
Adventure."
Santa Ana a~ivities include a· ·9 a.m.
parade down Main street followed by
'an address by Mayor Loren Gr!set.
The fourth annual "Cily of Villim
Parade" in La Palma will feature a
fireworks display at dusk. Buena Park's
Delila Park also has a pyrotechnic.s
display as well as Ful~erton. High School
at8p.m. -·
. . . -,
. ' . . ·-of :San . , Clemente Wife
Nixon Sets . -.
. •
Envoy Meet
·.In Clemente
By RICHARD P. NALL
ot lllt IMlllY rlltt llMI
•
President Nixon is to meet in San
Clemente Saturday w~ ·navid Bruce
his ·new chief 1:1.S: ;negotiator at ...;
stalltcf Parts lalts'Ul J)8!lCe·ln· Vletnlm.
Jn his -")>Uab lo· find polltii:al solution for the lndochlha war, Mr. Nim1
has said that1Bruce', ·a vetenui diPJOmat;
will hav"great oUibiHty .Jn·pmOuting
the U.S. pooll\cJn •t Parl!.
The 'President has etpressed sa!Js(ac-
tion with. the rate of :Vietilamization.
AS: the · :>outh Vietnamese grow stTong
enough _to defend tJJ¢iselves, the Pftsi.
dent has suggested they will be a tougher
adversary for Hanoi at the conf~
table than is the U.S. ·
The North Vietnamese and Viet Cong,
however, t.bW: fat-haVe replied to the
President's, appeal by in e!fect ~ym,:
first get U.S. f<'oopl oiit ci Vietnam.
' .--
. " _. ' ...
..... -._;-
Probe Nab.s,
.. Pendleton ...
r • " ' '1 ••
-19-year-ol~
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of tllt Dlllr r1i.t Iii"
v
San Clemente police-e~rJy _today a~i
res.ted a 19-year-old Camp Petidleton
Marine in Uie knjfe and bludieon'slayint:
o( :Mn: CoMi.e Lynn Johnson, 20, ~
e~Iant mother ·beaten arid lla!Jliecl . . ~ .
to ~lb.more Qian two weeks ago.
MarJne Pfa.: Frankie Wayne .Mellino,
attached to Headquarters Company,· ge..
cond Battalion, Second Infantry Training
Regiment, ' was booked on • murder
c~rg'e.s aboUt 1 a.m. today after tiiore
than two ';"'eeks of lnt~sive i'1vestlgation.
i;>etective Lt. Robe.rt Mason and his
partner Leonard Gcoclwin · arrested the
yoUng s~rvlceman al 12:50 a:m. at an
unpi sClosed apart111ent In San Clemente.
Thus far police say the young Marlnt
' ha$ niade no staterru;nt's about .the case
to -,offlcers, and the ·lntensive probe irito
, ~ case ii contlnuing. · .
: Jolajng In 1h!o 'JIOSl'arrest wor\ In to.
1 1 Olle . .,1u be tQIUtaiy autbOriueS,at Cami» A meibtier ci ~Viet Cuig~ "* tllo' ...... ,.,..,.~-. --'.li!Pe
01I'J ili°'1'~ 'uil1Fi£"' U)?"oOc<!Pia
the ·Viet Cool p0oco • ploli liid. polls -•--an~ ait. . . .$. ··~Pre.iiiw pliiro !I... ~ .
· Ptndletonr who .have a~ady been CGDo
IU~. . . ---::-""· ll'Jt despite the military -t o!
tilt ,.ca~e, !l'fllcers said Jeftal a-ctlon la ~ cue will remain in ciVilian tiands. ~1nc1e '•-'p • f"" I • ... ,...,.... 11 eera1toDlei. ·
Alfur day• of a...centrauon oo foreip
affairs capped by his Wednesda1 Digbt ·
foreign policy dialogue oo television,. the
Preskfent has turned attention to
domestic problems.
He met Thursday with top officials
of the Office of Budget and Management.
Director Geor1e P. Shultz, Deputy Direc-
tor CaSpar Weinberget and A.ssoclate
Director Arnold B. Weber .
1be three lftl'e sworn in ·aloo1 with
new Labor Set;retary James Hodpoo
of Nortbrldge Tbunday morqlng on the
lawn outside the Pruident'1 . San Cle.
mente ofllce. ~
"We are very proutl, ·those ol us who
are Califomians, to hate the swearing
in ceremmies take pl~ here~" lllid
the President. • -
The new OBM chiefs were plucked
from · other federal poats to run tbe
new ageocy. It replaces the Budget
Bureau and is eq>ected to combine
budget-making with evlluation of the
effectiveneu of federal programs.
Aftet lunch Thunday, the Presldellt
held another <kmestic cooference with
Shult.<, White n...,. aides H. ,R.
Haldeman, John D. E)rlichman. Robert
H. Finch and llonaid Rumofeld, dlre<IOI'
of the Office " Econcll1ic OpponunltY.
Laguna Se nior
It has not yet been specified whether
MeUJno will be arraigned on Monday
or whether an indictment charging
_ • • • • "'f ..L. murder will be sought through lhe . ~ DAlt.Y P11.0T •tiff-::_~ 0rai11te County Gz:aiid Jury, ·. ' • IJiSt'tlrie Rit e, : ·· · · 1 .: ~' •. 1. : -; Police spent all day Thursday seeking
, , • '"I .. ;:. . · ' warrants ~ the c~. 1 and siill · wil~
·A> b!s·Wifetiolds·Bitile/tames'Hddgson'takes oat.b 'ofomct .aa Pres· moun\ an Intensive search for three
dent 1iixon•s n.ew sec~~lj' of IabOr. Fedeni.I •Judge TliitimonCf•CJllrte critical Items in the case. ,
·of Newpolj-.Beach~ a'drhirustered· oath. ,of1qffic:e TuOlday ·mominj ,on , · The , linlfe uled ·lut· June 11 to otab
lawn of. Westel'll ·Wbite' Hous•·i,n ·San Clem,n!O. 'Hddi15'on ·was: uiid,i'· Mn. Jrihnson lllJJ' Is missing. •
· ;ecretary onab<ir .. p'rlbr'tp .e)ev~tlon. ~·!•rm.er N~!ll!•.' r,e~~t; . '.The: w.a~t ~g to \h• m.y._,,.14.
he was at one time v,loe·prmdedt.for fudwtrl.al re!ll\lou• for]~, , "11• of a Vietnam veteran was not
heed. / 1 : • , ·, -• ' ~ , • 14*n4 ~by . police . Jn h~i' apartment at
1 , . • 41~ ?40nterey Laqe. , , , • • r ~ • • ., r ' ' And ·sevel1l!. otfltr 1critical pieces of'
.. • • 1 • ;; 1 '· , : ' evidence st,U! hayd nol tieOn Iocat>d.
Conn_ , . · ·cit) O_ K. : : s.· :_, 1,·~.a.r __ .g .e.·. r_. :· S1.··,1e : a~~i:1r-: "!..":~"~"!:~
• w • the state -will also continue, officers ,
sa id. .
ForP.acked·Councl l Meet~ ~?:i~~e=:~~~~?:wi·~·
• • , : : .. • • : • .: -1 • : , • <Set SUSPECT, Pase Z)
By BARBARA KREIBICH men(takes a poor view o!'1Ji~.
ot"" IN!""'"""'""'. fJ1le Cham,bez:'s maxlinum•.cilpaclty; 115
With Laguna lleacb Clly -Council person1, now-has been pooled· on ·the
meetings threatening. to:f4ral 110liver!." door and firem~ .car~lly count_qoses
and the .. Pageant of -~ Masters as · and1 bQr_furtbef'.~ ~;tbe mu.·
crow:d gather~. councilmen this wi:e~ irn!ptl has ,been reached. , ·
adopted an ordinance permftting legal · · · Interested c1tizeils 'then a~ obliged
adjournment to I a r g e r quarters if to pie~ up what they can hear thiough
necessary. open windows. . ,, . .
Fishing, Ski~n g.
Gea r Cleaned Out
I ., ' ' ' •
R b• o•J.• ' It was •farther agreed that'•• •loud • On one ·recent-eccasion, when uraency
, , the present council cliambers to take persons turned uo and the mee~• was
. Laiunan "itliam R. t:.uiea Js a dteep•
1ea fishing and· )'ater skiing enthu:siut.-
but he'll probably'.have to .forget about.'
hls favorite sports thJa summer. -
,Police report 1 :bur&lar-entered an Tb!· "weaving band of parad;ers wi,11
end at Costeau Patk where games and
races will take place between l and
4.-p.m. T?R>se 'interested in participating
in tbe games , are asked to sign up
in the park at noon.
A beauty cont.est will be ·~ •£ 7
p.m. in Laguna Beach lifeguard head-
quarters .. 175 N.' Coast Highway. Mi.SS
Laguna Beach_ l.Jfeguardiwill be crowned
at the Indepenctea. Day aqlvlties.
O in '.LJVer \ •peaker ·should ' -be installed outside ordlii•-'.were up . fur»dl""'8Ioa, 700
G • Ab ad · care of smaller overflow crowds. adjourned to the hfnh scbobl auditbrium oing ro ·Recent" c..:0<11 .zn<eiiligs :coneetrilg s~ th~·~up\cl~c:O& ·;~ .. -th. • =•Do/~ ·Jloull!Jtg:lmpeetlons llnJe all!I j>Ia~· fOi'.''~;.\;Jir . ~u
open car pc_>rt .at Lutes' apartment, IIOl N. Co~st H!ghway ·whiJe Lutes was away
at won and Temoved fiihlni and water llkllna equlpmel.valued at '418: • , ..
Lilted u milling are two Iatge,,marlin
fliblng rods;. Uch ·worth fl50, a •bmi ci tlctie for mirUn !Wllng, a pair ol .,_ . An -aU-commtinity baseball game for
men ·ind women Will be played ,between
4 am 6:30 p.m., followed by a picnic
dinner and fireworks display.
Jn Mission Vh!jo"'the '"day will ' begin
with •an Orange Crate Der1ly down' La
Paz ,Road at IQ a.m. followed by .a
community' picnic al' 5 p.m, on lhe.
driVing range al Mission Viejo Goll
course.
Entertahimenl will, be climaxed by
the f~works display, . .
Fiteworks Blaze
Hits Clemente ·
A. -~ .;;.;.,.,;~-~-bis sling~
and '•·~ ·fireworks fountain Sl>'Utd
fire .. la1ll Thursdoy nigl!t In a m,,,..
blalt·whicb iDched toward ,.vnl ~ •
for a· time. ,
Fife Chief Mertoo Hackett ,said fhe
IS.year-old youth started the brush fire
along the 400 block oL Avenida Presidio
-across from the-fire station -when
he lighted the fire-belching fountain , Ulen·
tried 1o send it lo wivd Our Lady o(
-Fatima CathOlk: Chi.irch using a· sling·
shot.
It landed halfway and caused the bloe
covering ~veral acres before firemen
put It Oii~
. Jolm Wayne Wins
: Court Judg!llent
" "\ . ~
On W ild Goose
Robin Oliver, preUy b-l&year-old .olber Items of par)lcujar !n.ter,ell·. nieeuii., '-' l:30'P·l1f· on·'~ qm ·and
1970 graduate ci l4)lna <Beach High "! , , \'·ha~.~nal!iao\hli1rycord tlllrd'.WOclne!d,Yo!1"9cll~ln·Clfy
&mo! IDday was notified Ibo wtll leave audiences to .lbe lp«llnP', , . Hall c<iuncll -'chiil!ib<ri' .' ~, l!iefe 'wu,
• 'On' mo~ ·u..n -oco"'1/Jn 1listeners . o0me1doibbl ·8s' to .'ule i.P.I!tT of ""'h July IS for Belglwn in the American have jammed .... the ' 'aisles i!nd itbod ' ad'' t '1 • , r --.
Fle!d Service Americans Abroad pr<> aliou!l!er.:io:.t;,ulder· aiwhcl !lie• walls• el ap . 'F.""l!" -: • I ,; ' • ' •of' 111• . the coundl ch8mber but ·~firi(.w....... Thi,9 . bowevet, was l-lfkt:n care-.. gram . · · . • , , _.,..... a. new ·,o&im'Gce 'a4C!Pfed <$b;vitbe ~cit
"Wow, l can hardly believe it," she · 1 • ' ' ' .... .'. 'l\'edneidiy ,plan~aoo SJl<C,III\ill1-i>m!ll~ ~xclaimed UJXl'.'1 receiving the news b)' H · · J! -tl.ng adJOUFD~\ to 1 oq,e1"~ if
telegram this morning from AFS head· • f; P .'W Oi"iLing . . n~ : • · · . .. 1 • : ·
quarte;rs in New York. / ' • · • ) :1 r • · • · _ • The1 new .ordinance· ai.o 1permit_s use ·
h .. , voUrig. ,on.,.·-· -dtlne· niatiers · and Miss Oliver' a top scholar and active ·, ·ov" er' H.o',lid'r:;:y" ': . . of a .''cOnsent Ca~ndar". to streamline l\.1ovie actor Jo n Wayne of •1ewport student in Laguna Hig'h'a Cli.ss of 1970, • ., •· h • -jud t Th ad rf«ganlzu ,f.h~·offlcial order ot bUiineu JX:IC won 8 cou, ~ gnten ur 8f is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Blair ~-' ' ... I ~-which requires an insurance ·~ql~Y Oil . l' CatifOmla ~. ~if lpa~bneri to UAUV1-u• WJth lhe muni\;apa 'W'K· •
to pay f14,509 coverbig d8~qea' let l;iis ~r of 505 'Anita S · ·' stationed Jn Orange. Cqimty, have 'Whf!n·Ctty Managei-·Jan\es b.tWhe1ton
. yacht, Wild Goose: . r . c 1 • • She was selected· as ,a, finalist ~ : a -· e · for erralit holiday pnektted the new ofdlnince;' Mayor ' . • ' ; . ' • 'Richard GoJdber ·'*1o0ed ;tlie Jleni I The _diesel·powerlld. yach\ __ •run November In the AFS Americans Abroad weekeull moto!illl.. . . . . • , _g q _,.,_. . ..
·-Olllld In s.n .niego•Hllliior .,..May procram.Shelathe-·LagunAlllp · '"De ... ·~''-Ii<! Ula! we are •=·jolli'mnentto......-.qu-.. · ~ · ,-<-u •• J "-'-' ~.~ •""'-I · -·•·-.• ,. •' ' ., ' · ' · e-'•lned" tt ;obooiJd, tit .Jn. 19, 1969 while un~er chonec 'to' ~,;lll!t . ·-ent _,.,.ed this year to a )'ell'·lo!lif . • • worilillf .. • . t., ~~""""-. . '•*· iiOl"·:ri&tal!O' w.:o11~--
Corporation. " . Pnlt!l'81lloversus . .JuulorTOQ1Jlurphibi I .oena:<~·1el ll>1 . 9"';' ~i ~·In order lo' pe;:;."iiTii: '-~ i-rly' ~~"!'< com, • ..!"'2'..J. !:.,..icy·l'II • ~-~" ~/!"-Repuy"'·bll:' r!..!:!~lmty~ t? ' ~' '4.6· ~l\liiin~, :f·.w.,. • ' ...,,...i ·;i0; 'coildikt' i '!11181 • niOetlng ·~-·~~.... ...... ... . I . au. Pli\!IMI "'"' Job ,~, ,1111 1'7'4· '•me• :.....:. JI. M.~~ such· Miit Oliver will become ooe of 1• 1 1 • loek1 •.1..tJ .monU i:._.;.l i..;;t:a • euew_.e •m· "'1c: .:,.,,.. u..-i:,, oo the yacht onl)I covered 'the cfaft US stud~· set~~ 'this yeor f. -st·"'" • ,o ~ • • -,•'. . ~. '"""'!"'""'" a• • .. ntt, lihOO!d . ""'He· It .lmpOojlb. , le when used for pleasure: not when under 1 · i i "''"" ~o;v.und the '" _, high, $oulders bic~_ tYel, alert r l t"' ;..., the regular coUhCit chambtl!. ·
charter. Dul Los Ang'cles Superior Judge n ore gn coon er AFS J'fO' • to 'C'IJ:pe tyiija, the ~ hoUday ' ? <™d~:\' said: later he woufif't .... to gram. ' . , traffic. • ~ "'~ Robert Kenny saw It differently and She has 12 days to prepare !or her · « •.: ~ ' ' .' · lrrange l8 'tkl speMl:er outsid~tM Cham· ~Id the company liable: departure. " Pey Ot:;lJOl, we are iswom 19 her as soon as"poaslble beCauae &
Wayne, earlier had filed a suit again!t WhJle at LagJllla }Ugh, MUs Oliver • aod wUI 1 \*i&orously. enforce • \¥ jOufpiri,erlt 'nl_aY riot always !>e pbssible.'
lnlerpact Corporation asking $7?,000 served u co-chairman of the campus Lraffic. laws on Ule coonty s , "·We."don'l ktiow ln·lldvance how many ·
damages and $38,250 for breach of con-American rteld Service chapter. "Sbt 1
• freeways · and' hi1hwa)"S,1 and *' ~art coming," he explained. '.'and
tract becaute they didn 't re\Um the is CWTently workift4 It BentoD'srCol!et t. ~uJly silt~_-me. llve l·,1' li'i"nci_atw-ajs:poail:de "to "1"• larie
yacht until almost a monU. after the • Shop. She will return to~LalltD• in July .... P«trolinen 'framed. t· ,_y,,. •• -1 fnou.8h place. 'at fht lasf mlnute,. IO.
eoo of the five-dil)' charter period. ol 1171 alter her Y'll' Jn BeJciwn. . • . """"91.a---~·wtll .help.-..•1 '.
• I
stis and one llqle skl. , ... . .
Oraage . ,.,...
.Weacie~·
\I'll be a bang up'Folirth of July, ~ we&tberwlse, with. sunny skies 8l'ld (
terDpt?ratures fn the 81}1, sUpPtni
back Into the 10 ranie along the
coast over the weekend.
'
INSIDE TODAY
: YOu tqti have a·cr:ockino ·oood
time at any of tM ·many fire·
Works '1hows around OrtJ11ge
Co••IV' qp lh• Fourth of July. 'Phttf're"all~U.tld in ~-Gum
to Fu11 column· in 1 toda'Ji's Week·
ender.
~
ON .... " _., .....
C.ll•nll• ' M•llilllt ,._ ..
Clltdlln• U• ' .. _......, ' Cl-"'" llfll ... r•h IJ·t• '""a .. =:'w.. 11o1a ,,....wtN .. • DMja Mttic. ' ,_" ... ·-' w....,,.~ •
lll!Wld ·-• .....,...., .. .,.. ... -" -... •• ... .._ , ........, , ....
. -~,
•
I
I
' .
• DAILY PILOT SC Fridu1 Jlll.1 S, 1970
Murder Suspects Reach Six; Two -More Nabbed
• .. L-:.. •
A 11-)'0li..id ·boy Ind a 31·ytar'<>ld .... """""1ted .ofter lnle,,...nlon ol locol 1u-'ty Pl..,...,. ollcero n1ved without. a pennonenl ctweninc tn. . fnini' th• Santa Ana Police D!partm•nt
-alr'""1 wvlllll Um1 oo a marl-...--driltero ..,,. an befn& held bl Norwallt IOl'U.r llrla week to f1«1 the Santa Ana area and started wvlng -probing Ille carlfn cue -received -=:•••-wll.111 llwlld • llO:.-.lo~ ..--·for.._ boldiel ........ charpoMonadllltinlheinurdor-lddnlp a six-month term for marljuoa an illlonnal'• Up J...u., lo tbt ..-,..,.,., ,.,,.,...._ o1-11n. ....... -""'*"'"' ._...,.,llO.]o_Qrne !:qunl)I~ o1 a ,oo1111 111 8anll ·~ wtio 1a11r
'li1he brUtal buld>!irinc ol °'"""""' llallo!I -hn7 certla; _ ~ "Gypay" Qlbbooay, 17, Jail. A complaint ,.king charges ol Wiosruled-11"1 H a ~. bu1 who Mt....n :Viejo teacher Mn. Flor'""' th'" othen C... Ill ........ IW1nc ol -r • driflor, -bok1c held in aldfn& IJld •belllntt aft. a felony has . yte1ded lnformalioo. teadiog 14 ll1e six
Nancy Brown. • Mn. B-.. Pwtland, ore., where ho hu beJun to ' been commllled will be , oought against , arre<ts.
1be arrests· ~y of Melanie The principals In the cnea A(f!: fiiht extradit.ioo to Orange CoorM.y, where het today. The murder of Mrs.' Brown, police tt. 31, in jail for a week on the --Stephen Cr&lg Hurd, 20, no addrts11, he will faee prosecution _as an adult -The 16-year--0ld Santa Ana boy releas-said, allegedly took place In an Orange
dwge, • to uold_enl.iff<g 16-yeer, who is the allee:ed unolficial leader of tn -ttie Brown case. ed to ~ parents after his arrest. He grove in Irvlne where the victim w1ls
•;wraps ~ the &rTeJta" in the the roving crotrif of alleged pUI usen. -Arthur C. "Moose" Hulse, 18, of will fact the same charges as the Daniels forced to drive after being stoppt.d by
bWlrre cue 'ol lhe dellll d'Mtt. Brown, . He' fices $lrga or murder ald kidnap 11461 Dolan St., Garden Grove a hlgh woman, U. Drake said . · the group on Sand Canyon Road and al~ murdiited at the bands of. a in.. U Brown caae. He was arrested ICOOol student specified as a Principal "The two pickups last n,jght cloaes the santa Ana Freeway. . rovNt ~bit mm . ol Y1lUnC after 'a foot chase In Norco late last In the June 1 hatchet murder ol Carlin the book on the suspects in the case,.. The band had left 1heir stalled car
dru.rt... week. dur911 a t50 holdup in a Santa Ana Drake Saki today, near the freeway offramp ~ thor.tly
~ U. Ricblrd Drake Aid 1be ...... Hennai Hendrick Tayk>r, 17, al&O aervioe. sta~. 'J'be roundup of the sii penona began afterwards allegedly forced their way ~led• arxe..-iel in the deaths at no known a~, turned m'ff to -'Ille Daniels woman, who assertedly exactly a weet ·ago ~ two deteet.ivet into the teacher'• car.
•
Mrs. Brown was on 1 trip from payin&
a coffee shop Up for a teacher's meeting
lo -Viejt lo a PfA meelilo( ln El Toro.
It II lu.,..t the ' rroup farted the
woman to drive to. the Oran&e grove
where her killera used a mWtary surplus
Kabat knife (a seven-inch version of
a Bowie lfunl!ni blade) 14 kill her.·
Mrs. Brown's body was duinped in
a shallow grave near El Carlso Village:
The knile w• toQed out of a moving
car aJoni the Sa!U Ana Freeway neat
Tustin.
And the woman'• ltatioo waaon wu
driven to the Santa Cruz area, aban-
doned, then put 14 Ille torch •
tLagu~a Del~ys
F1-0M Pqe l
SUSPECT ... State :0-udget Still Stymied_ ,,
.. ' .
10urces in the case.
Officers declined to specUy exact!)'
which tip la.st Wednesday night led to
the arrest.
~reeway Study : . --
They also have not found whether
Marine Pfc. Mark Johnson.-19, husband
of the alaln woman, knows the suBpect.
John.900 has been in Michigan since
accompanying his wife's body back home
for burial last June 22. ~-~bl. cSO!ay In con· stnhm tJf' the ed.ire Ooaltal Freeway
1f tile Newport Beech segment is remov~
ed, 1-i!" Beadl dty councilmen act.-
joomed d>eir Wednesday evenlllf ...,ion
14 4,30 · p;m.· Tuesday for further
dloc:ll3sion " Ille problem.
Councilman F.dward Lorr urged
"strong action" by the city in the face
of Assemblyman Robert Badham 's J:lill,
now beaded for the State senate calljn&
for removal of the portion of the ~rouk
that'woold cut..,.... Newport Beach.
''11lis tea..i d>e Letiuna --med tvqq in limbo," Aid Lorr, "and
any delay in construction o( the freewJ111
could 11trously increase our traffic iro-
blems. We !OQ(lbl hr llrls rQUte and
mU!i> " !l'lr lulure ~ hangs on it, OL~ •
city Mina(er James o. Wheo1on
told the council he and City Engineer
Joseph Sweany will be meeting Monday
w\th State Division of Highway officials
in Lo& Anseles in .. alUmpl lo obtain
more W«mation oil the state's intention.
Wheaton said he wou1d agree that
the ooUndl ~ adopl a. ""'11utlon ••·
prelSing its views and address it to
Se .pa~or Randolph Collier 's
Tt lll't3PQriation CommtUee, which now
will'llllldy.the Badham bill, bill suggmed
an! a<iUon mi&hl l'l'tr bi'. delayed until
olt4r d>e Monday meeting. '
wt-._ pointed out that Ille bill does
not ~y affect ~ La&una ~
Cl! h. fi;io••1· ' ' '
"II dOes not ~ that the poriloo
Cl! Ille tr-.y oouth " Buck Gull¥
in Corona de! Mar wilt not be built," A polygraph i.st and more Ulan a
w~ sale!. "111iS b all port " the dol!ell houra " interview• of the young
entire state freeway ayltem and 1t would ~-hu8band ruled him out u • suspect
be poosibie, 1o dl...t. the Corona de! qulckly alter ll1e crime. Mar·~ .. dawn M 'Anh Boille\l'A-" Mrs. Johnson, eight .weeks pregnant ~"-" . ., • Lr .,..... with what would have been the couple's
south via Buck Gully and the adopte4 first child, was Deaten severely in the
inl'!nd route U the Newport Beach &el" face with a large kitchen stool, then
ment of the Coaatal Freeway were re-stabbed in the neck, breast and abdomen
moved." . by her killer. '
torr noted tb.t 'there haff hem in-Her nearly nude body was f o u n d
stances where a whole route was blved sprawled on the bed of the couple's
becaUle Of .-1J-Jn certain areu. modest, ground-floor apartment in San .,......._.... Clemente's pier bowl resort area.
Sweany Mid the Boon! " Saporvisora Her husbanil unlocked the front door
hod adOpCed a rtlOllAlon u'11nc • . .,,.,. " tbe Oat about 2' bnurs after leaving
structiao ot the lrte'flY "and the Orange his 'wife for ,euard duty at a, San la
Coonty Rood llepartmfl1I It 1Bafnc us Ana-he!Jcopter bue and fOUlld ber •ude
' to go •atone .. but since we baff, the body aprawled on the bed in the '.livin1
11 ...... -.J.-1 •• 1 room. mee-,. ~~ed July I k probably Mrs. Johnlon had been dead more
would be better to wait." than 24. hours.
City Mtorney Jack J. Rimtl pointed · Evidence of se:iual molestaUon was
out tDat freeway construction bu con-_Jns:oncluslve, c or on er ' s lave1Ugator1
tinued on either side ot Sant.a Barbara dJtc0vered later·thal 11ighl
despite that cily'1 bloctlng of the route They said only that "evidence of violent throoih the city Jtlelf. sexual activity was not evident."
Councilman Roy Holms said he agreed A specific" time of death also proved
"wilt Che apirlt of Mr. l.ar's JWOlut.ion" to be a puzz~ in the case. Examlners
and auuted adjounment unW after could only specify a general Ume p;eriod
the meetq with hial>woY olficials, at for the killing -perhaps bolo"' ilawo
whidl Ume awopriat.e city action could of Jue 16. , _
be dbcuseed. The murder created a severe case
Lorr and the telit of.Ill OOlUICl1.....,. " Jtu.r1 in lhe ahocked community,
14 coolinue the......,. unl1l Tuelday. .\111<1"' place oaly bours afler the bo~
cbered and. partially eviscerated body
of a pretty Mission Viejo 15Cboo1·1eacber,
B gl S .l'lf>.r.t Mrs. Florence Nancy Borown, 31, Was or ar U8r--discovered in the hills along Ortega
Highway.
H Id . t G • t Police throogh 1ub8equent \l'ef:b often 01.d_ .P e,pp.e.r Tr ee e a unpom disclaimed •peculatio• that the two kill· . t · . . ings might be linked.
I -• , -~ •• :r."-. . .A s~ ~"" patrolm~ answering 811 youthful 'suspects have heel ar~ G;V...,:~*"' lt"'ame .o. ' ' h\lrllar . alarm can after ·midnight rested In the Brown murder af1er •
11 .:;.o "J~~ l :.1', c: at Shl;lf,ec)iff1. coUnLpt,,,club arTetted .a ·tip•_ again .-·led to dayllgbt in the
. t -~ ·~~Jt;u'Y ~.It~ . inve1~at1on: • , TO •Eh;D'Ufl(J, .Lot ' , tod~cfcO::J•-eris 29 O! lll'Cal!e . , San ~Clell!'•te police, however, '°"' :0 ' · ~· I ' ~ id ' • '~ of duded ln1ervtews with "'""' arr•s1ee•
'l1le ancleOi ;,.pp.;~ U,.i ~. th•. • · -~!'aa .. OO:ect~· .tp the ,~rown c~ la1e last week a.s
111e entry 1t1 .1be .old ~ p~ , n1gM c!bOrgei <I buiwtary. • . · .. a lnag-lbot posalbWty. , ,
IJld was Carelillly 'jlri;served """° 'tllo , P~lrtliman MIR Reischl said ht 4tl-year,-GJs!.~1er .wai r....i. will ilv•' aniweri<I the ilimCc:alt al 1z,M a".!n. B-8-by G-els New· Li-·ver its name Q>. the,, new ci{y parlltnl lot , and as his. headliaht.s illurti.inated an
14 be :lnelalltd at the Ocean Avenut open masoolle ,door they picked up a .
1ite. ·. man in .11Gffs tO.inc · a amall."'bpadlf ·
Bids fct JllYlnc the .. Pepper Tree under a trf(lli·bln., ·, ' / '.
Parking Lot" were presented to the . The bundle contained more than PIO
city oouncil this week, with SuJ.ly·Miller's In cash.
low figure " 110,152.ls accepted for Reisclll said ·the arrest wu without
the job. lncidonl
This was aboul !700 above tbe , "I. pulled the shotfWI and ju.st aaid
engineer's estJ.mate and substanilally you can come out now'."
below the high bid ol 112.974. ..
R;e p!rts OD Trip
-' • I
. MO~AL. (UPI) -An 11-month<>Jd
baby who received a new liver in
canada's fi rst liver transjMant ~rgery
Feb. 12 ,has been released from Notre
Dame H0&pila.I. The baby, a boy Iden-
tified Only aa Beooi~. suffered with
cancer of the liver when admitted to
hospilal in January.
ti>e Pewer Tree lot wilt run thro\l8h
from Ocean _Avenue to F«est Avenue,
where •' couple· of old commercial btindinp_. ~ were razed to eXpal)d
"'" psldbg' .... ' The );t wiU pn>vide 37 Spare! and
wUl .lli<lu<lo the oew l~ ine1ers for ~111od business P'Ol'le who .,,.
i1*tn --ail day.
l'Ut ~Tn ~eath Drive
To Aid .Stricken Peru DAILY PILOT
I ' .• ,,,... ..• " ......... ....
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• C,... ._ S.. Cla ••·.
• '
·~ .. C041T ~!Lt5MIHO COM,AHY
;': ,~ R•Otrt N. w.,,
l"f'U;,1111 Md PllblWllr
J•ck l. C1111..,
VICll ,.,.1.1\otnt Md ~fl M•Mt«
By PAl!'lll<:K BOYLE
01 ... p.JJ~ .. , .. , •tatt '
•Pat Nixon will le8ve S1n Clemente
f<>< Washingla\ wt, week 14 meet with
a sroup tllat is. cocirdina.Una private
cootributioos to .Jlelp ·Peru l'tlCJWtr. from
its disastrous earthquake. ' •.
nedy for her glamorous image, Lady
Bird J~JOn for her effcrts to improve
Uie environment. ~
• Tholl\•t K, • .,;1
"'~ 1 The First Li\<IY. who returned .14 ill!' fami!Y home here Tueoday olld a tJine.
day mercy mtsskltt to Peru, will report
on her trip' anf ·~de Information
But none had ever tried such a peraon-
loilUIOll· mercy mjS&!Olj " human oon-
cern and diplomatic side-effect.a.
Even Penr:'s exotically beauUful ·fir$t
lady, Consutla Velasco, had only viewed
the dramatic devastation high in the
Andes from a helicopter.
Thom•• A. Mu,phl"'•
M .... j,,g !dJlot
Rich1r4 r. N.n
Soillll Otl"ff C..,.,!y EdftW
Offict't
CAifl1 Mae, JJO Well l!IW Slr«I ,......,. •t«ll: 2Jll Wtsl 81lllo1 8owll'fl,.,
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on current relief needs in 'Peru. ·
Giving the report her&el! will be just
another eiamp~ ol her personal touch
that was particularly evident when she
traveled to earthquake-ravaged Peru.
During the lhree<lay trip, abe delivered
nine tons fl relief suppUes and displayed
Ameri<:U hearUell· sympo11ty f<>< the
thoosands of Peruvian lndians who
&Urvived lhe dlsllta'.1
And sfle !Jrouihl ba<;k tile m-e
that Americans must continue to help
the 80,000 refugees to . re~uild their
homes.
The Peruvien misaion came about rrom
a discussion wlth her hus&and on June
20, ahortly after the disaster.
"l talked about the gttal desttucUon,"
r.trs. Nixon recalled. "I really wished
I could do something. 1 Aid I'd like
to make lhe trip down."
"Fine. Why don 't you!" ahe said her
husband rm>lled. So oho did six days
liter.
Other first ladies.have attracted world
attention -Eleanor Roosevelt for her
eood deeds and {'Jacqueline Ken·
Biit when-Mrs. Nixon decided to see.
first hal'll! the destruction, the two flrst
ladles flew in a C·l30 Air Force car~o
plane to a abort dirt runway high in
the Andes.
"! don't think any First Lady has
ever been in or out of any airstrip
remolely .like tllat,". said AJr Force
Genera.I Vernon Walters. 1.ln. Ni.loo's
intupreter. "I think you've' flown a com-1 bat mi~lon. You lhould get combat
pay," h• told the First Lady. '
From there, the two women helicop-
tered over the vaUey to Huaraz, a
deva1tated town Of 20,000 where she
toured the nibble.tilled streeu. She spent
two hours there, getting .the story d
the disaster from the survivors.
"1 wanted to see the People," the
Presid~t's wife explained. "I think they
need all the encouragement they can
get . . . too olten they feel 1Jd Is lm·
personal."'
In Latin America where appearances
mean, so much. Mrs. Nixon added a
humane dimension to the 11Yankee" jm. •ae.
Democ rats Demanding More Money for Sc hools
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Demanding
more mo11ey for schools in exchange
for t.heir votes, Senate Democrats today
stymied pa51!3ge for the third straight
day of Gov~onald Reagal\s record
$6.59 bill ion state budget.
SeT"WJt.e Democratic Leader George
~foscooe said he Js prepared lo wait
indefinitely for Reagan to agree to the
swap.
"If it takes months, I'm ready lo
do it," lhe San Francisco lawmaker
told newsmen 'Ibursday nJght after the
Senate refused to a~e the ~~ding
package on the secood attempt. "I have
lo belleve we'll stand fast ." "'
But R.epublicans sch e du 1 e d •
reconsJ.deraUoo vote on the defeated bill,
for t.day. Sen. Fred Marler, (fl:Rod-
dlng), the Door manager C... H; said
he WU "opllmistic" of ga.irDg final
passage.
The Senate, m a ~13 vote, rejected
the upend.iture program five houri after
Robb to Be Arraigned
On Abortion ·Charges
Dr. Robert Cumming Robb of Laguna
Beach has been ordered to faee Superior
C.OOrt arraignment July 9 on felony abor·
tion charges.
The court date was set by Judge
Byron K. McMillan immediately after
the jurist reject.eel Thursday attorney
1.1oses Berman's arguments that further
prosecution of the Art <;olony physician
is unlawful since the same charges had
been dismis8ed by a municipal court
judge.
And .Judge McMillan al.so threw out
Berman's plea that the Orange County
Grand Jury was not qualified to indict
Robb because it did not truly represent
lhe cootmunity in te.mu of racial, social,
economic and religious f~.
Judge McMillan dellvereii:i his double
barroled ruling a(ter -lllllU<> <iessfully tried t.o hive him removed
from tile proceedincs • prejudiced
against his client.
Judge William S. Lee quickly rejected
that argument in a neighboring
court.room and eent Berman back to
Judge McMiiian for an equally speedy
rejecUon ol the arguments he filed la.st
Aptil 1. .
Dr. Robb, 67, ol 34567 Scenic Drive,
Da!'¥l Point was indicted by tile Grand
Jury· ori(OO'iles of inducing miscarriages
in thret women pat.ient.s.
The indictment revived the charges
that were dismi8sed by JI.Idle l,'aul Mast
who '1re" ~ alleaatitQ, °""'cl Santa ,
Ana Municipal Coort wltll tile ruling
that California's Therapeutk Abortion
Act or 1967 was uncomtitulimal.
the Assembly approved it on a 12-15
l10le.JLt.ak.S.21...o1es.to.paa.a.budiet-
in the upper houBe. .
GOP leaders considered sending an
ambulance for bedridden s'en. lliehard
J. Dolwig of Atherton, but decided
against-Ille-plan. They thoughl-ll-mtghl
enootrage a Democrat to switch bis
vote.
A compromise versi~ of the budget ·
written by a second conference com~
m.ittee proposed •102 million more for
schools and certain guarantees in state
financing that Democratt: also demanded.
Specifically, the compromise says the·
slate will pk:kup additional welfare costs
to counti~ cau~ by increased
case.loads. ll also provides that any
mooey vetoed out ot the budget by
the governor woold revert to the state
ICboo! fund.
But _Moscone noted the language does
not force the adminl.stratioo 14 ap<nd
the. money. He said that could take
another appropriation . bill unleu such
a mandate is written into the budiet.
The spending program compromise
also guarantees the 190,000 s l a1t e
employes, who went to work as usual
during the budget impasse, will be paid
along with any other debts the stat.
rang up while il was budgetless.
The situation was nearly Identical to
last year, only then it was usembly
Democrats who demanded and got more
money from Reagan in the budget after
a three-day holdout. '
Thi~_!~~t"· S~ate Democr1ts want-. at
least aIKMer $11 million (Or hard"i)ressed
~I districts, <md aay their real goal
1.s $282 million in new aid.
The majesty of the Mediterranean
is captured in Henreden-'s
eapri
SUMMER SA LE
featuring Henr1don', C.pri
This fabulo us collection of Henredon's furniture
to include din ing, bedroom & occasionaJ, all at sale prices.
Drexel Furniture is oUering their famous Esperanto collection at.
substantial savings.
Heritage is reducing its exciting Madrigal collection.
Henredon, Herllage &: Drexel will also affer their outstanding upholstery at substantial savings.
Lamps, pictures and accessories will also be available at reduced prices.
•
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
7tJ• "
NEWPORT BIACH
1727 Wfftcllff Dr" 642·2050
OPEN .fRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
'rofes1ion1I Interior
O.slgnert AYlllable--.AJD-NSID
LAGUNA llACH
34! North CMtl Hwy. 494-6551
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 ...... felt ,... ...... °'9119 c..., .... ,,,,
I
11
I
I
·1
SAWDUST FESTIVAL ARTISAN WORKS BEFORE. A SOMEWHAT SKEPTICAL AUDIENCE
150 Artists-ind Cr1fts-men-fo-E-xhibit Their Work July 17 • Aug. 30 in Fourth Annual Event
Sawdust Festival Informal
Creative Freedom , No Adniission at Laguna Event
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of tllt Daily "191 ll1tt
Creative freedom, a casual atmosphere
and no admission charge are the un-
derpinnings of Laguna 's.rustic Sawdust
Festival.
The six-week artistic showcase that
takes its name fr om Its informality begins
July 17, marked by sawdust along the
walkways, and unu~al displays of art
and landscaping to complimet"lt the ex·
hibi ls of mo re than 150 artists from
the Laguna Beach area.
"We want to stress ingenuity this year.
All our artists are asked to be really
groovy in setting up their booths," says
Peg Smith, publicity ci>ordinator for the
fourth annual Sawdust Festival, held one
block from the Festival of Arts grounds.
"The essence of the Sawdust Festival
is creative freedom. Other festivals have
many restrictions. but we are a:;
unrestricted as the city fathers will
allow ."
A big feature al this year's festival
will be a large windmill, painted with
brigh t colors, and boasting of six-foot
blades. The windmill is sure to be a
landmark of the exhibition.
It is also reported t.hat the panels
that blocked the view of U1e Sawdust
Festival last year from the roa d, will
not be around this time. All of the
dividers in and around the grounds,
Capjstrano-Laguna Ready ·
F ?rOccupationalPrograpi
The Capistra~Laguna R~giona1 Oc·
c:upalion Program will be able lo enroll
its first studenl!I this fall, Mrs. Jane
Boyd told fellow members of the Laguna
Beach School Board this week.
Plans for the program lo equip high
school graduates not planning l.o attend
college with "employable skills'' have
been moving swiftly and the joint board
decided last week lo open its first course,
trainirig for healtll aides, by September.
· The e<.>urse will train 24 high school
seniors and other young adults in need
of job training witll classwork and ex·
perien~ that will qualify them for work
as :school and home health aides. hospital
nurse 'aides, ambulance attendants or
orderlies.
It will be conducted with the coopera-
tion of South Coast Community Hospital ·
and the Beverly Manor Convalescent
Hospital in Capistrano Beach. wbere on·
the-job training will be provided, Mrs.
Boyd said. By the beginning of the second
semester, a second course in quantity
food preparation "·Ill be added, also open
lo 24 students of both sexes.
This will be conducted at the central
kitchen of the Capistrano school district
and commercial food enterprises that
enter into training agreements for the
m-ogram .
-High school senklrs enrolled in the
program will remain at their regular
classe!, attending ROP training three
hours a day for 17i·days, Mrs . Boyd ex-
plained.
As time goes on, she said. training
in addjtional vocational fields \\'ill be
offered, with emphasis on fields where
jobs are available in the £ounty. Even-
tually, each course will have its own
advisory committee of expe rts.
The two districts each V.'ill levy l'I
one-cent permissive tax to help launch
the program, roceiving additional slate
aid on the basis of average daily at·
tendance (ADA ).
The Laguna and Capist rano districts
. are tht: first in the county to initiate
their own Regional Occupat ion Program,
as approved by the State Board of
Education. A ~ time director for t_hc
program will -tJe hired, l\1rs. Boyd said,
as soon as plans are a'pproved by the
state board, an action expected by J uly
•• The joint board fonned to plan and
operate the program is made up or
two trustees from each of the school
districts.
A state-financed c o u n t y w i d e oc·
cupational tra ining program is in the
planning stage and it is expected that
the Laguna.Capistrano joi nt program
may eventually be able to participate
in some of its vocational offerings, but
for lhe ti me being. according to Mrs.
Boyd, the emphasis will be on IOcal
needs and job opportunities.
Huntirigton Beach Youth
Winner of Angel Contes .t
Christopher Rideout Is "n 8-ycar-old,
freckle-faced boy from Huntington Beach
who avidly reads lhc DAILY PILOT
sporlfi pages .
!Je \wants nothing more than to be
11 profe ssiona l baseball player some day.
And he'd like to mecl Cali(ornia Angels'
lefl fielder Alex Johnson while he"s
"'ailing to gro\v up enough lor fa te
to place him In the big league lineup.
Next \Vednesday night he'll gel part
of his Wish.
The Jetter Chris wrote was declared
the winner in lhe Early Bird Bonus
coJ1test presented by the DAlL V PlLOT
in conjWlclion with the newspaper's 2-lor·
1 Nile.
As "'inner of the "bonu1,'' Chris, (If .
21002 Ocean Ave .• gets four tickets for
some future home game of the Angels,
a baseball autographed by the Angels
pla~r:s and -best parl of all -· a
chance lo meet his f11vorile Angel before
the gan1e next \\"cdnesd;iy e\'ening a~
Anaheim Sladium.
Lcltcrs lro1n thr ee other Oran~e Coast
area bo~s -t"·o of them brothers -
were selected by judges for runner-up
honors In lhe Early Bird contest.
E::ich or lhe three letter-writers will
receive two tlckeli to future Angel games _
or their choice. The runner$·UP are:
-Honnie Pear!lfin Savago. IO. of 330
E. 16th St., Co3la l\·lesa. He selected
shortstop Jim Freg(lsi as " ..• a great
baseball player and a really cool guy ."
-Karl JacobsoJ1, 10, of 10192 Valley
forge Drive, Huntington Beach. ltis
"favorite Angel" was Chico Ruiz, picked
by Karl ror his ability lo ''come off
the bench Ice cold Lo pinch hit and
come through wlth a base hit."
-Karl's brother. Keith. 7 1 ~, of the
same address. He selected Ale x Johnson
for. among other reasons, being " ...
a good sport. He doesn't get mad when
he strikes out."
Judges selected the letter written by
Chris Rideout on the basis of its apparent
sincerity, because or its simplicity and
its originality, Here is the e1Ure text
of the letter:
"My favorite Angel Is Alex Johnson
because. I like to set (sic )..._on the third
base line and watch him.
"Jle is a good left flekler apd he
hil.s good, too.
"And I lhink he like.~ kids."
Chris will attend the gaml!: with hi111
across.the-street neighbors, Mr. and f\trs.
Guy R. Smith, and his mother.
The Smiths hive otltn Laken him,
she added. Chris said he wants lo repay
his good neighbors.
"Now that I have won four tickets,"'
he sald, "I'm golng to lake Cuy end
Secky tthe Smiths) to a ball aan1c."
will be constructed this year so as not
to block the view.
Wandering minstrels will provide-music
during the fes tival run . It is hoped
that spontaneous music will also spring
up from the artists who are exhibiting
at the show. Visitors wiU also be en-
tertained by a number of potters at
work, a glassblower, several jewelry
craftsmen, and artists who will draw
on-the-spot sketches.
Various exhibits will di splay works
in oil, water colors, leather work.
photography, collage, wood and metal
sculpture, weaving, batik, and mosaics just to name a few.
Artists will begin work at the festival
si te July 6 and will continue to make
read y for the opening a week and a
half later.
Concluding the Sawdust Festival on
Aug. 30, will be an art auction of works
thal have oot been sold. The funds
raised will be donated to !he new Boys'
Club facility in the canyon.
Ne\v Surfer Ouh
Forming for
Laguna Youths
Young Laguna Beach surfing ~n-1 thusiasts will have a chance-10 compete
"'ilh ITl(lre than the Art Colony surfing
crowd this summer. '
The Boys' Club and tl1e city Recreation
Department are forming a surfing club
for boys 12·14 to spur competition on
the waves between young Lagunans and
their counterparts in other coastal cities.
An organizational meeting of the new
club is schedu led for Thursday. July
9, at 7:30 p.m. in the new Boys' Club
facility on Laguna Canyon Road. All
12, 13, and 14 year old surfe rs are
invited to attend.
Plans for a surf meet be~ween Laguna,
Hermosa Beach, and Manhattan Beach
will be discussed. The night. before the
tourna ment all contestants will have a
sleep-in at the Boys' Club with movies
and supper.
The following morning they 'll be up
bright and early for t.he competitfbn.
No date is set yeL
Surfing rilms are also slated for the
first meeting.
Lutherans Take
Sex Act Stands
MINNEAPOLIS CAP) -Delegates to
the biennial convention of the Lutheran
Church Jn America have adQpted a policy
statement saying that divorce may be
preferable to unhappy marriage.
In closing their eight-day meeting
Thursday th ey also condoned birth coJl-
lrol and abortion, and urged that
homosexuals be treated justly and with
understanding.
The statement on sex, famil y and
n1arriago put the LCA on record,
however, against sexual l11lercourse
before marriage or .adultery by married
couples. The statement was the product
of five years of study by the LCA's
Doard of Social Ministry.
British OK Pensions
For Octogenarians
LONDON (UP I) -Britain's new Con-
servative government. in Its first move
to carry out an election promi6C , today
Introduced legislation into Parijament to
give state retirement pensions to Britons
..over the age of 80.
The bill affected a dwindling number
of the counlry's oldest citizens, estimated
to number about 125 ;000. They were
too old to qualify for tbe normal slate
retirement pension plan when it was
introduced In 1948.
....... -r
Fr{dly, Ju~ J, 1970 L DAILY Pri:OT .,,,
Really ·Small World
AFS. Sfittdents Meet Old C.ountry Pals at Disneyland
For tw(I or the more lban 40 American • • Fil!:ld Service students who are staylhg
1n the Laguna-, Beach.San Clemen le area,
en route to Denver, Wednesday's trip
to Disneyland brought home just a little
~!Oser.
It came as quite a surprise when
J1assan .Quseily, student from Finland,
happened to run across an old soccer
buddy who Is visiting the United States.
while w3lking down ooe ·of the streets
oC the Magic Kingdom.
Later. almost in a matteN>f·fact way,
Barbara Bristow. fr.)m Australia on the
AFS Program, met two of her Australian
schoolmates at one or the Disneyland
attractions.
It was a thrilling experience-the two
stud"ents reported, for them to see a
glimpse or home. while st.ill thousands .
of miles away. Jn a way, it was 1
preview or the day when they arrive
In their native countries, after spel)d.ing
this year in America.
Young Ouseily and Miss Bristow were
among 4.2 American Field Service
studePts who have been spending the
past ye/t in lhe San P'rancisco area,
9n th~ ~xchange pr_ogra!Th......__.
The student groap now is en route
to Denver, Colorado, where the Western
AFS ~nference will be held before the
fore ign studcnl!I leave for New York.
From the gateway city, the students
wllldepii't to their native lands.
While in th~.-~guna Beach and San
Clemente areas, the-students were taken
(In tours of the San . OOOrre nuclear
power plant, the Mission at San Juan
Capistrano and the Dana Point Marina.
The AFS'ers also tried Tuesday to
get a peek at the President, by w.alking
down the beach from Cyprus Shores,
which borders the Western White House,
but all they got was a good look at
the chief executive's estate.
While al Disneyland Wednesday, the
foreian group was thrilled by the famous
Bob'!leds. held in awe by the "Pirates
of the Caribbean." and wildly tossed
on the "Mad Teacups," making the day
an instantaneous hit.
Saddlehack Begins
Summer Session
Saddll!:baek College begins its six-wetk
:summer session Wednesday, the first
such session for the young community
college.
Registration ror the 87 classes to be
offered during the day and ·evening prtr
grams commences Monday and CQntinues
to Wednesday; the first day of classes.
D.\IL T PILOT lleft' l'lltll
AF$ GATHERING -Ian Cailhness of South Africa, Rosanna Rost-, . .,
agno of Italy a:nd Karen Cutkomp of Thfee Arch Bay, California, talk
things over before heading to Disneyland. ,;•
Pyro1fchnics Illegal
In Laguna Says Chief . "
" .
Laguna Beach Fire Chief Jim Latimer
today reminded Art Colony resldent.s •
and visitors that a local ordinance bans
the use (If fireworks within the city
limits -und that includes Fourth of
July celebrants.
The fact !bat firework s are sold and
ma y be used in several surrounding
communities and county areas com-
pounds the problem, Latim er -6aid.
"Tilere a're several brush fireS every
year in and around Laguna, Sl!:t off
by fireworks," said Latimer, •:along wilh
fool injuries after the Fourth, when
bcachgoers step on discarded wires from
fire"·orks set off on the sand."
"Safe and .sane " fireworks are not
Jllegal on adjacent county beaches, the
chief saJd, J>ut cherry bombs and other .
imported fireworks containing e1plolivea ··:;
are banned ev'erywhere, for 1a£&&'f1 reasons,
Military Plans
U.S. Pullouts
HONOLULU {AP) -To" " ;•1tary
.strategists meet here for flv• ::igm.
nlng 1'.1onday .to ·plan l!" :s of
WiUilraWing -50,000 men i~nam ."•:
by Oct. IS. Such a w: .I would '
reduce.the level of U.S. fo, ~ _ lJ 384,000. \
The con(trerice, announced Thurlliiay · ·
by Adm. John s. McCain Jr., Paclfic ' ,
military commander, fol lows Preskient •
Nixon's "June 3 announcement concerning •.
additional U.S. troop deploymenb from
Vietnam.
This is one way out of povea I y.
But, l.ke every shortcut, il's a long.
shot.
A man's real hope-is-to learn:-He
needs the basics !hat will get him o
oecenl {ob. •
A g1oup of Gos Company employ·
ees hove \lolvnleered to help. They've
joined volunteers from· other busi-
neMes working at the South Gentrol
Los Angeles Service Center. Other
Gos Company people ore helping at
ervice--centers--in East Los Angeles
and Venice.
They work evenings, teaching .
Business English . Ari)hmetic. Anything
that will help somebody gel a lob.
And ·1hey'll leach anybody who
wants to learn.
Gos Company people don't g•I
any pay for this work. Exce pt sotisfoc..-r
tton. Bui they believe ·
chance.
that everybody ought. 6
to have a fighting
~~~~ ggg w.·,. "'°'"''"'Mt ......... ., ___ •
••
-
lloll.l"fUT
• The Kolhapur. India distri'ct ma;i-
lslrate drafted JM poU-Mav-
day night to drive a.o elephant
named Barchi B•hadur back to his
stable. Barchi, a prize possession
of the Mabarajoh of KoUiopur,
threw off hit Mollmout driver wbila.
being taken w a pond Monday frJr
• bath. The elephant then roamed
tile dcy''• .,_, •mashinf • rid<-
shaw ond a scoottt, !"!'Piing a pow-
er pole and knocking down fruit
italls. • A MWni-boy named Donlll!y.
who says he has gotten into several
fights becaun of bi> mme, was
1entenced Friday to twomontllJ in
fail fur hitting a man named Cash.
Miami Municipal Judie Ar1flur Hut·
tN passed sentenu on Do....ity L.
Woo4ward Jr., 19, lft.er·Woodward
wu convicted of strikfnc Jame.s
CuhJ .usistant prilldpll of AIJapal·
tah Jomtor Hilth School. Hu&e Hid Woodward, who was not a student
et the IC!tool, .,., vts!JJn~ a itrl·
friend at the tbne of the fithl. •
• A judce ..m.nced a U-yMr.old
for the BritUb Broad· ~.(BBC) Tuesday to sir
moallll 111 pritool frJr boardiJIJ more tblll 40,000 lelten to the BBC over
tbe PNI two yun. A lawyer for wmr-Nowlot' told the court New·
by .....m no harm •ad simply liUd
collacllllf tlllnfl. A ,P.<ychiatrilt't report to the court llid Newby bad
an "ovtl'Uvelapad <Ollectint tn· stbx:t .• ,. • Dw1nl J.tonday nltht'• Dade
CIJ¥, ""·· city commutlon -hie. IOllllbody no!leal the City Hall
dnlJlll! ·.ii1eu. A fellow 1moldnt a ~ W lnadvertedly touched hit .. to Uie curtain&. Water wu totHd on the drapes and nobody
"91 lllJund .. The fellow witlt the ~ WU Dada City Fite Chit! ltiil ~ ••
--
,..,, ...,, J, 19»
'Honor America' Festival Set HEW Cuts
•
.
But LeftUu· Score Rally as 'Right Wing Political Slww' 3 Schoo'ls'
U.S. Funds 9t''lw: 'PIOAID,_
'ftle..a.crtt 'rill .......
f I ., 1rill 6t ii M t ,._.~
............... ...,. ....... t
-..; .... II W: 'I ,. • D.C., .._ e ts fll. ,.._ .e 11m1q _._.,a 1x0.,ltlllelll&.
Spw , i 4 _. ,•a Edna DI)' 1lf>o ...... et • 2 DOii... ,,..__,__•
..,j • . • _,, --ald - -M a.e. ..c· tr tllat
_ ............. , •• ! ......
lay ii z sz.W _, fatrietlc •• fr•1te.._ •• ..,_
Glils' " Ws ¢I .. •• .,. Gile a.or ~csrjn.lzd r 1 ¥ Day «IWlr:a-
W. " • 17-cs hilt ....,,,.. h
l.W pm --Yori< Ci1r; a
-... - --Jlid,. ...._ Va., _, a me.-•rt •:wie r1.afc ___ ,.._
_, ·--.-. ioc JSO .._._..,.._llle=:T ... , ------"""' fl.* er '•7.
c::.rm..: ... • • --, s w:e Yrtdly. ,_,. AnTia U., II mt ,_. ....... _, .... « D iras -
or R; tMdsn , • ltlem « .wte. lt ilal.t•t1rtv.•
A.,...Wt. i ......... .....,I
the nationf with church bells chiming,
train : whistles blu1ini and motorists
•r4ieg dletr .._ at tl e.m. 1eeal
............. by .. Hanor-._ ..--·· BoY Scouts ~in Virginia, carrying an
A·merican nag on a baton, were running
from Williesburg to the natieut
..,;111. ,..,., ...... It ....... -
Gr-. -nticU IUvices a the Lincoln Memorial. Hope wiH lead
the activities, including a stage show
eod fireworks display.
Special ...... •• ..... """""led '"'fmn Catilomia tt ....... ta Ha•aff,
the nation's youngett slate, an Honor
America-parade-will-M held-at.-Waikik-i.-
'l'h< pwade -· -Qlie, ... . "dwe will be 1IO ..... , ..... .
jUll li>IJ." .
Maine Gov. Kenodb M. Curtis hu
procWm<d "Opor•llon Patriotl"!l" for
MW USA, Debbie Shelton, pulls back her hair as Miss Germany,
Irene Newmann, watchel on their arrival in Miami Thursday for the
Mill Uaivene pageant. The new Mis s Univer1e will be selected July
11 at Miami S..Cli.
2 p.m. Saturday, aot<mg the otat<'1 ""'·
dents to "join with their. fellow Arneri-
<W lo •....... ol --· --i~ .. Iha commaa bleMloi or citizen·
ship."
SEATO Assails
McGovern 'Equal Time'
Rejected by N ~tworks
N. Viet Action
In Uimhodia
NEW YORK (UPI) -'Ille n1tioo'1
tfitte te\eviflllbn networts plan to prestnt
procrams offeriJlf v&riolll viewpOinltl on
foreip: affair!, but they 'lll'tW1't atve Sen.
Georp 8. McGov.,.n (().11.D. ), equal time
MANILA CAP) -'Ille Soulheut Ali• to respotld lo Prelldtnt Nillon'• plan
Troety Orjllliutl<lft today eoode!1IOl!d fbr peac•.
Nortll v-.... '"'"'·~· ....... In "~' ~ Tilt ntlworb -ABC, CBS and NBC ~ Mid -an ..-. -.~. ....... ... u--· .•. I • . ...__.. -,, __ y ..,.,.._ ,-em• -
•r.•a Co di,,__..: efforts to,...._ mand for time to a:Pbln the "amend-
_. tltlre. Bot It olf«ed m mlllW)' m<nt f« <ndfnc the wor" he fa co.
lid to ·111e bdolcuered ~-I _...;n,withlWtO.Hltfield(R-Or•.)
.... N11811,·IBl>ilc-fo!U~ Nbmn -"1 W-y nltlt In
.,...,..... a "conversation" with tenior newantn
A _...,.. lmued It Ille end d from Iha n11wms In Loo AftP8.
!loo ltd!-.!. mr""" el tho ll1lilnce'• llcGavem chorpd the Pmldenl, during t'OllllCil ol n• 1141n W1ICf a ''political the P'OV'"1· wu "ch.uine tbe ume IOI!•'--.. • Clmbodla'• closire lo ltkttlom that have bedevu..I us In
n ''Etsb Ml.,...,._, .S DMrdty." louthellt AU hr to years."
1111 ootDll"'Q'" -= ..... lie .tfor1I 1-lard H. Goldmlon, pre1idenl el
o( • -" to ~·boll! AmoriclJI Broadcaatfnc Compuia Inc., • diplolnalic •-Md f1111ul tP! A!IC Newa wW pr-• prim< oldfotelp"-from~. llmo prosran nnt Monday fe&Ulrlng
Tht llC!l'ftlry.....,.l al the .u11nae, o.nocraUc National Co m m i t t t e
J..,. Varps, fold ..,......., Ille Cam-Chairman Lawr111ee F. O'Brlm, Sfrl.
badiln pa111""' bid -m ~ Edmund s. Mutlile <D-Mainel, and !lop. for mitliary help from SEATO, and Henry 8. lleuu CO.Wis.)
"there Ir not1io1 SEATO can do -,.,,_ three dlrllo1u1Jhed m<mbm
•• Wiit r..,.et Owhocll'• nMrattty." ol the Democr1tie Party will have the
C.0-. Ir not a member d die _.wnKy lo ~ their polnll of
al-. "'1lcll -the United viw on the Important ltru<I ol the
81afa, 'l1ialllad, the Pblllpplnea , dty," GddarllOll Mid In a lelelflln. to
Pl.ltJJtan, Aurlr11la New l'aland, Brl~ McGcwom. Ht ai. tPl Iha network
aln and Fronct. 'The SEATO tr•aty hu pr-CotJtrUllnJ viewpolnll on
maka aid aplnat ......... avall1ble rubjectl NllDll dflcutlod.
to Cambodla, 1-and llouth Vietnam, R<lhert V. Evins, vice pr<1ldMll and
but they havt to uk ff.if' JL. 1eneral cou111tl cf Columbia · Br01d· ~ ol &tile William P. Ropn cllllnl Sy .... Inc. uld McGoven1'1
told tlie del<pta Thursday tho Unlled r~ did not "qltllify undll' Ille equal
6~ does not fav« l!ATO mltitary oppor1wllty provlrlon" d the Federal
--lo c.-. Communlcatlolll At! .. _ tlial pr ..
vision is _limited to Political candidates.''
Ev11t1 said ~ had attempted to
inlerview McGovern an the subject of
Nixon's appearance, but was informed
the Senator was unavailable .
He further said in a telegram to
McGcve rn that Sen. J . William Fulbright
([).Ark.), a leading antiwar Senator,
would appear Sunday on the CBS news
interview broadcast "Face the Natin."
Evans also said Sen. Frank Church (0-
ldaho), appeared on a June 30 broadca11t
that examined the Cambodian situation
and expressed hi s views on constitutional
responsibilities ct the President.
And NBC President Julian Goodman
said the network has scheduled a one-
OOur program next Thur&clay for a
discussion or issue.!! relating to the
Southeast Asia war, including the
McGovern•Hatfield amendment.
"Spokesmen for different points of view
will be invited" for that pro_gram. Good-
man ,aaid in a telegram to McGovem.
"tn view of the sctieduling of th.is
special program and the other op-
portunities that have been afforded in
recular and special prugram1 foe pre&en-
tation of varying point.. of view on
dltle iJlue& ... we re~pecUully decline
your request."
Ex-slave, 128,
•
Kno ,ws History,
Was Part of It
W ASlllNGTON (AP) -To one vewu
IJlllw&r orpnlzer the July Fowth
"Honor ~· estrav11anza lo the W ABlllNGTON (UPI) _ HE w
nation'• capital "l•·tlie kind ol thlni -..,. EUlot L. RldJardoon. afler
that took place lo Hitler'• Germany." only nine day1 lo olflc&, hat onf•..t
"It'• all there -folkrole , ~ fedmol funda cut oil lo tl1m Southern
politics, jUll Uk• Nu! Gmnany. Jt'1 ~.::::.~for lailinf lo de!<lr'l!at•
tci.ry,'" Stewart Meacham ~y1, "lt '"I'hit ii a veey decisive action on
really is." / . the PM't ci Mr. Ridwdaon," said one
M .. cham'a edvice .lo the left ' HEW civil ri...,. olflclal at the Deport· monl ol Healtll, F.ducallon and Welfare. ''Stay away from It. Any attempt to But od:ier HEW· aoorcee: denied that
get into it makes it more: lnt.enttlng tf>e move indicated the department was
and buik!s it." .ti.if' Generally, the organlud loll seem• . liog "1\jlhuia fr<m court action lo
lo he following Meacham'• OOUJl!ef and ::i. cutdft lo achieve sdlool ~··
ii ignoring the eveirt. Ricbardson, who pnxni9ed at a news
But no one can aafely predict the · a>nference June :s that he woukl use
reacilon ol the ditorpnized felt -that In "-Ille'' cws Ille cutdf pro-
• collection ol ra,ia1 revolulloa.ari"· Yip. cedure Widely Ulled durn. the Jolnon
pi .. , p01fllcized hlppiea and lllreet people admlnittralfon, taXI 'lbunday he wooJd
who band toge\btr under names like maintain communications with the three
While Panthers, Jhe Up.Agafnll.th .. Wall, Soutl!Enl districts in hopes d bringing
the STP. .. them lnlo compllance.
"There's a kit of people coming,'' Affected by the order are the Hendry
said a tall young man with long brown County Board of Public Instruction in
hair and a sleeping bag strapped to hi1 La Belle. Fla.: Chester County Schools
back. "And there's going to be a lot in Chester, S.C., and Naoogdocbe3
of political-disagreement. 11 · I~ SctiOol -D 1 s tr l c t in
-To the far left, the organized , the Nacogdocties, Tex.
unorganized and the d i.s organized Until Thursday's fund cutoff was an·
segments incl uded, the produCtion featur· _ nounced. HEW had used the procedure
ing Bob Hoe and the Rev. Billy Graham only once since the administration an·
is a political thoW, pure and simple, nounced In July, 1969, ~at it ... ouJd
and a right·wing one. at that. rely mainly On courl suits to force
"It's a diigraceful exploitation of desegregation instead of cutoffs.
religicn by an administration using this The action was announced on the tame
kind of thing as a means to prep it.self day that Sen. Walter F. Mondale (D·
up,'' s a Id Meacham , a Minn.), accused the Nixon adminislralion·
former Presbyterian pastor who helped of "Statistical gimmjckry" -in claimina:
build last November's mal!ive antiwar that one million black &dlool dlildren
demonstration in Washington. in the South will be enrolled in integrated
Originally, Abhie Hoffman planned to ldxlcl systems In September.
call the nation's Yippie tribes to the Moodale, chainnan of a aelect Senate
capital for a "Festival of Lile" on the committee on equal educatifJllll ~
Fourth. portunities, 1ald in a statement that th•
But after "Honor America" Day was administration failed to aay hovt many
announced Hoffman canceled hlJ hap. ldloolJ are de!egrea:ated in ead1 dietrict
pening. One close aasociate explained, classified as desegregated « whether
"Abbie thought it would be a mll5aCJ'e," &ehools clauilied 'U-inteerated "AN
Anotl'ler tource said tbe decision wu 60mett1ln1lea1ban 99 percent black."
political and would havt been made
with or without "Honor America" Day.
Rennie Davis, another of tile Chicago
7 conspiracy trial defendants , made a
spoofing attempt to get the an·
tiestablishment included on the Honor
America Day program.
He proposed, among other things, that
poet Allen Ginsberg, a New. Left guru,
be given equal time ;.vith Billy Graham .
and that the Walhincf.on Monument be
1loshed wilh a many-colored coat of
washable paint for the occasion .
Davis didn 't" push his suggestions for
Jong or very loudly. He hid anothu
ptJf"J)Ol!:e in mind~ "We wanted to llhaw
it up as the right-wing thing that it
is. Now the hell with it," he uid.
Soviets, Ai'abs
Study Re,quests
For Armaments
MOSCOW (UPI) -Th< top.rlllldo1
soldier• and diplomats of Egypt and
the Soviet Union today worked on details
of further Soviet military aid to the
Arabs, with possible guidance: from the
Communist Party Central C',ommittee,
diplomatic BOurces said .
Wh ile Pfesident Gama! Abdel Nasser
of Egypt relaxed and had medical
checkupa for his clw-onic sciatica and
diabetes, the aources said, two sub-
committees of military and diplomatic
experts negotiated the details of hi!
requests for warplanes, mll!Jlile1 and
m1npower .
The central committee is the ultimate
authority or the Soviet party and it
met '111ursday for the first time thla
year. The officially published purpo1e
was discussion cf plans to booat
agricultural production.
'
Abrams Surgery
Said Success;
Recovery Starts
SAIGON (AP) -G«I. Creiihlai W.
Abr-ams, commander ol all U.S. forcea.
in Vietnam, underwent surgery this
morning for removal of his gall bladder
in a U.S. military tioepital in Japan,
the U.S. Command 1Mounced. AbramJ
is 55.
"The operation was oompletely suc-
cesslul ," the aMouncement said. "Gen.
AbtMl!I Is re c e I v i n & riormal
poe;toperative care am ia makinc" good
progress in hit recovery from tM
surgery."
The surgery had been &ebeduled for
some time, and Abrams entered the
hospital in Japan two d11ys 1110. the
atatement added.
The ccmmand &aid Abl'tanls will return
to Saigon after a convalescent leave.
Mrs. Abrams and three of the couple'•
dl.ildien, Bruce, 9; Jeanne, 16; and
Eliazbeth, 14, flew to Japan and wert
present at the hospital during the opera-
tion and will 1tay wilh the general
until he is released .
Abrams hi.a been the top commander
of U.S. forces in Vietnam since July
3. 1968. He terved as deputy commander
under Gen. Wtlliam C. Wettmorelarid
for nearly a year prior to moving into
Ill< top spot.
He pined a reputalion during W(lf'Jd
War JI as a tank commander and tented
in the U.S. 4th Annortd Division from
that time It was activated t,i lHl)untii
V·E Day In LM5. \ (
~
'
It's Hot Traveling East
BARTOW, Fl1. (UPI) -Old Charley
Smith iM.'t really sure his birthday is
Saturday, but the one time handyman
for Jene James knows for certain
be was first sold as a slave Oft July
••
Nixon Number I
• in Agne·w, Hope Teens' Top Ten
Neeilla Hiu 111; BlytM Night Low Jrut 91
r-peNlt•re•
Coutel
Anrllere"
a11,.,1re11
l "M
..,,~ "' .... Cl11dwt1
(l .... 11111111
°""''' °"'ell 1urt1t1
ir;Ott WMlll , ......
Ht!ttlli -
MfMiv111 -· .. t.4• v ....
MIR .... """ .... ... "
" " '°' ,,
N • " ..
11 " " " 100 ,.
N " ·• .. .. " .. ..
" " ·~ ~ " " ., 11
" 11 '°' ,, ti II
'' 11
Charley. wlzeaed and balding, will be
121 Sllurday. Th• yean &re by his NEW YORK (UPI) -II there were a rebellion a11ain1t the ••·
count: the date Is compUment• of the t.abliabment by the 1111tion'1 youth, it hardly could be determined by
federal government. the result& of a poll of teen·aa:ers. They picked Pre1ident Nlxon 11
Charley 11y1 he remembers when he their most popular American, and Vice Preaident Spiro T. Agnew
wa1 IZ years old he wa1 enticed abo1rd was 9th . ,
a wooden 11ailina: ·ahip not far from Mom and .dad cam~second and comedian Bob Hope ran
hl1 home ia What J11 now Libya and lh.ird in the 1urvey by the tronic computer programming in1ti·
brought to t~e United State.11. tute in which the closest thin to a hippie, yippie or rock 1inger waa
And he remember~ clearly that ll television star Bill Cosby.
was 1 July 4th -the United State11 Cosby placed 10th and last, and the only Negro named. wu only 78 then -when he was placed R I ed Th d h f on the auction block Jn New Orletni e eas urs ay, t e po I was conducted among 4,000 high
and Miid 11 8 sliveto 1 Texas rancher. school juniors and seniors throughout the country. They were aiked
"1 took the s•me name 11 him _ to list the 10 living Americans they mruit re1pected and were given
Charley Smith." th4' Ne-o aayi. "I 300 names of wclJ known persona in such fielda at politics, 1ports en· .,. tertainment and science. · ' worked and lived h1 his ranch house
I T Additionally thr taen1 were permJlted lo write in any livi nc n exas. · d' ,. "I remember when President Lincoln Amencan can 1dates oot on u1e list.
called freedom day Md 1 was fret," Besides parent•, other write-in 1election1 incJuded favorite
sajd Charley. "I .never war; treated Uk• teachers, who ranked 1i1th, ind "no choice" appeared frequenUy
a slave, though . t Jived In my dad's enough to give it seventh place.
I
I'
iUMIY ltf1Y, Lf9M \lilltblt wl11~t
l!ltllt el'ld mo•"lrit Plou" llKOf'l'llflt
Wl•l•IY • lo lJ •11tt1 H, tlllll',...<'I• t•tv l l'ld Slhlllt\I, Mltll fed.., 111.
Clrtt11t '''"""''~ .. ''" .. ,,.., " It IO, lflle<'ld IOf'l'l-•lu••t t11191 '""" ft It It, Wllft ,..,,,..,tllllf ...
Sun, Jlfoon, Tide•
fl•I04Y
'•~•r• thulMlt"lo'"'' '"II hltn w1nd1
IWtlll H f... ,..,,J_ (If lowt tflOll
110rtht rn lll!~t hllltf,
WI... 11.1'11 Uf te 11 "'llt1 Ht
l!oU1 tlrll(.k O• Me111tt Wiiii• twe
llHln•I ctoull1 ""''' •191111'11 '''' of 111to ell•. Wl"ft t~tll!ll 111 M 111!1u
H• ~r we•• coml'Nn 1cr11u 110rltotrn
lll!Mlt Inf ...... t ll 1'1111 l (COrf!Ptnlllll
IN thlll'ltlt•tlor1"1 In IM t••• .. Mtnf ,,_ •IMI ..,.,u"" ,,...,.. "wroM.
Ollirl' l~tot'll'll wtrl' l)(CU•rl111
Ml1"'I IMdt
Mlh11ellk ..
Ml1111t1 .. Ul
Ntw Orle1111
HM Vortl
0.kltlld
bmtht
,Ill ltOlllU
'orl1t l!l
lttd 11111'
lttl!fl
S•tfllfltlllO
SI. LNlt
" . " . .. " .... . " !OJ .. ....
101 ,. " -·~ ..
house Just like hil three boys and two The wiMera in order of popularity were :
lifldsaddl.d, •. Tha~s what ! ca_lled_M_r. .s,m"'l"'lh'-lf--1. President Nixon -2:-Pal'l!nt.~~~~~~~~
Charl•y lod•y •II• in hi• llltl• "•lore" 3. Bob Hope
where he Uve1 ind &t11la sofl dtlnk11 4. Astronaut Neil Armstrong
and recalls his p1s1. years In a sure ~. Sen. ~ard M. Kennedy
---·-·-->-+-
I
I A.TUI04V
•:»•"" '!
a:11 '·"'· t.1
,l'&I 111911 "'" , 11 :4 1-"'· JI
''''' low "'".. J:OI t fll. f ,I MtW "''" ......... 10·" ''"'' •.• SICW ltW J M'·"'· ,.J ... -11 ... 1•1 •"'· 11111111 • ..,,
lllM6 f:U 1.l'l'I. ltll t :40 ''"''
t trtHll I~ M!dWtll l lMI Grttl Lt lo.tt
•n "'-lll(ltlllY ti t !ronr11 '/'""' t •!-1"' fl'llolll M. I I Io u r It
"''" ... , ....... 1., f llll!'f •• , •• , .. , tul•
!fflod 111\lflcll .. "-t llMI' I~ I '°'11hHtl, •
Stir Lt-• Cltv S•n Olttt
l tll ,rtl!ClKJt ""1' ....... .
''''"' SJOll.t11t ., ..........
Wttlll!lfl"'
'
" " .. " ....
" " " . .... . " 101 li " ~
volct. 6. Teachers
"I didn 't read my history, I knew 7. No choice
fl," h< bouts. 8. Biiiy Graham
Charley 11111 •·•ars two bolls. On• 9. Vice PrHidenl Spiro T. A&new
holdt up his trou,.rr and tht othei 10. Bill C<l1by
ii where be ~ to wear ·hta cu.obeJL
·, (
. -·
I
/'
I
I I
t . -
-.
. San Clenienie . . . .
Capistran,o
-.
EDITION
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• •• • Dally Paper ·~
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ORANSE .COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • ' . . ' VOr: 63, NO. ·1ss, 4 SECTIONS, 34 ,PAGES FRIDAY, JtJtY-3,1 1970 · nN CENrS ; ' ~'--,-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-·~~~-·--·...,...,.~~-..,,...~...,.....,..~~~-·~·~'-'-1 ..,.--.'-'-·~~:
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Marine ' ' Held ••. J.
Ill Killiug
Wife
. .
Of San ·~· Clemente
-·· fl't . , ...... V1,.n.oT ~ lllrJ91'·~ i
'"' ·MAROARlT ,nn.11t, 5, STOCe'Uii'i'oit,l'OllltTR 11
~ M~j~Fireworks Shows
. . . . ' '
Nixon Sets
Envoy 'Meef -
ln Clemente
By RICHARD P. NALL
OI ftlt S»llY Plltl l .. tt
President Nixon is to meet in San
Clemente Saturday with David Bruce,
his new dllef U.S. negotlator at the
1taUed Paris talks on peace in Vietnam.
In his ll<lt .. d POSh to find political '
llOlution for the Indoch1na war, Mr. Nixon
has 981.d that Bruc:e, a veteran diplomat,
will have great flexibility in presenting
the U.S. poeition at Paris.
'11le Preaident hu express~ aatislao-
. lion with the . r•te of Vle~.Uon.
~ the SouUt Vietnamese grow strong
enough to defend ~emselves, ·the Pres!.
dent has 111ggeoled they will be a tougher
adversarJ for Hanoi at the conference
table than b the U.S.
'lbe North Vietnamese and Viet Cong,
however, thus far have replied to the
Pre1ident'1 appeal_ by in effect saying: f\rlt get U.S. Jroo!io'out of Vietnam.
A member ol 'the Viet Cong deleplt«i
~d the confer~ "can never ,make
any PfOil'al" until ihe U.S. acCept.11
Ille VIA ·Orinc """'. plio ...,.. pulll
American ~ 41111. • '
' 'J1)e Pres~ plollo .. partlc!Ipotian
lo~Dl)'-
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Allef .,. "' -.... W.llft .I/fain capped by his w_, lilbt
krrelgn polley claJocue on televm.,•tlle
President baa turned MtenUon 'to
dom .. tlc problems. D.fsio.-l.e Blt~s ·
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Probe Nabs·
Peiidlet()n
~ ,
19-year..old-
liy 'JOHN YAL TE11ZA
' Of "-o.Mr PllM Stiff !i,
> San Clemente police early today ar,
rested · a lf.,year-old Camp Pendletoa
Morine In the knH~ Md blud-~
of ~· CoN)le J,ynn Johnson, IO, tho
e>Pectant mother beaten and .stabl>od
to. death more tbll\ two weets ago: .... •• Marine Pfc. FrankWi Wayne MeµJno1 attached to Hudquarters Conipany, .se-
cond Battalion, Second lnlantry Tra!nlnl
R,eclmeri, , was booked on mufdei:
cbarges about 1 a.m. today arfu: men
~ two weeks of intensive investigation.
Detective Lt. Robert Muon and hii
padoeLLemird Goodwin arrested tho
Y9UAI terV~rnan at 12 :50 1.m. at aa
undl9cloeed apartment ln San Clemente.
, Th111 fir polfj:e uy !he young Marlnt
hu·r:nlde no1s1iatementa about. the case
, to o!flcen. and tho lntenalve probe lnto
the nae Is continuing.
• .Jobt101 In the po11....,..t ~.ln .U.~
... will be mll!lary aulho<IUeo !'! Qo!ol : ~·r•ho 114 .. Feodl-...,. •'</
11111' di'.;i.~ a;,,.;:a'... '
lbe ·~.' olfteeri\~ aclioit In tie ei• wtD ""latr Ill ci.w.'n bands;
It .... 'not ' it bftrn ' llled -' y Ip«:
" MeQlllo wtD be arT11ped en 14.00!IAY
or whether, an indictment charstnc mlirder ' will be llOUjhl thn>qb llla Oran~e Cowlty Grand Jury. '·
~o 'Light Up Orange Coast
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He met Tlluraday with top officials
ot the ()(flee of Budget and M1n11prnent,
Directl>( George,P. Shultz, Do(luty DI,....
tor Caspar W~r and Aasoclate
Director Arnold B. Vfeber.
· i., h1~·wife hi>tds silite'. James l!oog,on t~it~s <\a.ti!:ot ot!ic•'~• ~.,1: ·
.. dent Nixon.'s new ~~cretary1 011ab'or. Federal Judge Th"unnOrid"Clat,ke'
of NeWJlort, l!eech admlnistered .,oatlr al .office:'l'lJ .. d•Y'mprnq,R on ,
Jawn of .Western WlUJe Hotllle in San Clemente., HOdg&0a-was1 u~4r.
Police apant all day Tllursday ~C
warra~ tn the cUe, and ' lllll will
mount an · mtenilve aearCb tor thtet
critical lt•roa· In the eaae. ,. ·
The tmtf• IP<ld lul June II to slib
Mrs. JohnJOn atill ii m!¥1ng. '
·The wallet belonglng to .the IQ.yoar-ol(
wife of a Vietnam filer~ -waa 1not ..
f9und, by . police In btr a~ 11
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Si~ 1major fireworks !!hows will light
ap the· Orange Coast arta on July 4
from Seal Beach to Laguna.
P.yrvteclutic dlspLay• will be held at
Newport Dunes, lhmtington ,Beach pier,
Laguna Beach, .AnJiheim It a a I u m '
Disneyland and Long Beach.
See the Weekender aect.lon of today's
DAILY PJL<Yr for lurlher lnlormaUon
'I'h9: three were 1Wcrn-in•-alm( with
new 'J,abor SecrelafY James Hodpon
of Nortbrldge· Thunday morning on the
lawn outalde the J>fealdent'1 San 'Cle-
· Secretary 'of labor .prior 'to elevation. A former Northrictge rnident,
he w_as at one· tim'e vice presideht for industrial relation• for Lock·
heed. '
en local llr<works dlsp1'ys.
mente pfftce. · 4.11. Monttrey_Lane. .
MIS• SW• Jl y: n1'0 Other Independence Day activlUeJ In
1 "'° ' Orange County loclude the Huntington
Beach Independence Day Parade, now
Ca':Po H;ghl.ands in Its 16th year, 'the parade will take
"We are very proud, Ume of us who
are Californians, to ·h~ve the swearing
In cerern<11;les take place here," IEiid
the President.
The new OBM chlers were plucked
from ol.her federal poet.a to run the
new agency. Jt replaces the Budaet
Buteau and ts expected to combine
bud,\et.mlklntl with evalu1Uon of the
effectiveness of federal prc!gram1.
Couilcil1 'Ol{s Larger Site ·
And sev<nr other critical plecia cl!-
e.vid!JllC~ !!Ill! 114v• nol ""'1 localed.
Interviews of other polential w!"'-
and 10Urc11' ~ ~e ,,t11iiiil out of
t1'e state -will alao continue:, officer•~
aald. , , • ' place at II a.m. In a clrcular Youte,
f · from Lake Park to Main Street.
Ready for FOUrtll Kl)oll'1 Berry Farm wilt pre'°"t
•10peraUon Patriotlmt" at the park's For Packed Council Meets . , , ' , I J l ,
· Qetectiyea are now rpa~lne plans ·iq'
travel to Texas and poJslbly Ml('.hjpn1 Mrs. Johnl!Oll'I ~ atate,. to· talk .0:
(Seo SUSPECT, Pase I) 1 lndependettce Hall beginning at JO a.m, Mlasion Viejo and their nrilhborJ Actor gora DeFore will narrate a paaeant Aft.er lunch· Thunday, the Prealdent
held another domestic conference with
Shultz, White HOUie aldu H. R.
Halde111&11, John D. Ehrllchman. Robert
H. Finch and Donald llutnlfold, director
ol tho O!!lco ol l!oooomlc Opportunity.
acro11 the freeway at Capf.5tran0 depictlilg Jl acenes from American.
Hl&fllands are both planning a lively hiltory entitled "America the Great
Fourth of July. Ad nture " ' '
By BARBARA KREIBICll
OI Ill• Otllr PJlll Sltft
The Hijcb)anders will begin with a ve · par~ at 10 a.m. which will form at Santa Ana , ~ctJvltles Include. a 9 a.m.
With ,Laguna Beach City Council
meeUngs threatening to rival "Olivet'!"
and the Pageant of ·the Masters aa
crowd gatherers, councilmen thl.9 week
adopted an ordinance permitting legal
adjournment to I a r g e r quarters if
....... ry.
the~ of'Valencia and Ericson Wa;,;. parade down Ma1n street followtd by
The parade wlll 10 doWn Pike, right an addr• by Mayor Loren Grlset. .
on Own plain, left on Qlarlemagne, ri n.e fourth •Mu al '1City or Vlakrl
on ))eSale, left on Eartwt, lelt on Parade" in La Palma will feature a Laguna Senior
Robin Oliver
Going 4broad
Ericlon, right on Elm.rt, ri&ht on Lu fireworks dllplay at dusk. Buena Park'•
Bo1111: and left irM Tumin. BeUia Pm also hu a pyrotechnics
'1111 wetvinl bnt of pil'adel'I will display as well as Fullerton High School Jt was further agreed that a kr.id
!peaker should be Installed outside
the present council chambers to take
care of smaller overfl~ crowds.
end at Costeau Pll'k where games and al a p.m.
racea will taie.' pllce ~tween .1 ~ · A beauty cont.est will be ' he)d at 7
4 p.m. Those idterelted in parUcipating p.m. Jn Laguna Beach lifeguard .head.
In the games are asked to sign up quarter!, 17~ .N. Coast Highway. Miss
in~ ~Y baseball game for · Laguna Bc~ch LUeguard will be crowned
men Md women. will be played bet1"en at the Ind~ Day activities.
~ ' t • I • ' ' • Recent council meellngs con~e.rnig
urgency. ordlnallCe!l; housing lrispettlons
and other Items of particular interest
to reaidel)ts have ·*n attracting record
audiences to U\e ,meetl11.gs. 4 ~ 6:30 p.m., followed by a picnic m,,. Mid fireworb display.
In Miulon •Viejo the day Will begin
wltb an Orange Crate ·Deri:ry down La
P1& Road. •t JO a.m. folioo<ed by a
~1· picnic at ~ p.m. on UM!
dl1'11ll range at Mlaloo Viejo Goll ........ ~enl wlU be climu:ed by
ihe n-'" display. .
F,V.e~rks Blaze
I
lijts . Clem_,ente
~ .. ClmnetWe boy, his lilngllhot •ja UCIPI Ii"'""*' !oontaln •Ptlled ftre )111.t Tllµroday nJtbt In 1 bC'llih
btaJjt'...,.ch lncllOcl toward '"oral hom1•
foi' a.lime. • Pir' Oliel Merton Haeketl Rid the
11-,..r-01d yooth started the bru&h lire
•loow the 400 block ol Avenida Presidio
_., .. from tho Im ll\llllTn -w
he lighted jJle fire-belchinl l11W1tain, then
.tried to l<l1d it to!'ll'd Our Lady ol
Fatima C.thollc 'Church using a allng.
ahol. '
It tllllded halho/ay Ind cauaed tho bllze
CO\•erlng aeveral acres before firemen
put It out.
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John Wayne Wins
q>urt J udg~ent .
On Wild Goose
Robin Oliver, pretty blonde 18-year~d
1970 graduate ol Lacuna Beach H!Jlh
&:Dool, today was notified Ille will leave
July UI for Belgium In tbe American
Field Service Americana Abroad pro-
gram.
"Wow, I can hardly believe It," she
. on more 'than' one . occa.sion, listeners
hav~ , jammed , ~e alsl~s · arf 'stood
shou.JcfeMo.shoulder around the walls of.
the ~ii chamber, but ,th~ fire ~part.
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exclaimed upon receiving the news by ·
telegram thla morning from AFS head· CHP Jf'QJ;~ing
quarters In New York.
Miu Oliver, a top scholar •nd active ' ' Ove· r H-o·. lida". y'' . 1.fovie actor John Wayne ·ol Ne.,.;pert lludent In Lapna High'• Cla9s of 1970,
·neaeh Won a court Judgtoent Thuraday 11 the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Blair , · 1 1 • •
which requires an insurloce ~f'lplny Oliver Of SOS Anlia St. • CaUfomla .I-lia:hwa,y _. palr~lmen
to pay $74,sot coverl111 damages to .his. stationed In Oranae Lnwrty have
)'acht, WUd Goole. · She "11 Hlected as 1 flnall!t Jut a ,mCs.saae' for errant .holiday
The diesel-powered y'acht was run November In the AFS Americans Abl'Old wee~eod ~· ' ·
agrOUJKt in Sin Dlero ff..:bor1on1 M1y JWOITlm. She ii the teCOnd Laguna Htch "Deiptt~ the fact ~t •• ·ar;e
It, 1• while under charter-to titterPaCt student 11&igned this year lo a year-long W9fkiw: wi)hl&ft1 PIY , (the1 ,ta<e1
.Corporatlen. program over .. u . Junior Tom M~ 1 . ...,.le has, ytl 19 qrove• i;0v,
P l f I lell for the !Wpubllc o1 Panama ~ · R•••anl1 •11.f cblill<M bu'-'}·we The i111Urance company, 1 c c April. He I" studying In Panama City. --"' ...,. .... Indemnity Company, con~ lu pOlky Mia Oliver will become one o! til(IO ' ·•Y ar<lvocj •on tho 'Jo!>:'at· I:~ en. U... yacht ooly cov"'4 ti>< c:rllfl u 8 -··~ 1 ed !hi f tuel , •• ·~look• this moinlng heads held w"hen uaed for pleasu~. nOt wtidi under • · -~ "eel s yu.r or 1 Y high, ahoulderat ANlck, ·eyes al~t h·~-B t , _ •·· le ... , , __ Jud In foreign countrtea under the AFS pro-, to' c()pe willl the Ilea~ .holiday, c cu~. U .._ ..-1111e I ~petM-&e &ram. ~
Bobtrt Kent1y--w--it· ditftrenUy and-She..-hu-1-t--dftyt-to .. pnpare for her tlaffic.J · · ' · ' ' • ·
J>tkt the compuy uab1e. · . departure. 1 ' "Pl) 'or 1fll)l, we """·IWOm to
Wayne, elrtler had IUed a lil!t against W'alle al Laguna IUJlh, Ml• Ollver and will vlgorou1ly enlorC. .. the
Jnterpact. Corporation a!~lng m,ooo sirved as CO<halnn'an of tl\e camous tral~c la.ws on the , cOunty'1
damages and tJl,%50 for breach ot con-American Field Se:rvN:e· cha~.' SM 1-.. frtewap1 and bJghw_1yu an,~
tract becau• the)" didn't niturn the 11 currently wor~q al--se.ifon'i CMtee-~ hppef!tll1 ,11ve IOl'ft6.-l 1JV e •,
yacht unUI almost a mon~ alter the Shop. She wlll return to Laruna In J~y pairolmin Wamt4. · •
and of the !lv«iay charter period. ol 1171 Iller ber year lll 'Bel&lwn.
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menL takes a poor view o{ thla.
The cbanlber's maxbnwn capacity, ttS
person!, now has been posted on the
door and fireqten carefully count noaes
and bar further en!fY when the mu·
.Jml01\ has been re~cljed.
Fis~g, Skiing
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Ge.ar Cleaned .Out
• Interested citizens then are obliged . i.a,unan William R. Lutes ls a deq
to pic k up what they can hear throu1h sea fiJhing and Yater ' lklinl eatbuslut,·
open windows: "· · . but he'll probably hive to forget aboUt
On one recent occuton, when urgency his favorite 1pocta tbla awnmer.
ordinances· Were up hr· dl1CUsskrt1 '100 Police report • burglar entered ail
persons turned up and the meetln« was open car port at Lutes' •pirlmenl, 11111.
adjourned to the hlgh ~I audltorlwn. N. po.st 1figbway ;wWle Lutes was away
, . · at work and rtmaved tlshlf!C_~nd water Since Uie .mwnclpal ~ ,speCllles the aklfng eqUlpment valued 1at ~· •
time aOf1 1 pl~~ for regular :coimcll Llated '' mtisJng: 'are two lar&e marlin
mee.iinRs :--7:30 p.m. on the first aM .. flshiftg rods Uch wot{b ftSO a bas GI,
thlnl l)'edheadOy of 'ea~h ·-t~ 111 .~lty tackle for l\)arlln 'f~hthg, a pair o1 WIW
Hal1 1 CQUflCll cham~s ,-there wu 1ki1 and one ~le akl. ' some ifoiu'bf 'ai to -the legality of aµch · ·
an 1ai!JO¥mmen!. , -r-• 1 .
Thl1 ho'tYevef,' .. 811 't1ken Cart \of lrt er •• ,,
1 new. ordinpnce adopted by the, ~u, •
wedn.oday night and -m•llY pemilt·
ting adjoumm·m •lo ·other quarten 1it
necemry. ! .... : ! r ; 'J
, The new ordii1arlee 1 .,., pennltiJ. -
or ·a "cob.sent ·ca1erida'r"1 to ~Int
yoting on rout!~ 1matten! . a·n d
reorganizes the official order fl ~bualhea
to confonn with the1ritunklpal ~! · · ·
' l'(licn City Manaier James;D; WJ\e~
presented the ·• o<\liol~, M.,... !\lob•rll. qotd1ter1;qUUJloo1!d,'1(1e lfom ~bout ad!~1 IO ·~· I ' Wb~ exPWne.cJ h should ·11< I rn. cludi.ct, oot JU•t '!O tbe car6 ol<.:..w.llnc P<Ob/em~. tio\J.\~ order to,'"'""1111'" 1'91lllC\I 'icl "'1>duct ·1' l~al. ·.,.
ei .. whefe' In ttje' event'. 'I &lialtof;
as a, lire.· sb9\lld '!U\ce •)\' J-il~ to use, tj1e ie!lilor c<rUncif clii\ob<r! Go1~¥rg ' Aid. !atir 'he '""Id, ·try to
an'arige a loud -ker oauldt the dllln-
)>er ,as soon 1 U 1"1!'9lble bi<-ail-'
Joumlll'nt may;not Tllwa)'ll 'be pooalbla'. •
"We don't know lft ldvanCll how many
pr!Opfe ,are <.i>mlng.': he ex,plall'td, "1and
,k'1 !"' alwa)'iop0aaible 19 l'I • Io,...
"""uJlh place at the last 11\lhutl, IO pemapc • spealtat, wW belp .........
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·Wudler · I • . ' . ' ' It'll be a bane •P Fourth ol Jqly,
weathlrWlae,, wllh IWU\Y skiel and • '
temparaturea In the 1111, 1llpplnc
back Into the 'Ill range aionc ti><
cout over the wiekend.
INllD• TQDAY ' : · ¥ •• .a. "",,.. • ..,...~•no ma
time at ,cmr1 o/ t"e "'4ftV /tre· :
lDO"lct 11Mw1 arouhd 0101'9•
Cou•tv 1011 the Fourth 'oJ Jiil11 . •
Th~U'r1 cill lt,te4 ,m ,e~e Guldt
to·F~n col~n .i'f ~··Week·.
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L 2 DAILY PILOT SC , Frlda,J, July J1 1970
Muriler Suspects Reaah· Six; Two More· Nabbed
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A 16-~ld boy aad a ll•)'Oat<>ld were ~ alter lrllen'ogotioa ol
"'f'"" alnldy IOMac ·liln< '"' a ...,;. lwr other drillers "11o 1n beill& held 1+ ..... will be dJorpl u ... lo Jail = -lor Ille -mytac ~ In the brutal buMliering ol ol -llatlol1 ~·rry Carlin;
?,!losioll Viejo teoch« Mrs. f'lo<en<:e three others lor Ille lmpulle k111fllc of
!IMcy Brown. Mrs. Brown.
'Ill< arreoto Thursday ol Melanie The principals in the.,_, . ...,,
31, ill jail for a week oo the -Stephen Craia Hurd, 20, no -· charge, liild an unideditied 16-yeor-><t>o is the elleged unottkial leader o1
"'wraP< op the ......U"' In the the roving ~ ol alleged plil users.
~ case. of the deMtl « Mn. Brown. He feces charges d. murder and kidnap
eJJigedl] mtrdered at the hMd.s fl a in IJe Brown ease. He was arrested =· ~okdt blBI ol youilg :::. a loot d1aae In Norco late lasl
flljll1ll~ U. lUdllrd .lgake-<111id the • -ijermac Heodri<k Taylor, 17, ako
.,. d>lrpd ao M»O-ies in tile deaths ol oo known -· tumed "'" to
• ~oncer.. l'dt r ~L.aguna Delays
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-local ' aulhorllleo by ~ olficert
tn Ncirwtik -.riltr thb week to fl!C'
"'"""' a IP -kl Git muntor-lldmp d Mn. 8"""'. . . -°"':: "Gypo\>" Olliboney, 17; __ • · r, -bl!tril ·held lo
Portland,. Ore., .. wbere be hat begun to fi&flt extraditioo to Orange Coutty, where
he wtU faee pl'06ecution as an adult
1n the Brown case.
-Arthur C. ''Moose" Hulse, 111, ol
!1401 Dolan St., Garden Grove a high
si:iJool student specitied as a Principal
in the June 2 hatchet murder o{ Carlin
during a ISO holdup in a Santa Ana
8tl'Yiee station.
-Tbe Daniels woman, who awrtedly
Frottt Pqe I
SUSPECT •..
aources ln the case.
Officers declined to specify e1.actly
which tip last Wednesday night Jed to ·
the arrest.
F S d They also have not found whether --f~· --..e-.e>T•7 ay t·u Y Marine Pie. M•rk Johnson, 11, husband "" .I.. · • TT of tbe slain woman, knows the suspect.
Johnson has been in Michigan since
accompanying his wife's body back home
': for burial last June Z2. Qoncernecl over possible delay in con-·in Co""'8 del Mar •• wm t¥lt be built,"' A poiygrapb i.st and more than a ~(ruction ol the ertire ~stal. . Freeway Wheaton said. "Tbia ta all part ot the ' dozen houia of interviews of the young !!t th~ :-:;"11~ remo~w entire state freewaY ByBtem. and it would hulband ruled him out u a suspect -~rned-d>elr-W~y-evening-:..,,;~pmlble~tho-.Corooa-del__l!U~~ ~li'J.-i' weeks pregnant ~--4:~ p.m. Tuesday for further Mar f~y down Mt\cAr4hur Boolevard with what would.. have been the Couple's dlSCUSSt~ of the problem. ~lb via, Buck Gul_ly and 1be ~ first child, was beaten severely in the
• Councilm~ 0Edward ~ u r g e d Ulland ro~Jte if the Newport Beach r.ea:~ face with a large kitchen stool, then
·st.roog actioo. by ~ city in th~ fa~ ment ll{ the CoutaJ Freeway were re. stabbed in the ne~. breast and abdomen or Assemblyi:nan Robert .Badham £_ bill. moved .. -by her killer. --
now headed !or the S1ote Senate calling · . / H 1 •-bod f · d for removal Of the portion ol the route Lorr noleCl tblt there haVe been in-er near Y nuue Y was 0 u n,
that Id cut N__..... u ..... .J. stances -where a whole route wa lt>elved1 aprawled on the ~ of the ~uple • wou acro&S ..... 1"'1 .. .........,.. • ·rnodeft lfOWld·floeit apartment in San
"':Jllls Je~v~ ~ ~ Beact1 .~-~ °'-Pl_'Obiemt 111 certain areas. <;Jeme~te's pier. bowl resort area.
!Tiept bq1ng m limbo, said Lorr, and S""'"'Y lli<f li1e Boon! ol Supervisor& Her husband wilocked the front door
aid delay ID ~on cl the f~eeway had ~ a teBOlution urgJni coo-~.the flat abgut 28 hours after leaving
could serously mcrease OU! traffic pro-struetioo ol the freeway "and the Orlna:e his wife for guard duty at a S a n t a
b!epis. We fouglit for this rout< ·and Coooty n-• "--'--t ~ . Ana bellcopl<r base and-fllWld ber aude mUdi Of oor fulure plamq ~ Oil .._ -,-w-m urpng UI ...... :. led the bed . the .. lt." . to ~ a~. but lioce we have the ;. IJlraW on . m living
'City Mana@:er James D. Wheaton m~ scheduled July 6 it probably 1 Mn. Johnson had been dead more
tald the council he and City Engineer would be better to wait." than 24: houra. ·
J~ph Sweany_ ~II be ~eetJng M~n~ay City Attorney Jack J. Abgel pointed Evidence of seni_al molestation was ~:~ State DiVISl!)D of High_way offJCIB;IS out 1hat freefty _......._ bu Inconclusive co r on er • t1 iaveatigatora
1n Los Angeles fu "" au.mpt to obtain .· ~~ · -d' d 1' le th t 111"" nfOre inilX'lllation on the state's intention. ~ on either side ol ~ Blt'bara JICOT~ere id a Ir U:t" ~de.I. I . I t
Wh id he id ,. t despite that city's blocking o1 -the-tQUte Y sa on Y ev1 nee o vio en eat.on tl8 wou agre:e .,.,a ttrough the cit i'tseJf. aexualacUvity was not evident."·
Ute ~ ~ adopt a resolution ex~ Co,mcilman ky Holms said he agre«I A specific ti~ of death also proved
pressing its Vl~ and address . it ~ "with the &plrlt of. Mr. tJ;n•1 relOluUon'' to be a puJlle Jn the case. Examiners
s.1' n at o r . Ra n d o 1 p h Co ! 1 I er s and ~ ~t until after coulil only specify a general time period ~ooB~~·bu~!.::l' the .-ng with J"'""8y olliclals, at for the killing -perhaps before dawn w"' ~' . m ' de! -eel il whldt time approj)rtate city adion could of Ju .. 16. 8IY acti.op mJgbt well_ be ay unt be discUsaed. • The murder created a severe case
• the Monday meeting. ' Lorr llld the reot of tile coondl 8(l'Oed of jlUUs In the &hocked community,
•Wbeatoo pomted oot lliat the bUI does to Clltlllooe lile lilatler until Tuelday. !akin& place ollly hour• al.ter the but·
not <ijrectly affect the Laguna pcrlioo chered and parti.ally eviscerated body ~.the treew~y. _ . .-.H of a pretty Mission Viejo school-teacher,
•'.'It does not meen that tile .,...on Burglar Sus· pee' ·1 .llin. Florence Nancy Borown, 31, was Gt, tile freeway &1111th ol Buck Gully . dilcovered in the hllb along Orl<ga
Ul Pepper Tree .
. ives Its Name
o Laguna Lot
.~'!."' llnclent -tzee that gra<ed ~ eruy to the· old Laguna Playlioute
and was corefully preserved l'iien the
40-year-old 11leater was ra~. will giye
its name to the new city parking Wt
q> be· jnstalled at the Ocean Avenue
&ite.
Bids for paving the "Pepper Tree
Parking Lot'' were presented to the
city OOUfJCil this week, with Sully-Mlller'a.
lqw figure of 110,652.65 accepted !or
""' job. ~his was about $700 above the
tigineer's estimate and aubstanUaUy
f!low the high bid of $12,974.
\ The Pepper Tree lot. will run through Attn .Ocean Avenue to Fore&l Avenue,
a couple of old cximmercial
'ildings also we.re razed to expand
perking· area.
. lot will provide 37 spaces and
· 1 include the nev1 lo.flour meters for Jiie~-and business people wbo re-
in downtown all day.
' DAILY PILOT
t ~··k ~ ........... ,11
H•ltfl.trN IHc•
'•111t9fa Y.tltJ
s.c-"-C....MfM
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OiltANGE COAST PUBLISHING COMPANY
Rob•rt N. W,..t
Pruicltnl •!Id Pllbllilltl'
J1c\ It, C~rf1y.
Vitt ftrt1~-t •~d GeMr1r Mtl!fttl'
111011111 k•1vil
£clttor
Hipway.
H Id t rlUD • l Pollce through subsequent weeks often e a l7 porn disclaimed •peculatlo• that the lwo kill·
ings mlght. be ·linked. A ·S~n Clemeftte patrolina·n answering
a ,burglar alann call after midnight
at :Shoreclilfs country club arrested a
!lel!ing burilary -t at sbotguJ11>0int
to<lay.
Cly4e Conway Stevens, 29, of 113 Calle ~. Identified as an employe of
the.country club, was booked after mid-
night on charges ot burglary.
Patrolman Mike Reischl said ht
answer«! Ure alann Can at 12:0t a.m.
and as his headlights illuminated an
ope.yi masonite -d9flr ttiey picked ~ a
man in g'loves tofsiJ)g a small bundJ1
under a trash bin.
The bundie conµained more than f200
in cash.
Reischl said the .arrest was without
Incident.
"'I Jillled the shotgun and just Nld ·
'you can come out naw'."
Reports on Trip
Six youthful suspects have bee• ar-
rested in the Brown murder after a
tip -aa:ain -led to daylight in the
investig11-tion.
San ·Clemente police, however, con-
ducted interviews with jt)me anestees
in the Brown case late last week as
a' lo•g-shot pos!ibilily.
Baby Gets New Liver
MONTREAL (UPI) -An ll-month-0ld
baby who received a new liver in
canada's first liver tr8n:splant surgery
Feb. 12 has been released from Notre
Dame Hospital. The baby, a boy iden·
tified only as Benoit, suffered with
cancer of the liver when admittl'd to
boopital in January.
Pat Nixon Heads Drive
To Aid Stricken Peru
By PATRICK BOYLE
ot tM Deltr Pll•t Sflff
Pat Nixon wUi , leave San Clemente
ror Wasflington next week to meet wlth
a group that is coordinaUna: private
contributions to help Peru recover from
its disastrous earthquake.
nedy for her glamorous image, Lady'
Bird Johnson for hf!r effort.a to improve
the environment.
But none had ever tried such a person-~
to-person mercy mission of human con·
cern and diplomatic side-effects.
roved without, a permanent dwelUng ln
the Santa Ana area and started serving
a 111-month tttm for m a r -I j u.a n"1
poi3alllon a ·,...k age-lo Orange Co!Ulty
Jall .. A comptalnL ... king charges of
atdlng and abettinc after a felony has ·
been committed will be sought against
her today. . ..
-The 16-year-old Santa Ana boy releas-
ed to his parents alter his arrest. He
will face the same charges as the Daniels
woman, U . Drake said.
"The two pickups last night clo1e1
the book on the suspects in the case,"
Drake said tdiay.
'I1te roundup of the six persons began
exactly a week ago When two detectfves
from the Santa Ana Pollce Deparlment
-probina: the Carlin case -received
an 1nfonnant'1 tip lOldina· to the mat
of a. youth in Santa Ana who lat<r
was rtrl~ out 11 a suspect, bot who
y~lded Information leading to the six
arrests.
The murder of Mn. Brovm, palice ,
said, allegedly took place In an Orana:e
grove in Irvine where the vlcUm wall
forced to drive after being stopped by
the group on Sand ·canyon Road and
the Santa Ana Freeway.
1be band had left their .1talled car
near tbe freewfy offramp and shortly
a!l<rwanls aJJecedly lorced their way
into tbe teacher's car.
Mr1. Brown waa on a trip from Jl•Ylnl
a coffee shop tip for a leacher's meeting
In Mlloion Viejo to • PTA mee11J11 In El Toro. .
II Is alleged the ,....,, forced the
· woman to drive to Ute Orange grove
where her killers used a military surplus
Kabar knlie (a seveu-lnch version of
a Bowle hunting blade) to kill her.
Mrs. Brown's body was dumped ln
a shallow grave near El Carlso Village.
The knlle WM tossed out of a moving
car along the Santa Ana Freeway nur
Tustin.
And the woman'• atation waeon was
driven to the Santa Cn:iz area, aban.
cloned, then put to the ton:h.
State Budget Still Stymied
De1nocrats Demanding More Money for Schools
SACRAMENTO !UPI) -Demanding
more money far schools in exchange
for their votes, Senate Democrats today
stymied passage for the third str&ia:ht
day of Gov. Ronald · Reagan's record
$6.59 billion state budget.
Senate ~mocratic 'Leader George
Moscone said he is prepared to wait
iJldefinitely for Reagan to agree. to the
swap.
--nir it takes i'nonUiS, I 'm ready to
do it," the San Francisco lawmaker .
told neWsmen 'Ibursdey night after the
Senate refused to approve the spending
paclcaa:e on the second attempt. "I have
to believe we'll st_and fast."
But Republlcarw scheduled a
reconsideration vote on the defeated bill
for today." Sen. Fred Marler, (ft.Red-
ding), the floor 01anaaer fer It, said
he was "opttm.is.Uc" of gainlng final
pl!_ssa:ge . .
The-stnate,-oo a ~13 vote,_rejeeted
the expenditure program five hours alter
Robb to Be Arraig11£d
On Abortion Charges
Dr. Robert Cumming Robb of Laguna
Beach has been ordered lo face Superior
Court arraigrunent July 9 on felony abor-
tion charges.
The court date was set by J udge
Byron K. McMillan immediately after
the jurist rejected Ttiursday attorney
Moses Bennan's argumenls that further
prosecution of the Art Colony physician
is unlawful since the same charges had
been dismissed by a municipal court
judge.
A.nd Juage McMillan also lhrew out
BeMnan's plea that the Orange County
Grand Jury was nol qualffied to indict
Rcbb because 1t did not truly represent
the comPlunity in terms or racial, social,
e~ic and religious factors . ·
Judge McMiUan delivered his double
bi rreled ruling after Berman un&ue-
cessfuUy tried to have hiin remoVed
from the proceedings • prejudiced
against his client.
·Judge William S. Lee quickly rejected
lhat argument in a neljhboring
courtroom and sent Bennarr back lo
Judge McMillan for an equally speedy
rejection ol lhe arguments he filed last April I. -.
Dr. Robb , 67, "-34567 Scenic Drive,
Dana Point, was indicted by the Grlfld
Jury on charges ol inducing mlscaniages
in three women patients.
The indictment revived the dlarges
that were dismissed by Judge Paul Mast
whG threw the allegations out or-santa
Ana Municipal Court with the ruling
that Califorria'S Therapeutic Abortion
Act of 1967 was unconstitutional.
the A~bly approved it on a " 12-1s
vote. It likes 27 votea to PIM a budaet
in the qppe.r house.
GOP leaders considered ~riding an
· ambulance for bedridden Sea. JUchard
•J. Dolwig of Atherton, but decided
&&ainst the plan. They thought it mijJ!I
encourage a Democrat to switch his
vote.
A compromise version ol the budget
W-ritten by a second <,'Ollference com-
mittee proposed •102 million more for
schools and certain guarantees in state
financing that Democrata also demanded.
Specifically, the comp'o~se saya ' the
atate will pickup additional welfare costs
to counties caused by i n c r e a s e d
caseloads. lt illso provides that any
money vetoed out of. the budget by
the governor would revert to Uie state
school fund.
,.But ~oscone noted the languaa:e does
not force the administration to spend
the mo~y. He aald that could take
another apprq>riat.ion bill unleu such
a mandate is written into the buda:et~
The spending _program compromise .
also guarantees the 190,000 s t a t e
employes, who went to work as usual
durina: the budget impasse, will be paid
along with any other debls the state
rang up while it was budgetless.
The situation was nearly identical to
last year, only then .it was assembly
Democrats who demanded and got more .
money from Reagan in the buda:et after
a three-day holdout.
This year, Senate Democrats want at
least another $16 million for hard.pressed
school districts, and say their real goal
is $282 million in new aid.
The majesty of the Mediterranean
is captured in Henredon's
eaprf
SUMMER SALE .
l
I
Thom11 A. Murphi111
M.,...ln9 Ecl!!or
~Ricli1rlll r. Nill
Ttie First Lady, wM returned to the
family home here Tue8day after a three·
day mei'cy mlsslon to Peru, wlll r~rt
on her trip and provide Jntcnnation
on current relief needs in Peru.
Even Peru 't exotically beauUful first
lady, Consuela VelaSC9, had only viewed
the dramaUc devastation high in the /
Andes from a hellcopter.
'
featuring H1nredon's C•pri
• i
I
$0ulll Or11111t CIMI!\' Etllll'
Offluo
Cllol• Mt11: l)O Wt;I ••v Street lrfl•~rl Sudl: 2211 WUI 811bo1 8 .... flVlrd LIO.,... a .. cll: n1 For11t Av'"'""
H\llllln0\611 ltldl: 11111 lt1dl l:.Vltv1r•
S.11 c,1...,..,11; "1rl Horii! Iii C1mlrie Jl:MI
DAILY PILOT, W1111 llf.lltll II C;lff!biMd tllt N_a-,.,n .. II publ1'!11111 •t!ly ••ct?! Suoo·
••~ in ttptrlle cdUIOl'll ftt LIO~ l ..:tll, Ne...,...I lfftll, c. ... 11 Mew, H11t1ll"fltft l•dl "1"All l"..,,,i.ln Vtll1y, 1111"6 wllll ,.,.
ntllMI ClllllltM, Otll'ICIC (Dlll Plilb!illl"" c.m .. iw ,..1r11111t ii<•nl• •It II ,,11 w .. 1 ••lbil-11 ..... N•WJOtl t••tll, •'·' ~JQ W9'l l1r. SI,_.!, C0.11 M .. I.
, ....... 17141 641·4121
C:l..UW A4 .. niti"f 642-J,71
he C ....... All Dc-11•rt-•Ki
, ... ,11 ... 492·4420
c.,.,,,_,, tt7t+ Or•• Cotlt ,._,.llifrtlnl ~II\'. N• ,,..... 1IOt"'. lliuUl•lilllt. ••l..,r•I -"-' '' ,,.,...llM:m"''' "'''"' _, lie< ....... .-wjJ....,_f IOff-1'1 lllf'•
miNolM .. '*'Y'""' ,.......,,
...... "ltiu. ..... H it 11 Iii..,.,.. &tWI
''·' Cftll ..... t1Ui.rtitl. '°"'°'1'°'"" " UffW It.II -llMVI ... m•ll sr.• -llllWJ ftlilltuy 11•11Mt"1!t. llOI mOtli~ly, -
• \_
•
Giving the report herself will be just
another example of her personal touch
that was particuJarly evident when she
traveled to earthquake-ravaged Peru.
During tbe three-day trip, she delivered
11ine tons of relief supplies and displayed
A.mefica's heartfelt-sympathy for ~tne
thousands of Peruviin Indians who
survived the disaster.
And she brought baclc ttie mepage
that Americans must continue to help
the 80,000 refugees -to rebuild their
homes.
The Peruvian missipn came abaut from
a discussion with her husband on June
20, shortly alter the disaster.
"I talked about the areal destruction,"
Mrs. Nixon recalled ... I really "wished
I could do ...,ethlng. I sald I'd like
to make the trip down.''
"Fine. Why don't you?" she said her
husband replied. So she did si1 days
later.
Olhar flfiflia1es have aUracttd worTtr
auention -Eleanor Roosevelt for her
good deeds and concern, Jaoquellne Ken·
But when Mrs. Ni1.on decided to see
first hanc the destruction, the two first
ladies flew in a c .. 130 Air Force cargo
plane kl a short dirt runway high in
the Andes .
"I don't think any First Lady ha.s
ever been jn or . out of any airstrip
remotely Hice that ," said Air Force
General Vernon Walters, Mrs. Nixon's
Interpreter, ••J think you've flown a com-
bat miaslon. You should get combat
pay," he told the Finl Lady.
From. there, the two women helicop-
tered over the valley to Hua.rat, a
devutated town of 20,000 where i;he
toured the rubblo-fllled streets. She spent
two hourt there, getting the 11tory of
the disaster from the sunrlvors.
''l wanted to see the people," the
Pmsldtnt's wife explalned. "I think they
need all the encouragement they can
get . • . too often they feel aid is Im·
personal.'"
Jn Llatin-America where appearances
mean &0 much, "trs. Nhcon added a
humane dimension &o the "Yankee" tm~ qe.
•
This fabulous collection of Henredon's furniture
to include dining, bedroom & occasional , alt at sale pnces.
Drexel Furniture is offering their famous Esperanto collection at
su bstantial savings.
lieritage is reducing its exciting Madrigal collection.
Henredon, Heritage & Drexel '"ill also offer their out.standing upholstery at suh,tantlal savtnes.
Lamps, pic(ures and accessories \ViH aJso be available at reduced prices.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE
·7td 11111 "
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 W•"clllf Dr., 642·2050
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
·-
INTERIORS
LAGUNA BEACH Profe11lonal Interior
Daolgnars Av1 1l1bl ..... AID-NSID 345 North Co11t Hwy. 494-6551
OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
,.._ feh "•--"•-•f ~,_>tt!!f!J.iO·IUJ
• I ..
11
l
'
t
Big Power
Race Set
For Ohio
lndepend'ence
Regatta Slated
Newport u.rbor Yacht
Club's tnidillcNIJ Indepen-
dence Day RegaUa will hold
the yachting !potlight 'this
weekend with nearly 200 boats
in 18 cWses scheduled to
eompete 00 bay and oce61l
couroes.
Racing Is ""'1eduled for
Saturday and Sunday.
BCYC Swinging
Clubhouse Not Yet Open
ActMl.iea at Bahia Corin-
thian Yacht Club are con-
tinuing full steam · ahead
despit< the fact that clubhow!e
facilllies will not be completed
until !all. .
Sd>eclliled f<r Friday, Satur-
day mid Sunday, July 11-20,
BCYC elll -tile first
Columbia 50 national charn~
pl<IDlll\p regatta. Two ,...,..
are plamed for Satw'day and
Sunday.
A feature m'""1t (no bearin4!
on tile dlampiooshlp) is on
tile ...,.Sa f<r Friday, July
J9 ~ skipper George
Poat ol Oyoter Bay, New
York, with an East Cost crew
end yel-l<>l>e determined Weot
0oost lll!lpper and cmr. Ap-
proximately IS Oolumbia 50'•
are expect<d lo parlklJ>Mt,
including a crew from Great
Lakes and tie Pacific .
Northwest.
Jn addition national cham~
pionships f<r tile Columbia 26
Mark I will be held on the same weet-end with arooM
JO entries etpeCted.
FuRlre dates fir activities
YOU wrr SP1111 aoa
THAN '25
\
I
'"""· Ju~ '· 1970
LEGAL NOTICE
DAILY PJLDT J f •'
'
,•
•
• • '•,
Oolll V l'ILOT Frid1Y, Jul1 !, 1970
TOO HIGH, TOO LATE -Angels shortstop-Jim
Fregosi goes up for 3 lardy, oft-target throw Thurs-
day as Milwaukee's Danny Walton slides safely in·
U'IT ........
f.o second base with 1 steal. The Angels, beck iD
Anaheim toni&ht to duel Oakland, won 11).7.
Sports In Brief Newcombe
Injured Hockey Player . Idolized Man .
Coming Out of Cornn
PITI'SBURGH -Michael B r i e r e,
: Pittsburgh Penguin rookie standout, in
a coma for •7 days, has regained "a
!.fow level of consciousness," a team
tp)kesman said Thursday.
Briere, who suffered head injuries in
mi auto accident near his home in
Malartic, Quebec, May 15, has been
pnder treatment in Notre Dame Hospital
In Montreal ever since.
1be sp:>kesman said he wa s able lo
recognize his fiancee, his brother and
teammate Jean Pronovost. The 26-year-
old National Hockey League center has
eaten his first solid foOO s since t'ie
eccideftt and bas regained "more use
of his limbs," accurding to t h c
IPOkesman.
•
STOCKHOLP.t -Aus I r a I 1 a n Krr-
ry O'Brien recorded the faslesl time 8t 3,000 meters steeplechase this year,
1:29.4 before 5,652 spectators at thf'
fin81 day of an international track and
field meet Thursday.
' World record holder Ron Clark e. also
' or Australia, was a popular winner or
the J0,000 meters in 2.8 :43.3-more than
: one minute from his best time -in
his last appearance at the Olympic
stadium, site of his 5,000 n1eters world
record four years ago.
• • • MUSKOGEE, Okla. -"Golf is half
:errogance and half Ignorance," said Lin-
~ da Craft after turning in par 71 Thursday ~in the first round of the U.S. Women 's
:Open.
• "lt-'1 arrogance when 1 shoot a 71
• and ignc)rance ~nen I card an 87 .''
: said the s.root-10 Texan '(_ho's been on
•the tour only three years)'She arrived
: via psychology, public relations and ~ 1'botts -thal's a disease cows gel."
: "About the only thing you can do
: -.1th a bachelor's degree in psycho logy
: ts empty bed pans." said the graduate
; of Louisiana State University.
! • • i KIEV, Soviet U11ion -A J2-year-otd
t Kiev student ran the 800 meters in
l minute, 45.5 seconds Thursday, the ~ best time for the distance in the workl
: this year.
( Yevgenl Anhmv. C."Ofl'lpt':ting in the l two--da)' Brothers Znamcnskiye lnterna-
tional Track and. Field competition at
Central Republican Stadium, sliced
.seven-tenths of a second olf the Soviet
record held by Sergei Kryuchek.
A Soviet girl, Antonina Laweva, also
set a Russian record with 1 high jump
o( 6--J'!I.
••
PITTSBURGH -A womu filed suil
Thursday asking that Pittsburgh'• entry
in the American Basketball Association
not be called "the Pioneers" tmtll she
is declared whiner ol a contest held
lo name the team.
ti.1rs. A11gela B. Weaver charged that
Inte rnational Sports Inc. ran a contest
asking contestants t.o select a name for
the team (formerly "the Pipers"}, ex-
plaini11g their choice in "25 words or
Jess."
She offered the name "Pioneers" and
her reasons, but the owners violated the
rules of their own cont.est by awarding
the prize to a man identified as Donald
Sey1nore, who supported his choice with
57 words, the suit said.
As well as the $500, the contest offered
a lifetime pass to the team's games ..
•
PH I L ADELPHIA -Philadelphia
Phillies' pitcher Grant Jackson was filled
~50 Thursday for unbecoming conduct
during a game the day before al Mon-
treal.
,Ja ckso111 Vi·as removed for a pinch
hiller in the sixth inning of the second
gan1e of a lwin bill , showi11.g his
displeasure, he threw his helmet down
and stalked into the clubhouse..
"I don't show my Uall players up
and I don't expect them t.o show me
up."' said Phillies ti.tanager Frank Luc-
chesi 111 announcing he had fined the
southpaw.
•
LOS ANGELES -Cordelia
lngrarn won the 220 ind 440 to lead
the La Mirada Meteors to the team
tillc in the National AAU girls 12-13-year-
old invitationa l track and field cham-
pionships Thursday.
Miss Ingram beUered her previous
best time in lhe 440 by 2.7 3econds
10 set a new national record of 56.7
on the UCLA lrack. Her winning time
1n the 220 was 25.0.
He Must Duel
Wll!IBLEDON, En&iaJ!d, (AP) -A
l~year-okl Australian boy, just lea.ming
to hold a tennis racket, listened io a
radio commentary on Ken Rosewall ·
playing in the challenge round oi the
Davis Cup and told his parenla: "That's
who I'd like to be."
It was If year• ago. Now John
Nl!W<OO\be finds hlmoeU lacing -all,
who is SS, In the Wimbledon final.
"To think I was just a 1m1ll kid
when I idolir.ed him, 11 Newcombe said.
"He and Lew Hoad were Australia'•
national heroes.
"I guea he's always been a »Ort
of hero for m~._ But to play him in
the Wriledon final was never even
a childhlod dream. It would have seemed
irii.po&Sible."
~ final is 9Cheduled Saturday.
JtDRwall will be: the ~oldest Wimbledon
finalist since America 's Bill Tilden, who
won the Utlt in 1930 at the age of
31.
Rosewall, playine ~I. calculatin1
tennis jn a troublesome wind, killed
BriUsh hopes 'nluradly by defeatin1
ll<l(er Taylor lhl, H, lhl, lhl.
Newcombe outplayed Andres Gimeno
of Spain, 6-3, u, l-0, in a match in·
terrupted by riin .
The older 1eneration or Wimbledon
fans will be wanUne Rosewall to win
for sentimental rea1ons. He played in
two finals long, Jong ago and lost Uitm
both -to Jarosalv DrobnY in 1954 and
t.o Hoad in 1956.
If anybody_ thinka Rosewall will not
last a-Wi1nbledon ri.nal -even a five.set-
ter -he'll have to argue against
Newcombe,
"Whatever elte may hlppen, Ken won't
Ure." Newcombe aakl. "He's too fit
for that, even at hia •It·
"He's got everything exctpt 1 big
service. I shall jull. hive to come. at
him at all Umes, and he will have
to counter--attack me.
"Possibly his age will count a.-ainst
him in one respect only -Wimbledon
Center Court nerves. After all, time
is runnine out for him and iL would
be his last chance to win Wbnbledon.
f still have years ahead of me."
' ' • l , Longsl1~t Gilbert Fires li:i
! LONDON, On~ (AP ) -Gibby Gllb<rl,
: the lonphot py who came from nowhere
: to win the Houston Champions earlier
t tbil year .. C:redited a telephone lession
: from hll old tutor with his first-round ' : Jeld ia the Houstol Champk>nll earlier
OU. year, credited a lelf!phone !~&Son
from h.i1 old tuCDr with hi• flrst-roonrl
i l<11d In lfle flll,000 c.ruidian Open golf ,,......,,
•·r milled the cut at Cleveland l1sl
'"''"'·"' GUbm1 •allt, "and played bad ta J"Clico IOWlds IJllJ week.
"So I calied .loe Gerlak in Hollywood,
Fla. I lold h.in1 wtlal I was dollg.
I was hJUiAg everything high and to
the right..
"I guess he could visualfie: what t
~·as doing. lie knoVi·11 my game belt.er
than I do. Uc !old me I y,•as too wristy,
bringing the club back too fast wilh
my hands.
"So I made a correctJOn,"
ller.ult : A seven-under-par 65 a.nd I.he
l1rs1 ruund·l~arl,
Jui;t off hl1 pact In this &tar-starved
"allonal championshi p, however, were
Gflor~ Archer ud veteran Art Wall, ~
.a pair ol. former Mastes champions
Ued at II.
John Kennedy, a tw~yeu tour veteran
who hun'I come clooe before, and T...,,_
la a"latant I"" Gory Pllchlord !ollowed
with 671 and Bob Stone had I 18.
t.fany of the alamor names i• lhe
3ame-Amokl.2almer, Jack Nicklaus,
Gary Pla)'<r ud DUiy c .. per -1klpped
11\e tournament to concentrate on
prtparallons for nut wtek '• BriUsh
Open.
•
Angels Battle Oakland;·
Wright Seeliing No.12
Alex Johnson made 1 bis hit• with
hh bal Thunday anon-, aid almost
made it 11 a flop with his 1love.
1be Call!omia Anpta' tell fielder rat>'
pod throe hill In five lri .. , knocl<ed
in two runs and acored once u the
Angela toppled the Milwaukee Brewers
lo-7.
1be Angel>, home loday, send ctyd•
WM;ht, 11-5, against Oakland's Chuck llobaos. 74, ill tonight's opener of a
three-aame set againat the A's.
tn·tbe bottom of the seventh, however,
Joma played a Mike Hegan oU-Oeld
hit into a double with speedster Tommy
Harper llCOl'lng all the way from first.
When asked about Johnton'1 obvious
lock of hustle on the play, Call!ornia
manapr Lefty Phillips said: "He doe1
real well with the bat, hu real good
speed aid is good for the ball club,
period." •
Phillips repliced Johuon with 1ure-
1
handed Jarvis Tatum Jn the ninth and
&he move paid orf almost immediately.
With two runs already in and Dave
May on first with one out, pinch hitter
Tito Francona sliced the ball doWI the
· left field line.
Tatum, nJMing at the crack ol the
bat. hauled In the ball with an over-the-
ihoulder catch.
"That wa1 the best move Lerty made
all day," cracked Milwaukee manager
Dave Bristol Concerning California'& in-
aertlng Tatum ia the outfield.
While Jobnaon was upping his batting
average to .331, second beat I• the
American I.oeague, Milwaukee's Harper
wu movin1 into the top ten with a
4-for.S performance.
The speedy third baseman, already
the league leader in doubles and stole•
bases, raised his average to .308.
Harper slammed Tom hfurphy's first
pllcll of the-came into .tile left field
Cigar-puffing Woman
Steah Morganna's Act
CfflCAGO I AP) -Aside from the
big cigar it was hard to tell it waa
26G-pound Dave Col_wSon ~°' the Chicago
Tribune out there on Comiskey Park dia·
mond . in women's clothes kissing the
Oaklahd A's.
With a wig of flaxen curls nowlng
araund his shoulders, his body stufred
in a woman's pants suit, and his bosom
blossoming frcm two 16-inch softballs,
aports columnist Condon appeared on
the field during 1be seventh inning Thurs-
day.
He kissed Oakland's first baseman,
Joe Rudi, and Umpire John Rice. 'Jben
be atrutttd off purfing on tiis cigar.
Condon said the whole thing had been
AFTERNOON T IL1'
FOR DODGERS I SF
SAN FRANCISCO : AP -The San
Francisco Giants will catch the Uis
· Angeles DodgP"S and pass them Saturday
-but not in the standings.
Thia artemoon's "Helmet Day" game
will be the Giants' 1,000th at home
since they moved here from New York's
Polo Grounds.
Both teams were off Thursday.
planned with his friend, Oakland owner
Charles 0 . Jt~inley, Lhe night before.
"l Wore a pants suit because I couldn't
find a mini-skirt small enough," said
Condon who dressed· as a Boy Scout
at Chicago's baseball dinner last winter
and presented Chicago Cub Manager Leo
Durocher with a flag from Camp Ojibwa
in Wisconsin.
Condon also dressed like an Andy Frain
usher at the Kenttlcky Derby last May
and directed customers t.o the wrong
seats.
Condon said he and Finley conceived
the girlie stunt as a "rebuttal" to
MorgaMa Roberts, nightclub dancer who
h.1s been running onto lhe field around
the COWttry smooching with players.
~ohn ~1cNamara said he didn't mind
that the game y,•as stopped (or the
publicity stunt.
"But why do we have to get Condon?
-he isn't as good looking as J\.1organna,"
he said.
The Sox Josl the game 10-6. The A'!'.
grabbed a 6-4 lead in the first four
innings thanks to three Chicago errors
and four walks from starter Barry Moore
who finally left in the fifth.
Chicago got four runs in the first
two innings on carlos May's two-run
homer and singles by Moore and Syd
O'Brien and Luis Aparlcio'.s sacrifice
fly.
Wi 111bledo11 Run1aerup •
L!Jng Beach's Billie Jean King sellled for second place in the All·
England tennis chaIJlpion.shlps lodl)y when she bowed to AustraJia's
f\1argaret-Court, 14 .. 112, 11-9, tn the longest femaJe finale In the clas·
s.ic'1 history. The match lasted two hours and 27 minutes. and I.he
marathon first set aJone took one hour and 27 minutes to complete.
Mr1. Court, the top seed, thus regained the title she last won five
years ago.
stands to give the Brewers a short-lived
1.0 lead, singled in the llflh. singled
and ·scored in the seventh and homered
with one o"n in the ninth.
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JOE NIEKRO
Niekro Takes
Blaine, Loses
No-hitter in 9th
DETROIT (AP ) -Joe Niekro blamed
himself for ruining his own no.hit bid
in the ninth inning Thursday niibt u
the Detroit Tigers blanked the N"'· York
Yankees 5-0.
With one out in the ninth, Horace
Clarke grounded a ball deep behind first
base. Tigers second baseman Diet
ht cAuliffe fielded it beautifully, pivoted
and threw to Niekro, racing to cover
first.
Niekro's fool apparently came off th•
bag as he caught the ball and Clark•
was a\\•arded an infield single -the
Yanks' first and only hit.
"I knew \\'"hen 1 caught the. ball I
wasn't on the bag." the ZS.year-old rtaht-
hander groaned in the dressing room
afterwards.
"I wish they gave me an error on
It, btjt that's the way it goes."
~1cAuliffe was brilliant all ni&ht,
finishing with 10 assists.
"I felt bad that Joe didn't get it,"
the spark"plug infielder said of the no-hit
bid. "He was jamming batters all ni&ht
and nobody really hit the ball well."
"I thought I could get t9 lt as soon
11s it came off the bat." he added , rerer-
riiig to Clarke's grounder. ·
It wa s the third time Clarke has
broken up a no-b itter in the ninth iMln&
this season.
"It's just a coincidence it has happened
that way," said the Yankees' seeond
baseman as he walked Crom the shower
in the New York dressing room.
"I'm just glad somebody got a h.it,
11nd it happened it was me," he added.
"Nobody likes to be in a ~hitter. I
know because I Vi'as in one once in the
minors."
Ironically. Niekro said he didn't pitch
as well a' he did in his previous outin1,
when he fired a four-hit complete 1amt
against Cleveland .
"I think I had a little better lluff
tn _that last game," he said. "I hid
more on my fastball ."
Ex-1'iger Owner
Spike Briggs Di~ •• ROYAL OAK, Mich. (AP) -W ...
o . "Spike" Briggs Jr. died in WJlliian
Beaumont Hospital early today at~ a
long illness. He was 58. •
Briggs was the '°" of tM late Wa1'rr
o . Briggs Sr., former owner ot the
Detroit Tigers.
Briggs Sr, died Jan. 17, 1152, DI
hia son became president of the Tllin
nine da)'s later. :
He sold the baseball club July 17,
1956 lo an I I-man iroup of businessrrti!I\
!read«! by Michigan b r o a d c •·• ~1'
Freflerick Knorr. ·:
Briggs then became vice president pd
general nlanagcr but reslined unatr
prtssure April 26, 1937.
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Ra11eh for Park
"· 10 ..... 1111..0 ... , .....
Map indicates plans drawn by Recreation Erivironments Inc. of New·
port Beach for old Starr Ranch in souihe:astern Orange County near
Mission Viejo and San Juan Capistrano. Firm plans multi-million·
dollar privately-owned public park on the ranch's 10,144 acres adja-
cent to REI's Coto de Caza. First phase is to be ready in the summer
of 19'11. Entrance would be off Ortegll Highway (bottom) six and one-
bali miles north of San Juan Capistrano. Closeness of elevation lines
on map indicate ruggedness of land.
Huntirigton Beach Youth
Winner of Angel Contest
Christopher Rideout is an 8·year-old ,
fretkle-faced boy from Huatinston Beach
who avidly reads the DAILY PILOT
iporls pages.
He waats notning more than to be
a professio11al baseball player some day.
And he 'd like to meet Caifornia Angels'
left fielder Alex Johnson while he's
wailing to grow up enough for fate
to place him in the big league lineup.
Ne~t Wednesday night he'll get part
of i}is wish. '
The letter .Chris wrote was declared
the winner in the Early Bird Bowus
cowtest presented by the DAILY PILOO'
1n c,conjunction with the newspaper 's 2·fOr·
1 Nile.
As winner of tlle "bonus," Chtls, of
21001 Ocean Ave., gets four tickets for
scme future home game of the Angels,
• baseball autographed by the Algels
plQers and -best part of all -a
C?hance to meet his favorite Angel before
the game next Wednesday evening at
Anaheim Stadium.
Letters from lhree olher Orange Coast
area boys -two of them brothers -
v.-ere selected by judges for runner·up
honors in the Early Bird contest.
Each of the three Jetter-writers will
recel~ two tickeli to future Angel gan1es
ol thfir choice. The runnerHP: are:
-Ronnie Pear10n Savfgo, 10, or-311)
E. 16th St., Costa Mesa. He atlected
shortstop Jim Fregosi as " ... a gre at
baseball player and a really cool guy."
-Karl Jacobso1, 10, of 10192 Valley
Forge Drive, Huntington Beach. His
"lavorite Angel" was Chico Rui:i, picked
by Ka rl for his ability to "come off
the bench Ice cold to pinch hit and
come through with a base hit."
-Karl's brother, Keith, 71h, of the
.same address. He selected Alex Johnson
for, amOng other reasons, being ''. ..
a good aPort. He doesn't get mad when
he strikes oot."
Judges selected the JeUer written by
Chris Rideout on the basis of ill •pparent
sincerity, because of !ti almplicily •nd
Ila originality. Here Is the eatire telt
of the letter:
uMy favorite Angel Is Aid Johnson
because I like to set (Ille) on the lllird
bUe lie and watch him.
;'He is a good left fielder a.net he
hits good, too.
"And I think he likes kids."
, Chris will attend the same with his
ac:rou·lhe-street nei1hbor1, ~tr. and Mrs.
Guy R. Smith, and his mother.
The Smiths have oyt• taken him ,
ihe added. Chria said he wanla to repa,y
hi~ .. Jood neighbors. ~nw that I have won (our Ucketl, ''
fie sa10, "l'ffi goift} to lake Guy and
Becky (the Smiths) to • ball aame."
..
.. ---DAILY PILOT ~
Councihnan li~s Really Small World . •
Criticizes ;{FS Students Meet Old C o~ntry Pals at Disneyland ~
Fire Boost
By JOHN VALTERZA
ot ... ....,, "lllM "•"
A San Clemente citizen's detailed ~
pooal for contracting with Orange County
!or fire department service ~ yielded
a city staff study on the plan aloog
With hostility front one city councilman.
.. I don't see where it will do much
good to beef up !hO department,'' said
Councilman Stanley Northrup this week,
"au· 'it would do ls add that many
more handball plf.yers." '
But fellow councibnen "have agreed
that City Mai:iager Ken Carr examitle
the f~bllity and cost.s or suggeations
by James W. ·Moss, 431 Avenida
Cristobal, that San Clemente contract
with Orange County for a higher level
of fire protection while at the same
Ume retaining existing volunteers and
the fire chief to shore up that service.
"1oss, In I Jetter to crumcilmen, said
San Clemente's rating by the PacUic
Fire Rating Bureau of nine paints was
_.fl1t "worst ratlni PQ§lble," and that
·contracting with the county could raise
it.
"What can best be done to improve
the poor fire safety condition! in San
Clemente?" he asked.
"The only logical and economical solu-
tion in these times of ever-increasing
government costs is to contract for fire
protectJon with (the county).''
He aaid such a contract would :
-Immediately improve the fife in-
surance rating for fire service by three
classes without an increase in tax cost,
si mply "by virtue of becoming a part
of a larger and better equipped organiia~
lion."
-Continue use of the volunteer fire
department to supplement a minimum
paid crew on duty arourw;t the clock.
-Improve the quality and level of
service at cheaper cost.
-Include use of Fire Chief Merton
\V. llacketfs services as full-time fire
marshal, responsible for fire prevention
duties.
The Moss plan drew favor in spirit
from Mayor Walter Evans, but Northrup,
an insurance executive, doubted the con-
tr&ct with the county would effeCUvely
change prices paid by Sin 'Clemenfeans
for insurance.
"J doubt very much if it wou1d mean
a savings lo insurance customers," he
said.
The councilman. a strong critic of
city contracts with the wunty -or
vice-versa -has in recent weeks sug-
gested San Clemente abandon its contract
.services ol offering local lifeguards on
county beaches.
Aligned with the request for a rtaff
study on the Moss suggestion came an
additional • request from O:luncilman
Thomas O'Keefe who asked a local query
of the "proprietary" fire department
in effect in Scottsdale, Ariz., where the
city buys fire service from a private
concern similar to some anlbu!am:e
service systems.
The suggestion drew a chilly respanse
from fellow councilmen and city stall,
but· it won assurances of some com·
munications to lhe desen town never-
theless.
Another recent suggestion by O'Keefe
for examination of the combination
police-fire role drew a frigid reply.
Under that arrangement (the most
oft-cited example is the city ot Sun·
nyvale) policemen and fire.men • are
blended into one function:
But Fire Chief Merton Hackett and
Police Chief Clifford MulTay two years
ago traveled to Sunnyvale to examine
that pilot program firsthand,
They weren't impressed.
"It seems awfully funny to see a
shift of patrobnen leaving their patrol
car with fire helmets and turn-<>ut jackets
along with their revolvers and police
gear," Hackett observed recently.
The rapid turnover rate of employes
in the Sunnyvale system also was a
deterrent, he added.
As the debates and queries continue,
San Clemente's fire safety 1ituation rests
on volunteers who in recent months
have intimated that they're tired of
the thankless job.
The city budget has a little more
than $170,000 in cigaret tax revenues,
stored away for a new fire department
headquarters and a site. Several locations
have been suggested, but a choice is
still unmade.
The sum can only scarcely touch the
costs for a new building, and ts not
enough for needed equipment, and
especially salarles for a full.time depart-
ment workins round the clock.
By FREDERICK SCllOEMEllL
• Of' ... CMll'r .. , .. , ''•"
For two of-the more than 40 American
Field Service students who are staying
in the Laguna Beach.san Clemente area,
en route to Denver, Wednesday's trip
to Disneyland brought home just a Uttle
cl0&er.
It came as quite a surprise when
_Ha~· OUsei!y, student from Finland,
happened to run across an old $0C(!er
buddy wbo ls visiting the United States,
while walking down one or the streets
of the Magic Ki.'lgdom .
Later, almost in a matter~~fact way,
Barbara Bristow, from Australia on lhe
AFS Program, met two of her Australian
schoobnates at one of the Disneyland
attract.ions.
It was a thrilling experience the two
students reported, for them to see a
glimpse oI home. while still thousands
of miles away. 1n a way, It was a
preview or the day when they arrive
in their native countries, after spending
this J ear in America.
Young Ouseily and Miss Bristow were
among 42 American Field Service
students who have been spending the
past year in the San Francisco area,
on the exchange program.
The student group now is en route
to Denver, Colorado. where the Western
AFS conference will be held before the
foreign students leave for New York.
From the gateway city, the students
will depart to their native lands.
While in the Laguna Beach and San
Clemente areas. the students were taken
on tours ·of the Saa Onofre nuclear
power plant, the Mission at San Juan
Capistrano and the Dana Point Marina:
The AFS 'ers also tried Tuesday to
get a peek at the President, by walking
down tl\e beach from Cyprus Shores,
which borders the Western While Holl&:,
but all ,they got-was a good look at
the chief executive's estate.
While at Disneyland Wednesday, the
foreign group was thrilled by the !amous
Bobsle$, held in awe by the "Pirates
of the Caribbean," and wildly t()Ssed
on the "!\tad Tea cups," making the day
an instantaneous hit.
Saddlehac~ Begins -Smun1e1· Session
Saddleback College begi ns its six·v.·eek
summer sess ion Wednesday, the fir st
such ' session fo r the young conununl~y
CGllege.
.. RegistfaUon for the 87 classes lo be
offered during the day and evening pr0<-
grams commences tlfonday and ·continues
to Wednesday, ~he first day of classes.
•
OAILY PILOT , .. " ....... .,• -~ -
AFS GATHERING -Ian Caithness of South Africa, Rosanna ROst-:
agno of Italy and Karen Culkomp of Three Arch Bay, California, talk '
things over before heading to Disneyland. ,;
,--
Majority of Eleven Votes
' Can't Produce Teen Center
By PAMELA HALLAN -
01 ,,,, 01117 l'llet lt&tt
A handful of· M~Oh Viejo residents
voted to increase lheir coonty service
area's taxe$ by seven cents to pay
for a teen center Tuesday,
But Mike Shearer, president ol the
t.1ission ViejO lfomeowners' Association
~ajd there's little chance Lhe the County
Board of Supervisors will approve it .
'"Jlhey·n ha!'dly find 11 votes repceseo-
talive of the e.ntJre community," he
said. Six voted to keep the lax rate
the same and five voted no on the
center.
The voting took place at a ·special
meeting in the l\1ission ViejG High School
1nultipurpose room. Shearer said hi11
group had sent notices to every home in
!\fission Viejo.
"We have to assume that no one
•
ls aga!nst a teen oonter or else t.Dey
would have sho¥lD up," said Shearer.,·
He said he ~lieved. that a fai.r!Y
strong case could be presented to tM
Board or Supervisors in favor of a teep
center financed with surplus tax f~,
curre!V.ly being generated in .Mis5ioo. Vitt
jo's county servi<'e area. i<"
Th is would provide $44,700 from ~1ission Viejo alone. : ••
Aegean.Hills Ho01~~ m~in&-~
the same time as the ~1.lssion Vi~~
group In Val~nda School, voted in fay.9( f~ u:infee~~n~~;i:r:~x a:~:
proximat~ly $11,000 to Mis~ion Vit:~i
toLal. ·• ~ ..
Shearer has estimated that a "bar!
bones" , ~~t for the· first year for
the teen center would figure ab<M:
$41,600.
Recruiters for Elks
Bag 23 New Me111hcrs
This is c;me way out of PO!f&rl'y. • •
But, like every shortcut, it's a long·
The ,herd of Elka la growing larger. shot. Publicity chairman Howard 111gram of Minion Viejo Elk1 Lodge 244f report.s A man's reol hope is to learn. He
the current hunt haa bagged 23 applica~ needs the basics that wHI get him a
tions tor member1h.ip. decent job.
However, he said they were far short ~A group of Gos Company employ·
of tht:ir intended 1oaJ of $00 which they ees hove volunteered to help. They've hope to meet prior to their August
los Angeles Service Center. Other
Gos Company people ore helping ol
iervice centers in East Los Angeles
ond Venice.
Ttley work evening s, teaching .
Busin6'S English. Arilhmelic. Anyth ing
lho l wi ll help somebody ge l o jpb.
And lhey'll leoch onybody who
wants lo learn.
' ' Go• Company people don't~
ony pay forlhls work. Excepl salis~
!Ion. Bur they believe
·tho I everybody oughl
lo ho ve o fighling
chance.
Slflltm Cllltill 611 C...,
4 .lulHld...,. oj '••lllt ,,....,. o. ......
-We'tt hwettirtt 111 ..._,, .......
JSth Charter Nile. Anyone dtsirina to joined volunteers fr om other busi·
become an-E:l~--may-call-membership-n~es.-working ot-the Soulh Cenlrol
chairman Ed MaGulrt at 137·248$. '--------------------------------------
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f Dall Y I'll.OT rrld<Y, Joly '· 1971 •
'Honor America' Festival Set HEW Cuts
3 Schools' But Leftist.s Score Rally as 'Right W,ing Politi~al Show'
WA&lllNGTON <AP>-ro ..... w.. U.S. Funds '>
anUwar organlur the July Fourth ___/
By THE AllOCIATED PllEla
t~•*MWPl••i.tn
Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Mayor F.
....., Clementi bas decreed com·
mlllloner1 ahould appear at their
July 21 meeting weanng Bermuda
lhortl and sport shirts. Clements
uid Tue.day ha laid down the de-
cree In keeping with the i,mage of
the city as a resort.'' Seventy·two-
yeal'Old COmmlssioner Edmund R.
Bqrry said simply: I don'.t like it." • . ' Th.ret Atlanta Utn.aQtTl l~nt
4 m01tth cleaning up a 10-bloclc
uctipn oJ Na11CJI Crttlc in the dfv'• northwtlttrn 1tction. Tht
2S truckloadl oJ ;unlf collecttd
bu Rl&ode1 Haverty, 15, Bil l
Ewi1111t 14, and Bob Murphy, 16,
incluclld:
' -1,390 bttr and '•oft drln~
car,..
-lOJ old t:a.r tirts.
~lU ... d-9olf1>lllll.
-284 bucket3'~
-A 'f'tcord player, o whtt£.
baffow and a ftrtitiztr sprta4tr.
• The Kolhapur, lndia district mag·
lstrate·drafted 150 policemen Mon·
day night to drive an elephant
named BarchrBohodur'back to his
stable. Bare~ a prize possession
of the Maharajah ot Kolhapur,
threw off hill Mabmout driver while
being taken to a pond Monday for
a bath. The elephant then roamed
the city's street.s, smashing a rick·
11haw and a scooter, toppling a pow-
er pole and knocking down fruit
stalls. .-
A Miami boy named Dorothy,
who &a}" he has gotten into several
fights because of bis name, was
sentenced Friday to two months tn
jail for hilting a man named Cash.
Miami Municipal Judge Arthur Hui·
tM passed aentence on Dorothy L.
W-1nl Jr., 19, alter Woodward
wa!I convicted of striking James
Caah, assistant principal of Allapat•
tab Junior High School. Huttoe said
Woodward, who was not a 1tudent
at the school, was visiting a girl·
friend at the time of th~ fig!!!. •
The county oavt Charlotte,
N.C., Memorlol Hospft<J! 96 pint,
of confiscated liquor Mondau. A'
hospital 1poke.fmtln SCJfd the
tohi81uy will be ustd !() makt
"bi.!muth and bourbon," whicJr.
he Mscribtd a1 the world'• beat
bed&ore lotion.
• A judge •entenced a 118-yeer-<>ld
messenger for the British Broad·
casting Corp. (BBC) Tuesday to oix
months in -prison for hoarding more
than 40,000 letters to the BBC over
the -past two years. A lawyer for
WHiiom Newby told the court New·
by meant no harm and simply liked
collecting things. A psychiatrist's
report to the court said Newby had
an 11overdeveloped collecting in-
1tmct. •• • During Monday night's Dade
City, Fla., city commi.!sion meet·
Ing, somebody no~ced the City Hail
drapes ablaze. A fellow omoklng a
cigar had inadvertedly touched his
1togje to the curtains. Water was
U...ed on the drapes and nobody
waa injuncl. The fellow with the
cl1ar was Dade City Fire Chief
ltod,..,..
The ,.lion Celetirateo Ila 114U> blrtlxby
l!aWrday with the tradlllGoal fittworks
dllploj>s, picnics and or11«y, The larg .. t
l•Mtie& will be In w-.i.o. D.C.,
"4M!re thousands of J)l!rlOOI are beading
lilr Honor America Day ·-· $pm11011 ol Honor America Day, Mio IACllJde evangelilt Billy Gnham and
-Bob Hope, -that mo.e tlwt 200,000 will participale Sltur.
day ,In.memorial and patriot ic cerwnorues at d't nat1m'1 capital.
Going to Wuhlngtcq for tho Honor Am~ca-Independence D a y celebrs-
Uona i• a J7-ear traia reserved for
J ,200 pertJOna from New YCl'k City: a
train brinlinlf 4CIO -from RJcJi • mond, Va., Ind a 500-car motorcade
briflrling many others from the ume
-: a d!lnered plane carrying 150
hi&li -pupils from lie Dallu, Tex.,
area, and many other• mm otbei' parts
d the coontry.
Graham ljltld at a IM!WI conlerence
Friday;, "Hdnor Amf.ria Day 11 not
for hawka and doves, or Democrats
or RepubliclaDS, or black or white. ll
is allot us Coi~"
A sj>ecial tw~minute salute throughout
the· naUon.-wi.lh-church btlla chiming,
train whistles b1uting and motorist!
llOUl'lding thelr Inns at Il a.m. local
time, was ureed by the Honor Amerjca
sponsors,
~ Scouts Jn '\ljrginia, carryipg a~
American flag. on a baton, were runn1ng
from 'Williariilburg to tne national
capital. They plan to be there .wtiert
Graham conducts religious ervlces at
· the Lincoln Memorial. H0pe will lead
the activiUes, tncludlng a sta1e lhow
and f-.,.is display.
Special events have been acheduled
from .,Califorrria to Maine. Jn Hawai i,
the natio1t'1 youngest 1tate, an Hono r
America parade .,,.ill be be1d at Waikiki.
The parade dlainnan, Robert Cole, says
''there will be no banners, no 1igns,
just flap."
Maine Gov. Kenneth M. Curtis has
proclaimed ''Operation Patriotism'' for
2 p.m. Saturday. asking the state's rNi·
dents to ''join with their fellow Ameri·
cans tn a minute of meditation, renect·
Ing on the common tileulag of citizen·
ship."
SEATO Assails
N. Viet Action
In Cambodia
MANILA (AP) -'!'ht l!ouilleasl A!ia
Treaty OrgaBzatlm today condemned
North Vimomeoe m!lilory ottocis in
Cambodia and "1fered all poaoible
..... tanct "'diplomatic Mloria"' ....iore
peace there. But it offered o0 military
aid lo the beieoguertd Cambodian
govommtnt, leavq lhat to Ila irMividual
ln<ltlberos.
A communique lSllUed 1t tht end of
the 15th annual meeUng o( the alliance'•
coundl of mioirters urged a '"political
90Jution bNed on Camlxldla'• desire to
malnialnlto IO'ierelgnty and neutrality."
The communique 'lll!Jlauded ilie efforts
ol a number ot naUoni to bring about
a diplmlaUc IOluUm and the withdrawaJ
of all foreign troops from Cambodia,
The flea"elary-teneral cl the alliance,
Jesus Varga, told new1nttn the Clm·
bodian government had made m request
for rn!Htary help from SEATO, and
"there 11 notJWDg SEATO can do -
we must respect Cambodia's neutrality."
carnbodia Is not a member ol the
a!llance, "4lldl Includes !be United
St.ates, 'Ibailend, the Pbl1ippine1,
Pakistan, Australia, New Zealand, Brit.
ain and France. The SEATO treaty
makes aid against aggression available
to Cambodia, Laos and South Vietnam,
but they have to ask for lt. ·
Secretary of St.ate William P. Jtocers
told the delegates ~hur8day the United
Statee does oot favor SEATO military
involvtm.ent in Cambodia.
Beauties Arrive
Miss USA, Debbie Shelton, pulls back her hair as Miss Germany,
Irene Newmann, watches on their ar:rivaJ in Mia.mi Thursday for the
Miss Univera_e_pageant. The new Miss Universe will be selected July
11 at Miami Beach. ·
McGovern 'Equal Time'
Rejected by Networks
. NEW YORK (UPI) -'!'ht rialion's
three television networks plan to present
programs offering varlew viewpoinlt on
foreign affairs, but they won'l give Sen.
George S. McGovtm (D-1!.D. ), «iual time
to respond to Pttlident Nixon'• plan
for peace.
The networka -ABC, CBS and NBC
-Thuuday reject..t McGovern'• ci..
mand for time to explain the "amftXI.
ment for ending the war'' he is co-aponsorlng with Mark 0. HaUield (R-Ore.)
Nixon appeared Wedneoday night In
a "conversation'' wtth eenlor newsmen
from the netWUT'ks in Loi AngeJM.
MCGovern charged the Pttsident, during
the program, was ''chasing the aame
illu1ions that have bedeviled us in
Southeast Asia for 10 years."
Leonard H. Goldenson, president of
American Broadcatllng Companies Inc.,
&a.Id Aac News will pre1ent a prime
time program next Monday featuring
Democratic Natiooa1 Co m m i t t e e
Chainnan Lawrence F. O'Brien, Sen.
FAmund S. Muskie (!).Maine), and Rep.
Henry s. Ralss (0.Wls.)
"These three' dlstincuiahed members
of the Democratic Party will have the
opportunity "''JftOOOI their pointa of
view oo ~ important tuues of the
day," Goldenson said in a telegram to
M~ern. He also a.id the netwofk
has presented contrasting viewpoint.a on
subjects Nixon dl!Cllsaed.
Robert V, Evans, vice president and
general counsel of Columbia Broad.
casting System Inc. said McGovern'a
requeat did JlOt "qualify under the equal
opportunity JW'O'Vision" " the Federal
Communioll!OM Act "linct thal pro-
vision is limited kl political candidates.''
Evans fiaid CBS had attempted to
interview McGovern on the subject of
Nixon'• appearance, bu.t was informed
the Senator was unava ilable.
He further &aid in a telegram tn
McGovern that Sen. J. William Fulbright
(0-Ark.), a leading antiwar Senator,
would appear Sunday on the CBS news
interview broadcast "Face the Natin ."
Evans also said Sen. Frank Church 10..
ldaho), appeared on a June 30 broadCast
that examined the Cambodian situation
and expressed his views on constitutional
responsibilities of the President.
And NBC President Julian Goodman
~aid the networ k has scheduled a ooe-
hour program ne'xt Thursday for a
discU$SiOn of issues relating to the
Southeast Asia war, including t.he
McGovern-Hatfield amendment.
"Spokesmen for different points of view
will be Invited" for that program , Good-
man aakl in a telegram to McGovern.
"In view of the sd'teduling of this
special program and the other op-
portunities that have been afforded in
regular and special programs for presen·
talion o( varying points of view on
ttiese issues •.• we respect.fully decline
your request."
Ex-slave, 128,
Knows History,
Was Part of It
It's Hot Traveling Ea·st
BARTOW, Fla. (UPI ) -Old Charley
Smith isn't really sure his birthday i11
Saturday •. but the one time handyman
for Jes~e James knows for certain
he was first 80\d as a slave 011 July
4.
-
Needl.es Hits 111; Blythe Night Low Just 91
Charley, wize111erl and balding, will be
128 Saturday. The years are by his
count; the date is compliments of the
federal government.
r-JM1Nt11re1 Charley says he remembers when he
was 12 years·-old he was entlced aboard
a wooden salling ship not far from
his home i111 what is now Libya and
brought to the United Stale..11.
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Aid he remembers clearly that it
was: a July 4lh -the United State11
was only 78 then -when he was placed
on the auction block in New Orleans
and sold as a slave to a Texas rancher.
"l took the same name as him -
Charley Smilh,'' the Negro Jays. ''I
worked and lived ill his ranch house
in Tcxu.
"I remember when Presldent Lincoln
cRlte<f freedom day a.nd t was free ."
said Chatlfly. "I never was treated Uke
a slave, though. I lived in my dad's
houi;e just likt his th.rtt boys and two
girls did. Th11t'1 what 1 called Mr. Smith
-dad ."
Charley today silo; In his little "store" ~e ~ Jives a.wt sells soft drink•
a11d recalls his past year& in a sure
voice.
"T dldn' I read my histo I knew
It." he boasts. -
CharleL still wea(l two_ bel~-'
holds up his troustrs and the other
ii where be used to wea.r his runbelt.
I
I ~ -·---' ..
"Honor Amtrica" trlravagwa in the WASlllNGTON (UPI) HEW
nation'• capkal •·11 the kind of tbing Secretary Elliot L. Ridlardsoo, after
that took plact in Hitler'• GOrmany." · only nine daya in clfl~ has on!S'ed , , . federal funds cut di lhree Soolllem • It s all there -. folkrole, etCtalian achool diltricts for fall' to desegrqate
poUtk:s, ju8l like Nazi Germany. Jt'a • lf>eir 9dloo1*.
scary," Stewart Meacham llyt, "It • "Thia i.s a vwy decisive action on
really Is." the J8't <I Mr. Richardson," said one
Meacbam's advice to the left : HEW civil rights ollk:.lal at the Depart-ment of Health, Education and Welfare. "Stay away from It. AnY ~ttetnJt to B~t olher HEW sources denied that
get into It makes it more mt.ensting the moft indicated the department wu
and builds il," llhllmlc ..,,.,..is from court adlon to
Generally. tbe organized left aetrns fund cutoas to achieve actxiol ~ga·
to be following Meadwn'1 COllMOI and Uoo.
is Ignoring the event. Richardton who prombed at a neW11
But no ooe can safely predict the conf'erence JWe ~ that he woold use
reaciion of the disorganized left -that in "~iate" cases the culnff pro.
colleclion of ragtag revolutionaries, Yip-cedlJre widely u!ted during h Jobn&on
pies, poUticized hippies and street people administtallon, said Tttursday he would
who band together under names like malntain communications with the three
White Panihers, lll• Up-Against-the-Wall, Southern distrlds in hopes d bringing
the STP. them into ccmpliance.
"There'a a lot of pec>pJe coming,•• Affected by ttie order are the Hendry
said a tall young man with loog brown County Board of Public Instruction in
hair and a sleeping bag strapped to hi!! La Belle. Fla.: Chester County Schoo!&
bade. "And there's going to be a lot ln Chester, S.C., and Nacogdoche«
of political disagreement." lndepetx:ltnt School D I a tr i ct in
To the far left, the organized, the Nacogdocbes. Tex.
unorganized and the d ls organ i z.e d UnUI 'Illunday 's fund cut.off was aft.o
segmenta Included, the prndudion featur· nounced, HEW had used the proceduro
ing Bob Hoe and the Rev. BlllY. Graham only once since the administration an.
is a political show, pure and simple, nounced in July, ..1969, that it would
and a right-wing one, at tha_!: . ~ _Tely ~ m.!linlL_ ~-('.Ollrt suits __ to force
"It's a disgraceful explo1talioo. cf ilesegregition ifiStead cl Ntoffs.
religion by an administration using thi!r The aoUon was announced on the same
kind of thing as a means to prop itsdf day that Sen. Waite~ F. M~ale (D-
u p,'• sai d Meacham, a M~n.), ~used ~e~ixon~101st.J:ation
former PresbYteria11 pastor who helped of 'statiltieal gnnrruckry m claimlnl
build last November'll massive antiwar that one million black .00001 children
demonstration ln Washington. in the South will be enrolled in integrated
Originally, Abbie Hoffman planned to aohool systems in September.
call the natk>n's Yippie tribes to the Mondale, chairman .« a seli:et Senate
capital' for a "Festival or Life" on the committee on equal educahonal OP" • Fourth. portunities, said in a statement that the
But after "Honor America" Day was administration failed to say haw many
announced Hoffman canceled his ha~ sdlools are deeegrepted in each diflltrk:t
pening One close associate explained, cladfied as desegregated or whether
''Abbie. thougtit ·tt would be a masswe." 8Chools classified as integrated ·::are
Another aource said the decision was something leu ihan t9 perctDt. blae~.
political and would have been made
with or without "Honor America" Day. Abrams Surgery Rennie Davis, another of the Chicap
'l conspiracy trial defendant!, made a.
spoofing attempt to get the lft.o
tiestablishmenl included on the Honor Said Success,· America Day program. ·
He proposed,-among-other-things....tha1-_ ~
poet Allen Ginsberg, a New Left guru, R e y tarts
be given equal time with Billy Graham , eCOV r
and that the Wahngton Monument be
sloshed with a many-colored coat of
washable paint for the occasion.
Davis didn't push his suggestions for
Jong or very l!Kldly. He had another
purpose 1n mind. "We wanted to lhow
it up as the right-wing thing that it
is. Now the hell with it," he 1aid.
Soviets, Arabs
Study Requests
For Armaments
MOSCOW (UPI) -The top.ranking
soldiers and diplomat& of Egypt and
the Soviet Union today worked on details
of further Soviet military aid to the
Arabs, with possible guidance from t.ht
Communist Party Central Committee,
diplomatic sources said.
While President Gamal Abdel Nasser
of Egypt relaxed and had medical
checkups for his dronic sciatica and
diabetes, the sources said, two sub-
committees ol military and diplomatic
experts negotiated the details o! his
requests for warplanes, missiles and
manpower.
The central committee Is tbe ultimate
authority of the Soviet part y and it ·
inet Thursday for the first lime this
year. The officially published purpose
was discussion of plans to boost
agricultural production.
SAIGON (AP) -Gen. Croigbl<ll W.
Abrams, cemmander o( all U.S. f«ce1
in Vietnam , underwent aurgery thi!
morning for rtmo•al ol his gall bladd<r
in a U.S. military hor;pit.al in Japan,
the U.S. Comm.and announced. Abrams
is 55.
"The operation was txmpietely auc-
oes.sful," the announcement. said. "Gen.
Abrams i• receiving nomial
postoperative care and is making good
progreea in hi.I reoovery from the:
llll'ger)'."
The surgery had been llCheduled for
IOJT\e time, and Abrams entettd the
hosp)tal in Japan two days ago, the
ltaternent ·added.
The command said Abrams will return
to Saigon after a oonvalescent leave.
Mrs. Abrams and three of the couple's
dlildren, Bruce, 9: Jeanne, 16; and
Ellazbeth, 14, flew to Japan and were
present at the hospital during the opera-
tion and will stay with the general
until he is released.
Abrams has been the lop commander
of 'U.S. forces in Vietnam since July
3, 1968, He served a.s deputy ccmmander
under Gen. WHliam C. Westmoreland
for nearly a year prior to moving into
ttle top spot.
He gained a reputatioo during World
War II as a tank commander and eerved
in the U.S. 41.h Ann<lrfd Division from
that time it was activated in 1941 until
V·E Day in 1945.
Nixon Number I
Agnew, Hope in Teens' Top Ten
NEW YORK (UPI) -If there were a rebellion against the es-
tablishment by the nation'• youth, it hardly could be determined by
the results of a poll of teen-agers. They picked President Nixon as
their most popular American1 and Vice President Spiro T. Agnew
was 9th . ...
Mom and dad came in second and comedian Bob Hope ran
third in the i urvey by the electronic computer programming insti·
tute in which the closest thing to a hippie , yippie or rock singer was
television star Bill Cosby.
Cosby placed 10th and la st, and tHe only Negro named.
Released Thursday, the poll was conducted among 4,000 high
school juniors and seniors throughout the country. They were asked
to list the 10 living Americans they most respected and were given
300 names of well known persons in sucb fields at politics, sports, en-
tertainment and science.
Additionally the teens were permitted to write in any living
American candidates not on the Ust.
Besides parents, other write-in selections included favorite
teachers, who ranked sixth, and ···no choice" appeared frequenUy
enough to give it seventh place. -
The winners in order of popularity were :
1. President Nixon
2. Parent~
3. Bob Hope
4. A•tronaut Neil Armstrong
5. Sen. Edwanl M. Ktnnedy
6. Teach•rs
7. No choice
R. B<lly Graha·m· --
9. Viet President Spiro T. AJrnew
10. Bill ~sby
• I
I
)
. I
•
DAIL V PILOT $ !
'Bomb Blasts Rock Hippies Dip
Northern Ireland 50,000 at Pop Festival
BYRON, 01. (UPI) -ol the event.
Reshuffle
In Kremlin
Reported r BELFAST, Northern lreland An untxploded bomb was SwelWlng long·halrtd · hjppies Temperatures soared ov~ 100 degrees for the ltCOlld skinny-dipped in Echeconnee .consecut.Jve day, sending hl~
Creek near the Middle Georgia pies _ male and female -
RacewaY Thul'3day on the eve scrambling into the coolin1
o( the sa.'OOd Atlanta lnterna4 waters of the Echetonot•
LONDON (UPI) -The
possibility o( a lop level
Kttmlln resOOuffle gal n e d
support today from a cryptic
Soviet report frocn Moscow.
The report said Oom1nunlst
party chief Leonid S. Brezhnev
ls ill and hinted at possiblo
changes in the leadership.
The report came from Vic-
tor Louis, the Soviet journalist
who in.,.. the past h a s
fore&iladowed major changes
in Russia, including the outser
of Nikita S. Khrushchev from
the prmtiership.
Brezhnev has been absent
from the Supreme Soviet of
the Russian Feden1Uon and
may cancel hiB smeduled visit
to Romania. He is said to
be suffering from high blood
pressure.
"Western obserVen have W Go
had lo draw their own COO• And Aw~y e
c\usions about a possible
' ....
•
' •
Kremlin re!lilu!fle," Lou Is Comedian Jackie Gleason, 53, is shown with his
reported . bride--to-be, Beverley McKittrick, 37., at his home
The restiuff\e run1ors, he ad-in Wentworth, England. The couple ~tll marry Sa~·
ded in his dispatch to the urday. just 10 days after Gleason's di vo rce from his
newspaper Evening News , wife oC 34 years.
"would gain probability" if .:_.:.:.:c.:::c.:::c..:c=:c_-------------
Brethnev fail~ to attend tllc .
plenum o( Ult Coinmunist
party's Central Committee.
However. Brezhnev h a s
iib'!Ce attended the Central
Committee meeting. But his
trip to Bucharest apparently
is still uncertain, if not unHke--
Iy.
Jobless Rate Drops
First Time in .Year .
There have been repeated
reports in the past of a
Kremlin reshuffle this year.
They are either Ignored by
the Kremlin or d e n I e d
outright.
Penn Rail
Probe Slated
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
nation's unemployment rate
dropped in ,June for the first
time this year aHhough llll
additiooal l.3 million
An1ericans so u g h t unsuc-
cessfully to find jobs.
The seeming contradiction
was attributed by the Labor
Department 'nlursday to the
fact that the number of adult
women and teenagers seeking
work fell far below ex·
pectations.
The department a 1 s o
toward the four percent mark.
The number of unemployed
Amerieall! totaled 4.7 million
last month, a rise or t.3
million over May. The civilian
labor force increased 2.3
millk>o to 84.t million.
The government said the in-
crease in the labor force -
those Amerieam working or
activ~y seeking jobs -was
much smaller than had been
expected. The Labor Depart.
ment had predicted 2.S million
teen-age~ woukt seek work
in early June but the actual
number was ooly two millkln.
WASHINGTON (AP ) - A
full-scale investigation or 'fhe
Penn Central ls being under.
taken by the Interstate Com.
merce Commission following
the railroad's petition for
reo rganization under
bankruptcy laws.
IOC Cbainnan George ~f.
reported, without elaboration,
the jobless rate for Negroes
f'OSe fr001 eight to 8.7 percentliiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiii,..Oiii-.I
last month, returning to t.he.t~r----:ir::t:;;;l;;;---tl Aprilfevel i'fter a dlji in~1f.'11
Stafford said Thursday the
oommissioo staff had been
reviewing the f I r m ' s AC·
rounting praotice!I and finan·
c\al traASactions foe several
weeks.
''Institution or a formal in·
vestigatiOO ••• will allow Ule
eommisslon to examine the
operat.lng practices of the
railroad and wilhhio give
tt ~ to the records of
the Penn Central'a affiliated
companies," he said.
-The nonwhite unemployment
rate "'as seven percent a year
ago and 7.1 percent in Mardi
1970. The I>year low in
noowhite unempk>yment was
5.7 percent in February 1169.
'lbe overall unemployment
rate for June was 4.7 percent.
ccmpared w\Ut five percent
in May and 3.4 ~cent a
_,ear ago. N i x on ad-
miflistration offici·al! ti ave
predict.ed the rate will hit 5',I,
percent before droppine •aatn
Dropping In
Sky Dive r Surprises Folks
BELLEVILLE, Mich. !UPI)
-Barney and Janet 1...astinger
have a son who Is a sky
diver, among other things.
Thursday night he dropped in
on them for the first time
In six years -from an
altitude Or 5,Mlll feet.
"l thought I'd come back
east {or a visit and surprise
my parents,'' said Barry
Lastinger, 27, who has been
living in California . •·r "'as
going to make my l,OOOlh
jump and I wanted them to
see it."
Friends got the Laslin gers
to go to the ninth hole oI
the executive golf course here
with a JViony story that Arnold
Palmer would be theu, Barry,
an electrical engineer,
motorcyclisl and black.belt
karale 'exper~ who'• been &ky
diving for eight years, ar-
ranged to fly over the golf
coorse.
lie Jancled on the green with
tits parents watching l n
amazement.
"I hope you weren 't di.sap-
poiinted that I wasn't Arnold
Palmer," Barry said M he
folded his black and orange
nylon parachute and peeled
of! his jump suit.
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e1ch 2nd Meil of equ•I
price or lower, PAY
JUST A PENNY I I I I
BOWLING
P1y the r19ul•r price
for tho ht (3rd, 5th, etc. l
•·"'· .•• '"" 2nd, 4th, 6th, etc., 91me JUST A
PENNY I I I I
NO LIMIT
KONA
LAN E·S
H" HAHO• ILVD •
COSTA MUA 141·111J
1 '
(UPI) -Several bomb ex· found attacheft to the heado-
plosions rocked Belfast and quarters ol the Proteslant
Londooderry today and the government unionist party oo the other side ol the city British goverrment announced when wires were st-en pro-
in London it would keep troops lruding from a doorway. here as !l)ng as .necessary and
with orders to shoot back i! In London, police raided five
fired upon. homes and seized machine
Two bomb blasts audible for guns, rilles and n1ore ~ar\
six miles ripped apart a 20,000 rounds ol ammunition
British army recruiting center they said they believed were
In Be\!ast early today and to be smuggled into Northern
aronists set fire to a Roman Ireland. Eight persons were
Catholic school. 1 n Lon-taken in for questioning .
donderry, a firebomb exploded One man was ho5pitalized
against a house but did lillle for shock in the l a.m.
damage. recruiting center b o m b i n g
British H o m e Secretary which broke windows I n
Reginald Maudling, speaking neighboring buildings and lit·
in the House of Commons in tern! the streets with glass.
London afte r a two-day visit Damage frorn the fire at
to Northern Ireland, said Bri· St. Joseph's Roman Catholic
ta in was detern1ined that Primary School, a quarter
violence woold nol. succeed mile fr°'n lhe recruitment
and there would be no change center, was not serious.
in Northern Ireland's status Six persons have died in
without the consent of the the violence that broke out
people here. last weekend over the im·
Natlonalist.s in Northern prisonment of Bernadette
Ireland ha ve been fighting for Devlin, a Roman Catholic civil
return of the northern pro-righls )eader And member of
l'inc~ known as Ulster to the the British Paljiament, for her
Republic of Ireland. Former part in last year's riots.
Laborite Home S e c r e t a r y Supporters or the Rev. lan
James Callaghan told Com~ Paisley, a Protestant militant.
mons tile out.Jawed Irish marched to the home · of
Republican Army ( lRA) and . Premier Jamtl5 Chichester·
extreme ·'Protestant bodie$" Clark ool$kte Belfast 'Illurs-
were the "small. dark evil day night and delivered a peti·
forces at wwk'' in Northern tion demanding his resigna~
Ireland. tion.
II CHILDREN AND
TODDLERS
ll SHIRTand I SHORT sns ·
9-12 ~tONTHS I ,..._1,..1.n
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Add 1 bit of coklt
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Capp Can't
Oppose Ted
Uonal Pop Ftsti'-'AL · Creek.
By nlghtf1U, more than The festival is offlclally
50,000 young per'5011S from advertised to run through Sun-
thr0t1ghout the United States day nigtit, bot promoters Slid
were crowding into "the a benefit performance-p~
world's most expensive SOY· bably will be' added Monday,
bean patch" where at 3 p.m., the benefits going to t'Onlb&t
EDT today mort th.an twice drug abuse in Allan~·s hippie
that number were expected district.
to assemble under a bluing Gov. Lester Maddox ordered
sun for the start of the blaring slate troopers and a~l! of CAMBRIIX;E, 1-lass. (UPI ) bah! rock fMtival. the Georgia, Bureau of
-Cartoonist Al Capp says Youths; set up tents and Investigation into the plywood-
he cannot run against Sen. swigged 90ft drinks by the enclosed festival area just olf
Edward ~1. Kennedy in the truck.Joad frior to the start tourist-jammed Interstate 75, November election because of -.:__:_.:_ __ _:.:_ _____ "'=='
t.1assachuset.t.s' voter registra·
lion laws .
Capp changed h,ls registra·
lion fron1 Democrat t o
Republican sometime in the
past few months. Hence, he
cannot meet the requirement
that a {'andidate be a
registered party member for
at least a year.
He said he would remain
interestedin slate politics and.
as a parting shot, criticized
1-tassachusetts.
"A stale that doesn't object
to a vWt Crom Abbie Hoffman
or Jerry Rubin but does object
to a visit from the vice presi·
dent is not a healthy state,"
he said.
Tmlty, Fridty. it't the }'ronl il'rt me1t ind Jci1nir;
S1t11Td1y, Billy ~liu.; Sund•y, Th, t.:1'Upt.trtl Brother•
-j1ut • lew of the 11111ty 1t&r1 1~pe1rin1 1t K110U'•
11.1111mtr lo•1 Golden C1•1lc•de of Cciuntry ind
We11erl'I ~lu1ic. fi.rewcirk1 on the like in f ie1t1 VUI•&•
•YerJ af&ht !
SAVE 1''2 ~NOW I r
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• DAD.Y PILOT EDITOBIAL PAGE
Menace
The motith ol San Juan Cr et._ Ml Capistrano. Beach
Js a Jl1Urky menace.
. Two young boys playing on the unguarded banks of
the stagnant lagoon al Doheny Beach drowned recently.
Why Is the lagoon-accessible either through Do-
heny Pai-k Beach or upstream along the creek channel
-allowed lo remain both lull, unguarded and generally
unposted?
OUiciaJs from the state of California and Orange
Countr. say they have tried to drain the lagoon !or years
\Yilh little success.
Existing behind a natural sand bar. say officials,
nature's tendency is to stack sand at t.he mouth of. a
creek. This creates a natural dam which traps split ..
over ocean water at high tides and seepage from un·
derground at Doheny.
The state park district con,trols much of the lagoon
and has but one tractor capable of cutting throueh the
liand bar and freeing trapped water.
The large number of waders and paddlers in the
water includes vandals who tear down small warning
s igns.
It is obvious that more effective means of control
must be found to make the area safer. This might in·
elude: ·
-Closure of the easy access lo the lagoon. '
-Allocation of more bulldozer lime to help keep
the water depth at a minimum.
-Posting of permanent warni_ng signs at all points
oi access and if necessary periodic replacement of ~e
signs along with a crackdown on those who vandalize
them.
-Vigorous patrolling of the area to keep waders
out o! the lreacheo6us so!(.bottom slough, particularly
in fhe summer months.
Parents shou1d help, too, by proper supervision of
youngsters who do not know the dange rs they lace.
Keep Teen C.enter Alive
Laguna's Revival Teen Center had its problems in
the weeks before. it closed for the summer and its future
for the next school year is cloudy.
So far as its· members and invited guests were con-
' cemed, Revival Teen was a success. Staffed by trained
recreation leaders from 'the new city recreation depart·
ment. it attracted. two or three dozens teens every after·
noon after school and usually was jammed on weekends.
Inside the center, everything was fine. But the music
attracted unwelcome visitors and there were instances
of rowdyism. on the adjacent boardwalk and beach.
Recreation director George Fowler believes the mere
presence of a uniformed police offiC'er or private guard
patrolling the area would discourage the troublemakei-s.
Also possible might be use of part ol the spacious
new Boys' Club for teen activities. Strictly speaking, the
Boys' Club caters to the 8 to 18 age group, butt.he local
board has expressed a desire to have the Laguna facili-
ty serve.the entire community.
Certainly the first summer teen dance at the Boys'
Club was a total success., with 250 youl!,g people from
.iunior high through college age-havirig a wonderful
time -and· with no untoward incidents. •
s
English Gru11amur and Spellita:fi Are Cockeyed Why Did Ther,
Want This Time to Rati·onalize Them
Among uneducated people whose
language is described as "substandard"
the verb "to · be" is often CORjugated
as follows:
Singular Plural
I st person 1 is we is
2nd person you Is you is
3rd per.son he is lhey is
Educated people find this -conjugation
extremely funny.
.How.ever 1 should
like to ask the read-
er, if he has been
tempted to laugh, to
co.atrol himself for a
minute.
In l h e standard
conjugation of this
verb there are four
different lonns to
be Jea~ed : I am, thou a he Is, we
are, you e, they are. In the substandard
coojugation, however, there is ()Diy ooe
form, usable in all six situations. Now
a fwh:tamental principle of e!ficiency
is to get the most done with the least
effort, using standard, interchangeable
parts. We use electrical coAnections or
the same size and design whefller we
are plugging in a toaster, a table lamp,
a radio, or a hair dryer. It would
be silly to have plugs of different kinds :or each item lo be connected. The
substudard conjugation or the verb "to
be" ls, from th is point or view, a great
imJrOvement over "good English."
INDEED AN EFFICIENCY engineer
could make many helpful suggestions
,about the English hu1guage. If the usual
way of making a past tense is to add
''ed" to the end of a verb, why JtOt
make the principle general and say "run-
ned, ''rided," "swimmed," "gived ," ".sil-
ted," etc.? Many of the errors in English
madf by youngJhildren, from whom
thooe examples are dran, result simply
from the fact that children are a great
deal more logical than the English
language.
English spelling, which is about the
most cockeyed system in the world,
provides even greater opportunities for
the efficiency engineer. To have to write
"sewing a seam" makes about as much
sense as wriUng "gewiJlg to bed.'' U
we have learned to read correctly the
sentence, "There was a tear i• his
sltirt and a tear in his eye," how would
\•:e go on from there to rigure oot
how to pronounce "fear," "pear,"
"bear,'' "beard," "heard." "heart," and
"rearm"?
WHY, THEN, DOESN'T Congress ap.
point a commission cf linguistic el-
liciency engineers to go tc work and
rationalize the English language? It i!
to the lasting credit of President
Theodore Roosevelt that he at least
tried to do someUting about ih He
ordered the government printillg office
to use simplified spellings !or a large
number or words. But all he got for
his paiAs was an enormous storm or
public protest. When his succeS&lr, Presi·
dent Taft, was inaugurated in i909, the
New York Sun bade Roosevelt farewell
in a malicious cne-word editcrial,
"THRU!" ~ ' . The Chicago Tribue under the late
Colonel Robert R. McCormick use to be
pretty hOt on spelling reform, but since
his death i4 ardor has cooled . It still
uses ''tho," "altho," "thru," "lhruout'"
and "burocracy." But "buro" is gone-
alKI so are "sherif' and "tarif" and
"frate rate.·•
JT'S TIME SO~tEONE took up the
cudgels again for rational grammar
and rational spelling, The advantages
are obvious. With a· dece1tly phonetic
system school children would be saved
hundreds of millions of hours cf drill.
With simpler conjugations, millions of
people wculd be-saved the em·
barrassment oC realizlllg that Otey have
said "it don't" in front of someone
they shouldn't have said it in front of.
Te1s cf thousands of English teachers
would look yoUQger and live longer.
But help is on the way. If JtOt for
our grammatical system, at least for
our spelling. Someday soon a phonetic
typewriter is going to be invented -
it may already be in the development
stage, Such a typewriter will not be
able to distinguish betwee11 Hs ight, "site"
and "cite." It will print all three in
the same way. But no confusion will
result, as some believe. U you doubt
this, dictate tc a skilled stenograptier
the septence, "I can cite you many
examples of building sites chosen oo
first sight."
By S. I. H1y1kawa
. P~1ldeol
San Francisco State C:Olle1e
Man and Supermarket
One of life's little ordeals for a mere
man is supermarket shopping.
It is for him more a test of endurance
and survival than of character.
For if there is one place in the modern
world where woman doesn 't have to
:&lruggle to obtain equal rights, it is in the
average supermarket. There, in the unen-
ding war between the sexes. she has
every advantage; man Is at every disad-
vantage.
A grown man is a~ oul of place alone in
.a supermarket as a 3-)'ear-old child at a
picnic of banshees and harpies. There is
something about his presence there that
arouses the killer instincts in veteran
women shoppers.
11IEY TA~E OUT on him all the pent·
up wrath they have felt in centuries of
1ubmlsslon to male dominalion.
Al! a guy making his first trip through
a supermarket has to do Is to :Onocently
ask a lady where the cans o{ dog food
are. A look of unholy glee crosses her
-----
Friday. July 3, 1970
TM editorfol paot o/ the Dail11
Pilot •ttkl to inform and 1Um-
tdaU f'eodns blf presenUng this ~r'• opinton. and com-
nw1't.tof'l' on topici of Interest
and .tgnijicantt, by protlidi"O a
fortl.tA for the e.rpressfon of ovr readers'. opinion.I, and bu
pruentfng tha dtvcrae vltw-
poi!IU of lnf.,,,..d observers
and rpok<1m<n on copici of the
day ..
,..,bert N. Wood, Publlaher
race a-: she deliberately misdirects him
to the frozen vegetable! department.
Then by whispered word and eyebrow
gestures the ladies pass the news about
him along
"This guy's a greenhorn. Let's give
him the works ." From that moment on
his progress through the sto re is a march
or debacle.
lf he tries to buy a steak, four ladies
surround the fresh meat counter shoulder
to shoulder and ' keep him away for 15
minutes while they chat about household
problems.
IF HE REACHES for a container of
fresh milk, It is snatched from him by a
fem inine hand aOO he turns to meet the
smiling fangs of a victorious vampire.
tr he starts to ask a 60-year-old biddy
old eoough to be his mother just where
the store hides the tomato juice, she is
likely to reply in stentorian tones:
"Are you trying to get fresh with me,
young man? I've s good mind to slap
your face . It's getUng so a girl isn't safe
anywhere anymore."
If he heads for the nearest checkout
counter. half a doien women elbow him
out or the way. They show hlm -no mercy,
they yield 'him no quarter.
But their chief educilional weapon 'In
reducing hitn lo ii quivering jelly Is the
wire pushcart. AJter he has gone less
than SO feet into tbe store he fe~ls like a
squirrel on a thruway during the rush
hour.
TllEY llOLD TO the exact center or _
tht--r-oactv.·ay ll'ld crash Into him head on,
Sf'ndlng hair or hi! own groceries Oylng.
n1ey lie in wai•. and ambush him on tht
'
turns. They smash into him from behind
every time he pauses to select an item.
They chivvy him, harry him, stare at
him, glare at him, and every time he
opens his mouth to apologize, they bawl
him out -just because he's a man and
there. When he finally limps out, he find!
he's bleeding from half a dozen pushcart
cul!J and his legs are bruised from ankles
to knees.
"I spent two years in the infantry, but I
never saw a battlefield quite like that."
said one man, recalling ~is first visit lo a
supennarket. "I keJ.~ looking for a fox·
hole tc dive into, but there wasn't any. I
would have surrendered, but the women
shoppers in that store didn't seem to
want to take any male prisoners alive ...
A man· is fairly safe if he accompanies
his wife to the supermarket -the other
ladies recognize he has been c::aptured -
bul any fellow who has to go iL .alone
ought to get a combat medal for each
trip he makes. And a government
disability pension ii he lasts a full ye11.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Don't buy 1 Fifth for the Fourth.
July Fourt.h is lndtpendtnce D.:iy.
-G.S.T.
,.. .. ....._ ~,........ .........
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Freedom?
Guest ·Reporf ' ' ,
By LOUISE COOK
A11ec:illi.il ,..,_ WrffV
NE\V YORK -You can lead me
to McSorley's, but you can 't make me
drink.
Far be it from me to s11eer at the
efforts of those women who fiaall}'-15roke
the 115-year..()ld sex baJTier at McSorley's
Old Ale House in Greenwich Village.
They've won the right to stand in
the sawdust, belly up to the bar and
quaff their ale with the men.
\Vhat puzzles me is why they'd want
UUs somewhat dubklus privilege.
Women are never really at their best
in bars, Now wait -a minute all l'ou
women's Iiberaliofl members. J'm •ol
saying the gals don't have a right to
get just as drunk and make just as
big fools of themselves as men.
Bl!r P.10ST BARS -real two-fi sted
bar!, that is -just aren't designed
for distaff drinking.
Try perching en a bar stool. Chances
are your legs aren't long eRough. Hoist
yourself up anyway. With the midi there
isn't loo much peril to modesty .
Now find a place to put your purse.
Detore all you militants do away wilh
that litUe feminine frippery you'll have
to find a place to caJTY the money
'"'ith which you'll independently p·ay for
your cwn drinks. And the key to your
independent aparlmenl. And all those
independent credit cards -in )'our
name. No "Mrs." in front.
PUT THE PURSE on the floor and
you can't reach it Put it on U1e bar
and get a sneering, "Lady, I gotta
serve drinks here. Move that thi11g. '1
Put it in your lap and it falls into
the sawdust.
The art of driaking isn't much easier.
That hearty mug of ale -no fair
cheatiJlg and ordering an apricot brandy
sour -is designed for male mitts,
not remiaine fingers. And nothing looks
sillier than an ale drinker who hoists
. the mug with hvo fists, kind cf like
a toddler sipping his milk.
tf you're looking for conversatio11, the
bar ain 't the place. Unless your taste
runs to "Another cold one" or "Two
more over here."
WHAT ABOUT eavesdropping 011 those
tales of woe poured out to the bartender,
legendary amateur psyc hiatrist?. Close
your eyes, Imagine the voices are an
octave higher ;:ind you might as Y;ell
be at the beauty parlor listenh1g lo
r..frs. Jones regale her hairdresser,
Entertainment means t e I e v i s I o n ,
prelerably two sets, each tuned to a
different sports event. Don't try to listen.
Just gtunt with the crowd.
If this is freedom to the !eminists,
they can ha ve it. I'll slither off my
stool remembering the words of Ae.'IOp :
"Better beans and batori in peace. than
cakes and ale in fear/' Or ill a liberated
salooa.
Quotes
~tu1on Kam Via Lff. tlect.ed ~Ilsa
otutow1 U.S.A. la S.F. ceremony -
'1\Yomen should have equal rights In
business, they -should be aggrtsslve In
bus1ness. but they should never forget,
once they gel home, that they are
wamen."
j
.
Zoology:' Basic
Ideas Changing
Speaking or animal populations. as t
was the. other day, reminded me that
even the field of toology has seen some
startling breakthroughs in knowledge
lately.
What has come to be called the
"knowledge e.xplo-
·sion" is by no means
limited to. such new·
and recondite areas
as atomic physics
or molecular bioJ.
ogy. Our -old friend,
t h e naturalist, is
learning a lot more,
too.
In the la s t two
decades, according
to mamm alogist Maurice Burton, some
basic ideas have changed even in the
relatively stable field of zoology. For
instance, it was customary to di vide
animals into "diurnal" and "nocturnal,"
meaning those who hunted by day and
slept by night, or vise versa.
NOW WE KNOW that this division
has been more man-made than God·
given. Some "night" animals have been
shown to be active part or the day
during certain times of the year, and
some smaller mammals are neither
diurnal nor nocturnal, but divide the
24 hours into alternating periods or rest
and action in 4· or S-hour cycles.
(As 'far as the "crepuscular" animal!
are concerned, like bats, \Vhich operate
in twilight, we have learned more about
their sonic devices of hearing in the
last 20 years than in the preceding
2,000).
Ncrr oNL Y RA VE the old categories
of dai and night fallen, but the eating
habits of animals are now seen lo be
Jess rigid and exclusive than zoologists
used to believe -that some mammals
were carnivores, others herbivores, and
still others insectivores.
Some traditional meat-eaters ingest a
high proportion of fruit and vegetables,
while even typical vegetarians like cattle
and deer are new known lo eat flesh
or ' carrion. Recent invesligalion of red
Coxes indicates the large amount of crau
and wild fruit they consume.
WHAT JS HAPPENING in ioology·
seems to be a "liberating'' knowledge
rrom the old deterministic thinking ct
the past. Some animals have local dieU,
some have seasonal preferences -even
idiosyncracies like humans -er whims
and fads. Prof. Burton tell! of a goat
and a dog fed together, witb the goat
invariably eating the dog-food, and the
dog preferring the goat's rations.
In the subatomic world of physics.
~·e are learning that nature is lesa
rigid, less uniform, less iron-handed, than
was formerly believed. So, too, in the
world of living things, we are learning
that Ute subhuman species are more
individualistic, more "personal," as lt
were, then the mecbanists used to think.
There is a larger place for whimsy
in the universe than philosophers have
dreamed of.
Who's Our Tyrant Now?
America \Vas born of re\'oluliOft. lt
is a revolutionary nation now.
So say cur resident revolutionaries.
Aod lhey Care correct -except in the
way they meaR it.
America was indeed bom of revolution.
Revolution agaillst an individual tyranny;
a tyranny with a history O{ "repeated
Injuries and Usurpations" matched i1
number only by the repeated "Petitions
for Redress" by the injured colonies.
The American revolution was guided
by "a decent Respect tc the Opinions
of Mankilld." It sought to secure and
nurture those sell-evident and unalienable
rights by which all men are endowed
by their Creator -Ille, libeny, and
the pursuit of happiness.
TO EFFECJ'UAtE that ' revolution
against tyraM)', to eMure those rights
of all mankind, the men of 1776 mutually
pledged their lives, their fortunes, their
sacred honor.
Today's American revolutionaries?
They pledge other people's lives.
They urge other people 10 kill U)elr
parents, to revolt for the heU of It.
to become crlmJnt1ls, to "disrupt every
Institution, break every law.'' ·
Dear Grorgc:::
Why don't"'" ever .\tt ~·lndmills
on fanns any mort?
SAM R.
Dear Sam R.:
And people ask me \\'hy I don't
y:rit.e more aboul sex ...
Well, Sam, lo act right to your
problom, the Answer is that b:Jck
b\ the old days when wlndmllls
were seen frequtntly the coun·
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Guest Editonit1
Pledge theiZ: fortu11es!
•
Abbie Hoffman's two books o 1
anarchistic revolution already have earn-
ed him close to $100,000 in royalties, ad·
vances, movie rights.
ONE JERRY RUBL'1 paperback h111
earned at least $45,000 already, and
its publishers espect it to do four time.
U1at much eventually.
A new American Revolution? A ,new
1776? No. Today a revolution, a riot, ii
"a party!"
The real, continuing American Rcvolu·
tion is that which has brought us chanp-.
lhrough Constitutional methods; which .
has substituted respect for disdain d :
our fellow man: which has overturned
obstacles to liberty and the pursuit ol :
happiness that comes from opportunif1 :
accepted and used well.
\Ve have no Tyrant this July 4.
We have only would-be tyrant&
Callfonda Ft1tve S<n>ko
try wu sparsely populaled. Now
that the population cxplo&ion tla&
come along, lhtrt just isn't enough
wind for everybody to h.ave a
windmill.
Sam. No ofte.nse. But "'Ill you
write to Abby In the future?
(Learn to fact life wilh squarf\
obl/qucness. I.ti George teac::h you
Sideways Thinkhlg.)
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I : r : ' :
By PhR i.;!;rtcnidt ' lit Compton
...... ~~~~~~~---"'"'.""'~~~~ ,.
\
.J
Bomb Backfires,
•
F em8Ie Halibut Kills Young Man:
I "
Qutweighs Mate
11J. L. M. BOYD the buU !0< 1cquittai In 1
WHEN A SIX-LEGGED JN. court martial of an Eoglillh
SECI' got! for a walk it major. He hid been ·~ ' • prellended, stark naked, by
COMPTON, caur. (UPI) -
A young black man wu blown
· • to pieces Thursday ln front
t. o( the police station in this
predomirumlty-Negro section
d Los Angeles when a time
born.ti he was carrying in a
brltof case exploded,
Tti_e dead man w.as ten-
tatively identified I! Tommy
Ligh Harper Jr., 23, Compton.
Parts ol bla body were hurled
200 feet . . keeps three feel on the ground · mllltary jiollce in U.e corridor
at all u.rne.. The fore and of a Cairo hotel. 'Ibe arresting
aft feet m ooe side and the soldiers testified th~ major
middle foot on the other • appeared to be in pursuit of
.. THOSE HIPPIES who sleep an unnamed damsel, similJ.rly
along tpe bta'cbet wouldn't unencumbered by clothing.'""------------------· Ii~ it in Australia. There, Going by the book, the 'board
No one else was injured
and thert was only minor
damage to the station
alliloogh all peMJOml<I were
the beachcombers have to be exonerated. "
licensed . • . , DID OUR CONSIDER TRIS -. Just
LANGUAGE 'MAN say for tbe good ol your IOU],--,....---~~-----------
"pseudomythkel" was the do two things every .daj yOu
longest word where.in no Jetter don't much like to do. Who
is repeated? •A San Antonio said 'that? Confucius, I thiri~.j"
c 11 en t s u g g f: s ts "un-· Anyhow, it's not IO t.ouah.
copyrightable." You've a:ot to get up, right?
Four Killed
In Weekend
Auto .Crash "FEAR NOT" - A retired And you've got to go to bed.
fr I end n, med ,Mike MISTER. ARE YOU critical
Carmichael reports tn. His of YoUr wift's we I g ht!
card reads: "NO tiusiness, no Remember, the female hatU>ut
worries, no money, no pm-outweighs ~r husband 10 to
spects, no phone and no -a~ <1ne •.. IT'S THE~ LENGTH
dress." Says he: "The words of their legs that shows you
'F.ear not' appear 365 times the difference betWeen English
In the BibJe, <>ne time for Cocker Spa.Oiels and American
each day of tht year." Cocker Spaniels. The shorter-
Enllgh_~ajp_g. "Fear n 0 t" ~ged _ Coc~~are _j.mer:ican ~-like a jritty gOOd mot· •.. Wlf.l.T DO Y01J know
to. Am thinking of laminating about U.S. President John
that, too. Tyler? All I know about him
CUSTOMER S,ERVICE -Q. is he drank a mint julep every
"Which is the more poisonous, moming before breakfast.
the venom of the rattlesnake GOURMET N 0 T E
or that ol a black widow Among the best of all st~b.
.soider?'' A. The spider's. it's said, is filet ol. foal. That
About 15 times m o r e is to horse meat what veal
pois<lnouS. But there's not all is to beef • • • IF A MAN
that mu~ ~ il per lpider, _ __AD proPortionately as much
so a rattler's bite is a lot as a dragorj]y, he put away
more serious. maybe 804. pounds cl meat
OLD SPORT -"It is not a day.
compul90ry for an officer to Your qutstiom o.nd com-
wear a tmtform at aJI times mt'nts are welcomed and
as long as he is suitably garb-will be used in CHECKING
ed for the sport in which UP wherever posrib~. Ad·
he is engaged." The fortgoing dress Utters to L. M. Boyd,
anpears in the British Army's P.O. Box 1875, Newport
Manual of Replations. It was Beach, Calif., 92660,
Thoresen's Wife Says
Husband Injured lier
FRESNO (AP) .-Loui>e
~.accused In the'
~ -d her gun col-
·lector husband, says he beat
her, breaking two of her
ribs, and stabbed her before
his death, according to a
surgeon who examined her a
day later.
• Mrs. ~ " charged
with murder' 'lit~ deatb ol
millionaire Wwtam '11loresen
III , on June 10 and with
possession of rharijuana f0r
sale. The hearing on ttie
charges in municipal court
here was reported to end to-
day.
Medi-Cal Rolls Cut
' To· Save State Funds VALLEJO (UPI) ~ Four
persons died, including three
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The One Of the criticisms of the members of one family, and
Reagan..amninistr&Uon says it proposed reguJatiom was that seven <1thers were injured in
-will stiffen eligibility re-they would not ~ve money -a fiery three-car collision east
but Y10Uld only shift the cost of here Thursday night-in-the
quirement,, fort Medi-Cal but from ~te funds to local pro-worst California highway ac·
attomeyS for California Rural perty .Lu~. cldent so far of the July of
Legal •Assistance say the new weekend. •
rules violate federil Jiw. -Three" members or the
or. Earl w. Brian, director Smog· Free Ro'!<'\ Milloy thramilyr burned
of Medi-Cal, i6'sued the new to -ueat when e vo kswagen bus iliw-were • ridiiig ln regu1a1~ 'Ib.Jrsday. Sheldon • Auto Pri' ze overiurried and caught fire
Greene, a CRLA aU<1meY., after the crash. They were
promptly filed a complaint in Mrs. Mary Milloy , 34, and
Sacramento Superior Court G •" OK'd her sons Martin 11, and ond Jqe Joseph Babich e~ Patrick MiChael, 4.
adleduled a hearing for today. Roert Milloy, the father, got
Greene's suit, brought on ~ACRAMENTO, C a I J C • out oC the wreckage without
behalf c( a San Francisco (UPI) -The man who invents any !IE!rious injury and manag·
widow, Uet Yee Wong, asks a Mnog-free automobile is en-ed to rescue three-other
the court to overturn the new titled to a $25 million reward, children, I n c I \I d J n g his
regulations. a California legislative com-daughter Carolyn, age 9.
Medi-Cal officials said the mittee says. She was in serious condition
new rules were needed to save The Senate Governmenta l ·at the St . Francis burn center
money, to pay for improved Organization Committee voted In San Francisco. .
care for those who remained Thursday that the money, to The fourth fatality wes
eligible and to prepare the come froll) gasoline taxes, Horace R. Nichols of Fairfield.
way for establishment of a should be held out as an in-The California H i g h w i y
prepajd medical service. centive. , Patrol said the accident oc-
Brien said one <If the im-Before any fund is ap-curred as the Mllloys were
mediate effects of the move propriated, however, the full travelling east on narrow, two.
would be to eliminate about 1_1_e1P_·,_1a_tu_r_e_m_u_st_v_o_te_on_i_t. __ 1a_n_e_s_ea_r_s_P_oin_t_ro_ad_. ___ 11 50,000 persons from Medi.Cal
rolls. But som,e 40,000 of those
would re-qualify within six rndiils, after-uslng up some
of their own resources, Brien
aaid •.
Medi.cal provides fr e e
medical care ,.to some two
million poor and aged Califor-
nians.
Of the J0,000 persons
p«manenUy dropped from
Medi.cal, Brien said many
would ~ly end up oo
county fflfare rolls. Dr. Donald R. H...,., fall·
lying 'J'bundey during U.. 1e•
cond day of a preliminary
hoarlng to determine if the
attractive 3~ear-old former
speech therapist should be
brought to tcial, Hid Mrs .
Thoreseo told him U.. Injuries
were su ffered In
"altercations" with her hus-
Dand.
·•A ruling was expected also
on defense ~entions that
testimony concerning t ii e
seizUtt cl the Thoresen home
was illegal. M (I It of c ·z OKs Thursday's slow-moving ounci
sessioo was devoted to defense
questioning o1 police officers LA A:rpart who were at tfle Thoresen "
home the day of the shooting
and discovered u.. marijuana. Entry Fee Late 1bundey afternoon Dr.
Huene, an ori:hopedic surgeon,
testified that Mrs. Thoresen STATE l jCA -JL
had two broken ribs, LOS ANGELES (UPI) .,
numerous bruises and a An drdinance which would im·
M N bb d puncture wound when he et· pose a $1 admission fee on an fi e amined her the day after her anyone entering'. Los Angeles
husband was killed. International Airport w a s · 1n Pomona Huene described numerous ordered dratted Thursday by bruises on both legs, as well the city council.
as a llalf·inctl deep puncture The council voted II to 4
Burglar;eS wound and a large bruise on in favor of the unique ta•
" the buUocks area. He whiclr would · be used to su~
estimated the bruises were port the city government.
SAN DIMAS (UPI) -. Jess tnan 36 hours old and The measure was approved
Sheriff's deputies believe they the stab wound was two.to-five desPite the warning of assis-
have solved more than 100 days okf. tant city attorney James A.
burglaries in the San Gabriel Doherty that the charge would
and Pomona Valley areas with OK be Illegal under the city
the arrest of one man and. Assembly S charter and under existing
f~1. 'SA-T.8~
IS"!!!. f
ordered out d the building
tfter tile blast shook Ule sur~
rounding nelghborbood. · •
Police officials put a 3'Cur1·
ty alert in effect at all other
Los Angeles stations and
persons entering t h o s e
buildings had to present iden-
titlcation to officers.
Detective Sgt. Robert Ellis
said police had no idea why
.the victim was carrying the
bomb.or w1J_ere he was headed.
He said tJ:iere had been no
threats Of" warnings.
The explooioo occurred
about 100 feet from the main
entrance to the station, a
modern two-story building.
Two windows were shattered
and the glass plus glaas from
wiridows of--an automobile,
shrnbbery and other debris
lit tered the' street
An al'900 investigator said
the victim was carrying a
black attadle case filled with
high e1'plosivei: Investigators
said they found bit.s of a bat-
tery and a clock which they
believed was the detonating
medlanism foc_J:he makeshift
time bomb. '
UNIQUE
CHURCHES?
Some are!
* Bible taught
* Love evident
* Education
exciting
* All ages
Jlend·
* Members happy
* Positive
preaching
* Community
concerned
FIRST
CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
HUNTINGTON
BEACH
MAIN •nd ADAMS
1:30, 11 :00 end 7:00
seizure of at least • $7S,000 airporU department leasea
worth of stolen property. ' Pay Guarantee with the airline•. ' 1~...:.... _____ :_ _________ ~~~~~~~~~I
James A. Hillyard, 33, was Although no estimate Wis
arrested at a construction SACRAMENTO (UPI) _ A made or the amount of
iard late Thursday and an revenue the tax would bring
all-points bulleUn was issue~ bill guara!W.eeing that Mate in, an airport ipokesm.an iai4
for yard owner Gary Fowler, employes will nol lose pay 11 million pasaengers and 20
32. or other job benefits because million visitor• entered the
The· discovery was made of ttie legislature's failure to airport In 1989.
when two narcotics officers enact a budget <1n time was ..... =========;;;I investigated a tip that mlri· app~ Thursday by ltlel··
Juana was growing in a field Assembly.
near west Arr<NI Highway. Of· 'Ille urgency measure by
ficers fou~ an old truck body Assemblyman F r a n k Lan.
loaded with stolen merchan-terman (R-La canada) was
dise and obtained a search sent to the Senate on a 77-0
NO~TICE
warrant to further investigate. Vote. Thia could be the most lm-r=======;;"'iiiF========-=;11 portant INVllTMINT of
,THE NIITT THEATRE 1, II N l TE D . ,..,ur tile, If you omoke. 'Jbe. investment t& the time
presents
$11,..ornlr t.\roiek't
"0Pt At Se•"
, "The. Police"
A IATttlC: STAnMINT ON A
, . MODllN POLICI ITATt
I ST A TE S Jt takes to learn how you
· NA Tl 0 N A £ can break th~ smoking habit
I
,. BA N K 1n 10 days w1tonut c1ru.,,
hypnolls, or will power.
SOUTH COAST PLAV.. Cell !or a tree ...,1on and
BRANCH consultation wtth no obll-
NOW ONN p.Uon.
SATURDAYS June lf.20 thru July 17·11
: FRI. l SAT., 1:30 p.m. 1 ,._, 642.ClH
t '9 I P.M.
307 MAIN ST.
HUNTINOTON Bl!ACH
F•r R111rv1tlon1
c.n (7141 s36-f151
MOH.·THUll. 1 .. 1 P.M.
PIUDAYI 1M P'.M.,
f71•> Mt-1211. &.. ....... , s..c:...rt-.c ..... ...._
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Sponaored b)' the
NATIONAL ANTl-
•MOKINe COUNCIL
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Frlday, My '· !"70 OAll V PILO! 7
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SELECT THE T~~M THAT IEST
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$100,000 7.50% 7.79%
Anaheim Savings now pays the
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announce a new 90 day 5.25o/o
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117W. U11<tt" A•1, I 'II N1i"S\ru t j '701, lre1tl¥d, "'"'~ti•, C1li!ttni1 llYnti~rton 111t~, C•tif, 1111, C111101nla
PR. 2-llll ll. f.Ut\ M. •411l
FREC CONVENIENT P,1.PIKIN~ AT ALL 3 LOCATIONS
-~, ' ••k about fret 1·ar1_
dopoolt bouo, Llmltod
quontlly ov1ll1bl1 , ••
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For. The
. Record
Frid<I, Jolt 3, 1970 ,
Battling Battin
Loses Two More ·
By JACK BROBACK
01 "" D1t1t '*" ltlft
SANTA ANA -Mav<rlck
First Distritl Su pervlsor
Robert w~ BaWn Jolt. two
..... battleo thlo ..... t In
olwp disqr-with his
fellow board meml>en.
Battal's fU'St targe't was a
proposal to hire a private con-.
oultant at 19,250 to aid the
county Planning Department
in processing plans !or 1be
propooed city of Irvine •
Dev•~ Company of San·
ta ·Alla to creel• a "plan of
action° to activate the cciun-
'ty's General PI a nn ing
rrogram.
Phlllll"'. motion paosec! $.J
with Battin on the other side
as usual. Supervisor David L.
Bater"Wu abeerit on vacation. --
Poor Youths .
Get Chance
For Work
"[ -t that this ...
peoditure lo a necmsary,
reasonable md proper marae
agaimt the county's tu• payers," the f r e ab,m an SANTA AN:A -A group
supervisor fumed. al. diladYamaged 0 r a n g e J)iSSOlUtiOtlS He moved that the CGunly County liudents have been
c ou n Set and ·c ounty emplO)fed under the County's 01 Marriage Adntiniltrative 0 I Ii c., in-Swnmer . Work Esperience
._..., Menrv II. _, •urti • v~l&ate tbe ~bility , «. :cr~~all '1S~~i:; <DeC!'!.M>f~ J•MI Lynn alld ldlbY ~ 8 'WWAf lervlCf: "'-~ area -·..;•• i'ust the 1rviDe Orange 'Comity, are ,high L~*' Clto..,n J. •!Id Jat1111 £. '-"• ... ,..-o hool nd U tud nls T. IMry """ ..w GHWrt · w. Ranch to ~efray all coals at: sc a co ege s e
Cott•, ao..111 J. 1nd :s11nlff c. p-oin" the plans. His mo-between the ages of. 16 .and llltJ. J11n Ind Allen L. '"""""" .. "6
L..,..i.;:, P1w1111 e. n 0-11 "'''• •:on died for lack· of a second. 20. B•l11n, Robstl J. •1111 "'-" Whll)'le'V u ' '--'--• I ed •• sa..;11er9, C111r1n L. 1fld Winifred Supervisor William Hirstein They 1wve .....,.n ass gn w sit=~! M1r1e LoulY 11111 J-• went Battin one better. "Why various departments within
N111. N1..cv G. 111d s11nlf¥ e. not ;...,.lude all uni ........ -i..1 the. cowty -flood con1!ol, PM, P11r1,11 M. •1111rRim.n1 II'. ..,.,. '"'"".--I b k bation "•"'i J11111 sue 111d Lvt• J1v areas in the county in om; 1 rary, par . s '· pro . , ' s.n1m o, INrv 1.. •1111 GU'I' P. '"--1th ..1 .. ~i .... m a tramee Uftt-;-MltY KIThttlnl ·1rld OWIYnl "big-service-district"to-finance -•IC4U ,_ _.1..Ll.16 --i;:~ 1 L ~A en•;-plarinl""' .w.. .. ..t. capacity. The trainee may be Qwlltt,Htl!nM,M!Clnd~H. ~ u:n; .,. ""'t-'" onth if ftr~:~"'1C~Y :.,.i ~.;~"'.J.i,," ment" he «fered. promoted 2fter one m ~= 't:::t.,.M;.. ~Lr.J.•..:. c. "The Irvine OOmpany has his superv~ fee~a -that NI
Piwce. B.i11 M. •nd Artllur' fl, 1 .. _ "'•••"'g ~-.. .. -ent performance IS satisfactory.
Gi.tnlhll, , ... I """ ..0 De!!nll VWQ r---' -~ ..... ''It 'd k v,_ and spends plenty of money . prov1 es w o r ei:· ,..'!'"' a1ni.r1 Lvn11111 •nd s ... ...e1 penence and a pa-'""'k at w tu"" ;,t;,... county departments " . J ......... ,."''*· ow1n "''" •nd Ellubltll in~ e~aioed , , w h'y a time that can be the most am Olllnlel Cllllal Jr. lnll SnlrltY make them the iarget and critical in a young student's
9..,f~"-11rw s. ... L.,,..:;':.' -"Uest tbat they pay taxes life," aaya Howard Wade,'
~=-"'~=.: ~~,:.,.io:~~'" {or developments w h t c b dirtctor of the program. "A
MYre, Gtr•ld 1. 1nc1 v 1'lll1n1.-'--·•=t tbe entire county?" summer job can often be the OWrton Rlm'IOlllll 1nLEJti1btllt ~ d ' ' ' ~~ f,,_ .,_ •lld Fr..Wlck Battin quickly agreed to the crucial factor in the ecwon
:kti.!!!1:"Rll• AMI Ind Wllill"' P. aU..-.CODJ""C'l:ing service area of _Whether o,,r not to drop Mll'H. Eh•edl1 1rld Rvt>en M. .,,.. _r--· \JI of boo! P1Mml'\jFr.tnt11 8ernlt• tnit 11""""111 and again moved that the o « · C..,_ Mlrtl,_t I. flld ltw!n E, 'J'he -~ [ the Jd\!!IOll, 1t1er G. •nd 00r11 Marie Counsel and CAO report "as ... ~~ o program, ~~0~= ~~ ~~~i~ soon as pos.'liblt on the a1:>0~t $73,000, comes . fr~
Etlv. Lllrlen #Ny Ind ··~ c. I ' Within tile budget.s of the m au111r, c;..., M.t•lln _. En11be111 feasibility of one arge sernce . . -G~~t1~. MltY·E. ~ Frlllk P. district to finance the Plan-d I Y l du a I deparlme~, ac-g:itt..~!~.,.ej_~nc1 :;;. ':k...,c• ning Department, and also a cording to Wade. . Y~.'!;in:ii:t.f::~ ':;J ed!l~..i R. separate Rrvice area to cover Last su mmer, the fll'St year
Hrd:1, Ct11r1011e C. 1nc1 Nell A. the p.............., city of Irvine." of the program, only two out
M1111sll, Lton•nl Ind M••«ll• Rull\ • .,.............. ( 33 ouths f' ed f wr1vn1, M1rcv H-•ncl E. o. Supervi.sOr William Pbilli""' o y were If • or SIOlll, Fr•ncn Ind Irby ,... I [ I t b 0111e't'. Clllrlft L_,, .ind vki....11 .ended the .debate with a mo-u n s a s a c or Y, Jo
s:i:"t17'T11rrv L~ •nd JuM Mlrlt tion to approve the Irvine city perfonnance. Acconhng to N'J_=w W•~•• Je•n •nd 'T11eo<1Cr1 consultant and an additional Wade, many of the youths
f=:t ~~~~· i:'.'4'fn31~~°" J . $9 350 to hire Modern Systems were given "considerable
Cltldlll, Lwlw M. 111111 Melvin H. • praise by d e p a r t m e n t a 1 Cl.II'"" ,,,_..., H•l!n •l\CI Jr.u1 J.
wi1mo11 ,1uct1•n:1 L-11 1nc1 Ell• O•••· management."
Sm'lL. l.1111Lllrf•IM1nd JOl\n Prn•on s J • Wade believes the program V~·l>I V•~er. K•r ... Ind ROlllf an oaqwn Will help Ml onJy the young C•lmeM, T,_,... Cllffna Ind JUMI·
1e IC•""' · penoM, but the community fi':'~Sn~r:i't:.11~·111'1K1 Oltll Schools OK as well by the development Robin'°"' DoNl4 K-itl lnll G•t• l ~-o;al 1·~·-) AubJV, J_..11 .. L. "" R-'111 . o t""'""u ..,..... e emp oyes
EYft::; cn.rin Arthlll' .,,.. "" ~ and increased rapport between
K,.:;:.er..o1 Auel..., 1nc1 11.otwi JD1111 B d -.. ·•y gover---~ and the 11en:11.LOCU'fO'IY o•c•••s B • l •~• ~· Hldtox, P111v Rulh Ind P•u• Ke1111 I!! U ge --""'ty ''""! a.rti.tr1 o. 1"&:.,..oblr1 s. 0 .. "............ • ~,!1~!~-~J ..,a~H. Jf/::::" C. R~I' ~11"1 &.uleh M.tt Adlk, Def'Mh' homfl Jr . 8111.1<, &rend• ana Dtnlel Rllol'o H1m1111o V~ A 1nd Alber! E.
Nin. Mlrv Linn b . -John C. Toll.itUP 8urt1.1 111d Don111 Cl,_ C-11 .... E. •ncl RlcMrd F,
DwahltY, JMn M. 111111 W•l!er C.
Deatlt Notlee•
ANDERSON
Abl Anar.n o1 110 E1st oc .. n Front,
81lbol. SUrvl..i 11'1' wl,., Llnn1t.
PrlYlll 5-lc" w111 Ill held Mond1y,
.hlty 6 11 J PM, 81'11 8tOldllt'IY Mot·
.... tY CMPll. t.ell 8r01dw1' Morttl•rv,
eo.11 #Mii, OlfKlon.
CORNELIUS
Nltafl c-llw; et 2\M MYrflfl OrlVit,
C.O.ll Millm.• S...Vkll wtlL 111 T.....O.,,
JulY 1 •I 11 AM. Biii llf'oldoilNY Mlot·
1'ultY CMPll. 81'11 8l'Oldw•' Mott111tJ,
CC11!1 Mita, Oll'lcion..
RAU
Tlmotfrf Ec1¥111n:I R.u of 21111 Cenrlnel•
PllCI, N-1 BtKh. 01t1 of -!I\, Jun1 21. Survived o,. ,......,,11, Mr, •nd Ml•. Jdln C. R1u, Ntw-' 8'11dl;
2 btO!lltD: st-. Mlndoclno, •rid
R1ndv. N-' BtKI!; 9r1ndrnollllr, M,._ Cl\.lrlolll Kerwon, COlll Mn.1.
S1rvlcn """ln1. T~ who wl1h, .,,...,
ull PKlflc V'-"" MOrtu•rv. ,....2700,
1nvtlfne 1tler ~ on Mond1v. J11lr 6.
r"••dlfll vl11!1llon hGura.
ARBUCl<LE • SON
WestcWf Morta1ry
U1 E. 11tll SL, Costa Mna
. 1111111 • BALTZ MORnJARIES
Corou del Mar OR S.N50
Colla M-Ml HIU • BEIL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 BrolldwlJ, Coda Meta uwm • DILDAY BROl'HERS
Hadqtao Volley M-..Y
l 71ll ll<acl Blvd.
H..U.glolollead
IC-7771 • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORnJARY
l 7tl La(UDa CU)'Oll Rd. ....... , • PACIFIC vU;w
MEMORIAL PARlt
Cemetery e M-ory
Chapel
1M1 Pllcllle View Drive
N...,..t ll<ae~. CaUlonia -• PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
•tBelaaAve.
..... 1tr m.ms • •SBD--l"&R,. MORTUARY
,..., • ._.. U4-1m
... Oe•w•&e dUIM • SMITllS' MORTUARY
QI-lit. ........ -...
EAST IRVINE -'i'rust<u
or the San Joaquin School
District have approved a ten-
tative budget. hiking tile
figure nearly $2 million over
last year.
Rex Nerison, assistant
superintendent for buSness
services, said the budget total
currenUy stands at ,7,987,880.
Last year's figure w a s
$5,348,258.
Smog Meet Set
FULLERTON-The monthly
meeting of Orante County citi-
zens to Stamp Oul smog (SOS)
is scheduled Monday at Cal
State Fullfl'ton. The meeting,
to feature two films, will be
held in roonl 121 of the Science
and Letters building at 7:30
p.m.
Nerison attributed the bite ----------t
to the district's rapid growth.
"We'll have 26 percent more
students In September than we
ended with in June," he said.
"The district grows at a
rate of 150 students per
flBCll!CB )'Dl!P
1Y7ll h1ccme
18XBS !
month. That's S classrooms." r um11J lu ~utlioes Dllu lictt4i"t Im ol
The tax rate for fiscal 1970-1"'1·Ync lll'llSl-t
71 is estimated at $2.55 per CQlltinu011 m Oif'DlllldiM bemptllMI
$100 assessed valuation, up 15 ''" ,,, ,, .. ,.,f•• • l•l•t••ll•• ••
cents from last year. ••111Lt••11r •1111111
The --J U ·1 I thl i •• •tt•••'u'I' ulUll~ cos y 1 em n s •r••t•••u•• 11• • ,, year's budget is certificated •t••1111111• • • •
salaries which c 0 n s u m e e
$3,934,766. PllOll l •tS•lll nie final budget comes up ·
[or adoption during the (U'St
week in August. Sch o 0 l INtntatloul &evritk1 Corp •
trustees can d:umge the JSt l.11111 st. -r.o.••• 1 1 1
figures up to final adoption. C••11 • •••, C111 f. 11121
SAFEAllOSAllE FIREWORKS
ASSORTMENTS FROM $2.95 TO $39.95
r1,.._t1i1 '"'' be t._111)' .old, flOI••..., or dladl1rpd
Ofll)' within CIUH wlllAI .... I• •utl'loril:..:11.
0 Sold b1 Ch1rit1bl1 Orl1nlzationo Q
at Wi~ standl.
HAVE YOU VISITED . OUR NEW STD!!E AT:
5881 WARNER AT SPRINGDALE IN HUNTINQTO~ IEACH
,.OUWl'AIM VALllY-1 ..... Ml9lllMi ... It Tl .....
"0UMTAllC VA&.L•Y-ltUI MIT'iilr • .._ 6 ......
EL TOtlG-al T-11 ltldefllM .,.,.
' HUMTINGTOH 81!Ac;~n" ._. IM. II .,.... c;oSTA ~A.-i-Mlr91r ., ...... w~ SL
•1• Yalutl
Sea & Ski
IUNTAN ,
LOTION · :::.!.•83c-...... r . -~
Webblcl Aluminum
~haise Lounge·
.UI-•• s5•• ··--)
"Pist&" 1ounie of l"
sluminwn tubi.i 6S' . ,,..,.. ... .,.::r-
'Webbin& 74" Ion(.
6'r 91/J·lnch _Play Balls
IA baPt fluoracw
mlors -:red, yellow,
othcn ! Stwdr ,.ioyl,
t fen beach.
19' Pack of 80
9" Ppper Plates
Hi~ quai!tr Papu-
nwd. Plastic coattcl 5r f o t f:X tr': rigiditf, ,
mohture ft'lllttl\ce;
58' Val~ Quart
(Jiarcoal Ughter
Starts fires fut. Gtt 2, JOUn •t tbis ml bot
pria.
Ca!iada Dry
Soft Drinks ~o.. 12i$1"
Sr:"1• ····· · ···· ·W -·
'TT' 10.U.. ...
Charcoal Brfquets . 5
Clamp-On Style
Chair Umbrella
large sizt, wtathcr-
rcsistant, 2-toiic "inyl. $209 Swivcl·type for chair,
tiblc, ra il.
Family Size
B-1-QWagon
l,1r&e ad jusub!t
fircpan '·twin s1054 chromt gnds, JC·
mOY1blc Jt .
20.lnch 2·S119ed
Breeze Box Fan
Powcrf ul 2 1peed
1 11 purpose fan. $
Use in • window,
'
JaltaVodka
A Thtiftv txdu'i"t •nd bcs1 ielltr. No finer Vodti
i t an, pri~. The tclling't
in the tasting-trr it tod11
in 10ur f1YOritc 1wruricr·
time rrimhcr .
Fifth
Gallon
Reg. $]D Scripto
Butane Ughter Fuel
Long lMting, asr to mor. Cl.IL ... be u5Cd in most·refillablc bul&Dc:
.li&htm. •
II P1rtoct Woul• S1ll l11 $Z.l9 !
Travel Syringe
2 qt, •izc, with 11i.rn. aac mtntJ. Slight fla'IVI woci:c
1fftct service.
. Reg. sa••
Folding Table
.26x40-lnch Size
,.,,. """' ubta .,;,. ,...,. $5'' ainlc U01hlped 1ubui1r 1tccl
kp. finished.in Hot Or1111e
or A.-oc.do wich cki1r dt·
1iyi.
SMllTA AM_I_ W, • ..,._ -1....,.1 SI. COSTA MIU.-W •· 11111 51. Wl!STMLMSTEA-4GJ _Wttti.llWll' 1t G.tlllla W•I ICWTtlfftott •U.CM-fMI .Ml• II • ......,..,
0 " , ,.. . ' { -
D
.,
.
"'
Bnnp in mpst ··'
ltltiom ! Eat. phone,~ CattJ we, si!~ box included.
Cae-~l~rs,
Y1IU11 .fo 12.981
.women's
Sunglasses
Ht-style FttDCb 8r: ltd-99.
ian itDpor11 •ilh anr C
10und, 1q1.We a: bc:t-
agon f~ • , ·• opti· · .
MH's. C!inv• loaf.Shes ......... 1" • H•YJ •&..IM _,.
•Whit• .
Si1t1 6l/2 to 12:
-11.g. $2.18 Men's
Walking Shorts
No jroo blends ia pop-$239 ubr J'!T or Walern
1qle. StUt 30 to .CO •
Women's
Jamaica Shorts
2 ""'' stre tch in· ' ...... ,, kruu, .. ,...,.. $191
antnt creue. elMtici2°
cd waistband. 8 to 18.
Menls Sammer
Straw Hats
Cool 1raflo« comfort.
a11ortmtnt indudn
plantatlon sty'lts.
PlllD WINNINlt --~10.1•
Ice Cream ·
~ HlLFIAUOI ' ~ =a:.:'69'
11 Olhlf FllYtn, :::. ... lit
•111•& •1111.ong Handle
Garden Tools s111
FREEi General Electrlc
JWHCUBES or. BUW
$1.!0 Val,e Peck el I,....._.,
---:---, VelUI hckefl Ml I•.._ wmr PUIOMW .. I llLLI .,
Polaroid IOI
Color PG. Film
s3~!
•4n Value! Super 8 €--"'ll'
Movie Fiim
::~~NG $2" INCLUDED
BONUS fi PHOTO
FILM litOCESSIN' .
U.S. Watartlte Women's Swim Caps
.1tc v.1 .. r 59' Smut ·a ·c:omlortahle
C&JI' that pmcm hilt·
dw. .
· •t" 2·Ring Ylnjl
Wading Pool ·
Inf~-pool ,.. ;. $1 •• diamccer and 8" cktp. .,.
ln fluoteSCU1t colon.
..... 69' 23-lnch
Vinyl Swim ling
x..,. child -.... . ..
11fe. QiloduJ ud: 44~ ~t\lrdr.
•
$4" G.E. Er.ctrlc
Alarm Clodc
G:E ''Cuettt'" with
Jwni ..... dW. i...i. '2" clear alarm. · Genaal
Eltctric Ii .
"
Pack of 4 ,J '1" Valuel ~ ..... ,
Transistor "Al"
Batteries ~K 5,
.-·
I
•
. .
BARBARA DUARTE, 4'4-9466
"'lllfY, ~Ill", a, 1'79 I ~ ... f •
Valley Swings ·
Night· 0 .-ut
.
NotSqu·are
Swing your partner, back to the bar; ladies to the
center .and fonn a star.
--~· FFamijiai-square--dance~caus .. will-ring out-in-Mission,---
Viejo Recreation Center· on Saturday, July 11, as mem-
bers of Saddleback Newcomers Club meet for an old-
fashiqned · hoedowi;i.
Dinner consisting of barbecued beef, potatp salad ,
cole slaw. chili, coffee and iced tea at a cost of $11 per
coµple wjll be serv~ starting at 8 .p.m.
-Square dancing under the directiori·of Herb Lesher,
caller,· will begin at 9:30 and· will continue until mid-
night. For those who don't wish to square dance, ball-
room dancing will be 8"'.~laJ>Je.
Persons interested in attending may call Mrs. Ar--
thur Dunbar, social chairman, at 830-3569, before Wed-
nesday, July 1. .
Purpose of the Newcomers Club is to welcome new
residents to Saddleback Valley: Members meet once a
month with various sections devoted to bobbies and cre-
ative activity.
President is Mrs. Robert Pelletieri with board mem·
bers the Mmes •. John Vogt, Reid Bushong, David Wyatt,
Donald Swingle and Norman ScotL
GUIDES QUEEN OF HEAR'!"S GUILD
Mrs. Hor•c:o Frltz Ill •nd. Hoddy
HATS OFF FOR HOEDOWN -Saddleback. Valley Newcomers
Club· officers get into a western mood for an upcoming square
d:ance in the Mission Viejo ~reation Center. Officers (left to
New President Named
right) the Mmes. Arthur Dunbar, social chairman ;·Robert Ham-
mond; decorations chairman, and Robert Pellettieri, president,
sit atop a buckboard waiting for the event.
Heart Guides 'CHOC Guild
Mrs. Horace Fritz III of Emerald Bay
will assume leadership of the Queen of Hearts
Guild of Children's Hospital of Orange County
for 11170-71,
Dynamic Nancy Fritz brings to the presi·
dency a consuming interest in Children's Hos·
' pital dating to inception of the guild in 1962.
~he was the first recording secretary and has
subsequently served on every board of di-
rectors in key positions of membership, nom·
inating chairman and ways and means chair ..
man.
This background and steady interest now
logically bring her to the present position of
the guiding hand of the guild. O
Serving with Mrs. Fritz as her board of
directors ·is a \veil-qualified group of women
representing Laguna and South Laguna.
From Monarch Bay come the Mmes. Thomas
Fleming and Herman Roesti, vice presidents;
Henry North, corresponding s'ecretary, and
Francis Fabian, parliamentarian.
Emerald Bay residents serving as direc·
tors include the Mmes. LeGrand Daly, vice
president; Gale Pike recording secretary;
Geoige Gade, affiliate chairman; Verne
Daily, te1ephone chairman, and Gordon
Forbes, public relations.
Completing the board are the Mmes.
.James Townsend, treasurer, Laguna Niguel;
Douglas Kenaston, nominating commitee
chairman, Lagunitll, and William Beck, hos ..
pitality chairman, Laguna N(guel.
· Long-Lime residents of Laguna Beach,
Nancy Fritz and her husband come original·
ly from BrynMar, Pa., but their three child·
rcn are native Californians.
Ann , 18, graduated from the Miramar
School in Newport, R.I., and plans to enter
Graham .Junior College in Boston, Mass., in
the fall. Debbie, 16, a tennis enthusiast, at-
tends Laguna Beach High School, and 4--year-
old Horace TV is yet anticipa,ting his turn in
school.
Mrs. Fritz, through participation in Queen
o! Hearts Guild projects, had a hand in fund ..
raising work for the desperately-needed child ..
ren's ho spital in 1962.
Flnally, on Oct. 5, 1964, the hospital, fond-
ly known as CHOC, admitted its first young
patient.
It now boasts a special care unit, opened
Jn February, 1965, for treatment of contag-
ious di seases. Jn JuJy, 1965, the outpatient de~
partment opened and now contains 28 special-
ity clinics.
Also available for the care of county
children are a 16-bed intensive care unit, a
~bed post.surgical unit and a young adult
unit which has a full-time rec;eational ther-
apist. ·
Children's Hospital also is an educational
and resear.ch institution serving Orange Cou.n-
ty Medical Center, UC!, Orange Coast Col·
lege B:nd Fullerton Junior College.
.
You,ngest R~ader Provides .a. Birt.hday Present for Ann
DEAR .ANN . LANDERS: I wrole lo
)'OU. cnce before -10 yearr. ago. Yf>U,
were seekJng your youngest reader.1 was
I ~ old at the time. I said J dJdn't
have 111y problems but maybe 1 was
y.ur yoongest reader, and -as it. ll!rned
ocll,-·1 ·was! YOU i>rtnled 1111 piclure
in 'Ibe Daily Oklahomu. I'm 'sure you
doi.'t remember me but my n a m e is
" N111cy Ann Counta. l am sendlnr~ the
cllppin& Crom 10 years ago to refresh
y-lll<ll\OI")'.
I gractuoled from Dover High School
."In May -valedictorian of my class. nus summ,r I am attending Oklahoma
Slate University.
·•
j
l w1nted you to kno\Y, Ann Landers,
lhal I have roacl.y°"' column re1Jiious11
I
'
ANN LANDERS
· and you have ba.d a strong influence
on my life. You have taught me many
things•~ not only through your column,
but through your books, / "Since You
A!lt Me," 0 Teenagers and Sex'' and
'1Truth Js Slranger." 1 have been
fortuDate to .tJave liad such wonderful
partnt.s. God has been good to me.
Please keep up the wonderful work.
You help so many people and you
perform & very valuable aervlce. -
Sincerely, NANCY ANN COUNTS
DEAR NANCY: What a beautiful let-
ter? 1'ank you. 10 ver')' muc;b, ~t 11Qll
1ppear the day before my birthday wbJch
Is the Foarth of July -11 1 pre1e11t
to mytetr.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I was happily
married for 24 years and the mother
of sit: children. My husband passed away
ouddenly. Whtie goin1 through his
, .
'
personal belongings, I discovered he had
had a mistress for at least five years.
I debated for several weeks as to
whether I should get1 In touch with the
woman. Finally I decided I bad to meet
her, so I gave her a call and invited
her to my· home.· The ·woman looked
gricl-stricken and much older than t
had imagined. She told me she had
known my husband before the war -
· that she klved him and he loved her.
He married me instead because we were
officially engaaed and he felt it was
his moral obligation. This woman mar-
ried shortly-after she and her husband
have seven children.
How could I have been ..w blind?
I loved lll1 husband '° compleleb' and -
' '
I was Slife be ret.urned that love. Now
I can ·1 even pi:ay in peace. Whenever
I see hls face I see her face, too.
I "can't eat or sleep. I'm afraid l
Will become Ill aod die and no one
will be here to take care Ot.my children.
Please help ine. -LOST EVERYTHING
DEAR LOST: YOI wW recover lnm
this blow becaue yoa mast. Your
children need yoa and your cannot fall
tbem. Talkl1g out your grlel wU.b a
theraplrt mtPt be ueful. Perhaps your
husband w19 owe tf thote" r1re peopte
who was able to compar\men\l.llu ~ii
life totally, 11 he wa9 aac• a per1on
bl1 1f11lr wtUI tlls wtman wa1 a tlllac
1tparale Ind aptirt frem bis ramlly llfe.
It lo no way dlmlnl11acd hll love for
'(
..
you. I am not .. ....,..,. lo Jadf1
bis anlallllhlffu -...,. lo QpoUo
ll Good lack ud God blet1.
CONFIDENTIAL TO IN LOVE WITH
A DENTIST: Hang up your track .-,.
Dearle, Don't call· him unlesa you have
a toothache. A man nms fastest when
a woman is chaslna him.
Wllat 11 Frtncll kttttng? 11 It W'l'lqf
Wllo lbooicl HI Ille lletklq llmlll -
the boy or ~ ~l'! Cu a t • • t I 1 "
weddln1 10Cceed? Read An LIDdera'
booklet, "Teenage Sea: -Ten W•Yt
lo Cool IL 11 Send 51 ceate la ccn Md
a long, aelf.addre1sed1 1t1mped nvt..,.
ID care ol tile DAILY PILOT.
t
I
I
1
I
I
• v
I
JI DAILY PILOT
Peerin g
Around
IN TOWN for the • weddlng
ri ~r IOll John Allan to
Gloria Alarcoo West ol Hun-
11 tingtoa JSeacb are Lt. Col.
1fllllam (Rel) and Mrs. Allan
and family of Natick, Mass.
Following the wedding , they
wW hollc(ay In Hawaii and
Son Franci=.
CELEBRATING their
(ID)den anniversary In the
1'utch1 Castle, Salzburg,
Amtrla, Yere Mr. and Mrs.
Wendell Mansur Jones of
Newport Beach. Friends of the
couple were invited to joln
lbem for the f..Uvllles In the
catle which was the setUng
for the "Somd of Music."
HONORED on thetr golden
"eddini amlversary were Mr.
and Mrs. E'Awln F. KjellbUrg
ol Big Bear Lake and Bullhead
CUy. Ariz. Hosts were their
4coughten, the. Mmes. Edwin
Conry and Gene Leeper Sr.
al Costa Mesa and George
. Ward al Big Bear Loire.
t
Friday, J11ly J, 1970
' .,,,,
--• ~·' •
--
Your Horoscope
Leo: Detect All
SATURDAY
JULY 4
By SYDNEY OMARR
TEEN DATING HINTS:
Many tonlgb& dl1cu11 naU.o
and polltlct. Can~r and ,Lto
vie u leaden. Ideal date nlght
lnclude1 g a I a eooventloa,
theatrical prod1cllon.
Aquarius Is cooctnttd about
wbethtr relaUonablp 11 to be
permanent.
• ARIES (March 21·April 19):
Change, travel and variety -
these are featured. You find
creative outlet. You get aid
from one who appeared lo
be on the fence. Be receptive.
What you need is presented.
TAURUS (AJri! 26-May 20):
By tonight, )'Ot.I }f:arn Where
you stand -and why. 'This
is 11 time to be meticulous.
Acerbic remarks will defeat
your own purpose. B e
thorough without being a bore.
GEMINI (May 21..June 20):
Obtain hlnl from Taurus
message. There a r e tasks
which requlre your personal
attention. Holiday atmosphere
prevails. But you must realize
that carelessness taday could
prove costly.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
of public. Fine for new starts
in new dlrecUOnll. Stress
o r i g l nallty, fndependence.
Lead rather than follow. ·vmoo (Au1. 23. Sept. D):
Romance, l n tr l I u e IJ't.
featured. On negative aide,
there is goaip, Innuendo.
Stand tall Don't waver from
principles. Your chances for
success are er¥im1Ctd 1 f'
discreet.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22):
~y tonight you know who
eans what to you. There
t transfonnation from mate.
believe to reality. Self-dtcep-
tion goes out nearest window.
You leam how to fulfill hopes
aod wishes.
SCORPIO (Ocl 23-Nov. 21):
You prove a meaningful point;
your ..Prestige rises as r'esult.
Now is Ume to plan ahead.
Take advantage of obvious op-
portunities. Discard advice of
timid individual who lives in
past.
SAGITrARlUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): Some may claim
you are delving into areas
which represent danger. KeT.
is to be true to yoursel •
Welcome new contai:ts,
challenges. Message from afar
proves stimulating.
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jan.
19): Ck>se Ue with one who
vacillates may get tiresome.
Today your patience is tested.
MAKl!IG the Sanla Barbara
Biltmore their vacation head.o
quartel"l!I have been Mr. and
Mn. Charles Lenzt ol Foun-
liin Valley, -Mr. and Mrs.
Leoaanl Sbane of HwOlngton
Beach, thew: R. S<:hoU.. and
1011 ol Newport Beach and
newlyweda Mr. and Mn.
WUliam R. Patton ol Newport
Beach, who honeymooned iD
Sada Barbara.
Cycle. continues high -you
can obtain what yOu need if
persistent. Emde coofidence.
Money seems beaded your
way. Wekome opportunity by
displaying sense of
responsibility.
Strive to-arrive at canclusiion.~
which is based on maturity.
Don't risk something of value
for nothing.
P R ESIDENT ol the
out .. f-state guests. At work are (left to rigbtf the Misses Shirley
Oollom, Elizabeth Herte and Deena West.
'
Callfornia Federation of Women's Clubs, Mrs. Vernon TOTING THE BAG -The 18 Girl Scoots of Orange County wbb
Cumingham ol Los Alamliocl will be participating in PA VE Four, a vocation and enjoyment pro-insJded over a llala board gram Monday, July 6. Friday, July 1(, are making tote bags for medlng In Fresno June 23-211. ~'-----'-'--''-----'-'--'-.L-'---"----=--------
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You
are perceptive. You detect.
trends. You get flnger on pulse
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-F e b.
18): Lie low. Pennit others
to take initiative. You gain
most through quiet o~rva
tion. Be unobtrusive. You
learn and can apply knowledge
in profitable manner. Don't
force issues.
Mrs. Cunningham h a s
chosen Seet and Share as the
theme for her tw o ~yea r
..term. She recently returned
from the General Federation
of Women's Clubs ConvmUon
In San Antoolo. TeL
GRADUATING from the
Los Angeles Career Academy
as a medical assistant was
Miss Gayle Brown of Costa
Mesa. The daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Wilfrid B r o w n
received training i n ex-
amination procedures, elec-
trocardiography, anatomy and
otli<r medical slr:llh.
KAREN LINDROTH
August Bride
Rite Date
Revealed
Artist Illustrates
•
Watercoloring
A demonstration In
watercolor will be ac·
companied by a general Jee.
ture when Richard V. Johnson
appears at the meeting of tbe
Huntington Beach Art League
taking place at 7:30 p.m. Mon-
day, July 6, in the recreatioo
center.
Johnson, who inmnicted, in
both oil and water color at
Orange Coast. College, began
painting lo early childhood.
He trained at Choulnard's, and
studied oil wilt! Nicholi Feehin
and .Sam llyde Harris. His
watercolor studies were witb
Rex Brandt, Robert E. Wood,
George Post, Milford Zornes
and Barse Miller.
The artili.'s paintings are
on exhibit throughout the
United States in both public
and private collections.
11e has received awards
from the Traditional Artists
Guild; Laguna Beach Art
Association; Long Beach Spec-
Role Meeting .
Capped Arts1 Woman's
Explored by Scouts A wig party and special in-
duction !or new members Mrs.
Paul Billitzer, Mrs. Milton
Experimentation and ex. and-Pageant or the Masters Ronney and Mrs. Neil Levitt
plorat.ioo wiU be nurtured and Disneyland. highlighted the meeting ot the Orange Coast Chapter, B'Nai hfonday, July 6, through Fri-Among tfle 18 Orange Coon-B'rith Women.
PISC~ (Feb. 19-March 20):
Hobby pays dividends. You
are rewarded for doing what
comes naturally. Creative
juices flow. Red tape snaps;.
door of opportunity is ajar.
Enter.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you are patient
enough to pieee together
various elements which even-
tually lead you to major goat
New start thls year was right.
By July, yOO will be more
stable in emotional and finan-
cial areas.
day, July 17 al Chapman ty girls attending tlle event The group celebrated its
College when 68 Senior Girl will be the Misses Shirley sixth birthday yesterday dur-
Scouts from the weSt.ern states Collom of Newport Beach, ing a meeting in the Newport
participate in Pave Four, a Elizabeth Herte of Fountain Riviera clubhouse, Costa
Valley, Deborah Warning of Mesa. rfiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
program ol arts: for vocation Seal Beach and Deena West Hosting the · wig party was J • J UPHOLSTERY
and enjoyment. of Huntington Beach. Jim Gilbert of Huntington
The girls will live a Mrs. James Hook of Mission Beach.
dormilory life and participate Viejo is director of the event A d d 1 t i o n a I information
in workshops, lectures and and Mrs. C. A. Harry of San regarding the chapter may be
MUNS! OUALn"I', INTIGlllY,
SlllVICI", CllAl"nMANIHll".
WI: lltCI aEAUTll'Ul l'\llHIT\1111 .. ACCIPT CHM.LI Nel l
field trips. Clemente is a member o{ the obtained by calling Mrs. Sy '42·5176 646-1051
The theme is exploring the, _:ad:u:l.'..t .:sta:'.'.ff.:_ __ _, __ _:.K:lu~g"'.m'.:'.a'.'.:n·..:MQ.'.:::9354'.:'.:'.:'.:.· ---~~~~~~~~~~ role of women in the arts.1-
Visit.s have been planned to
the Los Angeles Art Center, Eastern
Ceremony
Links Pair
lrum Club and Desct1 Art Take s Wing
Center, Palm Springs. One or
his most important works is Mi s s Carol Frances
a mosaic in the sa'ilctuary Sha'v of N e w p 0 r t of the Grade Methodi s t
Jacqueline Ruth Wingert Church. Long Beach. Beach, daughter of Mr.
became the bride of Leonard Members are invited to sub-and Mrs. Cecil V. Shaw
M. Lilly 111 U Newport Beach mit one painting, a still-life. of Lubbock, Tex., has
during a double ring «remony which will be judged, and become a stewardess
UCI, a major dress firm,
greeting card company, the
La~na Beach Art Festival
New Gold
Gleaming
In Cubes
)days
only!
"'
. Clar-~ M th d l l plal\'5 will be revealed for the
••11uun e o s w1·th World Airways, a Church, Arlington, Va. eighth annual Art in the Park
Parents of the couple are day taking place July 12. charter airline. An art
the JOOn A. Wingert.s of major at Orange Coast
McLean, Va. and Mr. and Collej{e, ~liss Shaw will
Mrs. Leonard M. Lilly Jr. Des igners serve aboard 707 jets of Newport Beach. New i·ewelry al Cartier 'Attendenls " Mi fl)'l·ng to Osaka, Japan. were u.e sses features rinos cut out or gold
Patricia Ann \Vingert, Nancy Reprieve and various parts of cubes andugteami11g discs of
l-lelm and Karen Douglas and Europe. gold percbed atop narrow gold
Mrs. Debbie Gosbin. Others Ban the bra? No. bands were the bridegroom's father So said nine oul of 10 8 h 8 b Jea~ Dinh Van, French-Viet· and Dennis Ro\f!and, Russ eac a es Ekeblad and James Wingert. designers interviewed by the nnmesc jewelry designer at
The bride attended Pfeiffer Contour Council w h o s c Every Wednesday at 7 p.m. Cartier, believes j e w e I r Y
New,
breathtaking
8x10
Colle net the u · ·1 of members keep the innerwear members of TOPS Beach should be a simple line, well
Mr. and Mrs. Re"nold LiJt.. ge a ntversi Y ~ Maryland. Her husband is a induslry going. Babes '°COnvene in Huntington do11e. LIVING
COLOR
PORTRAIT
droth of Newport Beach have graduate of Newport Harbor The designers supported Beach , Hjgh School for pr<r His bracelets neatly encircle
announced the engagemenl of High School and the Universl-widerpinnings for their softer, grams. For information the wrists with geometric cir·
their daughter, Karen Lin-ty of Southern California. He slinkier, Jong-er, sexier·than· regarding the next meeting clc and square cutouts and
droth to John Vallely of is currently in the Coast ever collecUollS for fall and date and time telephone 111rs. chunky cubes and hoops of
Balboa Island. Guard Rese~. winter, Henry Cord 1'-1eyer at 644.()838. gold.
An August JS wedding date'i"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiomiiiiiiii;;i;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;,, tnGe.neva Presbyter i a nll
Church, Laguna Hills was
revealed during a dinner party
celebraliilg lhe brldw:lect's
birthday.
Miss Lindroth is a graduate
of Newport Harbor High
School and Orange Coast
College.
Her fiance is a graduate
er Corona del Mar High
School, OCC and UCLA. A
member of the NCAA cham·
pion basketball team a t
UCLA, he will play with the
AUanta Hawks in the fall.
Cl ea n Curlers
Wash curltl'tl and hair 1<>
etDOlies In a basin of warm
suds occasiooally.
1b1s removes film formed
bf natural hair oils and hair
ci-111(.
Open Saturday, Jul y 4th
t .
And Ever y Sunday
4th of July
SP EC·I A LS
CHOICE BmER
DRESSES I
,_
11 :30 A.M . TO 4:00 P.M.
--SAT., JULY 4-SUN., JULY 5 ONLY--
250/o DISCOUNT
ON ALL FABRICS' WHEN
TOTAL PURCHASE IS OVER $10.00
LUTESONG
POLYESTER
OUR NEW LOW PRICE
$498
............ YD.
CREPE RADIANCE
POLYESTER $)29
OUR NEW LOW PRICE ............ YD.
THE FABRIC FOR LAWRENE NIXON'.S
WEDDING GOWN WAS PURCHASED HERE
Ce
""' soe handling
and d11iv1.y
Your money bock if this isn't tM most lifelike
portrait of your child ever. Not just on ()Id ..
fafhioned tinted or colored picture, but
0 0ving Color"I The complete portrait comes
alive--coptured in omoz.ing full-color realism
with Epstmon Profetsionol Ektacolor film.
Entire portrait
photographed in
l.i'ling Color
by Jock I. Nimble, Inc.
• Choose from actllfll finished
portrciits-nol proof1.
• &tra prints C1W1Uabl1 ot NG1on·
able priett, Na obligation to buy.
• Groups taken at 99f per child.
• Ag• limit: 5 weeks to 12 years.
• Umif: one per child-
two p11 fcimUy.
Wednesday, July 1 through
Sunday, July 5.
HUNTINGTON BEACH SANTA ANA NORWALK
~!no"' •I bMCh bolol!•v•l'd brl•lol '' ,.....,. ..... 111 lll'IP9fltl •I rerwtftr. 'b1W.
phnne 714.892-6611 phone 547-6141 phone 161-0911
'
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.. • . . • .
l • .
}Jig Power
Race Set
For .Ohio
.Independence
_Regatta Slated
llowp«t -Yacht am·. _..... lndepen-
daiee Day 8'plla will bold tiiO yacbtlnr llPOllllht this ---ly!IOO-in II elaesel deduled to
<ili!)pete "' my and ..-. -lladnl Is -!oairdlflllll~.
BCYC Swinging
Clubhouse Not Yet Open
.. r
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• ' I
FNdOJ, Ju~ ,, 1970
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OAIL Y PILOT U
IJMAf, liOTICB
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DAILY PILOT FrldQ, July 3, 1970
UPfT.._....
TOO HIGH, TOO LATE -Angels shortstop Jim
Fregosi gpes up for a tardy, off-target throw Thurs-
day as Milwaukee's Danny Walton slides safely in--
to second base with a steal. The Angels, back in
Anaheim tooi1bl lo duel Oakland, won 10.7.·
Sports In Brief
Injured Hockey Player
Coming Out of Coma
PITI'SBURGH -Michael Br I e r e,
' Pittsburgh Pengutn roolde standout, tn
: a coma for 47 days, has r~aine<l .. a
i low level d consciousness," a team
lfPOkesman said Thursday.
Briere, who suffered head injuries in
en auto accident near his home in
t'alarti<:, Quebec, May 15, has been
lind.~ treatmept in Not.re Dame Hospital
~ Montreal evtt since.
The spokesman sakl he was able to
feCOgllize bis fiancee, his brother and·
teammate Jean Pronovost. The 20-year-
old National Hockey League center hu
eaten hb first solid foods since the
accident and has regained "more use
of his limbs," according to t h e
~kesman.
•
.! STOCKHOLP.f - A us tr a Ii an Ker-
ry O'Brien recorded the fastest time
at 3,000 meters steeplechase this year,
8:29.4 befo•e 5,652 spectators at the
linal day or an international track and
field med. Thursday.
World record holder Ron Clarke, also
bf Australia, was a popular winner o(
the 10,000 meters in 28:43.8-more than
·one minute from his best time -in
:his last appearance at the Olympic
stadium, site of his 5,000 meters world
record four years ago.
•
., irusKOGEE, Okla. -''Goll is half
~arrogance and half ignorance," said Lin·
~da a-art after turning in par 71 Thursday
,tn the first round of the U.S. Women's
()pen. . 1 "It's arrogance when l shoot a ·71 ;and ignorance when I card an 87,"
~said the >foot·10 Texan who's been on :the tour only three years. She arrived
:via psychology, public relations and
t "1>otts -that's a disease rows get:"
~ .. About the only thing you can do
• lfritb a 'bachelor's degrtt in psychology :n: empty bed paos." said the graduate jot Louisiana State University.
! KlEV. Soviet U:n - A 32-year-old
>Kiev student ran the IOO meters in h min~. '5.5 oeconds Thursday. tile ~best. tune far the distance in the world '-· • u.ilS year,
' Yevg"1l Anhnov, competing in the
; two-day Brothers Zoamenslftye lntema· .
tional Track and Field co111petition at
Central Republican Stadhm, sliced
seven-tenths o( a second of! the Soviet
recprd held by Sergei Kryuchek.
A Soviet girl, Antonina Lazareva, alM
set· a Russian record wtt21 a high jmnp
o{ 6-1,ii.
·• PJTI'SBURGH - A womu filed suit
Thursday asking that Pltllburah'• entry
in the American Basketball A.slociaUon
not be called "the PiOnetrs" tmttl lhe
is declared wianer of a contest held
to name the team.
tttrs, Aagela B. Weaver charged that
International SporU Inc. ran a contest
asking contestants to select a name for
the team (formerly "the Pipers"), ex·
plainiag their choice in "25 words ctr
less."
She offered the name ••Pioneers" and
her reasom, but the owners violated the
rules ol their own contest by rnrding
the· priu to a man identlrJed as Dona1d
Seymore, who supported his choice with
57 words, the suit said.
As well as the $500, the contest offered
a lifetime pa ss to the team's pmes.
•
P H I L ADELPHIA -Philadelphia
Phillies' pitcher Grant Jacbon was filled
$50 Thursday for unbecoming conduct
during a game the day before at Mon-
treal.
Jackso• was removed for a pinch
hitter in the 1ixth inning ol the second
game of a twin bill, sbowiq his
displeasure, ht thrtw his helmet down
and stalked into the clubhowe.
"I don't show my ball players up
and I don't expect them to abow me
up," said Phillies Manager Frank Luc.
chesi ia announcing ht had fined the
southpaw.
•
LOS ANGELES -C<rdella\
lngram won the 220 and 440 to lead
the La Mirada Meteors to the team
title in the National AAU girls 1Z..IS-year-
old invitational track and field cham·
pionships Thursday.
Miss Ingram bettered her prtvklus
best time in the 440 by J.7 seconds
to set a new national rt'COrd of 5'.7
on the UCLA track. Her winnin1 time
in the 220 was 15.0.
Newcombe
ldoliud Man'
He Must Duel
WIMBLEDON, ~ <m -A
ID-yeor-old Austnllan boy, just leaminl
lo hold a tennis racket, listened to a
radio commentary on Ken Rosewall
playing in .the ,dialle111' round ol Ille
Davb CUp and told his parents : "Thal'•
wt.> I'd like ·to be;"
It WU I& years ago. Now . John
Newcombe !Inds himt<I! lacin& Rosewall,
-is 35, In the Wlmbl<don final.
''To think J was just a amall kid
when I idolized him," ·Newcombe said.
"He and l.eW Hc:md were Australia's
national heroes.
"I guess he'• always been a IOrt • of hero for me. But lo play him in
h ~ rmal wu never even
a·chfll:hGd dream. Jt woukl hive .seem~
lmpoo&ible."
,,,. final is -Salim!ay.
Rooewall will be the oldeot Wimbledon
finalist lince Amerlca'1 Bill Tilden, who
won Ille title In 1930 at 1he age ol
37.
Rosewall, playin& ice<ool, calculatln&
tennis in a trouWesome wind, killed
Britillt hopes Thurlday by cfef .. linl Role< 'l).yio< f.3, 4-C, w. w.
New<:ombe outplayed 'Anc!m Gimeno
ol Spain, e:-3, M, M , in a match in·
terrupted by rain .
n>e older generation of Wimbltdon
fans will be wantinJ Rosewall to win
for sentimtntal reaaons. Ht played in
two finals Ion&, Ions .... and loot them
b>th -to J..-lv Droboy In 1954 and
to Hoad in 1956.
U anybody thlnkl -all will not
last a Wimbledon ftnal -even a fivwet·
ter -ht'll have to ariue against
Newcombe.
"Whatever ellt may happen, Ken wm't
tire," Newcombe said. "He's 'too fit
for ttw.t. even at hls age.
"He's got everythlng escept . a big
service. l shaB just have to come at
him at 111 times, and ht will have
to counter,attack me.
"Possibly his age wl.11 count against
him in one mpect only -Wimbledon
Carter Court nerves. Mter 111, time
Is nmnlnf out !<r him and it ,-...uld
be his last clwi<e to win Wimbledon.
I lllll have years ahelld ot me."
l Longshoi -Gilbert Fires 65
•
: LONDON, Ont (AP) -Gibby Gilbert,
~ lhe lonphot f1J.Y who came from nowhtre
11o win tbt Houlton Champions earlier
' lhis year, credited a telephone leWon
fJ'om hll old tutor With his lint-round
i lead i• the Houatoa Champions earlier
thls )'tar, credJted a telephone lesson -i'fl1>m 1111-o1c1-1uror-i<1th-hlrltr>t.l'ound
"So I called Joe GerlU: in Hollywood,
Fla. I told hbn what I was doblg.
I was hittillg <•erylhln& hl&h and to
the right.
"1 guess he coold v1"'al!Jo what I
was doing. He knows my 1ame better
. than I do. lie told me 1 was too Wrilty,
bringing tht club back too fut with
my hand~ -
Georp Arther 'ud veter.. Ari wan,
• pair ol lmntr Mui.ra ehlmplons
Ued llt 16.
John Kemtdr, a two-year tour vtttran
who hlln't come clooe belcn, and 'l'bml-
to assistant pro Glt)I Pltchlonl lollowed
with !7& and Bob Stone had I I&
.___ lead 'In tho f12$,llOll C1nadlan-Open go!!
lownamont.
" "l misltd the cut at Cleveland la~i ,..u," Giibert Mid. .. and pla)'td bad
i. pl'1ICtlce rouodl lhll week.
"SO rliffiae a correction."
Reaull ~ A seven-under-par e:.s IJ'ld the
first round-lead.
Many ol the glomor Mm<S lo the
game -·Amo1d-Palmu, Jack Nicklaus,
Glt)I Ptsy<r ud Billy Cuptr -1klpped
the toumament to . o:incentrate on -•Ilona 10< nell week'• Britllh
()pen.
Just off hls pace In this llar-1\.anled
1aUonal championship, h?Wtver, wen-
f
Angels Battle Oakland;
Wright Seeking-No.12
Alez JolUllOll made a bl& hit with
hll bat Tburlday ~ ud almost
made It u I !lop with hla &love.
The Ca.lilunll "111'11' left ~ rap.
ped tine hllo In ftve 1riel, lmocked
Jn two nw and ICOl'fld CIDCt u the
Alll'1L topplld lhe_MllwlU!cee Brnen
10.7.
The Ancels, home today, send Clyde
Wdghl, 11-6, lpinsl Oaklaod's Chuclt
Dobioo, 7-a, Ill tonfchl'I opener of I
~ aet qalnst the A"o.
In the. bottom ol !he oevtnth, however,
JofmlOO played 1 Mike Hean off.field
hit Into I double with spe<dl1er Tonuny
H....,.. acortnr all the way lrOon llrat.
Wbm aslced about Joi.-•~ ot>vious '
lack .,. bustle .. the play, Clll(Ornla
rnanapr ~ Phillipa -: "He dOes
ftl! well with the bat, baa nal pd
'P'ed ud ii pd for tile ball club,
period."
PhiWps replaced Johl84;!11 with ~
handed Jarvis Tatum In the ninth and
the move paid oil 11moat Immedlalely,
Wllh two runs alrudy in and Dive
May on first with one out, pinch bitter
Tito FrlllCGlll 111cod !he ball don the ·
left f!eld line.
1'111an, nmnln1 at the crack ol the
ba~ hauled In tile ball with an over-tbe-
aboulder catch.
•"J11at wu the beat move Lefty made
all day," cracked Milwaukee manager
Dave Briatol r;oocemlng Califomi1'1 ~
aerlini Tatum Ill the oullleld.
While Johnson WU llflplng hla batting
average to .SSl, lfJCoa:I • best ia the
American L!agl1', Milwaukee'• Harper
WU movJnc Into the top leJI with I
f.l<r-6 per!ormonce. .
The llJJ'O!fy third bueman, already
tho leque leader In doubles and -· bues, raised hla average to .308.
Harper .•lammed Tom Murphy's first Jlilch of the llJllt'. Into the left OelAI
Cigar-puffing Woman
Steals Morganna's Act
planned with his friend, Ookland """"
Qiarles 0. Finley, the niaht before.
"I wore a pant! suit because I couldn't
find a mini-skirt small enough," said
Condon who dressed IS I Boy Seoul
at Chicago's baseball dinner last winter
stands to ,ive the Brewen a ahort.lhed
1-4 lead, singled in the llllh, llnPd
ud scored in the aeventh and homered
with One on in the nllth.
CALl,OIUUA MILWAUKll ••r•rtll ..,,,,..
AlofMr, 211 J 1' 2 I He,,..., ao I I 4 t •.,.oz.rl lt11HIOlll.lll ,.,
,.,.... .. ·u ,~, 2 t Cl.Mey, c1 ' • 1 A.Jefwl-,lf51JJB...,..,rf l tt
J .T11u!t1, ff f t I 0 G91Mr, f i 't 't S99nelr, 111 I 1 J J ,.,.M-1. 11111 1 I t
MeMlllllfl'I. 311 ' I t I Wltlorl. " J' I I ~t ''''""' ... " ••• JohnlteM. cf J I I I ·-· u J t I T .MIH'P"!Y, 111 J I I t l'loot. t J 1 I
K,TtMn. " 1 t I I Kubi.~. 2" ' I 1 lr1bender, ' 1 t I S1nffr,, t I t I t1lllwlft. t I I t
Snyder, rt I ! I
lottll 9 11 14 11 To"fs fl 7 It
CaUflltnl1 020 tot Jllll -1t
MU•vt.. 100 IOlf llO -7 DI" -C•llfllr~l• 2, Mllwfuk .. 1. lOI -C.11-
femlm 5, Mllw1r.*; .. I. 21 -l'rlOllll 1. Al~ Rt00t. Hto-11. Hll -H1r'*' t OJ), R• (7). II
-WlllOll. IP' M I Ill: II M
T Ji!Uft/llr CW.HI '"Ill 1 J J ' .t K. T1lum t-2/J J 2 2 I t
lf11Mnder (4>!0) •111 • ' 1 t • s.no..,, 1 1121 1
811dwl" 212 O O· I 0 1
Gt11111r 22!2 1 1
Time -2:0 . Anencl•nct -12,0ff.
CHICAGO (AP) -Aside !rem th<
bi1 cipr it was hard to teU it was
~ Deve Condon of the Olica.10
Tribune out there on Comiskey Park t:tia·
mond In women's ck>thes ki53ing the
Oakland A's.
Wllh I WI& ol !Wien ' .curls llow!J\i
around his shoulders, his body' .stuffed
in a womarCI pazlts "1it,' ail,d)li5 bosom
blo"°""1'1 from IJwo 16-lnch softballs,
sports columnist Condon appeared on
lhe field cUin1 !he -·ilminc ni ... day ..
and presented Qlicago CUb Managw Leo
Durocher with a Oag from Camp Ojibwa ..
in Wisconsin.
He ltjsaed Oakland~• fint· bueman,
Joe Rodi, and. Umpire Join Rice. Thon
he -off pU!fmc on bis cigar.
Condon laid the whole thing had beet!
Condon also dressed like an Andy Frain
U!her at 01e Rentucky Derby last May
and directed t'\JMcmers to the wrong
xats.
Condcn aald he and Finley conceived
the girlie stunt as a "rebuttal" to
Morganna Roberts, nightclub dancer who
has been running onto the field aroond
the country smooching with players.
John .McNamara Aid he didn't mind
JOE NIEKRO
AFTERNOON TliT
FOR DODG~RS , SF
::~::; .t:. was stopped for the Niekro Takes
"But why do we have to 1et Condon? •
-he isn't 11 1ood lookJng as Mor1aruia," • "'~s.,. 1aet the game 1M. nie A'• Blmne, Loses
SAN FRANCISCO :AP -Tho ·San
Franci!co GiaJU will catch the Los
Angeles Dodgers and pew them Soturday
grabbed a M lead in the rrn four
Uw,tlngs £hanks to three Chlcag'o · errors • :!f~1fy~';:"~'.11arryMo•n No-hitter in 9th -but not Jn the, standings. · ·
'I111s afternoi:n's "Helmet Day"·pme
will be the Giants' J,Cl:IOUa at home
since _they moved here h\'irn New York's'
Polo Ground>.
Bolh _,,. ...... off Thursday.
Chlcago iot four runs in the first
two innings on Garlos May 's two-run
· · homer and lingles by Moore' and Syd
O'Brien and Luis Apark:kl'• sacrifice fly. .
VPIT.._...
Wi mbledon Rannerap
Long Beach's Billie Jean King setUed far second place In the All·
England tennis championships today when she bowed lo Austrllla's
.lllarfaretj:ourt, 14-12, 11·9, In the longest female finale in the clal-
sic's 1!11tory. T!iO ma1ch-tasted-two hours and 'll minutes. and the
marathon first set alone took one hour and 27 minutes to complete.
Mrs. Cour~ tht lop seed, thus regained the UUe •he last won live
yean o10.
DETROIT (AP) -Joe Nl<m blamed
himself for ruining his own J'J>hlt bid .
in tile ninth inning Thursday nl&hl ..
the Detroit Tigers blanked tile N"' Yon
Yankets f>.t,
With one out in the ninth, lknel
Clarke gr0u;.ied 1 ball deep behind first
base. Tigers second baseman Diet
McA.uliffe fielded it beautifully, pivoted
and threw to · Nifkro, racin1 to covw
first.
N'ielao's foot apparently came oft lte
bag as he caught tho ball and Clart•
was awarded an infteld lin&le -tM
· Yanks' first and only hit.
"1 knew when I caught !he boll I
wasn't on tile bag."' tile 25-yw--old rlah~
bander groaned in the drdsin& room
afterwards.
"I wish they gave me an error Oil
It,. but that's the way it goes."
McAuliffe was brilliant all ni&ht.
finishing with 10 assists.
"I felt bad that Joe didn't pt .~"
ttie sparkplug infielder said of the no-hit
bid. 0 He was jamming batters all nishl
and nobody really hit the ball well.''
"I th>ught I could get to it as IOOtt
as it came off the bat," ht added, refer~
ring to Clarke's grounder.
It was the third lime Clarke ha
broken up a no-hitter in the ninth lnninc
this season.
"It's just a coincidence it hu hlppentd
that way," said the Yankets' aecond
baseman as he walked from the lhowtr
jn the New York dressing room.
"I'm just glad somebody got a bit_
llDd it happened it WIS me," he added.
"Nobody likes to be in I ~-I
know because I was in one once ia the
minors."
Ironically, Niekro nid ht didn't pit.ell
IS well as he did In hla prevlouo outmc.
when he fired a four-hit cunplele pm0
against Cleveland.
"I think I had a liUI• belt..--
tn that last game," he said. "I hid
more on my fastball."
Ex-Tiger Owner
Spike Briggs Di~
llOYAL OAK, Mich. (AP) -w•
0. "Spib"1lrigp Jr. died In 111111'8
Beaumont Iltopital •r\J toclaJ -I
Jong w-. 11e "" sa. .I,
Brigp WU the -" the Iato "''* o. Brigp Sr,, former owner fJ( .,.
Doln>it 'ft&tn. j
Brigp Sr. died Jan. 17, 1-. .W
his "' became pnllldenl ol !ho ~
nine day1 Iller. '
He sold the bueball club JulJ IT,
1956 tO an tt·man croup ol bulira.M11
headed by Mlchlron bro1dc11hr Fttaerkk Knorr. f.
Brlgp then became vice pruldent .,i
general manq:er bul rt&cned m-ter
pmoure April IS, 1•7.
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Frldat, JylJ J, lt7D DAILY "LOT f~
;Caneer, ,Drq• . '
I( ·:-.Qm Man Faces
-'-
.'l}ual Life Threat
BJ Pm ROSS ed as a stow malignancy aod
OI a. DllllY "" lwt admU.s it could COit him his
,. • .·W,hen one hu CKOCtt, he life in five or slx years. -~;·~aurtlyworryhknselfin-, But the cheertu~ : ,. iQ an ulcu thlolcklc about It Westmoreland Is more content
' ' Hank Westmoreland, 27, has with thinking about things at Ufefl with a canceroua situa-hand-namely drag racing and
•• oUort for ei,tlt years and -yet his favorite hobby of surfing. · · !le'i placed h.ls Ufe in double And he likes to do it with ~ .. ~d>' with a dapprous the least amount of-worry. • 4 jrofessi'on-t.hal d. a drag rac-lt)f , "My chief ~enf at tfle
;. ·'. .. u:Ve:~ys, "cancer made moment is winning tonight.
> rDe realite about the foolish It's very important to my ~ . l!Ule \h!np people WarT'f e19", Ille winner of lhe 199
.; , Aout hi lHe. So, I made my Springnatiooals coOlides. ~ ·; rniM up not to bave such The r a c ' WestmorelaM
. worries. talks about takes place in the
' .. 1 have very UUlt concern top fuel category ol. tbe third
. ·about whether the canctr is annual nUromethant cbam-; : · ·ioina: to cut my life short plooships tonight et Orange
• ~ not. I felt IOrf'Y for myself County I n tern at i o n a 1
· .i.( first, but there's just no Raceway.
; reason to feel that way now." 11le· gallant warrior of the
: ·y,restmoreland, a Corona del raceway, who works full time
. Mar resident who ~u born building and d e v e Io p in g
· In San Diego and reared in Formula A racers, will be
_ ... Pasadena, was given the driving Les Allen's Preying
disheartening news about bis Mantis in nitro compeUUon.
mall1nancy when he applied \Tonight's will be the fourth ~ for a job with the Newport cdnsecUtive run for th e r.;,..,••.;..
Beach Fire De par t m e YI t Corona driver in the Preying
. following . '!'~uatlon f rom !dantls. ~e broke the tn00.$ler 1 ~·Jllgh scbOol m~lMJ.. 1n at Irwindale Raceway, ran t
:'> fll!i!t~_-.lmenl_j!_one.pru>ious timLal-OCIR
·:=al, It WM ~ and recorded a 6 74 elai-t lo ~ ~·had mau,n.nt tumors time clocking · 1asi Saturday r, ;:~hll neck and rislJI shoulder at Northern California's Fr.,. FLYING MANTIS -Corona de! Mar's Hank West· at 0 ·~ . "aunty lnterna. · .lional Raceway when the ::~ • . mont Drag Strip. -~ . " ·
;'.;"Bt'lllll bu whit is -He notes that owneruif the _:.:m::o:.rel=•=n:::d:_w.:c:::ill:_b:.e:_cdn=·-'vin=gc.h:_is'-Fl-"-ym.::· "'g"M=BD:.li::::•:...lo=m'-''gbc__l _..c"'_·1ro-'-c'-'ar-s_lock-'--ho-rn_s_. ----------
~.~ Preying MaW.s bad very litUe
CdM Aces experience in the top fuel field
and the situaUon originally
resulted in incorrect jelling
and some broken water hoses.
S kl Westmoreland says, '• I
Par e guess iI I did lave one l<llg
range goal it would be to
.win the Wintemationals cham· ' y _ M plonship sometime:" ·:::IJ:t· eet While managing to devote ~· • · almost lull Ume to top fuel ~~} ·, ' ·. dr•o racmg· · ""-,.....t ;,,;~_. • .,,DIEGO~~ h-'~~--ll! -"'"'' years »!"-· ~~ -w~ ~he lelt high ICbool, Hant
'-·• ~rtcedinl 1Uptly but the ·hp accumulated an AA
lanky s.loot-2 inch George defee from Orange Coast
Rhoden is the same genUeman Co lege in philosophy and is just 20 units .short of a
who won the 400 meters at bachelor's degree in machine
1 the 1952 Olympic Games. shop and·automotive industrial
When be says he can run arts at Cal State (Long
a I .& hwldred in the U.S. Beach).
Masters Tract and Fie.Id . Westmore~ held the na· . . tionaJ elapsed time re.cord for Championships, which con-'lOP •• fuel . raoers from '66
tinued its nm today at Balboa through '118. "I haven't bad
.stadium, you believe him. ~ much luck lately, he ad· ;4 ~·all, he won bis beat mits. "!dY ¥ victory was '~Y 111 10.3. the Springnationals at Dallas
TQp Bike
Riders Vie
In Mesa
A wiJd aOO woolly two.lap
match race will highlight
festivities tonight on the
speedway motorcycle racing
card at the Orange County
Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa.
The principals in l h f:
matchup are current U.S.
speedway di.amp ste.ve Bast
ol Van Nuys and former
California slate titiist Sonny
Nutter of Topeq:a.
Racing gets under way at
!. 11J'm a · foot doctor In San lntematiooal Raceway." He
itl"ftanci3Q) now," the 43-year· ~!aimed a juicy $12,000 purse Nu~ter was exceplionaJ on
• "old · athlete said "and I just m that one. last week's card at the
:",·.got interested in 'running again Queried. about shifting owr fairgrou~ dirt oval.
'" three yura ago." to anotner drag r a c i n g His perfOtn\ance inc~uded a
•. .,,. • Iii hi.s prime Rhode.'1l ran category, say, to funny cars, scratch i:i_~in \vent wm over
t 7 (100) 205.5 (200 meters) Westmoreland replies, "I'm notables like Gar.den Grove's
..... ~ ~.a '(too meters). really p1.n1'!ped on ra~ing and Bill Cody, Rick WOOds of. Hun--
. ,, 1•1 guess I could probably would be inter~ in funny · tingtop Beach and Steve
.;:-· pin 50 aeconds today" he cars, but It would have to Bast's younger brother, Mike. -~ •
0 laJd "but I hurt my ha~tring be the right car though." The past few wet.ks have
• ·;~.1a ··bit lut. week in the %20, On advice .to prospective seen. both Cody and . W~
.. : • ., I'll just run the 100 here. dr ag r a c 1 n g stars. donunate the Class ·A, ~on
"I would like to bring the Westmoreland advises, 0 you at the Fairgf<tU.nds Sl>ff:dWay.
Muters 440 record down to can get into bigger and better but, witb Nutter's unapected "~ ~ more respectable, ~acing by banging arotmd the ~ict.ory .skein last week; he
•·~though. "I'hat 52.S is not good right places and then all o( is cast in the favorite's role
r :,;:-enough." a sudden, 90l't oJ. imtinctively, tonight.
Corona de.I Mar Track Club yoo'U being doing it Nutter also looked iJn.
• lf!liors showed well in the automatically, pressive Sunday on a larger,
· U.S. 'meet. "The real secret though , is quarter-mile dirt track in El
: ::i 'Jn 'Iburaday's competition lo be able to race often and Cajon, outside San Diego. .:"""the CdMTC tpark1ed. In the keep consistency", the Corona Nutter says, "My bike now
~ club members were resident says. has the: right combination of ·~ Plru~larly potent. The carefree Westmoreland pcrwer and handling and, inr
Jn the SO-year grou p concludes, "~ally, the only p.mantly, traction which r
.·:l<athariiel Heard won with a obligatkln I have is paying beUeve was evident last Fri-.. toss« 13M'h:. He was follow· the rent." '· day night."
.-«f·t>y mai.. Dan Aldrich (130-
·'' 3)' •nd IJQn Wlntoo (12U\I). ·"'''ROiph Higgins was second
Winn's No-hitter
r/
Diahlos
·Outrun Sparks HB Pkiy Mater Dei
boor time limit. Righthander Ed W i n n
fashioned a no.hitter 11 Winn's
Tow Service (Edbon) record·
ed a Z..l .deciaion over Kauff·
man and .Board (Marina)
Wednesday right in Hun-
tington Beach s u m m e r
base.ti.ll action on the winners'
Gary Varney and Pat
Marley collected two hits
apiece for North Huntington
·with the latter'• triple in the
first good f« • run.
The Miasion Viejo Dlablos
maintained their steady pace
in the Santa Ana summer
basketball leaiue Thursday
night with a 59-49 verdict over
Mat~r Dei's Monarchs in a
tiff played at the Santa Ana
College gym. diamond.
Newport Center Kiwanis
(Corona 4el Mar) incttaRd
its Jeague . leadership (5-0-1)
by dropping ·Huntington
Ha-.r (H~ BeaCh), ·
:J.1 at Huntington and N..,.art
Exchange Cllib (Newport
Harbor) and North Huntington
Rotary (Fountain V a 11 e y )
fought t<> a 4-4 standoff at
Marina High.
The New:p<rt Exchange and
the Rotary Tiines oow trail
tile Kiwanis by a full game
with Newport at 4-1·2 and
R-Otary 4-1-1
Wirtn struck out eight Kauff.
mah batters and walked five
in 'twirling bis -lhe lint
-in lhe Huntinctoo circuit this summer.
Be was supported by six
hits including Ron RW"rs two-
run triple in the bottom of
the fourth inning.
Kauffman picked up its lone
tally in the second on a hit
batsman, a pair of walks, a
sacrifice and a ground out.
Kauffman is now alone In
the loop buemtnl with a 1-6
mark while W'lM's moVes into
a deadlock ·with Hlft1tlngton
Harbour· at J.5.
Bruce Wingerd and Mike
Easterlinc; ead\ bad two hits
for Newport in support o(
pitcher Alvin White, who gave
up just l'ix hits while fanning"
nine.
MIWl"Oll:T C!ll!Tlfll IUWAMI U M r llrlol
' I 1 I 4 I 1 0
' 0 ! I ' I I 0 ' I 0 0 J I 0 II
IC1rt. 'ii Dinner. u P1!mtr, ff Eric•~· c lllthoa, cf DeM!llt, rt C:1rt11, rr M . Jonmon. Jb.p 11 ...... 1-VlllJ, 11 It, JohMOll. 0 Clll\lltf 0 To!l 1 :~~1~.0,vr
••• 0 I a o I J : i ,.
1 0 0 I o ·o o o lt ) • 2
•-r II rltf v1nAt111r1'9!1. II J I • • 8~~ .. ,,,. J : f : Oftter. ,411 l o o o Sllllbl",llt l GlG Wt,ntr1 II 7 0 1 0 ~m .. ~1or•. •• : : ¥ : JttrV .Cl!forl!. c o o o e V....ntm, 2lt l 0 0 G N11U,11 1000 Sl111t,D 1000 llltt',rf t 010
Ml<:-lln. rl 1 t • I Tol•t1 • 2• I 5 1 kiri k lllfllll" H-.ot. C:n!r. l(tw1nl1101 Ill ~ I I Hunllnololl Nltlt. DOI DOO 0-1 J 2
KA¥,~{l~ND
·-r llBI :...cVm. 2!a ~ : : ·: Cretct. c 1 0 0 0
Fast break: was the name
of the game as coach Pat
Roberts' fiery Diablos llmply
outran Mater Dei.
The Diabloe: broke. tht con-!Ost open in lhe third period
with I IS.t outiJunt which
left the Mooarcho down, 0JI
and never able to regain com-
mand. 1be contest was n.21
with Mater· Dei on top at
halftime.
The M0twchs would have
been even further behind
withoot the iropman e!fort.s
or Fountain Valley resident
Steve (Gabby) Fritz In tbe
third quarter.
Fritz got all nine Monarch
counters in the stanza.
He al9o combined with Hun-
tington Beach'• Steve Kfmper
to he.Ip M.ater Dei's re·
boundln& battle 1 fa I n 1 t
. Diabtos Jell· Mutmoo (M )
and Frank Mort (1-3).
MIJJtolll YllJO '"' f9fl•l t• "!tti<I. 111 2 I 0 I
Ell -· It I 0 0 I M110tr1011 ll•tcl!an. '' ' 1 O O e Evtr\s • 1 I lJ
' ' 1 11 5 • 2 10 J 12 J 11
l •• ' l • , 2
'2U lst
Whffte,, cl I 0 D I Mori l(Ylft', If l t 0 1 ,tlc;t
H•_t<tllr, ti l I 0 f CUr11
Tolll1 WINH'I TOW It 1 0 Ftt"t11IO'I
llllVtCI CU Taltlt •-rhr~ N~Use~1 cf J 0 2 O MATlll Dll (4tl T, Mc"IV' c l 0 0 t f9 H -I fp P•rl1.1rr. 111 3 I 0 0 Frllf I f l 11 'tf/111"·,f f T l 8 Knltlen 2 I s ill:uf ,lti JOl?Ktflillfr 11 2 1 ll•cn,11 ia 1ollobtrh 1 7311 S.MCMIY.tl JaooJ.l(lltY 020 2
E WtlnbtrH r, 211 J 0 O 0 O'f:11e1 ,1 ' : ..: Toltl1 S{tn llY 111111 I 2 6 1 , I 1 k-tor ... ,,.... Ktullm•~ " erotd 011 ":M .0-1 o 2 Mlu!Otl Vitia I 11 lt 1,_5, Wlnn'1 TllW S.rv. 000 :JOO X-2 • 2 M1ffr Otl IS t t ,._.,
B!!pActlolt
Siming· Oilers
-Nab 6tlr Straight
The 1t11 I Jn r Bunuasticm av111A •••1t <»a ,. " _. '"
Beact1 0t~ rolled to ttm-=., ...... ,"" I t ~ 1J
ailth IUaftbt vict«y 'Jhn. ~ I ! : ii
day n6ght, rtpplnc La Quinta, ~=d . : ~ 1o
Jltf'Mlr I I I I tut, to hiehlilbt HWJUncklo :z..-.ao. e I J I
Beach •ummer bubtball"S 1JdJ J
1e1gue play ori the wtnnen' aDtlOll cnt ,. fl .. ,,
honlwood. ~ i l ! :i J'ount.ain Valley improved ' , l " II I ' :II ita ........ r m11t to 5-1 In .,_11*'41 2 • 1 4 2 I I '
the opelinc pme d. the , 11 :.1~ J J
doublehudtr.tHUlltirJiltonby .... ,~""' ~J 11 11~ ~~ 9~ G _.. .... •• Eclllot! ti 1 tt 11-11 ........... , _ r-.ue, ,....,.., ....... •llANOa ,.,
A ,.,.,_ --~ D """"' t ~ '-""IU1 ave Foer,i.r ,. 1 1 "
,_.., fatt·lmproving~:S 1 1 l i ~ ll"Klr; I I 1 'I Cbu):ert Caiptured their third ,.,.._, J I I II
ctmeeUtive nnaway Win with '=. I i ~ 1~
a 77-51 rout r:i. Buena Park rmi~OVMTAIN VAL.LIT 11.!4 1 a: \:it .. ,..
while VU!a P•k .toi>Ped ~~~,..., f f J 11
Ganien Grove, M-74. "-« s a 1 111 • Krl911NI 2 0 l • ~na kept M martr.~ : Tl t
unblefnished at J.0 CID itl borne W;ll;\';'.. • I 1 I 1 • ' I • ' • eourt by takmc ·WettminlW', ~~ 2 g t l
14-51. G. Glrlttr l o ~ •
Rancho Alamitos u P •et r•i. ""' .., ....,._' i' :io 79
Corona del Mar, 4MI, ln Ow ,~S:..~.r.:I:, ,.11 f,1~";t2 other tilt at Marina. U GUINTA IU)
C.ch Elmer c:omtM' npid ~ l ~ J
tn.nsit OUers eamed a ~ : ~ ! "
brilliant 31-of..$1 De.kl pl at-. =r \ : i \l
temiu (87·pen:ent) and --'Toi'.. -J-11.1 J
Jet up on a ruaed IA Quinta NYNTJHOTOH •IACM ~"J .., ,.
quintet. w1:w • 1 1 •
Wes 1bomal led the winnen =:ii '? ~ J ul
with 14 markers while mates ~ f ; ; 14
Darrell Walbr (11)~ steve •t: ! : ~ l:.
Broob (17) and Tom Cnmk •11 ._. 11, .,.,._.• 11"' ir;i
(11) followed. LI Qltlftl1 IJ I• tt 1'-4it F-~ yalla -• HUnf"-'9n .-.Cll ,. ti II 21....n .......... -Y .... aconnc ll4llCHO ALAMITOS •• ,
from 11 different . pla)'VI. " 11 '" •
Dave Lynch led tbe uuult ~, ? ~ 1 11
with 13 points I nd Rid: Power =:,-: ; ~ 1f
contributed 10. :/11'~ ! : ! ;
LilUe Mike Arus beaded Tof1b 14 , ll "'
Edl9on aplnst Buena Part co•GNA 01L """" C:'ri ,, .,
with 10 field pis for 20 points ~Kllllln i ~ l :1
while Jdn Fither hid 15, Bill l : ~ 0
"Ibc:mlOll 14 and Bob WritlJt ~ l ' l t 12. WIMI 0111
Muina coadt Jim Stepbenl '1J':.: ,; 1i J ~
let. tis flllt brtak go full force llMctll :11::' TM;"11 111-4l to vidbnize Wtstmlnster. tbe c-dll Mi r IS ' 11 ......
circuit'• cellar dwell~ ~utfit WllTMIN$Tlll (17) .. "'" "
• .. A.I' y_,"' I 0 1 0
V"V. Mtl14111htlmu I l J IS The Marina ·pair of '"5 cldl , , s • ,IW J ••I forw•d Kipp Baird and dasly J 1 ~ 1
playmWr Bruce Miller once 'ie~ ~ ! : 'l ac• annfe:red the calJ tally• lrllNll I I I '
Ing 17 _..... .... ect. ' :i.:~~ : \ : ! ...-.-_,.. ,4Jr10r! I • I I Relen'e Ren Rewoldt came To1111 15 • '' SJ
olf the bench to add U for MAlllflA OU fl fl '" ~
H.a iune .. lnl I I I IJ .. ..: W n . ltlllllel'I I 1 J 2
WelHilldplDed R a n t b o ti:" J ~ f .,il
!Jlmitos, a CIF-AAA•1;x-; i :"f
aemifilllllilt )lllt 1181DD, 11Ve ....... J 2 I Jt
aJ9Cb. Tab' Gillil' Conm del ~-f : ~ ; : Mil" ....... tion a d(llt of ..07,.;;,. ,_ ... .,.,._ .. 11 22 .11
I ....... _,__ W.rtfl'llllllitr' ,, 11 11 15-$7 ts own mW10111C. M1rln• 22 '' '' 1 .... 1•
Saddleback Puts End
To Loss Streak: Ties
Saddltback put the lki<b tg IAOIM.llA(I( 01 llll r II IM
ILs 1b:·1ame loll 1 t e I n l,,'fJ:' 1:' I : l ~
Wednesday nilJht ln~· ct ~I l:l
Metropolitan League iwnmer =r."~ to J ~ l l baleblll action at Anaheltn'I 01wl1, rt • 1 1 e Soehl, lit 1 I e 0
Boyaen Part as the area SJ>of:r:i~ • ,: ~ ~ ~
squad tied tbe An ah e i m S1Hi..::"' ~' 1""~~' 1 1 Hustlers, 7-7, In an air ...,..,..,,.. Hu1111r1 m .._, 10 •
breviated contest. COITA MllA PlllAT•I fl)
In anolher Metro tilt in-Cr.rt!. n Al : ~ .. !
v~vi. ... an area nine, Cypress '.-ii. lit •, •, • •, .. ,. tt•w••· ' • tied tbe Coata Mesa Pirates, LHvv. 2• J • o o
1·1, in the first gime of the ~~~1-! ! : ~ twin blll at Boysen. Piii. rt , • ' fl
Lefty Steve Shapard pitched :=. : ! : · : :
for Saddleback. Tol•lt s.. 1 1 1 Tom King coDeded three ... .., 1111111111
hi .. for th. Plrl'-, CO.ti Mell Plrtfel IOI OOI ~I I 1
ICll c:".,."' c .. ,..,. 000 001 ~· ' 2 tn the 60-year set with a 91-0lfa
·:""lhrow. And in the *-year aec-
.·.~··b Bob Richards WU MCOnd
(137-5\1.i:) while George Kerr
""»vu third (US.IOI>).
Woody's, Stationers
Score Open Loop Wins
Coast Tom Trager'11Kiwanls
nine added another impressive
notch on it'.s title cHmb with
Dave Vilas, Marie Jotmson and
Reed Johnson cooling Hun·
tiDg1.(BI on five ufe\iei.
Major League Standings DIANLIWIS
:t :· -''Don Badintlli qualified in
the 100 with a 10.7 and Shirley
: •·1Jtv.lloon CO!IP<d lhe 40-year·
·''"olda' long Jump with a 20-21>
,• -ltep. 0. B~ Gillett< look the
50-year division with a 16-3~
•jump. .,,,,.And, Ralph lllggird won th•
; •yeaMlds' jump at JUI>.
~:'..fish Report
' .. • U.N ClaMllf1'•-1n •1111tn1 '21
• '"'"" I wllllf: '" .. u , I" 1t1rr•cud1, ' • "9rllto. J ll•llbllt, 42 med<•rtl,
NaWl"OllT IDt..,.._ llallt'I -II'
1:-9111W•t IU Mis. JI .. rtKVH, 21 !to-rs ·'Ill ... 4 11111111.11. fArt't llllfllltl--tl '""
• '""' )6 .. rt~. 4 Nnlto. lit bin, • lltll~,'" l'lldc toll.• medff'•I.
Woody's Wharf rammed
Saddlellock ~r int<> the
league ba:!"iieut Wedo'5dlly
rricf't with a TT~ victory in
lhe Cooto M-open booket·
.ball _league at cmt.a Mesa
Hlgl).
In Wednesday's other
matdwp, Newport Statmery
broke a balf·time deadlock
and rang up an ...., dedsioo
over the Newport Merchants.
KiwmUs jumped of( to ' the brunt of the damage for l-0 Tead in ttie initial frame
Woody's. . . . and was never headed in kee~
In a. similarly dose o:in-• ing their 1970 re c o r d
frmtal.iOn, the two . even!y unblemished.
matched Newport quint.eta -Huntington's Bill Shubin
~ Merchants and the Sta. sl'l\a$led the only extra base
Uoners -were ti~ 4MO at hit ol the cootest -a triple
the half befcre the latter pull-in the sixth.
ed away fw ·the. victory. • WYM Neill started and
. Paul E~ortb of the. St.a-pitched four imings for tbe
tioocrs slipped 2.8 po 1 n t s losers With Brian S I a g I e
through the nets to leed bcd1 relieving in the .fifth and
sides wtl;le Lee Walters led finishing out Huntington 's hill
the M!rchenl:s willl 24. cbores.
JOe Iche.mey added 19 for Newport Ex.change and
the winners. North Huntington Rotary each
woooY' ••"" cm · had a pair of two-run innlncs
MIERICAN,LEAGUE
Baltimore
New York
Detroit
Bos!On
Cleveland
Washington
Minnesota
California
Oakland
Chlcajo
Kansas City
Milwaukee
Eut Dlvt1loo
W L
48 29
43 32 '° 33 36 36
33 '° 34 41
West Oivt1lon
47 25
45 31
44 33
27 50
26 48
26 50
Pct. GB
.623 ~
.573 4
.548 6
.500 91\
.>42 13
.447 131>
.6S.1
.592
.571
.351
.351
.342
• 51>
221>
22
23
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Pittsburgh
New York
Chicqo
St. Louis
Philadelphia
Montreal
Cincinnati
Loi An1ele1
Atlanta
Eatt Dht ....
W L Pct. GB
41 37 .521 '° 31 .521 31 37 .493 21>
37 " .417 s 34 42 .447 I
32 « .421 •
.711
Weit Dfvl1lo•
54 21
44 32
37 37
37 31
33 44
San Francisco
Hou.11ton
.S71 10
.500 16
.41S 1111
.429 21,~ .m :u11 San Diego 31 ..
ANNIYllSAIT SAU
[T~O~Yg>]T)A~
COROLLA 1970
.... . -$1697 +Tn&>Llc. .
OCIANllDa-111 111tlff'11 22'11 barr•
tvM, :M t!Onlto,. »2 lt<IH, J ,,_..llt -
lteN. 11 Pll!lll!.ll.
Saddlebock stayed clooe to
·Woody's, which only had five
to oapture the lead in dropping
its fifth straight.
• Eric Onisteoeen wu a one.-
man gang for the loteni pum·
1*>f! thrOlllh 25 ~ while
Pit Grant (21), Dave WumM
(22) md Jim KJnd (221 did
Jt f'I !It I• Tllunftf'• llttlillh
1111o.s 1 o , ' but it was to no avail as c11v11_,.. 1,, .. 111moni , T1111""'"' ••"' Hu~ 1 10• thelw .. ~. -•~-t 0. Y ~
' l
r
llAL •IACK-111 Wlenl 2tl reek
-. 4:M bt1 .. II heliltvl ... ~U
... ..,., 101 11111, II 1111111111.
IAN D1aM CMIJlliclp"' "*'I -22t
.,...,.I .. ~pl\IJWtlll, °l ltllteflft tvflt. J wtlltlo .... , .. J:U MM"k1Jll9.
PEN IVf;Y 4tJo
NEW $1995 BRAKES :,.o::
611.AU.hl?ID lt,MI MILD ...
Wtllmtn ' 10 O U 0 lq~ USt;U Will WO-lnoll J, N-Ol'k 0 PllijNelplllt W , Ntw YMk l-J
Grtlll t , 1 1) kltoll J. Wt1hlft1loil I Mortt,..tl 11. II. LOUii If
Kind t 4 ' 11 .,A_ .,A_ .,A_ C:1llfllrnt1 10, Mliw.ulr.Ho 1 Clr>dllMll 7, Atltnte 1
To!lls IAOOlllACK CUI" 11 f 11 )..( ).( ).( ~~~O~C:~= ,ClfY t Ol\lt "mn tchfdultd VOLVO
' 1' f'I,, Ip MOllTM Ml.INTIJt•TON llOTAllY 14! T ... t 'I a-1 T9f1\"1 ·-~~r_,' l ' ~ l; tll r II l'M W1sl!l"'IOll (Ir_. WI ti Nt,. York fhl\llHtl lM ... ,,... .. {lulla'I 10.SJ 11 Slfl "'lll{lKI !Mtr-
Cl'lrllltnMll 11 s i JJ SMm•IF. •2t1 s o o o '"5), nltht klltl ._n
Fr1t1 o o I O Wen"*'"'?""' > I t O Clt¥tl•MI INltlld t-1 ,..,.. ~1111 .,, 11 111• tC11l11 SI. Lwl• (T11i9< J.J) ti MMtrul {'"°"'"''" .,,I, g:;::ld 0 1 ) 1 v1rnw, j •, ! -~.:r.... , 0 ' , Mt~i_· 1·1 ltld •1•" l..J),-1, twk!i.ht II ,.,,_ I• -llttdl · • t o 1! ~l!ttTe. c 1 O O ! l(.,_1't:itr (~ .. S Md JoMMI\ 1·'1 111 Mii-Hew Yort (hdtO.I ._ •I I
Mer'ltt 1 o J ' O.-M91'11.1~1 ,' I •, 0 ••"*'" fJltt!lll 41 .,.. Downl"' ._,,, :t !Wk1'9.llt l·H, nltllt ~'' 1 t 1 ' lt'°"lt. l1 l o 1 O Otll.I ..... (OMM! HI 9t Cttltorni1 (WrltM 11·SI, Jlllhtll.trtfl (Mtale 1·•1 •I Chk"9 lHIMI .. ?) Mf!:* I • 1 2 A1tJt!tl, e 1 I 0 t1i.t11 S.n Dlf9ol (Ooltmlll w tllf IUm »I 11 At111111 H1m1~t : WDMY'l :n. ~ldd~·,r ~~ffl•"' •' 1' I I ,::!,1(9911 (Ht!'lel! M l .. Mlftnetotl fPerrv ).t i. INIH,.. .. 11 lll'ld "'"' .. J ), J, nltM MDf'OllT M•llC,,_..TI Otl ~':"' ,." """* IWllttll N .... Grtfllll NI 9t c--..11
.. "l'f tp ~ot1i.' ,J ' ' ' 1-°"-'_ .. _ ... _ ... _ .. _' •"•'•"·'--'.'.'~..;,'"•'•"•'·-----'""--.M_ .. __ , ____ ,._ .. _. -·-------""
Hr:E::1'11er '• ' I 'I J I I u HIWf'OllT IJ(CHAN•• CLU• (4) fi:•~ l i 1,l ~=: '1"1''t'i, ~ J,!Jl l~W.:1"'.''o"
•• w ... , ... "'"''-:.. -::. .. a-a :r" i l l 1966 HA••o• 1LvD •• cost A MESA , , • c , ,. L ~;:::::•M I, I, !, \I, ::;.°'!::: ;,' I I I I S.rvl<• and Part1 fw All Im"""" Cer1 1970 T01QTI w•-1!.: 1 ' 1 • F:1~ {I · 2 1 0 1 ____ ;;Mo::;dtrn Body _!hop for All Can A MUn
'Ji::.":.. 1• -,11 oj '"'" " ' ' Orange County's !Argest and Most Modem Toyota and Volvo Dealer -= £1117 ~·~ ~ , $art -t i"'"'' ! ____ :_ __ .;__..; __ .,_, ______ _,.;..,.,.,.,.,.,.,..:.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::~:...1 TO!fll 14 l II NO!''h H~nllntlOl'I to0 OO'J t -l I t ~ HllfTl""1 Mtrd'ltnll AO, Sit entrY • NtwMl'I Excll1nte 220 000 ._,. t I
DEAN ·LEWIS
1'19 DIMO
$2699
1411 llr4 rMl .. Mehr, ~· I Ht.
•4140)
646-9303
' 1
•
I
1
' j
•
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----... --... .. ___ .,__.. __ .. . ~-·
I
•OAJLV PILOT Friday, JUiy J, 1970
*GREAT
SPECIALS!
PLUS
DEllOJISTUnOIS
• AT ILL s.TOBES
'FlllDAT. SAIURDAY,SUNDAY
rHrrl~---' -;-~Poar..L~
~:.-it<'if "llecoti'11•'
''la .. '"
Decorators from.,~ B.. Hca-wRoocl'"" Co.
Wt.;t;KJJAY:i
Th.I& is the Fourth of July Sj,ectal so the deals a ie good,tJirv July
5. 1970 (After that m:k for •'Scrm.'"" he'll negotiate.)
9 lo 9
SATURDAY AND
SUNDAY 9 lo 6
OPEi TIE FOUBTB,'9 ·TO 6
POOL CHLORINE
·Du~ the :bot swum• Oft¢
lots of Yi11toR. you'Jl UN
t his stuff llbt lt 'llHll going
out of style. Scrte. U':o
r.gular lo 87c: 10 mcu:iy
plac ... ·
39:AL.
lIB
MITTRE$S
Forgi.-e u1lrYlng. but
bu1ine11 is you knoff. Thl1
i1 a to J .29 item. ScGlloped
pattern. hidden "falYM. (So
hidden you m<ry n••et blow
lt up.)
GLmDEN SPRED SAnN
OBSPRED
Gt.IDE-ON
The best
11uff..bell•••
me.Latex.
5 97
CAL.
9x12 PLASTIC
DROP CLOTH
Paint without on• and lt'1
1hcam•OD.1"1U• The mess i1n'l
worth th• headache e.-en ii
jou did buy lt from. the other ~---<~~~ ivoys to~ lk
REDWOOD STAIN
Now this ls the on• you buy
tor 1.99 an.d mor•. I mean it.
fmethin•• thou dost prol••lelh
too mvchJ Feac•• real\, lop I!
up. so JOU ICY• plenty.
• •
"
)
20'' IREt:zt BOX
Fii
J lr.now ho-he boGglil th ...
(two cur loads, wheD lt was
:reo:l cool) so »0liody Mata th•
prlc• lor this q11allty, hilt
nobody.
sPim J387
f97
'-I INCH
SHOP
FOIM
SWIM BlRG
Who inow1 whot ii 100•1
)Ille? Jut this U; close. A
-al.tr and fun tblqg for
kids. GDd pop Ube WQDI• to
coast.
400 WATT DIMMER SWITCH
1
Tum ii ftom '".bright and
1tayowatr:•' to "dim a:nd
the old mCU1 Is gelling
:romantic ... Fits ·1tm:11dord
wt,IUng :recepkld• !lox••·
177
HOBNAIL
SWAG LIGHT
A bra:ad new l l•m crnd we hide
Jt down her.. U Dobody readt
this we'v• had it. Complet•
IWGg Ji:it. The light ii )Q" -
dlameler and. haa ~top
cmd bottom castings..·
697
STAllLESS STEEL
BAR Siii
Hey. It 'ouwanl lodrfts up
th• dry ba:r ot U you need
another good s ink. , .. thl1.
It' 115xl5 so lt11 flt olmosl
anywhere. 1187
• I •
.· --,
_,
• --· • --
~. ' .-.. -: . .... -.. . . .
11 LIS.
. .
PORTABLE
CDIP Siii
Great, with Cl splgol.·ccrrrr
JIU a Jag. lloWa owier ilff
9cdloas crl w.:mrr ..
79.7
ILUJlllfUM
.SUD CBllR
lt•• a. cut down Terslon o(
the patio chair. Mice ecisy
to wipe alecia. ·
polypropylene. ani:a r••I•
too, Who bows?
237
DONALD DUCK
KIDDIE SBOWEB
Water the lawn and cool
lh• kids at the •Cliff time.
(They O\lgbt to put a:
hundred·ol th•M up darb11
the dumb demon1t:rationt).
RAii JET
UTl-SIPHON
VALVE
A new IDOIMI. for Je11
money, mode by tbe best
mfg. This oa.• you. don't cut
th• fingen. oD if you 101•
th• 1priDk11tt key.
397
PUNTS.ALE
YOUR CHOICE .
• JUIOPER TAM
•GOLDEN _
ARBORVITAE
• ITAllAN
CYPRtsS
6x15 FT. BAMBOO
FENCING
Roll out lhe prl.-acy a nd
windbreak. but don't lorgel
to '°' "h•llo" one:• in owhlle to th• neighbc>r1
a:nybow.
197
ROLL
POST BOLE
DIGGER
What did you think you'd dig
the hole1 with? Your t-tb? W•
don"! want lo Hll you. the
whole 1tor., bu! you shouldn't
go GWCIJ' without the tooJ,1 you
need. All metal unit.
387
PREMIER AUTO COOLIRT
I 1111
' SYSTEM
Jh lasl o.n ooswer to boU·o••r.
This catches II and lncreo•••
th• capacity' of your auto •
cooJIDg sy1tem. Or so Ibey ..,..
397
\
DiUNI HOLDE!l
llDASBTRIY
Jfeat 1pt•• dec:d .tic•• ll'L
th• 9round hold1 two
tumblert. which you gel
with th• deoL ad on
athtrur. 'lffhlch yvu also
''"
BUILT-IN
BIR-1-Q
The tugged iron dHl,you
bric• lD to ma.Ir:• o liletlm.•.
bcubecue. Fite.box lowers Of
rai ... 1 tot proper beating.
1J77_ -.
The guy who made thl• QDm• up
WO:I reGllF tripp4td-out. Jt'I G greaf
door. ond all bardwa.ni eom••
with 11. 1Dclud1ng the PD•umotlc
cJOMt.
32""-36" 13 77
BEDDING
PLIJITS
Ati blg Al hh Price and
barf. We are half and
bett•r. but th• stock U; 01
good If DOI helter. Choo••
lrQm mc:uay. D:ICUIJ" Tarietin.
REDWOOD TUB
I~~~~~~~.~~!.~~,~~ POT ·
~ .'!' • beautiful Uower1 In. We
· don't zru:zke no'job1 about
th• "Pot" beccruH w• dOD't
thlnk hurtlDg kid• 11 tunny.
(Call Teen Challenge. 714.-
633-3000 II you want lo
........
know.)
197
COMBED PALING
FENCING
five foot high ond oh me1 oh my. (Liii:• that7) 0.ol
lncludet palings, post1.
and raU1 lo maff the
whole Jenee.
87C LIK.
FT.
32 GAL. PLASnc TRASH
CAN
Okay. loo• at lh• ad1. Mo1t
guys run the te1ay-llny on• for
a deal. Who ••eds II? Thi• is a:
· big and 1lr1:trlg and does th•
job. So.
287 WITH
LID
MAPCO PURE YIRYL FLOOR nLE
We •nd with Cl killer-dllle:r t1*l
mo.ke1 lb• trod"• grind tntr
t .. th. "1" pattem. Short O•
1toc•. so «;.ome ID earl, for lhl1
one. (Short OD Ego. H tell me
II yo11 like th• o.d1 or DOI:
Chopper. P.o.1o, 154.7.
N-i-t ho:cb, CA t2R3'J
777~.;
• IOX
-~· >-•--.~v,-~n.~ . .,.-,.,.. • ...,.,,.,.,,,,..,,,.,,..,. ... ""..,..., .. ,....,.,...,..,..,..,.,.,...,.~,..,_ .. .,...,.,. .. .., ...... ,..,.. .. 11111 .. ,..1111 .. ..,,.. .. ,.. ............... ..,'!!"',.~ ...... .. '
I
"-· -3, 1970 DAILY PILPT l!f
' • , • • •
1 .. 1 1. D I ' ~l
I
I
I
.;
' • ' I
• ~A (o~R_/et~ 6ui~e t .o _go ' What ••••• ..... Where tlo -to • •• -
ONE SHOUlD lOOK HAPPIER AFTER CATCHING A BIG ONE IN lAK~ TAHOE .
-~.~ake Tahoe 2nd Largest
~ ~ .· .
But Few Fishernien. T<,1.ke Advantage of Angler's Mecca
By HOW1RD HANDY
Of 1M '0.lly Pl• SI.if
History rteords that Lake Tahoe is
the second largest body of water on
earth -.at an-elevation ol. 6,228 feet or
higher, surpassed only by Lake' Titicaca
in the Andes in size and altitude.
Tbe lake hes enough· water within
Its 7l miles of shoreline to completely
cover the ent,ire state of California to
a depth of 14 1/J inches.
\Vith all of the wonders of nature
predominant and seasonal sports bringing
thousands or vacationers to the area
the year around, it is amazing that
few of those who visit this scenic won-
derland even think to bring along fishing
equipment.
If such tackle is at hand, 1 side
trip to one oC the many smaller lakes
or streams in the area is almost always
planned. ·yet fish abound in Lake Tahoe
it.self and the city of SOuth Lake Tahoe
is out to make this fact known around
the world.
A fishing sweepstakes is "hekl each
year with prizes offered for the largest
catches of Mackinaw, brown and rainbow
trout in addition to Kokanee salmon.
One expert in Ute·· Mackinaw· trout
line is Rislo Ricci, a 11..1mmer resident
of South Lake Tahoe 1 and a veteran
of 30 years experience in fishin, the
surface area of' 193 square miles.
Intermission Risto seldom makes a trip out on
the Jake without bringing back a limit
o£ Mackinaw averaging from two to
17 pounds. Music Filling the Air A couple of weeks ago Sam Swigart
of South Lake Tahoe caught the largest
Mackinaw trout in recorded California
fishing history. It weighed 35 pounds,
8-ouhces and was taken at the mouth
On Coast for Summer
• 'B)' TOM TITUS1
Of'"" Dl!tt• """ 'ltttf
If •there 's any queMion that summer
ts, Indeed, officially~ upon us, just cock
your ear in the direction or the South
Coa5t and·1t11ten for the 90UPd or music.
The sumrrler fn uslcals·are under way.
Most ambitious of the lyrical quartet ·
to~be unveiled this·month ~is "Oliver," ""1c11 tonight launches· a to.Week engage·
ment at the Laguna A!~ton Playhouse,
~sponl(ftd by the Lyric Opera ~
socia!ion which joins f~ces with the
pboyllouse for Ille first !iriie.
The small but ambitious San Clemente
Oimmunlty Theater took the wraps off
itJ proc:hx:t.ion ot "The Fantasticks"
106\etday 11ilhl Thia one will .play rrt Six weeke11dJ, making it the biggest
atiow yet staged ln the tiny Csbrillo
PJOybouse. ' r. • 1 ~ COAST Repertory gets Into
the act next. ,-rlday by bringing back itf partly mUJlcll show, "Spoon Riv~r
Al\Lhology ," .. for two more weekends 1n
downlown Coatt Mesa. 1 • bn the ~.evening. July. 10, the
&aena Pari 'Civic Light Opera tunes
up with a Rodgers and Hammerstein .
offeqig,. "Carousel," for a tltrte-weekend
"'11!1Jetnenl. 'lbfJI, alter a two-week hiatus, comes
the: Orange County ··premiere of "Man
Of. La Mancha," orang .. Coast College's
most amhiUous summer musical to date.
Tllb one ,m ·•lllY be ·on star• foor
days. bowe...-, opening July 29 and c.los-
lng Aug. t.
AnOlll.,. 1bbr<vlaled run b planned
f0< llnolher· Rodgtn and Hammenteln
tavcwiti:. ••~th Pacific," b}t the. Ana·
Moc:t,;esK'a Pbye r' of Anaheim. Th~ fou r'
c:ncharited venings are July S..31 and
Aug. 14. 1 •
THAT'S .A GOOOrslied 1 um mer
t1chedule1 bUt it cOuld hive bten bigger.
Two Oranp COul lbater lf<JUP' ..,.
nounced plans for summer musicals,
then canceled them for varying reasons.
The lack of enough male voices spelled
doom for Ute hopes or the Rancho Com·
munity Players to follow last summer's
splendid "Onoe Upon a Mattress'' wik'l
a musical melodrama, "The Sl'reels of
New York," on Olivewood School's out-
door stage in El Toro. The Rancho
group now will wait until late fall to
go back onto the boards.
Another mlisical melodrama was plan·
ned for the Open End Theater ln Newport
Beach, but reorganizaUon and a lack
of opetating capital produced "second
thoughts. The Open Enders won't be
idle, however; they're bringing back their
suecessful staging ol "Joy" nut Friday
and will run it on weekends through
lhe etid'Of Au·gust.
*
of beautiful Emerald BAy.
The Ramada-Sands Motel is one o(
many modem motels and hotels on both
sides of the stateline on the south short
or Lake Tahoe. For tl1' 18Jlling en-
trepreneur, it is a short ride, or walk,
to ~ Nevada side of tbe line.
A modern, up-to-date airport servlce.s
regularly schedu1ed direct flights by Hob-
day Airlines from the Hollywood-Burbank
Airport. An hour-and-five minute· trip
on an Electra Jet puts you in this
vacation wonderland In short order after
a scenic flight over Yosemite and other
mounta1n retreats in the Sierra-Nevada's.
Golf courses abound the lake. There
are !our regulation 11 bole and lix
nine hole courses around the lake.
Edgewood Tahoe al. the -end
, of the Jake in Nevada is the propoted lite
of future PGA tournament action.
campgrounds and riding stablea art
abundant and strategk:flllY Io c·• t ·e d
BACKSTAGE -,The success of "The around the lake. Watfr !lking 11 in vogue
Impossible Year1° at the Hwltinpn throughout the summer months when
Beach Playhouse has tempted two other the surface water temper1ture hltt a
nearby theaters to follow suit • · . . maximum of • degrees.
ttie Long Beach Community Playhouse For those with 1 yen to travel areund opens its version of the comedy on viJlts be ade Aug. 7, while the Costa Mesa CJvk: the lake by auto, can m to the P'onderosa Ranch w 'h e r e PlayhowJe bas it eannarked for its televistoa's famed, Bmanu aeries ia ntm-
season'a.,,..,.,. on Sept. 18. ed. Otll<l' stopping po1n11 inclado ~
'lbO Irvine Community Theater, which Village, Squaw Vall<f (site of Ille Wlllter
made its debut late in the sea'°" and Olympicl), Emerald Boy and oilier
squeezed' m two productions, plans an . scenic *-tons.
ambJUous schedule of sl~ shows for 1970-With pine trees growing right down
71 •• ,. ~ tentative slate calls for to the water's edge, ,LM:e Tahoe hu
three comedies. two dramas -and• one lost JitUe ci its Jei!nic • wonder since
musical ••• a teen eroup ,also is that day in February, 1144 wbta captain
being p11Med by the Irvlne thespians. John Charles Fremont and his tcout
Don't look for lllCllher lntennlulon ~ "Kit" Canon . llrst lilhted
column In this section until July 31 _,,. ttie crystal clear body~ water.
... theaters take vacation., and .JR '" 1 matters little to thole who frequent
do theater columnlsl! , •. this .One's the area that the Nevada LegJa,lature
U!!glns l'lmorrow and lnclu~. an.ong has never formally changed the name
other things, a honeymoon lr1 Hawaii to Lake Tahoe (lndi11n wOrd for Big
where. OOth TilllSeS har-e v'bW-ed not to Water), or that Catl,foml1 lnally aot.
go wlthln thmi blocks or a theater arou;nd to it in 1K5 afttr 75 years
• • • Aloha. ~ of oant.ro'vll'IJ.
' r 'I
Coffee Garden E~hibit
The work of Miriam·Sbelton, sculptor who works in "dancers" and "Children in Tree" in wood. These
wood, bronze, clay and stone, is on exhibil al the are among the works s&own in the gallery exhibit,
Co!!ee Garden· Gallery, 2625 E. Coast Highway In spQnsored by the Newport Harbor Service League,
Corona del Mar. Shown above are Mrs . Shelton which is open 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Sat-
with her sculpture "Breaker&" and her bronze of day. A delightful place to have. lunch.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Buddy Ebsen Takes S~e
In New Comedy in l{ansas
• 'nlC right enLertalnment vehiele at the
ript time -·.such a fortwate~ situation
/ doem't 'olltn emerae wit.hip grasp Of
a at.age IDd ~ star. But ,one hap-
pened along !or Boddy'l:bsen of Newport
Belch. . '
At a llelUH, the actor will star tn ~
1'Appll: Of Hi1 Eye" at the Kenley Star
'nleatre in Wichita, Kansas, the week
startin1 AuilUll II.
Ebsen'• appearance in this romantic
· comedy wUI be unique for a number
ol teasons. First, he doe8n't often mafte
appearances. He is only persuaded to
do ao if he enjoys a role very mucll
and if it ii the worthwhile audience '
fare for which he ls always searching.
"Apple Of His Eye" to Buddy's attention.
Wichita It.self la an attract.ion to the
six-foot 3Y.i·inch tall actor. He is a Mid-
Wes~rner, from Belleville, Illinois.
Newcome1· Plays
Mll!s Jorgensen
John Hansen, youn1 newcomer who
stars !n the title role of ,;The ChrlsUne
Jora:ensen Story," c:urrenUy showing in
Orana:e County, wu cboflen ror the role
after more thu 110 actora .bad beta
•udltioned.
WEEKENDEll
INSIDE FEATURES . Frltf.ay, July 3, 1170
' ! ' I .
lOfttdoor Concerts, some untt.er·the"
stars, some at sunset, are aet for
COsta Mesa, Newport Beac~. the
Holly,;food Bowl and Greek 'ltle• ·
ter, They are ialL ct1vered on Rqes 1111 ~ 19! f j •
Tnvrl P1ae II
Gaide tt Fun Pap Ii
wli<dl ud Camplq Pap 11
C.-U,c...rts P•ll
Oat 'N' A1*11 I Pages J7·lt
U\le neater Pip 11
Hollywood> Bacnlap P ... II Badin.. Concert Page II
rer..ia .. tor · .....
Glf<le to Mo.to. Pql It ~!allri61e Pll1t!' . Pap: 11
Upl-n-Show Poge 11
HB Art Slttw . 1 i .Pqe 11
-~
I
I
Recently, he derived great pleasure
In .just such a prelerTed character'i:uion ·
In lJle_!lAndenenvllle..Jfrlal" {or educa
tional l~vl~lon network which wa1 seeo
10c1fly err Channenl:e pr<>
ducer ol this drama, Louis Freedman,
k.....,, lbe 1etor'1 deair<s, blougbt 'the
Allhougb the Edward Small-United
Artists. film Is Hansen's first screen
appearance, he has tcled ln seve ral
coinmunlty theater prodli<:Uons In iht
area, and at lhe time he Wlll signed
ror th• Tllm:-ntwas .apjiiirl•1 11
Disneyland as one or the Kkts of the
KJladoin slniinr IP'OUP.
•;Sesame Street"' lltllrill Pap u!-1l -=-"I
I• lbe G1ltrlet · • hge 11 • Oaoo4'1 lo-_,..Pip II •--,i
Caallct ......
'
"
I
l
.,
II DAILY PILOT Frld.Q, July 3, 1970
·• Trtwel '
Sight Seeing .
In Hovercraft
By STAN DELAPLANE
LONDON -The last time 1 Saw Paris J
tried to .see how much electricity t could buy
on _the night club ramble. Thus next morning r
arr.ived. at tile Gare du Nord $2 short of. the bo.it
tram fa,re to London. I had dollars -I was short
francs. The exc~ange booth hadn't opened. '
By the tin:ie 1. found out I could pay in
dollars . on the train -(but n._ot at the ticket
booth) -the guard 'was drawin( the chain across
the entrance. The train was disappearing down Ille track. .
That's bow 1 got lb ride the Hovercraft. . * .
These big air cushions skim the Channel
.fl't!m Boulotne and from Calais. You take the 'fi-ain from Dover to London through rollin~ ,reen
hilll and the prettiest country in England. Total pnce, $14.
* THE ' HOVERCRAFT carries 240 ~assengers.
A big inflatable inner tube runs around the whole
lh_ing. When Ille rour propellers· are turning, you
slide oyer a cushion of Bit~ The Hovercraft rides ~s over. the water and: when it comes to latid.
simply rides the cu1bion over the beach to the
(\ HovOJllOl'I.
~~ * .
Don't know that you really save anv money
for you hove lunch on the train. Buy duty.free ~e and liq_qor on the Hovercraft. BEA and ./Jr Fronce pool llleir planes to fly every hour
betwom the two cities for $29. So it probably
·worb out the same. But the Hovercraft is an
uperimce ond you oug)it to try it. . . * "What do you do Uout exchanQing money
If yw .,. ...... to a new ceuntry and have money felt...,.,,.... ....... .,., are?''
; . _ Tbe next country will exchange the money
J'GU have left over. The airport bank is the best
piece. Paper money -no coins. If you have coins
left over, all you have are souvenirs. You MAY
be able to exchange coins: Sometimes the -bank
needs them. Generally it's better to get rid of
them in their own countzy.)
* "Whot Olld who to tip In London?"
· Some Brit!Jb hotels have' taken up the Con-
IUwnla! alllom of addlnJ( a service charge to
your bill. Not all. So ask when you check in.
~·If not, for two make it a couple of shillings a
cloy for the room maid. Add up a shilling a day
for tbe ball porter when t?i'i,~eclc out. Doormen get a a · · g a taxi call. The
English seem to arrive at 1.2 percent of the bill
for nstaurant tips. Tu:! drivers get one shilling
for every five on the meter. ·
* .; Tip pie waitre~s in pubs. You don't tip barmen
or bar maid s. You can ask if you can buy them
~ a beer though. ~ * ~ "For YGUnl -'• -(without much ,,,_,1 ~ -we'd like te get to Mexico •• cheap i1s ~ pDltible.... ... .
~ Can't beat the bus. Get it first-class with
~ air-conditioning and reclining seats. From East
'• " and Midwest points, bus to Laredo. The 18-hour
~ run to Mexico .City will cost you'·$8.25. From
~ Western cities, you take .(\merican bus to Mexicali.
'· Then it's 41 hours for $22. ~-* ~ · More comfortable on the trains: From Laredo i it's 24 houn: SS: for the trip; $6 for an uppet'
~ berth. From Mexic'ali (near El Centro, California)
• the fare to Mexico City is $22. 'A berth is $16
:-for three nights on the train. ; * ! ''Whilt •bout driving?"' • • You have to figure bow many people and
bow many days on the road -mates a kind
of slide rule computing.
'
AN'DRE WATTS
In Opening. Conctrt
Beethoven
Turns 200
At Bowl
The opening week, o C
Hollywood Bowl's 1970 season,
JuJy 7, will be devoted to
ml11ic by the German and
Viennese muten, lncludiDI
an opeolng nlibt lll·Beethoven
Concert as ·• salute to the
compoaer's 200th b 1 rt h day
year.
All three of the week's con-
certi by-the l.A:ll Angeles
Philhannoruc Orchestra will
be conducted by Josef Krips,
fonner muaic director of the
San Fraucilco S y m p h .o n y
Orchestra and diJtiniulabed
maemo who has brought the
great musical tradlUons of his
native Austria to hundreds of
symphony orchestras a n d
opera houses around the
world.
The opening night a I l •
Beethoven bicentenary, pro-
gram constitutes the first o!
three such tributes to be of·
fered during the Bowl season.
Al the opening night concert,
Tuesday at a::», the
phenomenal young American
pianist, Andre Watts, will be
soloist in Beethoven's 4th
Piano Coocerto. Watts ap-
peared laat aeason at the
Music Center wjlh the Los
Angeles Pbilharmonic, and
twice previously at the Bowl
In addition to the Concerto,
Krips has programmed the
composer's stirring Leonore
Overture No. 3 and the im·
mortal 5th Symphony.
Thurad1y evening, July 9th,
Krips has as his soloist
another acclaimed American
piano virtuoso, E u g e n e
lstomin. lstomin, who will also
participate in the Concerto
Gala Concert, July 25, on this
occasion plays the Schumann
Piano Concerto. The concert
begins with Weber's "Der
Fre~" Overture and con-
cludes with the only JlOD.
Teutonic wart on the week's
program -Tchaikovsky's
moving "Pathetique" Sym-
phony.
BAND CONCERTS RESUME AT FASHION ISLAND ON JULY 6
Henry Bri1ndon Conducts Outdeor Monday Music Fe1t1 and Kids Love 'Em,
Pops Concert Opens
' -
Guide to .Futa
Fireworks
•
on 4th
July M
FIREWORKS DJSPLA\'S-The Orange County area wilt be
aUve with fireworks dlsplays celebratlng the 4th of July.
The first will be shot of( at Fairview patients on July 3 at
9 p.m. and will be visabJe from the area of Hatbor Blvd.
and Fair Drive. The largest display will be at Disnt,fland
at I p.m. on July 4 with another shoW at Anaheim Stadium
following the 6 p.m. starter between the Angels and Oakland
Athletics. The Newport Dunes (Coast HJghway at Jam·
boree Road) will have its show about 8:40 p.m. The Hunt·
ington Beach Pier show is set for 9 p.in. and will nm about
ooe-b.alf hour. At 1:45 the Pier at Sin Clemente will come
alive wlth firewor'ks following a patriotic show which begins
at 7:30 p.m. Mission Viejo has a whole day planned with a
picnic on the driving range of the Mission Viejo Country
Club at 5 p.m: followed by fireworks at dark. Emerald Bay,
a private complex, will have its own show at dusk, wbkb
should be visable in surrounding area. ·
JULY 3-SEPT. 7
KNCJIT'S BERRY FARM - A Golden Cavalcade of Country
and Western Music will be staged ·~ach weekend at 'Knott's,
through Labor Da)", Sept. 7. Appearing July 3, The Frontier,s..
men and Joanie; July 4, Billy Mize; Ju]~ 5 the Chaparral
Brothers, with showtimes-Fri.·Sat. 8:30, 8:30 and 10 :30 p.m.;
Sun. 5, 6:30 and !::Kl p.m ... The SoWld Generation," a ifoup
of 2t yOWJg men and women from John Brown University,
will present shows Mon .·Thurs. at 7, 8:30 and JO p.m. Hours:
t a.m.·11 p.m. Mon.-Thurs.; 9 a.m.-midnlght, Fri..&t.; Close
10 p.m. Sun, Admission $1 adu1ts, 2$ cents for children" 11
and under. No additi~ charge for shows. IKl39 Beach Blvd.,
Buena Park. .
JULY 3-SEPT. I
~ISNEYLA.ND SUMMER -Disneyland ls c e I e b r a ti n g
its 15th birthday with over 500 entertainers all summer
long in the "Super Summer" celebraUou. There will be
21 special shows and talent groups with "Show Me Ameriea "
musical comedy oo the Tomorrowlaod Stage at 1 ~
10 p.m. Mon.-Frl. The TomorroJ!land Terrace will have
HSouncf Castle Ltd." with new sets, new coatumes and
top rock favorites every eve ning from 9 ezcept Sun. The
"Minority of Sis." will take over the Terrace on Sun. and
may also be heard on the Tomorrowland Stage on Sat.
and the Plaza Garderis on Fri. The "Entertainment Com-
mittee" plays o• the Terrace Mon.-sat. afternoons. The
Plaza Gardens will have "Big Band" sounds for ballroom
dancing, nightly except Fri.. wllh leaders such as Tex
Beneke, Sammy Kaye and Harry James playing. Sunday
brings "Country Jubilee" on the Tomorrowland Stage with
a different group each week, drawn from folk·mwic experts.
Jazz will be heard in New Orleaas Square and aboard
the Mark TwaiJI. All \his plus the 53 permanent fun.filled
attractions all s'ummer long. Hours : a a.m. to I a:ffi .. daily.
J-ULY l-5
ANTIQUE GUN SHOW-The Calif. Arms Collectors will
stage a display of antique weapons July 3, 4 and 5 in the
~ Convention Center, 800 W. Katella, Anaheim.
Guns from Revolutionary War, the American west and all
overt the world will be on display. Hours: July 3, noon to
a p.m.; July 4., 1:30 a .m . ..a p.m.; Julys, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Tickets
at the door are '2 for adults, children under 15 free if ac·
companied by Ml: adult
JULY :I-AUG. t
DISNEY ON PARA.DE -¥aheim Convention Center, 800 w. Katella Ave., Anaheim, PerfomiB.nces Tuesday • Sun.
I p.m.; maUnees at 10::» a.m., and 2 p.m. Sat.; 2 'and 6 p.m.
Sun.; 2 p.m. Wed. • Fri. Closed Mcin. nckets, $2.50 • $5. •
(Children under 12 $1 less.) available at box office or tickei
agencies. 100 Disne.Y char11cters appearing for the Cirst time
together in a live two-and-one.hall hOur show. Jt blends live
production, sound effects, motion pictures, magic, music and
lighting effects in a new form or. entertainment. On stage
through Aug. 9.
JULY3·30
FILM PROGRAMS -A children's matinee film will be
shown in the multi·purpose room next to Mariners Library,
2005 Dover Drive, Newport Beach, at 2 p.m, on the last Sal
of the IDCll.th. AduJt films will be shown in the same place on
the last Tueeday of the monlh at 8 p.m. 8 mm films-five to
a patron for a period of three days-are available to the
public. Inquire at library.
JULY :h!UL Y 31 .j
~RV HOURS: The "Papoose Club" story hour wil.A>e he
in three Newport Beach Libraries between now and July 31.
The Balboa branch bas scheduled it Ior 9:30 a.m. on Wed.;
the Corona del Mar lJbrary will hold it on Thurs. ill 10 a.m.
and Mariners at 9:30 a.m. Fri.
JULY 10
JUNIOR TEEN DANCE -The Junior Tetn Club or West·
minster will hold dances on most Fri. nights from 7:30 -9:30
p.m. in the Community Center, 8200 Westminster Ave .. West·
minster. Admission, 50 cents. "The Pollutions" will play for
dancing on July 10.
JULY 11
TEEN CLUB DANCE -The Westminster Recreation and
Parks Departmenl ''ill hold a Teen Club Dance in the com-
munity Center,, 8200 Westminster Ave., (for Westmimter
Leen s) each Sat. from 8 p.m. to midnight. Admission, $1.
for members. $1.50 for non.members. The "Rush" will play
for dancing July II.
JULY 11·19
LlPlZZAN STALlJON SHOW-The Royal Lipitzan Stallion
Show wil! ·come to the Long Beach Arena July 17·19 with
perfon:nances at 8:30 _p.m. Fri. and Sat. and 2:30 p.m. on
Sun. 'l_'ickets, $446 available al the Dox office and most ticket
agencies. The pageant features Stallions from Austria and
Spain with famous European acrobats and performers.
• • •
..
·~ '
TRAILERS HAVE COME A LONG WAY SINCE 1937 MODEL
Tr•velen Compiiny ~ It ilftd Is Still In Business U Sun Vall•Y
Caravans on -March
Journeys Planned to Al.mka, Canada
Caravans are on the march. suspension sy9f.e~ and LP
(propane) gas flttinas.
* A iea50nal remiudu.-to
Take one trailer club alone
-the William Byam ad·
miUedly the largest -has
lots of caravans planned. 'nley
wembled at Great Falls,
Mont., on June 7 and an
scbedWed to go to Alaska on ___ •_v_J_A_c_K_K_N_E_AS_s _ _.
July 4.
those going South or the
Border: be sure to eet your
Mexican insurance. In ' case
of trOuble in any part of Mex-
ico American iilsurance, "even
On June 29 the
club had a rally
at Hershey, Pa.,
w i th approxi-
mately 8,000 per-
sons attending.
From July 7 to
sometime in Aug.
there will be a .1.t.cK Kt11u.s1
-Western Canada Stampede
Caravan and July 10 tO Aug.
20 a Caravan for flahing and
rockhound enthusiasts will
rendezvous In Moosejaw. Sas-
katchewan. July 15 takes a
Sea Province Caravan to
Eastern Canada. Q u i t e a
schedu1e with lots ol fun
packed into it for everyone.
* Question most often asked
by a beginning trailerist about
to set off on a Jong trip is
what to do about the mail.
There are many service.5
which act as letter drops for
a moderate fee . One of the
best is nm by the National
Association of Trailer Owners,
Florida, 33578.
Another frequently asked with a special. rider_. is ool
question concerns depreciation usually of--mudl value.
11n a trailer. Most of it comes When going to Canada a
in the first year. From there special card, recognized by
on trailers seein. to liold their Canadian authorities, will be
resale value very well. U you issued by your insurance com·
don't think so, price a S.year pany.
old unit that is• fully self.con: * lained. Readers who wonder ,why * writers emphasize the need
The Wall Street Journal f o r increased recreational
recently discovered campgrounds might be in-
"campgrounds." 'nle apple or terested in a few figures SUJ>"
its eye seemed to be Timber plied by Recreational Vehicle
Shores OD Grand Traverse Bay Institute.·
in Michigan _ and with good It seems that in 1968 outdoor
reason. It offers luxurious ac-enthwiasts made 150,834,600
commodations. Rates r u n visits to government park
from $6 a night with recrea· areas.
tioa, including tennis and golf Last y e a r visits k>taled
offered and a catering service 163,990,000. ln 1969 the bakt
will even deliver snacks, Mead N a l i o n a I Recreation
meals or banquets to the 'i;Ar;;;;. ;;;;ea;;;;;;;;al;;;;one;;;;;;;;h;;;;ad;;;;;;;;5,;;;;61;;;;4,;;;;900;;;;;;;;v;;;;isl;;;;ls.~
"campers." .I
* From marn.dacturers come
reminders to check o u t
recvees for summer traveling,
covering aL least the most
likely trooble spots. They sug-
gest inspectin g tires,
OLIVE·R!
STAl•ING
htl .... '•
Concerts in Park BEN WRIGLEY
-On Sta9-
A1
LAGUNA MOUL TON
PLAYHOUSE ~~mt~~ion~1!gh~!~d:~~ in~ormal ~~rts in tbe park ducted by Richard A. England,
will return to the Harbor Area band director at Newport
on Sunday, July 5th. A series Harbor High SChooi.
of one-hour band concerts, Students from e v e r y
presented by the Harbor Area Jntermediate School and all
Summer Band (school age four local high schooJL__ar:e
youngsters ol Costa Mesa and members of the Harbor Area
Newport Beach) is being Summer Band program .
sponsored by the cities of Rehearsals were held in
Costa Mesa and Newport the evenings at Harbor Hiih
Beach 1n conjunction with the beginning June 30 for the high
Newport.Mesa Unified School school level band and July
District. l for the junior high musi·
The first concert, is schedul· clans.
ed at 4 p.m. in Costa Mesa It is hoped the public will
Park, 570 W. 18lh St The £eel free to picnic and use
program will feature two park facilities to the fullest
·bands -one oC high school during these ".strict!y.for-fu.o"
students and one of junior programs.
6H Let•" C•"Y•• Itel.
L .. 1 .. a IHch
Ne• eirto11dltie..d theotre
wlflt to•tf-fef MMI ...
* * * OPENING
TONIGHT
CU•TAIN 1;41
494.0743
OLIVER!
We Try So Ha.rd To Have Every.thing
'"' looll what liapplftod Sunday! ...
A f•mous r•st•ur•nt in th• •re• w•s having Americ•'s most distinguished
guest for lunch and n•eded 6 box•s of stem str•wberries in •/1 hour _ We
couldn't ma~e it, we wert 11/i hours late, but we h•d everything else!
llbb Lettuce, Fresh llu•Hrrltt, Cnlltlhow M~OM, hlalurn Endiw•, Fresh Water
Cress, but we "9oof•d" on the "stem " StrawberriesT So when you're having
"your most cHstin9uished guest for dinn er" don't forget N.wport Product. The
l'resldlltt didn't! '
SAYE AT AMERICA'S FINEST PRODUCE HOUSE!
' ! • II ••••• •·~ •• WW•• ••••••••••• • ••. '
• LOCAL GROWN .• GIANT SIZE JUICY VALENCIA •
• CUCUMBERS • IClll!ll.G • •
LmUCE • ORANGES • , . . . . ...
: SC each : JQC ... : 6Cpouod •"
• Limit Six • Limit Sia: • Limit 11 Litt. •
a With Thia C°"""' • With This Coupen • With This Ceu,.,, : •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUl'ONS IXPIH JULY I
These rest•urants dem•nd the finest for their customers. That's why they fteture
NEWPORT PRODUCll Patronize them! Toco Tio, three locetions now! Sant•
Ana, L• Mir•da, Huntington Be•ch; Ylllt• IH, Balbo• Island ; Tcntff FrHI.
~v•e:~c,~:0:::,,~o'!"~b~u~;;~i:!f,~;9 •11:7ch; Tk Cltow I~ Costa Mes•, end
"ORANGE COUNTY'S 1ASTEST GROWING PRODUCE ORGANIZATION"
~ NE!_~I.!~~~CE
2616 Newport to.t._d oo Tll,1 r .. 1-1a
-67J.171S
67W711
67MJ91
•
-·
-·--~-------.... ....,.;_ ...... -..,;. ~..::-•• -;:, :-;~::-_;::.,~c=:=-=~==:r'l""''!!!":!"':!":""'~~!e""""' ................ 11!!1 ..................................... 11!1 .. l!ll
f'l'ldi)', July 3, 1970
.
WEEKENDER OUT· 'N' NORM
DAILY 'ILOT J 7
.,.
STANLEY
••d
ADLEY STEVENS
ORAN GE COUNT iY 'S RESTAURANT , NIGHT · CLUB AND ENTER T AINM ENT SC EN E
Duke Mitchell
In some circles he's knowrr as ''Mr. Palm
Springs." Chances are, before the summer is out
he'll also be called ''Mr. La•una Beach" -ii
not 0 Mr. Total Entertainment. •r '
And even that tiUe falls short of .sumining
up the impact registered by Duke Mitchell, the
phenomenal singer who's just made his Orange
County debut at Ben Brown's restaurant in South
Laguna.
• ti
Certainly no performer to hit the area has-ever
scored bigger with his audiences. The proof of
which can be witnessed in the rousing ovation
he's unfailingly given at the end of every show.
DRAMATIC
While exercising his fantastic vocal chords,
Mitchell easily puts more dramatic punch in a
song than a dozen ·other · singers might muster
betwee·n them. Personal rapport with bis listeners
is another quality this guy possesses to an unlimited
degree. ·
A recording and · niglilclub -artis ofeon-
siderable achievement, he also enjoys the enviable
distinction of being known as an entertainer's en~
tertainer. Thanks, in large part, to highly successful
engagements in major clubs throughout the country.
FRANK LIK ES HIS VOICE I
One of Mitchell's biggest fans, in fact. is
Frank Sinatra. Among Duke's most · prized
possessions is the gold mike Sinatra gave him
several years ago as a token of one singer's esteem
for another. ·
,
Sinatra has been on hand for many or Duke's
Palm Springs engagements during the past 15
years. At such top spots as Jack London's, Ruby
Dunes. the Metropole and the Ranch Club.
WRITER, TOO
•
In show business most of his life, Mitchell
1mmME'llt
HANK
SURAllE ....
PWIO IAR
E Rj o11 Ou r
Rav loll
I t alia ..
St11le
t
fOl llSRVAnotiS
• . 592-1321
16278 PACIF IC COAST HWY. HUNTINGTON IEACH
THE
WHISTLING OYSTER
NOW
OPEN
FDR
SUNDAY
CHAMPAGNE
BRUNCH
10 to 3
AND
DIN NER
4 to ID ~
16903 ALGON'i)UIN STREET
(Off hdfk-C.. Hftlt••r-a,.w...., ,t,,.,) __ _
HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
Reservations T•k•n 146-3377
>
came to Hollywood In 1951 and subaequenUy ap-
peared. in such films as ''Blackboard Jungle,••
"Baby Face Nelson'' and "Two Boys From
Brooklyn." A writer as well as performer, past
credits include scripting of 16 segments of
television's popular "Untouchables" program.
@)
His opening night at Ben Brown's -an
occasion marked by wave-after wave of thunderous
audience response """".:__inaugurated a new en·
tertainment policy that's slated to last through
the summer months. And one that could handily
make .. show time" here a regular habit. .
Our enthusiasm for Mitchell as an entertainer
carried us throu~h the night's (wo shows. And
sensational renditions of such numbers a s
"Delilah"; 11The Green, Green Grass of Home,''
"If You Go Away," ·"Without Love/'·"Love Me
_Tonight/' and "For Once In My Life."
MEMORABLE MEDLEY
A memorable high1igllt Was a me<ttey of songs
interwoven with stanzas of 11lt Was A Very Good
Year." Sung while artistic and colorful slides were
prOjected on an overhead screen.
Backing Mitchell is that . trio of amazingly
versatile musicians, the Naturals. Now all but
permanent fixtures in the place, they play as many
as four or five instruments each -often two
simultaneously.
This latter feat has to be seen as well as
heard for true appreciation.
THE THREE ARE NATURALS
Individually the Naturals and their in·
strument& are Hall 08.hleJs, -piano, trumpet, trom-
bone and celesta; Bill Sherman, sax, clarinet, flute,
bass sax, valve trombone, drumsj Warren Gale,
trumpet, trombone, bass and Latin rhyttun in·
struments.
lltttt
Proudly Presonls The
LEE FERRELL GANG
D•"cing •"d Entert•inment
•t The Swingingest Horse In Town!
MONDAY NIGHT I PICIAL
COMPLITI ,.IMI 111 DINNll $3.25
3295 Newport Blvd .. Newport Booc:h
ReHrv•tlon• •7J.1J74
NEW'POH IEAOI, CAllfOltNIA
TH E WIN E
•i cELLAR"
UNIQUE e"d ENCHANTING
lllTAU I ANT I
c-°"dot "'1t'f I
ISonN
WID, THURS.. FRI. I SAT. • ...,,..,.. ... s.,, ..... -BOB MOLINE
CAPITOL RECORDING ARTISTE
VOCAL WITH. GUITAR
-FO. ltESlltVATIONS TELErHoN& 6'44·1100
1107 JAMIOltEE ROAD NEWr'Oll:T IEACH
. '
Mitchell is appearing 'With the Naturals. Tues4
day through Saturday evenings. Between rounds
of dance music, two shows are staged each night
at 10 p.m. and 12 midnight.
Ben Brown's Is located adjacent to the Laguna
Beach .Goll Course, 31106 Coast J1igbway South
Laguna. Wheth~r motoring north or south~ watch ·
closely for the sign or you 'll miss the turn off.
Royal Crest -..
A ~henomenon peculiar to our times is image
making. In order to effect whatever such a pro~ram
entails, itls frequently necessary to start with a
litUe hnage breaking.
. That proce~ure marked the Cirst step tn a
ma1or face-changmg effbrt just launched by Costa
Mes?'s. Royal Cres~. Under the guiding hand of
the JOVtal new propnetor, Jim Hicks.
DI FFERENT
Taking over the Crest only a few weeks
ago, Hicks plans to develop an entirely different
atmosphere from that which characterized. the forrne~ operation. He's aiming for an entertainment
spot with bro~der appeal .and hoping, at the same
tune-•. lo. ~rovtde a place where quiet relaxation
and unb1b1ng go band in hand with the fun and
merrunent.
Hicks' initial move was the introduction of an
entirely n~w enterlainme_nt policy. He believes this
course will enable the Royal Crest to strike a
balance as an ideal location for both old er marrieds
and the younger daUng crowd.
GOOD ENTERTAINMENT
A wise choice was made in the group that's
moved front and center stage to kick oU the action.
Four talent~ and impressive young performers
known as The Heavy Rain.
Only very recently formed, the Rairl is
already off and running as one of the area's most
FINE
ITALIAN
DINNERS
CONTIN ENTERTAINMENT
RANDALL of DIGHTON
1tn1111nt tro\lbtctW, OPINS AT l P.M .. CLOUD MONDAY
J IZ W. C•••• • tti. clNle I• IJJ.tl77
. promising new groups. A fact amply demonstrated
b.y the showmanship they displayed during our
visit to the Royal Crest last weekend.
, Th~ group'~ leader also supports an old adage
thats qwte applicable to show-biz nowadays. Tlle
saying: "like lather, like son", • ~'~
JOE'S SON LOUI E
Because the Rain's chieftain is a chip oU
the old block in the person· of Louie Marino
son of Joe l\'Iarino who's been on the local en:
· tertainment scene for years as part of the Herb
and Joe Trio. Three top-rated musicians now firmly
ensconced in their own spot, the Painted Pony
in Garden Grove.
. ··e:;f t
. A r~s~dent of Long Beach,. Louie contributes
his versatility to The Heavy Ram on lead guitar,
bass and vocals. ~_a composer he's also written
a number of excellent tunes the group is featuring
in its repertoire. . ~·-.. •
Rounding out the Rain foursome are Grant
Martyn, ijammond organ and vocals ; Ed Newman,
drums and vocals and Donna Bumpas, vocals.
Prior to Rain's formation. Donna soloed with
a folk act, Ed held down the dfumrner's spot
with various groups in Hollywood and San Diego,
and Grant and Louie were teamed with ancither
drummer for a series of appearances in Orange
County.
Having been together a r.elatively short length
of time -approximately three months -the
quartet bas appeared only twice before in public.
At the Painted Pony and the Golien Salls in Long
Beach. · · w
. TODAY'S SOUND I
They produce what might best be described
as "today's young sound," a ·term that by no
means should be. construed as a musical turn-oil
(Continued on P•ge JI)
LOBSTE R LOVE RS
Everyone is talkinq •bout our 9i•nt
Austr1li.n lobster Jeil ( lf>..20 01.l
DINE WITH
AN OCEAN VIEW
Reserva tions ~ccepted
536-2555
BANQUET
N: FACILITIES nmpnr·t-Now Appocl_.,lc:k i. Grot1 Duo ~. Tuosday ........ s ... day--c:I"'
117 PACIPIC COAST HWT .. HUNTIN6TON IUCH O)rnttn ll~~DO~N~JO~S~E.~
SUNDAY BRUNCH
FEATURINc;.
STRAWBERRY
CHAMPAGNE
~ s2zs
1Z Nffa f9 1 p.111 •
Now Appearing
ALONZO BROS. TRIO Ji TUESDAY thru-SUNDAY
3333 WEST COAST HIGHWAY
NEWPORT BEACH 642-4298
NOW FEATURING
FRESH LOCAL SWORDFI SH
HALIBUT AND SEA BASS
400 MAIN, BALBOA PENINSULA 1 &73-4633
NOW APPEARING
VIC GARCIA LTD.
With Voc1l1 By
GERMAINE
• COCKTAILS •
Enchil•d• i nd T1co ........•...• , .• $1.35
Chill Relleno • Enc:hil•de ............ $1.SO
'·Senrieill wftfl ·---.. , ......... wf Selle
9093 E. Ad•ms (•I Mognoll•I Hunt. l ooc:h 962-791 t
·Like Ro•st l ong l1lend Duck -Tournedos
'of Filet Mi9non1 -Ve•I Osuir1 -Rai"bow
Trout?-Well, who doa1n'tlll
Th11e end many other enticin9 entrees •r•
served seven nights a week •t Bob Burns Rest ..
au rant.
located in Feshion Island, Bob Bums ls
more than ju•t • "Steek •nd Lobster .. restau ..
rent. A selection of twe"ty carefully prepered
entrees ..:. accompenied by lob Burns f•mous
Cre•m Cae•tr Sal•d .. -will satisfy the most
cH1crimin•tin9 pelate.
Open every ni9ht, lob Burns does honor
telephone re1erv1tion1 for ,,.ople "on the 90."
For tho•• of you Who ire out for e leisurely
evening, lounge entert1i"ment i1 provide~
nightly.
3] FASHION ISIAND
ltEWPORUINTEI -·e-•h..'-,..,.. ....... ....... ,,_ •M4-2uo•
•
I
r
· I
I
I
•
•
U bAILY l'ILOT Friday, July 3, 1970
. '
•
' " ' I
· .~WEEKENDER OUT 'N :ABOUT
\
' .. · · D'Amico's · . .
• '
I
\
" '· •• 1... ,,.. '
" ,•
' ~ ..
'.
BAL-PORT LOUNGE
PROUDLY PRESENTS
.THE
HONEY BEES
HELEN and BASS
Thunclay -Friday -$aturclay
9 P.M. ta 2 A.M. •
. NOW ST ARRIIVG . ' . -IN THE 'KJTCHEN-··1· ' ; ' . • . . . MA·RY .
I " '.
. .. 4507 W. Coast Highway
. ~ •. Newport Btac:h . '·· 675·4200 ·
!pr. the over-401s. The emphasis is on rock dance;
to be sure, but their range runs the gamut from
. ~Cid rock to.tire waltz. ·
. • N~te~orthy of1.'erings by the Heavy Rain in-
clllde such popular. pieces as ''Something's Burn-i~g~ ... '"K~~ ~ the Customer Satisfied". and
"Aquarius''. Familiar compositions· by the Beatft!s
and Jim Webb came off especially well.
''
ORIGINALS
'fhree o! Louie's original songs are also
deserving of .generous applause. They are "Love's
Kind," "You Can Never Win" .and "The Eternal
Now" -any one ol which sbows a talent the
best writers. in t~ business will ullimately have
to reckon· with.
The Heavy Rain is appearing Thursday, Fri-
day and Saturday nights Crom 9. p.m. to 2 a.m.
Take our word. they confer equal listening and
dancing pleasure.
FRIDAY IS FUN NIGHT
Friday evening is geared to a fun-filled night
at the Cre~t. In addition to dancing ffom 4:30
p.m. on -with music provide~ ,by a guest band
until the 9 o'clock arrival of the Rain -there's
a dinner special on tap from 6 to 9'.
The bill o! !are might be anything from a
rib-eye steak special, for $1.50 to lasagna or fried
chicken . Besides good eating, the prices are most
reasonable.
Still another feature at this place is the Sun·
day afternoon jam sessions UOm 2 lo 5 p.m. A
different group is on the bandstand each week.
Open seven days from 10 a.m. the Royal
Crest 1s located at 1700 Placentia Ave., co rner
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"'!J.~o~1~l~7~th~St:·;in~C~o~sta';!M~es~a.1_,~~~~~~~~~.
; ···~····················~······· :, rs\~·~~ Caribe Room : ;~ ~ PRESENTS • i ~ ENTERTAINMENT -DANCING Monday thru Saturday :
BUFF£T LUNCHEON
MONDAY tflnl FRIDAY ·
Songstrest/S4ni Wrlt•r
. .
JACK
COSTANZO
and
• • • I
iTUfT
!Jtli['
' ' 1111••.TAUllllANT
DU ... fl COAD .._AM•"• =--I lllJWPOlf -..a ,,..., .....,
. ' -· D'Amico's1llalian res'taurant offers ~ ·mlisical ·
cabaret Of fine 'YOung talent in Jddition· to ~ceUent
food. Papa ·D' Amico auditions talented youngsters, .
provides enCouragement and a S'lart in the en-
tertainment fiel d. ,
The. night we were there recently the music@! fare
was most delightful and plenty of variety was offer·
~ with Jon Dysart proViding violin solo~~; .Deq.ois
ENTERTAINMENT '
Marchiano playing claisical and semi-elassical
piano; Joe Szieberl jazz piano and guitar, and
vocalizing a wide· selection of pop tunei.
· • Nick Sabµto, latest addltiOn to this, i:nusiCal
m·enagerie:-plays .accordion reminiscent of Dick
Cantino .. Perhaps trie: 'mos! iqteresting !41ct is that
none of these talented peop e is over 17. . '
Jerry Valentine, gifted singer and guitar
player i~ leaving the employ of Papa O'Amico
to go on a sw.mmer . Jong tour of • Asii with the
Young Americans.
FOOD CHOICES
. The menu features such interesUng items
as egg plant parmigiana~ with beef and cheese·
filling, ~.75 ; Italian holiday sausage, with
mushrooms and green peppers in 'Yin~ sauce, $2 .75;
veal CC)Cciatora, with peppers, olives, m1:1sh~ooms ...
onions and tomates, $3.50.
Tn addition a \Yide variety of sandwiches
and pizzas are.available to orde r.
D' Amico's is located at 2610 E. Chapman
Ave. in the Lucky Shqpping Center. Orange. Closed
Tuesday.
t~e FLING
ENTERTAINMENT • 7 NICiHTS .A WEEK '
DA'NllNG * HAP HALL DUO ...... , .... ....,, .....
Dirr ...... S.a.
MON.·TUIS.-WID. *· tarry Lake Singer
. '.Cliitarist
R•ar-M.sa Th••t•r S:uel:e : Costa Mew
145 I. 1M St.-Jnt eff·N..,... ""1 .
• KATE PORTER GERRIE
woo
• • • • •
Ttlll rnaCll
b .
-·"' _,, rlMn ....... l'&l)'en. o_.. 'I.Ill. .. 1 ., .. Diily
S: ...... :3t p,M.'Mon: thrv Fri.
• . I • R 21112 PACffK,: .CDASrJilGHWAY-HUNTINGTON BEACH-536-1421 •
~·············~~·················· l •.
· iJ; •• i• tJi<.c..,;.,.,,., AM .....
• • • '
\ .. I•
'·'
~OllAllv. -· 437-3555 '
LUNCHEONS • QINNERS • COCKTAILS
Mr. Leonard Lombardo, ~wner-host, invit••
you to step into a new world of dining
pl.osur• • , • cr~ted in long Beach by od-
hering 'to th• exocting standards of old
world e xc•llence in contin•ntal dining. For
those who hove forgotten what a pl•osure
delecto~•1.dining con be ••• yo11 con r•-
cliscov9r lt at Long B•och's finest r•stauront
••• Lombardo'•·
566 EAST OCEAN BlVD,. lllNDEN AVE. ENTRANCE I
FIDELITY F,:'*RAL. ,.LAZA BlDG. L~ IEACH
''GRANTS . BRADFORD HOUSE''
· Y~ur Family Restaurant
EVERY FRIDAY EVERY TUESDAY $ YOUR
AND THURSDAY s1·29 . CHOICE
BUCK ... ,_,.,...,
ALL THE FISH 5.W.frWQldiM
YOU CAN EAT lM1t1HfA1Jn
Nl.GHT -· .... --·-·--CNI"" CM Slew, lfet ,..,.... .....,.. .........
... & twnw, TtrWr ... Cl'lll:r cM ..... ....... Het • a •irttlf'
JI
aaLLe}! «IE\BT·
. oORCHEF
IS A f'IEAL PRO.
iAY HISiLOBSTEA. IT'S
THE FINEST OUTSIDE
MARINELAND, STEAKS,
TOO. AND A FIX-IT·
YOURSEl;F SALAD 8A1'.
T.AY OUR NEW COCkTAtt.S
TOO, LlkE A FOOT OF
YOUA FAVORITE MARTINI.
A GREAT DINING OUT
VALUE A~O SOUTHEAN
CALIFO"NIA'S MOST
BE AUTI FUL 'OCEAN VIEW.
ENTERTAINMENT NITEt.Y.
TAICE SAN DI EGO FAWY. '' . TO HA"'™OANE ~Lvo.
. . A'.NO t>o~OU'"i'.tfo
' MARINELANo '01S~dV~~tHE'.~uLNM · ' ~tiLi;;'i~
-~e~ ... , .... ' ..... ,'1-.
• 1
.... .. .~ .
'•
I . :
•
\.1·~F~ ~ ,,
2601 W. C-t lHwy.
--~Nowpo<t IMdo
1"011. ll•llllVATIONI CALL
MNfN tr ""'1"
' __ _._J
LUNCHEON by the S.a ...
Served rrom 11:00 lo 4:00.:r·!n·
GOU&tET Ddr(NEl!iS
.•• wUli •'VJE\V
l::nler1•11n111f'filt ~r rv<"J ii\ i: Ctand
/.'lglotlr1 ;\,lanW.r.1"tom~:QO to
11:00, P·TlJi .W.~k ·
MldS 5,:IJO ~11 ~l:f./O p .m. , , . :,
THE ELEGANT_:
i~~"~· .. ,
(213) f 37-CM88
1900 EAST
0 ocurc BOUllYARD. LONG BEACH, CAUfOllNIA
THE BERLINER
German Fa11iily Restaurant
Famoui For
SAUERBRATEN w;+h POTATO DUMPLINGS
Opo11 Dally For Dlooor
From 5 P.M.
CHILDllN'S
MINU
CHAMPAGNE.BRUNCH
. .. , -· ~verr .. 9 !h•r Sund~y
11512 ' ,_,. lhd.
\
Tow• &. COMtry Center
HUNTINGTON a~.u;H
'61\S&Oa Closed Monday Col~flrtO
• ••••••••••••••••••• !
SPECIAL WITH THIS COU'°N
FAMIL y NITIS TUll,WID.-THURI. '
IUY ONE DINNER-HCEIYE
THE .$_ECOND FOR •;, PRICE
··········~·-········· For The Finest Cold Cuts, PutrlC!I,
Beers Snd lmported \Vine9-Visi t
DER BERUllER DELIUTESSEll
OnJy Several Doon From Resll\urant
In Town I: CoUl'ltl')' Center
Open 10 to 6 -C~~ Su,n. le: Mon. -. 968-4300
sn¥~:
LOISTU
CHOPS
•
COCKTAILS
with •
Hori d'oeuvr1i
WI Ac,9'11 •••Nric•l'f MfftW a..,...
AIMl'kN 1111,,._
• F11t.iril'lt
,AU\. 10111 I
llCHAID THlllTON
If "THI ,LATTllS"
...
'J J ' •
Ki.~t%ing the Act
Dnke.' M)lChell , ne\vest singing sta·r at Ben Brown's
in Laguna Beach , gets a· bit of kibitizing from sort
.J~ff w'ho drop.S in on the weekends to learn some of
the fine points of "show-biz." Duke's dynamic
vocals maS' be heard in two nighUy st3nds Tues-
days through Saturdays. Ben Brown's· i~ locate4
at 31106 South Coast Hignway adjacent to the La-
guna Country C!Ub.
DELANEY'S
SEA SHANT--Y
Featuring OrancJ• County's Finest
· · OYSTER BAR : ..
Ea sterri Blue;point Oyst.ih ori ~~if· _Shell , $1.50
E • 'terri-C h er',.YstcAi 1<-:e1a fn·i=-·$1 olO---.._
L_arqe ShrimJi •Coc"ktail $1 :35 ·
.;, MMy otiler Wo~1I Se19c#o111
Opet to Z P.M".
Erttert1\flm 8nt Nightly By ·KAPPY
/ At th1 p;1no l1r
:.. •3'0 LIDO PARK .DRIVJ
iNEWPORT IEACH · . . '67UIOO ., . .
WtlCome to the Wonderful World of
OMELETS
PRESENTED AT THE
E®°: AND ALE
CHOICE OF 30 OMELETS
Dally Et1trffl luclll tr·DIMer
~e_r,td with Relf1h Tray Dr Hors 'doeUYl'C'l
T11.·fhf'll Sot.-L1ft(;lt 11 to Z: Dln111er 5· 1 o
S11.-Uitell f ·2: Di•Mr S·f-CLOSE.D MONDAYS
• •
3101 NEWPORT .BLVD., NEWPORT BEACH '
E1Nr' fT0111 porttl"' lot Ude crt th9 Sl91 of· THE EGG AND ALI.
adj•c•nt to Flyln1 Butler. 67J-Ot77
l
\
... . .7--~· --~----;::;""7"""7""!:':"".'~==:':;:"':':':'"~'-'!'~:'!'l'!':'l:"f,,.. ...... ,., .................................................................. ~ ... ~~~~~~~~~~~ ' •·•' ' .' .J .• ~-,." ~ ;o>,. • -• -.... ···-'··-· _.,.~!'.4¥1£¥35 £•; !$&! 5! &J S Si so cs 0$.. • •••••
'
1t'a1l00is'
CONTINENTAL CUISINE -.
Femou1 For
ELAM/NG DU.CK .
Open 11 ,00 A.I.I, -Closed M'""•~
HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIFORNIA
' 11151 IEACH ILVD. , ·l<\2·1tl9
~~=
. ·-OUi•• couNTn MOIT
. IUUTtfUL USTAUIANT ..
•
THE DUKE .MITCHELL SHO.W 'M,.,.....,.,.
Dcncll';t To lhs lit lcMI S.u.1111 I
J11H COAST HWY., SO. U.•UNA-aU. ~· •
; COSTA MESA GOLF .
.. COUNTRY CLUB
•
"ALL. FACILITIES
OPEN TO PUBLIC
1701 Goll CourM Dr.
Costa MoM 540-7200 ~-·-...... ...:_ -----. --· ENTERTAINMENT
& DANCING
THUUll.·IAT.
t ·P.M. M 1:JI A.M.
-----... --"";;:. I ? IQ' __ ,
"'"' ....... ....,. ................... ...w.,. 4 .. . • •
,I
. TOP SIRLOIN .................. $1.5.9
lnc.lud•1 B•~•d Pot•to or Fr'9nch Fries
and_ Speci..f Si':_zler Toest. ' •
HUNTINGTON BEACH I . COSTA Ml!SA
TOwtf a COUfllTkY MIU.•••• IOUA'lt•
IUll •-11 ..... tU·ml •:.11'1111 a ..... AM ... ,.,.
CHILD'S POlTION HALI PllCI ICllU... ..... 121
PttONI IN ••• AU ~MS AYAH.AILI TO TAU Oif:T
COME IN TONiGHT . : ''For 'Tlae . . .
Prinae · 01 Your Life''
Roast PRIME RIBS OF IEEF
--..... •t110AS11 ...... --s·3as ..... ll11,....., ........ ,......, ....,, ' ' ' ..._.. .... •11-. ................
• . DIAMOND JIM IRADY Cul ..••.• U5
CHILD'S PORTION ........... ; ... 1.50
Ult.Y nlMI Ill DUftlD~lflCIAI. • ; ; ti.ti'
MONMT TMll NIDAY OWLY! 4 .. 6llt P.M. '
NOW-TWO LOCATIONS
.OPEN .7 DAYS
KING· SIZE COCKTAIL'S
32' N. STANTON ··n E. 17111 ST •
• ~NAHlilM COSTA MUA •
CH-•-1'•1'111 0,.~ ... ....., 0,. M .... 9'n ..... , I\ A.lL .....
II A.M....... ~p 0,. I P.M • ...., 0,.. .Mhl_.., & --· ....., __ _
Pheno 01~10 Phone •U 1110
.... IMflr Cnialr C.,. ........
~--
!
MARINA 1RESTAURANTS -2 BEAUTIES
Pel$ San Francisco fype Restaurant·
Seats 65 -Newport
1 Corona del Mar
S~llilty_Ho"!' _. Seats '210
4,F.amous Pizia Routes r ·s.11 5i1,,;1ce
IOD.l. ASSOCIA m . . . (Of Clo)
4'1 NO. COAST HWY .. L~GUNA llACH Phclno (714) _ ... ' • ,..
FAMILY , DINING .
COMPLETE olNNE~ UNDER $l
"OCEAN FRESH;-SEAFOOD"
-• 4-M. -.. " ..... "°"' DU VIA LIDO, NIWPOIT llACH '7S-1H'
RICKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE ·
Pi9oe a. btertel"'"oot FtWoy ...i Sot•doy
HAPPY HOUR Mon. thru Fri. S fo 6
LADlll NIGHT
'"· aMI l•t. II""'° te 2 a.m.
Fealv~i"9 Y~vr Fevorile Mt11ic.t11.Di1he1
Food fo ·'"•-Coc.ltf1i11
1711 PLACINTIA .,__..,. COSTA MUA
'4Wll4
MESA CLUB
Proudly Pr•1•nf1 .
LARRY ROGERS :
I Form•rly •t th• Ce1pii1n I
WID., THU•S.. NI. I. SAT. Ntns
FROM 9 P.M . ON
·Live
Theater·
"Savell"
On Stage at South Coast
Repertory Theater ID7 New-
port• Blvd., Co5ta Mesa, Fri .•
Sun .. at 1:30 p.m. throuah July
u . Reservltlons -·146-1363.
•<OM· Flew Over
lite ~koo'i Nut"
•
A comedy on stage at South
Coast Jleeertory, l!Z'I Newport
Blvd., COsta . Mesa, 1:30 p.m.,
Wed.-Thur1'., throuO July t .
Reservauons -S.S:11U .,.....!.-0...MI ~". • WAYNE MAUNDER
Two one aot · P'f.Y• by From Wrong Nolghbomoocl
Slawomir Mrpzek, • : ' T h e
Police'" ahd' ·~t at Set" 'art
on staie .at Uie 'Nifty Theater,
307, ~a1n St., Huntington
Beacb. Fri. and Sat. tbrougb
July 18 at 8:30 p.m. Reserva·
lions ~-536-91~. •
, 1 "TH Fu&ulk:b~
MuslcaJ fantasy on stage at
Sao ·Clemente 1beater •• 202
Avenida Oa br illo, San
Clemente, Wed,.· Sat. at 8:30
Maunder:
From Rags
To Riches
p.m. thiough Aug. 6. Reser\'a· "It's one of life's little
tk>M--C-046.$; ' "Ol.l'ftl"' ironies that all the time r lived
Musical versior. •ol .';Oliver in Cambridge, Mass., 'J was
Twist" ,on •slip al the on the wrong side of the
Moulton etayhouse, 6 O 6 tracks."
Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Thi I Beach, l'ues. _ Sun. at · 8:30 s 9 an ''in" joke With
p.m., through Aug. 3'1.\Reser-Wayne: .. 11~un;c1er, who piays
vations -494-0743. James Maey 's hall-brother· \Ii--------·· Scott, in ' 20th Century-Fa~ fml tHtlfitou1s _.._ Television1s "Lancer" series.
. OJ CONTINUOUS MOYIU "l was SO' poor then,'' he
Pizza Paia~·
16111...,.., .........
INnt .. z.4f'1I
139-72'0
WI MONOI ALL l'lll.A COUl'~S
IPA•HllTI
SANDWICHU
SALAD
IDT PIZZA
•
FAMILY
FUN
-Monie
hi .• s.r.
Visit a bit of Oltl Jnpan •••
said, "that I worked in a can-
dy factory ' and ate all t~
cht'COlate I could get."
Now, Maunder would like tO
go back to Bostoo when the
shbw Is on vacaU~n, to visit
his family. .
"When. I get there , I'd like
to realize my impossible
dream -working out with the
Celtics," he grinned. "l'\'e
al\\•ays been a basketball nut.
The Celtics are my club and J
hope it can be arranged."
When Maunder won the lead
In the "Custer'' series two
years ago, he said, '"I didn't
Friday, July 3, 1970 DAI~ V PILOT °19
Hollpood Backstage
Benja~Pro~
Self , Over Again ' •
l
HOLLYWOOD cl.JP I)-.Rlcb-and hlVing it c6:celled.",.. ..
ard Benjamrit became ~1 sfar sald, ''Although I didn 't tit;
just in Ume to see the itar Ueve either to 'be the ca.e jt, the time: ' :•: system go over the borilon. • "J didn't want to do uj:
Not 80 many Yf.Jtl 110 aa show in the beginning, and ;r.
actor could have rtmalned was panic stricken when lt-
employed for a dozen years was cancelled. I tbou&bt n(>"..-
on the stre:ggt.h of a ,single career was o,ver. . ;
performance auch 18 Benja-'"-P;i:ula r e m i n d e d mej ~
min projected ln "Goodbye. didn't wanr lo do the' Hri~
€olumbus. "-_ !~ the first place. But at Jwt°
Now he has to prove him-it · gave me a ctrt:aln ~
self every time in ever)' tion with the publie and ~
picture. 'Go 9 db ye, Columbus'~ s.ible." .. ,,,. ~ · "After 'Goodbye Columbus,' _.,1.
t told myself l'd ·never wark Although the star system
again," Benjamin said. "I !Uay .have .faded in ~via
knew I was Qn the way down.·• is .. still going ~ong in ~
Benjamin Is a very poor ' v1s1on. Benjamin nu
prophet. After "Columbus" he offered many new shows blfl.i
starred In •"CatCh-22 " "Di ary · turned tbem down becau.si~ ·
ol a Mad House~ife " 'Ind "Some of the m included tail~
currently in ''The Steaile." Ing ~!ll~kens and tblnp 1iJ1.!
"There was 1 seven-month that. ) I
wait 1-\ween 'Catch-22' ·and Benjamin ls a tall (6-focj1.
'House\ri(e,' ·and every day 3-lnch) man with a plelsa,~
was pure torture," Benjamin !ace a~ a tendency lo ~
said tnfo s.ilence. ..
1 , "i'.m not good at ailtin& 'It's · j.ust. as well ·the ~
around the house worryin& system ts gone. In pictures.,:
about my nei:t job.". _he said. "01.herwis~ I'd be a
The youtbfOI appearin4 actor some stu~lo woi:;king unde1
should (ret.Je!a than most men contract , 1n movies I di~!
about' languJshing arounil ~ H~~· , 'U house. Ula wife Is Paula Pren. Tbat s the way It wu~ R
tiss, the brunette beauty W1th· the old day1. But today t~~
whom he co-starred 'in "He Burton 11.l}d Taylor ca•'t aiJ a~d She" on televmon for a ~ure su~.ces.s unle.u the 1~
single season in t96USI. IS good. 4 ,
"The lwo best things tbafl;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iO~~
ever happened to i:ne wu lo-•
lng on the air with that ~" SOUTH SW "
• •
"' BoKr "liousE
TGIF PA«TY
EVERY ,RIDAY
From2,30to7p.in..
2.faso·I l'rlcos
lllS~Mell,hMwAM
JROPKAL FISH ~ I •
Tropical Fish 6: •
Largest Selection· of I
Supplies in the area. : • M .. 1LMmllen ~.
:n1•. WILIO .. , COSTA MSti
1• FflrTitw lfll.. $14-7'1\
171.0 •. lflv9"!de Of. -'".,,_,.
lbflllno:"" ,.... °""°' ......w • •
h:tve a dime. I was in New '"' •
632 W. 17ih ST.;· COSTA MESA ==i~=--=====i'JI .
... "l~itiMl• i1 nd OaliCJhff\11 l ~ (
York, lying in bed, cold and BUIJ[ES THE CLOWN
hungry, when the phone rang. · 1 tholfght it was my gtrl:But il CJ:tlLDRIN'S PARTIES
was an agent who spotted m<i MAGIC SHOW -PUPPETS -FAVORS
' . FREllCll RESTAURANT tCJ ¥lYM9
OPEN FOR LUNC~ · ' LUNCftEONS;DIN NERS
I l:l0-2 e Tuo1dey th~v Fri''" COCKTAILS
. DINNER 5,30-10 P.M.
Clf>SED MONDAY
c...er at••••"•_......., c..-..-141o.J'41 .
Real
C1nlo11ese food
... -ht .... ,
tak• home.
STAG
. CHDISE WlllO·
111 21st p~ •. Newport Boach ORlole 3-9560
0,.. ,_ ..... Mir 1J.11 -"'· _, ....... ·~···
MR;. MIKES
HOUSE OF PRIME RIB . ..
PRIME RIB ..... $2e95 .:!.!i, ::: '
DiNNER FROM 5 to ·11 ·1>,M. I
...
·KI 1-3303
sunday ·
BRUtlCh "
• ., I )', '
JI .\.m. to ~ p.m. 1
I :~ I l 0 1" j
lFM"~
1 3801 EAsT ciAST frto,,..AT
CoitQ.!fA nr.. lfAa, CALIFO&NIA '1
P11oto11: (7l<C) 675-:137.C
'--<::
"
I • ftMEftA ·
IE&TAU!Wrr
'
SUNDAY CHAMPAIONI HUNCH
10 A.M. to 2 P.M.
209 Palm, Balboa ........ ""' 675-5774 ,. "' .... 1'9""f Llmillll
llM:M lllll1lU IAllClllC
-A-ring .
JACKIE JOCKO .
~THE Giii MOlLS AT~
Tr~ot the Family to Dinner
In One of Orange County's
Fine Restaurants,
' This Week
. ' Conti~! ~ulalno
JCl:ociCtai11 . • I Serving
,Luncheon and Dinner
Mondor rough Sahlnlar. . I
:C\Qse!I Sundays
-------
I
when I Jfa• J>!OJ>ing a 'role at REASONABLE 'RATES 644 -4290.
Ldng Islaad'I Red Barn ~~~~~~~~.;..,~~~~~;;~;;~~ Theater.~ .... now . ~.Lancer.';
My part a,..Scott Lancer is tht'
best thing l;ve eVer done."
·Bacharach
In Concert ·
. " At.Greek
Burt Bacbarach, hit maker, ~pJei,conductor , 1r-~
ra• ·and one of t h e
1 foremost hafries iri. the World
?f Populaf..,!'luli<, wUI IQipear
1n conct;r\ next wefk. at the
Greek Thelter in l..os Angeles. '
His Is a talent which appeals
to both sidet Of the genera'.tion
gap by replacing noist with
music. His music is ap-
preciated ·by those who llkt
to' whistle the tune as well
a.s by Ute-generation brought
up ao a musical diet of rock
and country and western.
He is one of t)ie few conr
poser:s who bas five Academy
Award nominations and two 1
coveted Otcan to his credit•
Best Song .for "Raindrops';
and Best Score for "Butch
Cassidy and 'the Sundp.nce
Kid."· He composes brillhmt
muSic for s~ge musicals and
for~. films, -but sucb is hla
breadtll of Bbilily that Leopold
Stokowsk1 invited him to com-
pqse an original work for the
A'tnerl c an Sym p bony
Orchestra . •
Part ol. the program will .
introduce to Greek Theater
audiences ·Ril'fwd ind Karen
Carpent .. , youthluJ brother
and slat.er who bead 1 aroup
they call "Carpenters." With
Rich on kiyboarda and Karen
_on-:.druml, the group •:builds"
• 80JIDd Iii five-pert "harmony
'l1clli!tl are 1vaUable at the
bos,offle< and lllOlt ticket
ljtndel.
ClttlDTD~QmL
'WA!BIS. DF IEWMT IAUDI
, . .UOW;TIJ . .Usm.U'tlLT
MMIMCDT IZV_IUOAT
Parties, Weddings, 'Bus>neu Meetings.
·Super Sound System, Dance Floor, Bar,
Honky, 'l'onk -Plano, Wurlitzer Organ •
DAIL T SIGBTSEEIIG Tons
Le.avl~g From the Historic Old
BALBllft ,PAVILIDB
400 Main Street,. Balboa Peninsula
Phone (714) 673-5245
Operated by Davey'• Locker
'· 1 "
..... __ ......... ...... •• . .. . '. . .
. ('
ff) DAil Y PllDT Friday, Jul1 3, lc;'7Q
·DAILY LOG
JULY 3 ,
I 1:15 Utoflf11111ni1Y lullttin lo1r4 (C)
1:00 m All·N11ht Show: "lht Hein 101
1~ Mitter," "D·DU on M•rs," (C)
"8u1ln in the 'Jlttem6on," and
"Crltl'ICS of StepMn H1wkt."
2:30 IJ ifrn/C~ Us This 0., (C)
•
3
• • • • . .
t
¥our G11ifk1 to M;o1'ie•
I .
'Airp~rt' Hig.h F.lyi~g Film
• ,, ~)', j . . ' .
tditor'.t Nott: T 1& i~ Tbe LaDdlord (RJ : Beau gang fighters In the Ntw. York ,, Wnlncd (G): Spaee·rescue
movie guide is prepared Bridges plays a rich yowi.g slums. Pat Boone 3'1'1. · ol stranded a s t r o n. a 0 t s .
by the films committee oJ man who buys a house In D•Y of Anaert • J..ee Van Greiory Peck, Richard Cren·
I/arbor Go•ncil PTA.. Mrs.' the slums and becomes in-Cleef stars .;ta a gun[l&bter na aqcS lames Fr~us.
John CJark is pretiden& l volred w)th the teaiants. Pearl., who teaches"'bls proteae the .. Tbt Qut.-ol·T..-n (G)i" •
and )frs. William W a re 1 Bailey and (..ee Grant ·star. values of the weapqn they Di!astrous experiences,. of man
ii committee thGtrman. It Naked Ubder Leatlw:r (RJ : live by. aad wife who go tQ New York t ""II lftwl (Cl (60) i$ intended as o "'re/tf'eme f "The Girl m a Motorcycle" Tbe MaJlc .. a.rt.aUD (GP): from Ohio for a job int:ervlew. H.....,_l~ltJ tC) (JO) in ; detennining"_ suitable 1..wiih a new Utle.' Story of the richest man in Jack Lemmon and Sandy Den·
'• T1t1 1\isl (C} (30) Bill JULY 4 filfTU for certain o fl e \ MATURE TEENS the world and his adopted son, nis.
5.',TUPO."..'f
D1a1, Shi Gillllm ind Art• Johnson groups and will ,appear A AND M>l.!L.TS Peter Sellers, Ringo Starr1• FAMILY J:'ls'.J O'Ota Mtwit: (i:) "Thi weekly: Your l1itw$ ore Anne of. tlat\TbOaQDd Daya Onl1 .Game la Town (G): A .1JoY NIJl\e4 C II a r 11 ,e
. ..
Pltl:foOl•E lNGAGIMINT
811rt btoe:l'fti'r 0.111 M•rtill
".lllPOltT" IGI Collr
11 ··-,,.,,
a l
\/I. ~A~• A
AH C111r F1mllw S..1w Ol'ttart PKk 111 .. ,,.,..IOOMl'IY' !O'I
O<ltdll HI-W1ll1r Mlllllll
"CACTUS fLOWElt" (GP)
E1clv1l~1 ShOWlnl
l:li Mt CMllil CllNt Dell~" (dr1· G:Z58Ci'f• Us Ibis hf .~olicited. Mail them to Mo· (GPJ : Ge:nev~ye Bt'.ijold and Gamblin& film Set in ' La, '~ (GI ;' J1!\Lll leb(th car· 9"--r--~:•f '5'"-""toa Oiftr1nt. 6:J08SU111111tr $1m1st1r. (g '1ht vie Guide, care of the Richard ,'"'Burton as Anne Vegas. stars Elizabeth ;taylor t.ooo feature based on·Charles
•' lf"Ttiit-(30) 1111111 ind 1t1 Speech:' Dr. Gt0r1• DAILY PIL()T. -Boleyp,and Kil!&Henry VIII. and WantQ Beatty. · SChulz' Peaooti comic~strlp.
LA HABRA
OlllVE·IN
"THE CHllSTINE
JOllOENSON STORY" (Ill C:olor
1114 RAC11uel Wtldl I~
"l'LARl!:0 UP'' !GPJ C.ltr
Ulllllt' 11 mftl M: wilt! 1N•enl. ~~;.~cl(~? (lO) W: Weber. * Batch C1~1kiy:and the Sun-The Prime DI Miu Jen OliUy QdUy ·Baig Bug
MYt's ,....? (C) (30) ''Com\ G:ss mMornina '111• • ADULTS dance Kid (GP): A deft com-Brod.le (GP): English-made (G): Dick' Van Dyke portrays
m1111ic1tion AcroH Spice." Part v. 7:0080dfll'Y (Cl "Todiy's Bioloaici.I The Advenblrer1 (R): Film edyabouttWGcha.rming·legen-f1'Jm wi·~ Magg1'e ·Smllh In •I.>. lw-j. • • ' ,...... Si hptrw (JO) Revoltttion." Or. B1rn1rd Strehler, '"'' , ~~ crac,..,_ mventOr of Jan
* ~ANIA .. NA.
HARBOR BLVD
ORI"! I rl
N-----Ul·l271
E1clu1lv1 Showl119
Jl f\'11' SltWlrT H1nry l'tlldl "THI!: CHEYENNE SOCIAL CLUI"
{0Pl Color ... heh 111 n in lllrtll'.s (JO) I ~ [6J m Heckl• ' Jtcilc (C) version of Harold Robins' best· dary bandits who take the the starring role as .an ec.. Fteming's f a n ta s y , ' He
I • ,._. ii tilt lound (C) (f.O) (i)(!) Gulliver (C) se ller about an international ways ol the 'old West to centric but captivating teacher remodels an old. racing car
i :• w .......... (C) (f.O) r. Wlstlbtlll (C) playboy who becomes em· Bpli\Q_e. Paul Newman, Robert at an Edinburgh girls' school and spins fabulous yarns to ~ llliail• (C) (60J 7:30 IJ Dv.stJ'• Tmltoua (Cl A SP«i•I broiled in the political life ~edfo'?'d,~nd Katharine Ross. in t:he mid-30's. tt)e !Jnuse,ment. of his adoring
·*
"'I \t"'"<>'C o
"MAN l'RDM NOWHEllf"
l'rtmltrt Engaeemenl l'Hrl l t lltW Ltt Or1nt
"THf LANDLORD" (lit) Ctltt
"THE OIOUP" ni. ... , · Cl• (C) (30) music.al tdiptiti011 °1 "H•nsel inll and revolutions of a South Tbe cfteyeue 89Clal Club Topaz (GPJ : HitchcoCk's' childre.n. Sally Ann Howes. co.
1
1
1 "'Flllrila lhrtil11 (CJ (30) Gret el" 11 j)eltQ(111ed by Ousty'i American republic. Bekim • (GP): After''tbe Civil War, Oct ti-On of U ·' I U. hf tit ?Os (Cl (30) . 1111rioneUts. pr UC · ns spy nove stars,,
lilllDlrt JC ~C) (~) fJ @ (]) 1!J SllOk., bt 8•1 (Cl Fehmu and Candice Bert en. ·a Texas cowboy inherit! a starring Frederick Stafford Kusel and Gretel: German .
Olll a...t leport (C) •(30) 1:00111()) TII• 'j'jffl,12t . Alice'• Restaunnt (R): -bordello in 'Cl!eyenne. James and Dahny Robin. • film wilh dubbed EQglish. \
._II Ytrdad (30) , l~ m Kolic: Story of Ario Guthrie's search Stewart, Henry Fonda and A Walt in lite .Spring Rain Horse ii die Gray Flannel ......... 11111111tt (C) (30) Amer DI, IC) l ive IX#tftl• or for his "thing" in life. It is Shir~ J<>oes. ' IGP): Romintic drania &tar·
Ht·WAY 39
Oii.iV( I~~ Ul'lder 11 mu1t k wll!I JUen!.
Prem!ert En919emeni
Jo>tk LtmmlHI Sindy Dt11nl1 .. TN• OUT OF TOWNISRS"
(01 Ctllr Lff Vin Cl"' ln
"DAY OF ANGER" (GPl Color
J4lli' · Cll ~ """ (C) (JO) Jt!illous 111d patriotic uremonier set i'n M'""'Chusetts wh"... The ...._.1 and the swt•..i.. . A~--~.. d ~·U: Dlsney comedy of a --~ -· -U•l ~ (30) 11 tilt Lincoln Memori•I In Wish· _,...,, ..... "' "'',,,. ..... ring ,, .. _.y , .. inn an Ingrid Spl.~id =y horse w"'ch " r •-t-cr,;o'·1301 \"' Guthrie is guest of friends blade (GP)': S1 ........ b ase d on Be Ml"' o:a·-ru 1 ..._ l~fttn. D.C. _, rgmR'.il, 'becomes a contestant in the
E•tlu,(vt Sllowint·
T~t Stllltl In
~
I '
• ' I
I
i
... tl!t (C) (30) tJ lfiJ m QJ I 111c14 I Konor who buy a churdi and tum autobiography of Ult Re v. Intern.a · I Horse ShOw lllll IMl (C) (.)()) "The Aiief!U '*' (C) N1lion1! memori•I it into a restaurant. Filni Da+i d Wilkenon and hi! life TEENS AND ADULTS tiona witti
," by LIDf'lird Slater. services. in Wish .. o.c. with co-shows young people in. the among I.be narcotics users and Airport (GP): Film version the world's finest jwnpers Jn Jiit A..._ w.t. (C) (30) . th1irmen 'Bob Hop• 1nd Or, Billy ol the best.eelling noVel. Burt action. Dean Jones and Dia "•""'!flt• M•fll (55) Gr•h•m: the u,s At"'J Bind, d10Jn background of a commune. La -~ De M I · Baker ~-·. ~ " ·e b od C I od Ted od 's· nc.1i11er, an ar 1n, -n.t Dt (C) (30) iiil)d spec:11l,1111Sts. , • o a aro a a · -H
J:a @(])let S.irt(Cl (lOl (R~ .Storyboo-'i"" Alice (R): Coni#mporary '' tlgalOOs' elenHayesand VanHe6in. Iii Search of the Castaways llalll ca.,an-11 (C) (60) (R) Tllff ti Witb F•p social comedy satirizing mar-Beneath the Planet of tbe IG): Disney's version of Jules ...... (C) (30J 1:30 !.0011t111111111y{1totd l11n· rlage and friendship. Robert \ . -Apu (G): Sequel to "Planet Verne's classic of a lost sea
"""''""'O" OIACH
WARNER
DR!V(·IN
"LET IT IE~ IG) Ct19r
"ALICE'$ RESTAURANT .. (RI ColM'
unc11r 11 mini Dt w!lh parent.
.Ill Cel!:lt Show
Pel•• Sell1r1 l iil9lr S11rr
"THE MAGIC CHlllSTl.IN" IGP)
Reck Hue!-in
"ICE STATION ZEIR.1" (G)
'r.??~~ Rzi-1 1"' (C)I' : c.111,.!.Cll'rofile • . Culp, Natalie Wood, Elliott Ta, pin,'g Set of the Apes'' starring Charlton captain and the search to fi'nd
...._ $ Movtl : (C) "White 15 Mllfit: ''Y11io. Squtdr011" (Id· G-Ould and Dyan Cannon, Heston and James Franciscus. him. Hayley Mills, Maurice ~==:!:!:!~~~~~~!~
(--) "5-Robffl venlure) '53-Hi.sst Ekm~n. Ann· · Tb e Cb~tllne Jorgeoaen . lee-Station Zebra (G): All-Chevalier, George Sanders. --; • "'"1 N•rna11 RMMI~ R..st,,•~,
"'" " 11 • B"I •· ~· · Taning, hn begun on Sid 1 ~· "IUTCK CASSIDY .. No ,Dlb11.Pl1et. lB"llr~~-~·~~.spe.... Story (R): Biography of H mae spy drJma about a SleepingBeauty(G):Disney . SUNDA-NCE IC ID" IOP> cei.r
...... c .......... (C) (30) -IU 'Ch . . J . al)d Marty Krofft's new Chan· nuclear submarine's trip to version of Perrault's fairy JJ;~::J~ .. 7. r: .. ~~''~
:;t n.. ,._ Clrlif ~) (R) J11u1 (1111st1rn) ·~011 Albfi1tit,Ch1rlt1 J ohn Hansen. Martha the North Pole on a rescue tale. Music is Tchiakovsky's ,_.,,_
1601 1
Mtwlfl: ''Sewn c1111s to"'"'" cislme orge~en. starring. nel 4 ~ries, "Bugaloos. ," s.lar-1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--prtP1res "Chicken for four Hi ' i inlivan. Flare·Up _(GP): Suspense Jing Raye and The mission . Rock Hudson, Ernest "Sleeping Beauty" ballet with
Mow " !·oo !/iOO.!I? K. lti htnstuf ~) d r d , Bugalbos. the latter are four R.--;nt, • Jim Brown and the · of M ,...~·•-
'
.,..., .," ..,, 130•1 , " • . · .. .,...-, (wester"'n).•IJll rama o go-go ancer s at· 8 .1. " h 1 ~ fi"'" voice ary \,Al:llw,, ~ t pt ,_ fl _ .. _ n 1srr teen-agers c osen o Patrick McGootlan. * · -l'fild 8111 £Hiott ~ em s ..... ee a muiu.:rer. . '"' •• t.nl:io• de s.Ntc · ··@@EB Kot -.is (Cl :' Raquel Welch, Luke Askew play adventuresonie young 1'bt I t a I i a a Job (G): Es-The letter immediately I.<!'"' nil SM '(C) Cllll • Mme:-"'illit.., c. .. llfllJ'" and James Stacy. '1f!usicians in ,the new comedy-' p·risoner (Michael Caine) G]fef' the title indicates the ft(J)&':..(C)ar:1 hoel! I( ·~;~,J.a~1ney, Tbe Group: Adaptatioo of fiintasy. .trains an elite gang and plans rating given the picture by
,.,, ;llfJ) (Rf '111tty Klfl'Y-All · 1;1 ,. ..... ,-lltin. · Mary McCarthy'" c y n i ~a I F~g al Par am o Un ( an ambitious robbery in this the Motion Picture Code .
111:' CitldJ's tnoritl doll Is t:JD !9~DW1di, l Muttley (C) novel ·portraying group of Studio, , the show casts Miss amusing farre. Noel OJ.ward The Motion Picture Code
:ltd 1M ec:cuses Bobby 01 CDi 6 EnWl•bl•de1 Opt1 young women trying to reach Raye as a rock wrtch who and Rosanno Brazzi COllai. A·nd Rating Program may
.it Pitt Herbert 1uesta as Mr, Tennis • ..., • ,(C) Jim maturity during depresSion-Jives i1n a juk!~x. The • Let It Be tG): The Beatles be found on one of the nio-
• i• .. Tr.IAI (C) (30) . f;i;:nti~~r:~1th'!''m:.~~=~ . ridden 1933. Bugaloos, who ha Ye the power al ease and in rehearsal. tion picture pages.
Cillepelil•.(30) , . •ii NleUit!. t10111 tilt AU·[MIMll • Happy End~ng (GP): Jean to fly, live on Tranquility -;;;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;;;;:;:::=:=:::;II
...... (Cl (30) l1w11 Tennis and Croquet t:lmi" Simmons portrays a bored Island a do good deeds, ex-r
~ ._..Un (551 ,~(])f!rrtliNerdy..,..,.tcJ midcHe.claM housewife who cept wh n .. witch Martha and .,.. f~..:,:;•.::.;,~, 1~ l~.00 tt,t"'"..! ~I turyis I? drink. John Forsythe her evi henchmen th'?'l
•.. uoni.t 1r1 l'tlu«ld b~ 1n ur· CIJ1E l:itb""CI c.t1 (CJ and oSprley Jones. their ·laid plansy ~
l dlr from t.olldon tt e.1!1Cel ..,.--lkY It FumKt Ct11k
lot to wipe out • host of (wrstern) '48-Viclor Maluft.
117'1 ~ t11ilit1ry ludtn. m ... "Y1qlll ~ (west·
(i) ID••• " uie came ern) '57-llod C1111eron. : · E~ oosra-.. ·
){ft) "BtlSI Rint." Dan Far. . lhlblt Iii (Jptr1n.r:1 ' --a· . ~w SOUT~O~T .. tries to Mlp I JOLlllJ Multan· 10:)0 a (I) ScoobJ·Dot (Cl GEllEIAL "!'. ~ PLAZA ... HK
I, ·t.n bow wlloM wttr ii in Morit: "Ot1r lh!tlln ,(cornedJ) CUllPOf!ATDC San rw-0 f-at ...,:,.ol, , ••.• ••• ,1 rdy. Van ·JohMGn, Ctleste Kolm ' -Join C1ulr1tld, Will~m H9Utri. -. au111 -~
tck C.rter 1111111 · m MO'fit: (Cl '\Olt Worid el Silt·
1 ,_ p;;ni..t (30) bad" (ldwntbrt) '65-toshl10 Ml·
tHJ Ill ... -... .... IOM, ...... "1cA. CONTINUOUS DAIL y 12 NOON i'fC) ( (R)..,.,. ,.-, ... '. .. ll:Ol11,~-......... (t)
Joi< '""" -• "" 1•-:• • Cl-'-,_ BOX .OFFICE OPENS AT 11 :30 .4'M n. a.,._,.·.111strtm1r&. 1 11111 j~) ... ·w t.e.111110Unced. .,
---CC>l!IOJ U l!!JillOI"' •,.,_IC> hrll .en. (C) {60) Marl Li~ • .Jallltl Dl(l'en and Tht
11 • , 1 ... (30) Tht foiiirth Sh1aeo ..-. : •
-)In """"".... ,, -:II· ·!~from s-.i Fr1ncllco, ptrl'orms. J:JO · )gA..m.n IMlllRIM
'"'' ...-. """' M •;io ,. , '""'-'"'"· ~ .. 1toUllic'>ftoli111st Mrfk Whit 't , . ·,...St.err" (western)
E M1tsh1ll. • Ii-...: "flit Bl1cl W•ip" {11mt·
JM """' U ~llhilll '30) t rn) ""57-Hua.~ ~rlowe, Coleen
1:• tHJ (i) CIS ~ Mftfk "ftt Gray, " .
0 l IJiHI" (SUlf&lllM) '~ q
M O'Brl.111, Shlrlty !1ton, Fabi1~. ~
IA~er)' llt il'j 1n bol1ttd 1nd Ill· • ~:-Ii ' Id lri~h c~'~!W ftt1 peo. tZ:OOl(iiCl)Tllt M•lll!Ms ~) pl • llaw: been 111V1t.C. ~ thtlr un · Tutn fmiliar · ,
k host. • "1. • , •• • , 1n:.. • 11 St•1111 • !" ._. (C) (GQ) "f1111t lo 12:15 .Qldilr lllMI: (C) · '
5tM Fornst. ..L li:30 l'nlli;t P1b6Dp (C) m Hn c... Hit lliia \\If Movie· "IOtty"' (rom1nct) '4S-. ~.RI "BfUk t1M: Bink 11 l~· ty. MIHe~d. P1ulflte Goddlrd. '
. '.Irr.my Ind ~Ill pl.y ~ 0 Movie: "In Old Ctliftn1i1" (Id·
10 ette wl!MI 11111 Wiii I l1com1 wenlutt) '4Z-J0lnl, W.yne.
I YIMll ;1r1 (C) Olllld ln*IM (C) (Z tir) 12:40 Dodttr WtT•·Up (C)
"'7 (30) I :OD Supenut (C)
ffattdll (GO) Mn: "t1lt llllllOIUI Strre1nt" t:• OJ,.... (C) (30) (dn1111) '43-Henry f011d1, Thom11 "'°" T.,W.. (30) . Mi!ehtll.
s:-lus
GREAT 2ND FEATURE
Hiley Mills in
t09 Iii(!) 8' lrtdi•'• Wtrld (C) m Ooditf 8111ball (Cl The Loi
( ) (II) "!l's thi Powtr llru<:lu1e, Angeles DO<l11m. f!lfft !he S•• "IN SEARCH OF THE CASTA ~YS"
y.'' The bbct ind wh~e esllb· Francisco Gi1nts 11 tandles!icl
II nls move •a•inst Richel Holl Pm. !~•••••••••••••••••••••• ( n Jtll"!l). Ind b1lctr._ 111inee ID Movlt: "Se1411nt Yort" (dr11111) AtlJ4 [fllllllftS (.,_~ tlrtdshavl) '41-Guy Cooper, Join Laslie,
.... tn:.,:~lt(~t l 1· ~::.!~~) Oist111tn / •
ltn, "-riwi St)ilt (C)l 1:30 Jonny Q!lnl (Cl
) "love ind Ille Othar Guy.'' ·1:00 Oustf'1 'TT!lhOU$f IC)
·nc Donne Doua;l1s, Corbett (i)@ m Wl111blede11 Ope•
M-rru. G1ry Collins; and 'tove ind T111ni1 Ch1mpiontJliP1 (C~ This set·
G111ndm1," lttrtifll Paul ford, Ruth ond ttlecast or !ht di)' covers
Mt{)eyitf, Me redith MKRae, Pa trick championship matthts in Ille wom·
WIJM. en's sin1!es •~d the men's doubles
I P!lltiit'I ,..,._ (C) {90) play. Ann Ha1don Jones ot [nal1nd
,.,.... ln (60) , was tile. l~dits titli st 11$1 ye11 1nd
Tm Yldel Dlstintls (30) 1he doubles erown was sh1rtd by l~ 40 (Z hi) Auuies John Newcombt and Tony
M):JI Mi M....,. (lO) Roche. ~·· !())Nin IC) fJ Miwie: "N1~ed Alibi" (mystery)
' (6) ~== (C) .-'54-Sltrlina HIJll•n. Gene Biii)', .., Glorla Gr1htme.
1!!1-tCi .. • (!)S-1""'• !Ci tin tf ae Wiil {C) ,2:30 f) ReP;!!iol11 Wotbllop (CJ "New,
leri1 llrteff fll111 '•stltfl: t~ers.. A talent shoWc•r.e. 1ntro-f,,._,.. (myileiy·horrOf) '40 ~uc1nc live New ~ork 11eiil perform·
-8Qris Kafloff Bria tuaosl 1na la!ents. lndud1n1 simg ind dine11
Slid. slit S.id IC) (·30) min l1rry Ellis: I~~ singer K•lh)
FIBJU s.,t (II) Kiua:: comedy INm .lo, Todd 1nd NOdlt 1 Ill Onu Larry R~: sln1H Rod .Peny: Ind
1•11 IJ) Mfr'r corr (C) r sinaor~ Bette Mldll.ler doin1 1n lm· • 111 fOm presslon ol M1e WHI. ' I O Mll'lit: "MinistrJ of fur" (mp· [@II!"""' '""" (Cl ""I '44-R'1 MUl•od Mfljo<is Moon. Shelle7 8er1111n. l olds · , llllle: .,... M.oNct ., So-. w1.0,. Train' (C)
) '67-Guntfllr St.oil. . Yiritdldes Milicalts
CMtt (C) 3;00 11111 T1ltl.n, OltdMtt <Cl
1'-le~ t.... 20.~ · Movit:· "Sn111 Sltdt" (dr11111)
1 (llon'or) ~1ul Chns· '61-ltoy Don1hue, Connie Stmns. ; -"""'!!l'"'~ I, ... ..... CCJ ·~ins of lht , Blt Pldurt (C)
(*""•) 42-Jamts C•a · • T11tro de! $1b1do
Mottan, l:JO Movil: (C) '1\e FM S..,.,.
M (C) ldlllm1) 'St-Junes Stew1tt, Vtr•
.... lll'llfl" -(dltmt) Miles. , ~"'· ~tr Graves. -O Movie: ~1emip .t ttii er..
t11re" (ICl·ll) 'SS-John A&:•r, ·lOft
Nelson..
g,T11•1I !ht Worl4 (C)
3:45 m Ood1er StoitbOlrd (CJ ~
Fi0R ADV~TfSING IN Tt'IE
WEEKEND.ER '
'THE CHEYENIA! SOOAL CWB
SHllUYJONES ·,
('
I
sue Ne LN!Otm ·
,\
' \
, ~
'Ille ' ..._ la'C
.. Gt ... ,...,
cMone!
-e11y0c1re •.cfive Wt•r
for
1"tn ·end boys
two new colors in
le¥i cords:
r11pberry & pist1chio
"
, . ' '
( ....., .. llllltrlte4 ,.. c..,.... Socl .. Cl1t;,
,....., lie 1Mt
0the' tfrh ..... Ii" tt19,.,
••••• ., .. tlltc"9Nlll It .... , ...... .
, ;J'hey mal<e their
~laws
at "The·Cheyenne •
' Soaal~lub"
L
.
'
IN TAE WESTMl/"STER CENTER
·~ . WESTMINSTER AND GO ... DEN WEST -892-4493
BETWEEN GARDEN 'GROVE· & SAN DIEGO FWYS. ' Charlie'gsrc;Wn \ . ,. .. . ~ t:"dand 'the · .. ·
1Hanut•~ Gang
,~ · !!. -, in their ·
I~ ~~cMovie!
~e4 'Bay Jtlamed
Charlie 'Brown"
A L.E£ ltPDELSON· BU Wl.f.RDEZ POOOOCl1:lH -""Bill MEl..BUz
_._,, OWILf.S M. SQ;llAl -., I.EE MENOElSOfi IN Bill •lllEl..EJIE -· .-: . . .
HOLIDAY~ MATINEES -Friday-S1turday-Sunday
"It is the perfect entertainment for the summer
months!"
"THIE OUT·Of·TOWNERS" i1 1om1lhin9 to 1ee. Wt prtdicl lhtrt
w1111't ht roo m in the 1i1les lor .ill tho1t who will f•ll off their
11 1~1 l1u9hi 119!
-Ron• lerrett, Metromedia TY
,;,, lllE' ftll'r-1llE._'l'ftlllllE-. . " . "" . _.,,.. .... ~ ~· " ~·--. . .
---ti' ; I \>: i 1-.. --""""' .......... ll<"""flo ... atll ...... ~-·· ,-.o.M'lt"'JO:'OltS -.. ,. .. ~ .... cc..1'l"!l'l'~¥"_,..1"'t'l\#I!:
Ortn:ge County Prei:niere En919ement
-
-·
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'Zabriskie' Star s -.. ' . . '
Us ing Own'Name s''
Mark Frechette and Daria
Halprin, bolh discovered by
famed Italian d i r e c to r
Michelangelo Ant.onioni (J)low-
Up) tor his first film produqed
in the United States for MGM,
"Zabriskie Point," use their
own names for U!e characters·
they play in the· film which is
being shown in Orange County
\heaters.
Th e stories of how Mark and
Daria were chosen for the
toles · are in the tradition of
110\lywood legends.
When (irst seen by Anio-
nioni's scouts, Mark Frechette
\VRS standing at a bus stop in
C a mbridge, Massachusetls, ·
· swearing at a man who had
thrown a geranium pot at a
quarreling couple. . lntrigu~d
by the anger and v1olence 1n
the young man, Antonioni's
people told him abou{ the film
and asked him to come for an
interview the next day.
J\1ark Went t.O work as usual
but when · he smashed his
thlfinb and had to go down-
town for a tetanus shot he
figured he might as well go to
the interview too. After talk-
ing to several people and hav-
ing some photographs taken.
Mark went back to work and
forgot about the interruption.
...
scenes from "The D e e r
Pork," then went back to ~ston again. · ~
A few weeks later he receiv--
ed a message to Can MGM at
a certain number. He made
the call and reached a .Vr.
Saperstein in B r o o k:.l y n ,
Furious and perplexed, he was
sure a friend was playing a
practical joke. B u t i~
vesligation showed that the
number was in California -
the area .code bad been omit-
ted. ,
, He wen t to California and
sat aroUod the MGM Studios
all day. Finally, late in the
aftemoon\ Harrison Starr, ex-.
ecutive prOducer of "Zabriskie
Point," strolled by and said
casually, "Oh', Mark. You still
here? Well , you've· got lhe'
part, so go, back to Boston and
report for work back here on
Monday."
Without ever having a
California screen test, Mark
Frechette became the 'n\ale
lead in a movie whose script .
he had never read, filmed by a
director he had never heard
of. MARK FRECHETIE ~D DAl!IA HALPRIN
Use . Own Na'm11 In 'Z•briskie Polt:'f' Movie Antonioni had seen Daria
dal)ce in a film with ·other
members of a San Francisco dance group. He was sure-she like he would help me with the ed -yeah, I'd recommend
was the girl for his film. An scene, which he did several it." As"io the future, she'll just
interview and screen test con-times. He was v e r Y let it happen with b e r firmed it. permissive in his attitude
Li . p•zzan ,
\Stallions I
In Show
"
PREMIERE ilRIYE·IN SHOWING
''THE. LANDLORD'' . lhffftJ
P US• "THE GROUP"• Color -·---·-·---------·-" Show Starts At Dusk But ten days later he was in
New York being ioterviewed
by Antonioni along with about
forty other young men. At the
end of the day only five re-
mained, Mark among them.
Next came a screen test for
Which-Mar-k reJuctantly shav-
ed off his beard. He read some
.> H 1 1 do h t' customary coolness: "She was extraordinary in towaru me. e e me w a 1 __________ 1 the teal," he says, "She has I would do instinctively. W}len COllllll
Children Under 12 FRIE . ,
HI· WAY1S-DR1VE~IN ·
-........ _ Tl.litTl!!cpre .~et'·l690
HELD OVl!:lt
l llG DISNEY PltODUCT IONS C11'1fl11-Ditty l ft.M.
"SLlEl'IN& IUUTY" ...
"'THI CASTAWAYS ..
Wlltl H ... lef'" M,llk
,__,.,.DP ll06S• M80CIATU
Exclusive
Southern Californla
Engagement
Starrin9
PAT BOONE" o,;,, w.1""'"
11i1h ER IK ESTRADA • JACKIE 61ROU(
DIHO DcfltlPPI • J0.11111 R0$111W"
Scru~pl1r ~1
~DK MU~AY ind JAMES IOHMEf
MU$iC bf RUPH CARMICHAEL
Tllrtc1ed ~J IGPJ Prtducc~ br
llOK MURRAY' DICK ROSS
f(5UtA• •llfOlnUJIC(S f UllSll IN
1101. '"'~ Tllurl: 7,XJ, ''"° 00'1.v.N COLOll
P M/Fd_. s~t. & s~~. PlllN'TS 6f
12, 2, ,, 6, f, 10 PM 'fECltNICOl.Ofl
the best qualities for an ac-_ h~ had any, sugges~Ollll, ~e "I);,.:::~
tress. She is so sincere she himself made them m an 111-"'
can communicate anylhing tuitive way. He didn't bave[,miiDlll!
everything.'' · ' any preco~ceived idea of ~hat
Darii:..., is a girl of simple he wanted me to do. tmUI he
tastes :and almost auperely saw my fll'st reaction to a
, simple dress except for,1om-scene.".
nipresent beads which make A. na~ve of K e n t f i e l d ,
her a part of the generation of Cahfom1a, acros~ the-Bay
the moment. Having been a from ~an Francisco, Daria
.part of show business as· a wa~ a f1.rst.year stu~ent ~t ~e
member of a dancing troupe Uruvers1ty of California ~n
Which toured Europe and the ~rke~ey.whe~sh~wascast1n
United States she understands Zabriskie P..01nt.
the dictates of the profession. With the film now in the
''.I wasn't nervous," she says past, Daria says of the ex·
of her first day's work in the perience,' "I had a Jot of
film. 1 figured if I . did choices thrown at me all at
.. anything: Michelangelo didn't once, Met new people, travel-
WALT DISNEY'S FABULOUS
I IF A N T 'A s I A LI
' Recording
the World's Finest Mutlc
CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM 2 p.m.
.
STARTS WEDNESOAY, JULY I
Walt Disney's
I I B 0 A T .N I K s I I
ONE MORE WEEK
1 a Acodemy No'"h1ilttOM
''Epic batUeof the sexes!" -Vincent Canby, M.Y, TimtS
RICHARD BURTON
• HD<l~V \1111
GENEVIEVE BUJOLD
.. ~~NE •O~N .,. •
r:t HIY KIDll t.:i •PAL SHOW SAT.:=
Beach Blvd. at Garden Grove 'fwy.
534·6282 '
IN NEW SCREEN IMAGE
3 TIMES BRIGHTER
'· SHOWN AT 8:15 AND 10:30 P.M.
COME EARl,Y! eoxomcE OPENS 6:30
'GIANT PLAYGRDUND ·DINE WffH US! . '
Pacific~s FOUNTAIN VALLEY
DltlVE0 IN THEATRE
AT ~AN DIEGO FREEWAY
IROOKHUIST (SOUTH) OFF~
Tll.8'HONI '62·2411 .
ORANGE COUNTY PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT
When ·~,. .. 'pni for ... otd-of·louma,
dlq.raU~ fG .. ,au.
JN THt HAL WALIJS P!tOOUCTlO!'f • ....
~~~~~II vlime ef tire 1tlousa11.~ Ders @j""
•
BALBOA ' "'"""'' ""~~o
673-4048 '
OPEN •
•:45
7Dt !. lalbol
l .1lffai l'•nln1ula
Nolhlng has been felt oul o!
"The Advenlurers"
A~l'ICll,llf
a!ll lllmllBI 11 llWIBI1111
llAMllllll
11111lit11111UIMl1111f
~ M!lll Hlllll ,.._ .. ,.~~-
ALSO
"THE
ITALIAN JOI"
(( \~,tllllilf EXCLUSIVE AREA ~ TRUTH SHOWING
~ "'""
0 All •-Admitted 2to5 last CMd Hwy. ,.....
·"'-Coron• Ml Mir
... loo ·-Cleol ho ORANGE • •
' ·"n.iO......t .... ·--• 1 •
... 1111 • 11111 , ••.
. .
• • . .. Fr"'ld,Y::.'ccJc:.u~~'·--'-"..:.o _________ oA~l_LV_P_IL_O_T·~1 .... 1 ';
Deadline in Art
Contest Extended
.~01t//J ( ()([.\;[ /ft jJC /[11 1 I
fllDAY
"l .. t $""' tf !tit Orl!IP Celmty SelMll'' -D.ft, "ONE FLEW OYER THE CUCKOO'S NIST"
Cl..n THlnt
FOlt ll:l!ll•VATIONS; CALL '46-UU
' ' , .
1121 Ntwporf Bl'!!'·• CNll MIM !"-~~~~~~--~~~--~_,,
f.sPE'Ciii"M"A1i~Eis iiA1Lv'
SHOW TIMES DAILY AT
·t~·2"46-&-10.PM -----
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
NO SEATS 1!-ESERVEO
•
NER Of 4 ACADEMY AW
o'•" o\T r1• P.M. SHOW ITAATS o\T OUSK --lo
"I LOYI YOI
ALICI I. TOIW"
--·-1.11 1
STADIUM ,3 .·:
... ..-__._J., •u_:,..a, -_ ...
BI YO!iD THE YAU.IV OP THI DOLLS-u.m x
PLUI
'
with
Ml<lt11I C1ine
"O~ Y OP ANG l ,R" (M)
....... 1111• , •••
-Alt u ., ,,..,.
Orqe llrlYe~n' _ ... _
-c• .. ... .. , ... ,, ... .,..... 0,-ieA., .. ,~~
s.t •• .,.. .. 11• ....
• '
r
i ....... ,.._
------''-----I
• .. . •
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.,
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. • I: .. ,, -..
I
• .. .. ..
'I
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·•
II DAILY PILOT FrldaJ, July 3, 1970
.Tw9 Artists
I i
Show Works
• . .
MESA ART LEAGUE -513 Center St., Costa ~tesa. Hours: ·
Sal and Sun. t to 5 p.m. Continuous exhibit of art work lo
i----·--vanous medta"by"Art"bea~memberr.No-admWion charre.,.....__,,
UNITED CALIF. BANK -3029 Harbor Blvd .. Costa MesL
. On exhibit, during regular business ho\lrS, through July 15,
oil paintinp by Louise Young. . ' CAUF. ~ERAL SAVINGS '' GALLERY T 2700 Harbor'
Blvd., Costa Mesa. On exhlbi~ during regular buainesa
boura, fJiroulhVuly IS, oil paintings by Pal Ingram.
SECIJlllTY-PACIFJC BANK ~ JM E. 17th SI., Costa Mesa.
On Wtlbt during regular business hours through July 15,
water color and acrylic work ot Ferne Williams.
MESA VERDE LIBRARY -2969 M~ Verde Drive, East.·
~ Mesa. On exhibit during regular library hours throuab
July 15, arts and crafts by Donna Frlebertshauser •
•
AVCO.BAVINGS AND LOAN -3310 Bristol, Costa Mesa. On
elhlbit dlll'ing reguler buaineas hours through July IS, uil
palnUngs by Shl!'ley llo"·ard.
• CROCKER CITIZENS DA.'111: -2300 Harbi>r Blvd., Costa
Mesa. On exhJbit during recular busineu hours throuab'
July 15, oil and loryUc paintinp by Gordon Andrew.
.
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. -.
'.• . ' ••
• •
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HB PUBLIC UBRARY-525 Main St., Huntington Beach.
Houn: I a.m. to 9 p.m. fl.1on.-Fri,.; 9 a.m.-e p.m. Sal On
exhibit through July, 400 works by Calif. ert.ists in many
medlo, •-eel by the Calil. Arts Commission.
'Sesanie Street' -
Returning in Fall '
"Se!ame SU'eel," the hlsftly· LIOl'd N. MorriseU, P("sl·
acclaimed pub 11 c television . dent ef lhe lUrkle Foundation
aeries for lft!Cboolers, will and. chairman of the newly
return to the air in a new daily formed worbbop board Qf
series next fall, and may be trustffs 'innounced fonnallon-
joined tbe following year by a . .' . . second series designed to of the new corporation.
teach reading M> • o I d e r Mrs. Coaoey said the second
children. seuon of "~me Street"
The Children's Television would begin Monday, Oct. 19,
Workshop, creators of "Sesa· an~ conUme for_30 weeks of
me . Stree~" made this an-dally programming. ~ said a
nouncement rec!:ntly and also number ,ol new stations pr~
revealed that the Workshop bably will be added to the 200
has incorPorated as an lnde-now carry.ing the program
pendent production company each day.
so that It can continue to re-Thls season, KCET, Channel
search and produce other pro-28, has been broadcastl.ng the
grams that are both entertain-programs thl'ff times each
ing and educational on a wide weekday, and repeaU'llg all
range of subjects for children five programs on Sunday.
and young people. The format will remalq the
Mrs. Joan Ganz Cooney, ex-same next year, as will the
ecutive d i r e c to r of the target audience -the coun-
Workshop, has been elected try's 12 million three lo nve-
presjdent o£ the Children's year-olds, partkularty \he so-
Televislon Wor kshOJI. ill(. She called disadvintaged children.
was joined in a press con· Mrs. Cooney said the cur-
fettnce In New York City by riculum would be expanded.
principals of th) Workshop's however, with new production
major fund ing sources, who features aimed at:
have pledged to meet a six -Preparation for reading,
million doUar budget to cover including specif.le emphasis on
'production and broadcasti ng letter souOO.. and carefully
of 150 new one-hour segments selected sicht vocabulary.
of "Sesame Street." -More advanced numerial
Pre~ s conference skills, including teaching -or
p a·r t I c l pa n l s I n eluded sets and slmple adcHtion and
McGeOrge Bundy, president of subtraction.
the Ford Foundation; Alan -A more comprehensive
Pifer, p re 1 id en t of the approach to teaching reuon-
Camesie Corporation ; John ing and problem-!!OlvMg, and
Macy, president of the -New material dfslgned to
Corpor1Uon for Publk: Broad· beUer reach key et h n l c
cut.Ing, and Dr. J a m e s groups, specifically teaching
Gallagher, deputy assistant of English vocabulary t o
aemtary of HEW. U.S. com· Spanish-speaking children.
missioner of education James The Workshop also will tn·
Allen also appeartd In a brier crease its efforts to reach in·
Yideotaped alltement. ner~lty children. she said .
' _J
I
"
. -·---··'*'~--.. -...
-'
•Cot1nt'll· lubilee'
Acuff on· Dis~eylarid S~ow
f • '
Hear a summer series 'of nine "Pops" and "Big Brass" con~erts _
under the directioh of Henry Brandon ••• free to the public, on
the mall at FASHION ISLAND each Monday evening at 9:00 p.m.,
July 6 through August 31.
Thirty-five Profes~ional Orange County mll sicians will present
a delightful selection of all-time f avorlte.s during the nine week
Monday. night programs, alternating each week between "Pops"
and "Big Brass".
• You are invited to bring folding stools or cu shions in case of
overflow seating capacities.
',
«•Sponsqred by The ·Irvine Company and Fashion lslana--Mer.:-
·cha~~s' Association in .cooperation' with the Recording Industries
Trust Fund. .. •
l
•
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' I
DICK 'lliCY '
TUMBLEWEEDS
-.
MUn AND JEFF
.
JIJDGE PARKP
. ~LAIN JANI
II DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by •. A. POWE• I
ACROSS 45 Say lei
answrf
l Frol ic •7 Fortitall
S Kern 48 kffp close
enJorlMlnl •9 Miss Garbo
10 Drains SO Traer of
14 Surplus valuable
15 llovr list •·•·• mineral
Slncliir 53 Three: Prtf1lC
16 llap ~ Cartlrss
17 European SB All Baba 's
ieadtt command :
18 Petm lss io ri 2 words
to spend lit Decoralh't
li•t case
on land: bl App Ir
2 wOfdS macadalll
20 Expert 63 Entrance s
22 State: Abbr. M On1~btat
2) Hambur9tr flS Slippt'd
in91tdient &6 Sort
24 Kind of &7 Sllol 1nd
bird shtlt:
26 Bar Sl ang
27 Anilllilltd: .-. Informal DOWN
JO Communicali011
34 lnrbria ltd: l Round of
Stang dutil'S
JS San ·-· 2 Roman poeot Jb Char9' 3 A.ll ot 37 Bland 4 Pit« ti
38 l111porta nl rral t st1lt
Canad ian '> GloOll'IY -· trpotl b Support
40 A.l11s 1 T1lr
4 l Ending B Ripped
ustd with 9 Pronoort
Fottllll and 10 Exhausts
Pondl'f ll So,irt
42 Ed ic t 111ou~t1kl
43 Can·--ra nge
Y~sterday's Pu111f: Sotvtd:
"
IZ Tilt
Peacock
13 Gun
19 Unltltt'rtd 21 Seize
25 Gtrdit Howt ,t'.g.: 2 wtrds
Zb Br ing back
to sound st alt
27 A.nlmal 's
track
28 Comi>0sat
1'1 School
tflttbool:
JO Fll!hlless
tXI net
bird JI lllatl' up ror
32 Grttk
physician Jl Put lcwth 35 Gush
39 Poss essfd
1nno
40 Irish
statrsman:
2 words
42 Row ing ,. .. ,,
44 Favor lkS
46 Called 47 Made ready
49 Persona
11(11'! ··-· 50 lll inlons
of the law:
Sling 51 FOl'm of
sllica
52 Son or
Jacob
53 Empertr 55 Particle·
5& COii dust
57 Nullitricill
P"tlil s • Encouragt
110 comr"' pol,n : A.bbr . ' ,......,,..-,.....,......,.
'
"/
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PERKINS
Ir Climer Gould •"Tm.Le IN "TROii . N?•
MR. II DC.
Br T-K. Ryan -
A FEW WW<S WITH A CARNIE SIDE-
SHOW, 1HEN A SHOT AT VAUDEVlll.E
•.. l'LL HANP~E THE llOOKIN6S ANP
1AKE 107.!
AUIMJ.Y, HE~ verv FONP
OF a: HE tiOESN'T oarre
N'PIOVE: OF ™E l,AMGllA6E
'tOI 50METIMB DSE,.~T
~E POE5 Utu: VOii'
'
•r Frank BaCJl11$1d •
30 S"""'""1C Ucnat &:~UP ! '
Ill
GORDO
• • ·-•••c "-:• . ·_. .• :::.:·. .. . .
MISS PEACH
... :· :::.: ..... :·· ... ~=··~ . . . . . . .. .... . -· .· ... · -. ... •:.-.
MEY!
THATS
MY
PEN!
I
THER:E 15 NO SU';H TUIN.Q
AS A 'MISTAl'E~ He,iJ'lCON·
SCIOU5LY Wl5MES TO
MAINTAIN A R:ELATIONSHIP
Wm.I 'I0!.11 1'HEREl'OR:E HS tAl'ES VOUIC: PEN TO
INSUll:E: ms-~ ':\,, . ~ ' .. (·
i I I
( -J -t-' ''D
~ ... ·'
By Mell
Ir Al Capp
-IS """""'9EI> RJN>H-lllJT IT'S MAHONLV ~
FO'HOOM1'4 CDMIWllONSHIP-1'-----;·
,twt nlAHGf W01U1 • ,.. • . . -MR.MUM
. .
OJ
DENNIS THE MENACE
•Wit> OOYA CAL!. IF AU. 1141:: STUFFING cOYiES our OF 'lCUl. MATmESS z•
•
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• . •
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• • • • • • I •
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Friday, Jul) 3, 1970
1£A1\-£MD SA~ll{GS NOVI .
1967 DODGE
DART 170
' cro heet1r, s..i.... e11torn1l1C, fl I • ' I
Power 1teeri119. Exl.rem•IY c ''"
!TV02 ~01
$1395
1969 CHEVROLET
CAMARO
2 dr. h1rcltop; e11foP11efic, r1dlo, r h~iler, power 1f11ri119, whit1 w111 tir.._ CYQC611)
'2095
I
'
ON ALL
PLY MOUTHS
CHRYSLIRS &
· IMPERIALS
\
I
. s1395 ,
1969 PLYMOUTH·
ROAD ·RUHH!R
\I.I , '4-ipeed, redio, heet.r, f'Oi'r
1teerln9. b11clt1t ieeh, conto ••
lZWS lll ... · s2195
' _\
\I.I, eutornetic, red1o, heifer , pow ·
1r 1te1(ln9, cl1•11 lo'w '"il••t•·
tVER2~11
I
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-.. ·:'. -·: ·.
' ·-..
. .
. NOW!! ~IGA,NTIC USld CAR
.. · ~LIARANl!:I
fYERY CAR IN HUCH INVENTOR
AT DRASTIC PRICE REDUCTIONl
. 1.968 FORD .
• LTD l DCiOR. HARDTOP
• :,.. -., ' odio heeter, •390 ,. I e11torne uc, r • · ' . l breke1, f1c«iry ~wer. •t1","•"' 1 !oh of oth•r el• tir, ,-111y o '"'; 'i2t95 · I
1965 CHEVROLEi I
STA_TION WAGPN
6 cy/., r1dio, hl1l I IPIX96/) •r, re1 •co11omr; I
s.7_95 "
1969 ·CHEVROLET
NOVA COUPE r .
I.
•
1
:: 1·970. THUNDERBIRD ( -·--l. . . . .·-~.
2-DOOlt llAllDTOP.. OM~!E_~1500
Wllt1o ... .._.... ....... ' W9Y ...... ~ ~ -~
-'· .,.,...,.. ...... flrtMr •11• ...-.c1 from Pldtry List Prkt ~. -.. •Ilene• .,_, .._ ,_ -UM_M=IAn ..,,_tilt wflllt, fkforY 1lr cond .. tint.It I ll•&. --•• ~
..... ~ \'elltn.t!M. s.i.1 No. O'RUOUN7. DRIYIRY .
NIW· 'f970· F~ I OOPICK UP $2288 ' ~-: lOW•:oWN
__ . . LOW PMTS • . Serial No. FIOARH34362.
_NEW 1970 G~IE ''$00''
2·DOOR IMRTS~OOF OR ~DOOR llDAN
Y UR CHOICI ,
' 'l . ' l
"I
sasaa . :~. !·~~=.;
· NEW .. , 970 MAVIR1ck
'
Finl ,,_ 11r ,i;-~ :,_..,,...... -j · ~ _PIKE -~~ .... ·~~ 1888 ·-~·"'-
, • IMMEOIADLY1 DlilMRY • . : · . ----. .
' * * * FREE ;.;--. ;
. 7 DAY TRIAL EXCMNGE
· lluy.,..eofovr.nertlMil__....,_
Drhre It fer 7 llay'a and If yw -...
cempl ... ly .... died, traH If fer -
•f·the 200 ........ avalllillle. · '
TELEPHONE APPRAISAL ' ' u ..... •ltJr .. ,.. ..... _ .........
.. ...... ,..,. ... _ .. ___ _
' ............ ....
' . .
CREDIT COUNSELING
~·· ... ON DOWN PAYMINT! .
• ~.TIMI Oii .IOS?
• LITILI OR NO CUDm
•· OYnLOADID Wl1'll a1LL1 aUT mu
NllD AN AUTOM091Lft
COMI IN OR CAU M2-661 I OR l40-77IO
~·65: : FORD Cottina a:T.
' Bocket seats, 4 '!JOed. PBE O~.
·' ~ !'J-VW-BUQ ~~--. J / Runs great. KMX. 704.
'66 !~~-~~!~!~, ""''~ landau roof. WPX 325.
~64 !~!~~~K~ beau~, l~od i~l fac.tory air. VDU 261.
5988 ..
. '67 !!!!~~!~~~s~v~.•ulo. $1088 !
power steering. OCJ 767. .
f 69 ~:,!~!!w.!~nlerior.UG ' $1488
. '69 .f!~!.~~!., ~ staering, ,.. $1888
dio," heater, xtr.1 nice. No. 105159. .
'69 ~~"~ ~~!~~:.~ air.$2388 landau roof. YYM 050.
169 ~~~~d~~~.~ •• a!~·N .. ~2488
, '
Friday, July J, 1970 DAILY PILOT !$·
. SPECIAL PURCHASE .. ' . : . . SPECIAl.i, SAYINGS .
. NEW 1970 ft\V$T~NGS I
CHOICE
HDTI'. 5 YEAR •
OR
FASTBACK
50,000 Ml
WARRANiY
AVAILA~
LOW DOWN
&
LOW PMTS • 23&8 ~ .. IMMEDIAT~ DELIVERY No. lbll13nU •
--:NEW 1970 RANCHIRO .. " . . ... --. ,. ·~-r -•2488 , FULL LOW DOWN
! PRl.CE . LOW ~MTS.
. ORDDNOW
New 1970 L. T·.D. Sta •. Wgn~-. ---______.____ '
COUNTRY SQUIRE
ou.i 11el111 r .. r _.., Ot cu. Jn. v.a
_,,., crv1-110 •• .it COIWll ••
-· • ._ .. ""''· '""' w ..... ""· WirOIWs • WSW tins. AM1i:M rlodi. •
dJL "'"· redt • tint. •l•u • 11i.111UllY
,. -...__
51200 IMMEOI~ T!_ DD,!VERY: .t llOM IAc;lOrr USTlllCI
SAVE •• -;.
'
·NEW 197o'1FOiD. CORTINA
,... · I •. ~ · I ' -. · · . · • • 2-DR •
"" ' FULL PRIC£
'f """" • fully oyDChrooized
1Ntsmlaio.n, H.D: bater 6
~--dilcbcobs.
Ser. ·No. BAl2JX'l0505.
RENT: WHY WALK?. DRIVE A MAVERICK
LEASE: l TD 2,000R HARDTOP
''"" ahtrfag, dl1e brak•, 390 2V engine, 1ir Clfto
dlt!Oftlnt. wlthowoll tn1, 24.11lftltl .,.....,u1111. Call
1itri11 Dtpt,i42~11 ... ,540-neo. .
$& ......
"Miio
$1.15°5 :-.: l"htt ,.. ..
-
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ilous1s ~R IALE !HOUSES ,.(m SAU! HOus1s FOR SALE I Houses· FOR U.~e H<lus&s l!OR SALE~ ~USES-FOR SALE \Hous1s l'OR.sAl.1 Hou~s mR ~LE /HQU~E~OR SALE
r.al · 1000 O.....rel· "' 1000 General 1000 Gener•I 1000 Gen•r•I 1000 General 1000 General 1000 G41neral 1000 Gentral la
. ~ ~OOL & LOVELY * * * * * * •* * * * .
'
READ JHIS MACNAB· IRVINE J! VIEW 11 -I< *. ··J~V~.' R-* * oflnJ~ Jj/e ELB,9W ROOM '· • ~'·!."' 1 , .
FINER HOMES with VIEW -I< 1. '"""''""'• ..,, ,,. it-PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
3180 Sq. ft. o! cuit.om b11ilt, effke'wll k ~ ·~f*'· 'J11ty 4tti,
:
If you •re il'I the m•rltet for e
NEW 'home, 1e• these outtftnd·
{ ln9 customiied homes, ,built by ! M-•nk H. Ayr•• •nd SoJJ, ·!oc~t_ed
lti • prime ar•• in Central Irvine.
Th• home1 ere priced from
t29,990 to $'40,400, and vity in
site from 3 to 7 bedrooms, 2 end
l cat 9er•9e1 and 2 to '4 beths,
with shake or mission tile f'oof11
f irep'.lec•1, und!Jr9round utilities,
concr,.te driv.•ways, all buitti[ll,
end besic c1rpetin 9. Th•r• is VA,
FHA end CohY•nfion•I fin•ncin9
•v•ileble.
actu~ncy by August 1, 1970
, the RANCH-Ayrll!• .Hom11
•• _1 Since 1905 ~
Modelo •t
Jeffery Roed & S1nt• Ana Fwy.
714-838-5120
1.1 :00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M. .
• Open Houses
THIS WEEKEND .
ICHp fllh ..., • ......,-.... '" .... '"'!It-' ..
YH t• •• .,. ........ AR ... Mc.rt .. lh .... ti.low
-._riltH 11 .,..,.... ...... lty .n.rthlilf .....
wWe 11 tMloy'1 DAILY ,llOT WANT ADS. Potro•
&howl .. .,.. ....._ fef Mle er te .-t -11'9ff te
U1t slldl ~ .. 11 tt111 cel11111 eec• fridcry,
HOUSES FOR SALE
(2 Bedroom) '
324 Poppy, Corona del Mar ¥
673-6.110 (Sunday 1-5)
(3 Bedroom)
319 Driftwood Road, Corona ·del .Mar
67:J.0176 . tSat & Sun noon Iii dark)
4632 Siel-ra Tree Lh (Univ Park) Irvine
641rll235 ; 675-3210 . (Sunday)
228 Goldenrod, Corona del 11ar
644-4910 (Sun 1-5:30)
(3 Bedroom & F•mily or Den)
32.12 Colorado Ln (Mesa Verde) CM
540.2945 (Open House)
208 Via Mentone, (Lido Isle) NB
646-32.15 .(Sat & Sun 1·6)
*2006 Tahuna (Irvine Terr.) CdM
642-6472 ; 673-3468 eves. (Sun 1-5)
**433 Bayside Dr., Newport Beach
642-8235 (Sunday)
*2048 Commodore Rd., l Baycrest' NB
646-3255 (Sat & Sun 2-5)
1027 Tiller Way (Harbor View Hill§) CdM
642-8235 (Sunday)
1927 Santiago Dr. (Baycresl) NB
644-4910 (Sun 1-5:30)
*134 Harbor Island Rd., Newport Beach
644-4910 (Sun 1-5)
2907 Harbor View Dr (Harbor View Hills)
CdM 644-2792 (Sat & Sun 12-6)
( 4 Bedroom l '
***•5 Collins Island, Newport Beach
1135-5164 or 673-9043 (Sat & Sun 12·5)
**11 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) NB
675-3210 (Sunday)
149 Via Venezia, (Lido Isle) NB
640-3255 ISat & Sun 1·5)
1130 Santiago Dr. (Dover Shores) NB
642'8235 (Sat & Sun)
4545 Tremont Lane (Cameo Shores) CdM
642-8235 ; 675-3210 (Sunday)
3907 Topside Lane. Corona de! Mar
833-0700 : 644-2430 i Sun l ·5)
**342 Biiena Vista1 Balboa
833-0700 ; 644-2430 (Sun 12·6)
(4 Bedroom & F•mily or Den)
1606 Antigua \Vay {Dover Shores) NB
675-3210 (Sat & Sun)
*4627 Camden (Cameo Shores ) CdA-1
642·8235 (S at & Sun)
17642 San Diego Circle , Fountain Valley
962-7ll5 . I Open Daily ),
1430 Galaxy Drive, (Dover Shores) NB
646-1550 (Open Daily).
1941 \Vindward, (Baycrest) NB
646-3255 (Sat & Sun Hi)
2226 Alta Vista. (EastbluU) NB
833-0700 : 644-2430 (Sun 1·5)
858 Sandcastle. (Corona del Mar)
833-0700 : 644-2430 !Sat , Sun 1·5)
*1749 Skylark Lane, Ne\vport Beach
' 548-8281. (Sal & Sun 1-3)
i112 Nottingham (Westclil!) NB '
644-4910 (Sun 1-5:30)
877 SandcasUe (Harbor View Hills) CdM
644-4910 (Sun 1-5 :30)
($ Bedroom & Family or Oen)
1014 Polaril (Dover Shores ) NB
&42'-8235 <Sunday)
*15311 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB
&42-8235 (Sat & Sun)
I' Bedroom! **'° Linda Ille Dr (Linda Isle ) NB
'.644-4910 (Su~ 1-5:30 )
~
DUl'LEXES FOi ,SALE
(J & I hdr m•I
121 Marine, Bal boa Island
615-8809 (Sat &.Sun 1·5) ...................... , * * w-•••• * ....
____ ,.,.
I
BAYFRONT
Piet & float for 55 ft. boat; complete pri-
vacy & security behind electrically con-
. trolled auto entry gates. A-3 Bedroom home:
large living room, marble fireplace ; spa-
cious fa mi fy room, sunny breakfast room.
A perfect setting for the most stylish furni-
ture. Call P-1axine Williams at 642-8235.
CORONA DEL MAR
Livable home with minimum upkeep. Sunny
patio; 2 'fireplaces, 3 b~~ms. Perfect con·
dition. With the possjbillty oC exceedingly
low interest rate. $63,500. Jane Frazee
llAYFRONT
1uxur!ous living l>ehind 1he 1' ~ OPEN SUNDAY, iuLY' 5th v.~ht iron aatea or this . ' 'l; brand rr.!w Ivan Wells ho~ ~ WE'RE CEL.EBRATING
in ,Dover Shol'l!s. • Beet. ~ Sunda(fn Coro!!._a (l!fMarl Ney....n:clusive! lf--
room1, 3 baths pJua.powder -Near beach! Prime area! 3 BR. contempor·.
room. formal dining room +: ary custom blt 2 years ago. For the young *
artd dl'l!am kltch@n w l th at heart. Goo4 valuil. ' $79,500.
breakfast atta, Ol/tt.aized 228 G ld od ' panelled lam room wilh fire. -tr 0 enr . • · · , Open 1·5:30 *
place and walk in ~·et bar.
Luxurlouzly carpeted thnl·
out, 19 x 32 Sparkling pool
in landscaped courtyard. ~e gee today.
Ivan Wells & Sons
WESTCLtEF -$52..100
ii •Bedrooms & lam nii contemporuy w/3 *
baths. One isolated ))f!droom & bath. Un-
.. ,. usual flOor plan. Largi: yar:d & quiet street. .~
-1<··1112 Nottingham ·open Sat.Sun 1·5:30 *
' NEWPORT HEIGHTS
OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY & SUNDAY
' 26 Linda Isle DrlYe
Corp. owned. 5 Br. 5 bath home facing Harbor
Jsland. Jacuzzi & sauna. ·comp. furn., for
immed. occup. W /dock ............ $200,000 •
77 Linda Isle Drive
New 5 Br., 5 bath home on lagoon. Marble
eQtry, wet bar, AM/FM Intercom, Huge mstr
Br. bas beam cell. & own frplc. Large liv. &
fam. rms. w/lrplcs: w/deck ...... $185,000 . .
Occupied-Linda Isle Dr.
Cust. 6 BR., study, 5 bath home w/S frplcs.,
circular stairway, decorator selected carp.
& drapes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $210,000 E8stern charm, European craftsmanship .
The ultimate in waterfront View location. -5
Bedrooms, 5lf~ baths, den, formal dining.
Pier & float. Shown by app't. $225,000
Roy J. W&rd Co.:'
l'~XCLUSIV!o: :AGENTS
1430 G'alaxy Driv_, 6*-1550
-f()p('n Dally)
-"'l 3 Bdrm., 2 bath view custom home. Walk *
to, schools, beach & shopping. Oversized -tr • rear yd. Park your trailer & boat. $41 ,950. * ,Waterfront Lots ·
HARBOR VIEW H.ILLS -$54,SOO No. 54 : on· lag?on. With plans ..... $60,000
LAND '· 21h Acres with prime frontage near Hoag
Hospital. $200,000.
1l Near new! Ideal family home w/4 bdrms, * No . .fl : Long water view facing Harbor Is-
fam room &: formal din ing~ Well planned land wn6.2 ft. of frontage. Plans available.
BAYCREST
BUY TODAY
for your future
INDEPENDENCE DAY
1l efec. kitchen. Lge rear yard. 3 car garage·. ·""'--
877 SandcasUe Open Sat·Sun 1·5:30 ,..
-le LINDA, ISLE
NEW waterfrt home facing loyely lagoon. *
5 & Maid 's rm. lam rm '+ lge 1>layrm. Cp td ir & ready for decorator's touch. $169,300. *
No. 76 : Wide lot on lagoon ........ $85,000
No. 88: Corner Point lot with 118 ft. of front-
age. Long water view. Plans available.
For complete information on
other homes & lots, call:
5 Bedrooms, 41h baths, 2·story home on fee
Jand. 1-ovely formal dining room, large
breakfast area, enclosed wet 'bar' in family
room. Large storage a.reas. Poolsize yard.
St:e this for value. $93,500.
EASTBLUFF DOVER SHORES unUJual
floor plan plus "forever
view .. n1ake1 lhl11 spacious
80 Linda Isle Open Sun 1-5:30
if We have 3 other fine homes on Linda Isle. * BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
Call for appt. or see broker at #80. 1'!!!13!!3!!!!!Do!!v!!•!!r!D!r!.,!S!u!i!l•!!3!!,!N!'!.B!!.!.,!'J!. !.!-!!6"!2!-4620!!'!!!!!!J Truly a vacation home for year round liv-
ing. Pool with safety fence for children, On
a quiet, cul de sac with ocean view. Clean &
sharp 3 bedrooms & family room. Fast pos-
5 &droom. 311 Bath home
outstanding, 2 Bedroomz &
hath,in separale 1'·ing per-
-jc HARBOR ISLAND ROAD -$7',SOO it-I'
Decorator perfect!.Bright & colorful 3 & l·G::•::"::,.::'•::l=====l::OOO:::;G;:eno=:r;:•::l====='~I
den w/pool, lge covered patio & abundant Ir session. Priced at only $49,500. ·
CAMEO SHORES
~eeking the unusual ? 4 Bedrooms, 3 bath
pool home with s umptious view & private
beach. $69,500. Open Sun. 1-5. 4545 Tremont,
Corona del Mar. ·
HARBOR VIEW HOME
Come running! For this spectacular value in
Harbor 'View. 2·story, 3 bedrooms, 3 bath
home. Portofino model. Owner extremely
anxious. $41 ,500.
DOVER S!iORES ,
Unusual 4 bedroom view home. Surrounded
wiyi volcanic rock, Polynesian wet bar &
game room. Island kitchen. separate dining
room. Large indoor pool. $79,500. Call Amy
Caston, 67~3210,
THE TOWERS
Only 7 available. Panoramic bay & ocean
View. Exclusive 2 b'edroom apartments. Ele-
vators, terraces, Jacuzzi pool. 7% Financ-
ing with 10% down. Very special buy, $44,500
to ,58,500. Open Daily 1·5 P .M. 3121 W .. Coast
Hwy. Newport Beach. 642-8984 or 642-8235.
MACNAB·IRVINE
Realty Company
1080 Bayside Drive · 675-3210
6"2·823S 901 Dover Dr., Suite 120
Newport Beach
3 BEDROOM ANO
FAMILY ROOM
Take ovt'r $148.00 Ptr monlh
• 61~'"':. Ju Cosia Mesa, but
subjrc1 lo existing VA loan
• total payment $148.00, ar
no n1on('y riown to Vet!,
111inimun1 do"·n f'llA. Love.
Jy added family room, de.
111ched double g11raKe newly
adde1L This home ill in
model home condition. Own.
er atllllous, asking Sit.500.
See it today!
2629 HARBOR BLVD.
54M640
OPEN EVES TILL 8,30
$495.00 TOTAL DOWN
And moves you tn! ! Gor-
geous 3 bedroom hon1<',
beamed ttiling5 !ltrp-Oown
living room, be1nltiful carpet.
Ing, Two luxurious belhs.
Dble.11rage. All elt'l'tric kit.
ehen, all this Jor $19,000.
CAU.!
Walker & Lee
Realtor
2l'.Ml \Vt'11telitf Dr.
646-7711
Open 'Iii 9:00 Pl\t ,lftij.
VA-VA-VA
Nice 3 Bednn that has an en.
Ia ~ed "dorm" root" for a
groy,•ing family. Near Eleni
& J r. Iii Scllool11. Cl.lie pan.
t>led Jiving rm with 1haa:
crp1g. Will sell klw down
FHA or VA, Asking $27,750.
NEWPORT
HEIGHTS
Channing 2·bedroom & den
(or 3 bedroom I horn'-' wilh
TWO FIREPLACES! Locat-
ed on a quiet shady sttti!t
cooltd by the ocean brttze.
Alley AC<:i!B & space for a
boat or trailer. Low-rate as-
atlmable loan. APPRAISED
at $31,900.
' Coles worthy
& Co.
REALTOR
Ne1vport Ike.ch Oflice
1028 Bayrilde Drive
67>4930
NEWPORT
HEIGHTS
l/4 AC . Estote
Curving drive~'RY lettds to
Quaint nlanor hooS(', Open
beam t.'t'ilings. fan1ily room
bn-akfasl 11ook, lile bath~.
v.·ood floor. Vie~· of Newporl
Bay. '4 acrl.' ol beautiful
111rd<'n. C1111 oow 64;).0Ja.l
FOREST E. OLSON .
' lnc. Realto~
)!ARBOR N. or \VILSON
4o/4 •;. VA Loan
M11.y be taken over at $115
mo., includlne: all • not •
large bal., oo~·ever, Good
3 Ii Cam r n1 in ~ll"sa Verde •
ueeds paint &: 1<>me c.11rpets.
Make an oUtt • fix ii up •
a ve a FE\Y TIIOUSANO!!!
ir storage. Great location. lf-fect for 'teenagers or aue•t•.
1-'ormal riinina roon1, big
family rm wtlh 2nd fire. iC
placC. I~land kitchen with
breakras! Rtta I< ovcrziied
euJ:lboard11. Luxurloualy tar.
peted. draped &.landscaped.
134 Harbor Island Road Open Sun 1-5:00
BAYCREST BEAUTY -$81 ,500 lt-
Glamorotis 3 bdrm home w/family rm &
$95,000. ' .
ir · sep dining rm. Ideal floor plan. Shake roof *
& 3 car garage. Many extras.
Roy •·J. Ward Co.
Realtors
Dover Shores Office
1430 GAiaxy Drive, N.B,
646-1550
Colle(je Paill
With
-tr 1927 Santiago Drive 1 Open Sun 1·5:30
LIOO ISLE lt-
Oii Ll(fo Nord! Over 3000 sq. ft. of elegance
-tc in' baylront home. Beautiful & luxurious *
4 It md's rm w/formal d in. rm. By appt. •
WATERFRONT CONOOMINIUMS
Lpxury beach ).jving facing ~arden court.
-le Steps !<I beach or pool. 2 Br, 2 ba. $53.500.
Ocean view in So. Laguna. 2 bdrm, 2 ba.
ii Swedish lirepl. All electric. ,54,500.
"Our 25th Y ••r"
*
Low Interest
AssurnablL.Loan
A 3 bedroom 2 bafh doll ir
house In MOVE IN CONDI -
TION.
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO.,
Realton
2111 San Joaquin Hills Road Check Th'is
./ New ~·11.U to wall carpet
./ New waler hca!rr
./ Garbage disfl0881
./ New driveway and walk
Plu11
Fruit trees and a lovely
\\'ide tree linC"d s~"el
$29,200 .
$46-231 ~73-&SSO
'-O THF; REAL \~ F:STATE:RS
COUEGE PARK
ASSUME 5~/• 0/o
New Ji~tlng tn tree lined Col •
le'Ke park. SQUEAKY clean .
Like ll('W D/W, Mnt, free
yanl Take over FlfA loan
with annual percenlBie rate
of 5~ % . Call 645-030.1.' ..
FOREST l OLSON
Inc. Rl!altors
l!ARBOR N. Of Wll.SON
SPLASH SPLASH
!IEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
* * * * * * * * * ~ General 1000 General 1000
Bay & Beach Rlty, Inc.
2~COAST HWY., CdM. · •
CORONA DEL MAR, So. of Hwy. lmmac.
2 BR. & din. rm. Zoned R-2. '44, 750
IRVINE TERRACE. Panoramic view of
ocean & bay. 3 BR. + den & fam. rm.
SlighUy Spanish! Only 4 yrs. old. '88,700 .
2 HOUSES, 3rd block So. of H1"Y· 3 BR;
utif., 2 BR. furn. Approx. 1 I> lots. $49, 750·
BLOCK TO Big Corona Beach. 2 BR. 2 Ba.
Huge encl. lanai. l lh lots. $54,900
BUY OF ·WEEK. Broadmoor Estates, har~
bor view ; 5 BR. din. rm. Owner movilfg
East, very cooperative on financing. $66 ,150
675-3000 CALL ANYTIME 'This di lferent 3 Bit 2 bath
honll' w/sparkling ~ and
20 x 20 game room ts gre•t I
for par1ir~ and 11ummer fun.' %
Builtin kitchen, choice Col. lr~r P11rk locR lion. 1-'HA ap:. _.;:==:::::::::=:
548-1861 Eves
pr11isrd. Asking $34.950. Call ::. General 1000 .General 1000 now!
PAUL•WBl'l'I
CARNABAll I.SAi.TT CMl
1093 Baker, C.M.
NEWPORT
BEACH!-!
Lachenmyer
RC',1l l or
,
LEASE OPTION
CISM HS & P.OOL
}"'lt.buk>u• value near B.!aek
Bey CUstqm home. ~11iuti..
Jully paMlled ~mlly room.
Ctrcular bar. T~'O cbeery
.Orept•~. Deep Olympic
pool. Hi board. Rent now
buy Isler.
CALL 645-0303
FOREST l OLSON
Inc. Realtor!'I
HARBOR N. Of WJLSON
" OPEN HOUSE
"6 B!DROOMS"
Do you have a Jarge fam·
ily? We have a large home
for you. Thi5 place 11 FAN.
T ASTIC. Single story huge
llt'parate family room. al!IO
~·ith bC'an1M ceiling, No
more ero~·ded bedmoma. -
nne for each. SU bmil No
Down GI'!! or Low Down
t'HA, Sellrr Ill noady to ta1k
, , PriCf'd al $25.7:.0. CALL!
Walker & Lee
Re1.ltor1
2790 H11rbor Blvd. at Adams
~1'1~9'191 Open •tu 9 PM
Unusual, Different
SAT. & SUN. Older 2 Bedrm + sieeplna
a 1223 GOLDENROD rm llx19 addtd lo detached
l garage + pat vmrlcshop
f Broadmoor Hom<'I 1Sx32. All this for only
: Corol\11. Del Mar $25,500.
I $67,500 .. JOpen Evtnh111) b &"l-lllO M __ ...,..
-· CM <Optn Eveninpl 1860 Newpnrt Blvd., C.M. 1 :~~~·~;~~1:~,.,~,·~im~~=U=i~~~ GER~TY SUPER SPECIAL
NEWPORT HGn;. Two btkl IRVINE TERRACE Ml·511D CALL 646-,3928 ~5-3483
LIVE ON BROAOWAY 1--.1-·---~--
AppcA11"1< 2 bdnn l dc• with Ol.LEGE REALTY : CHARMING ha.rdwocd floon, cpltl, and •l&X>,.,.atHatW,Cll 3 Bedronm homf'. l\1 Bllth11.
dnipes, Obi, e•nac. fatr lh~ge f11imlly room. Pool11b.:OO
aized lot, pa~ all~ al ONLY $21,500, 3 BR, near yarrl "A'ilh child', playhouse
l't1r. NeAr 17111 Strttt and HARBOR HIGll, APUmt A !lflndbox. S~.<XM>.
Wr5tcllff Shopping Center. present 5~ ntA LOAN. THE FOX CO .
Priced 1o·M!ll ta,t at $23.9'.iO'. KINOAARD R.E, MI 2-2222 REAL TORS 67). .. 95
M. M. La8orde, Rltr. ntE QIJIOU.'R YOU CALL.' THE SUN N R SETS an &I~ 1'~VCll, 646-4~179 -THE QUICKER YOU ~E:O. .15AIU' PJLOT"'WANT AD"S!
,.
L. _....L
• I
from Ha"!>or HJ and .17th St, 3 Bedrooria and family room
shOf>plna ~nt~r. Thrtt btt· •• h r ~ neVi' applbncn • move-in rm, twd ... t , am, nn. co.1dltion _ lu-p he8.tec1
b11n1.1n k11ctien. Enelos«I: _._... -·· . . pool • Sll,!7l ..... land ..... .,., ~ acrtt1..,.,·lt1 pa.tio. A U
12 .Cl
beau1y at only '-' .?QJ. As-CURJ DOSH Rea '"""' •w 'II , ........ 1.... , ltur
M. M. La&orde, Rltr.
646-0500 Eves, S48-326S
Dial ~ & eh.uze·lt.
M2.&t72 l.Vts. ~
1730 W. Cout Htghway
. .
~
Coldwell, Banker OFFERS:
OPEN SUN. 12-6
BALBOA BAYFRONT HOME
342 BUENA VISTA. Cusl<lm 4 Br. home
completely furnished. San d y beach. 701
Pier, 40' dock. Pro:rimity Nt?'wport Harbor
Yacht Club. $169,500.
Cathryn Tennille
VIEW-IRVINE TERRACE
For full enjoyment or living, you must see
this 2 bdrm., conv. den home. N e·a r golf
course, bfst schools & F ashion Island. Own·
er living out of town and anxious to sell.
}.take offer! $89,750 ..
Kathryn Raul ston
HARBOR VIEW HILLS
JUST LISTED -Immaculate 4· Br., large
fam. rm. & formal din. rm. -popular tri-
level model. Large, well landscaped yard + 1
man y extras. J\. rare buy at $68,950.
Bud Austin
BROADMOOR-OCEAN VIEW
This is the one you have been waiting for.
4 Bdrms., 21h ba., fam. rm .. liv . rm., 2 fire-
. places. Loa'ds of extras. Best toe. Communi-
ty pool I> blk. $65,500.
M. C. Buie
UTMOST PRIVACY
lndoor·outdoor living at its best, with no
tloBe neighbors. Corner location in Irvine
Terr. Lushly planted patio & pool -3 Bdrm
-can expand. Some Bay vie\\'. $61,500.
Mary Harvey
VIEW-POOL $59,750
OPEN Sat. & Sun. 1·5. Lusk Home -858
Sandcastle. 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath, famil y rm.,
2 frpl cs.,~rkfst. area. 3 car garage. Walk to
Corona de! Mar beaches. Age, 21h years.
Mary Lou Marion
CORONA DEL MAR
Beautiful ocean & bay view -3 Bedrooms,
2lh baths. family. din ing. breakfast & laun-
dry rooms -21h fireplaces, walled court,
3 car gar."Only 21> Yrs. old. '55.oilo.
Carol Tatum •
POOL-VIEW ~AND
PRIVATE BEACH
Ocean view home on huge lot with kev acc.
to 3 pMvate CdM beaches! Big LR .. Cxtra·
large fam. rm .. htd. pool, lush lndscpd. pat-
ios. no grass! $52,950.
Bill Comstock
BLUE PACIFIC VIEW
Invites you to 3907 Topside Lane in Corona
del Mar. 4 Bdrms .. 2'h baths & loads of
charm. Open Sun. 1 'Ill 5.
Harry Frederitk
EASTilUFF OPEN SUN. 1 ·5
2226 ALT A Vt~ A. 4 BO .• 21> ba. Lusk
home -larRe wood paneled fam. rm. Con·
venient to schools -recreation &: shopping.
IdeaJ family home!
Harrt~tl Davies
133-0700
' . '
frklQ, Jul1 ,, 1'1b
HOUSl.S 'OR SAL! HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi! HOUSll ,OI SALi
DAILY PILOT l
RENTA , HOUSES ,OR SALi! HO.USES FOlt SALi -HOUSl!I ,Olt SALi I ,H=:.;:S=.:..;;.;;..:;;=;;..._
10,~-~·~·~1iiiiiiiiiiiimi1;000;;0;'~"'~';'1i;;;oiiiiiiiiiiii~1000~1 o :;";"";;;'";;;1;;:;;;:;~;;;1;!!';:·~/.;°"'~~;='":'";:';:;:;:;:1;000;;/~M~"~';;;v::.=;or~ilo;;:-;;;-:;;;1~1i"10 ~ le'.!!!._.!!! c0,... lier Mor
,. I • j E" t t s I El<pnt. br, 3 ... din '. OCEAN FRONT C.D.M. DOWNTOWN
tto\I'" FumhhMI •
Rontaltt.lhtire HIS I 1250 H""""""" laoch. la
Pele Barrell_ f<eaft'I
pl'e6etil6
OCEANFRONT
2 CUTE BEACH HOUSES, side by side, on
R·2 lots. Buy one or both for run and in·
vestment.
4701 Seashore Drive . , , , , • , . , , , • $54,000
4703 Seashore Drive ..... , . , .. , . $56,000
LIDO ISLE
CHARMING s mall home,
just remodeled .............. $54,500
CHALET STYLE 4 BR .. 3 BA home $63,500
ARCHITECTS OWN 3 BR & den,
2 story .................... S69,500
BIG S Bedroon1 Colonial,
on oversized lot ........ , ..... $97 ,500
BEAUTIFUL NORO Bayfronl home,
pier & slip ................. $220,000
EXQUISITE New Soud Bayfronl,
pier & slip ....... , ......... $235,000
IRVINE TERRACE
VIEW HOME -3 Bedrm,
famil y, lovel y yard .......•..
VIEW HOME with pool -
reduced by ................. .
BAYCREST AREA
GREAT New Listing, 4 Bedrm.,
$53,500
$9000!
lam., 3 BA., etc .............. $37.500
IVAN WELLS 4/5 BR., family,
dining rm .. pool ............. $74 ,950
REAL PRIDE of Q\vnership -
4 Bedroom, custom ...... , ... $77 .000
UNIQUE CUSTOM 5 Bedroom.
family, dining .............. $89,500
TOP QUALITY 4 Bedrm., 3400 sq . fl.
lovely patio ... , ............. S~5,000
4th of JULY WEEKEND SLEEPER
Extra Sharp, Ne\vpor t Shores Beach Home
$35,950 Furnished
J Office Open Saturdays & Sundays
'PETE BARRETI REALTY
1605 Westcliff Dr., N.B.
t.. 642-5200
fl. I ., A S I e I e_ i:;'°:..."!',. ~~.' =,;. =... "'.:!:'. ~~71~) Double Header '=. :·:,i·:,:,\ ":,i,.':: ~-•:::, 7 .~~ ol..itida , al e o.llahttul 3 8edrm hom•,1::::::=;:-.::::::::;;;:;:::= 986 3816. 1. Cott ... by l1'e $H 3 car ae/llley, Pro!, tod. ,,,,_ dependabl•
F'1Lbulous tradltlonuJ hOme covered Pf.Uo, new carpet-College _Park 1115 MUST SELL Whl~ water view of little acpd. Sell CI or FHA. Own.. worun. 21.aG )'tut of Qt; On the ba.yb'otlt o( Ing and tnll trtt ..,.,,._ '--"'.:.:..--= Coro be··'-A bachelon U' tn.1'1111. 1 child O.K. $90 mo. 91).1134 lkautiful LJnda We _t 1 •-"'· PRIC'.ED $1210 below qpra! Wilt TRADE na ........, aftt g \Vltb p\IT 1 alip Court appraiaaJ $22,CO'.I -o~ for qWclt: aalt by owner. BtautifuJ. • Roomy Baycrnt _ Wea.WQ" in a lf!C!uded ~ 341.8501 Ev•. BU'?& ="',,,.Po,.·,,. ... =-,.-,-,..,=
Large bayskl.e deck feni aubjl!ct to court ap; FllA or VA flnln avail. CUBtom-built 4 bClnn home r: tetti"C". took' tnto this ~ SHARE lowly al)l or priv.
•, ·~room1, • •--•-,•roval*. CaU •""""'.· * Ne .. ~·· decor 4 BR, 2 i.., on lg. lovely lot on -aectuded bedroom J story Charmtr ,\ 1""411 l I J.;i rm/bl.th w/elitan, na.d,
Spacious fMmUy room We !1-\te ! openlnp for ex. :.:.. ::.:~~ cpl, ::e~ Xlnt loan prov1&ton
12. BEACH TIME -•• ... • ttMn Bch. Vliew. Walk to • 1 • -, ~·e ·~ 154"" ~~·~·~"!!~-~1~;·~·~~ motun womaa. Lar • • • "r
SU11ey bay view kitchen penenced, pro.fQsional men<i,,,o--:==_;,.~~~~ wa:d, 548-0773. Euy walk to bla Corona ewl")lthin&. ~n. 4
$179,000 orwomen ExcepUonalbene-BY OWNER, 3 BR. 2 BA. 4 Br, pool, Bayaut-llke btach. 5 BEDROOM SHARE ~y &le1a11t ,
Exoellent Flnancin&: fitst!! aaU ~. larre, livirc rm + maey new, Fee llUe. Fam. rm, * 5 BEDROOMS '38.500 .. Hardwood noon, waterfl'Ont home w/dock. ;
extras. 350 Hanovtr Dr., Id loe.n, nr. tchlt, ahop * l BATHS latre UTeaulat siz~ lot, bU. l\fu, 3IMO yrs. $150 mo. ~
Realtors
''Our 25th Ye ar"
In the H1rbor Ar••
673-4400
c.o.ta MetL $29,500. 548-8281. *WALLED PATIO in range,41ven, dhhwaahu, '75-4331 J
54G-9'199 BAYFRONT &¢. dlx 2 Br, * ONLY $48,500 latfe Uvinr room, family 1
2 Ba Condo, fine tum. CALL QUICK room, plenty of room and A~_,_1~. ~ l ~ f ~ S..ch 1200 ~~1$10M dn. A 1 t • 67U550 1tona~, dble caraae. 1 fu:~: m:M";~~· -I
NO DN VA or LO ON FHA HARBOR VIEW HOME ./ BAL. Penin, 3 Br, J.c, I' ~~-D All~:.~
1-$19;950,-clean, 2 BR,..--R·2 mc>dt'L l BR 2 Ba tonn&I Manball Realty, Call : 2 Fine EaataJde locatio~ Much IOUgbt after "Carmti" patio. $4.S.950. Fr an k ff!.447·1 ( =.) MM11J nn a: bath. $1lJ mo. sa;.oon; -
1 Z-$23,650, 3 BR, htdwd firs dini Pi ~ '°'.,.._""'=~--~~-SWIM DlPLOYED Mae, 2>35 l l==:::::::===::=,/!KIN~:'.G~AARD~~R~E~M~l~:i.2222~~1 LUXUR!ng nn, WI • rm. 2 BR·--.,_ .. '-""n, VIEW HIDEAWAY In Your Own Pool!. yrs. to share Newpt:!f"t a · · ous inlttlon: by .., ru• ..... " u .... 2 Bdrm ~·· 1 ·--~ Acr•Pool teadfng decorator! Protea. mUJt aell. Make otfer. nus..... · u-i .... eve · Prfstige borne nt'lr Marina Shorff home. $150. ~· Low Interest ~--. ., .,_ Mod. kltcbeo. lllch "'*""· High, 3 BD f11m rm, OOY. >!AN -~--~ ... w/~, 3 Br, 2 Ba, hOrses OK. ~ hxllcpd, Omice loe., clo.e vw•....-~ Ste to be ch • .., "' •l&U,.. '""' _..
er/ A.gt, 548-9477, &U-5000. to Swim Qub 1: Parle. QuU.. 119 • a · ettd patio + 15x36 H/F Newport Bee.ch. 1
Assume 6% GI loan. 3 Bed·l==========-1 ity features TOO NlJMER. Newport ~eights 1210 Open Sunday .t-5 pool, G.I. or FHA terms. ' Ce.II &U-lm I
rm, l~ bath, shake rool, Costa Mesa 1100 ous TO LisT. Call .,. tor 324 POPPY · TM Real Estate Mart ···~wood """"· d •-"-·~-· NEWPORT Uni""'ily R<alty mt510 M7-15ll Mn• Vo-'-2111 1141-..i. e....,.., .MlUllf:U, Cltt\IJl&.llC)I, ....,.1 E Coast H....,. CdM ·~ $26,950 FOR SALE nu..i .. MUSTSEE!S43.500 HEIGHTS -. -, ..
By OWNER • Red Hill RNlty $16,o-• * SHORECLIFFS * Faun!•!• V•llay 1411 B::UT.;.:.,Br.;.~<oo"":' :
Assume 5% % GI loan, 3 Bed· Univ, Park Center, lrvinl UU 3 BR, 2 BA, charmlna: ruJ. $2'50 TOT Al DOWN 962-2326 aft 5. '
rm, 1% batll, corner lot, 3 bedroortlll &nd la.rp fe~ cau AeytJme 833-0820 Charmine 2 Bedroom cotU.p ~c. Euy wallc via prlv. [-,========I $
'
'""' -I. yard, Perteet for childrenl'!!!!!!~~!'!"~!!!!!!!!P w .. 11.0 .... dll:•--to an. ohop.. gates to 2 btacbu. l'ee lot Buyt, attractive 3 bdrm, con-N-•~-...a. -, ,...,.,.,. ....... r• ....... ,. ..,"""' room .... _.... "'---'-' do. Yes! A--• .. :-;.,.. room, ...,.rt _.. --~
$26 500 and peta, Fttshly painlod -BY OWNER ... ExcoU..t c:oodl-•• ~. "~"· ·~ ~·-, •
. , ' living room just paneled. Weetclitt Villa'• F1nest P -646.-1 I $65,000 for qu1ck sale! 2poo~~-electric blt·ina, + 2 YEAR Leue - 3 Bedrcorn,
"l,500. for adult ..-c1ou1 llv'g. 7 7 67¥176. ~ Ne port ... ...-='="~=~-~-II% LOAN 3 bath, den, extra room w VA NO DOWN separate 1-story condo unit. QllNA COVE Bl.y Frt. nr. Roomy 3 bdrm entry hall off patio, dbl sarase.
•t · • Lae. master suite nu. 2 •ty, 3 bd, 2 ba,· 2 sepr llvin ~ family prden mtne on or before ; FHA·LOW DOWN w/•l•aa•t O.!h, 2nd brm lrplc, b!t-IM, "'Pl, drpe, _...: 1 .. • ~---· •--• July lS-$350 '" mo. Wri" • Fairview 'C'.-o•••• --w ............. w/bath, din'c rm, 1-. llv:e bal-. -!cal patio, • .....,,,. -... ... u.,.. ~··v•ce 1,,,~. y.1.-.. o .. Loull·""-""'"' u.., a•,,__ ....,,,... nn y,•/trplc, all bit;:~ OW.et REDUCED To $25,500, by bulk-bee.di;";, $128,000. porch lge patio, pool i lud °"""~nu nu.: v....,.,
G.I. No Down area, 3 pvt. patiol, en. Owner, aMWne 6%. VA, Ownen office f213 ) yd, On!)' $30,500 + aood i ,..:;Ky::.·:,,,"11J7:::.::.;.·~~-~-,r
or oe~area w/B-B-Q, lot-. ~ ~-•,,!., B1R. ... cor11 469-6255; Wkend ( 714 ) tenns. Courtel)I Realty WVEL:_. .. ~ B,!t~ bayw•~-! •
$1 500 do FHA 1..A-..1 ua:u ,, ... u vw--... ,. !IS2-7751 BA. ol.-,...,..,..,.-, ~-~
:::=::/vrny' SHARP wi; bdrm •• ::;.,...., main...;;..-,;;;; ;..::.~·ask for Paul ~ 3 CAR GARAGE ... tal. ""3Sth St. • :
ADOBE doo (or 4 bdrm) -Laree cov. • drpe. Prico rlfht, "'YI=,...,,-,-=,.--,-,-,-5 ladrm/Lo lnterHtl SMALL beach-·.....,,... •,. -ered patio .. excellent area • linllncl..-. Call owner an. BY Owner: End of cul de BESl' BUY tN CDM monthly $150; winter $95. • :
Fantastic custom home ontil\lul don't wail. $24,9SO. l•'iiii;.......,ioiiiiioiiiiii ... iiOiii• I Ac. 4 BR 2 ba, apridng Spac. 3 Br, den + apt. Mow N~:!._ ~!utitul1 --~ course. Weekly $15. 642-3121 ! acre overlooking beau z.Jlz.7171 pool N• -~-•--•pne Mkt •.a""" ..._,, ...,.,, • .....,. ....... ""'t'l<U e........... drape• •
Santa Ana Canyon, 3 Bed--THE ILUFFS be~h. ~~· ..., ' ~m.-· ......., ~',,...,.."' Ex~nent Tefm.1. • UNUSUAL-contemp 3 brm.,, ' ~:ri~P=! f! M:. Condominium $27.950 3 BR 1% ba, 1300 ~ HAFf~':..:~AL TY ::;. rvJ: .r:::rr-~ J ~ L}v~;n1Vw1andthcon~rsauuoc·hol"'iiiiii""iii""iiiiiii;;l ~lBRNe2wport\IBA.8'Hacl> lili:v-=~tt.c1p~xintw~.~ *HOMEY* BY OWNER -4 BR'11, 21h, L'~-11•-2251 .t·, ptt. '" er a ... m .1• .... , uce v. owner M8-&MS You will like this nice 2 BR. BA'a, 1amil)' nn, service ... ,. ,•
much more! Hones OK. ALL FOR $23,500 inC rm 1:-dlninc nn. Owl'-home, So, of Hlway, cpts. porch, patio, Ira cukle-e&e LOVELY Lido 1a1e S ' May exchange for beach Joolrl-"-n i....tt:• Ask"· .i--1 ~-• · 3BR,1%BA,db1egar.,1hab .... .., e•~~ ~ Dover Shoret 1227 &. ... .,1., .. .,. run .. ~ &U' lot, 1p. for trlr/boat. Many bedroom . home tcr .leue.
property. roof, huge yard (fenced ing$f.3,SOO, Eva: &o.01151---------ht., din. ~a. $39,500, extru! $33.500. ·17642 San Available Jub' 11 lD Sept.
Mal·n Realty -Rltrs. -wltht cu~ ...'.""';>·}l:!:'.'~.~-. I *MEDITERRANEAN MORGAN REAL TY 0 .... Cir., F.V. SS-ru; '-=",,,· 615-='=*=====f~ •·vs « >1 ....... ILIA;ll Exceptional Bay & mountain 673-6642 675-6459 BY Owner: Jl'11 a Beau .. ·, 1 • BOB OLSON REAL TOR ~ a.1•--I I NI 2W view. Private & spacious, * * $54.500 * * 3 Br, 2% ba, lra tam. nn, . -I a
Call 545-8977 or eves: Call 546-5580 nearly new. 4 Bdrms, ex· Channing duplex, So. of u.UI. nn., frplc, crptl, ,drpl, WINTER rental _ Ch&rminc !
_. IG =;;""";;;';;•;I =;:;;;;;;1;;000;;;, 1 T_o,,m!!!!O"he!!!nlo""rf"or'","!!!"633-3926!!!!!Pl"""'!"~~~~"!!!!!!!•I 188) Newport Blvd., C.M. pandable, 4% ba + maid's. Hwy. Patiol, trees. A. full landspcrll. Very dote t 1~~-----~-• = *TRIPLEX* otn~ 6f6..392S er 54&.JC83 High cl.g's. SOCll sq ft built Burton Oevidtnoe Rea.I to schls. <n4) 139-M. ~at~·~ mo. In-~:
6 UNITS Newport Beach $17,900 own" will help finance •roulld court • atrium.' E•oao._ """"· 64U223. Prll>cipalsOnly ;, FIXER-UPPER lofust Sell NOW! Almost car gar, Conskler ·~ house GOOD income on 2 valuable Owner-4 br. 2 ba, tam. rm. L11una leech 2711 ;~
Less Than 7X Gross VA Great house on a large R-2 Call p!:~c:k ·~~S-2300 ~:t::~N~ ;~691.~.~:e;n~;9arta. ~~r.502~~. isi~~m i n e . ?4: ~~~~ni\1J;~ BEAUTIFUL Funt. J Br.,?
lot. Good future investment. e Bill Haven, Rltr. Juat a few itepl; t:i beach. O\VNER, 5 BR, view of blcy. 1D24! NIGKJ'INGALE AVE. 2 Ba home: ocean v\ew,
Great Tax Shelter
All 3 bedroom, 2 bath , buill
ins, yards, etc, don't look
for \Vestclllf area. a little
paint & eibo'A'. grease will do
the job.
\VAL.KER & LEE
MR. J.EVrNE
SCS.9451
JR. EXECUTIVE
Rambling Ranch home on
hlige lot. 4 spacious bed-
rOOms, tremendous living
room looking onto 18x36
"Luscious Pool." Assume GI
Loan s\Jbjecl to 6 annual
percentage rati> balance oJ
$33,000, OWner 1r11.nsferred.
Included in price is an elec· 2lU E. c.oast, CdM 67J..321l 2 BR. It 3 BR. with tam. Imm. acc. Will rent. Open Balboa Peninsula 1300 Good locaUon. 9&8-1454 nr. IChll I: best beachel No On . Payment tric range, washer &: dryer ***CUTE 1 BRtt* rm. PLUS l·Br. •.ba. guest .lt-6, 1m Antiaua Way, a: town. $425 summer mo's. ·~
ln1mac. llon1e w/lormat din., a:~ also a refrigerator. Ter. on bllliness tot.. $18,950 for rm. Xlnt condition A bu'· BALBOA DUPLEX S1nta Ana · 1620 • $350 winter mo ltta. 1
& bcautifu~ lighted land-·r1fic · 11tarler ~CALI.me f~r )'OU qUick sale, Maybe $2500 dn. pin, U~lvers!ty Park 1237 3 BR. up . 2 BR. down 3·-8-ed-· ;;.-... -S,-2 Ba.th .. ~~.~-· 414 -2921 • t
scaping. \Vhat better invest. yoUng renters. · Terrific fine avail Vacant Near bay &: ocean beaches, I 9Vllt ~ /
mcntcan theirbcinbuying w lk & L Driv~by.?92Cenle~Sl.,Of: ~ 54J,~?lli BRING POOL TABLE market&: public library. 4 BR.-$350...MONTH ~
pl'Opf'rty \V/no down pay. a er ee LL.Lockhart Realty** ~--LJY IUY•,•,•,•.011 Sundttk. Try $48.500. Musive cuat. built driftwood, I :•=LA=CE=REAL==TY=-="'"==.:i:·l, , w Id w u v t 'l JI{ f'UI And join up in year 'round va. men t ·. or ar es, DAaJton 641).2301 548-2951 642.-0267 1111." llllWPMT POIT ornc• · IURR WHITE fiN'pla.c:e. Nr. acbDols •
you1· eligi\Jllil.Y expires this """ -. .... ;;:· r,.,;;;;:r;";;;;;;;;;;;-11-"-:::-=====-tation sett:ina:. This immac. lhoppin&: center. Alk1na Dana Point . 21• ;
July. Call us, NO\\I! 279054~~!'~.~·,,~tSAPdMam.s 4 "uo11.,cct S<°""'""sooo Mngmnlnc !utl BAYCREST aa''Julliardpl ",!!!1·.!_ BR. 2 2901 N ~~!:, NB $23,500. ------:
N' h I R I [ tat ~ u~ " ' • • • -., WI -~·"' rm.. •·~" ~~.. . • I BR oxpondo mobU., ... ut I! IC 0 s ea s e per nio. l7SOO dn. A. Burton Priced to sell! Auumobl• ht .. jult the righf '"' tor your 675-4680 =·c.n==M'°"=)'limo"'' =0!6-=n1=9·= I tum. porch. ...,...... pool ' 5 BR & FAMIL y Clevldence Reel Estate. TD. Spacious 4 Bednn, active family, $36,950 And, ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio . --1705 A dubhouse. 1 blk to bftch.
Price Reduced 675-6044, M:z.8223. large, panelled famib' nn you own the land!. W •. Bay Waterfront la~ Beach Sl50 49t-1&39
for quick sill 4 BR. WeU bl!. 2 lltory by :".!~ln~~ ~~ li~.!1-ce • Red Hill RHtty Beautiful, newly redec. 4 BR FAMILY STYLE . ...:._.
$33 500 Owner $29.!DI. Reas. dn. """'J" 1ng ... ,. nn, Univ. Park Centn', lr-rine + bonus room. Patio-deck· eo., home for family Uvirl&'. Vacation R;entell 2M ; to , Assume GI 5% In, 'Nr breakfast area, Large back Call Anytime l33-0820 beach-pier A slip, $175,000. Garden entry court with . !
Large family home in No. Fa.irvit!w I. S.D, Fwy. 3142 yard, coveted paUo, Extra !!!!!!!!~~~~~..,.,.I Bill Grvndy, Reattor pJbd. arets u,. mood. Spt.c-LAKE ArTowheMI, new plush •:
1 . .-J J. k •. ~.ICHOIS
546-9521
Costa Mesa witll all bit-ins Cork Lane 1
1oonce.SmithFor appt: It SHARPEST 833.Dowr Dr., N.B. 6Q.D iowl livinc "ruom 'witti fttt... A-frame, 3 Br, 2 Ba, frpl, •
including water conditioner. " By owner, 3 BR 2 ha, ean . Rea or 4 8dnn. townhouse OD the p1lce: 1lOWll to dining area I. TV + ltudio apt 2Q) )'d :
Quick Poss. ruisume existing corner lot, to lntef.est GI ' , market u to )ocatlon, oond, built-in kitchen 3 bedrooms from lake. Pvt filb& A : • ••-ori ee L"-ltl• 1351 · • n.. o c~•) • Fl-IA loan: Only $3,!m do~. loan 6%, $26,150. 54)-7952 • 400 E. 1701 St., ca.ta Mesa • "-"t' ce. sUtt to see 1 ;;;-;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;; a double garage I: the right awmr. nale ex. ..w .~
Walker & Lee Get This! 6°fo
Realtors
2700 Harbor Blvcl. al Adams
&45:0465 Open 'til !I Pt.I
Golf Course Area
Large Cal/Jtanch 1 story
~home 'vilh 4D' long rumpus
or billiard rm. 'Vidc 130'
deep lot • plenty of room
for pool, Fresh pain! & pa.
per, $43,500 or best offer!
(Open Evenings!
s.ff-5880
f 111111' cWllfl'lil ttlellltl
LLEGE REALTY 500 ,tidlllB It tt11bor,CM
OWN
SHERWOOD
Tip top location. big 3 &
family· In tip lop condltl<ln.
E-&ide C~f. $29,900. Terms.
Vacant • Show anytime. Cnll
Glen ·Quee.n, Hcrilage Real
Estate, 54()..ll:il.
Ye~. you can assume this 6'!o
VA loon, pay cash do11.·11 to
the loon &: payments are
only $158 per 1no. Ver;o
sharp 3 Bedm1, 2 bath home
on corner Jot with room for
boat or trailer in backyard.
Comt' ,'j(!(> this beauty~ Pric.
ctl at S27,950.
COATS
&
. WALLACE
REALTORS
-l46-4141-
(0pen Evenings)
PERRON 642·1771 3 BR. 2 BA. Patio, Dbl, ~3255 this one at only $32.950! J • amount' of yard make thlt r ~""""'°~-~·~-=-.,,_.---=,..,-~ ~ 000 rn ~· loan BOB PETTIT, RNltor UDO ISLE • ........ family homo. BY &Jo. J BR ...... D-8.
VA No DOWN gar -· · ,~ ,,_ · OPEN Sot. • Sun. 1'-S No. "SINCf: 1946" , n• 642-0398. 1133-S423. 5 Collin!!I laland. Spacious D .Just ,Ll1tedl ....,,soo. Bay Shore Park $75. week.
FHA Low ,_..,,.,. Frm:h Rec'"c y ay1 133-0101 Nlghtt Oon't MIH Ill ..A6 112 W. Pac. C.t. Hwy. NB.
Me1a Del Mar , 1105 overlooking tumlng basin I: 1,.:,ine · -l.1ost charming 3 Bednn :n .I,,,~ ~ ·5M-5651. ·
Dow' N-N-S.,.. 4 bnn, 3\1 balho 1231 home on 56' lot. Pr!"d lo vl-U,1c-BIG 8'or very lllce -·
B13y ?;:;-~u~e Si.4% 'oar;· I: a Ii~ room u 1a.rp U.C.J •• TurtJe Rocle 1ell. Room to expand, Beaut. REAL ESTATE tit Lake, bltna. $IC day,
· h h · • .., m nn, pro · as al.I OWbn Small swim-4 br e1p1 drpl bibs f family n>0m, ?tfodem kit-,,,.,,, GI St $40 wknd, SSO wk. (n4J ', ~i;om _,house wit uge Jdscpd, 2 patios~ new shag ming pool, P1er. • slip. ' ' ' ' am. he •--Iii' ' F ~ enneyrt: • 521 9672
!"n,.;cu yaou. crpts/drps, slate entry CIJSt. $237~ B 835-5164 rm., frplc. dining rm. pool. c n, ""'C 18 now. or 494,9473 549-03115 ='=====--::=c'
PRICE.DAT $21 ,500 fpl., nr schll & pk, s.is-1323 or by a~u:m~·673-9043. Park, rtt. areas, achls, Sac. appt: CABIN FOR RENT ~ Mam-
Fre•hly paontod •od -•od. "-la " ..... I yr, nu. l.lJ33..2945 Jean Smith Realtor • HANDYMAN SP~ • motb Ltko• in lllch ........
Call evenings 673-6568 week-4 °""" muy rm. w/w crpt WHY WAIT? ' 4 UNIT a.pt., oceen ia.. of Furn. 1 nltes J95. RntrYe
ends. thruout. O~ner must lesvt Immed. occupancy, charm-Eastbluff 1242 400 E. 17th St., Colla Men hwY, approx. 150 yds. from mw. 531-3374 Evn. Jt0-0611
am,. Asking $ 31 , 9 0 0 . ill&' l Bdrm, 2 BA, prden--be~h. Groesed $9,000, lut LAKE ARROWHEAD: new OCEANFRONT 545-0938 or546-9755. 1tyte home.Cansetyouinto CUSTOM home -new, ~3255 yr. Nds. paint It clepqp modern cab'"' 100 ~ ao
bet.utitul 3 bl' 3 ba, ·~ ESCAPE of inter. Price $69,500 WILL "" ,,_ 3 Bedroom Home ---this Bayc:reJt Beauty fOl' un. ' • u.,.c, · TRADE Jakt, S115 wk. st0-2924. 1-::::::::::::::=c I R.2 Lot Mesa V•rde 1110 der sso.ooo. witn only $5000 crpts, drpa, 1hutten. Open TO BEAUTIFUL · 1• Add 2nd Uno"t ''-',950 dn. Xtra BoflUI you will view, park vlew. Xl nt for ?t1ISSION REALTY 49t-0731 Summar Rentals 2910 LIDO WATERFRONT ..,.. ~-~ prtmo i.n.t. Opeo '""'"Y & rnildroo. By LIDO ISLE _.300 e
APTS.-320 LIDO NORD George Williamson ~ ~ sun l.S PM 1849 owner. $48,~, Tennis ·Ciub 3 t 0.n cy, clcwe in BEACH COTTAGE
NOW REDUCED TO 67l-4lSO R::r~~ Eves ~ ~ windt or call 673-UOI m f:nb~r~ By ap-Str"41'10LotStr--" 900 e Secluded 2 BR (compl furn)
$160,000-Xlnt Term1 -~-~~---· BARGAIN HUNTERS to .ee. po e · _, Bedroom• on wooded % attl!, ,
6 Benulilul units. 6 Car ga· Dover Shores-Big 3 Bedrm, 2 batll, family Biycrest * Pool 5 ·BE.DROOMS, 3 full baths, O.ll9htful Xlnt terms -Low down priv. Wttkly or mnthly. t•
r::iges & utility room, with By owner & d' . dbl 2 f!l'eplat:es, 2600 sq. n. $64,500 PLACE REALTY 494.970t Avail JUiy 4 thru ~pt: Call :
80 fl . fronting on exet!Uent Xlnt , terms. 5 br, 4 ba, love. ~m · ining r;:1• ~By owner. Gracious S BR 2 Large lot adjacent to pwk. To Inspect 646.7171 2969 So. Coast Hwy, Jeny Walden ~162'1 ·
s11.·1mmin!." beach. Unlls arc Jy bay .,Jew, pool-sized yonl, service pore ' ' ba, spec ldt/bltni, huge llv Walkirw dillance to eieme~ l ROOM ~-~--UPPER BAY-· d~pes, full b!Hns &: cusl~rn rm w/frpl , din nn, muter tary a.nd hich 1ehool. Ideal • ._,,...,,. ....,,._ ... on .LGE 3 BR, den apt
NEWPORT n("V.'lv furnishNI. immed. occup. Open daily kitchen. See 'ocial'.· full pnce suit~ w/eleaant bath over. for family. For SaJe by &plll'OX. ~ aaT, Lagunt Ca-to ocean A bay, Avail J\1'1
Bifl Grundy, Realtor 11.fi. 1712 Antigua Way, $28,7!l0. For details 54G-ll51 looks pool/patio, Beaut Ind-Ownft'. 149•500_ &M-i040 nyon Rd. Full pricf' SU.~. $250 wk A Attg S3tlO wk,
C\1£1.om 4 BR 2 ba, r~m rm. 833 Dov!"r Dr .. N.B. 642-4620 BEW\V Cost: New deluxe pd cho" !oc •c." Altnt 49'-M88 Special monthly rate Apnt form din, lg cov patio, 2400 ~~~~~~~~ sc ·· lCe • -.500. -~·-DECORATOR'S ' •
pks & boy'i club. By owner. You'll !incl c:i;at .~5ai.ns brk tiled-many ~ pe c. ';Ill HOME & NCOME HOME l .. una Nlguel 9"'"'_,,.
1q ft, + extras! Nr !lehl~.
1
;;:; . '---. 3 BR, corner lot. Shag rugs, s Heritane ~. Corona del Mir 1250 · 1707 ~ ~ Joy; eYel
&4&lS46 when you shop Daily fearures. $32,500, Lo dn pmt. 1tE11L..:..1 I FANTASTIC, Beautifully done. 5 Bdrmt. OPEN HOUSE ON Th! wa~, BeJbo'!l Jsl. l~~~~·~~~~~~SPi~lo~l~d"'~'i~lied~•~d~""'~Uo~n~t:J_~S<&-<~~530~. ======l~~:;m~iii~;;;;.1 0rlghW owner wants to Rll UNCLU1TEREO' Famllv rm Xlnt 1tlftt to Boa •-k l BR, •·-'d "· 2 "-+ ..,, · 24355 La Hermoea. t """ , , iWTI •
TALL TREES ""' ~-. hOrne 1-bdnn. OCEAN &-HARBOR VIEW: street 45 n. lot. · r ·-·-Ni"'ial Avail 1/lW/1-4225 wk: Gener ii 1000General 1000 General 1000 rent81. Blk to ocean, Shake P~IGIO HARBO $98 rOJ .._...... .. ..... 1.;.=...;..------------------------Shadetheentr)'onthi1 1park. roof.Xlntcond.Takealook! VIEW ~I.LS· R LIDO R'EALTY INC. ' 1-SPMJulylrd-Sth 8/l-8/3Q.42SO wt. w/2 wk
The Purzle with the Bui/f.fn Chuckle
0 R:eorrorige letters of th•
four 1tramblod words ~ tow to form four simple wards. I LUYT IG l I 1 1 • I I ' I
I "1~ j.11c I I f
~
l"OCSA Jr I I' /' /' A writer's hond bticome
lame from cramps. His doc·
tor diagnosed It os -I T A y F I R I ~-l I j I ' o I j / d c""•"" "'' ,,.,1~ •·~"' br lolhl'lg ht th" "'ls\ln9 word,
you d~lop Ir°"' 1tep No. 3 hr.law.
o ti~~·:." I' I' I' 1· I' I' I' I' I' I" I
I I I I I I I I I I I
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 9000
" r
ling Mesa .Verde home. 3 MORGAN REAL TY 3 Lee Br' 3 '~ Ba' 3337 Via lJdo 673-7300 3 sunny bdrm., 2 'ba .. nlct mln. ~.. '
Spaciout bednn11 2 batha &: G7J.6642 · • 1, ..,... 1• liv. rm., block wall encto.ed PENINSULJ\ Bayfront, $ .~
liu·ge family ~·, 675-6459 Lovely, pvt. ~ k * * •· 222 Nord * * * rear yard. Crown · Valley BR + maids qtn, p~. I
patio play ya car. PRIME OCEANFRONT, Patio. lJv., Dm. I. Fam. B~D NEW BAYFRONT SChool Oirnict. JU!lt $29,950. Call •I ••-•,. 1~31 pe ts ' & ll'eshly decorated. Priced for lmmediatec l&le. al'f!M att all ckluxe 1iu: 3500 1q ft. 5 BR, 4~1 BA, C&piftrano VaJJey Realty 7~1STh r~ <2i3) 7'&-i£u l
See lhis new listing! Priced 3 Bedrms, 2\ii bath!, ex· I:· k1eal for ent.erta.ining. pie r I: slip. Area'• 1ealand 493-1124
at only S30.500. Call Ray a .llent condition only J Bet.ul stone firepl, beam buy W/7% fin, lit &: 2nd. BY Owner, beautiful mtn Evet. 1
Gault. 54().ll51, Herltarc yelll'I old. Huge Mute{' BR. eel.I. & many other plU11es $119,000. ~n afternoons Ol' view. 2,000 sq f\,, 3 Br. J1JLY • i· blk trom Ocean. ~ ~sJ Esrale massive lrplc, . modern In this charmine; & chetttul 1call owner 494-6415. huge tun. rm I kit. beam Pool. Patio. 3 Br, J Ba. 1•
BY OwNER kitchen a.nd right on ' the homt: $67,000. Open Sat i LARGE LIOO LOT celling, •hll cpbl, ~n-sips 1. Beaut. tum. sm ~-~ ' ~-"o t bed-•·-u.ndy beacb! Call 56-IU4, SUn 12-6 '2901 Harbor V'ew ta..M• ......,, V' , --T ced/landlc&ped. $ 3 9, S 0 I . wk. Mn. Fenlon, IC-e833 '":""''om ..,.... • . • "" ...,,,. Sou th Coast Real ton. Dr · &M-inn Otmer ~ ..,.. l& LVL ..... , emu. 95-6576 or 67l--2110
lly. room, ~ big fireplaei?t , NEWLY •-•~ l BR I ;o;o'iiiiiiiii. iiiiii·....... (714) 548-6913, 346-3256. 4. -· ·nus beaut1ru1 home over-UC\Nlaicu . I: J • • 45• LOT $52,SOO --LIDO. LINDA Isle, Bayside
loob the 17th I.airway ot den, 2 ba. ~ut v1tw of UNEXCELLED VIEW Ne.t, coey, 3 hr. bit-int. Dana Point · 1740 or. ' Ptnin. watntronta ~lea Verde Golt CourM. Back Bay. Priv bch/pool. of Harbor A ocean. Attr. Owner. 61.,..2643 or 497_1265. --------3-... -3-b + aff.water Udo homes.
6'4 usumable k>an, 3036 Slip a~. No dlllclren split level home on R-3, 5100 CUSTOM U •tiaPt ' • Bill Gnnxty, Realtor. und 18 ..,., 900 .-• · + suest-nn w/200 ldtchn. .. ... .,..,.. Java Rd. 540-4095, $62,000. tr or pets. -· • sq, ft. lot. Ideal tor 4 Apt. B1lbu Island 1355 J mile from Doheny Beach ,,._
BY OWNER-3 Bdrm, 1% 831--2886 or 675-4995 units. $225,000. 2501 Ocean ==.=..:==--~ in peace.tu! ·rwit.ic ~a. OCE&'l'rnONT Uwer 1 Br.
Batha. lrg family nn, lrg * * * * * Blvd .. Cd)4. By 1ppt, only. HURRY! Flxer-.Upper, 3 Br. $36 900 Owne 49&-lJ'fT apt, twin )>edt., lra l\vrm •
screened patio, new crptg. CHARM Biii Grundy~ Realtor I: J Br. 1pt. UJ a.tanne. ' · r, w/day btd. Gar. prb dlat>l. ,,
:iclnl cond. 1 blk to elem New 81ulfl Townhouse 3 Br !131 DovtT Dr .• NB 6'2-4620 Open 1-6. Only $57,500. Mr. RENTALS UtU pd •• $l'rn wk + S30 , '
& Jr. HI, A~kln11: $31 ,fOJ. pool, lo maint. lmmed poy: Ojel)a . Hou1es furnilhH dep. 642.-.1M4.
5*'% OJ loon.~ Colorado Vae July 1. A. Burton HARBOR VIEW HILLS Pyramid Excbaniors 67WSOO CORONA DEL MAR. t'OT·
Lane, 0.1. $4G-2945. Clevldcnce RH.I Elt.te. A BEA\n'YI O.ner•I 2'00 TAGE. main beach. Slps
OPElN llOUSE D~~RY .,,_ 642-8223 uoo Sand Piper Drive Huntington ... ch 1400 7, ~50 ,.. 2!7 Hal-
. •n.r ..... iv • · New c:rp t1 ,. dr•P••· ----· -R!:DF.CORATED .. ...
:\ BEDROOr.I 18 DE;WXE UNM'S. Stones Compk!tely redecorated. 3 MEREDmt Gudcn1, 5 BR, S2JO-l BR fnd yrd, p.r, 6Th-353!J,
2.im LA Hennota, Laguna throw to We~h.:llff Plaza. UR 214 Bath Pool Xlnt l b&, din. nn, tam. rm, many extn.s. F • m 11 y I BEACH House. nut le
NiiJlt"I Appt only -c.U Mr. Harris. temia. ' · Cul--de-4ac cpl3, drp&. shut· w~lcOnle. Bkr. Ac t iv e , clean sips,•. Stcluded aru.
493-lu.& (Fri ' &Jn 1-5) SG-8424 South Cout Real $1)5,000 Owner. ~m1 ten. Owner, 96U460. SJ4..6980, prl\'ate beach! QlO wk.
Btwt loc, coc-lot, 4 BR, Jg Estate. Call aft l pm for Appl. LEASE1 Option. 4 + 3. PLANNING to movt? You'll 714-6400, eves 4!K-00l~ ~
fam rm, 2400 IQ ft, lmmed ~UFFS Condo -Qolom._ ·DON'T-rlvre it-away, g!t Ew:rythl,,.-In, $lt.IQI. Lo 1lnd an amaz-lnz numbt.r of Turn thOse Whits Elephanta ,
po!IS. o~. ~13 e\'el . ~fOdt) . 3 br, 2'it hi. $42,500, quick c:uh for It with a dn. AYl.il 7112. 11»74 Owl homM in todl1'11 CtwWed inio ca•h thtu a OJlly Ptlot •
wk/eTX!s /ot 839-224!t ~or 213: a.'JU3 DAILY Pn.oT WANT AD. Ctrc. 968-30$S Ownl'.!r. Ads. CMck them now. . OlMH.-ltnt ad!I
I
I
•
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•
I
I
•
• • '
'
" ..
. • • ~ \ •
••
• -
R I NTALS -~ •---!111111-l)m-ll!'*--*p!lll!I, -*ip,
Ap11. Unfumlohod " :k * U DMV l'llOT f•ld'1, July 3, 1970 , '-' 1l1DRT1•,;;wn;,..:.::::.:_ ___ lrlrNmT•A~Ll....--'=::...c"'-=;.R:;;lrnNTALS ---.-11iNTALS --'-...:.-+· UMTALS . RINT.ru:°I
II 2211 .............. Aflh, Pu""lhod Aph. Un!Vmlohed Aplo. P uml.W Ar'?; Pumlthed• Ap!t. UnfumhhM ................ 29100....'81 ' -Gonorol, --•I -N.•port ...... 4100 CMI•, Mo10 5100 I H I lluff 5242
..-...., atpo s. ,1 blk , •:w!NTER RENTA~ 'e VILLA MESA APTS. PRESTIGE LOCATION I ..,,,._., 7/J -7111 $t00 HUNDREDS Of APT$, LISTED NQW .... , NOW "" $opt.I 2 BR. Priv pofio, Hid pool. >'or l•uo, dtluxs 18811 sq. 11•
l
.rte. Aua A Sept S125 wk. -Abbey Re1il~ • IU-3850 2 ca{ tfld'd pr. Children 4 BR. 2~ BA apt, Ftplo,
IBT ' 'el ti I 1 dtapn. c:rpts, "A'f!t bar, pri .. Uth. NB. 67).-089. ... IN nn~ I • WATERFRON,T • l hr. $150. " come, nl) pe p tale. bakonm, dbl ..... cH kitchen
LG 'bnn UUl'lr• ' · Yni\y. Adul11. N•wty '"" mo. ru w. Wilson. ·-
1 , new, apt. , 2 b&. .... cteccPJl!d. ~ ·"~~--"· --~~~~-,-dshwhr, dbl oven. Pool. Conv , ~ ::::..:: ~ .i~ A COMPUTERIZED SYSTEM FOR 'flNDlllG , APTS 1 At<t> '1 BR. wkly or Now .•ltnoUve 2 BR In. to ~~y~ :•lion.
: :1510 M.,..., N.B. m-1m , CQMP.IJ.1.IST monthly· wntr or ""'"""' dlvtdu.sl unlit Fr PI, 835 Amigos Way, NB
'
-SPECTACULAR VM!:w: 3 BR * Owners Of Thousands 'Of Apt.s \he avail.now! 549-0010, -...ms. crp/ ... drp ... bedutam ·c .. ~.~ 11111 •, Mar. ntxt door 865 Afnliol.
• ,2 b& boue, alPI I, nr CdM .:=;e=;=;F"====I pa ·" ta 0·""'· m Pf!lll. Managed by
I -·· IZO WL 67>-1235 or * New COMP·U,UST Books Published Ev~ry Friday c •• -.~ •l Mer 4250 11"'" $!59.lO • '""'° 23M wn.IJAM WALTERS co. 1 m.-2368. · • · · · . lcll_O..._M"'o-. _&_ch_:_ap"'t-, -Po-lib. ~ Av, .. 5".!M'12 or 2 BR 2 ba &. powd~r room,
BEACON Bay, l-4 Br. home. * Complete· Apt Descriptiona Included Hoti>l&Ulrtlria:. Util pd. UNnJRN 6 furn l% bath frpl, spec\ cpt, i-uo! kar
l3tlD-$300. Alao, 2 Br apt. Nr bch 67,,_ BR . LI , • pr. J yr he. Avail 1mmed.
l250. 11U> 84S-342'7, fTI4i ) * Apt.s Checked For Availability Before Dati Procusina · · ,......__,, upttl.in, v ' S24S. ~ or 6"-U92 .,.._, I IL--I " _ .. • ..... qu,aittrs down. Cpti, dt'pl, eva.
•• buv.. your book -U vet you time,· Worry, 'nieney. • -1 •••na -pool, no chUdrtn under 10, ..:..:=-------
:. ~!;!~E ~~ Wo: Linda .-. ,. BOA INN Clean cut adt.Ut 11\es w/ret ---------
; · wattttn>nta FOR SALE AT loyd Re•lty, 362' E . CN1t Hwy, CdM. BAL • ok 64&-0496. . •• Corona del M•r 5150
'.-B~ ·~i.;--~.H~......, -Ed-RhWl•·RHllor, v letorl• I Npf, CM 0," .::. ::,~~~:.';,&.,,wt.. HARBOR GREENS ~~-.----Loclch•rt Co Realtors, .Uf W . .Jtth, .CM • CORONA dtl Mar J BR apt, FOR INltORMATION • Paul·Whlt•Cern.han Rlty, l.Of3..C ilhi_ker, CM * YEARLY Avail now. At· GAio!:N, 6: STurito AP1'S
--.IPI .(, View, nr heh, SlSO 642-jEfi!• tractive 1 BR. $170 in· Bacb. l, 2, 3 BR's. from SUD. ~ wk. Qwner/Agt. 6'1>Jm ttUitU The.Doy!• Ce, 270 E . 17th St, CM. , dudirc utUitiK. fl~2975 2TOO Peterson Way, C.M .
' WKLY -~• ·-'l ., Vlll•t• Real Eit•t•, 19142 'Br'ookhur1t, l:IB 546-4310 • •
ft,,... a .... now • .-1"?~~~~---;;;;~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~!!![!!l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!" *)BR S155 mo: YEARLY. ' . Br. fum apt nr. ocean, Slp1I ~ Gu / wtr }Id 110 pets 2 BR llfl ha, ,J160. Cpt/drp,
'· 312 S3rO St. NB 557-""5 RENTALS . New__. llHclt 4200NoWpo#t ......,, 4200 ..._,130 . . P<bo. pool, bltns. S.scHll
SUMMER JtentaJ apt. ~ HOuMI Unfoumlahed ....,.. ' · 1 Manor Apt.11, 1525 PlaCflntia
4. On &yfront nr. Lido A'n'R. 1 BR, sl~Jll t ;. by ~-Alk about our dis-
ahop'c. m ~ti st. 673-4296 Coron• clel Mar 3250 mo., July &: Aus avail, I count'
Wlntu-70 rtsv'• .. 6'13-J503 · ro=R~IM-,~,~B~,-. ~,~.b&-.M=-.,,. WEEKLY R.enta.11, 1·2 Br. $150 MO be Spectacular
From SlOO. Neu Bt&ch It view, frpl, hltM. Nr CdM
Bayt Call U) 683-8247 beach. 3 BR, 2 ha, p'tl,y
BAl.aOA lilt. ·Plano, furn. 673-1235 or 67S-7J61.
dishwasher . patio, bet.utituJ CHARMING 2 br 2 ba comp
tum. July 15-Sept. 1 5 . ~ec. new cpl1, open bt!am
497-1129 • clgs. Adults $250 , rn11 .
. I I 673-484'1 agt. BEACH cottage,· Sm a • =='==~=~~=Furnimhed. $100 wk., $27a CHARMING 2 BR, So of Hwy,
H II ..__ •---L _._._ tlcfl.llo condo. Adult wction, un ntrvn ._...,.. --Attach. ~I pr. W/Auto.
DRUIDS opener, c:rpl.I, drps, bltM
Newr Had It• So Goori! !
STONE HENGJ: ..\PJ'S
28R. 28A Infant OK
$185 Furn !136--31111'
~ Florida St. HB
Incl. $225. 549--l627
Shllrp I BR, close to -OCC &
UCJ, $130. Refs l'flqUired, * * call 54:;..mg * •
*DELUXE 1 l 2 BR Garden
LUXUR 'i 1 BR apL Crpts,
ahutters, bakony, Ir p I c,
atove, retrir. Nr. bch S200
tno. 673-1!163.
e 3 BR, 2~ BA DUPLEX e
Cpll, drps, bltns, encl tar.
613-2402.
~·" ·-frpJc, newly decor, bltns, mo. -S250 lse. 675-4401. •
1 Br. condominlum-nlcfty Apts. Blt-i!'IB, priv. patio,
5300 1uf.nished. Eiidoeed patio. ~ted pool, frpl;c. Adults. Balboa Sl~., 962-9568. . Sl45 mo. 546-Sl6i1 · 'OCEAN_F_ron_t_-,.-.-rl-y-F-,.-,h
---'--·-----BEAUTIFUL, 2 BR, l 'n BA paint & ~arpeta. 2 bnn Ui>"
ltlNTAL~
Hou-Unfurnished
4 BR, 2% ba., dplx studio 2000
aa a , NwJ'( pntd. Bltm,
1ar. $425/mo. !.!I 540-7?.73
Chneral *O SHORECLlITS -6 room
Ocean Breeies $90 1 Bedrm Me, l yr. I~. $425 mo.
cottqe utilltie• paid 206 Orift'NOOd. fi'7S..4ll 6· l'T.
.4620 •tudio, w/w crpts, bltina, per. $250 mo. 673-5729.
_ garage. No. C.M. $165 mo.
'STANDAl!D MANOR ~M6--071-~'-~~~~ Larg~, charmlnt newly dee. ·Gr•cioul Adult Living
Lido Isle 5351
3 Bedroom home. EA11L,idf',
C<Mta Mesa: Xlnt cond. •
$23.950. Comider clear auto,
boat or trllvel frlr. Ca.l l
54>84 24 South Coasl Rlrrs.
• * * • * Gift 1.: party• import 1hop
$4000 for bus camper, o~
what have you, MS-3536 or
646-~.
2 lrg beaut Rancho Pines
Jots, Houston, Tex, Flnest
~zt. Clear. Also 32' trlr. hm.
full ba ./bltn11. FOR Mobil'
home. ~5589.
20' SLOOP, s.lttps 2,1 hAi
hf'ad, outboard engine,! etc.
ll*X>. VAiue, trade for !ale
node! Sta.lion Wagon, Dune
Jllgi)' or ? 492-8508
rrade clear lot \v/beaut
liew In Laguna. for small
J(tm" I lo! CM or .11uhmll.
A/, E. Lachenmycr , Rltr,
.4&-3928 Call E ves: 642-2237
160 acre11 near Bishop, CA
for Sou1hern Cali!. incl,
Palm Spring!! area. Ftte
and clf'ar a r $15,900. Roy J,
Arnlwn. 494-72ft0.
List lt here -in Onnge
What do you have to trade'!'
County's laJvlt l'fl.ad trad· tna poat -aM make • de&L
1962 MERCURY 425 ena·
ine & 1ransm.IMK:ln. TRAD!:
J.'OR TOOLS OR?? 64&5486.
2127 Collere Ave. Costa
Mesa .
\VIU.. trade 10 Irrigated
acl'fl.1 In Hemet with 3 rent.
All for Orange County in.
cMie property.
C11ill 714/962-2.'"161
4 x 6 UTILITY TRAILER.
Good cohditlon, new tires.
TRADE fo.r molorcycl,, 4~
Hamilton, Apt C, C.M,
548-3597
NeWpOrt Bf!ach View house,
value $84,500, equity $44,500
TRADE for ocean view lot
belw Lona: Bf!ach &: New-
port. 548-ll68 Rltr.
Heathkit JG-28 coklr bar
geflf!rator & degauuing ooll.
TRADE for .38 or Jgr cal
revolver or 1'~M stereo re-
ceiver component.. 962-5059.
Trade 112.000 eqoity, in lgt
4 Br, 2 Ba home for smaJl
home or lot. C.M. Submil
W. E. Lachenmyer Rllr
64&3928 Call eVf!s: 642..2237
80Jr type FREEZER,
TRADE
for APT. 1lze
electric STOVE or '!'
642-1514,
It ' quiet. 'Sl.35 mo. By the 2 BR, w/w c~ts, drp11, bltn 2 BR, l BA Apt. 100' from
Beach w/ view, Yearly ..a. * * * * * rorner Standard c\ McF1d. R/O 11pi.r 1trcM frplc. 145 w
den, -1009 • S, Standar( 541· E. Uth. S57.f682.' $1!1(1, ,;S22S==."C'=ol=l~673-J9411==·===-'!!!!!!~!!!!!!'!!!!l!!!!!!!l!!!!l!!!!!J!!!!'!!!!'l'!'IJ!!!!l!!!!l!!!!l!!!!l!!!!i
c.o.ta Meaa 1 BR. $90 + gar. ,
WAik to water $97.SO util pd. Huntington Buch 3400 Oakwo'od.~. $105. 2 BR, pr, tol• OK -~ •
3 BR tots I pel1 OK $170 WATERFRONT
SlOO :i BR Apt, tot OK, fff, Huntington Harbour
STAR*LET 547.-J U"'"'"· <Br, JO' dock , 1 .....
S1M • 2 BR. 2 &. Tri.pin. ()ptn Sat & Sun 9:30-4:30
Crpt. drp bib» Chlld/pel 2U/376-6550 or 21J/J7S..59tl.
ok. ' · . 16513 Harbor Lane
Blue Beacon. Bia. 64!).()111 $160 • 3 Br. lit .t last +
• Sl75 • NEWLY dee. 2 Br. clrc/damage d~p. N r ,
' h i Id yd gar Chlld/pe.ts Beach Blvd & Slater. Nr.
•1 wi;'k.-o~e ' ' lehls. 2 Children ok. Key
Bl Be'aeon Bkr Ms.&111 at )7660 Van Buren. AllO ue ' . •vaH 4 Br., 2 Ba.. $155.
n,so.2 Br. Duplex. Yrd, Gar. ·' j 0 _.. l R/O. Refril. Avail 1n. VERY l.ovC<y • acunn,
Child ok. Actiw, Bia. ba, Brookh.unt & Adam.1
,. •• filCln Joe. $265 mo. Re!eftnce1. ..__.., 962-6795.
$250-Util pd. 3 Br. Refrig. RIO. W/w. Avail now. 4 BR .t10me, 2 blks to St.
A tt B._ 534.&980 l'rancJ.1. •Vacant now. 1M
C Ve, '". . $245.
$110-Util pd. 1 BR. lower * 536-2315 *
apt. Avail now. ActiVfl., Bkr. 3 BR townhm.ule. cpt/drp
534-6980. S1'1S mo. 9615 Ke:1111ington,
2 Bdrm house, 1989 Charle lfB 962-!1911 or ck at office
St CM. S135 mo. No pets, 9635 Cornwall Driw. llR
~ 1 child O.K. 642-2259. 5 Brm, 3 baths, tam. rm.,
$145 • J BR 4-plfl.x, l ~ ba, trplc, bltns, trpll, drp1, .
famHi8 only. Avail now. pool. 847-4461.
Bh.-Beacon. Bkr • 645-0lll LEASE pio mo/Executiw
4i + 2'n. Available July U .
3100 PH:·-• Costa Me•• ! ___ ::_ __ _:.c.o... 2 BR 1lffl' park w/w cpt
Rent or Le••• ~Ion drpa, for appt alter 6. No
~ 3 Bt-drm home, lge Jiv1111 rm, pets. 213/3.19-7882.
new kitchen. S200 mo.
Nichols Real E1t•t• Midway C ity * 54&-9S2'1. * 3616
Sl4i.5 Attractive a e par at e 2 BR le den plus wk shop.
houR, 2 BR 1 BA, cpt/drp. Lg fncd )'d. $18.5 monthly,
Adlli only, no pell. :-.er.. $175 lease. 89J...{)ML
~S.9472, 673--0395. Sant• Ana Heights 3630
3 BR.. big acttl!'ned porch,
f&rnity only. Max. 3 chldrn. 4 BR, near UC!. Frpl,
• VacAnl .. $225Jmo. Axt. AJ;k cpt/drp, lncd yd. im.
:: fO!' l))n 8J(Mi()6(), 968-4362 Alter 6. MJ....9930 .. 3105 ~ 4 BR. 2 BA. Co&ta MeM. Lagun• Be•ch ~ tee. sle:fpa 10, 1/3 acr.
alter 6, 548.-oot2 Lf~ASE 3 hr, 21,i bath. Ocean ~ RENT or Lease Option 3 View. 2 palh:18. Lovely ya.rd
' ho · wltrtts. Part. tum . Wa.lk ~ Br. exec. me, immAc. lo mrkl '1. tM>ach, S37S mo.
S265 1ncl. gardnr. '42-2'155 4'99--3087, 494--6409 ews.
3 BR, 2 BA, new crptl'I, $21j BEAtrr 3 BR 2 ba,
bltn R./O, fncd yrd. $230. Cu1t bit . Span. beams, trpl,
5.11-W. 5.11~1 . · 83"7449 vu, 1mmllc. -2 BR howle for rent.----------
Sl40/mo. Nn c:hildttn, no S•n Clemente 3710
pet!I. 64&-538S ;o;-1.M: Ocelln Vw, lnve.ly
1 2 Br. 11. houlll!. Ne""'.ly 3 br, 1% ha, frp\c, 2 cttr
' df!OOrated. Stove k t"flfng. gar, c:rtps, dpr.i. In ex·
SU9.50. l-Tn--0142. elusive neighbrhd $250 mo.
4217 CalJe Abril, Sa.n. Clem.
3200 C.all {7141 6J5..35oo 6-3 pm.
a new way t.o live in
·Newport Beach
94!M. UNUSUAL l·Br. apt. BAlbo~ Island 5355 RENTALS RENTALS
I---------I PartlaUy turn. SllO J>l!T mo. 2!!•· Unfutnlshecl Apt1. Unfur nished
L•,...• 8Mch 4705 Nr. ahop~in&". Avail, July lat D&IELUXE e..2 BR "Little Huntington B•ach ,._ S•nl• An• "2t'
I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·~1RealommM:a-Bkr. 675-6704 boa". t dock-tie up """" ""
. ' .
Jt's fun,;fine nelgbbon and prestige living.
1111 in one luxurious p ackage. That's Oak-
wood G a rden ,Apa rtm e nt• i n N ewport
Beach, just minutes from Balboa'• Bay and
be1che1.
There's a •/,million dollar Clobh018e with
party f'ooin, billiards roOm, indoor golf driv-
ing range, men'• and women's heAlth club1,
saunas, tennis court3, resident tennis pro
and pro" 3hop, and Olympic size pool. All
this, an·d much. more, just .1tep1 from your
prof e1•ion1lly decor1ted ap1rtment, etch.
with private balcony/patios. Air condition•
inglfireplace• optional.
Oakwpod Gard• Aputment,
On 18th Street between Irvine and Dover Or.
(11'} Mi.1170 -:::s: ..... , .................... ··••1
, • ,. t•t llto•ISC. I • •O QI 'f,
I• L MODERN 2 Bdrm, l% ha, pri\l'. No pets, no children. SING E ADULTS'! cpt/drp, GE kitch, view. $300 mo-yearly leue only.
$3S WK. VILLAGE INN enc rar. Nr bu.11. '$155. 673-0207
I MO mlnlmum 11dult1, no rieta. l:aJ E. 20th
Prestige llvi~. Maid M!r, 2 BR. Unfurn. S130 mo. In-
JXl()I, steps to beach. 494-9436 fa.nt ok. No peU. Joann St.
CM. 54~37
•-n C'-ment. 4710 3 BEDROOMS: W/W carpet. ----~-------! No pell!. Slts month
t BR., liv rm., kit. It. b&th.1-~~~'4J.<2JO~=~~-o
Ocff.n vie'<IV, ....tk to heh .. • UtG 2 ~ 3 BR. 2 88.ths .
1 hop p l n I & sho w, Frplc, bltns, cpb, dtp11, encl
reuol'ltlble rate. 492-9996 11:1r., paHo. 546-1034
UNr. 2 &: 3 BR. a.Isa furn
l·R-E_N_:r_•_L_S---...,.--2 BR. cpt. pool, kids ok
"' _1008 Maple, No. 1 548-2808.
..........
1 _A_,_pl_•_· _u_n_lu_m_loh_ed __ 1SPLJT Level 3 BR 2~ ba.
General sooo cpt/drp, bltn1. No pelJI. 988
----------Mluion Dr No. 1 549-3524.
NEW 1, 2, 3 Bedrms. All 1 BR. U~r. $100. Older
bltnl cpt/drp, pr. Nr So pttf. Avail 7/1. 1:a2
Cout P lua 5 4 0-197 3 , Marnolia C.M. 494-4695 M~2321 1~-=°'~='-·--cc-;:::c:--, 1---------LRG 2 BR, crptl, drpt, l
1----------1 child ck. $135 + dep. 2214
Huntington Beach 5400
ON BEACH!
e 2 BR l'Ai BA FROM $225
e 2 BR 2 BA FROM $260
• 3 BR 2 BA FROM $.JfiO
Carpets-<lra peWlillbv.·aaher
heated pool.sauna.tennis
rec room·oeean 'Views
patios-ample parking.
Security guards.
FURN. also Avail.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
711 OCEAN AVE .. H.B.
(714) 536.1487
Ole. open 10 am~ pm Dally
Managed by
WlLLIAM WALTERS CO.
i :C;•;st;•::;Mo;;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;5;1;00~!cc~o~ll~••t'~·~·~•~t~2.~640--0621~if,:~·~1 ·3~B~R,..~,~.'"•'"o'"u'"~'".,.'"'".'",'".,,'".,~. '""========,-,:======-=== I• LOVELY l Br, crpt.s, drp!i, drps, bltm, Ina! yard. Like
G..,.r11I. 4000 Cott• Mt1e 4100 * * * * bltn,, patio, gar, Adults, no priv, home. S200. Chldrn or
-----..,..----------El Puerto Mes• Apts. pets, Sl35. 646-1762· pet ok, 2 blkll from Hn!g ~y ** W~EKLY-Lovt1y apt, * * * · * $135 ·2 Bednn. Crpt1, drpg, Hosp. 897-4809 or 213:
EXTRAORDINARILY Bach, or cpll. Furn!Ahg;'• 1 .. 2 BHroom Apt1, elec kit, Adull.r, no pell. 430-9743 BEA,~,.. compl. KUch. S35 wk-pays St.10 up incl, utilities RoyAI Palm Dr. 50-0570 2 . v•u-v~ II 998 El Camino Dr · 3 BR, ba, trplc, bltns.
V•ID'IHreG•rdenApt1 ~1 . Alsolurn;..,~l~~·tion2BRapb, bltru, cpt1, drpg, w /w c pl•, patio ,
area. ..,..1et L-11•uvnmenl Clean. Inquire Li.52 "A" eve .... n.; .. -. Near nu. acroM Puttih& &reen. waterl.all Ii: 011 ki N ''"-~ . 1trttt pa.r Ill. Opell. Cori&nder. ~. from Huntg Cntr. Small pet 11tream, 110Wft'I everywhere, * SUS CASITAS Abo Ian.rt• for rtnl, 1 BR lg clOM!tS. new crpll, "' child ok, Tmmed occup,
45' pool, rtt. ~m, billiards, Furn. 1 BR. Apl!!. Adult1 1959-1961 Maple Ave, ......,1, ,1,.1 pd. si~n. 1884 Jtsnble. ·842-3550, 894-4488. BBQ'1, Sauna, furn.-unturn, n1 •· ... 10 N ~--~ ~ 0 Y, no Jll!ui. ... ewport ...... ta Mesa M . ••• .. ~ HERITAGE APTS 1 & 2 Br . alao Sinlles from Blvd .. c.M. * 642-9286. ,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,._,.,.,.,.P [,;'-i;'onrni-"ov>a~, ;o;--;:;:;;i;:-' >,,;:;;;: $135, See H! 2000 Panollf 3 BR, 2 bath, crpts, &: drp11 . $149 Attractive 2 BR, cp!/
Rd., 642-3670. Between Har. BAClfELOR Apt, w I w Child under 3 or over 1:'1. <lrp, bhn.,, pool. Kidll ok .
bor&:Newport.2BlkN.l9lh crpt1, <lrp!I, pool. Priv. ~5-3868. Avail now. l7401·A Keflson
~5:·2. $135. 145 E, 18th New 1·2 BR .. 2 BA., furn l Bdrm uppe.r. Carpeta. SUD. Ln. M1·1446, 847-032.S.
RENT FURNITURE
3 Rooms from $19.95
?i.1onth to month Rental•
Wide Selection .
100% PURCHASE OPTION
24 hr. Delivery
Cu11toril Furniture Rental
517 W. 19th, CM. 548-3481
1568 W Lincoln, Anhm 174-2800
CHATEAU
LA POINTE
or unfurn, air-cond, ~f West Side C.M. NEAR Huntington Harbour
1 BR. crpts, dl'J>ll, stove, clpan oven, beam celling, 671-5729 • New Triplexes. Quiet area.
retrig., carport, fl40. Ask dshwr, pi-iv aar, elevators, ----------Lrg l & 3 BR's. Dish'>l-"UhPr.
111bout our discounl pilln 141 l.herapy + 1v.·lm pools, $150. Pet ok. (213) 592-2623
W ]'th St Apl B 64• '1158 BBQ's, saunu, clubhouse. Mft• Verde 5110 or (714) 846-3559. · ·· · • -Adu1u. From $140. J u1t _;.;. _______ _
FRESTIGE l BR Sl40. Pool, East of 2600 Hartio,r near 2 BR. newly dee. apt. ri.tesa 2 Bedroom 2 bath just
quiet, nr fwy. Adults, no Nabt!ora Cadlllac at 425 Verde. Adults only, SlSO mo. p11;lntM lmmed. oceup. l
pe/1. 546-8791, Checkmate Merrimac WAy. 545-6300 WaJking dist to shopp'g. hlor.k to 5 Ptl. stom $150
Apl.11, 21tll So. Bristol BAY MEADOW AP'I'S. 548-3~ or 541).-5599 unlurn. mt Ell is,
LG. Furn 1 BR apt. $130. N1e;Rexci ting 1 BR,. ~140, Fannie Price, Ree.llor * 2 BR 1~ ba, patio, pool.
}"or l or 2 adll, only No ' Sl6S. Beam ceihngi. 2 BR -•~ 1<1•... n-tt6.'i mo. Mora Kai Apt•. · · Wood pa.n'lg .11ha,g 1 • """"'"" ......... u • ...,, •~ Jl!'IS. See Mgr, Apt 6. 2135 priv. patio, ~me wl ~:~ crpta, encl gar. Harbor Eitst or Beach Bl, 1,i blk
J~l<lcn CM. Pool, und volley hall crt:, Baker lhPPi. Adult.I, no nH Garfield.
1 BR furn apt, pool, Carport. U C bldg, pool tab1es, put· children. $]40. 6(2-2389 2 BR. Adult!!. Util txt.
3 BR Townhouse-Pool, ap-
pllanc's &. patio. $180 mo
lse. 540-2'l85.
2 Br. Apt. Children ok. New
drps; crpls. range, cloled
gar. $140. 842-8365.
BEACH apl., studio, 2 hr,
2 ba + 2 br 1 ba. Adull.!.
no pel11, 219 15th St., No. 7
Sll!)..Lrg dleerful 1 BR. apt.
CrptR, drp!, bttns, encl gar.
J chilfi ok. tNr. schll), 22.10
S. Cen1('r St, S.A. Nr.
Warner. 5-1~9.
Santa Ana
Sant• An ~eights 5630
2 BR duplu unfurn (ttarh
11dul1s only. SJ~ mo, ht
& last + dep. 543--1362. 5620 [=======
La~a Beach 570.S CAN'T BE BEAT
Single Slot}'
South Sea Atmosphere
2 Bedroom 2 Baths
CArpets & Drapes
Air Conditioned
Private Pltios
Heated Pool
Plency of la\~1l
Carport Ii Storage
* t BR. Unlurn. Apt. Util
Incl. $16.'i mo .
494-9471 ()r 494-8823
S•n Clement• 5711
Near Be:ach, lovely garden
BPI. 2 br. rel., range bit-in
bar, cpt.11. drps, garage. $155
mn. 601 C&lle Puente, S.C.
492--0492.
OCEAN view apll, net; ttf.
plex, 2 br., hit.Ins 4 cpts
4!J6.2160 or 491)..3954,
REAL ESTATE
Gener•I -----Rent•ls Wanted 5990
HIDDtN.%LAGE * Young couple needs house
GARDEN. AP'T'S or 8pt ntllf Daily Pilot In
2100 South Salta CO!lla Meu.. NO bad habits,
Santll An,. * 546-l52'5 children or pell!, and can
........................... ,[ PAY Sl35/monl hly. Own
VILLA MARSEILLES furniture and would be will·
BRAND NEW ing to renovate a shattby dwelling. Please call
SPACIOUS 673-TI96 and ltave m~sage
1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. wilh plP.a1111.nr. mother.in.Jaw.
Adult Living
Furn. & Unfur n.
Dishwasher. color coordinat-
ed appllanO!s • plush shsa;
carpet • choice ol 2 color
schemes • 2 baths • stall
ahowers • mirrored ward·
rnbe doors ; indirect light.
tng ln kitchen • breakfast CLEAN f'urn house, .facing
Mr • hui~ private fe nced nttan. 8/~/17 ha.vf! ttfs.
patio • plush l'lnuscaping • G. Kova !ch, 31145 Cnffre L.n,
brick Bar·B·Q's. l8f'ie heat-Snnla Rolla. 707/54~173.l
ff pools & lAruit.
3101 So. Bristol St. 3 NURSES need 2 hr ptly
(lb Ml. N. of So. Cx>!!:rt Plaza) fum house to $165. 548.JM.ll
S•nta Ana 1-',"'.-','m,•,·.,...,==--c-
PHONE: 557-1200 e LANDLORDS e
RENTALS
' DOVER SHORES Aplo. Furnished
l.Dvely 2 BR furn apt. Pool,
carport, walk to shop'g.
Adult~. M pell!. $150.
1941 PomonR, C.M.
Adull.11. 560 W. Hamil ton, ting arttn. Adult11, no pet.. Beaut-Quiet Pool. Pr iv
CM 5"48-72U 387 W. Bay, Open House l---------patio. Beam clngs. 17676 $160 -LKG 2 BR. Stu dio
MERRJMAC WOODS new 12-7 pm daily. M&-0073. Newport Beach 5200 Cameron. 84Ul2t Apt, {Triplex), F1.1nily size
FREE RENT AL SERVICE
Broker 5.l4-6.'l82
Rooms for Rent 5995 ~Y Forewr View. 4i Berl· ~ room Jvan Well• home. 1% Gener•I 4000 MAGNIFICENT view, 1~1 luxury l -2 BR., air~. 2 BR Unfurn apt, Bil-iflll -------. -LRG, Cle1.n 2 BR, encld kitch. v.•/bllns, crpls, drp,:,
)'fl.art old. Year le&M from
j .July 15th, includlrll" 1ardtn.
er. S700 JMnth,
1'00ms, Elegant 2 brtrm 42!! Merrimac Way. 54.>6300 w/w crpts. ~nranl ok. N~ ;..OPEND'im aarage. Adull.11, no pets. 2608 !~~~~n e:. c~S:·.11c~lll;r N; ROOM, Barh, priv. entr .. on.
J t F duplex. Furn or unfum, See clus 5100 ~ts. I.lit & last Sl65 mo 1n AMIGOS WAY Engh1nd St. 536-1205. peti. 2230 s. Cent~r St., beach. Avail thru .Tuly, Call us or Adults onJy. Sl50 -$.W!). TRAILERS-3. BR -$150 t p"'1" I c"'M1r. Apply 135 . Alben 2 BR 2 ba unlla, unlum. [=5.16-=9593==· ======_:S::;.A~·_;N~r~W.::.•:;m:::.';;'•_:54;:,_.,..::::;::::::·::·_ Aft 6:30 PM. Refer. req. 2'111 Kingii Rd., NeWport & 2 BR's $00 up. 132 W. ·• · . mgr upstairs apt Out1ide living area.11 and 494-5647.
Sl"ngle Adults Bc:h. 548-8858. . '\'ll!1on. 543--9577.133 E. 16th or Cllll 1213) 693-5839, (213J double garages. $250 to $300, s.nt• Ana 5620Sant• Ana 5620 °'SL ... E"E"P"tN"'G;o--;R"oo"'m-..,-,-1,--,r .. -1
HOLIDAY PLAlA SI. 642-l26.i. '124-5lOO ext. M. * 644-1617 * t>mployect pe.rMn. Call even.
Realty ComJ>«ny South Bay Club is a \l.i'lole DELUXE. 1paciau.11 1 Bdrm. J BR, dicier bach man only. * LARGE 2 BR. * ~ ings, 6~318D.
Macnab-Irvine
67~3210 new way of life destined Furn apt. $135. Plu.11 util. Util pd, no ran.re. SUS. Crp111, d~. displ, lrs patio, 2 BR 2 ba, bltns, cpl/drp, f1JRN. Room for refined l !!!!!!!!~!!!!"~"!!'!!"''!!"~':'I juRt for single people. Jt's. lita!td pOOI. Aftlplt p!'lrk. 1971 Church SI . 646-2()9.1. nr, quiet arta. Pref. cpl, rir, priv ·~. Adults, no flel'$0n. N"WJXIM area,
REDUCED: 2 BR. 2% BA fun living with 1''&lTTI, dy-lqg. No children • no pet1. SHARP, com.,,.ct I brm. No chldrn/peta. See to ap. pell. St75. Appt only, 4'249 642-5697 Condo, part .turn. Ponl. NllTJlc neighbors, lt'1 a 19'5 Pomona, C.M. Qu.iel building. Adull1 only . Prtt .. S\50. HilariA Way. &4{).-0093
Adu 11 1. S 2 4 0 mo. $750,000 Clubhouse w Ith $180 •· 2 Rr. w/ pool'. Gar. $135 mo. 541)...9722 or 547-2682. 2047-A Chllrle St. IMMAC Penthou!e type. 2 ROOM S60 mo. No cooking.
64l-401S/67l-6756. health club, 1auna.1. swim· Singles ok. Ava.ii now. I NTCE 1 BR Duplex. New MMOOO, 640.1841 BR, .,-•-k. cpt/drp, elec: l.rg priv BA k entr, Set · 1 ··-bll 64"" I ,...,~.. Mar No. 6. 213.'i Elden, C.M. 3 BR 2 ba, l8U Dover Or. ming poo • _..,,. room, • Blue Beacon, Bier. . .... t.1 C"a~lirtfl:, Adulti. Sll5 mo. 2 BR Un Tum apt. Bll-in1, nrnge It refrlg. Adi!•, no
G1.rdener/watu, l child, no ll!llnl•, Indoor gOlf driving 549·-083.t w/w crpts. Jnfant ok. No ~ta. S200 mo. 642-3666 NJCE Room for man on day ••M range-, lenni1 courts, pro Costa Me•• •100 .,.t_, l!!t •· J t 1165 shill. Costa Mesa. Close Jn. pets.............. ~--------ATTRACT. 1 BR. furn. utll'• ' ... aa mo WATERFRONT· upper m A 1) ' 64" -. -•j•=..n ~-1••6 shop llnd re•Kient tennis pro, ~ Incl utll Apply )'• Al""--' · • ""'"w ~ ."},,)•· '" * SUNNY * pd, $105. Si nglf' adll, over Pl CM. ~, . ~"1 .11pec:tac:ular view. New, Jux. rth . '// : 3 BR, • 2% Ba townhouw.. Single, I &. 2 Bedroom Jux. 30 only, 642-6197. ., . . mgr ups atn ap uriou1 2 Br. 2 Ba. $405 QC Uf J age
ury 11ipartments with all the * ACRES * or call (2tll 69J....5&19. --th ~ ,,,. or 6..,. .....,. Guest tiome1 Pool. Lra ground. Ava.ii lm-mode.m cnnvenlenee1 avail-• 2 BR DELUXE APT. 2 Bt'd 1.~"=-·=· ,,"'c-.~~::-;o,--,-'~--= ~ •1---------5991
med. S2CI mo. Ag! 646-0732 able. l'umilhtd and untum. * Mo ... l•Ap ... * ea..._, 1 ·r ....... , room Apartment, bllln WESTCLIFF : 2 BR. ,,..,.u PRIV. Room now ava.il in ,. ,~ u..,,,.ra ~i 1rcs. nlUI. r11ina-e/oven a: ,..frlt" No r Sf'd I
-Unlvor1lty P•rk 3237 ~. Studio & 1 Bedroom1 Adultt. $155 mo. 643-'T!I08. chlktl'W!n or pets Sl35 . c:pt/d111 ,1 bltns. Adullll oncy, S-.Ula Stvl.. L11.ru -K"f'n ruts home for am·
• :;;.:.;"'-';.;.;;....:------·I $l 2 WHL . Wells-McCard. le, R. Itri. no pell. Sl1S rno . 548-6515 r-· J ·;, bulatory, 11enior c I 1 i ze n . , di NEW • ....., RENTS FROM " CO OOMINIUM I I J A I...,_ Lovely yard A a patio. Good • 3 Bednn • n rm, ..,_, $150 to $350 Day, Week or Month N rt Be.ch 4200 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. N w pco ,_...,,._,-' U•/•• W..J food, COngf!nlal abnosphere,
3 Bednn Ir 1tr1um •••••• S300 e Cnlor TV ewpo $41-712!1 Eves. MW684 privllege:t. 3 br. U8S mo. A'"" ''-'--CM Arel\. 548-5225.
• B<drm .l fun rm .... 1325 • Pool ~ Pho.,. S.N incl MESA MOTEL QUIET ADULT~ LIVING 67"9183· --• ·~nn. r..m rm A djnlng NEWPORT BEACH 0 M Id • __ , 11 1 2 B 1-"'-::======= Q-JJtr S"-1 w.--r .a '....tli ..
, nci• a .:w:n>1~ 11va . • LOW WEEKLY R.;.TES * &. R'1. Shag <:rpt.11, I -nn, tTurtJt Rock)R ••••. 1$.360 880 Irvin e Ave. 1 Sl,rnal So, of o.C. Kltchf'_n TV'• maid servi~ bltn11, pool, bf!t.ut, lntlscpd. last Bluff '5242 £•rfd•1 l•a.ricw 0..,,.,.
101 PETTIT, ea tor I · & '16th Fairgmunds · • · Sl50 ll Sl'J'O mo. Incl 1111 -----r.a ... , • .,..,.,. A a-..
"SINCE lHI" rvine 2376 Nrwpnrt Blvd. Heattd Pool. utll. Ztl Avocado SI , e NEW DELUXE e '""-'• D.a.-' • .,_,.
Days UJ..0101 Ni9ht1 (71 4) MS.OSSO· 548-91M M6-!168l M6--0m. 3 BR, 2 BA Apl fOf' leue. Air C-tlilio11M
2 BR I Ba ............... $300 SOUTH ·BAY CLUB S13.'l/mo Dlux mob hm 1 B~RM ~· Cott. to bay NEAR Paliudtt, N. Bc:h. Incl. spac. muter suite, dtn ,, i .. 1o1 r~ l'ri••• .!r.
' 3 BR. 2 Ba .............. $315 . Mmpl. furn. Hid po o I & beach. m 4or9iuntum7 · 2 bdnn. duplex. .1ttachf!fl nn It dbl l&ra.it'. auto daor ~· • u"'•·~ r'°" . r. .. TYO Al"''""• ·~-m-7176 ~ .94 I l h'ld I . -r &v·11 Pool k Rec ,~ •• I ' .... _., ... ,., •..... i,., s.,w. ,,. l BR. 2 Ba ................. ).IOJ •du llll, no ~· 4 Sl!'ll.ICM'MI pr. c I ' l'ncf!d yard. v,~M tLU. •
3 BR. 21~ Ba ............ S37S 1p1RJM£NTS 1 fl.lob. Est. ~ N w pt RoblMOn Avail now! No p e t 1 ! artl. Now Ren l ing 5BR2~Ba ............. $.150 R II •• • 543-6.\12. . BAOIF;LOR. kki111 for S4M969 e ntOMm!> e 1MadrE.,,,•11'ri•ol
e RED HJU. REALTY LOVELY 2 bdrm. Spll.ciowl, rntlttd ~rwon. S hori1 , DEWXE 1 lt: 2 BR. Bltn ~Amigos WA)', NB I•• N-'1. •I S..rA Coc.r rr--'--
Uni v, Park Centf!r. Irvine Liv• whe r e the fun 111 M.w flitn~ brlci.4.nack bAr m~t, thc11.trc.. .2 blkl. "lfove " m.nwhr. pool, tncl. Man11.l"d by 1000 JV. MacArtltr,r Bled.
Call Mytl.me 8.\1-0&20 <'rpt, bfaut. kitchen &: tilf! S7o:fTr7no7l'f~. ~AJte .. 11111 util pd. f'rom WJUJAM WAl..'J'ERS~ -5
DAILY PILOI' DIME -A $110-UW pd. Bachtlor A,pl. ~tt-.. Ri-11!10AAbl' re.nl. No 1·BR: duplt;x l blk l() (J(.'f)lln S 1 l ~ $ 1 T 0 . Cl\ 11 d re n TNl;ISE: 2 BR 2\; ba, fpl , ttnla .4.n•--540..84!11._
_ tJNES at l'OU '*"'pen-AvAil now. Bkr. A:ct1Vf!, ll'AM rf!qulrtd. 331 Vlelorla, k bl}-. s»o ytatly. util, welcome. 241 W, Wll1on, No, patio, el'IC aar. '1S2 AmJ&ol;
t11et & d&t. .;.IJ;...14-<-'!MI-·-------.•-.pt_. _2._c_.M_. ----pd. 3111 W, B&lbo& Blvd. 5. !icl-74M. Wf. Apt~ Ulll: ~.
\ _J_ ~,.,. ......
M isc. Rentals J999
RANCHO Ro.salita Riding
Club atalls avail . $ 3 5
monthly rlut~. Inquire al
Spa<'t 1752 Orchard Dr .•
Santa Ana 1-Jr.ightA, or ea..11
Diane Wt@d al 96&-7019 aft
7
GARAGE For rrnl C.M. A~
prox l l'x22', Alley aCCflss
:;.orno:-897:o1. .
M"S WONDERFUL the
many huy1 In 31'pUanet1
)'(IU find ln !ht Oauilled
Ads. ~k the.m now!
'
'
RIAL FSTATI
General
MIK. Rentalt
•
BUSINESS •nd BUSINESS i nd
"NANCIAL l'INANC!AL
~~J lv11M11 ---c:·.-.... ~.-,.,,-· .. -,-t-, -;:;;;;=:;:;;;;;;;';;;'•;;;•;;;;;;;;;';•;;;;;;;;;OperluN;;;;;;;;;;;;;lleo;;;;;;;;;;;;';;;*;;;;
· 2>-Vk. !9th and ""'"' EARN $10.000 ANO UP l'IR YEAR
Aria. .....,.,,, YOUR OWJ! 'IUSINISS, WILL NOT
I~ Propwly -INTERFIRE·WITH PRESENT IMPLOYMENT.
Mol• '· No s.111"1 -Fomol1 ·,Attention The Col!Jf)lida!MI Distributing Co. oJ Houston will appoint ·a Distributor in your area to dls-
lnvestors ! \{ibute. o'!': national, fast moving, high profit
For Sale, approxlmately % products. To qualify you need car, be a local
llcte prime R-3 property. responsible party, make a one time invest·
Situated on high blutr. over. meilt of S2875.00 and be willing to devote ap·
Jookinr Udo Isl&nd, New. proXimately to hours per week to managing
port Beach, etc. Adjacent to your own business .. uoas Memorlal HMp;lAl, FOR FURTHER INFORMATION WRITE: surrolindcd ~y Me d'i cal
Buildings and a lovely high. TM Contelid•ted Distributin9 Co.
rise, ap.a~nt complex, 3110 WntMirMr, Suite 426
Excellent financing ava.iJ. Houston, Ttx11 71027
able. noo.ooo. Write or call Including phone number.
Petrie Upton, Ctt4) '193-.2Ml. l.!!!"!!"~"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!!!!!l! ... !!l!IO!!!'!"!'!!l!!'ll!!'!'~'!!l!~'!!!!I!!
To"""'"'"' Dov. C.rp.1 w. 'REAi: ESTATE ANNOUNCEMENTS
Sl>t• St., Redlando, Ca. !l23'll Genor•I ond NOTICE~
• $79,950 •
5 Units + 3 Br. home e $ff.GOO e
AcrH.. 6200 Found (FrM Ads) 6400 -~~----
:i Units + 2 Comm. stores + hooSt', l."Omm. frontage e $125,GOO e
llotel, 12 + 3 Apts.
Easy terms • illneu
PLACE REAL TY 494-9104
2969 So. Coast Hwy.
CUSTOrif 6 units • prime
lac. 01vners 4 Br, di!n, 3
Ba + 5 l~io!I; lplcs,
patios. Net"'1!11,500. Owner
675-fJ033.
Business Property 6050
4 BR 2 ba dbl gar. stucoo
home, zoned for b111, use.
F'Ul.I view of busy mkt cor.
An adv. sign is visible to
18000 can daily, 100% fac-
tory \.\Wken. Ideal IDCAHon
child.care or any pro-
f~ional . $24,500-$6500 dn.
$180 mo'ly.
~ytle Realty
543-9493
58.l w. 19th
24 hr. phone
FOR sale by owner, 1-unit
modern MEDICAL DEN·
TAL CENTER. Good
return, iood write-off.
Consider borne or! in trade.
5 ACRES So, Hemet • 2700
ff. elev. Water, smog frtt.
$8,850. 847-4147, 9 am lo
2 pm
R. E. W•ntod 6240
WANTED: view home in See 5911 Heil Ave., HB. ,.~ d L I ""I Ca.II owner 714: 846-3221 ........ vna el Mar, pref. ~ _
eves. or 2ll: 69&-1810 days Harbor View Hilla area·, -'------
from owner only. Call
C-2 lot, 50 x 200 with 2 673-8916.
BR ho111e on rear, near 1 ~8-u-S_l_N_E_5_5_•_nd __ _
E. 17th. Owner. 646-4563,
BLACK LOOSE _. LE A 1',
BOOK Imprinted ''Ch.
Cllffflide Shown•· lilied with
dog show pictutts &c rlbbollB 67:1-7413 FINANCIAL ---------1 together with 1ev•r1l
Business Rtnt•I Business package1 ot dog pictures
Opportunities 63DQ & corr f'apondence.
--'-'--==--;.;;.;;I REWARD cau 494-7585. CO!'dPL Furn Real Estate
office, WeU estab .. ~ toe.
Parking. $150 mo. incl all
util. 5 Yr lease. Harbor: &.
19th area. \Vrlte Box M
1061 Daily Pilot.
DANA PT-blk -from harbor,
on Del Prado, ol1ice/1torr
1pace 1000 sq fl, $190. mo.,
lease 496-1672-Box 2'1, Dana
Pt.
MODERN Ocean viev.• unilJl.
Shop & office space avail.
1999 So. Cos.st Hwy, Laguna
Beach. M:ent: 494-9471.
STORE OR OFFICE
600 or l2Xl Sq, Ft. Parking
--*PARTNER
3 STORES
6000' Heart of Lancaster. tot
78 x 118. 2 storerooms k
M e a t Market including
equipment. Corner Ave. I It
division. Across. from Fair.
grounds. ExceUent invest.
ment!
REWARD for Gt'rman
Shepherd, male, lie No.
14559. Need11 a dlot! Vic.
W, Wilson, C.M. 548-0056
REWARD. Golden Labrador
puppy, rem, Emerald Bay,
June 28. 713: 790-5905 coil,
Reasonable. 646-2414
2630 Avon St., Newport
COSTA J'l.1esa: 600 sq. ft.
office. 600 sq. H. store, 800
sq, ti. shop. * Owner
&16-2130
555,aoo 494-5102 "' 494-83ij8.
l\Irs. Riley alter 6. WHITE female wh i p p et.
714.540-5595 look! like small Greyhound.
Opportunity K-ko Vic Balboa Blvd &: 20th . ........ St. 54G-8308 after 3PM.
6070 In. Dana 'Pomt. Stationary ll Heartbrcken!
gift store. Only one in boom. .
Delwce 1-Rm. oUiCf' Ing new marina arc1. Only $25 Reward f~ finding sm,
·$4 000 + inventory &: owner blk long hm male dog,
Nr. Orange County Airport wi'u carTY. Grosses SlS,OOO. v~ F.y. Chula VI.Ila Uc
&: Irvine l n du s t·r I a I \Von 't last, call now! flio. 4859. 962-4831.
CompJex, Carpet. drapes, AGENT 496-1268 KEYS. Guaranttt Chev lap. music, air-conditioning l
janitorial servlce. S12S Mo. FANTASTIC buslnegg op. On A~a SI, 4tcuna Beach.
BOB PETI'IT, Realtor portuni.ty. 140' ttstaurant, .':!IM:ii"'======= e 833-0101 e established NeWpOrt Beach
6 Yrs. Well known. For DESK SPACE lmmoo;.I< sale du• to ....
'.I Z875 Beach Blvd. of ma~r. $10,000 dn. Con-tact Mr. PiU, 494-6.173 or
Huntington 1Beach 494-7432 ..
6424321.. Ext 276 GARDENING J"O\lte f or
APPROX fiOO Mf. ft. $1111 aale-$800 or oUer. Also
mo . .All util'11 incl .• except mowers & equipment. Jack
phone, Next to Sec. Pacific =Ca=v=ana=u';g~h,_548-911=~'.c· ==
Bank, 188 E . 17th St., CM. TROBIOAL FISH STORE
Ample parking. Ml-4210 NETS $20,000 0 W NE R
Penonal1 * Alone?
Yes, lt'1 your fault, For ft.
corded message that w1ll
change your life call. ,
' 5'17-6667
74 Hr. Rl!cOrdlng * fULLY LICENSED * Renowned Hlndi.i_ Spiritualist
Advice on aJl matten.
REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS * CAB1NETS. Any sire job
25 yrs exper. 5'S-67U
A·l Small job 1pecialist.
Call Gordon,
846-6545
6625
:c3.· ~ ., ~ ~ ESK SPACE WlLL TEACH. Call Van al D Th< Roal.Estate". -717l Love·, Marriage, Business CARPET
Reading, given 7 daya a STEAM CLEANED 222 Forest Avenu9 MKT. SDJ,000 in groc. a:
L 8 h produce annually. Priced agune ' eec for lmmed. sale. 536-2042 ........ --=o"'E-::SK~S"'P..,.A"C"'E-1 Monoi 19 LMn ·-105 No. El C.mino R••I
S,,n Cl•m•nt• ...... .,
NEWPORT Beach Deluxe
Offices. Air-cond, hid, w/
priv. ba. 2400 W. Cout
Hwy.
SlOO h10NTH. on Cout Hwy.,
Laguna Beach. UUUties k>-
. eluded. 494-9727.
Commercial
5 Storts, SUO;GOO. 6!16--698 W,
19th St. Bethel Towers cor-
nl!t. 548-1768 Agl.
lndu1triel Rental ---INDUSTRIAL ,W.dg. lot' lae.
48CO 91;( It. IH7 W. 16th.
N.B. (In Rear). 67'-2Ml
A'M'R. View lot o'k>Ok.irc
Meu. Verde Country Club
l HB. $19.150 ~.
-
1st TD Loan
•% INTERFSC
2nd TD Loan
Terms based on equity,
'42-2171 $45.1611
Se~ Harbor area 21 yrs.
S.ttler Mor!t ... Co.
336 E. 17th Street
•
week, 9J..M-9PM 312 N. El REASONABLE RATES Camino Jteal, San Clemente, 49'Z-9l36, 492-4)076 Abo carpet instaUation
"6-5971
I WILL not be re!pornilble -~==~==~-for any dt!bt! other than OWNERS SPECIAL
my own, Allen Le 0 n 500 1q. It. $20. Diamond Windham Carpet c:tc;aners. 187 21st
St., Corita Mesa, 64>-1317 . AL COHOl.tCS Anonymous Phone 54.2-7217 or write to STEAAf jct ca1pet cleaning.
P.O. Box 1233 Costa M6u. By CJarKare. nation-wide tcrVice. Frei! est: 642-4055 DRIVER Asst. lo ~Uchlg&n
Jeavin&; approx. July 13, Call REMARC Services. 3 f'OOma S36a3038 S2L50. Fully iuaranteed.
' Credit cards OK. M7.Q;88 SWINGERS On.nae County
Guide. Free into write P.O.
Box ~ Anaheim 92814
•
Floors 6665
·-· --
'
When You
Wont it clone
right •••
Call one of
the experts
listed below!~
•
PAINTING-INT. l Ext .
Highest QuaJity, Lowest
Prices. Fully exp. In1. John
673-1166.
RETIRED Painter: 26 yrs
exper. Neat I: honest. Non
drinker. Call r-'36-0801.
PAINTING &: Paperhanging,
reas. 25 yrs exper, Refer.
CaU 540-1943.
6170
•
frtd11, July J, l 1170 DAn. Y PILOT. f9
JOIS & IMl'LOYiilENT JOIS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPl!OYMINll
Joll W•-· Mon 70IO'.~~J~o~lioi;;Mi;..,;•~·~-W~-..~~7~~~00~J•~-~~A~1ol~•~· ~W~1~111~_.~.7~1~Dc/~ , __ ' . RfGHJ.Y Qua!Ulcd El.EC I
:<::"~~u·~ NOW THERE ARE TWO!!! of pcoea<Mlvt ex~
tceko -In °"""' Cowrty, McMt teeflllly heed.
fd project 10 develop
vacuum coiUriln p(lttioo ot
h(sh, I p e t d l)'ncbronoul
rt(.'Ot"(ien. l oiler a
divcrslf~ backa:round ln
nawport.
personnel
~•gancy AND
newport.
persoMil
. agency
............ 1,. 1 833 Dover Drive e I e ct ro •ll'li;u111 • ..,a •P-Newport Stach pllcat/o~•· Co(\la.ct &42·3870
:IU-'182-"'92.
Maintenance
Mechanic ATTENTION
Airline Stew's APPLY IN PERSON,,,. PM
Here's the perlecl. UtUe car MONDAY TilRU FRIDAY
for you a 1969 Triun1ph GT .S
4 speed, with overdrive. Ex-
tra clean IUOV 840) will
take car In trade or l.inance
PERSONNEL
DEf'ARTMENT
private party call dlr. 546-. •2 Fashion Ii>land, N.B. 4052 or 4!M-9773.
ASSISTANT
HELPER
Equal opportu'?tity employrr
*DRIVERS*
No ~•nc•
Necessary!
4570 Cam~& i;>r .. N<W)>O>"t S.acl>
557-66:21
HOUSECLEANING 1: Child
care. S50 wk plus mi. i
board. Si,si days. Rd'.1 • .PH:
54()...9212.
HOUSEKEEPER ror 5
adults, $200 nlQ .+ · rm l
board. 54&-9427 heft S,
54G-9U5 aft 5.
HliKPRS Emplyr pays :.te
George Allen Byland Agency
1()6.B E. 16th. S.A. 547-IJ395 I
'MAIDS
'
EXPERIENCEO
Apply pcrwnnrl oWce. 1
3rd floor
The Broadway
NEWPORT
No. 47 C~rts ol Fuhio n
Newport Center
Ah equal opportwiity
employer ,
A&cncy Jor Career Ctrll
410 W1 Coalt kwy, N.8.
By appotnt. M$..3s39
-vs 1
..
I
NO matter wt.8.lit is, Yo\1
CID MU ii ~th--1 OAJLYI--~
PILOT W.Qfr ADI 64~71 ....
• ..
• •
• .. ' •
MlllCHANDIR. Nlll M1RCHA!iD1t1 ~\ MlllC:HANDIU JIOR TllANSl'DllTATIDN TllANIPOllTATION
SALi AND TllADI! SALi· ANO TMQI. -~~ND· lllADE FREE TO_ YOt:l tolO • .!.!.... ....... 711111 1--------a C I Mloeell Iota & Y•chl1 -S.,=ll..;.boo...._h __ ~--1
Appll•n«I • 100 1mor•1 . •--SIL°"'R n-1,..· fem. cat ' '--• ""'waiii--Men ~=='--'-i..;..;;.;.;,,.,.,,,,. ....... ====~::= I E I I aoo •£ ~· IS' COl.UMBJA l!.··cr .. t
Solla. WASHER 115; ..,. dr)<>r, $50 qu pmtn . * AUCTION ·9 mo old A baby kitten lrownl119 • day uller,. "'l' """"''-
In x!nt eond. Pr1ee<1 !or MUSI' 8'tl t.ut BESELER . * wlth•blue '"' to cd: l>Ome, • • Moln Jib I< spinnaker; Uke ERE DQ YOU qu.lck pte. 494-Sdst' EN LARGER, ptode:l. •S Fine Furalture 2800 Ocean Blvd., Cd.M. bn. Marine Dlvft101 new. Con'ij>Jlltely equlp'd,
CLOTHES dr)ler·. like • ne\v, MC~.~ 1ena. ntcauve CU'-&: Appl1'nces be.tore JD A.M. &ft 3 PRESEtl"TS . J\e.ady ter aununer run! FROM poi.1 dis:hwasher new cond rlers l easel, Oxt o_v.er No Auction Toniie P.M. 7/1 Factory Showing ot th!! 1'1n Triller incl 'd. C:O.t $2200,
DECO TOR GETS CANCELLATION Pll• '54>0016 .• ' • 641~;,.~. offer, Pb. Dean, W indy's Audion Born BEST q in 'the woddl 4'1• !!"'of NEWPORT Sait~ia. utdng ~-CoU 548-01112
HERE? OF 11 LUXURY APARTMENTS -,_. 'Wfti£ mixture, 1 year. M:ROCAAN stern dn~. RHODES 33 "HANAlWlJ'' -NORGE w1U1hing me<:hine, --...,,....,. Newport, C)f 6'64686 HOWM!broken, netda yard. outbOvd t.,alumtnum boats Beautilllll)' ~ipped and
Are tbt -Monday mornlna , Spanlth &. Medtterr1n .. n Fu"'ltur• just ()~i.uJed. XJnt orde:a:. Sportll1tg Goods ISOO Behind 1·0111'• ~ P..tat'I. Pref. f:trn.11.y w/chlldren. ~t OU{ Colla• Mesa plants. maintained. Idea;! tor~~
b1oJw ••Uni: .,... Ire· ALL 11RAND NEW $20. 546-5n2. . --l!l P<O 4' x r ~.ll" cox """'513 714 Our~tu1np1n·atter..m ,.. day saning. ·
qt.tent! Doea taclnr:-that AS decoratofr dream boSuse ~nbdfispl~yt -• • 8110 G~NP!:"· ~t::S.6'31 ~-~ plywood, U ea;· 90 l>C•. 2'' LEAVING town: be filh the a• J1i,ppl>r Sf.Uboat to thr $5500 .;. TERMS
doaH:bd job v.>ttk •fter rooms o gorgeous pams urru ure """tlqua1 ;;,~tlve model No. 38 toll-faced USG insulation, trom m,y aquarium· ti tan-21' Galax» &: orter-ex-See at 19 Bay Island
WMk cut )'GUI' dtlvc! Then (was 'reg. $1295.) .15" x 48", $20; Curved pool tails, algae eaten: catfish ceptional performance I.: $73.-1232 ~~I.II u much U v.'9' SACRIFICE • • • .• •· • $425· SJNGAPOR~ BOU~O! 'ri=tetnl~i ~la~!'d ~ alidt, It brn. $50. 67Ml:Xil. 4 lg tin foil barba. &42-1579 C?J!lfort. You are lnvi~ to LIDO 14 w/ trlt. Equlp'd uc~u .,¥.. Authentic Antique Mclodeon 38 automatic Colt. pal. CRAFTSMAN .\CCl'a-ann 10 114 ':'Jill qur plant or any auth. for ra.c:ing $195. St.ored at
in working c on d It ion· 1897~1902 ·$70. 357 S&:W inch Radial • Saw w Ith s Puppies 6 wkl olcHnotbet Orized dealer in the area. l{)t.) Bayside Dr, Nwpl.
Sarcifice $350. 675-4292. magnwn 3.5 inch w/bolster outerB le attachments. $175. wht Collie. Fattier mix of Ask tor OW' FREE 40 page C213l 264--5010. eves (nl) -~-.. ny wW 'MciW ~~to shape
,..... ""11 "1"¥" · the way
you tllthk tt illoWa be. And
~ mean money! Our d>'·
-~Ip. ... eromo&n &nd
.a~ Pf'Oll'am produ.
coa aU the lcw you need.
+ Draw Plan Ava!Iable * Work C10le to Jtolne. ~ + Car Pla'n Avail.able. * Be an l.UOC:iate of H. W.
, Dwtgbt,' l'H))teted CalU,
R.E. Broker. + Group 'Health Insuranc:t
-42$.000 major medical,
life and accident * Unllmlted Company Fin.
anclnr on All Sales. + Borwa,lncentive Plan
Get ,Golna Now~aU :
Mr. stariley cn 4J 135-3233
" Open 1 0.,.
JlQ00.00
Salar}' .(not commission) five
1!.l.rf>' manage01ent exp. in
General Life Insurance, fee
NeaoHable. (alao ftt jobs)
. call ~~ L~estcliff-Person
nel Agency, 2043 \VestclW
Dr., N..a. 645-mo.
SALES
WELL Established (14
years). Real Estate ofllct
needs sales people; Private
desk I: phone, Top o:mmUa.
aion. Floor tlmt. Good walk.
in tn1fic'. Call for.lnfl!:rvtew,
W. E. '-•ch4tnmyar
Rltr. 646-3928 Eves: 6734577
Compl•t• M1dlt1rran11n Btdt-oom Suite in
Oa k. (Rog. iH9.00I •..•....•. NOW $118.00
Gor91ous 'S ptnish Cu1tom Bu ilt Sofa with
m1fchin9 love Sett-Choice of b11utiful
f•b<ico, IReg, $3 19.95 1 ........ NOW $1'8.00
Sptl'li1h Oinln9 Sets ............................ $75.00
.Solid Otlt End Ttbles I Coffee T1bl11 $19.10
T•ll 01cor1f9r Ttble L1mp1
IR09. $49.951 ........................ NOW $11.00
Spanish Han9in9 Sw19 lamps
.IRa9. $49.951 ........................ NOW $22.50
CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN
$85. 44 MaanUm-Ruger r ine 54!Ml739. Lab-&.moyan 499,-4145 aft. 6. ca~~tcry Showroom 1_..,-,..,..'"'l.9S======~I Sewing Machines 8120 w/ihoulder ·pad. SSS. Pvt. MUST LJqujdate FABULOUS 7/3 l919 Placentia O J 16' FIBER-GLAS Centerboard f:i~: ~n~~6m ar:: OPAL COLLECTION at MOVING: 8 e & u (I (lit blk 646-4737 ' ' 548-Un sloop w/trlr, l )T. oJd. $1095
l9'li> SINGER Toueh O' Ma tic •u" ""JO. Ofien coJ11idered below wholesale pt Ice 1 . t erman shep, nialt, 1 yr ~3 daily & Sat. On.ly or bet ofr. Or trade for
sewing machine in walnut V'l6>W 673-0802. good w/ehildttn. 64~ Ortenbauser Marine Venture 22. 300 Broal!lway, cabinet. Zig-zags, ·but· on ttilal. I CM MG-~7 Fb:her Ste~ w/speakers 7 4 4U So. Harbor S.A, · " · ~~1:?f b~~u~~~ 7'S"~¥L yrSU!f.BOcT°cond. $150, Sprague.cartton Early WHITE/Brown RAT. 2800 839-1260' e 12' AQUACAT, lull boat,
or S5 per mo. Call 543-9~ $30 9G2-8587 Amer, bedrm set-dbl bed Ocean Blvd. CdM before lO U Weekday11 & Sal. great shape, new
anytime. · ' chest $150. 644-4678 am or after 3 pm 7/4 9-5 Sunday blue/white tiail. $4 5 0 ,
-==;:::.--,,,=-:c:~o:-SCUB,'. outfit suit, regulator, 49&-5409 '11Yro ";""""'r touch-0-matic, 1 ks be.It PLUS X'I'RAS FRIGIDAIRE deluxe BLUE eyed ,Angora kitten 1--~-·-----~
.,..16,_ an '· · ' re'"'""rator, excellent con-2800 Ocean Bl,, CdM •-1-... Lil John's • 24' Islander. aux, head, rig->••. beaut. walnut con. 675-3781 ... 06.. '"'"'" 1740 E Wh·tti • BI·~ mm -' dltion, very clean, ;65. 10 am •or after 3 pm 7/4 · 1 e. vu. galley, covers. p u IP it. FURNITURE sole, makes butlon holes, HART Skl.s with binding'I. 642--)724 u -Habra. 213-0W 1-4715 cushions, w/sllp. Reduced
· . overca11ts 5tams, bbind . bOots, I: poles. $50., · · WHITE poodle cross, female, 9-7 Tuesday~Friday to $3745. 897-03ll ex 5022,
. ~!11s0,8d0hesi0~s ~~alletc.pymu~:.· 64~ , 1 4 x1 8 REGULATION pool 2 yrs. lows children. 881 . s.s Sat, lo.3 Sun&.y 12, SAIL Fl-', n•w --•t, 119, •. ....., • .,,., ... ~~~.,:..;.=~-~..,;,,, tab e complete with all ac-. Victoria, CM 7/4 ""' ....,
1844 Newport Blvd (It 545--8238. SCUBA tank J .vaJve cessorie5• Xlnt ~. ·$350. CALICO kitten, striped kit-R.V. Staats Co. ;~':°"· 638-8470 or
l!I Harbor -Slvd.I t-S-IN_G_ER __ A_ut_o_>_ig_·,..--,~m-os. $45.00. ~3629 after 6 pm tens (3 only), Mesa. Verde. 2001 \V. Coast H\\Y, NB
Cos M 0 I old. No attach needed for 5484825 -MUNTZ Audli>Steieo 4 and 545.3842 '1/3 548.33.U 9-S every day ta esa n Y zig-zag, button hol'e"ir: ../···1-'0!! .. SURFBOARD, cun 8trackc&runitmodel A.00.. Power Cruisar1 9020
-G ·~ h .,ha-. 19" wid•, xlnt oond. Ex-" I ~ndl"--~--Sly Tomer, !em dog, Be;g. SCR M LETS. . designs. etc, Ual' • ..,., eas "i:n.Dave 494-2946. ..~en ...... UU4l • .,-~-""""" " Black. Long hair. Loves A '• 16' RIVIERA • Deep. v.105 Every Night .,.ii 9 -Wed., •nd S.t., 'TU _ 6 or small payments. ~6 ._ $50. Call 837-4239. children. 548-0813 7/3 • . hp Cheysler·power Jift.foat
Miscellaneous l600 HEALTH SPA 5 yr. single FREi:: puppies. Mother-JI!» ANSWER·S thl?ttie'.cu&tom big ~I JOBS & EMPLOYMENT F 1-:-Mu1lcal ---·------membership. $165 PrL prty die~ _!at.her Chihuahua. 6 lr8.iler-manr ~tras. $1895. -_ur_n_iw._~---'8000= __ 1_n1_1_•u_m_•.•_1_• __ 1_1_25 CUSTOM JEWELRY 673-8507. Wies 642-3354 7/4 . 541-8436 after :i pm Jobs ~,Worn. 7100 · NEWPORT BEAOI TENNIS . · Guilty -Chime -Chaos -, BEDRM aet: «>mp!. corner FENDER BASS AMPLIFIER Rinp, earrings & pendants. % MINIATURE poodle pu~ Ratify_ AtmlORJTIS 26 . Cll ff Express
e WAiTRESS
Experienced ·
FuU Time
Apply In person only
THE RIGGER
No. 16 F8'hion' Island
Newport Beach -
desli:-dte58eT comb, ~hell DELUXE RJCKENBAOiER Let us modernize your old CLUB MEMBERSHIP $15(). pies 7 wks old. 644-4227 A writer's hand beei.me Cnuser · L/11,. sleep11 !·
beadbrd, angle bed, mat-BASS GUITAR jewelry. Custom casting. 548--5306 · 114 lame-from cramps. His doe· Clean, nu paint. $5495.
tress &: apri1W'5. Dark * 675-6404 * CB.sting supplies. Cut stones. INV AUD Walker with Seat. FLUFFY Long haired ki t· tor diagnosed it as AUTHOR. 962-9910. . .
walnut & white, 2 yrs old, ELECTRIC Guitar, red Rock hound supplies. Real-Chrome and Leather. Like tens, 6 wk!. Box trained. ITIS. SACRIFICE: 17'1J; 1nbrd. All
'• -f nd 11'" Call fl iatic prices. New, $00.00, Call 837-4239 fbrgl Int -nd 11·~ •• ._,, .,...r co · 'IJ. a hollow body, dual pick-ups, 644-4295 7/3 CAPTAIN s, x . !:" · uw -
6pm. 644-4288 SlOO. Dave, 673-9729 belore 5 Open Tues thn:i Sun NEWPORT Beach Tenriis FREE bl k al . , bes! otter. 613-9361. Closed Mon. O ub. Full (amily mem· -one ac m e ter-Licensed • Radar • Loran,1 ~~~~~----KITCHEN set, round white Welnut Spinet S2SO S M GEMS rler puppy, 1 wk!. old. 30 Years exp. sail or power. 24' TROJAN cabin cruiatr,
fonnica table &: 4 barrel .-A.-5651 alt-6 PM 2750 H bo BI·" ll A bersbip. 6#-0l39. 84&-6511 7/3 Profeulonal Sport Fishing x:lnt $,hape, nearly new chal ~ BI k lat t..... ll'to-..... ar r vu., . CABIN at Mammoth Lakes . I,_.,, 644-1368 " .....,; ac s e "'" * ARTLEY. silver FLtrrE. Costa Mesa * 549-2039 Full k 1100 SI 1 ......,, FUNNY but loveable puppies: Gulde Mexican &:-Central engine. ~'" Sp&nlsh coffee table &:-D ,..,__ w • Pl _., ~· .,., Maltese Poodle/Beagl, mix. American waters • also matching end !bl. ttM Good cond!linn, A.~king ta"'. Rear Of CO ege ~·ter '"""·-.Reserve now. """'""74 S _, •kl Bo I --"A"' ,,..t .. alt
4
'f...,,,· •. ..,.. ..,., ,,..,,...-,. J.1~-675-4764 7/3 licensed multi~ng. commer. pe-I I 7ll<N .... ~ QUI 642--2931 ·
Ml W ~ 1610 2 FEMALE · · and cial pilot. land & sea. Ad· , LOVELY Floral aofa, qever GUITAR LESSONS IC. Int-· guinea plg'!I rninistrative experience. 10 GLASS-15. h.p. Mere.
WOMAN to work in Donut * SA LESWOMA!'i ~ .... .zhop.· No phone call! plea.ae.
.Must have experience. Ap,-2947 u-~-C ply in person. JACKIE'S ~. .M.
used, $125. Match. love seat FOLK ----· -----cage. 962-7116· 713 Beat of references Write Lrg, Wheel trailer., like nu
$75. Pvt pty, 530-33.17: 675-8421 WANTED: Good ~ toys, OLIVE tree, you dig ii up. Box M 1060, Daily ·Pilot. $250. 4 men ~ nylon in
LIKE new! 8' van
seat. sufa
&. Jove. EXCELLENT beginnen; Of'
praCtice trumpet. Case &
a~~ries. $35. 549-2673.
wago111, trikes, desks & 962-7637 7/3 ;,BY OWNER" flatable $30. 1626 Newport
chain-child size &: misc. Bl N 35 c M alt a
fQr pl'9-fCbool, FRE,:. ~~Baby Guinea pi~.j SELL. lease or leas e p.~. o. ' · ' '
FAmION CENTER, 75 School I 600 Huntington Center, Hunt .. ntfruction 1 557.r.,,gs Phone ~ or 646-3'106. · purchll!t'. -40 ft. -T . S . .0..-, ~~~-.,-.,---= 6 LOVABLE puppies· am. Whet-let. Suii-lounger with 15 Flberglas&-Johnscn 33
bl'ft(I. 548-2934 7/6 fly-bridge s., D.F., elect ref. hp otbrd., elec. start.,
12 FT, v.-ooden fishing boat Nu paint. 2-390 cub. in· rexlm?le ~n1.trol..,!,;l~.00.x3ir.,,
'Bch. -
SALESLADY
rience<J ft')actY•to-Weat.
Exciting Udo 1l'ibjl. Excel·
lent pay • Work SUITOUnd· maa. 213-1796-3787
* SALESWOMAN * MATURE Part time
Youn& Maternity Shops
So Coast Plua aft 2 PM * * SE~RETAR!Y'
-EX~Ul!VE-"* *
Pol.ted, · artic:\ilate Secretary
wt th , ~bove· ,twra.ge sklllt.
Type 70, SH :tro. Mb1. 5
yrs of· recent ex.per. u an
·Executive SeCfttary. ~nt
beneflta _ &: .salary. For a~
pointment, contact Person-
nel 540-4020. '
AVERY PRODUCTS
Coi1iumer Division
AIRLINE
SCHOOLS
·PACIFIC
. Day &: Night OU&et
"""'" &ID E~ 11th .St., Santa Am
' I '
GQIT"lt LESSONS
MY HOME. 536-8204 .
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TllADE -Furniture 8000
_Off-:-lc_• __ F_u_m_1_1•_•_•_10_10 Pl•no• & Ora•n• 8130 [I.. ... ~~
Refio'd 34x<tl wood desla. PIANOS & ORGANS 89J2312
WOULD Like to rent from
priv. pa.rt;y station wag or
1m. bus Jor 2 mo'l Ph.
646-9210 or 646--3706. · terceptors & recent major nt. Sacr1 ice. ,,,..,..Jon
$69.50 e Refin'd wood arm NEW & USED 't-
rotary chain, $29.SO e \Ve • Yamaha Pianog ()rgaflJ
have t~ largest selection • Thomas Organs
needs Y..'Ork. ~7 114 Xtras Plus XXX. J\Iake offer.' GLASPAR (Avalon) 90 HP
1700 2 BLACK Shel tie? I puppies, Weekdays 5.19-8978. Eves Mere, compass, top. covn.
of used otttce tum in tJilil • Kimball Piano! area. • Kohler & C8mpbell
-Mc Mahan Desk COAST MUSIC
1800 Newport Blvd. NEWPORT & .HARBOR
GU-8450 Costa Mesa * 642-2851
Office l!qulpmtnl ~II Open 1D-i Frl 10-? SUn J2.5
REDECORATING Drexe l IN!chlnery, ~tc. 9 wks. old. 64&-2033 7/4 893-840J. b'lr, new seats. $1 400.
bedroom set consisting of -;Mf'GR MOVING 2 LARGE gray and blk rah-27• OWENS .62 neiv 327 646-i295
triple dfseser, chest on .. ,_ -m•-...,.., Ip •ay bits wlcage. 546-8629 7/4 Flagship eng, &. 'trans. Full l·/~1-4-' -SK!-Boa--t.-F~,-,-.. -35~H~.P. chest, king size headboard, "''-'" ..., ..-.~ • night stands in beautifu1 e.n-. booths, spray gum, paJnts, PET$ and LIVESTOCK ro5vers. head, galley, bait, Johnson. Trailer. S 2 7 5.
tique v.·hite. Selling for less metal "Cabinets, turnace, 1----------1 S .. rad. lr D.F. Xlnt cond. 673--024&
than ~I price at $650. tbls, racks, Pek'g mater, Cats 1120 ~king $4750. (~14) 624-7329.t"l-4~rr=.-Tti~.m-aran--.~,,~HP=
64&-1711, 2282 Redl&nda Dr. wall plaques, picture . Shp 12, Bayside Vlllqe, Johnson mtr.; trailer. $9511.
frames t tuary ash trays REG ISTERED Burmese kit· N.B. Xlnt condition 646-5612
:N=e=w"po'°l'l=="'°'==--1 I ... .,• !!, ,...,. ·-' lens. Champion llired. Call 18' FRBGLS "Ma•k ""'·-•-·· . . . . e c. ~ . ...,......., 645--0391 \ . . • • ~....... * u· MID.I Sport, 40 bp. ~-==-=-==-,....,====-1·~=====--,..C.I Mer-Cruiur o utdr1ve. Evinrude tn.lier. Elec
HUGE DISCOUNT 4 Standard v.'alnut deska, on new S TER E0-197U-?.ledite~
FREE TO YOU I PUREBRED s;ame" k;t. (Fully ""ttl UI AP Chery start 11.ioo ,......, . tens, Sealpolnt, $15. Phone II eng. $2500, pmts; $2300 • _:. •
swivel inside chain, pada. Wurlitzer •nd ean S.speaker c o n 1 o I e.
20 Pc. "MADRID'' IBM Selectric -wrl~ Phono. anv'fm/mpX, tape .., .... other famous make 3 ROOM GROUP $200 under cost. Totalla PIANOS &" ORGANS deck, etc. Never used. 67>2033. cash. 548--9644 or 6T0>-4751 Boat' M1lnt1n1nca fOH FROM MODEL liOMES l Calculator* cost. 675-4422. GOULD MUSIC CO. ~cri~, Terms Pl*i-1 WKS • 4 mo. ltitt~ns iorv
Includes: Quilted IOfa Ir: ·~er. Royal elec. Since 19U haired and ghort haired, Dogs t825 Sailboats 9010 BOAT PAINTING chair, 2 end tables a. coHee $89. Call aftel"'3:30 "'04S N M • SA KIRBY vacuum w/&ll at· oranp, blk & wht, gray, . ht tab) 2 Jam . ·~--ml " o. e1n; . • h t tncl ,. , __ , and 1 ·•t M QuaJlty 'WOtk done nr e, ps, ~-r, r-*' 548-5924 '* * 547-0681 * tac mens u mg 1uu11.1)' wu an x. • e e e e r.rusr sell now FlberglaM at your slip. S4l-55.12
rot, ~-J~ qUilted boxo ii~E~.JjiUR~.R.;::diii·cta~ting~~ma~ch~;n::•:l ====~=~===I butler. Take over paymenta 836-4493 7/6 Summer School for Do(::s Sncl\Y Bird, 2 sails & xtras. -·-·--_ .. _. spriN( &·,~. 5 pc -:" .. o: 4 d 1 ·1 d 1-1· ()f $4.50 per mo. or pay COCKAPOO 7 mo, old blk. • VACA'J'ION SPECIAL* Please, make off~r. Ph. Mtr'tno Equip -·s ~ ... d'. .. ,fiJ",blo •· 4 L.: • ..,.,. ,r ega .,..ie I J,llf: TH.E BIGGESTI of! for only 132.50. Call y d · d hit • -· • ~ bl t •'/t k •~ -3781 ftmale all Mloll hsbk needs our og traine w e you Dean, 642--2253. · .~="'--...;.."-' ca ne w oc .....,.,.:u~ 543-9335 anytime. 2620 S. Susan St. Plano & Organ Sale good home. 545-7862 pie.)'. Martincrest Kennels, LIDO 14. No. ms, used less LARGEST disC9unts on all
Santa Ana (Nr COMPARE AT $749.95 ~hold-Good~-80:ZO in Town · LADIES diamond di n ner 545-4840 7/3 •fl46.-0989 • than 20 hrs. Racing rig, marine equipment. Radlos,
Harbor & Warner)' N down $199 ----·-is going on ring, set with 1~ karat PART Siarnftle a: Tabby • • • • • cov, trlr &: x1ra clO!lled. compasses. depth sounden. * SEC'Y (EXEC) * 0 Pmts, Only $16 mo GARAGE Se.le: TV'• radios, ritht now at · center diamond, 2 diamonds male, 15 mo'i,· neutettd, IRISH settt'r pup, 6 wks, C/B & rd. $1250. 64&-4794 paints, elc .• everything tor $600/.$650 WELK'SWAREHOUSE tape playet's, c h air s, \YARD'S BALDWIN srUDIO -;, karat on each side. playful & active. Needs ad male, AKC. shots. 26%' Cruising Catamaran power and sail.
• 600 W. 4th St., Santa Ana clothes, surfboards, etc. Sat ~o•" N -c ·M &12-8484 Brilliant cut Saeritlce! Rep. home. 644-0Ul. 7/3 • 67>8718 • aail w/auxil'--·. & '"'. r..tarine &:-Battery Shoppe, No Ftt. Loe. comm1 mfr, Gd ~ e,vpo, ,, · · ly to. Box P36Q, Dally Pilot. ...._,. ..., 2430 w Coast H N Sch skills req, Closed Fri. Phone REDECORATING • Drexel &: Sun 548-mJ, ~ Robin Open Every Nitc 2 BEAtrrIF1JL nutty female AFGHAN Pup11 mooring, N.B. · $3200. Ph. • wy., • '
Mon. Jntf:rvil!W eves by bedroom set consi~tine of -"=""==Ln=C=M=.===== I &. Sunday Afternoon FISHING EquJP· telling all 8 wks old kittens, 1 gray 2 blk males. Reason. 536-8247 aft 5:30. Bo Sii I -••
appt. triple dresser. cheat on -'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;,,,,!!!!!!!!!!!! pcrsOnal fttsn wal'er fishing .l wht. and gray atriped 557·9608 TEMPEST Zl-Many extras, ~_P. Moor "I_~
FEE JOBS ALSO chest, king size headboard, Garage Sat. ·8022 equip. "Lures, taclde, reels +;-54S-OS13 7/4 night stands in beautiflll an-HAMMOND, Steinway, Yam-& rods. ?t!ust eell! 644-ll41 Wfi ... r. ST. Bernarda . to show & ra~ or cruise, clean. Jrg SLIJ;>S Ava il. power or sail,
J, R. Pierce tique white. Selling tor Jen GARAGE Sale: lStb St and aha, New & used pianos of a.sk for Richard. 2003 Baja. BABY BUNNIES. Good pets. breed. Ch . sired._ Llt:'ral cabin !"PS, 4. ~us_t se,e to r;>-60 fl. . Newport Bay.
1885 ~te~ ~ncy,~720 than i,~ price al $650. Balboa Blvd. see corner Npt most makes. Best buys: in' =N~B,,.. ====-.,,.=-=-~1 Black and 2 white with terz:ru. ~--iq, 495--5165. appreciate. $2450. 592.-2278. Write Daily Pilot. Box
ewpo • 64&-17ll, 2282 Redlands Dr. B. Furniture. rock recordi;, so Calif. at Schmidt Music 1 FRIGIDAIRE elt'C oven, mg, black ipots. Please call -LOVEABLE Furry blonde CAL 28, 1/3 interest, Clean, P-1012.
SECRETARY Newport Beach ~:. ~:.,.~h!~~~n. Mandon. &Jdululyt co. 1907 N. Main, s&ntaAna hood, bltn. $75: Port stereo •. 548-2957 7/3 Lhaaah, .~!k no,~s~3271table for ~11 equ~~:ux enr, i:~t''===-,.-r~:IS~.-... --.• -r -boa_t __ , EXPERIENCED Furniture Priv, Home -oe .,..,, $40; Stenotype mac h, YOU name it, I have it. sm. c ...... ,.n o.r-u • er. ex -' Sl.50 per 1oot. Newport
Permanent, 25 hr., 5-day l dbl mal)le bed. 3 paddftl 5-6. PIANO, l.lprlght, xln't cond. textbks, ribbona, tape, $100; Cab! Ii: kitteM • ~s TOY PQOdles, black & silver. betwn 8 am & 5 pm. Beach. 673-6702
week position av8-ilable. bar s.tooli!, Whirlpool retrlg * FINAL clearance sale Furniture tor sale. Call 545-7272 !M wkdyt. agec & colon. Some·~· Pure bred, 8 wks, $40. CORONADO 25. clean o.b. Bo•t Mooring Avail
Newport Beach, Hours: g..12 w/, lee maker, Westhse elec everything goes' any 89~?47. CORNER set .. Ta.b le• tome w/ahots. st~\846 Tis 540-5791 extrM. Moored Huntington * 675-6999 * '
&: 1·3 pm, Top salary. Box dryer, gu. edger, fertilizer reasonable cilter accepted v.·alnut. Covers, bohters • PORTABLE BBQ w/CIOVf!r PRECIOUS Doodle Pu p's Hrbr, (ZJ3J 454r1574 r\'S.J =========~I • h. 395 E 6 PIANO, \Vurlitzer French .., ci. .. s / M 1030, Daily Pilot. spreade r . La:m~Polet, osn canyt 1ng. • l th Prov. Cherry, bench, near AlmOfit new. Rel Coldspot, &: cabinet. Trailer bitch tor AKC Champ stock. $50 ,,. · Boat Services 9037
SERV Sta Attendant, pt. swag & table. 536-9777. H.B. ~t.~, ~·="~·=-~---$7;Al 847--0075 14 cu; ft. Ice maker, white, '63 Ford Fairlane wagon. 549-0MC. VENTURE 21' Fully equip.
time, ..:r,,.d only. See J"""'• 17 PC. KING SIZE NEIGHBORS Tra sh & new. . . Excellent concUt~. 64>2025 96~3678 7/3 M·IN IATURE Schne.uter-6 ped w/slip. VOA quallJifd. Fiberglass & Gelcoat ~~ -·J ./ BALDWIN Spinet Orgaii, 96'5730 ••Ren•i-** 2500 Newpt, C.M. BEDROOM. T. reasures. Name it we bavl" SELLING all ·h oU 1e hold CUTE puppies, 2 long hair mo. old femalt, salt &: pe(> .-1 -• ..--• Xlnt cond. Best ofler! Frtt: Estimates 54&-1752 SINGLE needle & apecial Lar&e 9,dr&wer drtsler, mil'· it. Thur • SulF."1!:"30 534 &12-7072 funllture incl ftfrig. bed &. 1 short, black k white, per, AKC Phone 847-2393. c.µJF. Catamaran, 13' bing· ·
·machine operaton ~ ror, 2 bedside atandi, Kin&: S. Bay Front, Balboa set, stereo, 'IV, rugs etc. •mall mix. breed. ARC White Male Peke ed mast, $395. See at: 3410 B t Ch t 9039 ted. Exper'd only. Top pay, size headboard, ftaine, quilt., "'b~I•~"'~· =~----PI ANO·stu d lo upright prior movin& early Jilly. 540-0711 7/4 BEST OFFER! Martus, NB. 675-0469.:..__ ~-!!'._!r .
1; v.·/be nch in good cond. $175. 548-4353 "~"12 863 Production Pl., N.B. ed mattress, tbeets blank-HIDE-A-BED, d re sse r, 67HTIJ. SILVER grey Angora ferwle &I-KITE NO. 227. dolly, new FOR CHARTER
646--0308 ets, etc. ' chest, dinette set, Maple CABIN -Mammoth Lakes in cat needs a new hm, JO AHCl""'registered pood le , cover, good cond. $6 50 42 It cabin cruiser. Sleeps 6 SHARP SECRETARY Choice of Spanish hutch, refria, double bed Upright Piano $150 H.igh Sierras. Furn. '1 nifes. mos. old, Lov ing . Black miniature male. 968--7903. For pvt, cruises throughout
or ?i!odern Style ~ll. or best offer 833-3079 $95. Reserve now 531-3374 968-4397 7/6 968-108.1 •Hobie Cal * Soufhetn Calif. -DaOY &
tor beautiful bayfront office. All.. FOR $249 ''>"1=0VI=N"G~,-a-p-p~li•-nce-,-.-fu~rn. HAM1'o10ND RT2 orgall w/ Eves 5<10-0617. fl.UFtY &: funky ·kltteris MIN. Dachshund puppies, 7 1 yr, old like ric\V $856 Weekly rates. For re11. caD
25-35, Attractive, well groom. N'o down pmtJ. only $9 mo. misc. items. July 5 & 6. PR-40 niverb speakpr.' Xlnt FENDER Bass amplifier gray blk & wht, 6 w~s weeks old. 2-males, 2-67S.U60 , 642·5m ,
9d: 5 Yn. experience, SH 90, WELK'S WAREHOUSE 2162 Maple, CM. rond. Jerry aft 6. &12-4275 deluxe Rickenbacher hass okl, hsbk. free to aoOO temalea. weaned. 897-8900 USED AQUA CAT • nearly 27"'·,-,.Tro=Jac:n-n"y-,B"~"'dgo-°"Sed.._..on
typing '10 Executive, ?)lo~ 600 W .. 4th S~., Santa Ana LG. Colltctlon-over 6,000 --guitar ~pie 7/4 new sails. fut equip. alpi 6. $85-day.
Frt, 9 ID 5:30, PH: &42·5735. Daily. g.9 Sat 9-6 Sun 11..S books. lOc It up. 20231 S.\V. 1 ·T_1_l_ov_i_1_io_n _____ 1_2_os * 675-6404 * FREE rabbits:, larl(t A-mnall Horses 8830 $500. • 346-2957 $450 wk. 64&-9000. * STtTDEN~ * WAREHOUSE FULL Spruce, S.A. 5'16-7264. 1'o!OVING SALE l970 TV's 8' SOFA. u.phol. chair, birch • uk for Jackie, 2159 ~r -11'' VENTUJtE fbrgla sloop.I°"·-=--,======
NEED A JOB? Sofas & chairs or• Bednn REFRIG, headbrd, r/away Zenith-color, blk &: wht. table, 24" girl's bike, crib, Pl,. C.M. 548-4355 7/4 REGIS. 17 Hand B • Y Sacrifice $1590 complete. Fishinp Boats 9040 Position. now available for sets vnur choi"A ir11ri. K;ng s· Da 1V hi-chair, jumper, 6--sultet ho •-1 Gelding, 6 yn, beaut . Slip avail. 642-1548 ~.-----1
J V ...,. •'" bed, BBQ, lamp, chest, save up to $1 ;>, vt'S: case. n\isc. 67J..8269 2 Lovable brown s rt ,,. r English or Western 17' Fiberglass 25 hp motor, :1::u ~lth~~~t s~:i~ Bedrm set or sofa & love.eat tables, more. 400 38th, N.B. 810 S. El Camino Real San S-Burner Chinese stove $50; mixed breed puppies, male pleasure, ribbons, ~SO 0 • * _KITE ,No. 676 food cond, control!!. $350. No trailer.
$129, your choice. Gua.rtd Oemente. 492-6291. &: female. 548-0813 716 002-l'122. • ~vt!:.c must sell. $660. 67 .....
company, tun time or pa.rt re.frig's, stoves, waahen:, A. ppliances IJOO upright piano: old cash Id _,. ~ i.,;;;;~;;i:=====:==! time. dryers $39. _,;_;-'----NEW & USED TVs regifltl"r. 305% Marine Ave., ADORABLE T wk o ., .. 1co MORGAN Mare: a~lute\yl ~~~-----~~ t·
A·TEC. INC. 494-9750 Special Price OI\ Housefuls! KENMORE auto \\'asht?r & For sale/rent. upstairs, Balboa I~. kittens haJf Peflian gentle for chldf". $18$ or FiberglassR " * Gelco.t Boet Storage -TELEPHONE OPERAroR F mod I ho P I i d I Dunlap's, 1815 Newport. Ci\f. 644-1096 7/6 best oHe'r. 6-li.:2862. * * ep&rs * . ------t rom e mes, estates-encres e ec. ryer, ate Sl8;-7iS8 S\Vli\1MING pool, 3x12, com· F'tte ~sttmah'!!I 548-1.~ DRY storage • launching
11 pm Sal A. 9.ln will separate, Terms. models, xlnt cond. Both $9j 1 =-==--~~~ p!ete. Filter, vac. ladder, DOUBLE concrete tub 11, TRANSPORflTl9N RHODES .,., ,...:... _....,_ !or small sailboats 22· &: 228 Fornt, Laguna Beae b REPOSSESSION CENTER Will deliv. 347~U5 01· 23" AD:\11RAI.. color TV in· etc. Like new $75. 54$-4278. sttf:tch plank, ~closet. >N-..,,_,_ .. vi ...
TELEPHONE &lUcitors, n 619 E. 4h s., S.A. i ,.,".,&-86="'Tl.,-.,..-.,..-~.--eluding hmnd new $30 color LADIES elegant diamond 646-1492, 646-56.U. 7/6 Bo1t1 & yacht• fOOO f~~~.ra~ da)' sail: -~,:..;~ ~!d. ~ l602
or pt time, 18 or over. OPEN 9-9 PM SUN lD-5 DELUXE lady Kenmore TV antenna (never Wied) ~vedding ring, platinum Ht· KEN~fORE wuhe-r I Ken-TRADE For ~·· land ... * * CAL -* * -
•-ha;,oOK ....... "151 BAR Stool•, •wive!, matching wthr &. dryer ,.c.11_'-'=•r~o~f=f'=r.~>I=H=·l=7S=-ti s.n·1· =5855 ~1•-··r-mbo J"~ · 4Y -'-"-Lii H '200 -·~ ,,....., 1· ng. c ice, "'"' · mott wa!Jn.,r .... ,.... ...... · 35' Ohlson aail'r yawl. Sl,ps Many Extru mvv I omes _.;.BLUE BEET upholstrred In lt'atherltkt olive gm, all s peeds. PHILCO CONSOLE M t tak both 5484476 713 '11:ia'14=.. DINNER COOK naugahyd(' with hobnalt,_675~;.!13S~-·------Black & \Vhite $45. HAND made saudels & us e . 5, hd. galley. tuldly Id. * * 644-1156 * • INDEPENDENCE '$.na. per shirt trim. Cost MW $49.95 eaeh'Usm Appllaoo11 "-TV'•,•,.='~'"'~279=al_tc_r~5"'p"n_1._ wears. ArtisaNn·!..hBel'lCh. C2> 7 WEER old adohorablt ii!:~:s;.1881 ay e , LIDO 14' & trailer No. ml DAY SPECIALS
Mii for $20 each. 64fr.17ll. all cuuantftd. Dunlap't, 1 DAVE'S TV -Moving lo jl2~i 29th St ., . ix: . pu1>11. Musi lind now mt Xt t cond t sell UNIVERSALS 24 'des. • , ..... Da· ncers •• c. C'R top -·-tor. v1·nyl lti:la Wlf.-sl6=T:>29. . 7/3 21' SURFING OtrrRIGGER ra&, GI) .. mlJ9 • . WI 10 w _ EXTRA Long twin bed, oof· 1815 1-,e•rpor t, M. new location .2016 S. El " '-<LI• Cut b i1t b Ph 'i $10'W, 673-3706 from ~350. Me )'OU lookfn&. for a new fee table, end table, TV ~7188. Camlno Real 49U291. covered $15, mattttss $25. 4 Kttten1 7 wk9 old wht, -c-1.~mrds. I~. No~'• _ _:_, &'{lPE l.5~S fl fibf! .... lus. 2 BR, 1~ bath!t, lamily rm, -----.... -"" .A.. t h 1 21 .. Or =..,,,,,.-,==-:-=--,::-Box •pr\np $25. 545-5335 rraY • oranct. 499-4145 aJt. ...,...,..._ .wu ~ ...... ,n '"' .. ,.pta-Truly •-t 0 •·-•• ~· ar a .......... tl;K:\.I .se • couc • fl c. '" &l'lP EZ Auto Wuher I Hamilton I==""'='=--=----= 113 Call atter 6:00 pm. 675-0430 $795. See at 2312 Newp't. 1'~-m t~ay' U'C we ' <JCT trulport&t:Son cat! PJttyie Ave., No. C, C.M. gas dryer, xln'l. cond, Both Hl°Ff & SttirtO 1210 DAVENPORT 8', very fXll1 6· . Blv Na fru-1393 $75--1070 •~ ~ ·
Jtt ~~,od.M.Yael~ Dir. CUSTOM W"""' bu with $85. w1t1 de:Jiv. 847-8115 ors -.-E-.-~--•.. -4-box-.. -,.-8-,pk condition m. Alto SKY Territt '1ema1• dQg, 16' GLASS owr -40 hp · or -"-or .. ~"''" '"Y" c..-°'"2 ~ • refrl--•~ •• ., ~•t. betp A blk k>ng hall', !owit w/tlee. starter. Trailer, 19' CABIN Sloop w/motor, New~ x 60 CONTINENTAL ~ · bumt oranae leather hand ..,_.,.,,,, n .: 15" Jensen "'OOfer & .. ~·-"" ..,., .,.._ c~o ""'U 7/4 •~ u7 9661 r X" nd
U_,,.... __ Wante d . rail k 3 bar t!Jiotils, l!;t). ALM,_..ntw -11..,-"nter I bo I:::="°"=_,,,-,,.--,,,=. children • ......,....... ~r • ....,.., ..., -Y.~ly "8!· .. nt M . Sllp by Cambridge, 2 BR, film• ,,,-n,,_.~....,,~ top ~..,· ,.:..~· • •'"b,."llI·•·n super twetlcr n ea. ttom \\'EDDING Gown 'w/lace Kfrt'ENS cute as picture nJPPER. Whaler Ira.lier. 3 avail. $1:m. a.8-3283 ily rn1, 1'4 bAths, Ex;tertor fbU. llll' p/thnt. ,~ Phone Call 83(1.1337. wv" .. box·, ........ 0,ttr • mld-~o t-ln '''' 10 Uk• new •-K · • --'h · ..-i 0 1'"' "" •u .. ~ ''" ' ' • book kittens, -trte to aood hp & 5 hp Johnson<, i<aky VENTURE 17' • Sl-4. !II aiser a: ·~ sawn bar). •4'1W9 of ff'ff aft 6, ltOUSEFUL of new model oven. Sp, IUJ 218!)1 Newland horn in ea. top box. $100. Paid $100, eel! ;55. ~2621 ( ldt St 8 8 r.t.:-M\17 home., 6i>:4'm 7/4 di...,.hy. 673-3008 Galley, motor, ractni cear. rontal ~ ng.
DU.I ..,._ lor RESULTS
~
.1
home furnlturt. Reg. $683. .. · · ..........,,, · !S-7'961. SERIES 400 Codc-0-PhOne ...
now $197. 194~? or FR I G J DA Illi: deluxe 2 TAPE reoorders, amplifier, w/remote control play 4 YOUNG ftmal; 1~ OIRYSLER lnbd/oulbd. '68 $l800. ~7196 &ic:rlflce 20 x 5~ Cla~slc Para.
637-6200. l'fllH,ttrator. excellent con. turntable. 1'peakto..n. & be.ck. $395. 642-1686 catt,, 1 Ota'll'. tortou.e runabout. wtcorrv lop, ftw UDO 14 mounl.
PAIR , wing backed nylon dillon, ve.ry rlean, $6.), 11terw C85&C!tle. O t ff r s , DON'T JUST WISH for •hell and calico, 541-0813 7/6 htt. !;'llf'IS &: .looks like rw.w. XLNl' COND. STTl -
upholltered-e ha~ fl.1..-~lfU, ~ -64)-3253 - -tlllTliihlnp for ~ hOJM,--g t.OVABUE pqppln, •mall 494-3959 673-7208 Chapman Mot.lie Heme•
cellent condition. $25.00 r USED HQTPOfNT CRATG Pl~. 4., t track find great bu)I tn todQ''a breed. Ml--m4 7/S KrrE Sailboat ask 1625 10' CAJ....20 Saerlfict 12331 Sfach Blvd,
each 67Mlll09. ·REJ!'RIGEIUT'Ort, ~ hOmt 1tttt0. $9$. Call aft ClanUled Ads. 2 YOUNG ,uJnea pip. Sk!U w/4 HP outhrd. Uk Call evtnlngs Garden Grove
PlltOT'"WANT AO!! MJ..&678 * wMTe9 * 6, 84?-31Js.1. Dial &C-5618 • chup it. 54>4S6l 11• $223. MG-8761. * 673-7899 * 5•2tJO
\ --..... •
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,
'
J
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T llAl~~PORTA TION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION -TRANSPORTATl()l>I-
~ • . ~ ' 1 f rlda.J, July 3, 1971) DAILY PILOT 3J
'*
~ANSl'OR ATlqN TRAHS,ORTATION T1<AHSPORTATIO'~N,...:.;.~\t"'11A"""N;..S'°~R~t=A=Tl~O~N-""""'f=Rl"N"'S .. PO""'RT"'A"'T"'ION-~
MotorcyclH . 9300 Tr•ller. Tr•••I MUJ '""P'..,_._ _____ ,_H.;..;..ll,1 ~c1!')?!!' ' "1t 1-'"4 A-.HOO Im~ A~°' 9600 Imported Autot HOO lmpot..., --
~-,--------' . Mobllo Hom•• * Newport Hubo• * A few ftm&in1n& mobile borne
apacet tn one 01 C&lil. 'a rut.. •
ea\ crowio& re.sort art••.
- - - - -TERRY, 20' W>dom •¢.W., '52 WILLYS Ovorland Sla. 1911 EeonollM Van, slpt $, DATSUN FIAT JAGUAR JAGUAR I .. - - -• complt iielt-conL l o 11 t: t Wagori. 6 cyl W/O\'~Ye. auto tl"IJUI, mur •ti-make
• THINK .......... ,,,,. """"""'•" Gd cone!. S'JOO, 548-UTI ..... oll•r! '31.o!M. 1--------1--,-,-7-Fi_ia_...;t_a_so _____ J_A_G_U_A_R __ --------. '65 JAGUAR J.8 ledu. auto. HONDA "•· "''"'· $2495. ~ eh o B onr;oal. Witt rinu. fllOO
111 1952 ROADMASTER Recre•t'n V lclfl 9sis· -".!!!....... UfflH t5lS -llAllUN -Coupo, Rodlo 1vo" 11<1 · HEADQUARTEIS 67",...177. MOBILE HOMES
are on d!Ipl.I,)', lM-se hollies
are ~ull¥ egulp~ at Rri~a
you won't want lo Pfl•• up!
"fRIEDLA•HIER'• mo4el ~ 8' x 30~ ll.500 '65 Eroooline., rtbuilt victne. '10 Meyert ~nx con f • r . • $799 The onU-authorized J AGUAR '&.> 4.2 ~11':. 10 Pwr/air/
""' 548·*1 automaUc, top opens to (rame. 110 HP cofvatr tran1 "~aaer \ti Thi J;e~rb Cities" deaJn In the ent.in Hartlor lu"uriou'. Xlltt. Cond. P.tusl :"z..nt~~e box, 1tove $1650, ~~ .. 4~12~&ht, x!nt. ZIMMERMAN Harbour v .w .. AreL Complelu '· seU. $250D or ofter. 675-1803 EXAAIPLE:
New 20x44 w/awnl~, skirt,
etc, $9180 complete incl. tax
1:: Uc. Many ready for !A1· ,!'!:,~~~~~==!
MEDiitTE OCCUPANCY! HONDA '68 450 cc, C.8.
GREENLEAF PARK Blue/chorme finish xlnl
9500
LEASE NE~ GMC
. TRUCKS
An adult prlvat.: club cond. man)" xtras. Fari11g, 197 GM
1750 Whittler Ave., etc. 847--0330 0 C 2 Ton
Cotta J.fesa , . . 3.'il V6, 5 speed, 24,tlOO GV\Y,
fh. n4/642-1350 src HOt>AKA dirt bill•. 2 spffit axle, 9()) x 20-10 ply
Take Harbor Blvd. to flbe~lass tank & seat, ex· tires, PQwer steering:, power
19th St.. then west panslOn chamber. Best of. br1.kes. lri'cludea 8 x 21 Oa)
to \Vhittler Ave. fer. 557~73i5. b!d, head board and poc.
JOMICRA, lNC. 69 BSA 650 1kets. f340M) 2 year ltue
Excellent cooditlon $1000 at only • .
INOEPENDENCE . &l>-0314 betwocn >1 P1\I $1-72 'per lllO. DAY SPECIALS
12x44 General S.7122 .. $4450 S1f HODA~ OO, gd col'ld, ContaCt JJIU Applebee or Bilf
Ux43 Sheraton S-6'.16 •• $7995 wet up for dirt. Many extras. Lealle
""" ee.,.,., ~1 .. moo "'°· 644-547
" 11NIYERSITY '69 Honda rra ~
"' mi, xlnt oond. OLDSMOBILE * 54S-6679 * .
TENT CAMPER *BOUNTY Hunter '69 2'45 HARBOR ILVD. 13'Tll BEACH BL., 842.f.4l5 SALii$ ,.
W/ADO.A·ROOM, w/w-out 90 RP ·VW en1. 540-6410 llUNTlNGTON BEl\(:H SERVIC·E
""" • !GZ-208'1 :~,~ c~~··:,,..;.;,~r '67 DATSU'~N~w=A~GO=N PARTS •7r CHEVY Blater.wlnch, bi& BAUER
tires, loaded. evw Chauls .._.,... Ex IUICK 968-4901 Free pick lu> '1; dtltveey tra shat'Pt-Automatic, re-. •GC-O+U• \•ersed Chromt' w he e I 1. IN
'69 OOOGE Van. Custom in. (UOE591J Will take 08, io COSTA MESA
ter. Elee. rtfril., new t1re1. •METAL FLAKE BLUE tJ;ade or finance private par. _,, •o •-rt ltd
Tape deck. Bob 673-Jl98. DUNE BUGGY $850. ly, 5464052 or 4!».9T13, • r-23~ E. 17th Strfft S41)..3763, 54§.7765
campers '520 --DOT DATSUN -:mr °""''" crovo :_-;;.; ==:.:.::·---..;.;;.-11,,. .. 1..i:Auloo -OPEN DAILY
-----c-=o---1 '69 XKE Cpe.
MERCEDES BINZ
'68-250 SE. 21,IXXI ml'1, auto.
PS, PB. -• alr, .Ml/FM.
SJ0-.1m1m-3232 x 3066.
OPEN ROAD
AUSTIN HEALIY ,.J.u!~vd.
AUSTIN AMERICA Hunu~ 11.. ·
Salu, Stmce, Pu1t,
lmmo&!e-'
IU-71tl Or~
lo 196!1 2000 Roadster. r/h,
"miles. ta. 66-0640 or
'68 850 Spyder, only 10,0!XI
miles, Stebro muUler, ton.
beau covtr c hrome WhH'ls. $1550. Priv. party.
Cail M&-1.!l'JO aft 5.
110 adual miles. Ai\t/01,
1urbo \\·h<!el~. full factory
warranty. ~lllsl sacrifice 1965 \YHITE Coupe 2JI SL.
this month! \\'indow pri~ Low mileare. new 111't!I.
"'RS S6'11l. full price now Priced !o tell! 61'>7086.
$4787 (R26!1341 will t~ old-':)8 D'.1-S $89a. '65 190 di.e!!t-1, =="'· "--~-===="'-"' er car u down or! \\'ill 'II.Ir, S2000. Both xlnt oond. Manulacturtt11 of America's AD-10 x 5.7 Living roo m Expand<>,
New (Joor new coverina',
nt!W drapes, new rclrigera.-
tor. $3995.
MOT6RCYCLE trailer.
carry 3 bikes, $125.
83().!94ll
2850 Harbor B.lv1t finest f,.uxwy Recreation
\Vill Costa. Mesa 540-9640 Vehicles.'
LEASE·A·TRUCK . -•-
"l'O Do4ie C500 • V8. 2 sp, 20 e New Campers Cl•••ic Mobil•, Homes '69 Honda 350" hi v ~~ 19 f an , •••••• ,,.,.,. per mo rom
ll1 lll~llll I
1l111~:u11"
673--t216. .
'67 DATSUN Pick-up. Must
sell! See. to apprecla.te.
646-4970 or 642-3122
'61 Datsun picku~xlnt. cond.
Vlnyl cover, air. $149.> .
968-5251.
HIUMAN finance private party. Call 493-53&3 Lag. Nia:.
Dir a.It. 1D a.m. 5'1&3~00 or OON'T JUST WI=Sll~-1o-,·,I
494-1029. furnishirlp for yooa homf:,
ntE SUN NEVER SETS on [ find great buys in today'•
DAILY PllD'I' WANT ADS~ Clu1ilied Ads.
'64 HIU..\1AN
Rul'l!I rood $325
646-1492 or 64S-56J2 .. 913 No, Ha'rbor Bl. Runs good. Best oUrr. '70 Chev CF50 . VS, 2 sp.20 $995
Santa Ana 548-2864
S31 's71 ""'""""""'""'==-,,-I hi Van ...... SWi.19 per mo • Large Selection of -....
H2-94CI -St0-17'4
...... ••11·11
i;. iii.iiiiiiiiil ... •IYAA-1AHA 250 DT-lB. Near '71 'Doclge Van. V8, auto/ New and Used C&nipers Au thorlled MG Dealer
,. THE MEADOWS .. w. $675 ouh. radio ........ $89.00 """ mo -·-675-3781 '70 Dodge Piel!;. VB. auto. OPEN ROAD
'67 HONDA 305 SCRAMB· atep bumpeil • $89.00 pet mo 830 SO HARBOR 11:.\'D.
LER. good cpndition, $375. "Chry&ler Lease .System" u.NiA &NA, CALIF.
536·0072. Jolp1 Davia' (5 mileii so. ol Disneylar\l)
Reservations are now being 161 HONDA 50.e l ectrlc 9 to t!,aily • 557-8600 (11t ) 131-445t • 131,1131
taken in ~ Orange Coynty's starter. XIR_t cond. $150. Lemer '67 VW finest Ii; most complete park 536-8451 7 lo 9 eves .• 2J3.TR 3-1095
(Irvin.)
·;:; ROADSTER. Roblt .... ENGLISH FORD
new d utch, tires, palnt I: I~;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;
chrome .$650. 873-1350 1• ALL NEW ENGLISH
'60 ROADSTER lOIMi, fair FORDS NOW IN STOCK
oond, Pvt pty. $400. DRASTICALLY
1t962-TSC • REDUCED
BMW TO Cl.EAR
LARGE SEUX:TION
TO OiOOSE FROM
WE HAVE THE
aEST SELECTION OF
llMW's
WEEK ENO
SPECIALS
'65 PORSCHE
Sport C-
•,.,.i MW 91QIM Ml •
tnlle .... It! ....... hffl•. 1rnmKvi.1t ,.,,........
WMt • btotvl'fl t 14851 Jeffery Road {Sur. · 164 VW p• k C """ndod by Orango Grovos) 250 Honda. .... .. <hoppod. . IC up amper
I Irvine Fo . f tio Re-butlt engine, trans Xlnt. IOTU 3461 1'"'\ll!y Equipped IUQH 692) * BMW * Theodore
IN ORANGE COUNn SZ995
""""' BMW S.lectloo ROBINS FORD '66 AUSTIN ~ 893-5730,r i~lo~~ ~; oond. 6TJ-6103. $899 $2499
531-8105. '67 MONTESA La Cross lllX
~~~~ins"';,~~~;" Harbour V.W. Harbour V.W. 1 BAY HARBOR
e Salea it Parll e Service 3lfiO Harbor Blvd. 1~e~~h •:;i~ing1:~: Costa ~1esa 6C.ootD
isb. Sales open Swxlay.
·• ALL COLORS e ALL MODELS
e IMMIDIA Tl DILIYHY
H .. lilf' "SJirf!t", •Mi. • _,.,, l"ltf1td ,.,. --· S695 Mobile Home Sales
ALL NEW '70 MODELS
NOW ON DISPLAY
al' \Vides u Jow u $5995
12' \Vides to 34' flldea
Park Spaces Avallablo
1425 Baker st, Costa MeSl!I
~'block East of Harbor Blvd.
COsta i1esa (TI4J 54(1.9470
HEAVY_ dut~ Trail Bike, 3 l87ll BEACH BL, 8424435 h.p. $85. HUNTINGTON BEACH * -54S.51Zl * , ' '67 CHEVY 1" Ton, 6 cyl ..
47 Knuckle Cho PP e r-80 8 ft bed, step bumper. 6
stroke, nu gen., trans. Mold· ply on a: oH road tlrt>s,
ed frame, clean. 548-4472. trlr hitch. 30,{0) ml. Xlnt
01966 SUZUKI 150 cc Clean. cood. $1400. 557-ms
18711 BEACH BL., 842-4435
HUNTINGTON BEAOI
New '70 Datsun
c. Bob Autrey FERRARI
1860 "°"' """h Blvd., L.B.!---·-----• 12131 '91472! FERRARI
1600 OHC, Pickup with camp. CORTINA -Newport lmpc:rtJ Ltd. CJt..
"· Silo pr;c,, $2099 dlr. , '"'' CouotY• only IVfl>or. ( • 6TI98l Will take car Jn --!zed deaJer.
Best ofr ov. $200.
545-0016
trade. Will linance priva~ '64 CORTINA-Cust. 1nlerior, SALES.SERVICE-PARTS
'68 CHEVY •.~Ton Pick up. nu paint, eng_, 3:56 Chevy 3100 W. Coast Hwy.
V-8, auto. a ir, cab high party. Call ~ or gears. Over $1500 lnve1ted. Newport Beach ,~,,~,-Y~A~M=AH~A~E~nd~"ro-~125=·1 camper shell . S 24 50 . 494-9773. Sacrilice. SGi-7-Mll "2·9405 54~1764
cc. 18D mis under wty. $450. SJ?-5660. 8' Full caH vcr camper, Authorir.ed Ferrari Dealer o~n 1949 fact, discontinued model. DA=UN °""" 1963 Ford % ton custom cab. DI. FIAT
Ov ~ . Complete, $895. 869 Weat Yamaha 250cc "Big Bear" erurive V-8 overload sp.
"'" Oll<r!! Sh.,,,.ph. 837-554s. l81h Sl., Custa M"" '66 1680 ROADSTER
548.os41 Ask for David 195..'i Chevy V-8 2'iir Ion. 2 vw CAMPER I ........,,.,... 1vith sun-dial interior THIN"
'69 v.w.
Automatic dick 1hih,
r•dio, ht•t••· 100\1 •nd
drivt i Ii•• • f•clor., frt1h
c•r. ISEllttil .
'69 v.w.
f p111•n911 w19•11, fi y1
nt 1r n1w r14i1l t ir11.
Thi1 bu1 i1 l1ctory ind $AVE '64 v.w.
~11Uo, h11 t1r. cu1lom
p111thi,i119.
$Pf1ce1·Space1·Spaces
New 5 •tar Adult Park •
Centrally located in quiet
neia;hborhOod ol \Vestmin>
ter. Close to shopping area
l:.frHWB.¥. A beautilul new
dubhouae, Lge swimrnlna
pool, J acuZli It all other fa.
~lllties. m.2930. S.U-8571.
Ml-8105.
"69 YA.\IAHA lOOce, 600 mis. sp. axle, 14' steel bed, extra $!500. 492-3818 Silver finish wlblaclt vinyl e •
9 m08 old, Gd cond . $300. tank. Ph. 837-554!. interior 4 speed IRUC 831) ''f. IAsuf' priled 10 low you win'! btUewe iii
830-4693 '64 VW double cab pickup '£.6 1'~0RD super VJ11 camper will takr-trade or finance
* 2 BEDRP.1 , DEN ,
DRAPES & CRPTG. S9500.
SPACE '26 DR.t:FTWOOD
BEAOI CLUB , HUN-
TINGTON BEACH
'69 BSA 750 . S900 reblt l'ng, new tire, paint. equip. nt'W engine &as nu;iae private part). call 546-4052 or
Please call: 675-8973 ~fal!J extras. 5.10-2449. exc~ oond. '2850. 673-1981 494-9713. . :'fRIEDLANDER''
========o I• '59 FORD lG-wtll DUMP 1960 INTERNATIONAL step-'68 Datsun ., _ .. an T&M MOTORS Auto Service ** $1700 ** V11n converted to amper. ~ 1J751 IU.CH·CHwy.·Jt, sarso. 551-9661 4 door, 4 speed, showroom NIW·USID-HIY. & Parts MOO 841-1753 or 494-9466 clean (\VQD 23'1:> v.·ill take P'U'VVVI
VW-E--:-Good c---' 1964 FORD % T. P.U. 8' '63 Chevy truck 1hel I trad H prl le Trailer • Cabana Baytront. ng1ne, -· bed. rth, xlnt cond. $950. campec. reblt eng. $800 or e or nance va pe.r.
Stt to -wreciate! Make of. • 642-M43 • f>48-S331 beAt oiler. 67>1753. . ty call 54M052 or 4M-9773 .•. ~69"""'1~.,cSPID=:='°'ER=":;:Nc.•;::w=,=,.-=.,
1011" SuM•y1)
IOll liAIDIN lilOVE ILYD.
Y1 Ilk. I. .t IMO 11¥4.
fer • Bar&aln! $10,000. e VW pans, trans axles, &: THE QUICKER YOU CAU., nlE QUICKER YOU CALL, THE SUN NEVER SETS on tire11 &: brakes. Must sell
675-0250 body parts. THE QUICKER YOU SEI.J.. THE QUICKER YOU SELL DAILY Pn.or WANT AD. lm,med. Sl?OO. 497·1856
s34.2214 m.un
27' TRAIL.ER, twin beds. nr. 642-0443
P.O. &: Shoppin& center, • 90 HP V\V engine . 1000 Osacl C.rt 9900 Used C•r• ffOOU1.cl C•r•
S\=M· 642-5134 ' mis. Great for dune bll&IY.
2 BR. ST".:.00. Choice space 673-8651.
on golf course. 1k blk. from 283=~rn=E~V~Y~ong~7ioo--Ca~ll 11
beach. Htg: Bch. 536-6928 64£-5260 6115
'60. l0x40, FURN. Xlnt· oond.
Alum, awnlnp $2895. 351
\V. Bay Sp. No. 12, CM •
STAR 2 BR 2 ba. Quie1
adult park. N .8. aret. Lived
in 9 mos. 536-Jl26
e LIKE new 10.spcecl blue
Pe~I bicycle
6'1"><178
'69 Man.'<. nBny extras
Muat aeU
64&&92 * * 548-0082
Mini Bikes 9175
i\!INI blke-Xlnt 1M.pe. 31i
hp, Disc brks. Good tires.
Sl50 new. Will sacrifice at
$85. 549-2673
BONANZA, Brand new
Run 1 Hr. S!IO
83>-3592
942S
537.4011
Stream Line '70
Terry•.Nomad•Oasis
Explorer Motor Homes
Fourwinds•Weekender
TRATEL
TRAILER SALES
13172 Harbor Blvd. G.G.
1% Blocks No. of
Garden Gro"e Freeway
S37-401 I
'68 TRAILER. Sll'cp.i; 5.
Perfecl cohdi!ion! $~.
Call: 549-4123
16' SELF cont ained $950,
1621i Newport No, 35. Aft.
3 p.m.
lm~rt..t Autos 9600 lmr,,orted Autos 9600 .. -
WE'VE GOT THE NEW TRIUMPH GT .O+
DESIGNED FOR DRIVING
NOT JUST AIMING IN A STRAIGHT LINE
t11 ,... T"""""' llto
•I•* lft flll fur• -n Gr111f TOUrl ... c-,.,.,.
A tHn. ~ m•-chlM 1"1111 cl11n Hnu
'"" , 1ht cvll""'
COf!!Ntll'°"""lt\'.,. ' -1!n1.
l!'t l lMI tlll I011r•
1" ht t t lnlltHMllnl
tprlntl"f , WPWlo!'-ft •
tllt l·PIY llrtl, t...i
FKtlrl(t • lvH rKll
lf'ld 11nio<t 1tHrln t.
It 1111k11 ret! trlvlnt
• ""· SoJntlf'illll ,..,. 11\t n _ _,,,_Int &
-•·111'1-IM 0 11 t I
··~ 6-• ·--,1r~r9111 tllct,,tl ~lllt-
L1 .... 1! lllVflll'" !tr
1111!\'Wdlllt Otll.,....,. '" &o. C•!!I., toWs. moto
1h. tic.
' TRIUMPHS
from
Frili W1rr1n'l
SPORT CAR CENTER
710 l hf, ~ S.A. S4M764
~-----. -·-------
WE'RE MAKING
BOLD
DE .A LS!
We'r• m••li119 °tht c.halle119• of 1iti119 prices llv efferi119 de1!1 which will put •••i1111 111
your poc••t. Hi9h lr1d•·ir1 1llow1nc•1 •nd m•r9i111I prelits t'fl1kt it all pt11il1I•. C•m•
in tod•v ind li t '"' of ou1 11111111111 1how yeu how ••l'f it i1 lo ll Yt bi9 mo11ey o.,
t b.tt•r t:•r llOW,
1970 MUSTANG 1970 ttiAVERICK
IU.ND NIW DIMO
H1rd10,, Hi9h hec.• buc.•tt •••h . color V•ry low 111i11191. 100 CID 6 c.,1., •11t•-
k1y1d c.erpeh, floo r 1hili. i11t humt 11t 91119-mitic., whitt will tir••, d1lwu i ce.en!
11. E71a1 4 f ill•r9l•11 behtd tir11. OfOIL-9,9up, rt dlt . 0 KtlT11tJ6S.
116 111.
$2595 $2274
'65 FAI RLANE
\I.I. 4 d1or 1•d111, power
ll11ri119, radio, hetftr.
WSW, bti9• with m1tchl11qi
Yi11yl trim. l EQV 6 t SI SltS
'6' GALAXIE
1 Dr. Hardtop. lt.1dio, h••I·
t r, eutom•lic, 'I S, wh11•
..-ith ltlut i11lerltr, WSW,
wheel c.ovtrl. 15VF 111)
S1J.ll
''5 GALAXIE 500
l Dr. H.T. v.1. 11110., P.S.,
wheel CtWt'1, WSW, rtd it .
1 PCll.•4• I S12tl
l'RICES l"LllS TAX & LIC,
'6' GALAXIE
LTD 2 dr. h1rdtop. R1die.
WSW, \1.1, 1ulo., ,.5., , .•. ,
1ir c.011d .• 111to 1peed co11·
trol. !SlYtl t l 11161
'61 IMPALA
2 Door H•rdte,. 11.aclit,
ht1ter, 'IS. F1ct•ry A/C,
WSW, Gr1•11 Yi11.,I lop.
IW1E JS51 Slttl
''7 T·llRD L•nd•u
full powt r, St•erl119,
lr1 ~11, W111dew1. 51eh ,
auto., WSW, ·air ,,1141.
IVZF574) SMtl
'62 GALAXIE SOO
2 door 1td111. 11.tdii, h11 •·
1r, whila will tire,, V0 t,
•utom1tic. IQXVlt•I l6tl
·: '67 VW BUG
lt.1dio, he•tt r, 4 ''''"· white W•ll lir11. ltt11liful
ct r, ~~ctllt11t cof'lditf,11.
IVAN2111 S11tl
'6' DOOGE 500
2 ;,, h•r4t1,. v.1. 1ute.,
radii, P.S., r.I~ WSW,
wh1el ct •trt. I lt.51 5t 7J
S1Jn
DON''1' MISS THESE BUYS FRoM THE GOOD OUYS
.... SOUTH COAST..,.
FORD-MERCURY
4tWlll JOJ HOADWAY, U.eUNA llACH M'·llll
'
-New Cars tlOONe;trC•n --c ...
J~OHNSON &.~~sow
LINCOLN-MERCU:R·Y -·~ . . . •. .. ,
Tl1REE GENERATIONS IN THE AUTOMOBILE BUslN.ISS
llG SELECTION
BIG SAYINGS ON
STATION WAGONS
NEW MONTEGO STATION WAGON
MONTEGO MX VILLAGER
JI 1-4Y Y-1 ....... IMjtONt!M l111l11let C•11tfol, S•lett·
DI~ T,.._,llSI .. , C .. rmy Ufltt h1,, WSW •·71•14 n,.._ '""' 1.., wtMow, &..tfete c.,,1., -W/Alr
hfttf, Tlllttl IMt, llMr Fec:I,., P•W9f' lfftritt, Air C•11-
..iri...,, AM ..... ThltM 61en • C.111,...., Dl11. S....
& Pin ,..,..._ Wtt. ...... CTL Left H_.. Mitter, h-
l1q ..... C..... Treffef Towf11t rec• .... •OHllMI· ,,,,,.
_'87
Save$$
cou•_,• AIF!t. lrl111., IKllrY tW rW l!ltll"", ...... , 11-lnt, _.., W•k•, , ... le, lllller.
IUTIC In ) '&& T·IUID Lt ..... IOJf '4JI
l"uH ,.....,, "'""' air. '&& MUITAH• l .T.
Ctffl. "''-· 1"1111" IKll'l tlr Ctl'Mlll""· I"'' ,.....,. tlffri., • .,._ 111••-•t. r•tlll, M-ltw; llTV 4'11 194 COHTIHIMTAL
l'a.;i.,,, •Ir ""'JllDnlfll, filll ,... .... ,.~ ... llMIW, ••C-.flllltll'f c ... 11, IOI. T ... . ··97 Ml•CUll'r' 1 ti::: •T t Of. tl.T. .
1-li'OtD Ctlllt'l ~ UV .,...,, ..... tr•• .. l&M, 1lr
-· rwf rtllt. ITDI 1111 .......... ............. .,._ lfHt'lllt, ,...II, ~ .. llr.
.... ..._., flMIH. CXIU 4'.U '87 ........ • ...,, m, ,.,,
'
$2276
$1176
$1476
$1676
$1876
$1876
$2176'
$176
"\11 '"" J v••r• 1t
Joh111011 & 5011, "'"'' ~ ••
t+ter• bet11 • better time
ft ..... '"'"'Y 011 • "''"'
U11c•l11 '' Mtrcur.,. Ctm•
}rt 11ew, I will 1how
Y•u .. h.t t me.11,"
BRAND NEW 1?70
Marquis St•tion · Wagons
Y•ci'll Dlo., Pnl., COOKNltd ...-. LmP. Grill•, Duel Acr.IMI Tl. GI, P•w. R11r Window, Flo. thru Vent Snttm, L¥9119t lltc.11, e:..,. !mlHltn COlll., Ilk. SIW•H HfblJ Tlr11, I"-S/Wlndowa, ' N•y Pow. $ff!, Centtr FKiooti Rtlr 5"1J, Ctrpeltd LMll l'lool',
/lw, Fri, OIK lrtttl .
Ptw. 5tHring, Whl1per Air Ctnd~ 4M/FM SI-lt .. le, ta!, Wllldf
Stlld Wlptr, Tlnltd Gllu Comjii,, .Dix.' kit & l'rl. $.......,..,. Stll .. 111.t . Corti. Lii. Mirror, LlllllW'f W.1~e\'ln, CfllU COIH'llry ltllh flit,
DISCOUNT $967 .so
FROM WINDOW STtcQJ PllCI
'&&
'Ill
'87
v.w. auo
• ,,..., •11111 .....
IMf'I" 4fll ,
'0111T. Cat. c,._
Y4. tvtf, ,,_!! """' llttrlllf, , ..... """'· ,...,,._, ltll
. •
'18 &UICIC S'Yllrfl ! Dier HI,..., .. .... ''"'loo .......... , ''"'""'· '88' YW 1411el'Wt(' IW1f U:ll
$2176
' $1171
$2271
$1171
$TI&
$1371
$11M
$1171,
NOW IS THI llST JIME IN TEN YEARS TO BUY A LINCOLN · MlllCURY PllOOUCT
'
John&OD+&OD
LINCOLN .CONTINENTAL • MARK Ill • MERCURY f COUGAR. °"• c .... ty'. °'"" llt ... , ...... Factery Dtnct LIMel~ ONfw'
. ~·~ HARBOR, COST A MESA
540-5630 540-5635
(I Mlle So. of San DI• 1'.wyJ __________ _.,.... ..
I ...
.-
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•
....
• •
f•!d.11, .July J, 19]0
A I TRAN PORTATION -TRANSPORTATION -:;:
-Now Cort HOO Now~ -
*
* ·--·~-
* \\\· *
..
1
Wl
TRY
.TO
ARlANGI
DOWN
. PAY"INTS
TO
SUIT
IVllY
CUSTOMIR.
• .
•
• .
"" ,rkn ti< ~-, ... 11'141 r "=i ~-... ft1M ~II 1o:oa ""'" W ... '1 '"' . •
•
.. • •
~ . I
• '
**
SPICTACUW SAVINGS NOW
ON IJU WIY PONTIAC'S
ENTIRI IHVINTOIY OF NEW
1970 l'OHTIACS 'lNO TOP
QUALITY UllD CARS , • ,
OPIN THE ENTIRE JUI Y 4TH
WFEKEND , • , S T 0 P I Y,
YOU'il GIT A BANG OUT· OF
IT •••••
NEW 1970
TEMPIST T-37
HARDTOP COUPE
Seri1I No. 601~28
• •
• • • • • • •
•
NEW 1970
CATA-LINA · • HAROTOP COUP!
Serial No. 111101 '2799
NEW J.970· ,
GMC
Y, JON PICKUP TRUCK
'2399
.
'82 MERCURY $899. '82 CHEVROLET $299
STATIOM WMON IM,Al.A
,t, Comni::~ -· ~, r ... le & hill· v ... 1\110.. lr•n•., "''"' I. llHt;'"~" ~I or. "" .i1 ''2 wllft Ille new M l .. -orld c1r for ~ lr1-1'9 lOOY nn!SI\. cu• 1. "''·
'64 C~ROLE.T $181 '&6POmAc ~,
MALl•V CO!"fl•TISLI Tl.M,.l!ST W.t.90N ~
fl. nel l-' l1ttlt <fi• with Ill~ tlnlth, V.f en•lrie w!!lt 1ulllm1!1c lr•nt., Ind, r bl~k '°"' m:'."{ :fW ~ Ml!.,,..! tran1~ <Oftdlnon't1. P-,,.., wltri m1rchlnt
1 V.f 111t "'· fT IC:-0 , 1!11.rlor. C GL Pl). •
'13 POll'tlAC -'84 PONTIAC $599 WE
HONOl
IOtUllV\LLI" All
•1ack ' -· A .... 1 nit.I c.,. W ttw •Md.. CATALlltA ,WA.ON WWANTY llHlo, Plfflt~ •-ln9. -t>r1k ... V..t ~ ,...-tic trtl'ltmluietl, r1dl1 1llOll Iii'~. IT 2"1. ""'"'· tKXF 1'11. -K. l!GARDUSS
'87 DATSUll $899 '82 FORD $399 Of
WHO! ... oo ,Uf!JIA YOU Oni "' ~i... --"' 1-11 wllll ' I Door Shi CYll-t A r .. I ~ MV" '°'illl '"" tr Ion. " ~~ rllflM"' "'lttl lllck llllft, tr-ln!tfl, lllM:k lenOIV Nill .PURCHASIO '°"' ml!-. IUOG i..J. • -il'llflior, tODK ;i.l). YOUl -,
'I& CHEVROLET $999 '87 TEMPEST $899 l'OllTfAC. L
. -· IMl"AU. (OtfY'lkTllL• =· tlNn. ""'t .. "'.... .,.,,1.. i... • ... ~ 'ti-I e11tl,..., •111on\1llc tr.r111~ ••dlo, ""'"''
Ml', _.. ._,.,., --~ • -•tftrt:i· Wflll• will> ,,...., lnt.,.IDr.
Ulld. Cl'I\. 311:0. hi:.!lenl fl"' 1Y C•t. !UOM tMJ. .
. OPEN
'82 POITIAC $491 '86 Pl YIOUTH $999 d.J1 unta
T•Ml"IRT IAltlA(UDA JOPM
7 Orw S-1 ~· ~ 9"tll, r.Ole, .... ttr. t Doc>r. Hl·l'l!'lor.,..o« t~ll"" '°'l!h ~ ·~ includinc Rtid wl1'1 •e;J, lnltt f/lf, A ,_ r-h'lt, 9aod Pt ........ ( IU Hf). tr•~•mlultft. A rt1I MllCl!tt. !NMll 110), Sund., .
·•
l
' -'I ... • •
~ITA:r,~· TRANSPORTATION -TRANSPORTATION -TRAN$PORTATION TRANSPORTATION
.......... ,,.,...,; Mii 1..,.1rted Auto. 9600 Imported Autos 9600 lmpomid Autos MOO 1 f~porttd C1r1 ~
MERCIDD 11NZ TOYOTA . VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN V~LKSWAGEN
'66 TOYOTA '67 YW Lar9e Selection '63 VW Bu9
CORONA Squantback Of vw Camfien, MECHANIC sPc'CIAL Uc, OKC612 Glurnlllj Alt~ ... red with Sunroof
bn.nd new leatherette inter. . ~ VaM, Kombls, $299 M5' ior bu automatic tranamia-AM/FM radio, tape deck, a.ir --------1 ~ rwlio, fU.11 factory cond. 10,co_> mil~• on new Buses, New & Used CHICK IVERSON
~_--=-=-:. equip, TEY 957. factory el'lglne. Lie, UEP464
---------$1099 11695.
lmmedi .. te Delivery VW
CHICK IYERSON "4>-3031 Ei<I. 66 or 67 VW 1970 HARBOR .BLVD.
549-3031 Ext. 66 of 67 COST A MESA
1970 HARBOR BLVD. · '66 V\V SUNROOli'
COSTA ~1ESA NEW ENGINE. BLUE. •
~ .. -CHICK IVERSON 9 •:!'":.;:::~.':~ks
lllQ vw . CHICK IVERSON
549-3031 Ext. && or 61 YW ''FRI-,._ 1970 HARBOR BLVD. ~ COSTA MESA 549-3m Ext. 66 or 67
NEW MIDGl!T $1''5 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
'66 vw bus. ve.ry good cond 646-7610 or ~
thruout, radio/heater, cplg, ]961 VW Pkk up truck -
bed, elc. Belt oUer this 20,01! ml., xlnt cond. $139> COSTA ME.SA
• , .. MAa9 ........ ... Dial., ... .,....., f ·~~ .. NIW·UllD-.V. '"'"""'Cl or ~ .. TS weekend. 497-l!ll!l. :>-1S-0006.
~ ANNIYERSARY
SALE ·-.~Putt 1970 TOYOTA WAGON _ .. ~. '"2 Demo $1117
<ID -T..,.Oo Mork II $214'
_i"\'ll11'111 I
1\ ! i If i l' ! I . •
Lie, .ZPll51'
DEAN LEWIS
1966 Harbor, C.H. ~
-SUNBEAM . .
,.._~ ..1,..1... -
•Autbai11ed wt~ CLASSIC ~ AJ~ne Convt. '59 MG. .A 39,000 m>IH. Orig ow.,.r. • Xlnt cond. $500. 644-56lS
Convertible, 3 speed, dlr,
clean car. COXY8l9) Will TRIUf'4PH
take car in trade or finance ~
pdvate-partf:'CaiJ 5!&<052 '68 GT L
or 494-9773. -V .1 '1l167~~M"'c"~.:::..T_Y_e_JJOw~. -hnl-tp. Colorado Red, 27,000 actuaJ
26 (0) ' ~ > ., .... __ ,A milH:. tully @Qllipped, wire ' ml., Witt w•-=-a, nu wheels. Excellent cond,
trans, clutch 1-tlre11:. Pvt (YEM 414) Take smaJJ
prty. $2'l50. 6,75-8ll.9 down will finance t>rivate
'49 MG-TC du.sic Rdnr. party. Call Dir L~. 10 a.m.
Stg. 3 ere. RH drive, gd 540-3100 or 494-1029, •
cond:. $895.. ~ml &G-25118. '6C HERALD corw. A·l body,
MORGAN-
LEAVING STATE ,
MUST SILL.
1957 MORGAN, new top,
brakes, SlllO. Private Par-
1>. Call 60-17'4.
SUBARU -· * '70 SUBARU
' Here Now ~
Immediate DeHwry
e "' MPK .Capobill'>
• 35 Milel Per Gallon ._..,..,,..
Test~ To4Q' At
Kustom Motors
845 Baker,' C.M. 540-5915
OPR ---'69 OPEL dlxe. wagon; 102
eagine. Like new. 16,000 mi.
Still in \lo'UT&J\l,y. 644-0156
PORSCHE
'61 Porsclle S
C.OU11e. Abaolulely conooune
condition. Lie. SBN021.
$26H
eng, Xmialon, 8u'gain at
$595. 63Pr'l530
VOLKSWAGEN .
LARGE
SELECTION
of vw
CAMPERS
Harbour · V .W.
AUI'HORIZED
SALES I-SERVICE
lB71l BEACH BL., M2-443,;
HUNTINGTON BEACli
'46 VW Bus
Sunroof, rebu11t engine f!X·
cellent condition. <zxv' 493)
Take ama11 down, \I.ill fi~
ance private party, Call Dir
Aft. 10 a.m. 541).JlOO or
.... W29.
'66 VW Sedan
Radio fl'SF 785)
. $1299
Harbour V.W.
CHICK IYERSON YW '67 YW Fastback
S.t9-J031 Ext. 66 or 67 Black Beeuty. Total price
1970 HARBOR BLVD. lllllO. 'J\.lre trade or? (XIH.
COSTA MESA 336l wJll finance private:
162 PORSCH~ =-.t00c:!1 ~~: lO a.m.
AM-FM, Chrome rims, new '68 BUG blk . . paint, reblt •l!Kinf! •. Super . .v1n 1 n t
Clean Mab oUer• See t w/canary yel pnt. Auto/slk
3l89 ·Harbor Blvd c.~~ ta?t dk, Xtru. s 1~00 .
HOUSe in rear of 'A 6 .B &G-1756.
Pol'9Che Repair." =F"oR=-..i.-,-0"'·"61"vw=~a-,,.-,~1,·1
1970 Poncbt 911.T icoupe 5 cond. $1100 or best oiler.
speed trans. 7;·-inap with 646-4676
Dunlap raciJW tlrM Am-Fm ''"°67"""'vw=-~v.,,-. °"N"'ow~f"'oc..,.1...,,
n.dk>/and other xbU. Ml. reblt, warranty. Xlnt cond.
6500. $7850. Call 6'B-33'l9. $1795 Aft 5, &44-754.1.
PORSCHE/91~' '67 VW Sedan concourse cone. -50,llOD mt
$3850 . ca11 6 p.m,-(499-1.S70t. •.i ISKD 633}
'6' "C" AM/FM new tires >... •.'$1299 • • ioj >." ~= .::;66Xl{<T Pr 1~· Harbo.ur v .w~
'66 Porsehe'IJJ: tan. tleane11t low rnlt...,·Pfthe. ·1 \Vill 187ll BEACH BL., 842-4435
trade. can 6'll-42.17. ~ HUNTINGTON BEACH
·so eQRSCHE, XIni cood.
'63 en,g, disc brakes
~I oiler. 544-9338
'5? Ponhcf: 1600 S Cp.
Re-bl1 thruout. $169-:>.
Call S48-ll95
NEW YW BUG
$55.89 pr. month
$147.71 clclwn includes
tax & Lie.
'62 PORSCHE cabrolet . VW LEASING
Reblt. en,g .. tape deck, :"le:W AT
1 .... "·'°"· 6'6®5 .,, 1. CHICK IYERSON
'68 911 ~rine Wpd. Ma&. • VW
v.'heels. $5300. 831-1680 or 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
831-15.55 COSTA ).IF.SA
PORSCHE '61 Cobrolot
• 675-1321 lat. eve. •
'58 PorSche. hdtp conv, new
ere. radio/stefto .
BFSJ' OFFER.
i TOYOTA
'69 VW Sedan
Radio, Heater fZBS 327}
$1699
Harbour V.W.
1S711• BEACH BL., 842-4435
HUNTINGTON BEACH '70 TOYOTA'S
In stock. Immedia'te delivery. ~ ~ X1nt rond. R&H.
5u ...... =>, cream ext. red
I.. • uphlsJry. $975. -=· 1'1\S '61 vw. &>N'OOf. Rebulll ..... . f,, ,.a.~ 0..tom llpbol. New brlu A: UI flWQ tires. ?.take-" offer, ~6(2..:JJ.34
Legune Beech. •70· DELUXE Bus. radio.
tCIO So. Cst. H'J=:jY Warr'nty $2750. Offer or
494-7503 * 1111 ...... ep..<•11546-2222
BIIL MAXEY· .. vw aur. ''h + """''· . ~.<Kl1 mis. Mechl.nic owner.
$1295 • .m-1381
!T!OIYJOIT!AI '61 vw EXLT """'· ""'"
11111 IEACH llLVD. ~Calf beloro s.
1~~ !:: ,.:.'.!:: 'SS:, Joo~ ttblt enc. x.lnt
. '67 Corona . \ 546-1 ..
R<ol • "'liY r..;,.,, .,..;-. WANTED ·
9900 used c"r•
'
DEAN LEWIS
1AKKIVER!ARY
BIG SPECIALS
BIG, BIG,BIG, BIG,
·DI COUNT
AT
DEAN
$149,45 DOWN
$1 .. t .45 tot1! dciwn p•vm•nt S54.96 i1 1111 lol1I monlhlv peyment induding 11•. licen'e
i nd 111 c•rrvin; th1ro;11n cin b1nk •ppro•ed credit for )6 "'01. d1fett1d p1ym1nl ptk.e
i1 $1121.01 includin9 inl•r-!t, 11• & licen11. Annu1l p1rc1nl191 r1l1 i1 11.ll. If yo11
prefer lo p•y c11h 111• prite•i1 only $16'7 plu1 I•• 1nd lic1n11.
'70 Toyota .Wagon
$59 ;)72 .. ~~.
$169 ,85 DOWN
$169 .15 tot1l down p1ym1nl, $59.52 1t th• lolel monlhlv p1y1n1r1I ind11d in9 !11r. license
111d 111 c1r•vin9 ch1r911 on b•nk 1ppro•1d er.di! for 36 mo1. 01f1.,1d p1ym111! price
ii $2128.'ll ir1cl11dir19 ir1t1resl, l11t I li ~•n••· An11u1l p1r1t1nl191 r1l1 i1 12.IJ. If yo11
prefer lo p1y c11h the pdc• i1 only $1817.00 plu1 l11r 111d lic1n11 .
1970VOLVO
"1~" i DR: $2 . 95· · 77oowN . . I
$277.95 lot1I down p1ym1nl, $87.)9 i1 th1 fol1I mor1thly p1ym1r1! i11cludi119 tic. license
~Pld 111 c1rry.in9 c~1r9~' cin b•nt. 1ppr.ow1d cr1dil for 36 1111111. 01tf1rr1td p1yme11I prit1
11 $342].99 111dud1r19 1nt1r11t, t11 I l1c1tn11. An11111I p1rc1nt191 r119 ;, I J.IJ. If yo11 r ... ··soNus· USED. CARs I
$795
'64 OPEL
Sl1tion w19011. R1dio, l.111·
er, 4·1pe1d. R11I cl11~ cir!
IPIKl7ll
$1895
'69 TOYOTA
CORONA
H.T. Cp1. R1dici, h1-1!1r,
1ulom•lic lr1n1mi11ion.
l11ck1t 111h. fYIX561 I
$395
'63 PEUGEOT SEO.
R1dio, h11!1r, 4·ip11d. A
good f1tC011d C•r. !JZR8]6)
$1695
'64 TOYOTA
l.1MI Cfuitot, h1rdfcip.
W1rrt11 hW.1, h11!11, R11dy
for 111.,thir1g l IVGZ•IOI
$1595
'69 OUNE BUGGY
1 C•rv1ir 1119iR1l A-tcim1lic
tr1ns111itsio11. Mull 11~ this
0111. IOl~Otl
$1295
'67 ·SAAB SEO~
R1d io, h11+1•, 4·1p11d. E•·
t•1 cl1111, IVZU4011 4:
$795,
'61 FORD VAN
H11t1r, 1ticlr, R11n1 r11I
9oodll is,,.• 11161
$995
'63 ALFA ROMEO
Rod•lr. lt1dio, h11+.•, -4-
1pe1d. Eirt.• cl1111, !WTE
1411
$995
'65 AUSTIN
H11l1'f Sprite Rod.tr. R1·
dio, ht1!11, 4·1p11d. b:tr1
1h1rp. !YPUllOI
$1995
'61 flAT 124 CPE.
R1dlo, h11!1r. 4·1p11d, 11~•
111w l ~XDA521 1
$2695
• '67.JAGUAR
3.1 SEDAN
R1dio, h11!1r. pciw.1• 1!11r•
•i119, 1utom11ic, chro1111 wir1
wh11ts. Ju1t I; .. , 111wl IZVE
6661
$1295
'64 MGB RDSTR.
lt1dio, h1•fer, 4.1p1.d, r11l
11ic1l I 1Fl7901
$89$
'64 TRIUMPH
Rcidt11. R1dio, h1•l1r, 4.
1p11d, new p1i"*· IEVH
JOI)
. $895
'63 CHEVY
1/t ·ion pickup. R1dio, h11f0
er, .!_wlo11l•tic tr11u111l11lo11.
low "'hol111 l1 blv1 No~I
A 11111. I N6 1Z911 '
DEA N-L.EW IS
~ --..,.__.
VLK'927) \ViD take car in l'b ~ 1o, dOUa·· for )'OUf
trade or finatlQ! private par. VOLKSWAGEN ~. CaU
ty, Call for •PPOlntment, ' and~ a* fOf' Ron PlnohOt.
-"' 49Ul13. . 154~1. 86;67 • .f11.Jllm,
-D'AiLY PILOT WANT ADS! Saturd17 -DIME-A-LINES! 196'6 H'ARBOICBCVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303
I
\.
, .
. .
..
'
'rlday, July 3, 1970 .DAJLV'PJLOT 33
TllANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 7RANSPORTA'l'ION T•AHIPORTATIOI' TllANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION' · TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION -·---lmport..i Autos 9600 Autos W•nted '700 UNCI C•rt -UNCI C•ra 9900 Ulod c,,. . .,. 9909 UM.I C•rt 9900 Ulod C•rt 9900 Used C•ra 9900 UNCI C•rt 9900 ----·---· VOLKSWAGEN
'66 VW Sedan
WE PAY TOP CHEVROLET . CHRYSLER ·1>0DGI FORD MUSTANG PONTIAC
CASH --;67 ualibu · 1957 Cl!mlor Imperial fd. 1964 Convorl. :m-300, auol 19ell 60da< -· Bee. X!nt '65 EeonoUne camp unit, '65 ~SPD, .-. petn1. '67 Le Mans m,: cond, 393 Stock Hemi $400. J)(l\\'er. Rare:Muat tell tbJi 'coiid,. ~uat •11. Best otter. many extru, $1000, or Beit i150. ~946, 2040 N.~
\SLN 383) • ' Bucket ~als automatic, pow. Call Rkhard fi46..1318. wk. 675-ST'fO , , 9000 'ti\1'1. 6f2..MOS. ' qtter. 644-2900. Bl~. CM Bu,.i...t ll!&bi: .~~. JICl'W·
$1199 for1uled can A truck.I jUll 'er 1teerlng, air cond, ·own. -• v -· •gs -,-
call "' f<>< free estlmat•. • " tTP>' 681) wUI take trode COMET 62 ETrE Hd, '°f· .Otl& \ f i.LC._N 'tw ()ountiy """"' ~. MUSTANG • Lo ml, veey er oteerlnf, ,ir concl <•:118. rl ty red paint, 283 HI pel't enc. • • r U auto tr&ol, alt, Sood concl. lharp, VS aube.o-matic. 4711) will tab trade or ftn. Harbour v .w. GROTH • CHEVROLET ~·=. i;,;:,::_~ . '65 COME"r Calienl" PIS, ~ ••• SHARP 1!595. rn.694.\ * '•63 .FALCON .... ,. 289, 646-5619.· S.c. '°' .. ~. aa1 ....... 7l73 ~::.VI:..~ Cilll
U?U BEACH BL., .. ._ ..... for Sale•;...;..... ...... ~_,v~. •FU .. ...,.,,,, -auto, ""' Ur..-oharp. sr"'l --eOUGAR-JN&d ~ '::. ~·y62lcarb, n• '",.~!.... O''DSMOBILE '69 GTO Convert, .....
HUNTINGTON BEAClf U2ll Beach Blvd.~ ra • •ic:a e.r. ClU!' n~w °" bot, 89J..J400 bet 8:30-Uh;u, _,., uu-l " PDB, PS. Xlat: eond .
'64 VW Huntilll'tOn Beach tlre1ha ™;~al~a.rb :'ff i~t~n: 5:00, 846-3960 alt 6 SINGAPORE BOUND!. fO 673-"68 '66 C I Price42«)0. 5a-ml.
847-61187 KI 9..1331 mtt n~ y ox en "' . • '65 Cyc-... • QUICK SALEI RD MERCURY u.t ass '68 GTO convt. All ,.,..., Co. nw.mble 1 lhape! ..,....,. Hl·performance, 4-oj>d. llti». WE PAl CASH '67 CHEVY EL CAMINO, Cati B\U ~! . · ,, .• Shao> ·ss Red "°1'3ar! '56 FORD ·• !'\\'I pow" '"" air coed., ~~t't,'; ~~i.77~800• Ml/Sf Orange wi~ brand new pals. like new eond. 27,000 JDl's. . "'• Bes.t Offer 67M292 '67 M "' I I vuiyt top, {TRF:ll&) w 11 1 · · ·
le.y top&: ))rand tlf..W eneine. FO y c Aulo trans, air, pwr brlu, CONTINENT' .. i, Delivery rluly 7lh 1 O\VJ'ler, like ilew! dlr, Must ' OftTC a r tt.ke car in trade or !inance '69 PONTIAC 'LeMlltll. aJr,
Lie, OYJ798, .. R OUR AR strng-, vln)'I top, 396 cu. ,... 1967 COUGAR ar. Afr, PIS, adl. FulJ price $399, WIU Full power pllll air cond./ private party. 546-4052 or . ps/pb, Xlnt cond.
C $11'9 · In. ere. Priv. pfy. 540-2677.' ,61 ,.._ . d I sc brakes, JM-finance private parly, CPLG. vinyl top clean u ~ will 494-9173. 962-5730 HICK IVERSON. CONNELL • · ~·""'"""· fullpwr,<air, MACULATE find (V00049) Will ,. .. ,,,......,-=,...-,,-....--. _65 IMPALA convert, k> ml. AM/FM, new Otts,• brakes. ! $18 50 · 925) Call 546-4052 or 494-9773. ' -1; '63 OLDS Cutlass b I u '-. YW CHEVROLET sharp, good rubb'-r . Only $1200 968-1097 644-2450 '5?.. Ford needs seals ~in~ or= prl-w/whlte top, Wht·wall tires,
$850/bett offer. Sell this · · 1968 XR7-like new: only o''"* ..... •--.... n, g--' ., va e P • or r/h, ps. Very good cond.
RAMBLER
549-3031 Ext. 66 or 61 2828 Harbir Blvd. ::a: u,..,~...., '" uuu ,1-.t11.t_9773 •"-o"-"-'( 5= o 1910 HARBOR BLVD Costa Mes. ~UXI weekend. 642--2079 COKYAJR 17,000 ml. Near new r-.tiehelin chrome rims $75. alt 5 wkds 'I""-• -.,.. ........ •..-vl38. • '64 A.t\1ERJCAN, auto, 6.
XLNT cood. Real~. ~ COSTA MESA • -.66 EL ,&'A~flNO VB, 4 spd, X tires, air, stereu, vinyl &Th-8917. S'.J'ATION Wagon: '66 Mere '68 OLDS 98 convt .• \l.'hite, TOP DOLLAR R&H. chrome wheelJ, new -top etc. $2750. 54Q...351), FORD 6 cyl. e-ine wllh 9 pau. loaded · w/t.ir WI}' 15,000 mis, like new. $495. 536-1f14. •
1969 V\V Sedan, Affi-Fm '63 MONZA. Silver. blk'. 4 .... dean $1500. 675-0065 AM/1'"'M/4 trk stereo. ~. radio, stick shfft. Showroom Paint, $1150. 492-6264, Spd, new tires, paJnt, eng. 1 tr&flli. completcly rebuilt. .....,..., T '
tond. Days 546-3662, eves for • • 49&-9246. l\.1ake ·()uer. 275 Walnut, CM DODGE 2.000 miles. Best oiler take '68 COLONY Parle Wag. 10 63J..t799 •llRD
J30-0&15. CLEAN USED CARS '65 El Camino, '69 ~ng,-365 645-0083. ·, M&-5380. ~n'l8:,.d· ~tu~~ rack, '58 Olds, Clean inside k out, ---~---1
'66 VW Squareback with S@e:TH GEeoODOrgeRRaEy h.p. 327 mags. 4 ksp, Ton-'64 Corvaii;' 4 Dr. Sedan, WANTt ED:<;'~.~r '68 Podgy Se ~ti4N ~OiERO V$ 4-spd. . . -. ~ .. u,"'t r''u'·,._>:~L raldia25to0r, , '64 f•lircl
fUMOOI . $800 _ Or be&t 01• neau cover. l\1a e oUer auto, clean, $450. ~s om "P"' .... man, • , ew,1 tires. $550. 847-2.386. MUSTANG 14't-<m8 ,.....,. ·
fer:. Call: 67J....!M74. ROBINS FORD 646-6319. • ~ aft 6 pm. * stick. * Ion, __108 whil 8 7022 Betty Dr, H.B. ;;;;;c;;;ci:..=o':;,,,-,-,,...,-=. ~=\e·w~: ~
/ '67 VW & '63 VW No 2060 Harbor Blvd. '65 IMP. Wagon. A11 extras. pass, RI H' ,.$1900-$2*J9. '56 FORD V.S, .R/H. Xlnt '67 MUSTANG GT Fastback l!IS9 Olds 442, xlnt cond. 9,000
DlCllor, • Costa Mesa Air. Pert cond. CaU aft. CORYETIE 892-9887 • running $1SO. Owner. 2+2,P..vr.slr,discbrks,4 m i, Turbo-hydramatic, trade or~ prtwate
Call 842-852'1. &tUX>lO noon. Acc. best o t le r '68 Charger-Power MM., air 642-3767 spd, Sl.lSO. Wiii take older sll.~y. ~-parly. MS--4052 or .um.
'60 VOLKS, needi major eng. 673-8452 '.fi6 CUSTOMIZED SQngr&y, cond. &: vinyl top power '65 GAU.XIE 500 • ps, 289. car ln trade. Pvt pty '64 Luxury 98 Olds. 1967 Ford T..-Bird-J'actac)t
wrk. 1st $Z5 takes. Call WE PAY '61 CHEVY B iscayne 396 engine. Bu,,tgundy '&te('r & brakes $2300 $950 or be!it otr . .2811 646-0313. · 52,COJ tnl. $739 air, pe:/pb, $1750. call Tcm
67J...3ff0. TOP QOLLAR mechanically sound, good wtgolrl laN: stripe. Molded 536-7902. Verano, Irvine. l!.U-J654 •70 MUSJ'ANG, au .xtras. lo 646-0669 Browning, &e-«Ul. ·. r .66 VW Bull For clean used ca1'S 1iJ:1!1. Delore 9AM after 4:30 spo!ler. iirle pipes, map, '65 DODGE Dart 2 dr, R&H, '69 Country Sedan 390, mi. Pd $4100 ..,:· txllic, aeu i"'======== i==::::;;=====;.I
Good oond. $1400 JOHftSO'N, & SON $250. 846-3243 elcc. '•l'indows, new wide good tires. Ont! owner $423 PS/PB, A/C, sterel'.I, Xlnt $3000. Will take ·older VW PLYMOUTH VALIANT "~" '"'"'~ LINCOLN ?o.'t:'!D"URY tires. $2250. 642-4097 or cash. 548-6842 ~ · nd 646-7875 64~5603 bur a• pl pmnl. 5= ~·1· ~ ""'"+ '69 Impala 12.000 mi's. Fore-543-2211 ex. 228 ~ co . , eve: . ~=-~==r='·~~~ L---------1 ·--....:..-----'68 VW BUS ~IMPO\iarR!>oTSr mW:~~· ed Sale. P/S, P/B, a ir, ·Dial&f2...56TB ... RESULTS "67 Dodge family wag., r/h, '65 FtJTVRA C()nv.-r/h e '65MUSTANG CONVT,e 58--Satelllte 383, +.pd, TD, '65WAGON.GoodCOD4.p
, -...... ~~....u best ofc. Call 'til 11 PM, expandable top, hldeabed, stereo, ~w tires, very good Xlnt cond, lo mi'• mags, mint cond, $1995. down It $31 mo.
7 pus. Just like brand new Oranae Counties -673-1023. PILOT WANT AD!! &12-5678 Xl.n't oond. 54~9. cond. $700. 548-53.11 SlOOO. 548-9861, 675-2787 837-3387 anytime. 548-2687
¢HiCK'1vERSON en.r. ~~OT~ i-_-_::u~ .... ~~c:.~;..~~~~~~.;..9900:-:.0::c::'_':u~ .... ~~:c~.~ .. ~~~:~~:':.:'°°~7:u~soc1~~:c~.: .. ~:::::~-~'."u=...i===c=.=,.====-==:-·'u=,= ... ==c= ... =====..:-====~==0..:::========-I
18881 Beach Blvd. VW H. Beach. Ph. 847-8555
549-30.11 Ext. 66 or 67 WE PAY TOP DOILAR
1970 liARBOR BLVD. FOR TOP USED CARS.
COST A MESA If your car is extra clean,
MUST Sell : Leaving State. sec us first.
~ VW Bug. A perfect run-234 E. 17th St
fing car w/bocly in good Cnsta MeU. 54Pr1'765
shape. Radio, Good tires. 1967 CAD DeVille coup -
f;xb_'actor . exhaust. In same clean & low mileq:e. 968-3129
taJnily s.mce new. S?SO. after 6 p.m.
&U-1724 (if no answer, keep =="'=~-=====
calling) Auto Leasing 9110
1167 V.W. Sedan. Good run------=----
oing coed l' rood tim, moo. fl' LEASE V
536-3246. '70 Chev, v,, custom El ea.' '69 vw Se=n mloo Pickup. Radio. turbo. ~ · . . . hydro, pwr steer . 3300 mi's. ~~omatic stick shilt $89 per mo., p, disc brakes.
Cil5n. • SOUTH COAST $1·729 . CAR LEASING
300 W. Cat Hwy, NB. 64~2182 Harbour V.W. Ev .... w"""'........,
187U BEACH BL., 842-4435 Used Cars 9900
HUNTINGTON BEAOI 1--------~
CUSTOM BUS BUICK
Prof interior, great cond. '62 Electra 225 4 Dr. Hrdtp
lklll offer. 673-328'9. wl.air. aU pwr &: remotes,
'63 VW. Xlnt I hr u. o u I. autl'.I hl!~dlights, new paint
Loaded! $7'50 oc best ()ffer. tirell, upMls. &: reblt eng. '* 642-7243. Like new. Best offer.
'64 VW Bug. Ex:celle~ con-1~"-~~""-·---~-
dition. Must sell $650. « '65 Skylark Gran Sport 440 best offer 499-Xl66. eng, xlnt cond. $8 50 . 1-=========I 837-«>25 or 837-20ll
VOLVO 101$ ,Bukk U.S.bre 4-dr.
~--------1 r/h. air. $850. 675-383.1 or
~ =-~'~'"'~·~~-,-..,.--;c= ...-----~.~ -1965 Buick ~lark. R/H, THINK factory air. PriCed !or quick ·1 'VOLVOi "1" ><>-61., .... ., ·
Ill : CADILtXC
. "FRIEDLANDER" '62 c.d c.,,vortiblo
2 dr. Demo. Full power, fNPU821) Dir, * $2750 * Full price $699. A real bar· • • gain. Will take car in trade.
. ,,,,. •~ACM CHWY. •I \Viii finance private party,
NEW-USID-SUV. Ca.II 54&4D52 or 494-9773.
-'62 Cad Fleetwood, air, 2
VOLVO spkr radio, clean interi<ir,
push buHon sway power
ANNIVERSARY "'"· ""'· _A"" "'' 0' SALE weekt'ndll 495-5786.
'6.i Conv. 32,000 m i. Factory \.!70 DEMO air, elcc. windows. Green
"142" ........... $2699 wl~·tutt lnterio!'. $2200,
4 speed, radio & beater. # Call . Tom Brown ina:,
47!). 1800 E Cpe. for deliv-642-4011.
f!Ey, Ove~as del Spe-claliat.1--~,,.,~,,CA°'D'°l"'L;-LA"c.--
DEAN LEWIS Convertihlc, private party,
1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 $i195. 492-3878.
VOLVO BUYERS '69 CAO Coovort, leath" Int, AM/FM ndlo. full pwr, Let US check your deal fact alr. tilt l'-le strg, pwr
Chances are, we may save door locks etc. 644-5859 ,..,
$ $ $ '63 2 DR sedan. 6~.!XM) mis.
FRITZ WARREN XLNT "'nd· Good"""· 1995.
SPORTS CAR CENTER !162-5!9<. .
Tl{) E. 1st, S.A. 547.(1764 '62 CADILLAC Cpe d~ V1~)e, I~ 81 k V 1 XI t nd full pwr, $795. 450 V1ctona, """ ac 0 YO. n co · Costa Mesa
$1600 or $500 down, take 1..:;:=;;~~==;o;-.-;;-" over -payments, or best of· I EXTRA CLEAN 1 9 6 6
fer. 49&-5224. Cadillac, air cond, siereo,
·68 VOLVO Pl800, Z..1ust lil!ll, full power. 4g,r,..5349.
Xlnt cond &r: fully equipped. 'SCi Cad .. mag wheels. Runs
642-1536 eves good. $250. Phone:
,.. 893--0757
Sport Cars 9610 WANTED: '63-'64 4 DR. Cad.
·.66 p h 912 Lo mi., Mly equi,.... on,. orsc • owner pref'd, 642-4620
~ TO CHOOSE FROM
~Prlcod from $3499
WDZ-926
HICK IVERSON
' vw 549-3001 Ext. 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
<DSTA -MESA
CA MARO
For Sale : '68 CAMARO, V-8
auto, I owner. 25,000 mi'•,
new tires. 42400. 644-)020
CHEVROLET
"65 PORSCHE CHEVY .l6 hrdtp, v .. 1
J. . M 1 ()wl'lf'r. $195. Call alttt 5:30. O>upe. New ~ngtf'le. us 644-ttn.
tee to appreciate. PGX279.1 ~~~==~~~
! $3499 '69 EL CA.t'VIINQ.396, 4-spd.
CHICK IVERSON = bocket oeats. '"'95·
( VW · '67 Caprice 321, auto trlln&,
f 51!t-30.11 Ext. 66 or 67 PS. PB, 11.lr vinyl top, r/h,
• 1970 J{ARBOR BLVD. $1fi50. ~7-4509.
1 COSTA ,MESA '67 CHEVY Caprice, klw
1V 1 1 ff•S mlleaae. loaded! Xlnt cond, Mtlquet, c as• Cl Priv. prty. nm. 54H25t.
L<IAVING STATE '!5 IMP. SIS convert. Pw>.
MUST SELL steer.. UH; very dcan1
up MOltCAN + 4 In vtJ')' New wide o\lals. ~3309.
pld condition. $1D>. New • '69 Custom El Camino,
~ & brakes, P1ease call maga I. tonneau. like ne.w. 'P'™· -12700 ** ID'-14§8 • \
•..
FROM; CHEVROLET MOTOR ·coMPANY . '·
.1969 low mlleacJ~, ·llemoinlng fac:tory GuarantH lmpalo c:ustom c:oupes and 4 door hardtops •.
·An with radiq,·heatJr, air c:onditioning, power stHring, winyl rooh, tinted glass, white side wall .
tires; in new ear c:ondition -one 1970 c:.;uom c:oupe with 7,200 miles -This is a rare OPil01l·
TUNITY TO BUY a real nic:e c:ar-Spc:eial this wnkend-a red 1969 Impala 4 door hardtop in
this group for just $2699 !ZVL-180)
'66 BUICK
ELECTRA CUSTOM
4 Dr. Sdn. Loaded \\'ilh factory air,
vinyl roof. Real fine car. Week-
end S~ial. <USD620)
$1699
"'65 CHEVELLE
2 DOOR COUPE
One owner. Hlgh color. Automl't·
tic, rftdio, heater. VS. Dl'ad sharp.
Very special. !NFV088)
$999
;65 CHEVROLET
IMPALA 2 DR. H. T.
Automatic, power 1teerifl£'. radio,
factory air. A real n!ce car. (PCR·
3'9)
'67 DOdCE
DART
VS, automatic. power steering, ra·
dio. Cl~an car. CUJG514)
$1399
'66 Karmann 'Ghia
CONVERTIBLE
Pretty.yellow car. SO,!l'.>O miles and
1trona: car. (3585)
'$J .299
'67 CHEVROLET
CAMARO 6 CYLINbER
Factory air cond.itionin&, automat-
le. radio. heater. Such a nJce car
wort't lut at this }()w price. <UOG-
028)
1799
'68 .CHEVROLET: :'67 ,CHEVIOLE
BE L AIR COUPE
327 VS, po\ver steering, radio,
heater." factory air. A real bargain .
IVBB6601
$1799
IMPALA 2 DR. H. T. _
VS, pciwer steering, automatic, ra-
dio, heater, low, low 36,000 miles.
Showroom fresh. <TGA784)
$1599
'66 . CHEVROLET
IMPALA 2 DR. J;I. t.
Automatic, rad!o. heater, power
1t.eering. Sharp Sharp Car!! Hur-
rY! (ULA.9651
CUTLASS 442
4 speed: red, red, red. Pciwer steer.
ing, radio, heater. Absolutely
showroom fresh, Hurry only one. CVFV$1799 ..
EL CAMINOS
RANCHEROS
MUSTANGS TRAllSPORTATIOll CARS
'63 OLDS $499 WAGONS
WAGONS
AYlllMlk, ,,,.,,
11"'1..... 1lr t-~ tl<tftl"I, rffl9. 11,MI mllw. Strt.I N1. tUJ
'68
EL CAMINO
\11, lllcll 111111. -ff
l!Hrln•. hrt.vt <•r.
"UnAI
'68
EL CAMINO
V1, tv!Olftltlc. L ... t.i lnc111d ln1 .ir co...r~
llelllnt. • Ntlr IHIW. US711)
'67
EL CAMINO
VI, 4 ,,_.., -.:•et
IHfl, ll>w m l l1•,
(INll. IVOMl)
166 ·.
RAN CHE RO
A~to1Nlk, rHle, ,..,
flt l ltr, SIHtwrMM
lrttll. ISV•4"1
'68
RANCHERO
"'· ttlck tlilft, o.H
alNI,._ (1'0UAI
• ~:. l~ke+br~nd now. Radio, s1999 healer, automatic, power
Ht('f'rin_g. ( XS H582 I
'61 HARDTOP CPE.
V8. air ecind .. loaded,
P.S ., automatic.
(VHF'85.'l)
'67 HARDTOP Cl'f.
3 speed, power steering,
radio, heater. Nice.
IUZF161J $1499
'66 HARDTOI' CPE. $1499 Autome;t1Ct111Jio, heater,
power steerina. &rgeous.
ISIL878l ,
'66 2 + 2
Hardlo9 coupe. Radio,
heater. automAtic, power
steering. CS1S250l
'65 HARDTOP CPE. $1499 Automatic. radio, heater,
pQwcr 1lei>r1ng. Air condl·
tloning. <UUY~7). 46,000
miles.,
2828 HARBOR BLVD~ . .
-·
.. •
'
2 Or. H.T. Strong car.
IKIIA181
'62 CHEV. IMPALA
Cpe. Stick shift. Nice.
{KKB563)
'63 CORVAIR
4 Dr. Auto. Old couple car.
1FXG0551
'64 IMPALA S.S.
Aut6., P.S., R&H. Nice.
(QVP035)
!64 IMPALA
4 Dr. Auto., R&:H. V8, P.S.
(GES8911
'63 .CHIVY.
Bel Air 2 Or. Auto .. P.S.,
R&H. Resl &:ood. IYCN402l
'6J CHEVY.
2 Dr. Auto., radio, P.S.,
strorijt'. car. <YCR40'1)
$549
$599
$899
$609
$699
$699
'64 CHEVY. $799 4 Dr. 37,000 miles. Nice and a good car. (KDH146l
'U CHEVY It $799 4 Dr. Auto., R&H. P.S., nice car, (LTL162J
'6t VW 2 DR. $1299 Sedan. Rebuilt engine tn
Fcbrull')'. (VGJ43"2l
'65 IMPALA '66 CAPRICE .
I 1"11 ........ Air C-' .................. •Hltll~SIMr-MllH. Air ci::Hi.. 11>1• lk Tr-blf, llldlo, .. ,.,.,
ml11l911, Cll•UtJll, P-$Mir.... Hlc1 (llU:tUJ)
$1499 $1899
'68 FORD '68 MALIBU
l"lkH. 6 P1u.. Air 6 Pn..,....., Air C:-~ .• 11 .. lt, H111fl', •rtllnlnf, llllflf, " .... Plwtf s1 .. r1111. IZVZ· .... ,._, ,,..,..,
M11, (WP"IOIV I.
$1799 $2499
'68 IMPALA '69 MALIBU:
IP••=· Niuo w .. ' ............. ,...,, ~ ,tl'IC--••l=l~r CMlt--. (""" "" ( ) llUUUll). ... ltllltf.
'$2799 $3399
'67 FORD '64 .RAMBLER
CWlltry' SIQll, ......... .tt• mllol, ""'" • ...... Ill(!, llr CW. 6M ...... CH;~ CVOOIMI,
$1899 $999
COSTA MESA
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:e EU>ORADO'-e FOURWINDS e
· e . IAtBOA MOTOR HOMES -· . . e ·CRUISAIRE MOTOR HOMES e .
e TRU.CK·CAMPER UNITS
READY FOR IMMED. DELIVERY e· . -~ ... ·.... . ·-
EXTENDED CREDIT AVAILABLE .
COMPLETE
CAMPER
, . . ,RE.N-TAL .
. DE'-ARTMENT ..
... RESEiYt "YOUR' .
DATES Tii>~All ,.. ' .
. . . . CloMcl Sat., .4th · of J•ly....., Open, SuMl!iY :
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' !" I ·t.1~A"t, \14NY ,MORE
TO CHOqSE; FIOM :!:!:=;;~--.;;. ~-,. ... ~-• · · HARD T . Fl p · ' . A THEODORE ROBINS . EXCLUSIVE ' ' · · -•••
. . :,..» . . ·····"""'·'·''··'"''•· i.;;.,;;..;....;, .... ,., 1;,;.:.11 .. ,~ IOUU21l l . LOOK FDR THE DIAGNOSTIC '69 MERCURY C:OJ.OIMT . PARK ... r----· Stition WD9011; ftcfory oir, outoW11 1fic tr•nmii1sio'tt.. ro4io, h1ot1r, power sf11ril1to
.... n . . $1299 ·P•••r 4i1c brili:t1. u•, 1MW. IXW65~ . · s !! i . . · . . . · CENTER SEAL ON TllE . WINDSlllEJ.D! · · ~A VE . · f=:~~£ '64 .. !~::?!~ .. : :.· . $889. ' :AR~o:~p~s,:~:s.~s:DAYS .-.,7· CHEVROLET . '. s1 57· .7
<OTVt"I . • • . l•polo 4 do" '"dtop, Fod. ol<. v.1, P.S .,
· C.... .. '·1 '11lc .. ~ l•W ......... 11 ·=he .w .. IN. , , , Auto.,,AIH. fTllU4·74l • c1677-. _ . ..., ""'-..._ ... --... ---=-------=~~ "" .~·. ..-. • .., .... ~.,!' .. 1
•••·... ~'" '68 DODGE RT $1 799 •-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:-...,.;:::;;:::;;::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;=::;;;:;:;~ · · Corontt 2 Jr. H.T. VI, •uf.O., f1cto:v.•i~, "-'.:..:~----~--...,.-• . power 1ti1tiMJ I br1ko1, t'inyl roof, R&H. : ·'
r ~!~~~.~o~ ''" P:S., ••• ; ............ $2999~ T.R u c K--, 7-o·-~-';~·ERi0~K $1899. . "111 ftb wilMloWI I 111t, 429 V-1, 1uto, RIH, vinyl • ~, .
"',._,,. I IYCL7IOI ; 5 c I A 1,5 .... , .. '"''" ].,, .. ,, ' =~~ roo •· p E ' Iii l ike now. IYWT2171
I' ... s. .,, '!o~u~!~!.~~~.~!'!~; .. .,4;. l2498 . . : s' AVE '66 MERCURY WAGON ; $1799
!loo"" "''''''""''pow",,,..;,,, pow" , · '68 FORD F-250 'I'• TON . . . . t '"'· Col. '"'· ''';••!;,, Jo.t. '·;" pP~" . .. , J li,.lttok11, r1J io, l1e'1t•r, Zl,000 r11rl11. !XSRl 6]) . ' 'JStyleslde P.U. V-8, automatic, power "••ring I br1ko1, pow~r ·•••t,'R&H. ISAA02•1 ~ -,,~.7~·MERCURY $189'' t~~;£<~~!:.°d'~~:,;.a:~;, . .. .• . . ··~-·~· ~· -. -.... '""'"'~-.lo-•llM,.,f,llpow"• ,. •67 :: .. ~\;;1:: • •.· ' .,. 7 ~;~~.!,~~m~•t•· ·~1399 f t0 · 'ITJ RD70) .,., · £h \11ry 11ic1 conditi•11. IJICF--671 '. ~~STANG $1 .. s·· 99:"· .. · .. "~r.~i~llent . I , -.!,-7-F~ORD 'XL. ·. s14·99
• ' ' ~· -·-.... fW .. ..___ c•--·· --· 2 d,oor h1rcllop. VI, .;.to.; AIH, •ir cond., . · .-.-•• .._ .. -· ,.,S., vinyl roof. l\l!:C'4l61
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