HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-07-21 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa17
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Huntingt_o~ Approf!es
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TUESDAY AFTER(':IOON , JULY 2 f,1'1970 . . '
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' . ·Loot Finders . ' ' ' Newport VOtes to l(ill
Freeway; Badhalli -.Elat~ed
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.. ~.Kidilaped
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Gtrl~·16;
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FoundDead
LANSING, Mich. (UPI) -Two boys ,
waWzig' a · rural road , near here found
the body oC Laurie Murninghan,· 16, the ·
object ,of an inten1e police ·search since 1 sbe was kidftaped during a holdup 12
days ago.
Her abductor remained at large today.
Lansing PoJ!Ce Chief Derold Husby vow-
he would "leave no stone unturned until
the person or -persons responsible for
the tragedy are brought to justice."
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I • ~ t °""
.. · Will ;t fleet ·
~·~r J' • :'I I: • ' ' ') .,,,.. • ' ,~ t
Mesa. "·Fi·r:m'. llit·
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' . ' . • . ' 'Senate ' • '·, f •••• ; • r: • In ~mhe.zzl1·ng?
' • By ARTHUR .R. VINSEL
. OI tflt OtllJ' """ tl8ff . ' . '
A former aerospace plant' controller
and a woman Supervisor h"ave been'-Ar-·
resteq 01 cbaraes they embezzled $1~,ooo
over a period of three yeats, Colla
Mesa police revealed Monday.
·InvestJ1,tors said it is one of the
largest such cases they can recall in
Ofange Coast industrf, but knew of a ,
$24,000 case a decade ago ·In which
the suspect'ed bookkeeper is still free.
'The pair charged in the case involving
Master Sepecialties . Company, 16 4 0 ·
Monrovia Ave., are accused of ' three
counts of grand theft each.
By JO-'NNE 'llEYNOLDS
:OJ ""· DiflJ ,, .. ....,1
~b1Y.!Da!) ' l\Ob<o:t .J!~am i.tay
Jail aJld 1rele~ed on the aame ball declared" a~ i-esolution pas8ect, MoOday
figure shortly afterward. · night by ,th<i Newport Beaci)cCi(y CouotjJ
DetecUve1 Jim Strickland ~ Jan · supporting' hii .anli-freeway letislatiCll
GuatavPJiOq., wor~~ ~ CJse for abo!lt wtil haYt."a ~r -trect•· ixi. the ....i ...... a week before sulimitting evidence · a-i .. a "" --a
against.the pair to autborl~. · of.the bill through,the Senile. ' , •
f'We've traced, it baC.t ao far to t1987,'.' The-Newport resofUUon,~lntroduced by .
said Strickland, aotlng. that. Koster was · ~ Howard Rogers, ciilfa 1 fot
plant cootroller for live years . before Senate approval of lhe bill wlthw.t
he quit last Jw1e to take a job with ari1endmtDt. Council approval w' 1 •
a Los Angeles company. · unanlmOUi. · ·
.Badham,'a bltl,. which pa&oed ·the ·Strickland said he could not reveal AJsembly in late June, would de}ete details · of how the alleged . misap-·
proprlaUons were discovered, since this tQe, section of the proposf!d Pacific Coaa~
woidd be presec::Ution'n\aterial. · ~reeway from Beach, Boulevard in Hun-:
Koster 's prelimlnary bearing was set tinglon Beach to the Corona del Mat ' • ' DA(L 11 f'l.:,e:1:11aH "-"'
TIM PETERSON !LEFT ), BOB JUSTl~E FIND 'BONDS ·
In • Huntington Beach Ditch, Loot From • Bur1l.1rv
The body of the pretty, blonde daughter
of Max E. Muminghan, former mayor
of this state capital, was found Monday
in high grass and weeds near a lake
about 15 feet from the road. She was
clad -in· the white t>Jouse, red :bell-and
blue miniskirt she wore r when She was
abducted July 9 from the gift shop
where she WI! employed for the summer.
Cnr1, M. Koster, 40, ,of 2921 ~atalpa
St., Newport Bea~h, w,as relea1ie4 .finally .
Monday on jl2,500 ·ball ~fter .bel.Rg ar-
~~~ Satur~ay at ~is tx.Jne. .
fOr July 30 and Strickland said .his female boundary.· ' : ·' ' 1 · • .r .
Id be • 1-• ,_ Badbam .se.id t.Qday• be was , pleased co-defendant wou. requued w appear with the 'offlciat iu......-u.e ·city bu o,., the same date.• W"' • ,...
He did say Mrs. Schlocker'1 ·job in-' given. hi:S tffcirts.
Kids · Find ·Loot · ' ' .. ~ .
Identification was confirmed throu1th .
dental comparison, Husby u.ld. The
cause or time of death was not lm-
. mediately determined but Husby said
·he would reveal the res:ults of an autopsy
. Mrs. Ethel R. Schlock er, 26, .of 8402
Danbury Circle, Huntiniton Beach, was
taken into custody Friday at the plant
oo her final day of work after submJttitg
a reaigQatlon.
volYed Ule-.hudling 0r1 sums of money :"When' tile only 'city in v o Ive d
Uied to. pay the comi)any's bllll. unanimously back.s a bill without amf!iDd..
Strickland Wd Muter Specialties ment, you can bet that will have I
Company. la primarily an aircraff parts . great etfect~oo the vottng," he~Aid. .. . 'it a news 'coi'lference today. mallufactur~r. but that it· has built com· J Badhlpl said ,the P~ta for passage
Savings Bonds F oun,d .in Channel
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"At this point I have no knowledge
of anything and I'm happy 1 don't,"
Hus&y said wh·en. contacted at his home
early today. "t hJven'l' heard the results
A supervisor in charge or disburse-
ment, she was booked lnto Orange County ~nti ·f9r the A.pOllo moon rl)Cket!, of the bill "look good." He ,Jias ask~
such as h'lstrumenta and control panels. · for a Senat~ Transportation Committee QuestlOntcJ1a~t .the•slze of'lhe.afieged · hearing oo &be .~! Oii M~claY1 :
embezzletnent; the veteran forgery deteo-; ~e~y 1~ .members ot the. Newport
tive Aki l It . is ·one of the Jltgest in -Ffeeway Fighters were pr~t Monday
hia roemory, but rec•lled the '24,000 . nJkflt 1 when ·Rogers and eo..mclGnan
U.S. Savings Bonds worth $350 were
relurned M.opday to a .Huntiitgton Beach
woman after lhey were discovered by
lwo Marina High sophomores among
scattered papers Blong the flood control
channel south of Graham Street.
PoHce said the bonds, and other
papers,. had been· stolen MondaY' f~m
Miss Gail Ann Galante, 27, of 5501 Wendy
Lane, a student at Cal.State, Long Beach.
They were found on th e south siQe
of the flood control channel by Tim
Peter.son, 15, or 701 1 Candlelight Circle,
and Bob Justice, 15, of 16&51 Robert
Lane.
The youths were walking in a nearby
field' when the spotted iC8.Uered papers
-apparenUy dum i>ed by the burglar,
police said -along the side of the
Cagey Crook Steals , . Electric Typewriter
A burglar who evidently knew the
silent alarm setup bypassed doors and
cut ls way -through ~ a wlndoW at .11
Costa Mesa electronics plant to steal
• $420 eiectrio typewriter.
\Villiam B. Spencer, of R ad l x
Microelectronics, 2150 Pullman Ave .. told
palice of the break·l n Monday, saying
no other valuables were taken.
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01 anything.yet." . t-. Hun· tin" g· ton ·Ou-· channel, among thick b~s. The names of the two boys 'Who made , . . ~-.
'J'heY •• F&lled .. ,police, at . first ,thinking the discovery were not' disclosed. Husby .
someone might have'1beoo assaulted and said . theS' \mmediat.ely summoned ~of-Wat'er Supp' ·Jy robbed nearby. Miss· Galante's name was flcers to the scene. ·
~eri cise more \Han 10 yi!ars. lgil. Lf'dsley Parsons · each , i~uoed a
lHe said the~Jl'Bl is .Ull1hu•ting Robert '. + (See FRE,EWA'f,,P1p J)
on .the bonds and 'other papers, but · Murninghan who spent"t.Pe early d.ays .1. '. •
with a Long Beach address. ol'tht! investli~Uon 'at~ Lanslng'Potice Fluo·n'da.ti"on The mystery waa cleared up when · Department working with poUce, was
&he returned frorii school Monday -evllf\-. not • a•aUable for comm~nt, nor w,re ·' ' ' · · •
ing, found her ap;trt.ment raoslck·ed', anti other members of the family. By ALAN DIRK.IN
rePorted it to the police department. Gerald W. Graves, Lansing's mayor, O:I"" o.tlJ ,. ... •tiff • • 1 All but two of the 16 stolen '25 bonds · ~aid 6e was "st~~e~ ¥d, g'reatly, ltJeyed , . : Hun Ung~ Beach Is going to ·OUM'idate
were fciund. · 1 by this senseless crime. Our htart.9 and • the municipal Water &Upply.: i
Police said nothing else of va lue was prayers go out in deepest sympathy The council voted unanimously Monday
taken during the burglary. to Laurie 's family." . night to authorbe fluorldaUon after a
Miu Murning'han was k.idl\llped f~m 70-minute public hearing on the (!()l)o ..
Gallagher'• Gift ~op by a ~n-wte.ldmg · t"roverlial lsaUe. • · · , To B nk Thief bandit during a holdup which netted HunUngton Beach thus becarn'e the rO 8 $60 •. The owner of the .store, Mrs. second city in West Orange County to
,. Chr1sUne Gallagher, 1"88 pt1tol-whlpped approve fl40ridation . Founlafu Valley ' Grabs $2 .. ()()() •by the man, •'!" when1 she recovered okayed similar actlon In • 4-1 vote .
'7 ·from her lnjur14:s was •~le to help 5'veral weeks ago. an artist draw a picture of bun. , • 1.... ,
lb 'nltley; a ~bc:iokkeeper :for a NQport
Beach firm who droppe<I out ·of slcht ·
1hd wBll •ubdecluently charged witb krano
tlieft. ' .
Detectives · traced Turley to a point liom whiclfbe escaped the Unlted>States,
at which tJmC! Stricktaiid, then 'ar. w~ant .
detective, turned the case over to federal
authorltif:s.
He said Tw:lty i.s1 DOW· wanted lor ·
Interstate flight to avoid prosecution.
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"/;lilt lticre~es ·
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A man who "amed a ·blnlt taller 1bat picture along with . 1 recent , One foe of fluoridation voiced ms fear
by note that he had a 11111 and -1dn't pbot4graph of' Miss Mumln&imo was tJ;uil other county cities may follow suit ,The "Aslembly Judidary CommiltA!e
hesitate to Utt it took SZ,000 from the widely circ:Ulated, putlcularfy among Jbhn Slnnelte, ·a ch'einirt " 507 pnyon Monday approved 1, ,bill to Increase the ,
Coufity · JUdges '
El Toro branch ol. the Bank of America truck drivers, in the hope of determining ~cres,,.LquDI Bead}, apo& al lbt !)ear-· number of Orange COunty SUperlOI\ Court
late Moo.day. where the two had gone. J lgg and llkeoed fli:tOridatlo::i to a con-Judges from 22 ,to 24: 'Ibe humber Would·~
Bank employes and witnesses told Throughout the Investigation during t8gious dlaeaae. • ' go to 21 next July 1. • Ora~e County sher!ff'1 investiga~ra _ which pol.ice received .more than 11,$00 . "l'rri"afrald .it may spread'to Laguna The committee 1pproved 1 second bill ,
that tfie m.11n, descri>M aT being in lips· from citizens authorities said they Qeach, be said. . to 1ncrtaae the number of West Orange ·
hl1 late 20I and wearinc a milUa11 style believed both Mtsi Murnlnghan a® the Slnnette malttlained that It bad not Counl.1 Municipal Court judges from sh .
jacket, fled through a side door leadina abductor had remained In the Lansing been prO'fen that nuoridea will not be to 1evm, and from seven to eight nut into the bank.'1 parklq: Jot. area. hannful. ' M•Y I.
· Officers said there was no get away Rewardl totaling 116,500 were pledged ,Huntington · Beach resldent Mrs. Both measurea, .authored· by Senator •
vehicle seen by ~bank employes or by organizations and anonymou1 donors Bernard Gage urged that the Issue be . Jame1 E. Whetmo~e (R·Fullerton), now
customerL for Laurie'• safe return. (lee FLUOJUOE, P11e I) • 10 to the Waf1 'and Means Committee.
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I • 'Oruge·
Weatlier. . .
Mostly 1fatr Utrough ~ay aay1
the weatfferman. IJttle,temperatur.t
1 change is ezJ>!cled with highs
1 reachine to the nlneL1e1. Some night
r and early morrtbia klw clouds art
also predicted. .;i I . ' I • ·fNS"8E ~QA"" ' . :
1 :oranQe cocUt.r1 ore doing'
tl\<ir thing •wood -, hefpmg
others rothet' tft,a" ~
th'e "ugtu A'm.nican" image .. !t•
·'stories b\ th11 South Coo.at l?loaa
1 1cctibn. "
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!V,iX~ Eyes Viet Vote
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C'!1!ers Wide Range -in Impromptu Talk
WASIDNtm)ll (AP) -Pftsldent Nill·
on aay1 the fUtW1! a:ovemlnent of South
Vierpam mUlt be llek<t.d thmJill tloo-tlooo -DOI i_. Cll Ibo ,.,,....,,.
nalloo 111 ............ ·1n· PlriJ. / · . .-·. ,
Kii •dmlnistr1tloD wlD mt ~ for
an bnp>sod COl1Hm FVlnllntll~ tbe
Pr-oalcl. "It JDUlt bl 1 aovermnent
•leclell=tbe ol South Vletn,lm.." In•· -...,,..,... Mondit, 1116 t ileD llld bl would
Velo 0 lilll Mitlal maodalofJ quoW
on any importf tt,,eept texttfes. Such
quot.a.I, he said, a~ not in the national
Interest and mJght ael oil an In· --·-· Tbo-Wl)'I and Mew Comm~toa
hat Pl--1 quota; on lhot and tatlle
imJ*'IL .
lllyml· Vltln110 11>d Import•, N-
r"""" ....,. a· munbel'-ol topics al tbo BU'1l'lit ..,.., mn!tHDce.
111• llld tbo· Uailed Stlta baa no
Idea ol ubi1 'anied l0<ct1 lo ape!
tbe.lloflet Ualoa from lht MldclJe.Bllt;
promlaad ... ~ aquad ol ~
mt.II \If·--"" wlll forco acbool·
lnt..,.U. ID Iba -; predlcUd vo4'tl · .
wUI tum . against big apenders in
Coogreu; forecut an econonilc upturn
for the last hall el the year and uJd
be .... · Httlt chance ol 1 111 cut durlDr
the nut two years.
The President ........,_. plans for
a major meellnf j)ll national delonse
and tho def .... , budfll at' lbe w .......
Whlll -JolJI 17, I~ by -,.,.,_ ne lht ~c """ft foe lllCal
1111. -.:..= 1 ~--:le ·=::
hu llO·si~~ with ~·-~··· ~~ta lhll~. 1111 iald the Uallld
Statei «Ill .... •ulilll to-Dsten "' any pro_..,:mai» by lf4nol at tbe Paris
~··. '!lla=t'I-. wit · In an amiable,
. .,....,. -ii -alter bl UlllrPld ...,. ~~ L . .zie11er•1 •!fer.
11D011 ~Ii tht -u 'C!Uivterf al ,.Iba "" • i\111 ~-It ID1o renoe la his own office. . """'"''"°" queat!Ollin.I • ... • crtttcllm 0 f • 16-
"'"~-iotloa policy by Boa. 81m11 'l'lolr-
milld (U.C.), In I llellall tplltll ftlo''
~~-'"""""' .. -.... ..w' ..... •a:t>11rar1 .... ~ ...
tlOftl ln1: the administration, cited threata
to °""" tp exem~ of private tcbooll
1tt. 1!J1 U> perpOtuate ltl!'fSaUon and
w~· bl termed a proposed lnva~on
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Beeky's Wind~"Hit ~ulf;
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First Hurrican'e of 1970·
NEW-ORLEANS (UPI) -Tropical
llorm 1!«ky whipped her 76-mllwn·hour
winds into the flrsl hurricane of 1970
toc)ay, churning lo wl!bln ~ otiles of
lht guU coast Ind thrutedng the Florida
•hottline. • -
But resiilema . aJoog lht -of LOuwaiia1 M~4 . :Alabama .and FIDrida br_...i 1ga1n11 Ibo nr11 . p1e
force '!In.els espeC\ed to bit land tonlg)lt.
''We're just battening dowo lht ba~
chC!• •. &hutting up and tatlnr off e¢-a ~n and · equipment from o!labort plet..
fof!Tll..'' said a SbeU OU Co. o ff I c t a I
In New Orle811f. . Tht w11thlr bureau aakl windl at
the ~lot. of. Ibo 1\0rm ~•O retched 75·mJ1ff ae hour, just barely. bwricane
Def~nse .Batlle
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I~ Swcu'm Trial'
I '"' ,, • ~ ' ·,, f ! I ' ' Leadl· to D~lhy .
A growing conflict over what defense
attorney ls to repreRnt accused baby
killer Dr. Wesley G. Slocum in h1t
Orange County Sul>lriiR Court trial -on
murder charges Jed to a."detay Monday.
The 43-year-old former 1Utgeon, whose
hands weft cripplod ·by 1 suaflpt with
Santa Ana police I• Jlll'I ago,· ·ii
!dlldul<d lo return U> cnurt July 24
for I harlDC 00 bla def-plans.
Paul 'Augµstlne Jr., mee a nelghbor
In Iha Mesa \lerdO ...U.O of Coal> ,....,
hu, been deat,.ated Dr. 8locum'i ·•~ toinay oL racnr4 but ~ acicµlld phyl\-
clan I> bitterly oppooed to him. · ·
He wants attorney Michael Gerbo!I
Instead, but Augustine hat already been
paid and hit would-be IU~euor indicated
Iut "-«k he ll>ould be retalaecr lhroup
Auguotme. · ·
Dr. Slocum, who is diar1ed with ~ht
dlnnem:ben'Oent murder of hia daughter
Cynthl1 in 1'64, wflen •he wa1 about
thrM tnorith1 old, wllf ha•t a new trial
data Mt. when be IOM to court nat
Wetk.
He has been held at Orange Cotmt1
Jail •without ti,il llncO parts of I )>lby'I
body were found cut 111> and ntitly
pac~ged in butcher paper in a frttier
re:nOYtd frotn the farnlly'1 vaclt.ed
hem••
DAILY PILOT
~"Galt w1nc1s of 39 .. u.. an
hour and above stretched 150 miles to
the north and east of Becky's eye.
HWTicane warnings are PCJ61.ed from
Fort Walton, 11'11., to Port St. Joe, Fla.,
and gal< .............. In effect Imm
Mobile, Alo., lo St. Msrks, Fii.
"W.,ora playing It cool at the preoent
time .'' II.Id Wade Guice, a Gullport,
Miss., civU--dettnse director. "We are
implementing plana as we wouJd under
any storm threat."
A hurricane watch which had earlier
been posted llong lht Missiaslppl and
Looillana coitl piobably will be dlaCOn-
Unued later &oda7, the weather bureau
llld. '
The lat.st advllOry i>laced Becky at
latitude 27 .0 north and longitude 86.9
wesl, 2.11 mUes 1SOUth of Pensacola, Fla.
The ltcrm wu upected to move 1Iowl,y
north'll{ard at abou~ 10 miles an OOur. The weather bureall Aid µdu would
begin lo lncrease along lht ~ of
Alabama and northeast Florida late to-
day: aNI that 'gall· forct winds would
fir!l reach short toalltK. The <urrtlll path cl !acky would lake
her Inland lllt of lht route lallea 1111
year by Hurricane C.mtlle, • stann
that ravqed Louisiana, Mlssl.a&lppi and
Alabama.
Be<:ky Wlll the aecond storm of the
year to ·lfOW to tropical 1torm pro-
portloM; Alma, tbl ftrst troploll at«m
of the yur, dlld barmleAly bl tbl
Caribbean in May.
From. Pqe l
FREEWAY· •••
resolution backlnc tho B1dham bW.
Tht MOil 1ilftVlcant d 1 f f t r • n c e
betwttn the two wu that Roter1' op-PoNd further 1tudy of a route anywhere
within city limits and supported tho
bill wlthilut amen<lment.
PlnOnl was DOt 1pecilic on the mat.
ters of ratudy or unendment to the
bW.
While. all cou.ncll membera obvk>ullly
favored.the intents of the ruolution, only
M•yor Ed Hirth and Oouncllmoa Don
Mclnnit "npri111d concun over what
the community cou)d expect with the
delellon o( th• "-•y. "We're trytn1 to pl.an now ror a aolu.
t.lt>n ln -the .tub.Ire,". Hirth said. "Thi
pllyllcll trolllc probltm1 havo to bl
10lved and tolved on facts, not wilhu
or dellre."
Some altem1Uves outlin«! by the
mayOC' lncludld developmen\ of arterial
blil>WIY• U> latd tho beach city from
an llilitld -ay at tl>o city'• espenH.
A similar plae II belac Ulld bl Laguna
Beaob, he said.
Mc!Mlt aald with the pa11110 ol tho
rOIOlu!lon and ultlmatoly tho Badbam
bill the "WC<k will raally be1ln lo find
• IOlutlon.
"'111a mo,! t...,.nant wet of the
arU , fer ahiad d. the bay and beaches
~ , Ibo people. And for that reuon, I
ban ,to -' Oluldlmtl> Rot•ra'. reduU1111.~'·1at llld.
of carpetbagging Justice Department
lawyers to usure forced integration of
public scbooil In lht South.
N1%oa said Thlll)rlOOd objeelad lo ae
action that ha1 not been taken and
the.re is no lntenUon ol taking,-"that
is of send,lng vigilante lqUlds, in effect,
from ·the '.ru.tice DepvtmenJ, bwyert,
In to ~ the Southern ochncl dlllrlctl
to integrate ...
The givwnd-take ~ Southam ocbool
problema follOwed lhO ..itcll lltllor lo
the Mideast. A repOrter +asked for
clarification of Nixon's approaches to
problemB ol1 the area. llld. Sov!et move·
ment there. • '
Millon ttealled having said In hls July
11eleVi.sion conversation the U.S. interest
b puce and recognition of lhl aoverelan-
ty .and lndepeocltncl ol -••tiY llali In
the area. ,
He said the 'power balance bu not bMri upset bul the movement of So\•iet
w .. pons and men to the Mideast to mifl the weapons causes this country
coocern beCaute a continuation could
tip the scales. ·
He said orma eacalltlon, .partkulorly
tht use of troopo In tho Mldeut, ln-
m•ses the risk of a confrontation
neither stde wants.
"That is why we are pulling such
emp6nlt on our peace ldlatlve. 'lblt
is why we ha ve not announced ~y
sale of planes or delivery to Israel
at thls time became we want to give
that peace initiative every chance to
succeed," he said.
NI.Ion aald be wouldn't and shouldn't
apeculate on bow blgh unemployment
n\llbt rile Cl' ~ow lltroag be think&
. 'teonomlc recovery m.l&bt bl this yeli.
Ht said at this point the nation ii
at a watershed of economic policy -
the reason for bis rather strong state-
ment to Congress last w~k on Its record
of appropriating aod spendlni money.
"When the American people learn that
the big 11pender11n Congress art primari·
Jy responsible 10< higher prjce1, and
eventuall.Y even higher taxe1, J think
tha& the American people will turn on
tht bi( spenders politically."
On other topics :
-Campus Unrest. Nixon said it would
not be news to conclude one way to
bring peace on. the campus would be
lo bring. peace In Vie.Wm. But ht said
he wu ·not ture tt would bi'i.ng· campu1
peace. -Defen.11 Cuti. Nixon repeated that
, while he has shirted much 1pendlni from
defense to nondefense program1 ~ lt Is
unrealistic to suggest money for big,
new domestic programs can come out
ot subltanUal dererwe cuts.
-F~ Aid. Nlxoo aaid the chances
ol his lalnily usJJtanoo weUm plan
getting thrOllP the lltnalt ore fall'. ~FAu<atlan BW. The PrtstdtDt Slid
It ls MOO mllllon above hil budpt recom·
meDdatlon and lb.at ls unacaptable. But
he said ht hun't decided U> volo the
bill and be hinted he mJaht bl able
to male up the amount from olher
progranu.
1 Decompo~ed
Body of Woman
Found by Police
The partlllly decomposed bndy o1 1
secretary wu found in 1 Huntington
Beach apartment Monday mornlnl after
detectives were alerted to her contlnutd
absence from work .
Clad In only a negligee, 1he wu
discovered In Apartment 3• of the
Mediterranean, 401 AUanla Avenue,
around 10:30 a.m.
Police .said there was no evidence
of foul play aurroundlng the myrterlous
death but added that they have been
unable to decide whether the death w11
natural, accidental or a 1ulcJde.
Homicide Sgt. Monty McKennon 1ald
the wQman aged S6 and divorced, hat
been idenUfied but 11ked that her ldenUty
be withheld until the next of tin has
been notified.
"There was enouah facial reKmbl~e
left to identify her from plctuttl," 11ld
McKnnon.
McKennon estlmatea thi woman died
about 10 days ago. He says he was
nolifled through the McDonnell Douglas
security ataff about the woman'• absence
from her too. 1
Although an autopsy was conducted
Monday nlihl by Iha Orange County
Coroner's office, the c1u1e of death will
not be determined until the resull.5 or
certain toi ln te~ are av1ileble.
"lt will be 1bolit one to two w1eks,"
said Coroner's investigator H a r o I d
Minick, addlnc that he 11 trying to
locate the wom1n11 relatlva.
·The woman'• pattntl are dead and
iille lived In f011ter hom• all htr life,
Minick llld.
Police Seeking
Rapist Identit y
Oran1e County Sberllf's 1nvtsti,alors
11 re tod ay looklni for clues to the Identity
of a man who raped 1 l~Y:ear-.ld South
Laguna &irl at knltepolnl.
'nle victim told otncer1 that she "''' offered a ride Sunday night by a man
who picked her up on . South Cout
Htghway Jn La.guns Besch.
The &lrl said lh e man, ducribed 11
btlng about 40 to "5 years old , then
drov e her to a secluded atta n e 1 r
MO!l•rcil Bay snd raped her.
·'ftle victim said lhe man then drove
her U> • stnet nc or her Soulh Laguna
DAIL 'I PIL01 Sl1ft PllCIM
FOLKS ON KISER DRIVE SAY GOODBYE TO MRS. SABERS
Dlmhwtlvo P .. -•• Wint HNria hi H;l,,lin91en INC:h
Lo-ve Letter
Reluctant Farewell for Post Lady
By TERRY COVILLE
01 l!te Dtilll' PlMt S!ltf
"Goodbye Mrs. Saber - we all love
you."
Kathy gave the ~I lady a blC
bug; yollni Todd blushed, then killed
her nus11 on the Ups, and Suzy the
Pomeranian pup wagged her fluffy tail.
'Ille entire population ol. the.%7 homes
on Kiser Drive, Huntington Beach, said
farewell Monday to Theresa Saber -
their postwoman for the past three years.
They did It with a peijtion emblazoned
with more than 85 names ran1ing !rom
tiny 1<>11 to rrandparmlt.
1berua nearly cried when she saw
It.
"You never know how nice people
are," she said in a soft, muffled voice.
Three mothers f r o m Kiser Drive
delivered the petition Monday to Hun-
tingtog Beach Post Master Pete OiFa~io.
Mrs. Saber 'had no hint of lt.
DiFablo called her into his office where
the women 1urpriled ,U\e •little post.al
lady with It, then h\lcged her.
Friday wa.s Theresa's Jut day to deliv-
er mail on KlsEr Ori•e. The 1treet WIJ
taken from her route becau• of the
postal department'• change In sip code1.
"We want her back. W Ith Theresa
we felt like she was a friend," Mrs.
Judy Yellen said.
"T11e cltlldnn 1U followed her on her
route!' add e d Mrs. Jean Ver Weire,
organizer of the petition drive.
"Just a smile alone is worth a lot,"
chipped ln Mrs. Jane Keller. ....
D!Fablq, a .little embarralHd at belnc
placed In the villain's role had to tell
the ladles there was no w1y Mn. Saber
could cover Kiser Drive, "becau11 of
the tip codes."
"Tbla 1• a tremendous commendation
for one ot our Jetter carriers," he added.
Ttle petition read in part:
''We AU want her back now. If thi1
In impossible then we do want to pay
her tribute by signing this petition ao
that Ille will know that we appreciate
~ ror her outstandini per'IOnel qualltle1
.. well u her being our beloved mau
lady."
"1'tey greet me like a rrlend -I
feel I owe them IQmethlna: evtn If it's
just a hello and a smlle," said the
cheerful postal lady.
Theresa Saber always asked about the
children's teeth1 the new baby and how
the f1mlly car was n.mnlng. ri
Residents of Kiser Drive said ft ls
so regular -9:45 each monlln& -
they could set their clocka by her.
''Yes, there ls one ritual we h ·a v e
on the route," she admitted. "At the
end of the etreet there ii one mall
bo• we call the klllfnl bo" The Utlle
girls all k11fi me f)Odbye there, U
I leave. The little bo)'I lland around
kind of shy. It • •
Suzy, the Po¥tn1an pup, a 1 way e
waits In the window f<Jr the mall lady.
"Sbe Jumps Jn my ann1 and wl&bes
my face 11 U k had never been wMbed
before."
Mn. Saber b~ been I mail lady
for ?Our y..n; " :
At 5-feet, 2-1Debe1, and 100 pounds,
she'• not ' the heftiest peron to ever
carry 1 36--pound mall Ack. .
"When 1 appllacl "" Ill• •''"' the pootriiut. lookld ai me 1114 llld,
'You're kind of little -but 1 sueu
you'll do.'"
She did.
Released Bishop
•
To Visit Pope
HONG KONG (UPI) - A Rom 1 a
Catholic spakesman 11ld today Blahop
James Edward Wlhh, freed by Com-
munilt China July 10, will leave for
his home in Cumberland, Md., aomettme
nett month.
The Rev. John Sullivan, Re I Jon a I
Superior ~! th Morylmoll Fathen, 11id
Walsh, 79. probably will vi1ll Pope Paul
VI at the V1tlcan on the way home.
Walsh had been tentenced to 20 year1
by the Chinese on a conviction of 1pytn1
for the United Stat.es and the Vatican.
He served 12 yws befor hl1 nle1se.
•· 1
Fro111 Page 1 . ' FLUORIDE • ; •
~ p,;t I<> I public volo and later Couadinle
Ted BartleU moved that the matttr
bl placed oo the 1enenl eltdloa ballot
In.Nov~ · ·~natmari GeOi-ge McCracken backed +
BarUetl's moUon but It was defeated
•2. A motlqn by CooncUman Al Coen
aulborlilng fiuoridaUon wu then pas...t Without dissent
Water Superintendent Ed S I an I
estimated lht cost ol Injecting fiuorldff
Into the city water supply to bring _the
fluoride cootent to one part per mllUon
at 111,825 for equlpmo;nt ,and 18,2)0 1
)'W for the sodium Ouortdf:.
Stong ..Umated that It will lake five
moathl to iMa!I tl>o equipment and
allrt lht program lntmded to reduce ·
tooth decay in children.
The water superintendent also revealed
tbal natural fluorides ara already ill
the water supply, varying from 2/loths
to 4/loths part per million .
Mayor pro t.em Jerry Matney limited -
discussion to 30 minutes for each side •
with botil the proponents and opponent_,
receiving a fiv~mlnute rebuttal.
Several residents spoke against the •
plan.
Ron Muzzy, 9331 Hudson· Drive said
fluori des could not be injected without
extra costs and he would have no choice
other than to obtain water elsewhere.
"U ftuorldes are good let's not go half
way," he added, "let's have water with
vitamins and minerals in it."
Martin Annenberg, 17152 Camelot Cir-
cle, uid fluorides should be prescribed
by a dentist. "I look upon this a~ an
abridgement of my freedom to drink
pure water," he said.
Herbert Clark, 21031 Shackleford . C1r· '
cle claimed fluoridation will have a
res'ldual effect and that It will poison
plant.a which will later be eate n.
Other fJuoridaUon foes said that the
chemical would hanq the elderly, causlnA:
bone decay , and one resident claimed
it was a commun ist plot and that
fl uorides would damage the brain and
nerve cells.
DenUsts and pediatricians pleaded for
adoption of the proposal ciµn g en-
dorstrnents tA. f1uorldatlon by medical
associations and governmental agencies.
Dr. Eua:ene Brown, president of the
Orange County Dental Society, said that
fluorldation would serve "as a major
steo in reducing dental decay."
He listed support for fluoridation from
the American Dental Association, the
Amerlcan Medical A.uoclatlon, the U.S.
Department of Health, Education and
Welfare and the Public Health Service.
A Fountain Valley dentlll. Dr. Roy
Richards, 1ald that dental problems form
mankind'• moat prevalent dilea.se. "No
qualified lndlvJdual his docmnented any
adverse effects to youn1 or old from
fluorides." he added.
"It'• the mott effecUve, nfest and
cheapest way of prevenUna cavlUe1. For
every 11 -t on fluorldt1, llO II oaved
on fUllnaa."
Dr. Edw1rd Balkin, a chlldren'a dentin,
deterlbtd how much fluoridated water
would . .lave U> be dl'llllk for it lo become harmNI. .
"If yi>u drank three bathtubs lull In
a day, the equivalent of J76 gal.Ions,
you would become sick from the
fluoride1," he e1plaJ,ned. "But you would
have died tint from water lnto:ii:lcaUon."
Pediatrician Dr. Burton F. WUUs also
apoke and Dr. 'Ml.om11 H o u I b t o n
present.cl 1 petition •lined by 71 phy1I·
clans and dentist.I who hive HunUnaton
Beach patient.a backtn1 fluoridation.
'Mle last speaker was Dr. Dave Gaynor
who pointed out th1t 90 million people
In 7,UI communities In the U.S. are
presently drinkln1 fluoridated w1ter.
Nixon Plans Visit
WASHINGTON (AP) -President NI"
on dlaclosed today he plans to Visit
Mexico Jn early ,September.
Nl1on made the dlscloeure Jn an off.
handed remark to Melle.an ambassador
Hugo B. Mar1aln dur1na a ceremony
In which the ambauador presented the
President and Mrs. Nixon a sUver bo1
for their 30th weddtng aMivereary.
GRAND OPENING SALE!
We ore pleased to announce
th,e opening of our second store
in Tustin. We hove purchased
"Red Hill Carpets'' end the new
name will be /1 Alden's Red Hill
Carpets & Draperies."
e IN COSTA MESA e
ALDEN'S
·CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Pl1cont11 Avo.
Ph0no 646-4131
In conjunction with the open-
ing of our Tustin store, we have
several spec i a Is in our Costa
Mesa store. Please come in and '
see us.
• e IN TUSTIN e
ALDEN'S
RED HILL
CARPETS e DRAPES
11374 E. Irvine
Phono 831-3344
VISIT OUR ENLARGED REMNANT ROOM AT OUR COSTA MESA
STORE. HUNDREDS OF REMNANTS AND ROLL ENDS.
'
home and ordered bet to le1ve the car. • .. ______________________________________ ..J
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Huntington Beaeh
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Vi;lt. 63/,NO. 1.73, 3 SECTIONS, 36 P.AGES '
I
" DAIL l 'IL01 IM" ......
o 'FOtKS ON KISER 'DRIVE SAY GOODBYE TO MRS. SABERS
· Diminutive Poatwom•n Wins HHrts In Huntington BHch
' .
Love Letter
ft,eluctant Fare well for Post Lady
' ' By TERRY COYILLE
Of Ille 0.llY """ lltff
"Goodbye Mrs. S.ber -we all love
you."
Kathy ga•e the postal Ipdy 1 big
hug ~ ~ung ·Todd bluahod, then kWod
her fluah nn the lips, and Suiy the ' Poivewilan pup wagged ™:r ~ufty tall.
The ·entU:e p<>:PUlatfon Of the 21 homes
on KiSer Orlve, Huntington Beach, said
farewell . Mopday to Theres,a S~~r -
their postwoplan for the past Uiree years.
*.Y dia, it with a pe!JUon emblar.oned
with inpri!
1
than 85 names r~nglng from
Uny tots to grandparents.
Theresa nearly cried when she saw
it.
"You never know how nk:e ·people
are, .. she said ln a soft, m!lffled voi~.
ntree mothers f r o m ' Kiser Drive
delivered the petition Monday to Hun·
tington ~h Post Master Pete OlFabio.
Mrs. Sa°bt'r had no hint of it.
oirabio clalled her into his offict where
the women surprlaed the little post.al
ladY, with it, then huaged her.
Crash Driver's
Spouse Dies
AU.ENTOWN, Pa. {AP) -The wife
of a chartered bus driver collapsed and
died today as her husband was being
La.ken from a hospital fqr arraignment
on involuntary mamlau&hter charges in
the deaths of seven chiklren last week.
(Earlier story Page 4).
Hubert Daye, 44, of Montclair, N.J.,
was song the 52 injured when his crowd-
ed bu$ failed to negotiate a curve on
U.S. 22 aftu a briel thundershower ·and
plunged SO feet down a rocky em-
bankment. · .
Oaye1s wife, Henrietta, had ' boarded
at the nurse's residence ol the Allentown
HospiLal wbUe he wa.s under treatment _
When he was discharged today she
became ill and died shortly afterward
In the dispensary of what Leblgll Coonty
coroner Robert Weir called a massl'Ve·
atroke.
Friday was ThereSa's last day to deliv.
er mail on KiSS' Drive. The street wal
taken from her route becau• of 'U.e
postal deportmeot'1cbanp'in'1ip codes.'
"We want her back .. W I t h 'lbeNll
we felt like she was a fr~nd." Mrs.
Judy Yellen said.
"The children all followed her on her
route." added Mrs. Jean Ver Welrt,
organizer of the petition drive .
"Just a smile alone ls Worth a lot, ..
chipped in Mrs. Jane Keller.
OiFa~io, a lltUe embarrassest a~ be.Ing
placed in the villain 's role · had to tell
the ladies there was no way Mrs. Sibtr
could cover Kiser Drive, "Mecauae 'ot
the zip codes."
"This is a tremendous commendatton
for one of our letter carriers," he added.
The petition read in pan:
"We all want her back now. 1f thi!
in impossible then we do want to pay
her tribute by signing this peUUon so
that !ile ,will know that we apprecl~te
her for her outstanding pe1'210nal qual1Ues
as well as her being our beloved mail
lady."
"They greet me like a friend -l
feel I owe them something even If it!s
just a hello and a smile," said the
cheerful postal lady.
·Theresa Saber always asked about the
chi1dren's teeth, the new baby and how
the family car was running.
Residents ol Kiser Drive said she Is
so regular -9: 4.S each mornln& -
they oould set their ck>cks by her.
"Yes, there is one rilual we have
on the route,'' she admitted. "At the
end of the street there Is one mail
box we call the kissin& bo1. The liUle
girls all kiss me goodbye there, aa
I leave. The 'little boys ltand around,
kind of stiy." •
Suzy, the Pomeranian pup, a I w a J 1
waits in the window for the mail lady.
"She jumps in my arma and washes
·my face as if it had never been washed
.before.''
Mrs. Saber has been a mail lady
. fQl' four years. ·
At 5-feet, 2-indles, and 100 Pounds,
she's not the hefUest peron to ever
carry a 35-pouJ14 mall 'sack.
. "'When I applied Jor the job the
postmaster looked' at me and ·&aid,
'You'.re kind' of little -but I 1UeSJ
you 'll do.' "
She did.
. r
• : ~ 1
,TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1970 .
., ~ • . • . ' I'
' ORANG~ cc;>tJNTY,· CAUFORl:llf-, . .
. . '
.' t ..,
' '
·1.. r
'; .J EN 1~ENTS . . . ' . . . ' ., . . . . ' + .... J, r::····-
City Ok,ay~ FIUOfjd·at.iOit
Huntington ·Ct>u~il · Shuns Oppo·ne.niS "'
By ALAN DIRXIN
OI .. DilW , .... S•
Huntington Beach is aotng to fluoridate
the municipal water supply.
'nie. cooncil "91~ \UWlilnOlll!Y Monday
night to authorize fluoridation after 'a
'ro-minqte public hearina: on the con-
troversial iuue. ·
Huntington Beach thus became tbe
second city In West ·Orange Collnty to
approve fluoridation. Fountain Valley
okayed similar action in a .f.l vote
Nixon Backs
Free Voting
In-Vietnam
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pruldent Nlz.
on uya the future government of South
Vietnam must be aelected through elec-
"'°ns -not Imposed on the war-.t.em
nation by negotiators in Paris.
His admlnistralion will not atand for
an imposed ~alition government, the
President said. 'It must be a government
aelected by the people of South Vietnam."
In a wide-ranging news conference
Monday, the President also said he would
veto a bill setting mandatory guotu
on any imports ezcept textiles. Such
quolas, he Said, are not In, the n•Uonal
lntereat and 1 might ·set off ·an ln·
temaUonal trade war. ~
The Hou!e Waya andMunsCommlt1"
hu ,..,_ q»>l!f)"! ~ ·-~ fmpcrU. ' ~ ) . ,, I ,
lley</nd V~ and imports, Ni-
rangt'.'1 over a numbel: or topics at the
aurprlSe ..... confer.nee.
, Ha lllil tjie Uniled States has no
ldN al miliJ annod"lorces lo .. ~
the Sotiel Union from the Middle Eaat:
promised no ~·vJ1illl)te squad .of De~Jil
ment ot Justice agents" will for~ scf'oo1
integration ln·the south: predlcted 'voters
will tum against ·big • apendtrs I dn
Congress; forecast an econornlc uptura
for .the .last half of the .year and sa.i~
he sees little chJl)C! or a tax cut durin1
the next · two years.
The Pre!ident 'announced plans for
a major .meetin1 on national ·defense
and th•,.delen.e budge!' •t tM Weslern
White House July ·17, followed by con·
ferenw on.the dol!leJtlc budget for ,lilal
1972. '
fi1 ruling oul .any . impooed coafilioo
government in Saigon,' Nixon said he
has no significant disagreement wJ(h
South Vietnamese · President Thieu in
this regard. But he said the United
States aUll 111 wilUng to 1isten to any
proPosals made by Hanoi at the Paris
peace talks.
The President was in an amiable,
breezy mood . at times after he usurped
press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler's after-
noon briefing in the press quarter1 ·at
the White House and converted· Jt into
1 news conference in hll own oUice.
The school desegregaUon questioning
centered around criliclsm o f ad·
ministration policy by Sen. Strom Thur·
mond (R.S.C.), in a Senate speech Fri·
day.
·Thurmond, jumping on what he said
were arbitrary and discriminatory ac-
tions by the adtnlnidraUon, cited threalJ
to the tax exempUon of private schools
set up to perpetuate selregalion and
what he termed a proposed invasion
or carpetbaging Justice Department
lawyers to assure ~ tnteiration of
public schools in the South.
Nlzon said Thlµ1ll0nd objec~ to an
action that bu not been taken and
there is no intention of taking -"tlult
ls of sending vigilante Jquads, in effect,
from the Justice Department, lawyers,
In to coerce1 the Southern acho;ol ~iltrict.a
(See NIXON, Pap II
several week& aco.
· One r.. of fluoriclaUon .. Iced his fear
that other mlbfy cilie& nifY friUow stiit.
John 1Sfn'n:ette, a chemist fl 507 canyon
Acres, Lagµna'J)eaCh,·ipOll:e at the'hw'·' Inc and · likened Ouoridatio?t to a cofto
la&lous di1ease.
'T!ll. efriw_lt may spread to I,aguiia.
Beach,'' he said.
SlnneUe maln,tained · that it had DOI
been proYeo that"' nuorides will n0t be
hannful. · • . •
Huntmaton · Beach resident .. MTS.
Bernard .Gage urged . thM 'tb•· luae be.
put to a public vote and later COwK:llman
Ted Bart.Jett moved that the maUer
be pla<ed oo· the' senetal «lecliori billlo1
iJl Nov.:ember.. . , , , • '· ...
Councilman Geor1e M<Cricl<en backed
BarUeu'a motion · btit' 'IL Wis dilait~
4-2. A moUon by COuncllzOan ·Al Coen
~~riling · nuoridltion was , then' ~d
WJt~ dissent. ·j
· Wat.r Superinteqd"!'t Ed ~t·a.01
• ' ....... _....,_
, I • I J DAIL 'r lPtLOT hefl ,_
.. ''l'IM · PETERSON <(~EFT), BO!I JUSTICE FIND BONDS
In '• Huntl"""" llMch 'Ditch,' L~t Pr'om • Bur9l1ry • • \ r "' • I
' ' '' ,, . ' ' ' ·w•d · F. • d L t :n.I iS,·· .. ID · 1 • ·00 .
' . '
Savi11igs Bon(Js Found in Channel .·
U.S. Savings Bonds worth $350 were
returhed Moiidiy to a Huntlngtoi;i Beach
woman alter they were dlsco'vered by
two Marina High sophoi:nores among
scattered> papera along ·the flood control
channel south of Graham Street.
Police said the bonds, and other
paper•, had been ·stolen Monday from
Miss Gall Ann Galante, 27,. of 5501 Wendy
Lant. a student at GaJ..State, Long Beach.
They were found On the 89Ulh side
of the flooil 'control channel l>Y Tim
Peterson, 15. of 7'11 Candlelight Circle,
and 'Bob Justlce, 15, of 16651· Robert
Lane. :
The youths were walking . in a nearby
field when the spotted scattered papers
-apparently dumped by the burglar,
police uid -along . the side of tbe
channel, amona thk:k bushes. They called pollce, at first thinking
someone mJght 'have been all.!!.ulted and
robbed nearby'. MW Galante'• l'Lll1ll was
on the bonds and other papers, 'bi.it
with a Lonc·~ach address. · The , mystery was cleared up when
she returned from acboo1 M~dly even·
' : ' ·tng, found her apartment ranP~ked, 41nd
~Pl?fted it .to the J>l?llCe .departmtnt. ·
All but two ·of ttie 16 slolen ''25 bnnda
were found . · · ·
. POiice said nothing elke of value waa
taken durlnc lhe burglary. ' . . I
Bilrglar Escaped .
Baseball Bat
But Not Ju8tice
A young burglar whO came very close
to &etUng some · on the spot justice
via the Nsebalt bat of an angry Fountalft
Valley homeowner has drawn a .one.year
orao,g~ Court)' Jall te;m under· rather
more orthodox proceedlnas. ·
1 Su~lo'r Co~t Juc:ta:J. Janies, F. J~dge
·set Ul.at penalty for Dennls Wayrie La
Vey. 21. of ~ Mandrell Drive, !jun· . ' ' Ungton Beach, after the ,defendant plea~·
estimated th< -ol Jllieellnl fluorides lllto Ille city '.wUer• IUP9iJ<,. lo bl1oi . the
Ooorlde content to one part per million
at $18,825 for ~uipment aDd $e,2!'i0 a
yeir ftir the sodlwrl Quoride. · (
Stang e.<tlmalecLth•t it 1'itt tae five
montlls to Install tile, equtpnent ud
start the program 1Dtetl414 · tO 1educle
tOoth dtcay in children •• , •
The water superintendtnl abp revealed
that natural fluorides are: •bib iD
(See FWORIDE, P ... ·11 L
Beach· W oritiili · . . . '
• ' ~ t ·' • • •
~~ces · ·Char:ge
of Grand Theft ' . . .... ' ' •By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
,OI * O.ll'f Nit Mllft
. A Jormer . aeroepace plant .coatroller
and a Womani supervilOf' ha~ "beep .ar·
rested'OR.charges·tbey embezlJed tul,OOG
over a period of three yeara, Costa
Mesa popce reV!!f!led M9nday.
Investigators aaid it · is one of~ the
largest such cases they cah" recall m
Orange ena.t indUJtry, but knew of a
$24,000 case a decade aeo in wblch
the suspected bookkeeper ls suu·tree.
, The pair .cbara:ed ln. the case lDvolYina: lofas~ 'SepeclaJUes Compa'!Y. 114 o
Monrovia Ave., art accused . of three
eountil of gr~ thefi eoch. ' :
. earl. M, .. 11 .. o/; 40, 91 .mt ~talpo IL, Nali]>Oit. wu'.r•'-•_. "-·;'y MOtidl ·06 ' . ball '~•~-y ' ,. t""e reoted Saturday 11 His home. •
. Mts. F;theJ' .R. Scltlocktt, za, ol' 1181
C~untlaP>n Beach;< WU lo ' rrtcf.jy at the plant
"~l'i(laf. i11J ol, work, alter aubn\IU!q -........ u... . ' . A·, aupervlaor 1n 'cbai-ge of disburse..
m•nt,'she w4s 'bobked uito Orange Cooney
Jail and released on the sama ball
figure shortly afterward.
Detectives Jim Strickland . and Jan
Gtata:velOn worked , the cue for~
1 .. wetk bofo~e submiltjng e
against the pair to authorlUes.
"We 've trl«d it bick so far to 1ta7,"
said StrickJand, notina that Koster •u
plut <ontroller, lor five: )'ell'I bef019
he · quit teet ·June lo telit 1 job wllh
a Los Angeles,company.
Sbickland said he could not reveal
details of how the aliepd mlap-
proprtetions were diacqver..i, Illa thla
wquld be prO&ec'uUot1 material.
KO.ster's prellminary hearing wa1 Rt
for July 30 and S!rickland Ilk! his female
co-defendant would be required to appear
!W EMBEZZLE, Pqo I).
300 Set to Swim
In Rough Water
More lhan 300 "'immers will rather
at the Seal ~ach pier this Sunday
to batije the Pacific in a rough water
swim. .
Co-sponwi!d by Ibo seal Beach. Swim
Club and the City of Sell Beach, com·
peUUon begins at~I 1:m. on the west
aide of the pier; t
The couroe for the adV11DCOtf IWhnm•l'
runs out lo the Hwnboldt • Oil Jslllld
and back, • dWaiice of ,three mllea.
Younger swirnmlrs will compete In racu
ran1ing from mo yards to •one mllf!•
including run-swim races.
Orup '
Newport Backs Abolishing Fr~eway • ed IUiJcy lo aeooncl dearee bui1lary.
·He wu • placed on probltion ' for flYe
" year a.
La Vey waa arrealed last June 4
shorUy after he burstect I/I• hQme of
·weet•r:
....... J,''l " MooUy fajr th~!lll Wednesday
sa)'.11 the 1wtatherman. UUle tem-
peralu(e china• b eipected w/th hiJbl! reachinJ to, Ute nlntia. Soine
nigbi and ear.IT mominJ: low clouds
are aJso predie\ed. liy JOANNE j!EYNOLDS,
' ot ""' O.ir """~ hltt
Assemblyman Robert Badham today
declared 1 rettl{ution passed Mond1y
night by the Newport Budl aty Council
supporUnc hla anU.(reeway legislation
will have "• 1reat effect'' on the passage
ol the bill through the Senate.
The Newport resolution, introduced by
Councilman Howard Rogers, calls for
Se~e 1pproval of the bill wllhout
amendment Council approval w a 1
W1animOUs.
Badbam'1 bill, which passed the
Assembly In late June, would delete
the aecUon of the proposed P1cinc Coast
Freew11y from Beach Boulevard in Hun-
tlnaton Belch to the Corona del Mar
boondary.
Badbam said locfay be wu pleastld
with the official tUpport the cl13' hal
given his efforts,
"When the only city Inv o Ive d
unaniiljoully blckl I bW without amend-
ment, you can bet t.hat will have a
great effect on the YOtln1." be said.
Ba.dham said the pro!!pecta for paw.ge
of the bill 1'k>ok good." He haa askld
for a Senate Transporta.Uon Committee
hearing on the propo11l on Monday.
Nearly 70 members of the Newport
-Freeway Fighters were present· Monday
night when Rogers and Councilman
Lindsley Parsons uich Introduced a
resOlution backing Vie Badham bill.
1be most sipilliCaut d I I It r 11 n c e
between the lwo was that Roser1' op. Somt aJternaUves outll.oeC , by the Thomaa Timothy, 17~ Los AmlgOI Cir·
pooec1 further atudy of a routo uywhere m•r!l<' Included development of 'arterial cle, l'ou!Nln Walley, ;JI' 'I" 'bqo!t lo
within city nrriJls ·and iupPortid :ll1e '\li1hwlys •to lied !ho bl!iCJ;\ dl3 lioin d~ve o1f with' a car li>Mled' wt pr toodJ
bill without ameild"*l , 1 I '.an in11!¥1J.,.I)' ~t lhe.~l~'i .,..P..ie. ·ft!>\1>,tlpe)"!n•."~ P.,'J'ltrlo'l'1~1ly '
Parsohs WI! DOI specifk on tbf ma>! A iltnl)at plkn Ii btJha llM'll{ ~ 1rftll~, hom,. , , 1 . t , f · •: .' l ten • ml\td)' ... ~-to ,.,. • 1.., li'MEW'AY, 'hp•11 ,:. , ·, 'l'Ja>oth7 lrl)meGJate~ .• ar~, •
bill , l • t •, •baaebaU • ~t, pttnt/<d1 La· V°¥-' to: bl•
While all cout\cll membeu obvlouoly Israel's T .. ..:.i'O:.· ·u ., ,ep-and WU oojy baited Iron) ,f~ favored the intents ol the ,..,.lullon, only o ... ..,..., p ,_ ........ the Y-,.,..,_...,,. blm
Mayor Ed Hirth and Councilman Don ·•' , , • ..,'?", -.-t.,....,.,
Mcinnis expressed concern over wa..r: JERUSALEM (UPI) -I 1rael'1 ,Clift , at 1JU1polnl. Polict' llkl ~~ Ve.y
the community could "pect with the Tourllm Minister, KOlhe Kol, Ilk! Mo.. othtn<lumped oomeo! Ui11 Tlrlothy f'O'ls
deletion of the freeway. 1 «My th6 natlion'a tour 1 t t ~ine• is ~ tll the-sidewalk before drl!btc
"We're trying lo pten now /or 1 1111lu-boC>mlnl 4ie1plte tl)e MJddlo Eiot .,...ie ""' , • ~ ·
tlon In the future ," Hirth .,~ "The •'Id ""' 1uerrlll1 lttft<q. KOi ,,.•r : on; wnn I!'< r!'t of tlje Pi"""lona: '
physlcol troffic problems ~tve lo I be U..OOQ tourllls arrlvtld betl'ee~ Jan. ·I ' •. Po~ce arro11ed . LI, V~!t I~ 1th19 ¥
aolved and aolved on tacts, not wbbes and July ll, 11 percent more lhin durina bour"laltr' aM reCOvtrCQ the b~lknce
or de11te." • the aame period In 1169. of U. Timothy p0uwlt111,1. ,
I
INSIDE TOD~ Y
C"*""ll I ==~ .. ,: ._. II -" --I ....... 1111 ,... '
•11Mt1!-I , 1 .. lt ,..... l• ".......,_ 1• UIL...... 14
, .. ,,
•
•
I
DAll.Y PllOT H
¥outh-... Goali.tion. Cut·
•
l"SQ. IJ.eq~,~~Seen, as . ,Welfare P~ogram . .. ... '
Should the lfuntlngloo Beach Youth Couocllman 'Jick Green cilllclaill ~ lllp~UO' lbal Illa ~ canoot be
Coalition catnmKl<e (YOC) help dlsad-pion, .. Yibl It wai "In tf1a ' 1ru OI "'*"on qy par~cular P11>lects without
•aatapd kkb in the dty? welfare" and waa not a proper function additional council authorlzatlm being ob-
, It'• a ~ thet baa coot the froubl· ol the YCC . . talned.
ed. ~ ~ from teveral adult · -Councilman Green also objected .,to y.taen. ~Y nitbt the youth Tile coundl wu '?"'lderlng • 12,9U a 1500 tl<!m In Ille budget for openUon
orgaoititlon ran into new opposition budcet 1Ubmitt.ed by the group for city of a pilot teen center since he felt
when city counctbnen balked at a request subsidie! for the next fiscal year. this was Jinked to the proposal to help
for $t$O for services f« the di.aid-'lbt council approved the aUocation the disadvantaged.
vantapd. of ''2.!21. 1n fuodl for the YCC, but A slmllar teeo center wu run by
K1!klng 'Soble DaSt ·
Hu.ntingt~~· ~~sidents
. Blast Cycle Park Plan
R..iclents In --Huntl!lpio Beach are Jdctlng up dust over the
posaibWty ol a motorcycle park belbl
built ne.ar Edtlon High School.
Norm WOrthy, direCtor of parka and
rtcreatlon, told city councilmen Monday
night that 115 residents put their names
on a petition '!'PO"lntr 111< ol an eld
dump site near the high achool as a
motorcycle park.
"We're not opposed to motorcycles
tn the dty, but we don't want tfie
dust and noise In a residential area,"
Mrs. J)onal4 Morris, who otarttd the
peUUeb, eiplalned today.
"l have a l>year-old ICll who ll
fascinated by the machines. No «>e
la opposed to a motorcycle p~rk, but
Jt ahould be in an open, or induatrlal
are•, away from the homes." .
The Edteon site, .~1 ol several city
officials ... ~ •. 1ita ·on the
e.ut 1lde of the Selibury Tract where moit
<I the peljUon alpu1 live.
• W0!11!Y l"ld councllm"1 he Wll not 1•t prtporod to mike any recom·
Richard Merris
Services Hdd
Fllleral aerviees were held today for
Richard A. Merri1 of Huntlngtoo llt1ch
.who died in the cruh of hJ,I 1lldet
near Perris, Saturday. fl.e wia 12.
The afternoon aerv1ce wu conducted ~Y Rev. James cJ.rk ol 111o!Jy' Dlllt..i
Pr..byt«fan Cllurdi. "
Mt. Morris, wbo lived at 3'1862 W<>odloo
Lane, ls IU1Vlved by bia wile, 5""'1;
a dalJlbler, Kiniberly, and his111\iierr Bruce Merris. ;tff '(r1l'l1
Mr. Merri• wu practlclna !loofU\I
maneuver• near lhe Ferrie Alrpori, 1n
Riverside County when a win& !ell oll
his allder.
mt!l)da!lon, but ~I they ought to
koow """" oppOslUoo has been recorded
iii the resldentiaf areas.
Another site, which the pet.IUon sjgners
ccuuider beUtr, is U acres ~near-the
iriterseotlon o( Gotruird Street and Ellls
Avenue, behind the old Holl ySugar plant.
'lbe Edi!OO site Involves 28 acrt3: at
Hamilton and Magnolia street.I, an okt
dull)p site of which only seven acres
would really be usable for motorcycles.
"We have ap advllory cxmmtttee Jook..
Ing at a ·,...ber ol '1let In add!Uon
to -two," Wriy added. He aald more lnlonnaUon W<>Uld be pr-
at the Ibo All(. S "°"'*'1-. . ' ~ -t , ,• I,
Correspondent
Jim .Lucas Dies
WASHiNGTO!I (AP) -Jim G. Lucas
Jr., ',.ho' won a ·NllJur ·prJu'fo 1964
for 1i1I cov~age of -the Korean War.
died today ot abdominal caDCtr. Hi!
wai 18.
LucU began his war reportln1 career
11 '". Marine . combat correspondent in
tba PaeUlc Wli\d eampalp of World
War Il .. Aft.r the war he joined the
&;rtpps-Howard newtp1per1. In 9dditlon
tO the Pulltser, Lucu won ma1y other
awards for"hia "l"'lln•·
· J,gea1., <" i;ver'!ll!e r,wiort<!f· .w]io
covered many 1ype1 ol 1Jorlet, died
tine daya·belore publlcaUoo.ol his folelt
""*4• a ~aphy pf V!fA .~."l\W
SfllO T. Apew. • ' vr11 1t '
IJJCU die( in the V.,t l t 8 Q, I -'-atlon Hoepllal <:enJer here,
wtim be bad been confJaed for aome .....
Miller, Wheele·r.to At·tend
Meeting on Freeway Bill
Huntington Beach sent two deleaateJ
to Laguna Beach today for a conference
on Aaaemblyman ~rt Badham'• .bill
to delele • aq:ment of the Pacific Coast
Freeway.
The meeting was called by Laguna
Beach Mayor Richard Goldberg to
diacuss melbods of combattlng the
Newport Beach leglslator'a bill.
Both 'Huntbigton Beach and Laguna
°Beach are opposed to the measure,
dealped to terminate the freeway at
Adams Avenue In HunUngtan Beach and
deleting 1t from Newport Beach. ~
ctty administrator Doyle Miller am!
public works director James Wheeler
will represent Huntington Beach at the
DAILY PILOT
Oil..\111101 coA·sr l'UILl•~llNG COMl'ANY
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l",..ldow!t 8#ICI l'Uthllltr
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VIM r-~ #Ml GiMr11 AUMi•r
Til•111•1 Kt••il
I!•~
1110111•1 A. M11rplriin1
M-llnt E..,,.
Al1ft Oi1•t,.
W~I Oit* c-l'f' Ell'l9r
' /.lb.rt w. l1t11
A..llfla19 ~111or
N..ii .. r.. .._._ OHie•
17171 ~••&f\ ltul1w11ll
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·-
OAll.Y I'll.OT, Wllll ~ 11o aimMM• th1
H-•·"""· i. P\Ofll!Pld C1110y •ftlll 1111" C111r W. M11trtll UlllloM for LtflilM ltHll.
Jrll_.I had!, c .. 11 M. .... H\lftl,..\11\
... di Mii F_..111 Vtilt, l llflf with IWJ ne ..... I .. 11-. Or"Mll' Outt M :1t11 .... ( ....... ftt ,rlllllllf ...,,,. ... I t 1111 W.I
.......... ,....,., a..ticfl, .... )II Wftt
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°"1'•t. t11t. Or~ Cltt1! •.-111~1ft1
'""'"""· '" -· 1\torltlll. Ht1,..ir.i1M1. 1.i,.,i.I IMll# ..,. Ul-1"""9111 htfllill "'" ._ '""""ucd wlllltyf Hll'tlilll ,.,..
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c•rtllf .:.• --,i1111i w mt11 u.• -flilftlf ni1u .. rr M•IM•...._, ~eo -lh•r.
•
2 p.m. parley ln th1 Laguna Beach.
mayoi-'1 office.
Wheeler told councilmen Mooday night
that he did not eipect the bill, which
cleared the Assembly, to pass the Senate.
"lt appears that the portion of the
freeway will not be deleted, but it will
still take some following up," the traffic
engineer aaid.
Wheeler added that he understood the
bill could not go before the senate
Transportation Committee until Monday,
July 27 at· the earliest.
The City of Fountain Valley has passed
a resolution op-posing Badham':rmeasure.
Monday night the Newport Beach ~
ell backed Badham, wlth members
unanimously calling for the state Senate
to pass the bill to keep the freeway
out of the city limlts.
f'rent . Pllfle 1
FREEWAY •••
Beach, be said.
McIMis said with the passage of the
reeolution and ultimately the Badbam
bill the "work will rUlJy be&ln to find
I solution. ,
"The most important asset of the
area, far ahead of the· bay, and btacl\tfs
ls the people. And for thlt · rta10n, t
have to tuPPort Councilman • Jtoier1'
resolution," 'he tald. '
My Lai Defendant
Wants Civil Ti:ial
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Attorneys for
Lt. William L. Calley Jr, cbarged with
lhe murder of more than JOO Vletnamete
clvlUans at My Lal, flltd 1ult in fedtral
dlmlct court Monday askln1 ·11e be tried
by' a clvillu Jury II he b to be tried
at all. '!be rult conlended mWtacy
authorlUea have no rl&ht ·to try ·him
by .court.martial.
SMtra1 troundJ were llltt« for barrln1
a c:tui.rt..m.arual, Including the fact war
had riot been declared tn Vlelltam and
that after the Incident, Calley Wall held
In the service beyond bis dlldwge dale.
•
the OomnumlJy Action Council (CAC)
Jast year, but the group ha~ tq disband.
Gree n seld that welfare programs should
be funded by the county or federal
government.
"I know this has been a pet project
of the committee for some time and
I am. <>PPQM:d t,o it," Green said. "It's
just asking for trouble, At least four
members have left the committee and
are not involved for th.ls very thing."
Leonard Ewen, adult chairman for
I.he YCC and a teacher at. Huntlnglon ·
Beach High School, defended the teen
cent.er and the plan to provide legal,
medical and educational aid to other
youngs ters.
"This Is not my budaet," he said.
"The kid s did it themselves. They feel
llt.rongly that they want to get involved
in helping the young. They may have
used the wrong word in disadvantaged,
but they are not concerned with dances.
They want to. reach kid! with legal
or medical help."
Ewers listed Other project.s planned
by Ula YCC, including an art contest,
1urf• contest 1Dd fashion and talent
1bowl: ~ •1
Councilman Norma Gibbs felt the
youths should be encora.aed by the coon·
di 1n tto provams. . .
Councllman . Al Coeo wanted to !ee
the YCC complete a lfJt of by-laws
and draw up a series of goals and -Ewers replied piat $10,000 w a s
allocated to.the fll'<>UP ~ year without
a set of by-laws. 0 1 personally feel
the heart la not ln the council to wo~k
with .the coalUton. We· have tried again
and aa:aln but we have become whlpptng
boys."
Coen,, 1fho allo wondered whether the
20 youn& ~le on the committee · were
truly repreal!ntaUve ·Gf the city'• youth
community, wu nun~ to a council
committee along with Green and Mrs.
Gibbs to work with the YOO on
reor1lllizallon cl. the group.
Decomposed
JJ;ly' ~f #7~rh~ri
J'.'9u~~bY 'Police
The · partially dea>,;,pooed body of a
s~etary was found in a Huntlncton
Beach apartment Monday morning after
detecUves were alerted 1o her contlnued
abienCe from work.
Clad in only a hegllaee, ahe was
discovered 1n Apartment S4 of the
Meditenanean, 401 Atlanta ·Avenue,
around 10:30 a.m.
Police said Uiere was no evidence
o( foul play surrounding the mysterlous
death but added that they have been
unable to decide whether the death was
natural, accidental or a suicide.
HomJclde Sgt. Monty McKeMon said
the woman aged 36 and dlV<reed, has
been ldenU fied bot asked that her identity
be withheld until the next of kin has
been notified.
"There was enough fa cial resemblance
left to Identify her from pictures," aaid
McKnnon.
McKennon estimates the woman died
about 10 days ago. He say• he was
notified through the McDonnell Douglas
security staff about the woman's absence
from her job.
Although an autopsy was conducted
Monday night by the Orange County
Coroner's office, the cause of death will
not be determined until the results of
certain toxin t.elt$ are available.
"It will be about one to two week.a,"
said Coroner's Investigator Haro Id
Minick, adding that he is \r)'lng to
locate \he woman's relatives.
The ·woman's parents are dead and
she llve!i In foster homes all her We,
Minick said.
Freeway Section
Deleted at Venice
A bill designed to delete the Pacific
Coast Freeway between Maljna de! Rey
·and ' the Santa Monica city line was
approved Monday ~y th.e S e n a t e
'ftansportation Committee m Sac rainen-
to.
· Wllllam Hashimoto, des!1n englnttr
with the State Divbioo of Highways
Divis.Ion ln Los Angeles. said the bill
11 , similar to pending legislation In·
troductd by AMemblyman R 0 b e r t
Badham (ft.Newport Btadi).
The blll that cleared the Seru1.te Com·
mlttee WOllld delete the freeway in the
Venice area. Badham's hill seek!! to
delete the portion of the !lame freeway
that W'OUld be routed through Newport
Beach. '
Badham noted he was encouraged b}'
the oom.mtttee's approval ot the Venice
tilll. He h11s asked for a hearing of
hit btll on Mond_,.
Sen. Randolph Collitr In-Yreka ) who
b the chairman of the commlltet,
historically ha!! supparttd stron11l1 the
state fretway syst,m.
tn previous <:•ses he haa oppo&td any
lntervtnllon by I.ht Uglslaturt ln
altJ:nmenlS 1dopttd by the Stale
Highway Commission. ,
---
NIXQ~ •. ,
to lnttsrate."
1
1
,I
The give-and-Jake on SOU1hem llChoo!
problaml -Illa •itch -llir to
Ille lllllwtl A ._w uliad far
cllrltJcation of Nb:ot1'1 approaCbes io
problems of the area and Soviet move.
ment there.
Nb<on reealled bavlnl said In his July
1 televl!lon. cooverution the U.S. lntarut
la peace and recognition of the aoverei1n·
ty and independence of every state in
the area.
He said the power balance hu not
been upaet but the movement of Soviet
weapons ,and mtn to the Mldeut to
man the wu~ caUM:S thls country
concem be<auae1 a -1nu&Uon could
tip the ocalet.
He aaJd arma eacalallon, particularly
the UH of ti<>oie In the -· In· creuea the rif\ of a· 1tontroDtatlon
neither side wuU.
TEACHER CAROLYN HANSEN EXPLAINS NEW SCHOOL HOURS
Ocean View Dl1trlct'1 Cr•lg Young, 5; Lori Roberta, 6
"'111at la wh* we are put!IJll ouch
emt>ba* on °" peace lnltlaUve. '111at
la why we "4ve nol announced any
Nie ol piane1 or delivery to larael
at OWi time beqlluae we want to atve
that peace lnlUaUvo •"'1' chance to
IUCCMd, ... he laid.
Nlxoa aafd he W.uldn., llOli llhouldn't
speq1lale on hoW bJlh unempl.,.,.nt
mllht. !'be pt ~ lltrobl he thinks economtc.i:eiomy. might be this year.
He Did at lblJ pC>lnt the naUon Is
at • walenhad cl. economic pollcy -
the reuon ,for hi.a rather 11trOQ1 state-
l(ids Want Longer School,
'More Time for , ecess'
ment to Coqrus J week on tts. rteord
ola~ edlnameney.
"When tlle Am · people learn that
the big speJldera In u are pr!mari.
Westmont School first grader Craig
Young, 5, thinks he'd like to go to
school 25 minutes looger riext year so
he can bring a lunchbox to school like
the big boys.
And what would he do In those extra
25 minutes?
"I'd have recess," he says confidently.
Craig will get his extra 25-minute.s
next year -and undoubtedly his luRr;:h
pail, ioo -along with all the other
first and second grade pupils in the
OceaPJ View School District. Bui chances
are slim that he will be enjoying recess
during those extra 25 minutes.
The longer school day is part of a
new policy, jointly authored by teachers,
administrators and trustees of the
district. In addllio11 to the extra 25
minutes at the first and second grade
levels, fourth and firth graders will also
be tacking a 15-minute extension o•
their school day.
School Superintendent Clarence Hall
said the policy change provides teaching
staffa with more flerlblllty ln pupil
aehedullng. ~ "With a school day contalalng a di!-
• ferent number of rriinutes for theee arade
levels, team teaching and groupln1 of
children acf035 ll'ade levels, -when Id~
visible, was difficult. Firat, second and
third graders wtnt home at different
tlmta. Our goal is to lndlvlduallu Jn.
struction as· much u -possible, and a
uniform dismlssal time will be of areat
help In this effort"
AddiUonally, Hall points out, the new
pol.icy represents a aignificanl increase
in the amount of time Ocean View
puplls will be ln school.
"If we apply the 25 minute extension·
to the total school year, it represents
an equivalent Increase of 18.75 days
-alm08t a month of school days -
eve n though the school year wUI begin
and end at the usual times," Hall said.
"At the fourth and fifth grade level ,
the 15 minute extension means an
equivalent increase of 8.6 days."
The new policy now calls for a 2QO.
minute kindergarten, the same as last
year. First through third grade classes
will spend about 51n hours in school;
studen ts in grades four throu&h eight
about 11,.i, hours.
ly responslble lo< her pri..,, and
eventually even r toes. I think
that the ' people will tUrn on
the big pOl!Ucally ...
0nolherw1 ,
-CamJlllll llaresl. Nlxoa aald H would
not be M'WI to conclude one ny to brinl peace · on the campus would be
to brlnl peaca In Vietnam. But he aaid
be WU not ..... It W<>Uld brine cmpus
peace.
-Defense· Cula. Nlzoo 1epeat.d thai
while he hu shifted mucb 11pe.nding from
defense to noi'ldefen.se proarams it is
unrealistlc to suggest money· for big,
new domeAi.c program• can come out
of substantial defense cuts.
-Funily Aid. Nixon said the c))ances
ol hls family assistance welfare plan
getUq Jhrougil the Senate are fair.
-Education Bill. Tbt President said
it Is $400 million above his budget recom-
mendation and that is unaeceJiable. But
he said he hasn't decided to veto th•
bill and he hinted he might be able
to make up the amount from other
programs.
From Pqe 1
From Page I., 1 , ~r!:~.~1ZLE .•..
He dld say Mrs. Schlocker'a Job in-FL UORIDE OKAYED ... volved the hal!dliog of sums of moneJ
chemical would harm the elderly, causing used to pay the company's bills. the water supply, varying from 2/lOths
to 4/loths part per million.
1\iayor pro tern Jerry Matney limited
discussion to 30 minutes for each side
~1th both the proponents and opponent&
receiving a five-minute rebuttal
Several residents spoke against the
plan.
Ron Mu.uy, 93.11 J1udson Drive said
flucrides could not be injected without
extra costs and he would have no choice
other than to obtain water elsewhere.
"If fluorides are good let's not go half
way," he added, "let's have water with
vllamins and minerals In ii."
Martin AMenberg, 17152 Camelot Cir·
c\e, said fluorides should be prescribed
by a denUst. "I look: upon this as an
abridgement ol my freedom to drink
pure water," he said.
Herbert Clark, 21031 Shackleford Cir ·
cle, claimed fluoridation will have a
residual effect and that it will poison
plants which will laler be eaten.
Other fluoridation foes said that the
bone dec8y, and One resident claimed Strickland 'said Master SpecillUea
it was a communist plot and that Company is primarily an aircraft par!J
fluorides would damage the brain and manufacturer, but that It has built com
nerve cells. ponent.s for the Apollo moon rockeUi
Denllsts and pediatricians pleaded for /such u l.nstrumenll and control panels.
adoption of the ~ proposal · cl~I en-Questioned about the siie of the alleged
dorsements of fluoridaUon by tnedlcal embeulement, the veteran forge?¥ detec
associatk>ns and government.al agepcies. tlve said it is one o( the largest ll
Dr. Eu1ene Brown, president of the his memory, but recalled the $24,00C
Orange County Dental Society, said that theft case more than 10 years ago.
fluoridation would serve "as a major He said the FBI la 11tlll huating Robert
step In reducing dental decay ." L. Turley, a bookkeeper for a Newport
He listed support for fluoridation from Beach firm who dropped out of sighl the Amerlcti,n Dental Association, the .
American Medical Association, the U.S. and was LllbsequenUy charged with £l'BOe
Department of Health, Education and theft.
\Velfare and the Public Health service. Detectives traced Turley to a poin·
A Fountain Valley dentist, Dr. Roy from which he escaped the United States,
Richards, said that dental problems form at which time Strickland , then a warrant
mankind's mo,t prevalent disease. "No detective, turned the case over to fede ral
quaUfied Individual has documented any authorities.
adverse effects to young or old "from , He said Turley 11 now wanted fru
fluorides," lie added. Interstate flight to avoid prosecution.
GRAND OPEN 'ING SALE!
We a re pleased to announ ce
the opening of ou r second store
in Tusti n. We have purchased
"Red Hill Ca rpets" a nd the new
name will be "Ald en's Red Hill
Carpets & Draperies."
.• IN COSTA MrSA •
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Pl1cenfl1 Av•.
Phono 646-4131
In conjunction with the open-
ing of ou r Tusti n store, we have
several s pec i a Is in ou r Costa
Mesa sto re. Please come in and
see us.
•IN TUSTIN e
ALDEN'S
RED HILL
CARPETS e DRAPES
11374 I . irYln o
Phono 131-3344
VISIT OUR EN LARGED REMNANT ROOM AT OUR COSTA MESA
STORE. HUNDREDS OF R!MNANTS AND ROLL ENDS.
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' T-. Jllil 21, 1910 H
Nixon Change·s Style of Clemente Vacations
87 JOHN VALTERZA
ot ... Dtll'f '"" ,,..,
Preiident Nlxon :seems to be c~a
hi& style for vls.IU to his !eflalde viUa
ln San Clemente -focusing rhore on
lo.day working visits, instead ot the
expected repeat of hi! monlh·long stay
of last August.
'Mle second :i:uch JG-day visit this sum-
mer will start Friday when the Chief
Elecutive, Mrs. Nixon and daughter
Tricla fly in for 10 days in the sun
Two Cltanaps
and top-1t .. 1 coot..-.. and • bu.sy
worklood.
Alid.Preu Se<tttary Ron Zl•gler. said
Mooday tlllfl yet aoother tlklay sl•Y
ls fortCast fw mid-August
La.st year, a few months •fler the
P~ent 1b0ught the , ftlrmer Cotton
Estate, ttie President moved In for an
entire.month. bringln£ the cabinet, other
aides and hundreds of White House
workers.
But 1ince then lhe Presidential visits
Sue Ashburn, 15, El Tero, raised her Hereford, "Ferdinand," from
calf to grand champion of the 1970 Orange County Fair. Sue, a mem·
ber of the Mission Viejo Future Fanners of America, saw 1,140..pound
steer sold durin~ !air's Junior Livestock Auction to Mission Viejo
Company for $2,394.
Abducted . Michigan Girl ,
FoundDeadNear Roadway
LANSING, Mich. (UPI) -Two boy•
walking a rural road near here found
the body of Laurie Murninghan, 18, the
object of an intense police 5earch since
she was kidnaped during a holdup I?
days ago.
Her abductor remained at large today.
~in1 Police Chief Derold Husby vo1\'-
he would "leave no stone unturned until
the person or persons responsible for
the tragedy are brought to justice."
The body of lhe pretty, blonde daughler
of ti.fax E. ti.luminghan. former mayor
of this state capital, was found fi..1onday
In high grass and weeds near a lake
about IS feet from the road. She was
clad in the white blouse, red belt and
blue miniskirt she wore when she was
abducted July 9 from the gift shop
where she wu employed for the summer.
Identification was confirmed through
dental comparison, Husby said. The
cause or time of death was not im-
m~iately detennlned bul Husby said
ht would reveal the resµlts of an autopsy
at a news conference today.
"At thUI point I have no knowledge
of anything and I'm happy l don 't,"
Husby said when contacted at his home
early today. "I haven't heard the results
of anything yet."
The names of the two boys who made
the discovery "'ere not disclosed. Husby
said they immediately summoned of·
ficers to the scene.
Mumlnghan, who spent the early days
ol. the investigation at the Laruing Police
Department working with police, "'as
not available for comment, nor \11ere
other members of the family.
Gerald W. Graves, Lansing's mayor ,
said he was "stunned and greatly grtcved
by this senseless crime. Our heart! and
prayers ao out in deepest sympathy
to Laurie's family ."
Miss Murninghai:i was kldnaped from
G1llagber'1 Gilt Shop by 1 gun.wielding
bandit durlng ,a holdup which ne:Eed
M>. The owner ot the store, •.
Christine Gallagher, wu pistol-whip
by the man, •nd when she teCGVertd
from her injuries w11 able to help
an 1rUst draw a picture of him.
Throughout the Investigation, durltlg
which police received more than 1.500
lips from citizens, authorities uid they
believed both ~U11 Mumlnghan and the
abductor had remained in lhe Lansing
are•.
Rewards totaling $18,500 wtre pledged
by organl1atlons 1nd anonymous dooors
for Laurie's Silfe return.
That picture, •along with a recent
phCJtograph of ~1lu Murnint:hl"ll was
widely circulated, parUcularly among
truck drl\'ers, In the hope of determining
where lhe two had gone.
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BODY DISCOVERED
Laurie Murnlnghan
Bill Increases
Count y Jud ges
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The Assembly Judiciary Committee
~1onday approved a bill lo j·,1crease the
number of Orange County Superior Court
Judges from %2 to 24. The number would
go to 25 next July t.
The committee approved a second bill
to increase the number of West Orange
County Municipal Court judges from •Ix
to seven, and from seven to eight ne1l
May I.
Both ml!asures, authored by Senator
Jamts E. Whetmore lR-Fullertonl, now
10 lo 1he Wl)'I and Me&n1 Committee.
S11111n1er Vacationer
Loses Winter Gear
Nobody takes skis to Kansas ln July,
but a Costa ~fesa man who rttur~
from a l'NO-week vacation told poJlce
perhaps he should have hfonday.
Roger E. Malmtont, ol 2000 Anaheim
Ave., '1ti4 a chec\: ol lhe master closet
in his apartment reve1led a buralar
had taken the winter sports aear and
l!Olhlna else.
have betn more conde:Mtd and much
more acUve.
Ourtq the most rectnt stay the NlJons
lnltm1pled a busy olflcial schedule for
1 1ala visit to a niece's wecklini in
Newport Beach, lollowed the nut day
by a pr«edenl.Setling llilbl lo quak,.
ravaged Peru by Mrs. Ntxon.
The QUef Executive conducted the
first.evtr appo.lotment Of a cabinet
member out&kle of Washington, D.C.,
durlnl that past stay -tht swearlna·ln
of lbe new Se<rtlary ol Labor James
ilodgllOll.
That, coupltd willl the swt1rlnJ In
ol lhrM other top aidtl. • vi.sit by
the Romanian Fwtlp Mlnlsltr and lllb
on domestic aod fonip affairs wttb
h1s top aides and ambtastdon made
the last vl>lt particularly busy.
The awnmer weather in the nation 's
caplt&I, whk:b ls muc1y and un-
comfortable, obviously is a factor In
the 'rapid.fire Presldentiol vislla here,
and durlq the mosl .....,1 ..,..,. ,.
San Clemtat. Mr. NJxon •••med
especi&Uy exuberant about the or1nce
COasl IUll and balncy bneies.
Wilen he acctpla lop-level •llllon, the
viUa'I pool b the most popular Vis!Un1
area and durtng a reception for Hodg90D
and aldes and friends tbt Prtsldent
seem~ even more hou!e·proud than
ever, !Ourtes said.
"Ht kepi ukinc \IS to tako walka
around Ille ll'OUllda led prcltos IDd
attmed .. pectally proud and pl<ued
tbi.s time of hJs home, the weather
and the en Ure visit,'' one iuest recalled
IOd>)'.
The Wblte Houae press corps which
follows the administration Jauntt Ilk•
a. gaggle seem pleased with the Orangl
Coast tnvironmeot u welL
Becl{y Become·s lst Hurricane
75-mile-per-hour Winds Threaten Gulf Coast, F~rida "
NEW ORLEANS !UPI) -Tropical
storm Becky whipped her 75-mile-an·Qour
winds into the first hurricane of 1970
today, churning to within Z30 miles of
the gull coast and threatening the Florida
1horeline.
But residents along the coast of
Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and
Florida braced against the first gale
force winds expected to hit land tonight.
"We're just battening down the hat.
ches, shulting up and taking off extra
men and equipment from offshore plat·
forms," said a Shell Oil Co. off i c i a I
Fraud Spree
Suspect Says
Not Guilty
A sell-styled expert on banking and
fina nce who police allege launched an
international forgery spree from San
Clemente entered a plea of innocent
Monday to the felony charges in South
Orange County Municipal Court.
The suspect, Darrell Graff Hafen of
Salt Lake City, Utah. will appear in
the same court next Monday morning
at a preliminary hearing to determine
if the 44-year-old traveler should face
trial on the charges. The hearing "'ill
start at 9 a.m.
Hafen, arrested after months of
laborious tracing in several counlries
by San Clemente detettive Leonard
Goodwin, Is charted with passlllJ
thousands of dollars in worthless checks
i"n the U.S., Latin America and Europe
alter an lnillal alleged incident 1t the
San Clemente branch of the Bank of
Am•[Ic• last May 4 and I.
The colle.ge iraduate In finance was
picked up early last week as he, his
wife and lheir four children arrived
in Los Angeles from ~ta tuca.
Hafen, who also was hel' lnltially
on federal charges of flight to avoid
prosecution, was formally charged with
the San Clemente alleged forgery in
municipal court last Thursday .
He was granted a delay until fi..fonday
for entering a plea.
Goodwin folloll"!d the man via teletype
and letters on 10 different hops from
country-to--country.
And during these trips, Goodwin charg-
ed Hafen spread a trail of bogus checks
vl'ilh thousands of dollars involved.
No indication has yet come if the
sever al foreign banks involved will file
charges against the traveler in their
home countries.
Hafen still is being held on $31,500
bail on the local felony charge.
Bail on the federal case wa5 set at
$1,000 on the day after Hafen'a arrest.
1'een Gets T erm
In Girl's Death
A teenager whose wildly fired rifle
shot struck and killed a 12-year-old girl
has been sen'tenced to one to 15 years
in state pri90n.
Paul Albert Ruiz, 18, of Santa Ana
drew that term fr.,m Superior Court
Judge James F. Judge with his plea
of g u 11 t y to charges of vol untary
manslaughter -reduced from the
original murder count filed again.st him
last ~1arch 7.
On that date, polict said, Gloria V.
Hernandez wa3 atanding outside her
home watching a gang fight Jn which
her brother and Ruiz were involved when
she was shot in the chest.
The girl died en r:oute to Orange
County Medical Center. Ruiz, who fired
the shot from a car ln whlch ht was
a passenger, was arrested a short lime
later.
Police Seeking
Rapist Identit y
Oran&e Coonty Sheriff's lnvtstlgators
are today looking for clues to the Identity ot 11 man who raped 1 IS-year-<1ld South
Laguna girl at knUepoint.
The victim tokl offk:er1 that she waa
offered a rkle SuMay nl(ht by 1 m•n
who plcktd htt up on South Coast
Highway In Laguna Beach.
The girl said lhe man, described 1s
being about 40 to t5 years old, then
dro ve htr to a attluded 1rea near
tilonarch Bsy and raped her.
The victim said the man then drov1
her to a street near her South Laguna
home and ordered her to leave the car.
in Ne?f Orleans.
The weather burtau said winds at
the center of tht storm had reached
75 miles an hour, just barely hurricane
strength. Gale wlnds of 39 miles an
hour and above stretched 150 miles to
the north and east of Becky's eye.
Hurricane warnings are Jl0$ted from
Fort Walton, Fla., to Port St. Joe, Fla.,
and gale warnings were In effect from
Mobile, Ala., to St. Marks, Fla.
"We are playing it cool at the present
lime," said Wade Guic<, a GuUport,
~Uss., civil delense director. "We are
implemenUn& plans as wt would under
any storm threat."
A hunicane watch which had tarller
been posted along the Ml,.laslppl and
Louisiana costs probably will be discon-
tinued. later today. the weather buriau.
said.
The latest advisory placed Becky at
latitude 27.0 north and }ongitude 86.1
west. 230 milts south ol Pensacola, Fla.
The storm was expected to move al.owly
northward at about 10 miles an hour.
The weather burtau said tides would
Face Murder Raps
Five Suspects Indicted
In 'Devil Cult' Slaying
By TOM BARLEY
Of ... O.llJ ...... l llfl
Five persons linked to the "devil cult'1
killing of a Mission Viejo school teacher
and the fatal beating of a service station
The Russians
Ar e Coming
To Lion Safari
Forty-two scientists and crew members
from a sopblsUcated . R u 1 s I a n
oceahographlc vesael wer1 achedu)ed to
visit Orange County's newest tourist at·
tract.Ion today, Lion Q>u.ntry Safari.
Spokesman for the Long Beach Port
Authority aald arrival of the 26$-foot
expk>raUon ship "Raduga" -which
means raJnbow -requires special
clearance from the U.S. State Depart·
ment.
Port Authority 1pokesman said it was
the first Ruhlan ship ever to lmd in
that port and the first In these waters
since 1949.
The t ,4"--ton vessel, slacked with
sophisticated electronic gear. arrived
Monday morning. It left Callao, Peru,
shortly before the disastrous earthquake.
It had ~n In Mexican waters rttently,
ostensibly seekint tuna 1ebools for
Russian fishermen.
The craft is en route to its home port,
Vladiv05tok. with Captain ti.1ikhail Volik
in command.
There are 73 aboard, including ten
scientists, two of whom are women.
The group was scheduled to tour Lion
Country, a reproduction of the African
veld, at 1:00 p.m. today. The 500-acre
facility opened recently.
The aroup was lo arrive by bu1. Lion
Country officials said they would roll
out the ured carpet" and ahow thtm
every courtesy,
attendant Wtrt: today Indicted on murder
ch1rge1 by the Oranct County Grand
Jury.
The panel ended three days ol hearin&s
by Indicting Stephen C. Hurd, 20, Herman
Hendrick Taylor. 17, both trans)ents a.nd
Christopher Darwin Gibboney, 17, of
PorUand, Oregon, with the killing of
~1rs. Florence Nancy Brown, 31, of t:I
Toro.
Arthur Craig Hulse, Ii, of Garden
Grove, Taylor and Hurd are also charged
with the murder ol. Jerry Wayne Carlin,
21, a Santa Ana service muon atttodant.
Melanie Mae Daniels, 31'.1, of Santa
Ana, ii charged with beln& an accessory
in both murders. She ts cutrtntly serving
a 90-day sentence in Orance Cowlt)'
jail on' a narcotics vJolaUoa.
Four at the five persons Indicted will
be arratined later today before Superior
Court Judie Jamea F. Judge. The action
by district Attorney Cecil Hickt rtmoves
the case from the municipal court level.
Hick'• has asked Oreaon aulhorltl~s
to expedite utradltlon ~gs which
would enable them to return GibboMyl
to Orange County to _ltand trial for
the murder of Mrs. Brown.
Mrs . Brown's body, minus Its: heart.
lungs and right arm, and bearing multi·
pie slash wounds was fCM.md last June
15 in a shallow grave off the Ortega
Hijhway.
Investigation of the killing ltd to
reports which have since ~n substan.
tiated that the. woman was the victim
ol satanic orgies before and after her
death.
Carlin was hacked and bludgeoned to
death and dumped ell tht washroom
floor of his service station last Junt
2 in a robbery that provided .a proiit
of leu than $100 for his attackers.
Hulse and Taylor were certified as
adults in terms of tht. murder charges
earlier Ulls week in a move designed
to ensure their inclusion on the grand
jury Indictment.
Here's your cue?
begin to lncreue aJooi Ille eoull ol
Alabama and northeost Florlda late I<>
day, and that gale force winds would
!Int reach shore toalghl.
The current path of Becky would take
htt Inland east of the route taken last
ye.ar by Hurricane Camille, • 1torm
1hal ravaged Louisiana, Mlasioslppl and
Alabama.
Becky was the second storm of the
year to grow to tropical storm pro-
portions. Alma, the flr'St tropical storm
of the year, died harmlessly in t"n,..
Caribbean in May.
I 00 Disabled
Vets Eat Pie;
See Festival
Nearly 100 disabled veterans and other
servicemen were treated Monday night
to a fried chicken dinner and som1
apple pie by the local post 222 of the
American Legon· and then were guests
of the Festivail of Arts: to set the Pageant
of the t.lasters.
Such an evenln& is helci tach year
by the American LegMln, the Veterans
of Foreign Wars, and the VFW Auxiliary
in cooperation with the Fes~ival. The
post provides the home cooked meal
a.nd Ult Festiv1l do11.ate1 the tickets
to I.he Page1nt.
The disabled veterans come from the
.Veteran's Admipistration Hospital in
Lope Beacb, traMported. to the Art
Colony by "the American Rtd Cros;s.
ne other strvJct.mtn are under treat·
ment al the Naval Hospital at Camp
Pendletoo.
Many of the men bave served In
tht Vietnam conflict, suffering combat
casualties.
Irvine Home
Sw ept by Fire
A fire which may have ~n sparked
by a faulty gas dryer swept through
an Irvine home late ~1onday causing
damage estimated at more Ulan $11,000.
Orange County firemen and state
forestry workers doused the blaze at
the home of ti1r.s. ·Betty Davis, lf>446
Cherbourg Ave., after a neighbor sPolted
smoke billowing from the house.
~trs. Davis was away from home at
the time of the outbreak. She told
firemen that she had left her gas dryer
running While she was out.
There was oo damage to neighboring
structures.
* 4lh'x8' size
699°0
* l" slate top
*Weighs 1000 pounils * Olive, red or gold felt
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4 DAll.V Pll.OT ,, . Tundoy, Ju~ 21, 1970
Ten Battles Raging Near . Cambodian CapilQI
·-' l'!lNOM P.ENR (UPI) -Cambodian ti1Joiio bltlled to keep Communist unllS ._. ........ _ .... ,.....-.•
.. ..._ ~ I I ·--.. ,, ____ In-till
·-~-all-tithe
dli-• Goerrllla I01dlm alloclt<d ~ ttnter
at llAlmeu, .0 mlles from Ibo capital, » ·: z,...-..illllllnaJDll'tarbarrage
• .a11*-J y' •n mid. we held
-.. lllnlqllaut 1lle ni&lll and Into
... _ ....... ,..,...,
As -,. raim wllippod Milmea-
polls Satunll!Y, tlta 'neater al In·
llDl.-was p<esenlini Noel
z::.nr.r.tra: play "Hay Fevu." The
.._. __ U nnr!y !WG
Inches of water leabd t.broulh the
IOOf-and onlo the siage, With water
.OOUI his ankles, actor K•ltfl Wsl-
""5 walb4 -,e aid ..Uvered
Ille !UY'• nm line: "I HtY, it'1
rainin&/' •
The Draycourt, England pari&h
caucil Jiu ark# for 1p<cic! po-
-pahla IO_.,.~, a.t the viUage'1 favoriU courting
Uu CC!!M!le"1/.
• ftm ~craft. Councy, Micll.
• ......,.....,._~•aw
Sheriff U.,.. Gray let llil 4CJtl run
with no leash or collar, Jones gave
Gray a llck2L "Bia dog_ was ru ..
ning In Ilia -,. GD the aldewalk,
wffh no 1"8loll, no a>llar, m tags.
M. tar as I'm concemod, DpbodY
shoalll :receive special treetment
under the law;" Jones 1al<f, But.
aa:ardil>g to JOllll, •Gfty~lr -·
-nluaed ID au!llorlze tlta citation
and added it wu "clrlnby" far
Gray to ticUt him. Jone5:'quit.
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C"'f end Worlie F_,, 1ofFOUll·
taln, N.C. will harvest tlleir com
cr19 in. a.few dB.YI• but ~haft> .
'to .I~ up .on tlta roof o!tbelr ~ 1
-~ do it. The FOlliltain brothea
Jave been growing their crops en
\Ille tap at l!illt stora in thla small
IOmmunity abaut 25 miles north '
-<>f Wilmington since 1960. Thay also
haw ill watermel-. od a 40-foat
f<IW of potatoes growing on the
· aaf, Motori.stS do a fast dQUble-. ' take whm they see the crop. "In , nceut years," said Coy, .. we have.
VJed {ertillw' and sprinltled water
on the crops. 'nle corn, potatoes
ad wa-last• jmt like lliooe that come oat of the field."
this momlng by the gov.ernment
defenders. . Tbe ....,._i ol ,,, __ tr 1-Nol
Is ulq la -Tl'li!riog Ctnter ill Ua .U...~ to mold an. eff.ectlve
army from , rq-tq volwtteen and
dralles. The army la low Oii -....,.
and.......ition.
-_ ........ j-.1 In Saigon
..i ~Peob-IBIV!aCong
and North V'tdnam"" slain In lhe pall
lhree da1• or ll&htlna:. 107 of lhem
In three ballles Monday wllh SOulh Viet..
nameae forces near the border with v-
Cambodlan losses In the n-. were
pots ... dom -D-. with
1o1goa ~ -ol !ti lllldlen .__...:: ... mtati.~ea
clMleL
'Die Soutli. VietnamMit Mid 1t was
the haviat CGIDbat ttMly .baM en·
c:amdlftd 1ince •tlrins Camtwtia 1n
lata April Mid eortr May. In• addilioo
Israel Claims Air Raids
Keep Mideast Status Quo
SytumMUl!l!m~
An EKYJt!an military spokesman said
44 hraeli p1an,. struck along the Suez
CD. toda;r ta the '1lt conVOl!iVe day
ol sud! atta<ks ..i lbat F.op1'1 air
cW•wc drove then. back. An1 JsraeD
,P.U.nan said' F.oPt ~ replaced itl
mlalle sti.s tnocked out pmloasly.
On lhe pGlllicll levd, the 9'1!1fof{icial
Al-Alnm new.per In Cain> aid• Egypt
will gjve the United States an eswer
• lll --,..,..... -the nat tinJ cm,. afte' ,_11,.,.._, wili: .. ___ llu•-ilS
ewaew mt 11 "c·Arab nedlaa.
'Dia !..ii r-.p air -bqoa
Mlly n .n.r a one<lly Juli brought
by a desert sand stonn and have con·
tinued 1ince. 1be senlor l s r a e 11
~ said the atlacb had
pnvetdled. F.&Jpt fftm>, •lnlJill><nini ito
milUt .,_,_ bat bad not irevented
J!!apt from replac:ing lbole ioal.
The BIJllilao """"""""! ti today 's
air oltodl aid the p-otiloitod OD
the •tbem ad IOUtt.n aect.ors for
two hours md that "our air defense
.,...,.. t._i lhe •tlocldD& aircraft
and prnented tlllm from rertrlng their
ob,iedlva.''
• J!aidenb living near the Plashet ~Gethie
PMlt Joo ia Llltdln have. signed '*""' ... _,tho& Iha llZDDf-peacocks at the zm be moved ta
• largu park. Tboy clolm !hay
can't get to sleep bomnsa flf the
blhls• mating-cries every l!igl!t.
Wlllilln Alldtews, 18, and his wife, Hattie, 1111. marlc -7stll wed-
ding mmiversary Friday. The Andraws, who !lave li..i in a rmuidel-
ed Jog cabin in DarlinJl!On, Wis., for M :r-n, llaft ...,, ddldren
and 66' gnmdclilldn!n. Recipe for a !ling muriap ...... din« to Mrs.
Andrews, "Just !lane on, trusl the Lord, and don't nw:ryoppoaftiss."
Showers Soak East Coast
Poaible Hurriame Headed TO'irord Central Gulf Coast
'
<'•Rlwnl• -·---f-197:11.l.llUT• ·h l'-119Ntures
-Hlell L .. "91:. -nu. . , • .., .........., IJ •1 ,fl . ............... " " ·"
-..W WU Cfl'll....e W _. -
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• • '"11• '" l'lour. COiii! llr ~lne .... th9-....... ......,.. ...... °"" •Mftl' '""""" ~ "-'I' Ma9: Wfanw. •
~ """ t !net. ,,, rel!! ~ ~.,. ........... ..... ......... .... ... .... .,,,. ......... ....., . -· ... ~--11$£411r'l'14, ~ .......... ~
.. ._,, 11 " .M
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ll~ ,, .. J1
they round lhe liodl .. or :IO guerrillas
slain In air ltrlku. · 1Ji1tatJ iii • PW ift Ptmam. Penh
said Csmbodlan troopa. llod .....,red
• ..,.. Ill Sroac. • -.nhwelll
., .......... and· Ud -the m '•In r-i at Kirirom, 51 miles
meb 11lll:ta:a ol tile city, Jn fiehting -,..
Commuslll -cafbtr<d the mttpost al ...... .., ,....,_ ,_ of Ito
cWenders wer. tlllt' . on patrQl. n.
Manslaughter
Charge Facing
Bus Crash Driver
•
ALLE!iTOWN, Pa. (UPI) -Lehigll
Oull,y <11*1<1 allarnoy George Josepll
s'*1 be would file involuntary
muslaugbter charges today against the
driver of a chartered bus which crashed
_, """' Jut -". ltilllllg .. en Loa& bland drildnn and lnj<rlng 52 otber -Joseyh said u investigation !bowed
''probable cause" to fl.le one charge
for each death against Huberi Daye,
~s. of Mcntc?air, N.J. Daye was listed
in lair condition at Alleatown hospital.
The district attorney said charges micht be filed later against the bus
company which leased the bu.s t.o •
charter .mce because Of faulty
mecl1anical parts Oii Ille bus.
Joseph said the bus' tachometer, a
speed recording device, apparently was
not work.i.Dg dur.in& the trip. He said1
lt contailld no ncmded information as
to the speed of the vehicle.
The bm was c:anying 59 persom from
'Ille IDllel Day !!dlanl lft l:awrmce, N.Y.
when It skldd<d on ralnslldl rmte 21
near here and went &ver a 50-foot em-
blnkmenl. The children and se.....i adult
counsekn were an a toar " the
Pennsylvula Dutch coon!ry,
Da,ye, who llllfered boad ud cheat
injuries In Ibo !ICddent, sod a pollibia
heart atlack later, was 1D the hospital's
l.ntfnsive care uniL
.
aovenment said. the camp was b a c k
In Cambodia hands Monday a!Iemooo
alter air F'lt-ililled U o/. Ille per-
rillu.
c·-¥• troop1 were r • po r t e d
launeMn1 a aweep ll'OUDd Kirttom, the
.... rt ..... -by u. ......,ls ..
for lix dlys.untll last '11wr.Uy,.foUowlna~
a guerilla oUack from Olalau d'Ellt,
the fonur· nVut ol ousted Prince
Nandam S!INmo"lk,
s..,._ Jlalied oilier cl.-near
Kompong Thom soul.hwe1t ,of Phnom
Penh, near Svay RJen1 east. of tbe
capital, IDd • the llllMa. ef Toole Sap,
the take northwest of the city.
'Ille Soulh Vl<lnamese foupt Ille big-
p battle near ~ CJ""botMen town
Of Tut Me11 abcU ·t• .ma., west·
sou11iwa1 ti Sal&ao. kil1i!I& SI Bed troop•
and capturing 23 weap1111,,, lpgtarnen
said. The SO.Ill V-said lhey
lool lhr'te Iliad and It -
Ecorwmy Ills Healing_
Say Cabinet Official,s
WAlllllllGrtd (IJP!) -n-y mllld, Is lllo 1 ' "w wit!
_.., ~JI. I "'4:r -wllidltbe ailj 0 I --pn>
eoup ....... --.......... _...., 0-.. Ille -.... In ........ -· «"''*"I ...,., ,, J W la-
fliU · ;... FWWW& _.:, rece6c ~~ TM llltia'm ... 11 a «momif
•.1 _... -wd.L 'r••-11 0 tivit~
pi•Mt lli!il --w lblo ,... ..-... -.... .......,e toward• hnlthlrr·econamy. ..,,_ ......... •n · 3 t111er th1
"Ollr polieace 1!1 beinc rewwded," -If tMs --r lillo 1971 Kewdy• testified1 before tbe U.... JIG¥Mlbc1 ' t lllf ... 1 e·aa l b I 1
Sen.ata Doooric Committee. ''Tie ..L ...... ..... ... I t -•,.. h•
orthodox policies ol w. -i--..... are warldq'."
Kmnedy said the -la mUinc a transition from R:Vert infl•tia:l a&
Ille -time . it is sdjullliq from
"a war-time to a ~ ecoDllllf."
Another witne!I, L ab o t ~
James D. llodpon, ~· lll!il any
further •i&niflcant t n 'c r e a 1 e 1 tn
unemployment could be l!ftlded u Ille
administration pursued !&a' m:&i-inflat1oa
ll'<ltU8Dl while swilchlnc to a .,...,.,ttme -· Tbe cabinet members' "ll'i""id!i: _.._Pt __ ,
.... pr ........ ol M-,. In wtdcb be
...... ~Jn11iowy
tbe nm•'*"~ tbe yem-.
ltnnodJ -Ille --......... --·--.... IA•upn1y banlollipl -u:b II
unemployment -ml ~camp1i...,,_ tM
tats at ~ policy.'' Ronvtt. be
added: "The -lhlu(, lo my
Gen:.:-Jet $
m.mam
•Tough euragon@
rubber tr.cl'
• Famoue dual
tread dellgn
1.50-13 •••••••• 11.il.16 .. ~
1.25-1.il I. 15 •••• S1t.16 •
1.5~1.il •••••••• $21.45•
'Tiger ,f.ages'
To~ Destroyed
SA1G011 •(AP) -'11111 -Viel
nam.: .We• s t ..W ...., It wil
...,. • .., ' I ""lillr C1911S" a
Ille C.. S.. -.m-_. nplac• 1bem rilL .. ., 's' ., m11..
TM mll, Cllllllr IE. Ml Mi ' con
bUtUIJ mm -U.S.. ~er ...-..---ago wBl be S rw & I I ))·, •
.. 7 llill.
llo--·-tf-Vitt
nllril .,. M I MM' will b4! ma wD. a.,._ ta ..m · u wsanenu
as the p;aaswtca ....._
1.15-14
7.75-15 • ,,_
whitew111 --$1.71 IO $2.ll
, •. h. r.
1191'tl ..
dePltldi"C .,..91_,.._
•l<dlll'lllt se1i11 ..
PREMIUM TIRE SA• F
FIBERBUSS·BELTm BTW
ThemoreyoubuySll ... the more you
Dilalllts off our rqular selUng prices
Have You Checked Your Boat
And CamperTrailerTire.s Lately?
. ~ . .
1'\mf
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WHITEWAUS
AND ILACKWALLI
Fll.IDAT
A•CAIPER .. '
TRAILERS
•Hi .. .....
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3-Ball GOLFER'S VALUE
..IM'O·SUlfeR 1•
---
GTW S ALE ENDS JULY 25 ... ON E WEEK ONLY 1
DOii Sw•. 114
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•
J!o~niain V ';llley
EDITION N.Y. Steeb
..
VOL. 6l, NO. 173, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES
CA.IL 'I' l'll Ol lief! l'llflt
'FOLKS ON KISER DRIVE SAY GOODBYE TO MRS. SABERS
Diminutive Po1twom1n Wins He1 rt1 in Huntington Be•ch
Love Lette1·
Reluctant Farewell for Post Lady·
By TERRY COVILLE
Of "'-0.111' lt'l .. I Stiff
''Goodbye ,Mrs. Saber -we all love
you,".
Kathy gave the posO\I lad y a big
hug ; young Todd blushed, then kissed
her flush on the lips, and Suzy the
Pomerulan ·pup wa11ed h~r nuffy tail.
The entire populaUOn ot the 17 homes
nn Kiser Drive, Huntington Beach. said
farewell Monday to Theresa Saber -
their postwoman for the past three years,
They did it with a pelltlon emblazoned
with rqor,e than BS names ranging from
tiny tots to grandparenl.ll.
Theresa nearly cried when she saw
It.
"You never know how nice people
are,'' ~e said In a soft, mulned voice.
Three mothers r r a m Kiser Drive
delivered the petition Monday lo Hun·
tington "'Beach.Post Master Pete Difabio.
Mrs. Saber had no hint of It.
OiFabio called her into his office where
the women sW'prised the little postal
lady with it, then bugged her,
Cra sh Driver 's
Spouse Dies
AU.ENTOWN, Pa. (AP) -The wife
of a chartered bus driver collapsed and
died. today as her husband was being
taken from a 'hospital for arraignment
on involuntary manslaughter charges in
the deaths ar seven children last week.
(E1rlier story ~•ge 4). ·
Hubert. Daye, 44, of Montclair, N .. J .
wRs 801\8 the S2 lnlured when his crowd·
ed bWI· Jai~d W negotiate a curve on
U.S. '22 after a briel thunderghower anrf
plunged 50 feet down a rocky em·
banlunenl. '
Daye;s wife, Henrietl.a, had boarded
at the nurse"s residence of the Allentown
Hospital while he wa s under treatment.
When he · was ·discharged today she
beetme !fl and died shortly afterwani
in the diapE'nsal'y o( what Lelligh Counly
Coroner Robert Weir called a massfve '
atrote.
Friday was Thf!J'esa's last day to deli v.
er mail on Kiser Dri ve. The street wa~
taken from her raute because of the
~tal department's change in r.ip codes.
"We want her back.· WI th Theresa
we ff!lt like she was a friend,'' Mrs.
Judy Yellen said.
"The children all followed her on h.er
route ." add f! d Mrs. Jean Ver Well't',
organizer of the petiHoo drive.
''Just a smile alone ts worlh a lot,"
chipped in Mrs. Jane Keller.
Difi'abio, a little embarrassed at being
placed in the villain's role had to tell
the ladles there was no way M~. Saber
could cover Kiser Drive, "because of·
the zip codes."
"This is a tremendous commendation
for one of our letter carriers-." he added.
The petition read in part:
"We all want her ba ck now. If this
in Impossible then we do want to pay
her tribute by signing this petition so
that she ~·ill knqw that we appreciate
her for her oulSl!lnding personal qualities
as well as her being our beloved mail
lady.''
"They greet me likr a friend -I
feel I owe them something even if it 's
just. a hello and a smile," said the
cheerful postal lady.
Theresa Saber always asked about the
children's teeth, the new baby and how
the family ca r was running .
Residents or Kiser Drive said she i,
M regula r -9:45 each morning -
lheY could set their clocks by her.
"Yes, the re is ooe ritual we h a v t
on the route." she ad mitted . "At the
end of the street there i:ii one mail
hox we call the kissing box . The little
girls 11! klu me goodbye there, as
I leave. The li ttle boys stand around,
kind of shy."
Suzy, the Pomcr11nian pup, a I w A y s
·wails in the window for Lhe mail lady.
"She jum p:ii in my arms and washell
my face as if it had never been washed
hrfore."
Mrs. Saber has been ·a mail• lady
[or fou r yea rs.
At S-feet, 2-inchcs, and 100 pOunds.
she 's not the hcfliest peron lo ever
carry a 35-pound mail sack.
"When I applied for the job tht.
postmaster loo ked at me · ind 5aid,
·vou·re kind of litUe -but I iUess
you'll do.'"
She did.
•
ORANGE COUNTY, CAUr<>RNIA TUESDAY, JULY. 21, 1970 · fEN ,CENTS . • .. t" .. • I
City Okays FIUcJridatiOn
..
Hiinti,.,,gto -n· Cc)u~il Sh~ns Opp~~enis . . .
By ALAN DIRKIN
Of .... DtllY , ........
Huntingtoo Beach is gaing to Ouoridate
Ole mtin!cij>al waler supply.
The council vottd unanimously Monday
night to authorize fluoridation after a
70-mlnute public hearing an Uie con-
troversial issue.
Huntington Beach thus became the
second city in Wesl ·Orange ·County to
approve fluoridation. Fountain Valley
01ra:y~s.1m11aracuon---1n 1 4=1------vole
Nixon Backs
Free Voting
In Vietnam
WASIUNGTON (API -PrWlont Nil"
on says the future gavemmenl of Sou,ijt
·Vietnam must be selected through elee-
. tians -not imposed an the war-tom
natlan by negoUaton in Paris.
His admlnistratiM will not stand for
an Imposed coalition government, the
President said. "It must be • eovemnM11t aele~ted by the people of South Vietnam.••
In a wide-ranging newa cooference
~tonday, the Piesident alto aa~d he would
veto a bill setting mudatory. quota.I
on any imports except textiles. Such
quotas, he said, are not ln· the national
interest and might set o(f an in-
ternational trade war.
The HouSe Ways and Mearu Coinmltttt
has prowse<I quotas on shoe anc1 ·texti)e·
imports. •
Beyond Vietnam and imports, Nlxon
ranged over a number af topicl at the
surprise newa oonf~ / . "' 1ald tho u-'j1a1e1 .,:JIU YnO
ktea of using armed 1orces to1 uPtl
the Soviet Union frlom the 'M iddle Eatt:
promt.ed no "vigilante aquld Ill ~I·
I ol J·~·-_ _.., .. wm ·-_, men ~"""'"" :-ti""'":" , Integration In" Ibo IDlllh: .pndlcied ....
wUI tum a1ilnit • bi& • 1ptntlen 'In'
CongrOSI; "-foreclit ln .....,.le' uplui'll
for the last half of the , year ~ uid
he sees JltUe chance ol a tu cut durlnt
the next two years.
The Preiident announced plans for
a major •ting on national delenae
and th e defense .budaet ·at the Weatern
'White House J uly 27, followed by can·
ferences on.the domestic budget for tiscl;I
1972. '
In ruliQg oot any · iJnpo&ed coa.lilion
government in Sa.ilon, , NixOtl aald llt
has no significant Wsaireemenl with
South Vietnamese President Thieu in
this regard. But he said the Udited
Slates stJll is willing to listen to a,,Y
proposals made by Haooi at the Parts
peace talks.
The President was Jn an amiable,
breezy mood at times alter he usurped
press secretary Ronald L. Zlegler'1 •ft.er..
noon briefing in the press quartera It
the White House and converted It into
a news conference in hla own office.
The school desegre1aUon questioning
("cntered around criticism or ad·
ministration policy bj Sen. Strom Thur·
mond (R..S.C.), In a Senate speech Fri·
day.
'l'hurmond, jumping on what ~ said
were arbitrary and discriminatory ac·
lions by the administration. cited threaUI
to the tax exemption or priva~ schools
set up lo perpetuate segregation ind
what he lermed a proposed invasion
of carpetbagging Justice Department
l11wyers to auure forced Integration al
public.. schools ,in the .South.
Nlron said Thurmond ob}ected to an
11ction thal 'has not been taken and
there is no intention ol ti.king -"tb1t
is of sending vigilante squads, In effect,
from the .Justice Department, lawyers,
in to coerce the Southern school districtl
!See NIXON, Page %)
' . . \ . . .
seveial weeU ago., Hunun,ton Beach fesident 'M'r t . e1Umated tbt: COit ·Gt lojecUna fluorides
' Ont, foe 'of filioHditlan v9iCtd ,hb fe:ar Berna'l'd ·Gage Urged. that \the ~e b& int& the city' water supply to briq. the
that other ,colinty dlles may follow sUit. put to a public vote and later Councilman fluoride cootent to one part per million
Jahn , Sirinette, a chemist ol 1$07 ~n Ted Bartlett moved 'tMt lhe matter at •ta,as for equipment and M,250 a
Acres, Laguna Btach, apOke at the' bur-' be placed on the 1ener.i1: erectk>n bllk>t· year for Uie mum fluoride. ·
ing lnlf1 likened nuoridaUo!I ta a con-ln NOYember. 1 , • St.ang estimaCet1 that It will ate five
taglous Pl¥ase. . · Councilman Georae Mcefacten backed months. to in&tall the equipmenl •Dli
"l'P' a(raid it may
1
sprtad. to Laguna_ BarUel}'s motion· bat.' It wi's de(e'.ited start tht pl'Ofl'aln intended to reduce
Bead!,''. b•" said. f.I. A motion by C...ncllnWi ·Al COon '-decoy In children ..
Simlf!tte jnltotalned that it' bad not' authorizing fluoridation ~as th'en pis!td The water superintendent &}so revealed
been .\>ri>v!!l..,.thaf fiuori~Lw)J\ ooLbe.-withou) diSHflb -. -• -. ' -. that natural . fluorides .,. alreldy...,
fiannful. 1 Wolor Superlnl<!ndenl . td SI.an g • • IS.. r LUORIDE, P110 II · .. ' ..
Beach· Woman
•
F~ces · Charge
Of ·Grand Theft
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 10I ... D111r l'llt ftlff
A former . aerospace plant controller
and a Woman · supervisor have beal 1ar-
rested 011 charges they embezzled '11,900
aver IL .period of three years, Costa
Mesa poUce revealed Monday.
Investlgators. Aid ii Is one ol the
largest such cases -they can recall in
Orange C9ast· indUfJrY, but knew of , a
$24,000 case I dei:ade ago in which
the suapecled bookkeeper is still free.
. The pair ·~t«I in the case .invalviq
Master So~alUet Company, u 4 o
1!'onrov\a AV~., lrt accused of three
counts of grand theft each.
· Carl M, Kqiter; 40, ol mi Catalpa S~, NFwpoit"Bol!!h, Wiii reloaoed finally
laonday ·on 112:111\J bail ofter being ar-
r<l1'd -Satutday.1l hlo "°"'': ". !'n· 'Elhel" R. Sc;lll;ckor, ~. ol 11401
Dan!>\111 Clltje 'llqlllJDgton· ~; ,..,
lokoft 'Into. c:u.tlicrt Jl'rlilly 11 the plant
iJF,ftnaliiQ..fll.•ock..NW •'hd1iane -
• i'ili;nlUon. ·1
' ' ' . ' t
..;-,il .. ilf .... "'"' ..,.., -:.i.tterwaict. -""""""-~ Jhn ' Strlet1ond . '°"; ~' ~~~•\l!O--~/Wi~I dk ..... kl ·bltfi>r:e , ... ~ ·~
. • : ·• • · • -, ,.__.. ~ ,.-, ..-lhO ,.ir to aulhorlllo.a.
• . • Tlr.41 ~T·ll~ •(l:"!PJ), ~ J.USTl~I; FIND llONDS "We've Ir"""' II back., far lo 1~,•
.-•In '1" '4unllillfo/I•~ ·Dllch • L. 'F"°"1 1 'Jlllf.Y, ~ "id Strickland, notln11> lhlt Koster will
... I ' I~ ti'~·'· . .' I I, ~\I r' ('t r·' plut l:Clbtnl1Jer)for1 flvi'yeanbefare
1 , ,. • t 1 1 1~ 1 'i.'• · \. l•,~,J : '.be 'lllUltl.StJuneJ 1D1 take1job~·
' ' • I . ) • I .. I . • • Loa Anl'les'eompany. · 'K• d . ". ' F • '. d I . t Strlclland said ho could not roveal · I 18 ' lft " · I)OO, "" ' d•tallo"f~L how ·the , aDflle.di..;lllltJ!l\p-
.. . ' "' • • • , • • " > ' f"'IP!~l Wt!(& ~trod\ ,aln\l''!l>i!
• I t l' 'J •• I ! l ! '. .•· .. I ! . -~~".WJ::~~ WI •• ~'-el ~ ... ,
S.avin_·. irs B. _:o_ nth.' . F OU. ~d: :in.'; I('_ h.·a.· ;.,,n:e.' i. ·: Tor Jbiy 311 incfStrli:kland sald'!ihf.:.ale e . ~ co-defend•n~ would be required to •ppear
• , J ' ' : • ,' J ' ~ ' I I J I \ ' f(Srel fMB.IUJ.£1 ]tap l)
U.S. Savfn,is"Boftm --wd1.h '350 were ting, fOtind h'1r ~1Mlrlinent raflli,Cked, ~and •' • 1. • 1
.returned. MOOdiy' lei . a ,il . ..in'\lrl~n. Beacl!. ~PQrte9 it .to the .P9'*-~partment. 1
'"r · All but 'two lof uie"K·stOlen .·i;is. bo""' woman after ll)ey '.'!ere ,diicdvered by lweft follnd.,,: I I . ' I r-""
two Marina High sopho"1Qre1 among , Paliee 9akr nothing elie of ·vi:lue wU
M:attered' papirS' aloilg ·the.i flood cbntral .tak~n .d~n.&.tho,burglery1 ' • • • 1 ' channel south bf GNlhlfti Street.· , . 1
POiice said the' • 'bands, 1 and other
papers, had ''bffn 1s{o)en MOoday 1from
Miss Gall· Ann Galante·, '27 ,. ol S501r Wendy
Lane,' a student 1t €al.State; LOOi 'Beach.
Ttiey wete found on the toUUt 'llide
o( the floOd control" chanriel by ·Tim
PettrSQfl. 15, of '1fll I 'Cand lelight Circle,
and Bqb Justice, 15. of 115151· Robert
·Lane. . , · ·
The youths were walking . tn a nearby
field when the spotted acattered papera
-ai>Parently dumped by the burglar,
police sald -'•long . the , side of •the
channel, among thick bushes.
They called police. at first lbinklng aomeOOt might ·have been ass,.utted .and
robbed nearby. Mlu Galante'• nune·was
on the bonds atd other papm, bul
with i Long'Be'ach 1a·ddress. ' · • The mystery was cleared •UP 'when
!he rtturned fram achool Mondly eveq·
B., I ·E 11 'd. : ·q:r.g _-ar . ~a~ :
Baseball ' Bat . . '
But Not Justice
A' young burgl1:1r who came very cloae
lo getting some ·on the , apol , justice
via the ba•ball·bat of an engry Fount.Abt
Valley homcoWDf!r has drawn a .one-year
,Or8J1~~· ~unty ,Jfl! ter~ under ' rather
1 more o,ru;iooox rroceed~ngs. . 1 •
3(lQ . S~t t9 SwiPi :
ln )tou gh w~~er :
• "1ote · than,_~ flW~rs· 'Jfu. ••UJet
at tho · !\Oaf Q<ach J>i¥ . th~ . Swoday .to :~a~t.\e the. racllic in •. rough, wakf ,
swim. ·
Co-spontored by tho Seal Beach .Swbjl
Club and tho City of Seal Beach, com·
petltion be1ins at I a.m. on the wesi
side of the pier.
The course tor the. advanced swimme rs
runs' out to the Huinboldt OJI Is~
and back, a distaOC! of · lhree mUet:
Younger swimmm:s w.111 compete In ra:ces
ranging from toO yards to one milt,
Including nu•-cwim races.·
I
Oruge C.ut
Newport Baclis Abolishing Freeway
SuPf'lor Coµrt J!'G&• James .~. J4d&o
set' that peiialty f~r tkrinis Way,ne La
.VfY· 121 .. 'of ,78(12 Mandrell Orlv~, H.wi·
tinglon Beach, ~fter the ,defe~an! plead·
·eq guilly •to ~ degree bur&l~ry.
'He was 1placed on' probation ' for flvt . .. years.
La Vey was arrested last June 4
1tiorUy alter ho burfled· tho home ol
Thoffias Timothy, t?GI Los Ami101 Cif·.
cle, Fountain · Valley, •He was •bout to
drive Off with a car' loaded with &Oods
,from lbe home when tho Timolh:I. fomily
retwrned hollt!· . . . ' •
Weather
Mostly fair lhroqh we&e!dly I
says the wutherm1n. LlUlt tern-l
perature change, m expected . with
hllhs reaching lo lhe nlnUes. Some
night and early morning low cloud.a
1 are alao predicted. By JOANN~ REYNOLDS ,
Of r1t11 Ot ll'I' 'lltl ShlH
Assemblyman Robert Badh&m today
declared A reSolutJan passed Mond!ly
night by the Newport Beach City Council
iruppnrting his 1ntJ.freeway leglalaUon
will have "a great effect'' an the passage
ol the bill through the SenaLe.
1'ht Newporl rMOlution, lnlroduced by-
Councilman How1nt Hogen:. call~ for
I I Senale approval or • the bill without
amf!ndmen t.. Council appraval w a a
unanimou~.
Badham·s bill, which paNed the
.AMembly in IA~ June. wou ld dcif't1>.
I.ht section of the propostd Pacllic Coast
FreewAy from Beach BoulevAttl In Hun·
tlorton Buell to tho "Corona de! Mar
boundary.
Badham said today he wa1 pleased
with the official support the city has
give n his erroru.
"When the only dty l nvnl vf!d'
unanimously backs a bill willioul amend·
ment, you can bet that wi ll have a
great effect on the voting," he said.
Badham aald the prospecl.!I for passage or the bill "look good." He has asked
for a s~ate Transportation Committee
hearing on lht propoMI on Monda y.
Nearly 70 members or th e Newport
~~reeway Fighters were presmt Monday
nighi when Rogers and Councilman
Und11ley P1trson11 each lnlroduocd I
re~luUon b11cklng lhe padham bill .
The mo..t algnllcanl d If fer·• n c •
between Lhe two wa s tha l Ro&ers' op-
. posed further '1tudy Of a route anywhere
wilhln city limlls and supported the
bill without alriendrnenl.
Parsons was not specific on the IMI·
ters of re11tudy or amendment to the
bill.
While all council members obviously
ravored the intenta ol lhe reaolulion, only
Mayor Ed Hirlh and Councilman Don
Mcinnis expressed concern over whit
. the commu nity could upect with _the
deletloo or the frf!twly. •
"We're trylnl to plan now for • ~IJ.J'
ti on in the future," Hirth said. "The ~hy1lcal tralllc problemo have to be
solved and 101Ved1'0n faCt.s, not wishes,
or duite."
Some 1lternallve1 outline<! •by the
mayor included development of 1•rtetlal
highways to feed the beach city froril
•n inland freeway at the cUy'a u:pense,
A llmllor pion I• bolna UleQ In Laauna
IS.. FREEWAY, P11e II
l srael'fi Tourism Up
Timothy immediately grabbed a
ba.,ball · bat, Pllf•~ed La V•y .. to hit
car Jnd w1s only hailed from further
acUon when the youna buralar ~ld1 him
JERUSALEM· (UPI) -! I.I a.LL' .. oil.. al 1uopoint. Poll1"( Mid IA · v,y
.iourillll-.Minlllotl Koil~lCOl, 1114!.Mon-11hen dtlmpod,...., ol lbe Tlmotl>Y p>dl ,
day,tJie nation;• lp~rl•t buoinloo I:! l)ack' ao tho sldewolk bef\\re drl\'1111 boOmln& dOJpl\t ())o lll!ldle c.t~ • . • • • c'• • . and At1b ....ron. attlca. 11o1',~1d .off wllh "lh• rest of tl\e p0S30111ont.
Zl3,0llt tourlltt mlvod bel~ean Jan. 1 PoUce 111<1led I.a Vey lea lh•n an
11111..tulr )I, II per<1nt mon ,ibln duriD( hour later ond retove;;d tho blillt<e
tho ...,. period ID 1118. , fll 1"' Tlino!hY pCllMAlll\\I. . . .
•
•
INSWE TODA\' I
Orange Coasters · art doi#ig
·iltdr Ching • abrood -helpiwQ J
other•, rather Uaan spreading
tM "'ugl¥ Ayntrlcan" imo:Qe. See
<1iorie1 in the South Coast Pia.ta.
sec~tpn. i
~ . ........ , .. ,.
~~-u. J ~,....,.I· c........ '"' ....... c.... • ' ~.. • ·11· ,,~,,..,., ij' ,('14•••t . 1 I ...,,,..:. t ·~ ....... , ........... ~:.'.~ 1 .. ~. = l ..... ==-r. .,_... ....... ,~:·; .,.,~ M ... ...._ .._, ..
I
l
I
I
DAIL~ PILOT H
·Youth: Coalition 1Cut
•• $650 Reques~ ,Seen as W etfare Program
Should the Huntington Belich Youth
COalitm C<mmlttee (YOC) help dlsad-
va.Uged klds in the city?
It's a que.tioo tbat has t'OSt the t.Jroubl-
ed group support irom eeveral adult
advlaan. Mooday night the. youth
orgaW.atlon ran into new opposition
when city councilmen balked at a reque!t
for ·'850 for &rilcts• f« the cli11d·
vanlafod.
Ooomcllmao :fact G-c:r!U-IM
plan, a,ylnf ·It .... "In G>e .... 'ot
welfare" and Wa! not a proper function
of the YCC.
The coWlCll was considering a $2,924
blJdcet submMted. by ·tne group for city
subSidies for the 'nei:t fiscal year.
'nle council approved the allocation
ot P,9211 In funds for the YCC, bul
tHeklng Som~ Dust
Huntington Residents
Blast Cycle Park Plan
Rltldenb In ooutbeut Hunllnstoft
Beach ..-e kicking up dust over the
po.iblllty of . a motottyde park beioC
built near l'ldtlon High School.
Norm· Worthy, <Ii~ ol paru and
remation, told dty councilmen M~y
nlght that 115 RsideQts put their naDlet
on a petiUon <wO'lnC ,.. u an old
dump site near the high school as 'a
motorcycle park.
"We'i:e not opposed to motorcycle.s
in the ·ctty, but we don't want the
dust and noise in a resldential area.,"
Mrs. Donald Morris, who started the
petition, explained today.
"I llave a lS..year-old Pl who 11
fascinated by the machines. No ooe
is opposed to a motorcycle part, but
it should be in an open, or industrial
area, away from tile homes."
Tbe Edl!On site,· one <i several city
officials are considering, &it.a on the
east side of the Seabury Tract where most
of the petition signer1 live.
Wcrthy told eoqncllmen he was not
·Jet ~ to make any recom·
,,
Richard Merris
Services Held
Fl!lleral services weri held today for
Ridiard A. Mems of HunUngton Belich
who died Jn the crash of hlJ glider
near Perris, Saturday. He wu 32. ·
The afternoon service ' was conducted
by Rev. Jam., Clark of Trlnity UJ>1ted
Presbyterian Cburdl. .
Mr. Merrls, who lived at 211862 WOOCl\u
Lane, )s survived by bis wife; :Suaan;
a daughter, Kimberly, ·and his !a~,
Bf\\Ce Merrls. •
Mr. Merrts was practicing looping
maneuver• near the Perris Airport in
Riverside County wbeJI a wing ·feli ·alf
bis glider.
' mmlatlon, but thougbl they ought to
krow some oPflO"itlon has been reoorded
lo 1be reeldentW ~·· Another 1lte, which the petition signers
consider better, ia 13 acres near the
intersection of Gothard Street and Ellis
Avenue, behind the old Holl ySugar plant.
The EdillOn site involves 28 acres at
Hamilton ·and Magnolia 1treeta, an old
dump site of which only seven acres
would really be usable for motorcycles.
11We hive an 1dvilory eommtttee look·
Ing al a l!lllllber of -In add!tlon
to tboee two,1' Worthy · ~ded. He .aid
mole ln!anMtlon -1d be pmOQled
at Ille lheAllfl.1""""'1-. ·
Corr~pondent
Jim: Lucas Dies
' WASHINQTON (AP.) -Jim a. Locas
Jr., .who ..On a Piilltsei prbt lo lllt
for ·hlt coverqi of the Koremi · war,
dled f6day . of abdomlnal canter. He
wiaN.. ~ .
LuC¥ ·be1,:U lil1 wm: reporiln1 career
sa a Marine combat corre1pgn4.ent , in
the .paclflc hland campaign of World
War ri. Alter 'tlie war he joined the
~pps-Howard f!ew1paps'1. In addJUon
to the P,ulitier, Lucu won muy oUler
award> for bll ,_png. ·
Lucas, 1 verutlle nporter . who
c:ov~ many typeo of. .r.n.1, c!led
thr<e days before publication of hit totes!
bo!lii. a blopa~ of VlCe ~stdenl
'Spiro T. Agnew. '
Lucas dtid tn · the Vete 1n1
Al!mlii{lt:otloil ljolpltal Center here,
wh<re lllt 'had )>Oen coofiled !or 1101111
• .. .:.:..:• ' I • ";'W'I'• I
Miller, Whee"ler to Attend
Meeting on Freeway Bill
Huoting:ton Beach sent two delega\ltl
to Lagl.tna Beach today for a confer~nce
on Assemblyman Robert Badham-'s bill
to delete 1 segment of the Pacific-Coast
Freeway.
The meeting was called by Laguna
Beach Mayor Richard Goldberg to
discuss methods of combatting the
Newport Beach legislator's bill.
Both Huntington Beach and Laguna
Beach are opposed to the measure,
designed to terminate the fr.eeway at
Adam! Avenue in Huntington Beach and
deleting It from Newport Beach.
City administrator Doyle Miller and ·
• public works director James Wheeler
will represent Huntington Beach at the
DAILY PILOT
2 p.m. par~y In the Laguna Belich
mayor'• offiet.
Wheeler told councilmen Monday night
that be did not expect the bill, which
cleared the Auembly, to pus the Senale.
"It appears that the portion of the
freeway. will not be deleted, but it will
llill take some following up," the traffic
engin(!:er ~d.
Wbtel!:f added that he understood the
bill could not go before the senate
Tr~naportation Committee u~Ul Mctlday,
July 27 at the earlit:st.
The City of Fountain Valley has passed
a re.solution oppasing Badham's measure,
Monday night the Newport Beach COUJt.
cU backed Badbam, with members
unanimously calling for the a e Senate
to pass the bill to keep freeway
out of the city llmlt!.
.............. --.-_. oo arq por!loular p<0jecb withou!
addltiooal couneli'authorlzatloo being ob-
tained.
Councilman Green also objected to
a '500 Kem in the budget for operation
of a pilot teen center since he f~tt
this was linked to the proposal to help
the disadvantaged.
A slmllar teen certer was nm by
the Community Actloo CoW>cU (CAC)
lasl year, but tile groop bad to dlaband.
Green said that welfare programs 'should
be funded by the county OI' federal
government.
"I know this has been a pet project
of the committee tor some time and
I am cpposed to it, 0 Green said. "It's
just asking f.or trouble. At least four
members have left the committee and
are not involved for this very thing."
Leonard Ewers, adult chairman for
lbe YCC and a teacher at Huntington
Beach High ·school, defended the teen
center and the plan to provide legal,
medJcal aod educaUonal aid to other
youngsters.
"Thi• is not my budget,'' be 1ald .
"The kids did it themselves. They feel
strongly· that they want to get involved
In helping the young. They may have
used the wrong word ln disadvantaged,
but they are not CQncerned with dances.
They want to reach kid1 with legal
or medical help."
Ewers listed other project.II planned
by the, YCX::, tncludin1. an art contest,
aurf contett aod fashion and talent
lhowl.
Coundlmen Norma Gibbs felt lhe
youths abould 'be encora~ by the coun· cu In !ta PfOll'llD!· . Councilman 'Al Coen wanted to see
the YCC complete a aet of by-laws
and draw up · a aeries of &oala and
}iurpoeel. ' : hers replied that $10,000 w a s
allocated to the group laa y~ wltbout
a aet , of by-law1. "I perlO!lallY feel
the beut la not in the council to work
wltb the coallUon. We have tried again
and 91aln but we hava become whipping
boy1.". . eoen who allo wondered Whether the
20 yoWi1 people on the committee were
truly repreeentltive of the city'• yout~
community, was 71amed to: 1 council
eommlttee along with Groen and Mrs.
Gibbs to w<rk with . the YCC on
reorganlzaUon of the group. .
. D'econi l"'sed
JiOdy ·of Woman
Found by .Police
The patually decompoeed body of a
aecre\u'Y. was found in a HunUnrton
Belich apartmenl Monday morning alter
detectives were alerted to her cootinued
absence tram work.
Clad: In only a ne1Ugee, abe was
dllcovered in Apartment 34 of the
Medtterra~an. 401 Atlanta Avenue,
around 10:30 a.m.
Police 1aid there was no evidence
of folll play a:urroundin1 the mysterious
death but added that they have been
unable to decide whether the death was
natural, accidental or a suicide. ··
Homicide Sgt. Monty McKemi'on said
the woman aged 38 and divorced , bas
been identified but asked that her identity
be withheld until the next of kin has
been notified.
"There was enough facial resemblance
left to ldenWy her from pictures," said
McKnnon.
McKennon esUmates the woman died
about 10 days ago. He says be was
notified through the McDonnell Douglas
aecurity staff about the woman's absence
fJ!m her job. . Alt.hough an autopsy was conducted
Monday night by the Orange County
Coroner's office, the cause of death will
not be determined until· the results of
certain tp11:in tests are available.
"It will be about one to two weeks,"
said Coroner's investigator H a r o I d
Minick, adding that be is trying to
locate the woman's relatives.
Tbe woman's parents are dead and
she lived in foster homes all her life,
Minick said. O~ANO~ CO,t.5T PUIL!itt!NG COMl'AN'I'
Rokl1 rt N. W11d
,,.111 .... 1 '"" 1'11D1itlltr
Jock l, C11rl•y
'\'Ju Pmlcl9nl •1'111 -•I M-tlf
Tkow11' K11•ll
from Page 1
FREEWAY .•. -:] s . Freeway ect1on
l"OllOr
1hDm11 A. Mwrphint
M11\folns EG""r
W•I o...., c-1y Ecmor
. Alll•tt W. l•i•1
A.teclal1 E•+1or
H ........ •t.,cll0ffk1
1711' lo•Ch lo11l1v1rd
M1ilin9 Addt1,r: P.O. loJC 7'10, 92e41
Otwr Offk•
.__.,_ ••Kii: m "'-' ..,...,"'. (;o111 M .. 11 DO Wflll l•Y Strll't N1W110rl lt)<.JI; 2'111 Wnl 81tb0~ ,..,,..,.rd
11n C~t1; .Jt5 Nortll 1!1 C•nllllO 11: .. 1
Oit.1LY P ILOT, will\ ...io. • c.mblMf lllt
Ntwl·l'r•1. " pubtl1t1(• •illy ta<wpl .Sllflo
Ill' 11t HPl .. lt ,111-fOf UOUNI lf'UI. NeWPOrl lt>ell, Cftll "Mio, H1,111lll\cl~ft
... ~ tl'ld '°"""I" v1111y, •!trot wllll 1wa rttloMI tll!liolll. Ortl'IQI Co11t Pu•ll1h~ (.,,,.....)' '1111llftl .. I ntl ,,.. ti Hl I Wnl
l t lMI l !lf'd., Nt-1 I Htll. t lld UI Wtsl
l tV Str"I, ~It ,....,.,
T.t ...... t7141 641·4ll1
from w .... 1 .. .., Coll 140· 1110
Cl-..lf1-I ·~· 641·16 Tl CwYritl'll, im, Of"INfl • cour P11&111~1,... ~y. NI M•I• '11orln, lll11t1•11l1>•1, Ullltri.I ,...,tw _, l4vfl'!l-11 lleo•I~
l'"lr 61 tlll'lll>l(llf wUMlll '""'"'' pot-""'-IOn ot ~P'f'!'lllhl .-.
~ ''-" "°'" .. N1d t i Hi .. tOfl 8• <" t r.I '"" Mftl. (.ol~nll, S1111ttrlf!lrl • llv ~,.,.., u.o rno-.1111,, ~ lf'llU .,,,. '"°"'~!~t
m""9rr o.11nt1....,, ~-m0~1111y, •
Bea~h, he said~
Mcinnis said with the passage or the
resolution and ultimately the Badham
blll the "w<rk will really belln to find
a solotion.
"The most lmportant asset of th.e
area, far ahead of the bay and heaehes
Is the people. And for th1.t reaton, I
have to support Councilman Rogers'
resolution," he said.
My Lai Defendant
Wants Civil Trial
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Atlomeys for
Lt. William L. Calley Jr., charged 1'ilh
the murder of more than too Vletname~
civilians at My Lal, filed suit In federal
district court Monday asking he be trled
by a civilian Jury If he Is to be tried
at all. The tuit co ntended mlUt11ry
authorities 1'ave no rigllt to try nlm
by court.-marllel.
Several grou nds were liBted for b!llTin~
1 j))t1ri·mRrt h1l, lnctudin1t !he fact ~·11r
h11d nnl ht-en c1e<:lnrrd in Vlt.tnam iind
lhnt Aller lhl" lnciderit. CnUcy w11s h<"ld
ln the SCl'\llce beyond hla discharge da le.
Deleted at Venice
A bill designed to delete the Pacific
Coart Freeway between Marina del Rey
.and the Santa Monica city line was
approved Monday by the S e n a t e
Transportation Committee in Sacramen-
to.
William Hashimoto, design engineer
with the State Dlvlslon of Highways
Division in Los Angeles, said the bill
Is slmilar to pending legislation in·
troduced by Assemblyman Ro b e r t
Badham (R·Newport Beach).
The bill that cleared the Senate Com·
mittee would delete the freeway In the
Venice area. Badham's blll . seek!ii to
delete the portion of the same freeway
that would be route<l through Newport
Beach .
Badham noted he was encouraged by
th e committee's approval of the Venice
blll , He hni asked for a hearing of
hll'I bill on Monday.
Sen . Randolph Collier (0-Yrcka) who
ts the chairman of the committee.
hi!!lnrically has supported strongly the
state frecw11y system.
tn f>rtvlnus cases he has (lppoled any
lntt.rvcntlon by the Uglslaturt In
11\i~mt"nls a d opted by the Sta te
llighway Commission.
TEACHER CAROLYN HANSEN EXPLAINS NEW SCHOOL HOURS
Ocean View District'• Craig Young, 5; Lori Roberts, 6
Kids Want Longer School,
'More Time for Recess'
Weslmont School first grader Craig
Young, 5, thinks he'd like to go to
school 25 minutes longer rtex t year so
he can bring a lunchboi to school like
the big boys.
And what would he do in those extra
25 minutes?
"I'd have recess," he says confidently.
Craig will get his extra 25-minutes
ne11:t year -and undoubtedly hls IUJ1ch
pall, too -along with all the other
first and second grade pupils in the
Oceall View School Dii!lt.rict. But chances
are slim that be will be enjoying recess
during those extra 25 minutes.
The longer school day is part of a
new policy, jointly authored by teachers,
admlnlatrators and trustees of the
dlatrict. In addiU011 to the e11:tra 25
minutes at the first and second grade
levels, fourth and fifth graders will also
be tacking a 15-minute extension o•
their school day.
School Superintendent Clarence Hall
said the policy change provides teaching
1taffa with more fle:dblllty in pupil
ICheduling.
"With a school day contab!.ing a dif.
ferent number of minutes for these grade
level!:, team teacblng ud grouping of
children across grade levelJ, when ad·
visible, was dilficult. First, second and
third graders went home at different
times. Our goal is to individualize in-
strucUon as much as possible, and a
uniform dismissal time wUl be of great
help in th.is effort."
Additionally, Hall points out, the new
policy represents a significant increase
in the amount of time Ocean View
pupils will be in school.
"If we apply the 25 minute extension
to the total school year, it represents
an equivalent increase of 18.75 days
-almost a month of school days -
even though the school year will begin
and end at the usual times," Hall said.
"At the fourth and filth grade le\lel,
the 15 minute extension means an
equivalent increase of 8.6 days."
The new poli cy now calls for a 20().
minute kindergai.4.en, the same as last
year. First through third grade classes
will spend about !'h hours in school ;
students in grades four through eight
about 6~ hours.
From Page I • FLUORIDE OKAYED . ••
the water supply1 varying from 2/lOlhs
to tllOthl part per million.
Mayor pro tern Jerry Matney limited
dJacu•lon to 30 minutes for each aide
wH.h both the proponents and opponents
receiving a· five-mJnute rebuttal.
Several residents spoke against the
pl en.
Ron Muzzy, 9331 Hudson Drive said
fluorid .. could not be Injected wllhoul
extra C011ta and be would have no choice
other than to obtain water elsewhere.
"If fluorides are good let's not go half
way," he added, "let's have water with
vitamins and minerals in it."
Martin Annenberg, 17152 Camelot Cir·
cle, said fluorides should be prescribed
by a dentist. "I look upon this as an
abridgement of my freedom to drink
pure water," he said.
Herbert Clark, 21031 Shackleford Cir·
cle, claimed fluoridation will have a
residual effect and that it will poison
plants which will later be eaten.
Other fluoridation foes said that the
chemical would harm the elderly, causing
bone decay, and one resident claimed
it was a communlst plot and that
fluorides would damage the brain and
nerve cells.
Dentists and pediatricians pleaded for
adoption of the propo!al citing en·
do;sements of fluoridation by medical
'associations and governmental agencies.
Dr. Eugene Brown, president of the
Orange County Dental Society, said that
fluoridation would serve "as a major
.step in reducing dental decay ."
He listed support for fluoridation from
the American Dental AslOciation, the
American Medical Association, the U.S.
Department of Health, Edu cation and
Welfare and the Public Health Service.
A Fountain Valley dentist, Dr. Roy
Richards. said that dental problems form
mankind 's most prevalent disease. "No
qualified individual has documented any
adverse effects to young or old from
fluorides," he added.
From PfJffe l
NIXON ....
to lntegrat.."
The gJ\le-and-lake on Soul.hem achoo!
probl'Oll follOwed Iba &witch earller \o
Ille Mldeaal A -lar asked !fir
alarltlcatJo~ of Ntton•t approachel to
problema of the aru llld Soviet move.
~ent there.
Nixon recalled haring said In his July
1 televlaton convenation the U.S. intereat
la peace and recoaruuon of the sovereign·
ty and independence of every state in
'the are•. ·
He 1ald the power balance has not
been upget but the movement of Soviet
weapona and men to the Mideast to
man the weapons cautes thit country
con~ because a conUnuaUon could
tJp the tcales.
He aa1d arms eacalaUon, particularly
the use of trooP11 in the Mldeut, in·
creuea the rt.st of 1 confrontation
neither 1lde wantll.
"That la why we are l>\lttlnl such
emphula on our peace lnltiaUvi. That
11 why we have not announced any
1ale of· planes or delivery to Israel
at thil· Ume because ,we want to give
that peace inltlatlve every chance to
1uccet:d/1 he 1aid.
Nlxon uld be wouldn't and shouldn't
1~ulate on bow hlgh Unemployment
mlgbt rioe ..,. how strong he thinks
ecooomic recovery might be thil year.
He QJd at thiJ point the nation h
at a Witeribed ol. econonyc policy -
the rtUon for his rather Strong rt.ate-
mtnt to Congress last week on ita: record
of appropriating and spending m011ty.
"Wilen the Amerlcan l>'C)ple learn that
the big spenders iD Congeu are Primari-
ly responsible for hlgher prices, and
eventually even higher t.ues, I thlnk
that the AmerJcan people will turn on
the big spenders poliUcally."
On other toplca: -campus Unrell. Nlxon oald It would
not be .news to conclude one· way to
bring peace on the Campu1 would be
to brine peace In Vietnam. But h~ raid
he wa1 not sure U would bring campus
peace •. 1
-Defense Cuts. Nixon ;. epeated that
while he has shifted much spending from
defense to nondefeme programs it ii
·unrealistic to BUUest money for big,
new dome~pc programa can come out
of substantial defeose cuts.
-Family Aid. Nixon said the chances
of his family assistance welfare plan
getting through the Senate are fair.
-Education Bill. 'l'he President said
it is $400 million above bis budget recom·
mendation and that is unacceptable. But
ht aaid be hasn't decided to veto the
bill and he hinted he might be able
to make up the amount from other
programs.
From Page I
EMBEZZLE ...
on the same date .
He did say Mrs. Schlocker's job In.
volved the hart41ing of sums of moneJ
wed to pay the company's bi~.
Strickland said Master Specialtiet
Company i5 primarily an aircraft partl
manufacturer, but that it has built com
ponents for the Apollo moan rockei..
such as instruments and control panels.
Questioned about the size of the alleged
embezzlement, the veteran forgery d~teo
tive 1ald It is one of the largest iJ
his memory, but recalled the $24,00C
theft case more than 10 years ago.
He said the FBI is. aUll hu11Ung Robet1
L . Turley, a bookkeeper for a Newport
Beach firm who dropped out of sigh!
and was tubsequently charged with grand
theft.
Detectives traced Turley to a poirt
from which he escaped the United States
at which time StrickJand, then a warranl
detective, turned the case over to federal
· authorities.
He said Tu rley is now wanted fol
interstate flight to avoid prosecuUon.
GRAND OPENING SALE!
We are pleased to announce
the opening of our second store
in Tustin. We have purchased
"Red Hill Carpets" and the new
name will be "Alden's Red Hill
Carpets & Draperies."
e IN COSTA MESA •
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Pl1centla Ave
Phone 646-4831
In conjunction with the open-
ing of our Tustin store, we have
several spec i a Is in our Costa
Mesa store. Please come in and
see us.
•IN TUSTIN e
ALDEN'S
RED HILL
CARPETS e DRAPES
11374 E. INlno
Phone 131-3344
VISIT OUR ENLARGED REMNANT ROOM AT OUR COSTA MESA
STORE. HUNDREDS OF REMNANTS AND ROLL ENDS.
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Newport Beaeh
.ED4TION
Today's Fl~al
. ·----_, N.Y. Steen::.
' VOL. 63, NO. 173,.3 SECTICi>NS, 36 PAGES OltANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNIA TUESDAY,.J~LY. 21,. 1970, .. TEf'l CENTS
.,
Councilmen ·Okay Collin·s. R~dio A~exation
Newport Beach city councilmen Mon·
da}' night voted uriani:m.ously to start
annexaJ,ion proceedings on Collins Radio
Company property near Orange County
Airport after proponents and opponents
' of the move asked council members
for definitive action on the city's future
boundaries. ' ·
Following the annexation vole, cou.n·
cilmen Uien d~ded to take in the Orange
O>unty Airport and the balaoce of the
Irvine Industrial Park west of Jamboree
Road in lheir proposed future boundaries.
Both items are scheduled to be filed
with the county Local Agency FormaUon
Comm!Ssion today.
Councilmen heard brief testimony
from Robert Johnson, Collins vice presi·
dent and Roger S. Hopkins, Collins cor~
porate manager of real estate, boUi
of whom called for an ehd to delays
in the case.
lrvine Company Vice President Ray
Watson origi!l:ally ~ked for' a delay ao .. • •
that ctiy reprtsentaUves could discuas
the bounda.ry matter with Collins and
Irvine oficlals. ,
When ·it became apparent that only
Mayor Ed Hirth favored the discussion
idea, 'Watson too asked for a . decisive
action from councilmen.
The Collins leasehold from Irvine is
located on a 177-acre trj,ana:le of land
bounded by Campus Drive, MacArthur
Boulevard and Jamborpe Road. •
City PJannlni Director Litt)' Wilaon
•
told councilmen anneudop at the parcel
could bring t total 1Mual revenue to
the city ol $110,000 whiql could' reach
a total o! 1188,000 with dev<IOpm<nt
of the industrial· property,
Wilson said the Iota! aMual · expense
to the city would probably st.art around
$35,500, reaching ·ll0,7l0 with develop.
ment. The net recurrint anriual' beriefit
to the clty wvuld be $75,000 Ind could
climb as high as t127,000:
Hirth noted "the C011in1 anneutkia ii
i\ot 1 as controverslll as the , ~ ·
aµnexation to .the McDonneU-oOO,l1s'Pro. Per~y'.lying to its north , ' ;. · :
"nlert ls no zOOe change ' involved· ln
the Colltns ·case 3nd the tohle;~'l>l'QfftrtY '
line wqere C9llins abuts MacArthy.r·
Bot.ilevard lies adjac~t 1to eri11Ung city bound~. The proposed'· M~Ddnnell·
Dooilas' a'nrlexition onty · toUc;hed City
boundaries at a small Point. ' • The · COlliii.s annei:BtiGn :as, w'elt as Uie
futllre "boundary oUtllne 'roould 1t11¥e .~
!.. ; ' ' I '
" ' ' ..
disastrous effect on the ·Irvlnt in-
corpbraUon movement by' robblng the'"
proposed . citY. of it! ttonomic plum -
the lftt1ustrial base.
· Watson·, who also spoke 111g,inst . the
ambitious boundary plan, · noted that
Algergari Pharmaceutical, Vo orb e.I s,
Trindle • and Nelson, Parker Aircraft,
Dana Labs, the Irvine Industrial Office,
Xerox and the Airporter Inn have all
stated they do not Wish to become· in·
(See ANNEX, Pqo 11
0 re.ewa
People Will Rule
President Vows
No Viet Dictums
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on says the future government of Soulh
Vietnam must be selected through elec-
tions -not impnsed on the war-torn
nation by negotiators. in Paris. '
His administratio!1 will not stand for
an imposed coalition government, the
PreSident'said. "It must be a government
selected by Uie people of SquUt Vietnam."
In a wide-rangil:lg news conference
"Jfandaf, the ~t 1il80 said he wo'uld
vet.o a · bill aettmg inandatory quotas
on apj' imports except textp.es. Such
quotas, he said, are not ·in the n•tional
interest and might set off an in-
ternational trade war.
The House Ways and Means C:Ommittee
has proposed quotas on shoe and textile
imports.
Beyond Vietnam and imports, Nixon
ranged over a number of topics at the
surprise news conference.
Fumes Explode
In Newport
Homes 1Ruined
A workman c1ean1ng with solvent prior
tG .Jaying a floor accidentally triggered
an explosion or fumes and Ute resulting
fire damaged two homes in Newport
Beach today.
The 11 :02 a.m. blaze ate through a
primary telephone cable nea r the scene
at 1730 E. Ocean Blvd., knocking out
5ervice to the Balboa Peninsula.
No one was actually injured when the
fire swept tht! home of Newport Beach
library employe Eloise Luther, but the
unidentified tilesetler suffered singed
eyebrows. ·
The flame s drew Newport Beach life-
guards Logan Lockabey and Ken Does-
burg, who said one elderly woman had
to be assisted from the scene. ·
No damage estimate was immediately
available for the Luther home, where the
u~airs apartmenl was gutted.
Firemen on the scene ssid the roof of
an adjace.nl apartment also was damaged.
Orange Coast
'
Weather
He said the United States has no
idea of using armed forces to expel
the Soviet Union from the Middle East;
promised no "vigilante squad of Depart-
ment of Justice agents" will force school
integration in the south; predicted voters ,
Will turn against big spenders in
Congres1; forecast an economic uptum
for the last half of tht year, and said
he sees ljttle chance of a tax ~ut during
the next~two years:-
The President announced plans for
a major meeting on l),Stional defense
and Ute defense budget at the Western
White H~ July Z'i, follciwed by OOl'i.
ferences on the domestic budget for fiscal
1972.
ln ruling out any impMed coalition
government in Saigon, Nixon said ·he
has no significant disagreement with
South Vietnamese President Thieu in
this regard. But he said the United
States still is willing t'o listen to sny
proposals made by Hanoi at the Paris
peace talks.
The President was in an amiable.
breezy mood at times after he usurped
press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler's after-
noon briefing in the press quarters at
the White House and converted it in.to
a news conference in his own office.
The school desegregation questioning
centered around criticism o f ad-
ministration policy by Sen. Strom · Thur-
mond (R-S.C.), in a Senate speech Fri-
day .
Thurmond , jumping on what he said
were arbitrary and discriminatory ac-
tions by the administration, cited threats
to the tax exemption of private schools
set up to perpetuate segregation and
what he termed a proposed invasion
of carpetbagging Justice Department
lawyers to assure forced integration of
public schools in the South.
Nixon said Thurmond objected to an
action that bas not been taken and
there is no Intention of taking -"lh11t
Is of sending vigilante squads, ln effect,
from the Justice. Department, . lawyers,
in to coerce the Southerii school districts
to integrate."
The give-and-take on Southern schoo l
problems. followed the switch· earlier to
the Mideast. A reporter a~ked for
clarification of Nixon's approaches to
problems of the area and Soviet move-
ment there.
Nixon recalled having said in his July
1 television conversation the U.S. interest
is peace and recognition of the sovereign-
ty an4 independence of every state in
the area.
He said the powct balance has not
!See NIXON, Page !)
' ~ . , ' . ·. I ·, . " • ' • ' I ;
• •
"DAILV,,l,LOT Sl•ff ,MM
' ' '
. ,, ' Bu~d f)ut tn-~ewport . ~ • :. • ' ' ' ' • 1 • ' ' >
' I I ~ : \ • , f '
Ba!talion Chle( Billy ·Thoinas)nspects, wr,ei:~age.dl .
!970 auto burned out ~uting ~araRe li'e. Monday
eveniQg at 1509 W~ 'Balboa 'Blvd. Firemen~ said: rio·
one was injur~ in· the ,blaz~, _which destroyet;t. the·
, cal .~~ ·Plh~r·~onients oi \li~ gar.'~·· ~:,iiu; dkiha~« · was estimated al $0,000., Bwld1n11. IS owqed 'bY.
C18Ude·l G. Edwari:IS, ·accor.dini, fo fi.te'men .. Catite
of tilaze was:not immedi8tely d·etermined. , · ·
Police Arrest : Coast Pair
In Huge Gr~nd Theft
' By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 fM Djllr '"'' Stiff
A foi-nie'r 'ae"rospace plant eontr91ler
and a woman supervisor have been ar·
rested on chiJ:rges they em1'ezzled $181000
over' a period or three years, Costa
Mesa police revealed Monday. ·
1"nv'estigators said it is one· of lhe
largest such , cases they can r:ecall in
Orange Coast industry; but knew or a
$24,000 case a decade ago In which
the15uspccted bookkee~r is still tree.
The pair Charged ih the case involving
J\1aster Scpecialties Company, 1140
Moot"Ovia Ave., are accused of three
counts of gra.nd theft ~ach.
~ ·earl M: Koster~ 40, of '2821.' Catalpa
St., Newport Beach; W<ts .released fin a Dy
r Mond.ly; on $1%,500 batl after beh'lg at-
rt9led Saturday atitils'OOme.
Mrs. Ethel R. Schlocker; '26, of ·9402
' Danbllry Clr~le, liuritington1 Beach, was
'taken1 lnto •custody Friday at the plant
· on· her final day of 'w0rk ifter submi~ing
a resignation. '
A s\lpervlsor in charge of disbun;e.
men.t, she, was booked into Orang~·County
Jail and released on the same bail
figµre shortly af~erward. ·
~tect\ves Jim Strlcklanit and • J;in
· dUst.aveson wOrked the Case for aboUt
a weei befdr~ su~mjhipg eVldenCe
. ' (See EMBEZZLE, .Pap I)' · . ' ' . .
Badham. Removes
Bqck B,ay Area
. . .
From State .Plan ' , , ', I . . .
Assemblyman Robert 88.dlram (R-
Newport Beach) said today he asked
.the Assembly W. remove Upper Nfwpoi:t
Bay fi'om peilding · legislation,' bica~se
''it doesn't Deed anoth·er I.Byer · of
bureaucratic involvement." · 1 The action·. was taken 'Friday when
members of the · Assembly voted 2().13
. to sJrl~e ~e Upper Bay from a, re~lution
by Assemblyman George MiUas (R-
Gilroy),'. . . , •
The ·Milias resolution calls for' several
state departments invoived in prOj~ts
, of. various kincfs throughout the state to.~ibmit 'environmental impaft respOrrs
-· to the ~gisl4ture. 1 "The reasohs I askfd ,for th~ removal
wefe Q\i)te ,slpipie," Ba'dhafu said. "Ffrst,
ti.fostly fair through Wednesday
says the weatherman. LitUe tem-
perature change is expected with
highs reaching to the nintles. Some
night and early;-mornlng low ·clouds
are also preditt~d.
lrvi~e, Newport in Aecot•d
· the exchange ls 1 already in litigation
. aad. wil~ ,11\1~ubt~dly eocr µp Koin1g to
. tbe:Spprem1 ·eourt. lJ>e 'Legi,la\U(e h~s
8Jways 'retrained from ih9olvlng ltsell
in any matters in litigation. · J
. ' INSIDE TODAY
Orange CoaJters ... are doing
thtir thing abroad -helping
others rathtr than spreading
tht "ugl11 Anwrican" image. See
stories in the South Coast Plaza
sectton .
C•llftrtil• I Mrii., 1 .. lt CllHll'-VII S N.tlf!Ml N.... J Ct.ultlfif .. ,, ~•ltM CMlntf t
C""'k• iS SYIYI• ,.,,_, II c,......... 1J ,,..... 16-1,
Dt-"t N'9kfl t St.ell M9rllttl l .. 11
alllftt .. I ''" f T• .. "411tf1 It •11twt1lft"'9ftl l .. H T1111tw1 1 .. 19
ll'lllPCf II WMltltr • ... ,.._. u we111••1 Ntw• IJ.1'
AM L_." It Wtrlf N.wt W
~rom~nt~ry . Feud·: .'Over 1
A alx·week old disagreement between
members ol the Newport Beach City
Council members and the lrvi~ Com-
pany ended Monday night when coon-
cilmen approved an indemnity agreemen t
with the 18¢ company for Promontory' Bay. .
Settlement '"Was reached when Irvine
officials agreed to strike out any limiting
phrases in the document by which the
company would reimburse lbe city for
up to $50,000 on ·any claims brought
by a tenant or leasee of th e Balboa
'
Yacht Basin.
tbe agreement Is a ·key item in the
com j>any's plans foi. Prbmontory Bay,
which involve cutting a' rnew channel
through Bayside Drive nll1-Beacon Bay.
The agr~ment or~ proposed by
the !Nine Company-wii'd have relm4
bur~ the city $50,®;0 ~ly for tlaims
of inverse condemn•°"'·
Councilmen balk'lf al Ibo ldea,!'«ause
yacht basin busineatrp-1 cGblG bring
claims against the._ (II lega11theories
other than inverse ~aUon. Irylnt
officials were "lotted' to, -~pl~ulate,
removing the· llmttine pht'ues from the
agreement.
'Ille only d-.ig vQle Motlday ..U1ht
was cut by <WDcllman' Howard · Rogei-s
who a4k:I he . felt $50,000 ·w1s qot a
large eOOugh .sum. • •
Whel\ a>mpleted, ini development,
which takes lt.s n a m e from O'le bluff
behind Bay1lde Drive, will feature f2
waterfront homes rlnglnf the man-made
lagoon.
Bayside Drive will be rttt>nstrocted
· al<ing tho too ol the blull.
.,,-,
"Secondly, environmental and
ecolog)cal . maUers have already betn
agrted ( uj:Jon by lhe couhty ana tiVh~e
comP,.ny to be reviewed by tQe state.
In '•d<\ition .scrfppi,, uc Irvine,' Uc
RiVerslde · Bnd Cal Tech arc dolni studies
1 on ·it. It . doesnrt, n e•e d -another layer
• of bureaucratlc lnvolvemepl, '' he. safd ..
Israel's Tourism Up
· JERUSALEM <UPI) -11 r •• 1 ·,
Tourism Minister, Koshe Kol, said Mon-
day lbe nation 's tour i • t business ls
booming despite lhe Middle East llr\lple
and Arab guerrilla attacq. Kol 111d
238,000 tourla1"' arrived between Jau. t
~nd July 18, 11 percent ~e Ulan durina:
the llill1e period In 11189.
" l.
'
Councilmen
Unanimous ·
In Action
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ot tftt 0.111 ,1191 Sl•ll
AMemblyman Robert Badh~ today
declared a resolution passed Monday
nig.bt by· the Newport. Beach City Council
supporting his anti.freeway leglslatiOD
_will have "a great effect" on the passage
of the bill through the Senate. .
' ~ NeWport fesOlulion, introduced by
Councilma.n Howard Rogers, calls for
Senate appi'ovil · of the bill wjthout
""1nt6dfnent: CQuncll . approvp.l' w a I
unanimous . ' · ~· •;n 'w!ti b ~1M !Wombiy' 1li1 );;l'e .. ~1111~, c Wi!Ul4 , .....
the· oaciUon Vf. the pr_.i Pacllib .Coad
Freeway from Beach Boulevard Jn H~ ~n Beach to the Corona de! Mat
bOOndary. .
Badham said today he was pleased
with the official support the city has
given bis efforts.
"When the only city in v o Ive d
unanimously backs a bill without amend-
ment, yol.i oan bet that will have a
great effect on the voting," h~ said.
Badham said the prospects fpr passti;ge
of the bill "look good." .. He has asked
for a Senate Transportation Committee
bearing Of! the proposal .on Monday.
Nearlf 70 members Of the Newport
Free'Way Fightefs were present Mtioday
night when Rogers and CoUncilman
Lindsley ParSOl'.JS . each . int1"9duced a
resolution backing the Badham bill.
The· most significant d i f f e r e n c •
between ,Ute two was that Rogers' oP:
'pooed further study of a route anywber•
within city limits and supported tht
bill without amendment.
Parsons was not specific on the mat:·
ters of restudy or amen~nt to the
bill.
While all couhcil members obviously&
favored the intenls of the resolution, only
M11yor Ed Hirth and Councilman ' Opn
Mcinnis expressed concern over what
the community could expect with the
deletion of the freeway.
"We're tryina to plan now for a solu-
tion in the future," Hirth said. "The'
physical traffic problems have to be
(See FREEWAY, Pqe !)
tr tr *
Freeway Section
Deleted at Venice
A bill designed to delete the Pacific
Coast Freeway between Marina del Rey
and the Santa Monica city line Wf.S
approved Monday by . the S e n a t·e
Transportation Committee in s.acramen--
to. · • , ·
William Hashimoto, desiin engineer
with t.he State 'D!ViSion of 1Ugliway1
Division in Los Angeles, said the bjll
is similar to pen~lrig legislation in-
trodliced by Assetnblyman Ro· b e r t
Badham (R·New'port Seach).
the bill that cleared the Senate Corn--
mittee would delete the freeway tn the
. Venice area. Badham's bill seeks ~o
delete the portion of pie same freeway
that would be routed through .NeV(port
Beach.
Badham noted he was encouraged by
the commlttee's approval Of the Veniot
blll. He has asked for a hearlna cal
hl! bill On Monday.
Sen. Randolph Collier (0. Yrek') who
Is the chairman of Ule committee,
historically bas supported •tron&iy the
state freeway system.
ln previous cases he ha s opposed any
lnW:rvention by • the Legislature in
alignments adopted by the. Stale
llighwlll' Commission.
!
'
-r
• ~·
\
I ~l'I' l'.ILOT N
' ' .. !-clt1 Sttu111
f \ . ---Airport, Bay
-' TopP~·ohlem List
, Orlnc• County Airpprt is the lop priori·
ty )robltm fachlg the Harbor A~a.
followed by ·the controversial U.PJ?'r
Newport Ba.y llod swap io the opuuon
of one local leader.
Costa Mesa Mayor Robert M. Wllsoo
delivered hll oplalon Monday at a
mt<liing of the Hamor Area Coordinating
Council whicb also featured his Newport
Beach munterpart. _
"A.Tale of Two Cltlea," waa the tiUe
· of the gusk>n al the Costa Mesa Golf
ud Country Club.
Schools, libraries, ud regiOoal goyem·
ment were lllo mlllllcmed by Mayor
Wlllon while Newport Beacb Mayor Ed
Hlrlh ;.id that in re-~ It II lucky
Ille two c!tlea didn't merge II yean ......
p....,.p .. eJ
ANNEX •..
oorpocated into Newport Beach.
'Ille announcement hardly affected
couocilme:n who Aid they w_ere primarily
conctmed with taking .over the airport
in order to regulate its activities. .
Hopkins noted ooe of the points in
favor cf tbe Collins annexation was that
the corppany leased the proPef'lY ln 1?59
with the upressed idea of becoming
part ol·Newport Beach. •
He me.nUoned a "long atandlng moral
commJtment" made by the city eDd
ttie Irvine Company when Collins moved
to the area:· ·
"This commitment is based on the
right of sell detmnl.natioo," be said ..
Watson li.ter stem>ed lo the microphone
to say "l know of no .~or~l commltme~t
made to anyone on the ·lrvme Company s
part," and urged counc:umen t o
r~nsider their 'tiinlng In light of !:he
November bearings on the proposed city
of Irvine which would include Collins.
"Mr. Watson, were you with the Irvine
Company· when the lease was negotiated
in 1958?" queried a poker.faced Lindsley
ParllOD!.
Wauon joined the firm In 1960.
• Councllnwi Carl Kymla ._.ked Wai.on
If the land development company would
tab anY legal action to block the an-
neJ.atlon.
· "U You choose to proceed witbollt
fegard tO the Umelfne.ss of the November
heal!J.g1 of our master :Pia.JI be!~. ~e
fOUllly: planniJli CO~iOl!J all 1'~ c:&ll
da is .to become dd'enslve and pro~t.''
Watso1dofd councilmen. . .
Afttr the annenUon· wu 1pprowd.
Watt<¥> '""ai/!fd notbnblii;. ~. "The matter~ BUii' has-to go pre
LAFC and the Irvlnt Company 11 still
the fee holder on the property," be
said.
Air California
Claims New Item
Cutting Jet Smog
Air Calllornia bu installed e~ ex-
haust smoke elimination devices on the
first of !ta Boeing m aircraft, 1ccording
to Robert W, Clifford, vice president
and general manager or the airline.
"Cost of the modification program to
the airline's siJ: aircraft Is estimated
at $l50,000," Clifford said. The kits will
be installed on the craft when they
are overhauled and it will .take "several
months" to romplete all of the aircraft.
"1be cost of the smoke elimination
program is nominal in comparis(>n to
the tangible benefits to the communlUes
which Air California serves," Cllf!ord
said, "and more Importantly we have
to be good 'clean' _n~ighbors to ~11-th.e
citizens who live near the airports we
serve."
DAILY PILOT
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CO.II MDII D Wo11 lly 51rwl ~ IMClll m P.IW•I A•-MIMtlfltlerl '-'"t 011$ IMCll lllll .... I,. lflll ClsftlellMl al Nwtll £1 c .... ir. ll ...
I
A SPfClal coDll'hittee led by auto dealer
Tbeo ltoblns probed the possibilities of
a merger &Jld the cities went their
separate ways, wb.ich he said bas worked
to mutual advantage.
"11le number one problem today, in
my opll:OOD,-11· Orange County Airport,"
said Mafor Wilson.
"We have suggested the possibility
of a joint 91'ange County • San Diego
·regional a'lrport somewhere south of San
Clemente.'' he explained.
•·we have formed an Airport Com-
mltie< whicb ;. stricUy aon(>OllUcal ud
composed of. eJ.tnmely kJ!owledieable
men.'' ·
Mayor Wilson said while Newport
Beach citizens may believe Costa Mesans
llimewbal ims)'mpatheUc lo their posl·
tJon, this is not the case.
"While you .are ccmtanUy beiflg a-
Posod to U,. takeoff problem, we are
coostanUy being exposed to the landin&"
problem," he explained.
De~omposed
BOdy of Woman
Found by Police ·
The partially decompmed body of a -
secretary was found in a Huntington
Beach apartment ~ooday JDO!ning alter
det.cUves wore' al<ried to her comlnued
absence trom WOrk. .
Clad in only a negligee, she wu
discovered in Apartment 3t of the
Mediterraaean, 401 AUanta . Aven1te,
around 10:,W JiID· 1•
Police l&id there wu no evidence
of foul play surrounding the mylterloul
death but a4ded that they, have been
unable to decide whether the death wu
natural, 8cddentai' Ot 1 sulclde.
Homicide Sp. Monty McKeMon said
the woman -agecll 31 and divorced, has
been idellWlad bol utod that b<>r Identity
be • wttliheld unUI the next cif kin bas
been· nouned. . :
"'l'biel:'e· Wll enough fadaJ l'HelDbl.anee
Jdt • Identify ' btr from pictures," nkl McKnnon.
MclCeonon flltlmat.e1 the woman died about 10, 41Y1 · ~. He AYI. he ,,.,
nolllied .~ thO McDonnell Douglu _,;,, ........ ;, ........ the woman's a~nco -="il'-=iiiii· .,...,.,, . . ~ "'• ' . lroril. ei: • • • ·Although an aUtopsy was conducttd
lliooday oliht by the Orang< Councy
Coniner'J olfice, the cause of deal.h will
DOI "be dlijemlned' ual1l the resulfl ol
certain toxin tetta m available.
1'tt 'fW be about one to two week!,"
said Coioner'.1 investtgator H a r, o I d
Minick, addlnt! that he is trying to
locate the WOQ\ID'I rellUvet.
The woman's' ~ll are dead and
she lived in fottei-homes all her lile,
Minick said.
House Aproves
25-day Breather
WASIDNGTON (UPI) -The Hoose
has voted itaelf a 25-0ay recess starting
Aug. 14 but the Senate, with a backlog
of pending legt.slatton, plans to continue
meeting ·most of that Urhe except for
a five-day Labor Day weekend.
The House expected by tonight to have
completed action on all but one of 14
regular, annual appropriation bills and
most major authorizalion bills. The
Senate has approved only siJ: aJr
propriaUon bills and is behind on many
auUwrizing measures as well. .
The House plans to take a vacation
until Tuesday , Sept. 8, the day after
Labor Day, after Its Friday, Aug. 14,
. m~-Senate leaders decided only
on a recess from Thursday, Sept. 3,
until Sept. 8.
Toro Bank Thief
Grabs $2,000
A man who warned a bank teller
by note that he had a gun and wouldn't
hesitate to use it took $2,000 from the
Et Toro branch of the Bank of America
late Monday.
Bank employes and witnesses told
Orange County sherifrs investigators
that the man, described IS: being in
his late 20s and wearin.g a military style
jacket, fled throl.iah a aldt. door leading
into the bank's parking lot.
O!fiCers saJd tbµe ~u no 1et away
vehicle seen -by bank erftp~yea or
customers.
Zambia Pr()testors
Storm British Post
LUSAKA, Zambia (AP ) -Hundreds
of students, mainly Africans from the
University of Zambia. stormed the
Brill.sh EQ\beSsy today, hauled down the
Unio.1 Jack and tore It to pieces to
protest Britain's plans to sell arms lo
South Africa.
Police dlspt!'1ed the students wttb tear
g1s •nd afreeted five. Studtnll com-
. plained of being beaten by Police and
11ld they were determined to dcllver a
protest petition to the 1-ligh Commtsslon.
'
Tot to Tadpole
E'rotft p_,e ~
FREEWAY •• ·I
I
solved and solved on f1cts, not wfahes
or dellte." •
Some llternaUves outllnK by the
m1ya< lnch!ded dcvelopnont ol artertaJ
hllJ>way1 lo lead' Iha baacb city Iran
Ill in!and freeway at the clty11 expense,
A llmlter plan ta beJnc used In Laguna
Beach, he said. .
Mclnnls Slid with" the pa!Sage of the
resolution and ultimately the Badham •
bl11 the ''work will really begin to find
a solution.
"The most impoctant as::et of the
area, far ahead of the bay and beaches
is tile people. And for that reason, J
have to suppof1 Councilman Rogers'
resolution," he said.
* * * Huntington Pair
To Join Lagunans
To Map Bill Fight ...
llunt!n&ton· Beacb •Ollt two delegates
to 1Laauna Beacb today for a conference
on Aalemblymsn Robert Badbam'•· bill
to delete 'a Segment or the Paclffc Coast
F{eeway.
!lhe meeting was called by, Laguna
Beach MaYor., Richard. Goldbera: to
discuss me of combattlng, the
Newport Beach I I.or's bill.
1Both HuntinftoD ch and ·X..una
Beach are the ~11ure,
deslped to the freeway at
A:dams Avenue' untington Beach and
deleting it fTom port Beach.
City admlnls Doyle Miller and
pubUc works ector James· fibeeler
will represent -ntington Beach at the
2 p.m. parley in the Laguna Beach
mayor's office. .
Wheeler told councilmen: Moo.day J;lleht
that be did not expect the bill, ..iwcli
cltared the Assembly, to pass the Senate.
"It appears that the portion of the
freeway will not be deletei:I , but it will
still take some followlni up:" the traffic
engineer sald .
Wheeler added that he understood the
bill could not go before the senate
Transportation Committee until Mcriday,
July 27 at the earliest.
The City of Fountain Valley has passed
1 resolution opposing Badham's measure,
Monday night the Newport Beach coun-
cil backed Badham, with members
unanimously callina for the state Senate
to pa!!I the bill to keep the freeway
out of the city limits.
YMCA swim Instructor Linda Brannon points the
way for Kurt Rbodenbaugh, 8 months, as be plunges
into Ot\1µlge Coast YMCA's Mqrns and Tots swun
progrMI. His' motlier: Mrs. Rolier (l'l,ll'Y) Rhoden-
baugh of Corooa de! Mar (In pool), says Kurt swun•.
well under water, but is still trying to master swim·.
ming on top of the water. Information on the Moms
and Tots program can be obtained by calling YMCA
pool man,ger Bill Chunn, 642-9990. . ..
From P.,e I
EMBEZZLE • ••
against the pair to authorities.
··~om P.,e J
NIXON •.•
been upset but the movement of Soviet
weapons and men to the Mideut to
man the weapons causes this country
cOncern becfit11t 1 conUnuaUon could
tJp the scales.
He said anrui escalaUon, particularly
the use of troopa in the Mldeut, In-
creases the risk 0£ a confrontation
neither side wants.
"That is why we are putting such
emphasis on our peace inltlatJve. That
is why we have not announced any
sale of planes or delivery to Israel
at this time because we want to give
that peace initiative every chance to
succeed," he said.
Nixon said he wouldn't and shouldn't
speculate on how high unemployment
might rise or how strong he thinks
economic recovery might be this year.
He said at this point the nation ~ is
at a watershed of economic policy -
the reason for his rather .strong state-
ment to Congrw last week on its record
oI appropriating and spending money .
"When the American people learn that
the big spenders in Congress are prim.ari·
Jy responsible for higher priCes, and
eventually even higher taxes, I think
that the American people will turn on
the big spenders politically."
On other topics:
-Campus Unrest. NlJ.on aaid it would
pot. be news to conclude one way to
bring peace on the campus would be
to bring pea~ lri Vietnam. But he said
he was not sure it would bring campus
peace.
-Defense Cuts. Nixon ;epeated that
while he has shifted much spendirlg from
defense to oondefense programs It is
unrealistic to suggest money for big ,
new domestic programs can come out
of substantial defense cut.a.
-Family Aid. Nixon said the chances
of his family assistance wetrare rtan
getUng through the Senate are .fair. .
-Education Bill. The President said tt ts $400 million above his budget recom·
rilendation and that is unacceptable. But
he said be hasn't decided to veto the
biU and he hinted he might be nble
to make up the amount from other
programs.
Lt, Gen. Odd Bull
Leaves Mideast Post
JERUSALEM (UPI) -Lt. Gtn. Odd
null of Norway chief of the U.N. Middle
Eas-t Truce Su~rvlslon Organization, wlll
retire July 31, U.N. oU\clab sekt Mood1y.
Bull ha! worked In the Middle Eu!
, for the past seven years.
The United Netions f)as not announced
who wUl 1ucceed him. Tbe deputy chief
of the truce oblerver1 lJ Maj. Gen.
Ensto Siilasvuo ot Flnland. ,
Burglars Rifle
,, 'r_,
Trunk I I
Take $8,000 in Satchels
A Lpng Beach carnival owner who
collected $8,000 at the Orange County
Fair in Costa Mesa gambled MoDday
by leaving It in two satchels in the trunk
of his luxury car -and lost.
Norton S. Alevy reported the car miss-
ing from his driveway Monday afternoon
about 3:20 p.m. and Long Beach police
quickly found the vehicle parked four
blocks away.
The cash collected by concessions and
rides of AUas Greatest Shows, however .
was missing from the trunk when h~
examined It.
Mrs. Sylvia Alcvy told police the car
was definitely parked in the driveway
about 7:30 a.m., while a woman con-
tacted near where It was found said
about 10 a.m. she saw two men going
through the trunk.
-r
Police Lt. Charles Harmen saJd ahe
mentioned s e e I n g the two A tchels
transferred to a second vehicle in which
they drove away.
Premier Salazar
Remains Critical
LISBON (UPI) -A medical bulletin
said Monday night the condition of
former premier Antonio Oliveira Salazar
remains grave although a kidney in-
fection is clinically under control .
Salazar, 11, suffered a cerebral hemor·
rhage in September, 1988. He was ad-
mitted to a hospital Wedne9day with
the kidney Infection.
"We've traced it .~t .IO far to 1967·" .Ji l'Stric\land, .6unl 1h8rt~oitfi. !~~
plant controller for five years befor1
he quit last June to take a job wilb
a Los Angeles company.
SlriplrJ~d said.· ~ could not reveal
detaill '." oI how the alleged misap-
proprlalion.s were discovered, since thi1
would be prosecutiOfl material.
Koster's preliminary hearing was set
for July 30 and Strickland said his female
co-defendant would be required to appear
on the same date.
He did say Mrs. Schlocker's job in-
volved the handling of sums of monej
wed to pay the company's bills.
Strickland said Master Specialties
Company i8 primarily an aircraft part.I
manufacturer, but that It has built com-
ponents for the Apollo moon rocket31 such as il'lstruments and control panels.
Questioned about the size of the alleged
embezzlement, the veteran forgery detec-
tive said it is one of the largest in
his memory, but recalled the $24,000
theft case more than 10 years ago.
He said the FBI is still hunting Robert
L. Turley, a bookkeeper for a Newporl
Beach firm who dropped out of sight
and was i:;ubsequently charged with grand
theft.
GRAND OPENING SALE!
We are pleased to announce
the opening of our second store
in Tustin . We hove purchased
"Red Hill Carpets" and the new
name will be "Alden 's Red Hill
Carpets & Draperies."
• IN COSTA MESA •
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Pl1c1 ntl1 Ave
Phon1 646-4131
In conjunction with the open -
ing of our Tustin store, we have
seve ral spec i a Is in our Costa
Mesa sto re. Please come in and
see us.
• IN ,nJSTIN e
ALDEN'S
RED HIU
CARPETS e DRAPES
11374 f. Irvin e
Phone 138-3344
VISIT OUR ENLARGED REMNANT ROOM AT OUR COSTA MESA
STORE. HUNDRIDS OF REMNANTS AND ROLL ENDS.
',
I
'
' .• ,• 1---.• • ..
, (;osta Mesa
VOL. 63, NO. 173, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,•CAUFORNIA TUESDAY, JU~Y 21; 1970 . •
• . ..
• . ' esa 1rm c eme
Newport Backs Bill
Badham Lauds
Freeway Move
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI lflf D&llY ~U.I ll•ff
Assemblyman Robert Badham today
declared a resolutioo passed Monday
night by the Newport Beach Cily Council
supporting his anti-freeway legislation
win have "a great effect" on the passage
of the bill through the Senate.
The Newport resolution, introduced by
Councilman Howard Rogers, calls for
Senate approval ol the bill without
amendment. Council approval was
unanimous.
Badham's bill, which passed the
Assembly in late June, would delete
lhe secticiv. of the proposed Pacific Coast
Freeway from Beach Boulevard in Hun-
tington Beach to the Corona de! Mar
boundary.
Badham said today he was pleased
with the official support lhe city has
given his effort!.
''When the on1y city Inv o 1 v e d
unanimously backs a bill without amend·
ment, you can bet that will have a
great effect on the voting," he said.
Badham said the prospects for passage
of the bill "look good." He has asked
for a Senate Transportation Committee
hearing on the proposal on Monday.
Nearly 70 members of the Newport
Freeway Fighters were present MoDd.ay
night when Rogers and Councilman
Lindsley Parsons each Introduced a
resolution backing the Badham bill.
The most significant d i f fer e n c e
between the two was that Rogers' OJ>"
posed further study of a route anywhere
within city limits and supported the
bill without amendment.
Parsons was not specific on the mat·
ters of restudy or amendment to the
bill.
(See FREEWAY, Page I I
Newport Council Pushes
•
On Collins Radio Annex
Newport Beach city councilmen Mon-
day night voted unanimously to slart
annexation proceedings on Collins Radio
Company property near Orange County
Airport after proponents and opponents
of the move asked council members
for definitive action on the city's future
boundaries.
Following the annexation vote, coon·
cilmen then decided to take in the Orange
County Airport and the balance of the
Irvine Industrial Park west of Jamboree
Road In their proposed future boundaries.
Both items are scheduled to be filed
with the county Local Agency Formation
Commission today.
Black Youths
Get License .
To Sell Candy
A third South-Central Los Angeles firm
teaching black youths fundamentals of
private enterprise through~ door-to-door
candy sales has been granted a Costa
Mesa city business llcense, bul with
some criticism.
Grover Goodwin, of Boys With a Future
Inc., went before cowictlmen Monday
night seeking the permit which v.•as
recommended for approval by Finance
Director Robert Oman.
'Each young salesman will be required
to carry a distributor's card issued at
the time of the license.
Councilman William L. St. Clair,
however. asked for a discussion of the
matter, questloni'llg Goodwin about how
persuasive his I~ to 18-year-old sellers
get. "We don·t believe in pressuring peo-
ple," said Goodwin who represents the
third such company now licensed by
CN!ta Mesa. St. Clair said he has been getting
complaints from women who feel the
black youths are using their color and
the se'l'lsllivity attached to it as a selling
point.
"I'm not sure it Isn't partly In their
heads." he said, but noted Costa Mesa
and the surrounding communities 1are
predominantly wh.ite.
"What are you going to do? Tum
down a colo5ed boy?'' he said.
Goodwin 'said hia youths will be sellMg
Peter Paul brand quality candy and
are anidous to comply with council
wishes.
"What time is curfew?," he asked.
11When do you want us to stop?"
Councilmen said the policy has been
to cease the sales at dusk or a little
alter.
"I opened my door one night and
there was the most beautiful set of
while teeth a-.ld eyeballs .•. " said M11yor
Robert M. Wilson.
"I i&ld : 'There 1nusl be somebody
out Lhere, and he •aid 'Right be.re,
Sir," the mayor r~marked. •
Councilmen heard brief testimony
from Robert Johnson, Collins vice presi-
dent and Roger S. Hopkins, Co\lins cor·
porate manager of real estate, both
Of wh-Om called for an end to delays
in the case.
Irvine Company Vice President Ray
Walson originally asked for a delay so
that city represe ntatives could discuss
the boundary matter with Collins and
· Irvine oficials.
When il became apparent that only
Mayor Ed Hirth favored the discussion
idea, Watson too asked for a decisive
action from coUJlcilmen.
The Collimi leasehold from Irvine is
located on a 177-acre triangle of land
bounded by Campus Drive, MacArthur
Boulevard and Jamboree Road.
City Planning Director Larry Wilson
told councilmen annexation of lhe parcel
could bring a total annual revenue to
the city of $110,000 which could reach
a total of $288.000 with development
of the industrial property .
Wilson said the total annual expense
to the city would probably start around
$35,500. reaching $60,750 with develop-
ment The net recurring annual benefit
to the city would be $75,000 and could
climb as high as $227 .000.
Hirth noted the Collins annexation is
not as controversial as the proposed
annexation ta the McDonnell-Douglas prGo
pertY lying to its north.
There is no rone change involved in
the Collins case and the longest property
line where Collins abuts MacArthur
Boulevard lies adjacent to existing city
boundary. The proposed McDonnell-
Douglas annexation only touched city
boundaries at a 11mall point.
The Collins annexation as well as the
future baundary outline c.ould have a
disastrous effect on the Irvine in-
corporation movement by robbing the
proposed city of Its economic plum -
the industrial 00.se.
Watson , who also spoke against the
ambilious baundary plan, noted that
(See ANNEX, P1ge ZJ
Nudie Dancer
Court Date Set
A hearing and trial have been set ··
for a Costa Mesa dancer charged wit.6
lewd conduct1 and indecent exposure.
Sharron Katt, 21, is free an $62.5 ball
' while awaiting her pretrial hearing Aug.
13 at 1:30 p.m. In Harbor Judlcial Dis-
trict Court.
Sbe is scheduled to go on trial Aug.
18 in Division One of the same coort,
after pleading Innocent to the misde.
meanors.
Miss Katt waa arrested at the--Fire--
house tavern July 10.
A rulin& by Orange County Superior
Court Judie Robert Corfman forbidding
police to make such arrests were
overturned earlier that day by the Fourth
District Court 'of Appeals In San
Berna rdino.
. '
DAILY P'ILDT ........ IW •ldl1N KMllltT
Tot to Tadpole
YMCA swim Instructor Linda Brannon points the
way for Kurt Rhodenbaugh, 8 months, as he plunges
into Orange Coast YMCA's Moms and Tots swim
program. His mother, Mrs. Roger (Kathy) Rhoden·
baugh of Corona del Mar (in pool), sayS Kutt swiins
well under water, but is still trying to master swim·
ming on top of· the water. Information ·on the Moms
and Tots program can be obtliined by calling YMCA
pool man!lger Bill Chunn , 642-9990.
Mayor WilsQn Sees Bay,
I . ' ! I .
' ' ' '
Air.port. as Ttip Problems .
Orange CoWlty Airport i& the tbp priori4' Beach ctUzens may believe Costa Muans
ty problem f:tctng· the Hirbor Area, somewhat uniympatheUc tO their posi·
followed by . the Controversial • Upper' lion, this is not the case.
Newporl Bay land swap ' in the .• oplnion ~"While you are constantly beiag, ex-
of one local leader. , J)Oled to the. takeoU problem, •w! are
Costa Mesa Mayor Robert M. Wilson conatanUy being exposed to the: landing
delivered his opiniOn Monday al a 1 • ptoblem," he ex'plabw!d. ·
meeting of lbC Harbar· Area Coordlnatlng
Council which alSo featured his Newport
Beach counterpart. Bra'ke'less Aul". ''A Tale of Two· Cities," was lhe title · U
of 1hc ;cssion at the Cosia Mesa Golf
and Cou ntry Club.
Schools. libraries, and regional govem-
ri'lenl we.rt also mentioned •by Mayor.
Wilson, while Newport Beach Mayor Ed
Hirth said that in retrospect, it is lucky
the tWo · ciUes dklll't merge II years
1go .. · •
A special committee led by auto de1ler
Theo Robln1 probed tbe possibllJUes ' o(
a merger •and the cities went their
separ~te ways, which h~ said has worked.
to mutual advantage. .
"Tbe: 'number one problem today, ln
fl\Y opinion, ls Ot'anle County AJtport,'"
aaid Mayor Wilson.
"We have suggested the possibility
of a joint Orange County • San Diego
regional airport somewhere aouth or San
Clemen le," he explained.
"We have formed an Airport Com.
mlllee which is strictly nonpolitlc1l and
compnseC or extremely knowledgeable
men ."
Mayor Wilson 1aid while Newport'
.. . ,...
·I~ jilres Youth ·
A car hurtlilli down Superior Avtnne
at' Pacific Coa1t Hlahwiy near NeWport
Beach apparenlly lost Ill brakes today,
atri.lring arid l/tJurina a tee(lage pedea-
trian. ' : ht ';~ ~~~~ved to ,~ ·auious~
, , ~ulhortties at Hoa1, Memorial Hotpiti.1
• ldenllJled. tho vlollin' ol ihe 11:111 1.11\, ac-
cl~t Iii Cr•!r w. Smith, ~7. of ~!Ms
Anaheim Ave:, Costa Meu. ,, •
He waa being checked over ooe bOur
later in the h<apital <tmergency rgorn' and
.listed in good condition at th1t lime:
California Hiahway Patrol officera Jn.
veatlgated the accident which apparently
occurred In 1 strip of unincorporated
land below lhe bluff.
-• Tfte name · of the woman driving the
car wu not lmnledl1telji al.U.ble.
Defense Battle
111 SlOcuin Trial . . . . ' . . '
Leads wDe~y
A growing conflict over wh'at d.tfel\Se
.attor~eY ·ia to repreRnl accuierd baby
Jdlle~. Dr. Wesley G. · Slociun Jool Iii!
Orange County Superior Qiurt trial on
~urder cQarges led to. a.delay Monday.
· The 43-year-old former surgeon, whose
hands were crippled by a gurifighl with
·Sinta Ana polite' four years · ag'o. is
sch.eqUleA to return to court July 28 -. ' . ,
for ·• hearing on his defense plans:
Paul Augustine Jr., ooce a neighbor
in the Mesa Verde :Sectidn: of Costa Mesa,
has been designated ' Dr'. Slocum .. 1· al·
torney of.ricor_d bqt lhe .accused .p~ysl
cian is bitterly opposed lo him.
·He want.!J attorney Michael Gerbosl
instead, but AUIU$tine has already been
paid •nd hls would-~ s.uc~r .tnd.icate.d
last week he should be retained through
AUgusthtt. · ' -· . ' ) · , ·
Dr. SiOcum, who is cll1r1ed wllh the
• dlonienlbertnent miirder ol hit dou1h'ter
Cynthia In 1964. when abe was abOJt
thre~ month1 old. will have a rW.w trtal
date ,&fit whtn he gota to court next
week.
He .Jlaa been lielil 1l Oranp Counfy
Jall wllhool bail' since parts ola blby'I
body were found cut up ind neitlf
pack•&ed tn butcher paper in 'I frft~r
remoyed from the famUy'1 vacated
hotile. ·
•
Today's Flaal
N.Y. Stoen·
TEN CENTS
Pair Held
In 3-year
Cash Losses
By ARTHUR R· VINSEL
OI tM, Dlllr Pl_, Stiff
A foi:mer aerospace plant oontroller
and a woman supervisor have ' been ar·
reSt.e<1 Oil ch'arges they embe!Zle!i $18,oOO
over a. period of thr~ yeai;s; Costa
Me~.polke revealed Monday.
lnvest.tiators aaid It ia one of the
largest such cases they can recall in
Orange ·ri>ast induStry, but knew of a
$24,000 case a decade aga in which
the suspected bookkeeper ia sUll free.
The pair. charged tn the' cue tnvOJviag
Master Sepeclalties Company, I 9.4 O
Monrovia Ave., are accuted of three
counts of grand theft each.
Carl M. Koster, 40, of 2921 Catalpa
St., Newport· Beach, was released 1ina.11y
Monday on '12_.500 bail after being ar-
rested Saturday ~t his home. ' .
Mrs . Ethel R. Schlocker, '26, of MQ2
Danb.ury Circle, Huntington Beach, was
taken into · custody Friday at the plant
on her final day of work after 1ubmitliq:
a resignation ..
A supervisor in charge of disbune.
ment, she was booked into Orange C.Ounty
Jail aJld released on the aame bail
figure shortly afterward. · •
Detectives Jim Strickland and ...Jaa
Gultaveson worked the: c• . for about
a ,_)ftek before submitting el'idenci
atainst the pale to authorities.
"We've traced It back ao far to 1917,"
Aid SlricklaM, llOUhg lhat Kotter WU
plant controUer fOr five years before
be: qUit last Juhe to take 1 job with
a b:ls• Angeles oompany . ·
Strickland· aiJd he could .not reveal
details of hqw the alleged misap-
propriations were discovered, since this
would be prosecution material.
1 Koster's preJiminary hearing was set
ror July 30. and Strickland said his female
eo-defehdant would be required to appear
on the same date.
He did say Mrs. Schlocker's job In-
volved the handling of sums. of money
used to pay the company's bills. ·
Strickland said Master Specialtifl
Company i.9 primarily an aircraft Part..
manufacturer, but that it has built com·
papents for the Apollo 'moon ~ll,
such as instruments and control pane~.
Questioned aOOut the s.ize of the all~ed
embezzlement, the veteran forgery detec-
tive said it is one of the largest in
his memory, but recalled the $24,000
theft case more than 10 years ago.
He said the FBI is still hunting Robert
L. Turley, a bookkeeper for a Newport
Beach firm who dropped out of sight
and was LUbsequently charged with grand
theft.
Detectives traced Turley to a point
from which he escaped the United States,
at which time Strickland, then a warrant
detective, turned the case over to federal
authorities. '
He said Turley is now-wanted for
in_terstate flight to avoid prosecutiop.
Israel's Tourism Up
JERUSALEM (UPI) -Israel's
Tourism Minister, Koshe KOi, said Mon-
day the nation's to u r I s t business i.s
booming despite the Middle East struggle
and Arab guerrilla attacks.
Orange Coast
"'ea tiler
. Mostly fair thrQUJli Wednesday
says the weatherman. Little tern·
perature change b ex~ted with
hlgtis reaching to the ntnties. Some
night and early rnonllq: low clouds
are also predicted. ,
INSWE TODA l'
, Orart.ge c;~ste~a are doi'(l_{f
; their 0 "fhinO a~roqd """i helping 1
1o!h.ef".t ratlltr tho" Jpfeoditig
the "ugl~.American" image. See
stories in the South Coa1t Plaza
1eciion.
cltflttrol11 '
_ .. , .. ,.
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I IWLY Pll.OT • c
0 •
Peeple Will Rule
"
President Vows
'IJ.lll!IJNll'fON (AP) -)'resident Nix-
an. "1• the future eovernment of South
Vietnam must be oele<:\ed throug~ elec-
Uoas -·not Jmposed on the war-tOm
MUoa by negotiators ln Paris.
Bil admlnLstraUon will not stand for
an imposed coalition govemment , the
President Mid. "It must: be a government
seleaed b,r tbe people of South Vietnam."
In '• ~ranging newc conference
Monday, the Presld.enl also said he would
veto a bill setting mandatory quotas
on any imports e1cept textiles. Such
quotas, be aa1d. are not ln the natioMI
interest ad mlgbt .eet off u m.
tematJooal trade war.
The Houae W1y1 and Means Committee
bas Pf'Qposed quotas on shoe and tutile
lml>QM.s.
Bf:)'.ond Vietnam and import.s, Nixon
ranged over a number of topics at the
$ll'pl'iae news confertnee.
He said the United States has no
idea .or using anned forces to expel
the SOviet Union from the Middle E8.$t;
promlled no "vlgtlant. squad of Depart,.
zpent·Gf Jllltice agents" will force school
Integration In the southi predicted voter.s
will ·turn against big spenden in
Congraa r forecast an economic upturn
for the last ball of the ~ar and said
be aeet lltUe chance of a tU cut durhig
the nut two yem.
'!be President announctd plans !or
• maJor 'meetin1 On national defense
and the defeo.wi bud(et at lbe Western
Whit. H-July 27, followed by con-
re..,.,.. .., the domestic buqet f., n.c.1
1972. .
l.n ruling oui any imposed coaliUm
govunment Jn Saigon, Nis:on said be
has no significant disagreement with
South Vletnameli. Pre1ldent Thieu ia
this regard. But he said the United
States &!ill ii willing to li.9ten to .any proJIOUll made by Hanoi . at the Paris peaco talu.
:The .rJ>resident was In an amla ble,
-., mood at time• aft.r he ~
Pftll-..tarJ Ronald L. Ziegler'• alt.r-
nooo.:. )>riefing in the press quarters at
the WhJte Houae and con verted it into
a neWJ: conference in h1J qwn office.
'!be "ochool deaegrepllon queltionlng
centered around aiticism o f ad.
ministration policy by Sen. Strom Thur·
mood (11.s.C.), In a Senato speech Fri·
day •.
• Thurmond, jumping on wbat he said
were arbitrary and dlscrlminatory ac-
-by the =atioo, cited UU...ts Iii t111 ·m-.m 111 pr1v1i. ochoou
eet up to-:.perpetuate · ~pgaUoa and
wbat be t.rmed a j>n>pooed_ Invasion
of carpetbagging J\llftlce J>epartdlent la.,..•-lo1~cHilt.gralloa ol
public llCbools In tho South.
·Nizoo said Thurmond objected to an
action that bas not been taken ·and
there is no intention of taking -.. that
is ol ..Oclini vJiilant. 11quads, In dlect,
,. . '
frorn the Justice Departrntnt, lawyers,
In to coerce the Southtrn acllool dJ!trlcts . . . . '
tO integrate."
The give-and.take on Souttiern ·k:hoo l
problems followed the switch ~arlier lo
the Mideast. A rtporter asked for
clarificaUon of N~'s approeches to
problenis of1the aru and Soviet move-
mart tben. '
Nixon reca.lled having said in his July
1 television conversation the U.S. interest
is peace and recogtrlUon of the sovereign-
ty and iodel!CiX!"'"' ol every oiat. In
the area.' ·
He said the. power balance has not
~ upsa but -~ moyemen~ ol Soviet
weapons and men to the Mideast to
man . Ule , weapons causes . this . country coocttn · becauae a· continuation could
tip•lhe scaJeS. ~
lie aa1d arms elcalaUon, portlcularly
tbe .... Of troopt In the Mldeait, fu.
creases the riak of a coofront.alloo
neither side-wants.
"That is why we ~ putt.inc IUCh
empbuis on 'OW' peace ~ve. That
ls why • we have not announced lllY
sale ·of plaoes or delivery1 to Israel
at this time because we wapt to «1ve
that peace initlaUve every chance to
succeed," he said.
Nizon said he Wouldn't and shouldn't
speculate on ho'# high unemployme~
might rise er how strong he thillks
economle . recovery might be tb1' year.
He said at . thia point t.be • nation is
at a watershed of economic policy -
the reason for his rather strong state-
ment to Congress last week on llJ rtCOtd
of appropriating and apendlng money.
"When ~ Americm people learn that
the big spenc1er .. 1n.c:ongW "'' primari. ly responsible for higher prices, and
eventually even higher tue.s, I think
tltlt tbe AmerlCQn people will tum · oa
the big lpf!Qders ,poijUcally."
On other topia:
-Caplpu5 Unrest. Nlzon aaid Jt would
nOt be news to conclude one way tb
bring peace on the campus would be
to bring peace in Vietnam. But he said
he was not BUl'fl tt would bring campus
peace: . . '
-Dtfeme' Cull. Nisoo 1epeated that
wblle he bas lhlfted much IP'Jldlng from
def-to --programl It ii -to _,. money fnr btr,
new ...,.,,.,c Jll'Oll'IDl! can come GUt
of lil1lotantiaf llefenso 1culs. 1 -Family Ald.,ljls~ ~-the chahces
of Illa family ap1'tance weUare plan
getting thf.<>Ogh the Senato.Oft fair. .
• "-E<!Ualllon Bill. '!be Plealdent aalcl
K' bi 1400 ·hUllloil abovt ·bll balget ,....,..
mendatlon and that Is unacoeplable. But
he utd he hasn't· decided to veto the
bill and he blntecl he mla!!I lie obi•
to malie up the amoun:t flOm other
proarams. •
Burglars Rifle Tr,~nk
Take $8,000 in Scitchels
A Long Beach camlval ownef who
collected 18,<KX> at the Orange County
Fair in Costa Mesa gambled Monday
by )~ylng it in two ~atchels ln the trunk
of hil luxury car -and loot.
Norton S. Alevy reported the car miss·
ing from bis driveway Monday arternoon
about_ 3:20 p.m. and Long Beach police
quickly found the vehicle parked four
blocks away.
The ca.sh collected by concessions and
rides of AUas Greatest Shows, however,
Was; mis.sing from the trunk when he
examined It.
Mrs. Sylvia Aleyy told Police the car
was deflnlte.Jy parked in the driveway
I
DAILY PILOT
OAMGI! COAST ,U.llStll'IG CQM,AM'I'
le~el'f H. Wee4
""-'""' .... l'llltlllW
Jee• l. c,,,.,.
t Vite ""-""'' fMI 0-fl M.,.....-..
Th•'"•• IC11•!1
ri. ...... 'A. /ilyr,l.in•
M-olllt S:lllW
c.... .... otm.
JfO Weit itv Shttl • • #il1 IU111 M41e•:l .O. l•a 11•0, tl•J4
H.-t a..cfi": nn wftt ••lbe1 ltv!l"'l•rllll
L'°"'"' ._.,,: Ht ""'"' ... ....,..,.
"""'...,.., ~i 11'171 auc11 ewle<il•••
S.lt ~It: J05 Hwtll l!I Cemlnt fl:NI
about 7:30 a.m .. while a woman COD-
tacted near where It was found said
about 10 a.m. she saw two men going
through the trunk.
Police Lt Charles Harmon said she
mentioned s e e i n g the two satchels
transferred io a second vehicle in which
they drove away.
Sister Cities-
Nice to Have
But Cost Money
Lots of sisters.can be nice to have,
but big families can be expensive,
especiolly when they vi.lit back and forth
under the international sister city pro--
gram.
Bethlehem. the birthplace of Christ,
is qc>sta Mesa's sister city and City
Councilman William L. St. Clair asked
Monday night about obtaining mort.
"Big families are nice," he explained .
"That gets expensive," obServed Mayor
Robert M. Wiloon. .
ije.said Costa Mesa hasn't apent much,
but primarily because no funds have
been available tQ pay a friendly visit
ta Bethlehem the way some other sister
elty leaders do.
Councllmao st. ClaJr suggested probing
the possibility . of adding sister cities
in a spirit of international goodwill and
the mayor said he will tnve.dlgate
thrpugh the California League of CtUes.
El\1PACT Dinner Set
In Costa ·Mesa Park
· The Emergency Prepar~neu Action
Communication Tea01 (EMPACI') wW
sponsor 8 Potluck dinner at Cosla Mesa
Park Thursday: at 8:30 p.m. 'fhe evtnt
.is. belnr held to welcome: arrlviric
members of the Motor Coach AssocilUon
who wlU be' holding th~lr conven!lon at
the Qr•nse County Falrgroo.nds. ,
Coffee a11d soft drinks \\'ill be provid~
1tte: cr'Charge and lhe publlc Is invited.
Aizyone d~sirlng more information should
cootaclJ:farry Pennington nt 842-t:m.
•
DAIL.Y PIL.OT Stiff .....
. _, .
ANNEX .. ;
' I
/Jger(ID Ph~utlcal, V o o r h e I s ,
Trindle and Nelson, Parker Aircraft,
Dana LI.bl, q_.e Irvine lnduslrlal Office,
Xero• and the AJfporw Inn bave all ~ they. do not wish to become In·
corporated into Newport Beach.
The armouncement hardly affected
councilmen who said they were primarily
concerned with taking over the airport.
tn order to regulate its activities ..
Hopkins noted one of "the points in
favor of the Coijlns annexation was that.
the company leased the property in 1959.
with the expressed idea ol becoming
part of Newport Beach.
He mentioned a ''long standing moral
commitment" made by the city and
the Irvine Compa1'1Y when Collins moved
to the area. "Thll commitment is based on the
right of self determination," he said.
Watson later stepped to tht: microphone
to say "l know or no moral commitment
made to anyone on the Irvine Company's
part," and urged councilmen t o
reconsider their timing in light of the
November hearings on the proposed city
or Irvine, which would include Collins.
"Mr. WaboD.t were you with the Irvine
Company when the Jease was negotiated
in 1958?" queried a poker•faced Lindsley
Parsons. ' ·
· Watson joined the firm in 1960.
Councllman• Carl .Kymli asked Watson
it the land development company would
take any legal -acUon -to block the an·
ne1ati011.
Burned Out in Newport "II you choose to proceed Without
regard to the ·timeliness of 1.he November
healngs of our master plan before the
cOunty planning commlsslon, at! we can
do is to beeome de~·ve and protest,"
Battalioo Chief Billy Thomas .inspects wreckage of
1970 auto burned nut during garage fire Monday
evening at 1509 W. Balboa Blvd. Firemen said no
one was injured in the blaze, which destroyed the
car and other contents of the g ,. ge. Total damage
was estimated at $8;000. Building is owned by
Claude G. Edwards, according to firem,Jn. Cause
of blaze was not immediately determinffi.
Watson told council .
After the annei: was approved,
Watson remained obtimistic.
.From P .. e l
FREEWAY •••
While all council memben: obVioutly
favored the iqtents of \he reaoJuUoa, only
Mayor Ed Hirth · and Cou.nqlm.an Don
Mcinnis ·expre.ued concern Ofer what
the community could expect with the
deletion of the freeway. •
"We're trying to plan now for a 10lU·
tlon in the future," Hirth said. "The
pilys.ical traffic problems have to be
solved and aolved on facts, not wishes
or.desirt."
Some alternatives ouwnec: by the
mayor included develq>ment of arterial
highwoys to feed the beach city from
an inland· freeway It the city's etpeDSe.
A slmllsr plan ia being used In Laguna
Beach, he said. _
Mc!Mis said -with tbe puaage of the
nsoluthln and ultimate1y the Badham
bill the "work will rWly begin to find
• sollltion. ~ '
"The most Jmportant aatet of the
area, far ahead of the bay and beaches
b 1tbe people . ..And for th.at rea!IOJI, l
bl.ve-'rto1 support OOUDcilmu. Rosen'
reolution," he aaid.
* * * Huntington Pair
To Join Lagunans
To Map Bill Fight
Huntington Beach sent two delegates
to Laguna Beach today for a confennce
"" Aascmblyman Robert Badham'a bill
to delete a segment ol the Paclflc Cout
Freeway.
The: meeting was called by Laguna
Beach Mayor Richard Goldberg to
discuss methods of combatting the
Newport Beach legislator's bill.
Both Huntington Beach and Laguna
Beach are opposed to the measure,
designed to terminate the freeway at
Adams Avenue Jn Huntington Beach and
deleting it from Newport Beach.
City administrator Doyle Miller and
public works director James Wlieelet
will represent Huntingt4?0_ Beach at the
2. p.m. parley in the Laguna Beach
mayor's office.
Wheeler told councilmen Monday night
that he did not· ezpect the bill, whlch
cleared the Assembly, to pass the Senate.
"It appears that the Portion of the
freeway will not be deleted, but it will
still take some folloWitli up," UR traffic
engineer slid.
* * * Freeway Section
Deleted at Venice
A bill designed to delete the Pacific
Coast ·Frttway between Marina del Rey
and the Santa Monica city line was
8pproved Monday by the S e n a t e
Transportation Committee In -Sacramen-
to.
William Hashimoto, d~ign engjneer
with the State Division of Highways
Divlsion ln Los Angeles, said the bill
· ts similar to pending leglilation in·
troduced by Assemblyman R c b e r t
Badham (R.-Newpnrt Beach).
The bill that .cleared the Senate Com·
mlttee would delete the freeway ln the
Venice area . Badham's bW seeks to
delete the portion of the same freeway
that wOuld be routed through Newport
Beach.
Bad.ham noted he was encouraged by
the commlttM'a approval ot the Venlce
b!O. J(j has aslte<I tor a hearing ot
hi~ bill on Monday.
Sen. Randolph Collier (!)..Yreka ) who
ts the. chairman of the commitlet,
hl,torlcally has supported strongly the
tlate freeway syslem.
ln previous cases he has <1PPosec. any
lnlen'@nlkm by' lilt Legislature in
alignments adop ted by the St1te
Highway Commission.
Mesa All States Festival
"The matter stUl has to go before
LAFC and the lrvine Company is still
the ree bolder on the property,'' he
said.
Scheduled August 16 Air California
Claims New Item
Cutting Jet Smog CoMa Mesa Mayor Robert M. Wilson
•iln«t a proclamation Mooday declaring
Aug. 16 Ille date f<r the city's All
States FestJvaJ, a day-long event to be
Mesa Planners
Discuss Parks
A roview of priority pn>ject.s In Costa
Mesa parks developme..t and in analysis
~ ~•Uooal needs through the year
2000 Is ocbeduled tonight by" city ofl1claij.
Leaders will meet at 7 p.m. ill the
poll« department -torlum to diacuss
the cnllinunlty'• maat•r"J>lail of parU. ·
Since seating ta Hmited and coun-
cilmen, plamlng commissioners, and
others will participate, there will be
no room for the public.
Mayor Robert ~. Wilson said he plans to conUnue such meetings, on a variety
ol topics, every other month to establish
better communication among th e
organizations involved.
Zambia Protestors
Storm Brilish Post
LUSAKA, Zambia (AP} -Hundreds
of students, mainly Mricam from the
University or Zambia, stormed the
BriUsh Embassy today, hauled. down the
Union J ack and tore it to pieces to
protest Britain's plans to sell arms to
South Africa .
Police dispersed the students with tear
gas and arrested rive. Students com·
plained of being beaten by police and
aaid they we.re determined to deliver a
protest petition to the High CommWion.
staged In Coota Mesa Pork.
Formerly called the Old-Timer New.
'nrner Pk:nlc, the summertlme fielta
will feature helicopter rides, food booth!, Air California has l:tstalled engine et·
band music, folk dance performers and haust smoke elimination devices on the
prizes for the o1d~ and youngest. first of its Boeing 737 aircraft, accordln'g
A spaghetti diMer will hlghlight the to Robert W. Clifford, vice president
festival, which is jointly sponsored by and genera] manager of the airline.
the Women's Divisioo. of the Costa Mesa "Cost of the mOO.ification program to
Chamber of Commerce and the Jaycees. the airline's six aircraft is estimated
or. Hilda McCartney, women's division at $150,000," Clifford said. The kits will
ul1 be installed on the craft when they president, arxi Don B • cl the Jaycees, are overhauled and it will take "several are co-chairmen and announce that months" to complete all of the aircraft. children may sign up now ror a free "The cost of the smoke elimination
helicopter ride. . . program is nominal in comparison to
They may regtster at Cahfonua the tangible benefits to the communities
Federal Savm~-and . Loan, 2700 Harbor w1ictr Air. California serves," Clifford ~·• ~~ ~ ~t tq ~I ~-1 11aid1 .. ''and 'lll(lrt 1tm~Uy we haVe .... ..,t'per 1 ~-• • • , • , to be good 'clean neighbors tO all. the
A new feature will be ottered this citizens who live near the airport! we
year by the Calif<rnia Professional serve "
School of Medical and Dental Assistants, ·
the awarding ol $300 and $ 2 0 0
acholarsill.p5 to qualified applicants.
Interested young women may sign up
at the school, 1895 Newport Blvd., but
Aug. 16 is the deadline:for reJistral.ion.
THIS PRAYER.
GETS TO POINT
'Ibe lnYOC8tion was brief and to the
point. as Rev. John Gollnick assistant
minister ol the First Assembly of God
Olurch asked divine guklance and
wisdom for the Costa Mesa Council
Monday.
"He prayed .a good prayer," observed
one member of the rongregaUon a short
time later when councilmen unanimously
approved a wne exception permit allow·
ing ttie church located at 14' E. 22nd
St., to expand · its preedKlol enrollment
from 50 to 125 ch.IJdren.
.
House Approves
25-day Breather
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The House
has voted it.self a 25-day recess starting
Aug. 14 but the Senate , with a backlog
or pending legislation, plans to continue
meeting mast of that time except for
a five-day Labor Day weekend.
The House expected by tonight to ha ve
completed action on all but one of 14
regular, annual appropriation bills and
most major authorization bills. The
Senate has approved only six ap-
propriation bills and is behind on many
authorizing measur~s as well.
The House plans to take a vacation
until Tuesday, Sept. 8, the day after
Labor Day, after its Friday, Aug. 14,
meeting. Senate leaders decided only
on a recess from Thursday, Sept. 3,
unlil Sept. 8.
GRAND OPENING SALE!
We are pleased to announce
the opening of our second store
in Tustin. We have purchased
"Red Hill Carpets" and the new
name will be "Alden's Red Hill
Carpets & Draperies."
In conjunction with the open-
ing of our Tustin store, we have
several spec i a Is in our Costa
Mesa store. Please come in and
see us.
e IN COSTA MESA e
ALDEN'S
CARPns • DRAPES
1663 Pl~tt1 Ave
Phono "46--4tll
e IN TUSTIN e
ALDEN'S
RED HIU
CARPns • DRAPES
18374 E. Irvine
Phono 131-3344
VISIT OUR ENLARGED REMNANT, ROOM AT OUR COSTA MESA
STORE. HUNDREDS OF REMNANTS AND ROLL ENDS.
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~OL 63, NO. 173, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ·ORA NGE COUNl?f, ~tlFORN(A ~ ; ,', ' ' .
f • t ...... ' ' -t • '
TEN CPll'S . . ~ ''"
,,
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I I ' ,I ' 1 ;., " • 1 f ' • • ! 1 , t' I J
Nixon Change·s S~_yle of Clenlent,e "Vacations ·.
;;! .. \, .. ~... • ..' J,, • • . • ·.. < • r • • • • • ' '.
By JOHN VALTERZA ·
ot tM Nlly Plitt 11.tf
President Nlmn seems to be changing
hi1 styl~ for visits to his seaside vUla
In San ·CJemen~ -fbcusing More on
Jo.day WOrking visits, Instead of the ·
expecl.ed repe1t of hb month-long 1tay
of 1811 August,
The second such I<Hiay visit this sum-
mer will start Friday when the Chiel
E1ecutlve, Mrs. Nixon and daug_hter
Tricll Oy in fOr 10 days in the sun
People WiU Rule
and l<>pJevel conferenc., and a bu!)'
workload.
And Presa SecroWy Ron Ziegler 11id
Monday that yet 'another lo.day stay
is forecast 'for mid-August.
Last year, a few months after the
President 1 bought the former Cotton
Estate, the President moved in for an
entjre month, bringing the cabinet, other
aides and hundreds of Whi\4 House
worker!.
But ainct: then the Prisidenlla~ vlsitl
President Vows
No Viet Dictums
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on says the future government ar Saulh
Vie'tnam must be selected through elec·
tlons -riot imposed on the war-tam
nation by negaUators in Paris.
flia administration will not stand for
'
Fralid Spree
Suspect Says
Not Guilty
A self..sty1ed expert on banking and
finance who police allege launched an
international fargery apree from San
Clemente entered a plea of innocent
Monday to the felo;ny charges in South
Orange County MurUclpal 'Court.
The suspect, Darrell Graff Hafen of
Salt Lake City, Utah, will appear In
the same court next · Monday morning
at a preliminary hearing to determine
If the «-year-old traveler should face
trial on the charges. The hearing will
&tart at t a.m.
Hafen, arrested after months of
laborious tracing in several countries
by San Clemente detective . Leonard
Goodwin, is charged with passing
thousands of dolTBrs in worthless checks
fu the U.S., Lalin America and Europe
after an initial alleged incident at lhe
San Clemente branch of the Banlt o!
America last May 4 and 5.
The college graduate in finance was
picked up early last week as he, his
wife and their four children arrived
In Los Angeles from Costa Rica.
Hafen, who also was helci initially
on federal charges of flight to avoid
prosecution. was formally charged with
the San Clemente alleged forgery in
municipal court last Thursday.
He was granted a delay unlil Monday
for enteMng a plea. .
Goodwin followed lhe mn via teletype
and letters on 10 different hops from
country-to-country.
an imposed coalition government, the
President said. "It must be a government
selected by the people of SOuth Vietnam ."
In a wide-rangihg news conference
Monday, the President also said he would
veto a bill setting mandatory quotas
on any imports except . texWe.s. Su~h ·
qu~ he iaid, are not· in the national
ititereit and· might .et off-an . l:n··
t.emational trade war.
The House Ways and Mean• Commltttt
h11 propoaed quotq ·on llboe And textile
imports. ·
Beyond Vietnl!m '"°d imporf,s, Nilon
ranged over a nwnler of topics at the
surprise news conference. '
He said. the Uni~ Stat;e1 has no
idea . of . using . &rJlled force1 to expel
the Soviet Union trqm the M.tddle East;
promised no ' "vigilante squad·of Depart-
ment of Jlislice agerits" will fdrce school
integration in 'the aouth ; predicted voters
will . tum against big spenders In
Congress ; .forecast an economic upturn
for the last half of the· year and said
he 11ees litUe cliance of i . t'ax · cut during
the nert two years.· · '
The President an~ounced "Plans for
a major meeting on na'tional defense
a.nd the defense budget at the· Western
White House July 27, follQwed by coo·
ferences on the domestic liudget for fiscal 19'12. '
In ruling out any imposed coalillon
government In Salgon, Nixon said he
has ~ significant disagreement with
South Vietnamese President Thieu In
this regard. But he said the United
States still Is willing to listen to any
proposals made by Hanoi at the Paris peace talks.
The President was In an amiable,
breezy mood at time.s af{er he usurped
preg secretary Ronald L. Ziegler's after·
noon briefing In the prw quarters at
the Wbite House and converted It into
a news conference In his oWn office.
The school desegregation . .questioning
centered around .criticism of ad-
ministration policy by Sen. Strom Thur-
mond (R.S.C.), In a Senate speech Fri-
day.
Thurmond, jumping on what he said
were arbitrary and discriminato.ry ac·
!See NIXON, Page ll
have.,,. been mare condensed and· ftiU~ ,
more active.
Duiing the most recent stay the Nilons
interrupted a busy . official scbf(dule for
a galai visit to a niece 's wf!!ddin& ln '
Newport ·Beach, followed the next day ,
by a · precedent.-setting flight to · quake-
ravaged Peru by Mrs. Nixon. " ·
The Chief Executive conducl.ed the
first-eYer appolntplent of a e1binet
member outalde of Washington,• D.C.,
durin~ that past slay -the sw,wing·in
•
af,.the new secretary.. of Labor-James · ·and idurirll· the most rec:ent , voyage to
Hodc•o. , ~ · .. ' 1 , , San Clemente Mr. NiJon. 1 e e.10 e1d
'Thal, COil piod . wilh ,.theo ... earinl in. . ,.pec1any exuberaal 'aljout .)lie ()!'&!Iii.
ol three other top aides, a vi!il by Coast sun 1nd balmy breezes. •
the Romanian Foreign Minister and talks When he accepts lol>level visitors, the
on domestic ·Ind · foreign ·affairl ·Wlth ~ villa '• pool is the mtst popu)ar"fY~Ung
his ' top · •idea: ~· ab8851dora.:made ~rea ~ dwing a receptl~ ror.~n.
the lost •l•lt Alfllcularly 00.y. and aldea "'4 lrilll!I< lhf' Pre11dent
· 'lbe · sumnier -weather in the · natioill'.1 s'eemed. eveD more house-:proud ' th"in1
eaplt1I~ wlildl 1l1tmuggiy 11nd u.· tvei-,'aourc!:ssaid. '· 'i ·
comfortable, obvioua)y. is ,a faclor. in ' : "He. kept Wing u1.1 to ~e·, walka
the rapid-fire, ~dentiaJ 'viaita here, around the croundt and 1ardens. ·and
( ~: ' . ' ' .,
Heljled . "!~!ally, """"' and ~
this · time of his 'home, the .1'Qtber
1nd the entire ,vtiit;" one.l'Jtlt, ~.
today.. ' ~ ' . •
. The While !!ouae pr<11 COIJI& •l!iill
fol1Qw1 Uit ractrziliilstf.uoit jaUlle 1~
i ga,g&"le' seem ~ wftb'tbe" or;p,.·
CQast qi~nt' ~ 1Well., ; •· ' ..,
It'• a ~!or~ --·to
doff Suit coltJ.anil llet l<>·~i-Uk
(See \llllT,.~ I) ".~ ...
l.o • • ·1n ·a, r . . .. '
' -· . '' l . :· ! ,
. '
" ..,. '. • • • ' ,.., J l • ··''
~;.;.:. ... : ,..,., .i.....'.il-.. , ; . ,, • . . ' r • ; ,, •.
"
' . ,
I I\ • .. : •. ' . , I . _..
I I' , _;,I!·.
"
~ ~ ;/
~.,,..,.., __ .. . ~,. ~ .
' \. t • .. ' • 1 i1 ~ 1'.,-ewMMlr•. . .. . .· {.
' ,r I ' ,, . ' , \ ... ' • • ·~r-' . • ,
Paintings-by Al~andro·RaJigeh llidaJi.,_.e.pomJIYi · '-'llitU• Biqi,.~'lftdor" and "LitUe ··Fi\iii-i\rendor." '
ed in this panel during 1970 Pagl!"nt .. ol tlie ).f~ttrs : Moctf;ls .,are (frpm left) :Juall Evans aild' Salidy •.
· in •Laguna Beach. Living pictures include (from Baker qf. Lail!P• aad .Donna .apd .Cjay. Hut!e~ Qf,
· l~ft).. 11Going .'to· Market," ·"LltUe Flower, Vendor,''.· El.Toto .. 1 .. ' • •• ' • '. < ,' , •• .ri ' : .
. ' ' '
' '
Building.· : .· ·Pkiiinl'ng· •· .Urili ..
' ' I I ' •,
. ~ I ,
D.• . . w· La .. nu ivis~on · . i~: . -· g~~:v~~·
By BARBARA DUARTE
01 1tM1 0.Hr ,.,... Sflff
Plan'ning Camniiss~ni ·stamped ap:.
proval on division of tagun8 · Beach
building .and planning departments Mon:
day night with a Warning that adequat~
staff is essential to smOoth enactment
of the plan. ·
Repiying to Councilman P e t e r
Ostrander's reorganization prop o s a 1 ,
planners forwarded recommendations to
the City Council.
Commissioners proposed a "distinct""
separation of building and planning
departments with a directo; for each,
responsible directly to the city manager.
Duties of the planning staff will be
to direct all varjances, zone changes,
conditiopal use permits and site plan
and AL.5 reviews to the Board of Ad·
justment or Planning Commission.
Pre])aration of staff re~rt&. zoning
amendments ~d precise planning studies
also fall under the jurisdiction of plan-
ning.
Building will be responsible {or ad-
mirislraUon and .enforcerilent of~
~d. • loillng' · r't_g\Jla~ons; 'housing t'OO~
and special coodiUons of approved
. v~i8¥'s'Or cobditiooal use pe'rmit 'a'P-
piJClltlons. •
. ~ander!s bid1 to enlarge the ,Board
ol Adjus~i;it ~ five pro(easional men
was revised to 1e1clude st.aU• membera
fl'(lm voUng statu11 while retaining the
present memberShip of th!te.
• Planners further ,greed that me.m:
bership quallfiCation should ·not be so
rigidly defined that it ' ties ' the ma)'Or's
ban~ .In ~leclion, of board· members
of any partk:ular ba'cltground ..
· "In Ule .op,lnlpq of the, P.llrmlng Com-
mission,'.'. wrote Conyr\i~qn Chalrl'l}an
,Willlilffi LambQhrne, "a~e . reti)m·
meodaUolUI · will provide a 1 dillinct
'clepertmental separatloo )"ith clear
fespon.aibllity to tff~t.'ively and ef:
ficiently aerve'the p..iblic.
: ' '' ' . . it's .· Apple . P~ie,· : : .·
I • , / I ' • "
A d .F , .. · z · n · .estiva . ' ·
' ' . . ) ..
For ·.Vetb~ns·'
' ' . ' I !
Nearlf ioo disabled veterans ·and other
~icem~n .w:ei:e . treat~ ~ndl.Y, riflh'
lo a· Cried . fhlCken , dinner ' p.n"d ~rh~
ipple pie · by the Joc8I post .m'. Of 1 t\i~
American Ugon · and lheri were1gue1ts
of the FesUv~I of ·Arts to see the Pa'gearit
ol the Master!. · · ·
Such an evening la hel~, ~a~ '.Y~
by the American Legion, the Veterans
bf Forel1n War1,. and the ~W Auxillafy
in cooperation with the Festiv1J: n.
post provides the home tooked meal
and the FesUval donates the ticket.a
to the Pageant.
The disabled veterans come from the
Veteran's Administtatlon .H°'l>ltrid · ln.
Long Beach; transported to • the 1 Art
Colony by lbe A).nerlcan . R~d . Crp~.
~ other servicf.men are J under •trtat~
ment at the Naval Hospital at Cami>
·Pendlelon. . . . · : .
' Many of the men have served · in
the Vlelnam c~nhi.Ct, ·sQ~ering · cotnb8t
'
. '
G .. ' ·;.~d;·Jnry' :=.:~ ra.u.· . . . . ' . . ~ .
. ······:·~· ·•c·· .. Acti 611 · 2-.. ,:·
' • • ' T' • ..
~ r • l
· · •l< 'l'OM 114Jll.ft· •· I 'I ,.. .. ..,,_ .... , ' . , ' I l ) ' , FiVt1JH1li'.llll liake4 to Ute·"~ cult."
-ill.if&°'-• ~on. YMe~ ~ ......
,-? \1W ~lij'l!<l~\\"~ ~c 1~ ~~ ... ~·~ !l'fl!'Unler
-... bf.'ther Qranp, , Grlllll
JliF'j.' f1 ,• ...• 1
The ,...i ...., -tioio· ol ·jlyrinp
by J.aldtlDiltti>llloi C. Hurd, ID, Henna
H~T•1i.-.tr: -·tramients ud
Cbrit!GPber ~1n .aibbqney, 11 <i
Poklk>cl, Oregon,' wllb the \ ~ al
Mrt. Florence N.;.cy lfrowtt, II, of El
Toro. . •1 r
· 'ArtnUr . Crall r HulM, . JI~ ·ot Gtrden
Grove, TaYlor a.nd Hurd m aJao dwpd
jvJJh, ~·m~.oi Jttfy. W!yne ~ru!'o
II,. S,.La /.l(a !"fYlce:atallj>n;a~
· Mellllie "MM.r,Danllla; 31!, of ~ta
Ana, ii char&ed wtth,bllni1an aocenor.,
in ~ llluf~~~ .sht '11 ~~y ~lnl
a ~Y. l<:Dlo\';e • tn C)r,II)P Co1m!7
Jail oo:a•narQ!>tlct vlola\k\n. , , .,.,
· P'our <if ·thi . flve 'peroona iftlllcted wW
lie arraillfte<j Jltir today belott ·Supi!jo<
eo.1t .h\da·~UJl"' ~. J!Jdle. 'Ille.•
by ·dlalrlct Altoniey .t.lco Jilek& 'rel.Ova
the .. ~ fiom the inunlclP..l·ciiurt ~vtJ.
· HiCU·. hia · uked OregQn · a~uK.ntie1
I<> eX]led~ettridltton'pioce<dl!lp whidt
would enable them · io return Gibboney . . ' . . . . ' . to 0ta114e, eoupty . to 1 ~tand • trial. for
the murder ot·Mn. B~~n.... 1
Mrs. Brown's llodY>J" minUS'' ita 1¥ilti
lunp and right anri, and 1 ~Jing r:nWU·
pie slaSh wound1 waa f0tmd Jut June I~' In a' •hallow irav .. off lhe Orieci
!Upway. . ·
In...,ligalion of the , killing o'led ·to
reports w)\lch have l1nce bee,n subltln-
tlakd thaJ,. ~ wom1n was the Yl~Um
o[ satanic orgies before-•!id .afte{ !.~
death.
C1rlin was hacked and, b1u41eo"'1f to
death and dumped 111'1 , the washroom
floor or bis 16Yice atatloa last JU£1:1
2 In a rob&ery that provided a ~il
of less lhan $100 for hla atl>cUra. . f
Hulse -and T17lor were cerUfWd -..
adulla 1Jf tenns of 1he • murder o11U1'-!
earlier UU week in a 1m<We• designed
to tnsurt their · LtK:Ju.,, on the lll'apd
And during ihese trips, Goodwin charg-
ed Hafen spread a trail of bogus <:hecks
with thousands of dollars involved.
No indication has yet come il the
11everal foreign banks involved will file
charges against the traveler in their
home countries.
Hafen still Is being held on $31,500
ball on the local felony charge.
Newport Boosts Route ·Bill
casualU~s.
' '
General Te~· ~~
•New .Rare .~o~t '.
·F~r ''Earl:Y 'ltelief
jury lndlctnlenl.' : · ·
. • . ' • ' ! ..
' 0r .. ,.. I' . I . ... C...t
Bail on the fed eral case was set at
$1.000 on the day after Hafen's arrest
No members of the man's family ha ve
betn held, officers said.
Police Seeking
Raput Identity
Orange County SherUf'a lnvestigator1
are t.od~ looking for clues to the idenUty
of a man who raped a 16-year~ld South
Laguna girl al knifepoinl. · ~ victim told offi<:trs that she wa1
offered a ride Sunday night by a man
wbo picked her up on South Coa1t
Highway in Laguna Beach. .
'Ille girl sakl lhe man, dtlcr1bed a.1
king about 40 to ~ years okt, then
drove htr to a secluded area ne1r
Monarch Bay and raped her.
The victim said the man then drove
hu to a streel near her South Laguna
home and ordered her to le1ve the car.
I
Badh":m Says Resolution Will Affect Senate Vote
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of tilt P.llY , .... Stiff
Auemblyman Robert Badham today
declared a resolution passed Monday
nigh! by 1he Newport Bead! City Council
llUppor:ting his aqtJ.freeway legislatJon
wUI have "a great effect" on the passage
of 1he blll lhrootfh 1he Senate. '
The Newport reaolullon, lntrodU<ed by
Couocilman Howard Roten, calls for
Senate approval of the bill without
amendment. Council approval w a 1
unanimous.
Bacl!.am's bill, which 'J>assed the
AASembly in late June, would delete
the sectJon of the proposed PaclU<: Coast
Frteway from Beach Boulevard In Hun-
tington Beach to the Corona del Mar
boundary. .
Bidham Rid today he was pleaaetf
with the official support the clt,y bas
given his effort.a.
"When the only city Inv o Ive d
f
unanimously backs a bill wilhoot amend-
ment, you can bet lhal will have 1
great effect on the voting,'' he said.
Badham said the prospects for passage
of the bill "'®k good." He hat asked
for al Seilale 1'ransportatlon Committee
hearing·on the proposal on Monday.
Nearly 70 members of the Newport
Freeway Fighters were present Mond1y
night when Rogeni ind Comuftlmin ~
Lindsley .Paraoas. ,each Introduced a
resolution baeking'the Badham bill. l
The most "lllfliflcant difference !
·between the two was' that Rogera' o~
posed further study or a route anywhere
within city lfl'JllLI and supported I.he
bill without amendment.
Parson.. was not specific on the m•t·
ters of restudy or amendment lo the
blll .
While all C9U~ll members obviously
fa vored the intents of the resolution, only
Mayor Ed HJrtll and Councllm,u DI>•
Mclnnis o:presaed concern over ~h•l"
the community · could expect with the
deletion of lhe fr"'llY.. , ,
"We're trying to plan now for a toJu.
tion In the future,'' Hirth · said. '•lthe
physical traffic problems 'ha.ve · Jo tie
10lved 1n~ :solved ' on' f1eta1 not! 'V}shee: or dealre. .. • s.,ne· .alluoaUves outUnee ~Y th<
mayor b)cluded devek>pmen~ of 1'rteri.al
·hi1hw1y1 1<> ieed the beach 'city fnlill
!111 .Jnliad 'lneway at-lhe cft)"("P!ft'"·
'A !lmllar plait la Ji<in( uied. In l.q)Ja&
'Belch,\ be a.aid, •I • ' I ' 1 l
, ·Mclnnla said with the P11Uite (If. the
·re901utl00 •nd ulUmalely !ho Badbam
· blll 1he "-k wlll really befln I<> find
• solution.
"The mo.it Important auet of the
area, far aliead of the bay a'lCf beadles i• Ille people. And for' lllat 'l''°"i I
have to support C.oun¢lman .Roser11'
rffblUtlon," he aald.
'
Revising . i~ 1appllc~Uon., ~ the
C1\ifornla Public Utilities ·Cornmlalon
'for-• tale increase .. to off.Ht. erowinc
•operaUh1 cl>sts, Gehera~Tolephoae Com-
pany o( California hH 111\td fpr .• ".early
relief'" In the amoonl of flil.5 mHlloo. ,
The amended reciuest will not chan1e
1he compaay:'i total ieqUtst for'loc:tilie.a
·M;o<mting lJ ... !llilllon, acconlJnK •lO
·Rtch•rd C:Ol\llOn, vJce:pre&tctent .. +.,l
Genera) 'Telepliono now. la IOOlllnc :lo
Jnc:Teaae either toll and' m\lldmeseaie
unit ratei.. or local aervfcc ratee: to
obtain· r<Ud In the lmOWll ' nquested.
This IUJ>Pl•nts an earlier request ftr
permlslion to make "early relief'' lo-
creuea In 1he ·amount di' 12l.l mUllon.
whkh was Included In the general •l&-
cre11e application flltd 1 with the PUC vn
Miy II.
•
-, ...... e.r ' . . , ' ' ! • MOlllY, fair •throillh W-aj''
.. YI Jhe, ')<tjl\benniB. Little tem-
peralurt' chonce ' ;. apecW wllhJ
h11hl r<achl~the nlnetiel, Sonie
n11ht &nil. ear momln( low clolidl
1realaop -i ·• .
IN8DtB T9DA Y
>I ' I : ~ 1
onmg< • Coan.ti art c(oing •
'!heir llllllg allroad -helping •Ill•" 1'ltllcr '""" •prffd/ilg ;tht•"U01¥' Amtric0-11" f'NJQI. See
1torif1 in tht1Soutll Coast P1am lf!Ction. ~t ' 1 " . ,_ . _ .. .
c........ ... .. -" c........ 11 ==..:-= ?
•nMtll q•l '"?! ,.... .. =-=-1:
-
(
I
SC -T....,, .M111..1'10
' t1o111 by lllo odm!DlolraUoo, dtod threata
to tho tu cumptlon of privata tchoots
Ill up to WJl'luale" oelf"11Uon and
wlit .. --• ""JIOPOl'd ... _
of ... ~-·De...,-t
lawyers to """"e forced litt.gratlon of
public ac:hoota In the South.
Nixon said Thurmond objected to arr
action tbat his not been taken and there ta no lnt.ntion of takln& -•"lhat
ls of 8end1ng vi$Uante squads, 1n effect,
from the Justice Department, lawyers
in to coerCe Ute Southern school districti
to lntqra~."
The glvHlld.take on Southem ICbool
probi<m1 followed the switch earlier to
the Mideast. A reporter asked for
clarUJcalkm of NiJ:on's approaches to
problem&· al the area and Soviet move-
ment there.
NlxOfl recalled having 1aid In hi• July,
l teievlaloo. conversation the U.S. lntemt
ls peace and recognition-of the soveretp.
ty and lDdependence or every state 1D
tbeuu.
lie ~ tbe power balanct hu not
been upoet but tbe movement of Soviet
weapom and men to the Mkteut to
man. the weapons ca~ thls couiltry
concun 'becauae • cootlnuaUon <ould
tip the scales.
He said anna escalation, puticularly
the .,. or troo.l" 1n the Mideast, ln-
~ues Jhe risk Of 8 con!rofttation
neither side wants:
"That ti wby we are putting 1Ucb
empbuil on oor . peace. 1nltl.aUve. That
ta why we have oot announcad 01l1
sale ol. pla.Des-or dellv~ to hi'Ml
at this time became wt waot to give
that peace trilUaUve every chance tO
succeed," he aald.
Nilon said he wouldn't and shpuldn't
1peculale on ~ htgb unemployment
rnJgbt rise or JK>w strong he thlqks ec:o~ recovm-IJ).1ght be tb1I year.
He aald at tllll pcilnt the naUon ta
at a watershed of economic policy ' -
the reason for his rather atron1 state-
ment to eon,ress last week on lls record
of a-iallng and l(Jllldinl """"'7.
,. "Wbeo UH. Amerlcll. people lWn that
the bi& 1penders In .~· are priniarl-
ly responsible for higher prices, and
eventually even bi&her taxes , I think
that the American people 1 wUl turn on
the 1111. lpeDden ·polltlcally l'
On other topics-: .
-<:ampuz Unrest. Niuo aald It would
not be newt {o conclude one way to
bring peace 00 the caniput would be
to bring peace In Vltlnom. But he said
he Wu oot sure tt '""'1d brlnl campus
peoce.
-De:fenll! Cuts. Nilon • epeated that
whit. he hu shifted much 1pendln1 from
defenoe to nooder.... programs It la
unreallatlc to suggest money fot bl1,
new domestic progriirul c.an come out
d. aubitlDUal clef..,. cull. ,.
,.,.... P ... l
VISIT .. ~
local climate. One oil>« factor In the repeated ahort-
term v\slts, tome IOUl'cel have aaid,
ta the worry that dirilonJlratlOOJ · •1.alnlt
the admb)latration policy In the lndodl1na
war m!lht ;_,,. In San Clerntni. H
the Nb<oos maln)ajned .~ for the .
enUre month of August.
Some top IOUl'Cel have lndlcat.ed C9Q-
ceni about .900\e dlasellter activity next
month and a conclusipn could be reached
that the sborl, ·busy vilfla could ·curb
chancel for ~ 94v1nce orgaoita·
lion by leaden.of dlAl.dellt.puipa.
A huge 1ntiwar demonstration occurred
near the Western White House during
the NJxons' prolonged August vacation
last year.
ThWI far no indicadons hive been
made public that aimilar occureoces
were planned for this .com)n& August.
made pibllc that slmllar occurrences
near "the gates of the estate dUJ year
was the brief visit by a ltlf«Jled woman
candidate for the U.S. Senate who ap-
peared the day of the Pre1ldent'1
departure.
0 Send me to the Paris peace ·talk11,11
proclalmed a banner attached to the
mlnilklrted redhead's ptn~ paraaol.
She left suddtnly When a aummer
thun<lershower dompontcl· the clllllll and
lace on ber outfit.
DAILY PILOT
.....,.,,,__. M.-1 .......... u.-. ..... ........,~. C......... hllCI Its
Ou.NG• COll4T l"U..._IJKING COMP'MIY
ao9t rf H. Wot•
l'rulM\I Mii ,.~ltlw'
Jttk ,,_ C111!1y
Viet f>m!oMI 11'1111 G""'al M....-
lM11111t ic ••• a
E•1i.r
1lio1111•1 A. M11rphi~•
._..tip l.Cllllll"
Alcll.•tl '· Nell "'1111 O,_o Callnlt fdllW .......
c. .. ,._., no 'IW" ht '""' ......,, .. lCIU 911 .... , ..... , ""'-f"f L. ........ ...._. tltl'-1 ... _
"""""'""" ~I 11171 .. KJI tMr.oeNI 1M1 C:liMll'ltot JN ,.....,.. II C:_ .... fl•I
(
'• Capo €uts AlloWed Tax
S~lwol. Tr~teeli -Shave Override Amount ' .
II)' 7~;·~ Will bl JllYIJia Giily I.! ..... · ...... ·-Tbe tu nductlon ..... .u • 21<eftt
• • ..., .,... -they did lut )'elf. • 1 decrtMe tn permllllvt laxes and a 21).
Clplstrano Unllied School Dlstrlct Superintendent Truman Benedict saJd eent reduction In the allowable so.cent
t.rusteea vot..i WJllilmously Mqnday Dl&hl that tight budgetary cootro~. a reducUon tu override.
to reduce the pulnllstble · ta1 rate by ln permlasive ta1es, interest on unsold "That would · 9tllf leave-ua $5M.5ql
47 ceata. bonds, and a 19.1 percent incrtaae In ln our undistributed rell,l'Ves," Nid
'lbia:· Qlel.hl that property owners who assessed valuation bad created surplus Benedict.
voted lo 16tcb for a 50-ee.nt tax override funds. He recommended retaining $300,000 In the ,...... fund and spending tbe ...
Weekend Thieves Loot
Laguna High Equipment
More thin 1t,110 -u. o1 IOWld equip.
mtni, muCh of tt new, wu stolen from
tbe LafUDI Beach Hl&h , S c h o o I
auditorium. over the weekend by ap-
ponnUy aktlled burJlar1, pollce reported
today;
"It's complete1y sickening -they
clea-ned the place out except for the
lpeakert mounled hilh OD the walta
and now they're not connected to
aaythlnc," aald media coordinator Ra1·
Bagglrd, l.n cbarpi of the school'•
tecbnfcal equipment. He discovertd the
burglary Monday morning. listed u mlulng are two amplifiers,
Including a portable one used in the
football stadium, eight microphones, a
aoOnd mixer, a turntable and a speaker
from the stage wall.
The ampliflcaUoo equJpment, Haggard
sajd. wu brand new, installed during ,.... ""°'-d. lhe auditorium. The equlpmen~ he odded, la not
..,,....i by lnauranc:e, but each ~iece
11 marted HLBUSD," •POUed with •
metal 'IWICll whlcb would be difficult
to.!Ue oft. Police delcrlbed the buf&lary 11 "a
very c~ ~." apparemly tbe work
of oomeme -liad pnclae knowledge of tbe IOW>d, lnalallatlon and .... equipped
with all the tooll """lllO' to &coru>ect
and remove iL ' 'I1Jert wu no vanMllan and ~·no
dlllllP bl,oad -ll1l7 Nd .... do
to reach tbe equipment." • A_.,,tl1 plnlnr entry by a atqe
door, tbe burglar drWod • neat hole
In the door of a otorQO c)ooet on the
lide of the otap and roached In to
Oplll tl Wire cut1era wert Ulod to lain eolly
1ustin M,ay: Get
High School-
Site Unknown
The Tu!tln Union High School Diltrtct
m•Y be gelling a new bi&b school, but
they are not SIJ~ wl'lere they are going
to put it, or bow they are going to
pay for it. "No declslon hat been made u to
where it will be," said Jack Roper,
assistant supefinJeodent. of the district.
Asked about localing the: school in
the Saddleback Valley near the in-
tersection of El Toro Road and Trabuco
Road, Roper aald the dlatrlct did own
a slte in lhe area, but "It hasn't been
broua:ht befo~ the board of trustees
yet." He aald the matter would be brought
up at the nut meeUn& of the board
on Aug. 10.
At a recent meeUng ol the boanl,
Superintendent William ZOU to I d
turstees that the b u 11 d i n g of
the Ulliversity Park High School will
deplete the dhtrlct'a bond money.
Roper said the dtatrict "will probably
recommend a bond election to the board"
at the nut meetlng.
to the llllbt ca1e where addiUonal eq1lp.
ment wu atUcbed, and all the liema
were carefully -..cted, pollce sald.
All tbe equipment ..., kept under
lock and key and had been checked
by at leaat two peraooa Friday nlaht,
Haggard sald.
Arriving at the school Monday morn-
ing, he found several doora leading from
the auditoriwn~1tandlng ajar., apparently
left -by the burglan to insure a choice of escape routes during Ulelr
-allon. · I.-\of the portable stadium amplifier
wu not discovered tul1i1 today, when
the complete inventory of. 80t1ncl equip-
ment WU ~ked. Left ln the closet was one old amplifier,
which Haggard said will be hooked up
to pennit partial use of the auditorium.
"I couldn't even guess what we'll do
about replacing the rest," Haggard aid.
·The Russians
Are Coming
To ·Lion Safari
P'orty-two aclentlsta and crew member•
from a qbi!ticated R u 1 1 I a n
oceanoeraphic veuel were acbeduled to
vtllt Oraqe County's neweat tourtat ai..
tracUoo today, Lion Country Sllarl.
Spokeaman for the Long Beach Port
Authority aald urlval of the W.foot
uploration ablp 11Raduga" -which
means rainbow -requlrea apeclal
cleMar><e fnxn the U.S. Stat. Depart·
meat.
Port Authority apoktlllWI 111d It "fU
tho ltrat Rul>lan ahlp ever to land In that port and the tint bl tbete •aiera .,
since lM9.
'Ibe 2,i35-ton vessel, stacked with
IOphisticated electronk: gear, arrived
Mooday morning. It left Callao, Peru,
shortly before the disastrous earthqua\e.
It had been In Meiicin watera recently,
o!f.enslbly seeking tuna IChoola for
Russian fl.shermen.
The craft ls en route to ht home -port,
Vladlv06lok. wtth Captain Mlkhait Vol!k
ln command.
'mere ·are 71 aboard, including ten
sclentlst.t, two of whom art women.
The group waa scheduled to tour Lion
Country, a reproduction of the African
veld, at 1:00 p.m. today. The 500-acre
facility opened recently.
'nle group waa to arrive by bus. IJon
Country officials said they would roll
o'ut the "red carpet" and 1how them
every c<1urtesy.
Sihanouk Family
To Leave Palace
PHNOM PENH, Oambodla (AP) -
The aovenunent haa ordered the queen
mother to vacate the royal palace by
Frldax, informed sources aaid today.
ditlonal $264,501 fe< opeeial projectJ.
Among priority Items to be c:ooslder<d
by the board 11e tbe reaUtutlon of a
remedial reading program, microfilmini
district documents, paying off existing
bus contracts, eslabllshing a centralized
office dletaUng and typing department,
fulfilling more maintenance request&, and
installlng more fire detection dtvlcea
requ1recl by tn.surance companle1.
Benedlet also 1uggested that the board
coM!der taking the Uta roof oil Las
Palmaa School in San Clemente•to avoid
structural failure, providin& two portable
classrooms for Lu Palmas to use u
a multipurpose room, grading the Dana
Hilts Hlih School sit. and building the
Richard Henry Dana School addition,
most of which are refundable by the
state. _ _. _ _, Trustee Fred Newhart Jr. suggu\CU
lowering the tax rate only 35 cen,ts
and taking advantage of the available
funds to complete safety, maintenance
and construction projects that would
eventually save the tupayers money. Trustee HarcoUrt Bull suggested lower-
ing the tax rate even further.
Charles Dargan, chairman of the com-
mittee that favored the ta:r override
last March, said the board had .a man·
date from the people to provide the
best educational plant and process
available.
11We're t1ddlnC oursetvel u we think
that by aavlni money thla year, we
won't bave to pay more ln the long
run." Ray CampbeU, • larJe properly owner
In san Clemente dis1greed u.yinc moet
tupiyen would' prefer to have a lar1e
tax reductlon r1thflr than uae the money
to maintain their investment (1chool pro-
peffZbi..i that 'In view of tbe dlstrld's
llW'f'IU> f\lnds perbap• the need for the
tu: override had been euaerated.
Walter Hanson
Laguna Rites Set
Funeral aervlcta wlll be held at 11
a.m. Tblll"lday ·in Shefftr Laguna Beach
MorlulrY' Cbapol for Walter , Cllllord
Hanson of Laguna Nlluel, who died Sun-
day at U\t age of 58.
Mr. u.nson, a native Californian, is
survived by hll widow, Wanda, a 90!1,
Kenton, and a daughter, Marilyn, all
of tbe family home, 31881 Crystal Sands
Drive. Abo surviving are a brolher, Raymond
Hnson of Beverly lillls; three ai1ters,
Mrs. Helen Stokes of Sunland, Mn.
Evelyn Weinstock of AltaJrena and Mrs.
Llllian Harbaugh of West Covina.
Burial will be at El Toro District
Cemetery, El Toro.
Mrs. Holt Rites
Set in Laguna
A private memorial service Is planned
for Muriel Jean Holt, 2448 Lomita Way,
Laguna Beach, who di~ Sunday at the
age of 52.
Mra. Holt Is aurvived by her husband,
James H.; two daughters, Miss Pamela
S. Holt of Santa MonJca and Mrs. Harrold
Moore of Burbank ; a sister, Mary Beth
Proctor of Tustin; and by one grndchild.
Sheffer Laguna Beach Mortuary Js
dlrK'tlng.
U'IT .........
BODY DISCOVERED
Leurle Mumlqhan
MQck Brush Fire
Drill Prepared
For County Units
'Ille 11lrens of some 2:0 f~ trucks
will be waUlni through Laguna Beach
Wednesday morning, but Fire Chief Ji'm
Latimer wants to assure residents in
advance that it will be only a practice
operation.
The Laguna · Beach Fire Department
will host a countywide mutual aid drlll
in the Park Avenue-Temple Hills Drive
area from 8:30 to 10 a.m., Latimer
said.
Between 18 and 23 fire trucka represen·
ting all flr~flghtlng units ln the coonty
will participate in the drill, battling a
mock brush fire extending from a point
of origin at 995 Park Ave. up to the
Top of the World area.
Approximately 100 notices have been
distributed to residents of the area, ad·
vi.sing them of the drtll, and requesting
cooperation, LaUmer said.
At the conclusion of the drill,
participants will assemble at Top of
the World School, behind Lai\U'a Beach
Fire StaUon 3, for a critique of the
.. ..ion.
Kidnaped ,
. l
' Girl, 16,
' FoundDead
J
LANSING, Mich. (UPI) -Two boys
walking a rural road near here found
the body of Laurie Murnlnghan, 18, the
object ol an Int""' police oearch slnee
ahe WU kidllaped durinf I holdup 1J
days ago. •
Her abductor remained at large today. '"'
Lansing Poli~ Chief Derold Husby VOW•
he would "leave no atone unturned until
the person or pefstlM responsible for
the tragedy are brought to JusUct."
The.body of the pretty, bloode daughter
of Mu E. Mumlnghan, former mayer • ~
of this state capital, waa found :.tonJa.y
in high grass and weeds near a lakt
abou,t 15 feet from the road. Sbe waa .~
clad in the white blou.ae, red belt and
blue miniskirt l!lhe wore when she was
abducted July 9 from t"be gift Shop .
where she was employed for the summer.
Identification was confinned through
dental compai-l!on, ' Husby said. The
cause or time of death wa~ not in}.
mediately detennlned but Husby &aid t
be would reveal the results of an autopsy
at a news .conference today. . ....
"At thia: point I have no knowledp !
of anything and I'm happy I don't,"
Husby said when contacted at his home :
early today. "I haven't heard the results ·
of ,anything yet." . ·
The n,ames of the two bQys who made -~,
the discovery were not disclosed. Husby ~
said they immediately summoned of·
ficers to the scene. ' ·
Murninghan , who spent the early days
of the investigation at the Lansing Police •
Department working with police, was
not available for . comment, nor were
other members of the family.
Gtrald W. Graves, Lansing's mayor,
sa id he was "stunned and greatly grieved
by this senseless crime. Our hearts and
prayers go out in deepest sympathy
to Laurie's family."
Miss Murninghan was kidnaped from
Gallagher's Gift Shop by a gu~wieldi'ng
bandit during a holdup which netted '~
$60. The owner of the store, Mrs. ·:.
Christine Gallagher, wu pistol..Whipped
by the man, and when she recovered
from her injuries wu able to htlp
an artist draw a plctur! of him.
Lagunan Opposed
, I
\
He Raps Huntington Fluoride
• Huntington Beach is goina to fluoridate
its municipal water supply and a Laguna
Beach man Is unhappy about It.
The Huntington council 'i o t e d •
unanlmouely Monday night to authorize
fluoridation after a 71kninute public
hearing on the cootroversiai issue.
Huntington Beach th u a: became the
second city ln Orange County to approve
fluoridation. Fouatain Valley okayed
similar action in a 4 to 1 vole several
weeks ago.
One foe of fluoridation voiced his feAr
that other county cities may follow 1ult.
John Sbinette, a chemist of 507 Canyon
Acm Road, Laguna Beach, spoke at
the hearing and likened fluoridation to
a conta1ious disease .
"I'm afraid It may spread to Laguna,"
he said.
Sianette maintained that it bad not
been proven that fluorides will not be
hannful.
Huntlnlton Beach resideat M r s .
Bernard Gage urged that the Issue be
put to a public vote and later Councilman
Ted Bartlett moved that the matler
..
be placed on the General Election ballot ~
in November. ;"
Councilman George McCracken backed
Bartlett'!! moUon but It was defeated
4 to 2. A motion by Councilman Al
Coen autborWng fluoridation was then
pas.wd without diase·nt.
Water Superintendent Ed st an g' ·. ·
estimated the coat of Injecting fluorides
into the city water supply to bring the
fl uoride content .to one parl per million
at Sl8,82S for equipment and '6,250 a
year for the sodium fluoride.
Stang estimated that It will take five
montm to Install the equipment and · ~
Mart the program, intended to reduce·
tooth decay In children.
The water superintendent also revealed'"··
that natural fluorides are alrtady In
the water supply, varying from 2/lotbs 11
to 4/lOths per mllllon.
Divorced Dad
Visits Kids-
Ends Up in Rome
In It break with the monarchy, the
government of Premier Lon Nol has
cut off all funds for operating the palace
and told Queen Slsowalh Kossamak
Nearlreath, aging mother of ou!tecl Prince
Norodom Sihanouk, to move to a small
house near the Independeoct Monument.
The sourees close to the throne said
the letter to the queen motht'r advhl~d
her that she would be given the U!le
of two cars for her personal entouraae,
which Includes Princess Bopha Devi,
prima ballerina of the Royal Cambodian
Corps de Ballet.
GRAND OPENING SALE!
An alleged case of child stea.llna by
a father paying 1 post~vorce visit to
hi.I chlldren in San Clemente rf:acbed
International proportions Monday.
It began last Friday when, police said,
Beniamino Palazzi came to town to vi.sit
hia two chlldren, Dino, 5, and Laura, e, at the home of their mother.
' 'lbe mother, Mni. Nlcetta Palazzi of
215 Granada Apt. 3, told police her
e>traqed husband too~ h11 usual visita-
tion rlgfitJ with the chlldren, but dldn1t
return with them Sunday as dic1-ted
by •·Jt!Ue-t. '
On Monday she rf!Ctlved a telegram.
'"Mae children are flne," It aaid.
lt came from Rome, ltaty.
Pakistan Labor Camp
Raided; Slaves Free
DACCA, Eut P1kl1tan (AP) -Pollet
have reacued 19 perJOnJ fn>m alave
t"bor campe In jun1le1 ln the Chitlagona
Hill dislrk:t. .Orne 279 miles IOUtheast
ol Decca. the diltrlct commillioner ,.Id
today. Police arrtsted eight camp
operators but ll1d other1 escaped. ,
Most of lhe Victims were tC.trH.£trl
lured Into the jun1les by promises uf
jobs pa)'inc Sl a day plul board and-
IOdging, 1hey trekked 60 mllet ln10 tho
jungle And then were fnn::cd to work
from dawn In du~k cuttlnit ban1boo and
brcakJ.,lli &lOaea with no ptiy.
f.
The decision to oust the queen mother
from the palace grounds led to im-
mediate apeculation that the government
which ovefthrew Sihanouk· on March 11
IClin WU On the ·verge of procllimlnl
Cambodia a n:public.
Nightclubs Get
Government Loan
·WASHINGTON (UPI) -A loPI"'
nightclub 11 entitled to a Small Buslneu
Admlnlstratlon loan the ume 11 any
other legitimate business, accord.lna to
SBA Director Hilary Sandoval Jr.
Sandoval told the Hou se 8elect Com-
mittee on Small Business Monday that
• '41 ,000 relocatlon loan was approved
for a club featurlna toplesa 1~10 dancen: ·
ln Denver, Colo., because a Federal
HlghwAy project had forted It to move.
He said the club met all the le1al
requirement.I of lhe 1t1te .Sil Colorado,
ond "Thcte was no way we could turn
lhal (lhe loan) down." .
Sandoval ~·a1 questloned closely about
lhe n!5thtclub loan and a lo•n to a
Virg1nla rurnlture ml\1uf11cturer. Both loan~ had been crlllclied by ayodlcaled
culumnlst Jack Anderson.
We are pleased to announce
the opening of our second store
in Tustin. We have purchased
"Red Hill Carpets" and the new
name will be "Alden's Red Hill
Carpets & Ora peries."
e IN COSTA MESA e
ALDEN'S
CARPnS e DRAPES
1663 ,l1centl1 Ave
Phone 646-4131
In conjunction with the open-
ing of our Tustin store, we have
several spec i a Is in our Costa
Mesa store. Please come in and
see us .
e IN TUSTIN e
ALDEN'S
RED HILL
CARPns • DRAPES
11374 I . frvlno
Phone 131-3'44
VISIT OUR INLARc;ID REMNANT ROOM AT OUR COSTA MESA
STORE. HUNDREDS OF REMNANTS AND ROLL ENDS.
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• • • . -Lag1111~ Beaeh
VOL 63, NO. 173, 3 SECTI ONS, 36 PAS ES
• I' I I ' . . ORAN~E CQUNTY, OALlfQRN~ ' . ' ' I 'I j I •.
' . . -
! .' • I I
"NESDAY', 1JUlY 21" 1970> l ; . ' . ' .. "
L. ' .. '
.. ..
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•, •,.; l-1 r '.,!,J
Nixon Changes · Style of Ctem:ente :.,:v~eatJ'('.l;n$~
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of ... DellY , ... II.rt
Pre1ldent N·ixon aeema to be chan&lnl
his style tor visits to his seaside villa
in San Clemente -focusing mare on
11>-0ay working visll.J, instead of the
U:pected ..repeat of Ills monlh-lonc stay
of last August.
The seQ>l)d wcb •lG-Oiy visit thi.s sum·
mer--will at.art ·Friday when the Chief
El~utive, Mri. Nb:on and daughter
Tricia fly in for 10 days in the 111n
n
P ... le Will Rule
and to~level coolerencea and a busy
workload .
And Pr...S Secretary Ron Ziegler •Id
Monday ·that yet another lo.day slay
is forecast ·for mid-August.
Last yyr, a few .montN after the
J>Tesident bought the'· former Cotton ,
Estate, the President ft}oved-in for an
entire month, brqtging the cabinet, olher
aides and hundreds of ·While House ·
workers.
But since lben the PreaidenUal vlsita
President . Vows
No Viet Dictums
WASHINGTON (AP) -President NiI-
on r.ay's the future government of South
Vietnam must be selected through elec-
tions -not imposed on the war-torn
nation by negotiators in Paris.
His administration will not stand for
Fraud Spree
Suspec t Say s
Not Guilty
A sell-styled expert on banking and
. finance, who pollce allege launched an
internaUooaJ forgery apree from San
Clemente entered a plea. of innocent
Monday to the felony cha·rg.,. in South
Orange County Municipal Court.
The suspect, Darrell Graff Hafen of
Salt Lake City, Utah, will appear in
the same court next Monday morning
at a preliminary hearing to determine
tr the 44-year~ld traveler should face
trial on the charges. Tbe hearing will
start at t a.m.
Hafen, arrested alter monlhJ of
laborious tracing in several countries
by San Clemente ·detective Leonard
Goodwin, is charged with pa ssing
thousands of dollars in worthless checks
in the U.S., Latin America and Europe
alter an initial alleged incident at the
San Clemente branch af the Bank af
Ameri ca last May 4 and 5.
The college graduate in finance was
picked up early last week as he; his
wife and their four children arrived
in Las Angeles from Costa Rica.
Hafen, who also was heltt initially
an federal charges ol flight to avoid
prosecution , was formally charged with
the San Clemente alleged forgery in
mUnlcipal ctiurt last Thursday.
He was granted a delay until Monday
for entering a plea.
Goodwin followed the man via. teletype
aod tellers on 10 diUerent hops from
coontry-to-cOtJntry. .
an imposed coalit!Of! government, the
President said. "It must be a government
selected by the people of South Vietnam."
In a wide-ranging news conference
Monda y, the President alao said he would
veto a bW setting mandatory quotas
on any imports except texllles. Such
quotas, he said, are not.. in the national
interest and ,ni~~ ltt oil an in·
ternatlona1 trade war.
The House Ways and, Means Committee
has proposed quotu'oa aboe and textile -
imports.
Beyond Vielnam llid' imporu, Nixon
ranged aver a number or topics at the
surprise news conlerence.
He said the United States has no
idea of using armed forces to expel
the Soviet Union from the Middle East;
promised no "vigilante squad ol Depart·
ment o!-Justice agents" will force school
integration in the south ; predicted voters
will turn against big spenders in
Congress; forecast an economic upturn
for the last half of the year and said
be sees litUe chanc.e of a tax cut during
the next two years.
The President announced plans for
a major meeUng on n.at)onal defense
and the defense budget at the Western
White House July 27, fol.lowed by con-
ferences on the domestic budget for fiscal 1972. .
In ruling out any imposed coalition
government in Saigon, Nixon said he
has no significant disagreement with
South Vietnamese President Thleu in
this regard. But he said the United
States still is willing to listen t.o any
proPosals made by Hanoi at the Pari.!1
peace talks .
The President was in an amiable,
breezy mood at times after he usurped
press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler's after-
noon briefing in the press quarters at
the White House and converted It into
a news conference in his own office.
The school desegregation quest ioning
centered around criticism o f ad-
minislration policy by Sen. Strom Thur·
mond (R-S .C.), in a Senate speech Fri·
day.
Thurmond, jumping on what he said
were arbitrary and discriminatory ac-
iSee NIXON, Pap 1)
have been more condensed and much
more active. , , . 1 During the most recent stay the NixDM
llilemlpted a b<lsy olficial schedule for '
a· '81• vi$it to. a ~iece's weddinc In ,
Newport Beach, followed the nut day
by a pre<edeot-setting fliaht tq qua~ ...
ravaged Pen1 by Mrs. Nixon. ·
The Otlef EJ:ec14Uve .conducted t,be ,
first-ever appointment qf a · cabinet
member ootaide'. of Wasblnaton,1 D.C.,
durln& that paat atay -the awwln&·ln
• Ill
1 . ' . • . .
of !he new Secretary ,ol Labor' Jmoa_ and durlna tbt moat reconl ><l)'&le 111
HodJ;son. , ,.. .' · ,Sin Clem~te. Mr., ,N~~ai.e·,91,e.·d
That, coupled with the swearing in especially exuberant about ~-oraa&e
of three other top aldea, a. visit by Coast sun and balmy brteaes. ...
the-Romanian FwtJcri·~r and ta\"1 .· Whu ho accipta 14P>l<vt~vJsl~ the
oo dqrqelflc ~l!fl· J0re1111 ·aff'11'& )"•tb v)lla'• pool Js the mOil,(>Ol!Ular-~IJ9g,
hla top ·•idea and . mbueadou made, -and .jlurlng a.,...ptlan' lor·ffO!lpoo
the lut vtait PartJpilarly busy, , J / iDCI ' aliles and ·fritDds· tbO ~dtl!I•
'The ....._ "'"u.r .in_ tbe :na!ioo'•• ,....,~; ivm, ll'IO(t ~ than r ~a p i t a I, w~ la m ,u 11 y nf· ,un-; ewer, l!OUJ'W.lfl\d· ... •~. : · _ ·
comfortable, obviously b . a (lf'lor tn "'He kept Will( . ., to tab waJ~,
the rapld·flre Prealdentlal . vtaita~ .,.ul!d J he lfOlllldl ind _:~ni aiid
i .:.1 I -' ... •· ~ I .
., •••. _I
' . • r ' ..
'Ie· ;o· f • j ). f : l
, • , r
. ' ' '
-. ---· ... ·-·
' .
reerilod ' eBp!Cia1.ly JirOOi! and • plUIOd
this ume of' bis 'home, ~ -tiler'
ind.the eoUrt ,v1a1t:•·eme s\ielt redo~
. today. • •
The Whtie HOllse preas: corp& wlllc:b
follow; the admlnlltratloli jlunla' •Ila'
• 'gaggle seem pltaSell witb tbe ~'
Coast ei>vlroimieut u well. ' ' , '
It's'·a chance~ forS the, repOrtm to '
~off suit co_ats oild Uet to l&li(ple. Iha!
(8et'.vim, Palo I) , , '
1
1
l .. ' ' . :;
"
·:er . . '
'
Grand·J11 n · . . .~ ~]
Acts on..· 2 ·
' I
· 'Clllt' Cases
• . • • • l J ; • ' :1..,...-; • • \il !-. •
' By TOM ·BARLEY
'0t·lllt Ddr Plllf ...,
· Five Penon! linkeil to the ""devil culi'~
kilting of•a 1'\lS&ion Vi~jo ~teacher
and the fatal 'beating 'of a aervi<t itatloot it~~li~~ ~•Y .~ ~ ~ ~~raes, ~Y, !he o.._; <;oinilr ~
~ Jury. . ' .. ' . .
. ... . ._,... ................ ~~1'·-·····--'T.M Vendors' · " ·, · . · : • •1"'" r·r,:•.......-• ~ l • .
The pnel ended th ... ~!• of~
by tndlctJng ~n e. Hunt. ID, Herman
Hendrick Taylor, 17, both lranllenta and
Christopher Darwin Gi~ey,r 17, m.
Portland, OreBOn.• wltb· the klJlln& of
Mra. Ftoreo& Nancy Brown, SI, ol El . . . ,
Paintings by AMJaitdro Rangel Hldatgo a.re !Mlrtray: _ "Lltue .i!iid Vendor" and "LltUe ·.~~ ~endor.:'
ed in ,this ·pa~el durin~ 1070 ·pageant of tlie Masters · · Mpdels a;e (liom left) J uan Evans and Sandy
in La¥,una . Beacli. Living 'pictµres include. (f1'9m . · Ba~er, of Laguna .'aitd ·Donna 'aild •<lilly •Hutter 01' left)·• Going·to ;-Market.'' "Lltile Flower. Vendor," Ef bro. ·' . .' ·, : ~ , ..
Building,' Planning Vllit
' Division Wins Laguna OK
.. • J ••
. · By BARB,{llk. DVARTt; · _
• 'Ot *'Dllfr '"t"f Sllff · •
Ptafin!ng ci>mrnls$<1D,ers Stamped ap-
proval on division ol. 'Laguna. ·Beach
building· and pl1rming departments Mon-
day night witl;l a wanting lhat adequate
staff is . essential· to ·smooth enactment
ol the plan.. :
Replying to Councilman . P e t e .r
Osttander's reorganization prop o Ba I ,
planners forwarded recommendations to
the City Council.
Commissioners proposed a "distinct"
separation of building and planning
departments with a direc~ for each,
re sponSible directly to the city manager.
Dutiea of the pllfllling staff will be
to direct all variances, zone changes,
conditional use penni.ts and sitf: plan
and ALS reviews to the Board or A~
justment or Planning Commission. .
Preparation of staff. reporLs, zoning
atnendment.s and precisei>tanning studies
also fall · under the jurisdiction .ol plan·
ning.
Building will be r~sponJible for ad-
~aUon and' enfOrcement of.bwldJq
ind zooing regulations, housing codes
and special conditions of approved
variances or conditional uae perm.it ap-
plications.
· OStrander's bid to enlarae the · Board
of Adjustment to ' rive professional in en • L ' , • was revised to exclude ltlff members
lroffi voilrig 1tatu1 ,whlle retain"ing. the
present member1bip of• three. .
Planne(s further. agreed that mem-
berahlp qualification should not be so
·rigidly defined that it tiee the mayor's
hands In selection _,, board members
.of any particular background ..
''In the .Opinlon tof the P·laaning Cam·
· mlSl.lon," wrote1 Comml!8ion ·Cbaihnan
'Wllliam LambourDe, "Ibo!' recom-
. mendaUons will · prevlde · a distll'lot
departrrientat · separation · ·with cliar
1responsiblllty to 'eU«Uvely ·ind el·
flcieotly serve the public. ' ·
"
It's· A:ppf,e Pie ·
And Festival ·
For :.Veter.a~ . . . . . .....
' .. ' .. ' '
Nearly 100 °disab·led Veterans ·and other
Wvlcdnen ·~ere· treated Momlay nl&hl
to a· hied' chicken dinner. ·and aome
apple . pie by the local post ·222·· o{ the
·~er1c8.n Le&or and then wete' gutstJ
of the FesUval .of Arts to see the Pageant
of •the Mailers.
Such .an evening "ls hell::: uch year
by the American Legion, the :veterins
of Foreign Wars, and the vFw . .AuxlllarY
in cooperation wltli the Festiv~I. The
post provides the home cooked meal
and the · F.estlvil donates the,',ttcket!
to the Pageant. · '
The disabled vete~ans .come fro171 the
Veteran 's Adni~tr.aU~ ·HO!pital !n
Long Beacll, traosported to lhe Art
Colony by the. American· Red Crou.
ihe other servicemen •rr Under tr~
ment ,at the Nav,11 HOspif.al at ~mp
Pendl~ton. 1 • • •
. roro... . ! . ' •
. Artli\lf Craij H~lse. II, . of 0·1rien
Gnivt, 'l'aylilr and-Hurd .art alao ,char god
with tfle murder al. Jerry Wayne. Clrlin,
21, '1/Slnta Ana serVic.e atltlOn •ttenctant.
Melanie Mae 'Daniels .. IO, ·ot lailta
Ana. ia char1ed With bting an acCiuory
hi both murders. Sbe Js. currently ltrll141
a so:q>y senlepce In oraqe ~t)I
jall on a narCoUc~ Violailon. "
Four of the five. ~s indicltd. will
be anitgned later today ~or~ supeitor
Coilrt Judge 'Jmnes.F. ,J ud(e. The aclloo
by dls&lct Attome)o Cecil Hi<!U nmov"
the case fro~ ~ m.11111.cipal court level:.
Hieb· bas : asked Ori!gon. · autliorttie1
lo expedile extradilfon PrOcOedina• which ' would enable-them to return Gibboney
to Orange County to stand trial· fer
thi murde"r of Mts. Bi-own.
Mrs. Brown's body, minus Its heart,
lungs and right arm', and 'beirtng mulU·
pie slash wo.upda w~s fcxmd lut Ju,ne
IS In a· shallow grave . Off the Ortega
Highway.
Investigation of the· killing led to
reports which have since 'tieen. aubsla~
tlated that ' tlie · woman Was the vicUm
of satanic orgies before and after her
death,
Carlin was backed· and bludgeoned to
dealh and dumped ao the washroom
floor of hls ae.rvk:e ltation last June
2 In a robbery tbat provided a profit
of less than $100· for bis attackers.
And during ·these trips, Goodwin charg·
ed Hafen spread a traU of bogus check!
with thousands of dollars involved.
No fndlcation has yet come if the
several foreign bmks Involved will file
charges against the traveler in their
home countries.
Hafen still is being held on $31 ,SOO
bail on the local felony cha rge.
Newport Boo·sts lloute Bill
Manf of the 11T\'ft, lfave serv.~d in
the Vietnam• conflict, auUerlnc combat
caaul1Ue1 ..
:General Tel Asks .. '
Hulse 'and Taflor ;,ere cutifttd .aa
adults, in ,t,rms ol the' murder. chirp.!
earlier tbi5 week in ,a iqove d~
to ensuI'! 'their ' ioclµslon on. the grand
jury indiclm<nt.. ·
,, ',
Coan
Bail on the federal case was set at
$1 000 on the day after Hafen's arrest.
No members of ihe man's famil y have
been held, officers said .
Police Seek in g
'
Rapist l de1itity
' Orange County Sherill's lnvtsUptorl
art today looking for clue! to the identity
of a man who raped a 1.-yeaMld South
Laguna girl at knifepoinL
The victim told officers that she was
()ffered a ride Sunday night by a man
who picked her up on $outh Coast
Highway in Laguna Beach. , .
The girl said the min, de.act1bed u
beinl: about 40 to 45 years ~hi. then
dro ve her to a secluded area near
Monarch Bay and raped her.
The vlcUm satd the man then drove
her to a street near her South Laguna
home and ordered ber W le.ave the car.
Bci.dha.m Says Resolution Will Affect · Senate Vo~: ..
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of * De!IY 'llM ll•n
~mblyman Robert Badham today
declared a resoluUm pasatd Monday
night by the Newport J!ead1 City Coulldl
supporting his anU-freeWiy ~ leglalation
will h1vt "a great tffect" on the paasa1e
of the bill through the senate.
The Newport .resolution, latroduced by
Councilman Howard Rofers, calls for
Senate approval of the bill without
amendment Council approval w a 1
unanimOUI.
Badham's bill, whlch passed tht:
Assembly in late June, would delete
the secUon ol the propoged Pacilic Coast
Freeway from Beach Boulevard in Hun--
tington Beach to the Corona del Mar
boondary. .
Badham said today he was pleased
with the official lupport the city has
given .his effort.I.
"When the only city In v o I v e d
unanimously backs a bill without ameod-
ment, you can bet that will have a
great errect on the YOting," he said.
Badham sald the p_rospec;ts fqr ~assage
o{ the ·bill "look good." He llas as~ed
for a Senate Trao.s~rt.ation Co~i~e
hearing on the proposll on .Monday.
Nearly 70 members of the Newport
Fret;way Fighters were present Monday
nJ1ht when Ragus and Councilman
Lindsley Parsoos eaqh Introduced a
resoluUon backing the Badham bill.
The most significant d l f fer ~ ,n c.e
between the two was that Rogers op-
pm1ed lurthe.r study of a .route .aeywhere
within city limits and aupported the
bill without amendment.
Parsons was not specilic on die mat·
ters ol restudy or amendment to the
bill . ,
While all councll -m~rs ollviomly
favored the intents of. the resolution, only
Mayor Ed Hirth an\! COOncllman Doa,
•• l " Mclnnl! expressed coocern ov,tr whit
the community could expect with the
de1ettontaf -the freeway : ,
· •"We're try\nl 1o plan n9w" fl)r·a soll.l-
Uon in . the . tullirt," Hirth . uid .. "l'lie
ptiyi!cal traffic ptoblerrl1 bav~ to , & 1110lved and 90Jved on f1ct.a1 nOt WliihU
or derlre." : · Some alternatives <Ntlloe( by the
mayor Included developmeot of ar1ert-1
hlpwaya to feed the beoC4 dty ,lroµi
an Inland freeway at the city'• 'nJM!!nje.
• A limli. plall 11 beln( USld lli'l.o'pM
Be•ch. be l&ld.
lfclDQll· 1114 wllh tbe pa-• o! the ruolullon.,~ ultimately th• Badb'10
bU1 q,. :·,....M wtll really b<Cln to , rind •
• BOtuOon. , r • '
"The most ~t ~ ol lhe ar~. !ar ahead of tbe ~ ujl .. hes
Is ~ P<IOl'le. Ajll ror Jf-n" I :
h .. I, lo· ~p~ Coun , .lottn'
relOtuUon,' be liild. ' , • •
New .' Rate Boost ,
' I ' , ' • • • r 1
For 'Early ,Re~e('
Revlatn1 · .111 , appUcaUon· lo • ~h e
Califotnla Public UUl!Uu Commluion
,for 1 raJ~ in<:n!&se ·~ ollaer 1rowing
'opera Ung costs, Gener at· TelephOne Com-
'paflY ol Ca!Uorn!a has qlred for "early
relief"' in lhe amount' of $1.T.5 million. ·
The ~'9<,ndecl requut .will not chanp
tbe ""fllpiu\Y'• 1ota1 request ror 1ocr .....
m.ounllng IG,_ 116 /nlllloa, acoordlrii ,to
Richatcl L. OMlon, vice ~I. . c.n.<ai TclOpbone ~ II -~.to
lnmue either loU and mul:s unlt rates. or locll terVlct' rites'~
obtain' relief In tbo ..,...1 • . TI>Io 1Upt>lonts an earlier l"'luOI& lot '
i!*ml"1on 1o.inak1 "'1111J .rilltl\• !Ji· ! ~·~· In tbo •IOOWll ol llt.4 llllllli& Wllich was lacllldod In tbo i aenerll ·la-
crtast 1ppllcauon !Had wltb !ht PUC o.o
May 15. I
•
We titer ... . .. '
· . Mostly fair lbtooah Wedn...!ay
Says, ther weailie'rJllarf. LJttl& tern .. '
peratur'e cha'nie' ls" "expecteil with
Wahl reachlni.io the nineties: Some
nl1ht and earJY mornin1 low clouda• are also predicted. .
.. JNSmE ~··~y ,
, Oro.no• Coatrr1 ar1 doifto
their "1 thing abroad -helping
othera raeh.u than 1prtading
' tKe "ugly AmericiJn" !mopt. s .. ,
1torir1 in the Soiith Ct.mt Plaza,
section. , • •
~ ,. " ....... ,l ,."
C--u,.. ............... . .. ,. -c-ty • c..... . IJ ,.,,.... """" 11 c,...... 11 '""' '"''1 DM111 .... kW I .,.. ~ "'1 If! ... ,_ ' ,......... It
ll!Wt•llllllllll , • ., • """'"" , ..... ,..... 11 ...... • ~. ~: :::1.::-' , .. ~
l
lt ~LY Ptl.OT SC ' ~~~.c~~--~!. -~C. -a~ :cf· ;UlsA_l_l.o_' W.· ed ,T;ax ·
llou bY the ldniJnlstratlon, cited threall • .[""; _
lo the lu ....,piton of prlvolo schools •
~l-~f.:tu~z:::5 . ~c~~. !I:~~>S~~v~. Qve~ .4~un t
lawyen to ·UIUl'e forced lntegraUon of ~"C'!~~ w .•• •:tr!11-alliriu~1i.I,.. more lban Tiit taz_~Fv,pr~_. 27-<enl
public schools ln the South. •;'•,,.. 'i . '· "'1'tlllliltY...-· dociolfll! Jn · ve taxes and a ZO.
Nil<oo_aald .Thurmond objected lo an Cl~lllranb',1Jnlf!~ ScllOc!l ilt.irtcr; '·Sq-tendent>Tr!i!iwi, liededk:t :_.id cent r<ductloO· the iliowable llk:<nl
oclioe Iha~ hu not been taken aid__,,,,,. ... 7oted IL\lnlmoualy M~·lllahl tbal ti<t budgetary conlroll','a reduction lax override.
there ta no intention of taking _ "that to redu~ the. _permil11ible ,taJ: r~te lby in ·~ve ~s. Interest ,on unsold "That would etill leave us $S64,501
b of aeodlng: vigilante squads, in effect. 47 centa. , . . bond.a, and a 19.1 percent increase in in our undistributed re.te?Ves," ·said
flom the Justice Departmen~ lawyers, This ~·IDI Jh41. Pl'>P"rl)' OWQ\!rt who a5'esoed valuaUon bad created 1111tp!U1 Benedict. • •
in to coerce Jhe SOuthern·ICbool districts voted.in Marth for a »cent tu override funda. He recommeilded retaintJtg $300,000 In
tq IJ:M.&rite.'' the reserve fund and spending the ad-
The give-and.take on Southern school ditional $264,501 for speciaJ projects. ~ foiiowod tht awilcll earlier to Weekend Thie· v' e's',. Loo' t Among priority. Items tq..be considered \he Mldt_lll A .. porter aaked for by the board are tht ~luUon. o~ a
clariflcaUoft ol NI.Jon's apprOacbe! to remedial reading proira~ niicrofilming
problems of. the area and Soviet move-district documents, paying off existing
ment there, 1 bus contracts, establishing a ce ntralized
NJzon recalled having aaid in his July L Ht h E • t office dJctating and typing, department,
1 television conversaUon tht U.S. interest ag,J •na . ·lg qu_ipme n fulfill Ing more maintenance requests, and Ja peace and ~lion of the aovefe.tan. ~ inst8lling more fire detection devices
ty and Independence of every atate ln required tiy insurance companies. the area Benedict also suggested that the board
Me aaid the pawer balaoce bas not More dW.'ft;Soe worth of soond equip. to the light cage when additional equip-consider taking the tile roof oU Las
been .upset but the roovement of So\•iet ment, mUC:b ,Of lt"neW, wu ltolen from ment was 'aUacbed , and all the items Palqlas School in 5an Clemente to nvold
Wei.pOoi ·.nd men to the ~.to the t.quna ~ .lq41:h Sch 00 1: were 'carefully ~.police said. ·structural failure, providing two portable
man the weapons causes this country audltorliun ·ovet lhe weekend by ap-;All. the e;qafpment was kept under classrooms for Las Palmas to use u '------~uae a continaation could tock ~and ·key' 1and bad been checked a multipurpose room~ grading the Dana ~P ~ e&. •A.l..O , _. ~ ·Hllls High School site an ng e '""""'° , · parenUy ildlled biirglsra, police reported. ~I ,least two n..sons Fri••• night, d buildi th
f He Wd arms escalation, parilcullrly rMMf· ~ • • . ~:said. Richard Henry Dana School addition, )he use of tro6ps in the Mideast, tn-"It's ~pletety .sick~nlng -they Arrivinl 4t the school Monday morn-most of which are refundable by the
creases ·the risk of a confrontation cleaned Ule place out ei:cept for the ing, he fou~d several doors leading from state. .
neither side wants. apeakeri mollnted hJah on the wails the auditorium standing ajar, apparently Trustee Fred Newhart Jr. suggested
--, "Tha~ is w~ we ari ~Wng such ........and--.~y.n not connected-to left open by the burglar~ .• lowering the tax rate only 35 cents
emphasu on our peace fultfaUve. That: an•tt"; .... ,. 'd _A.u.:. r dln lo Ra boie6--0f.-escape-routes .' elf and taking advantage of the available b: why we have not announced any _.~, IBJ 1m:w.11 ooor a r Y operation. funds to complete safety, maintenance
·sale cl planes or delivery to Israel Haggard. in ,charge • of . the sc~'t .U.. of the portable stadium amplllier and construction projects that would
ltt tbls time becluae we want to give . technical equipment. ~e di9covertd the ~ ni?t discovered until today, wh.en eventually save the taxpayers money.
that peace lnlUaUve every cluince lo bur~ M~!,!'!ornmt.. lifi tht ciJqlpil\e lnvenlory of sound eqwp-Trustee Harcourt Bull suggested Iower-IU~." he said. • · ~-~>&'Ill! .. ,-amp. en, ment W.as re-checked. ing the tu: rate even further.
• Nil: on i&id he wouldn't and abouldu't including .• portab!e one . usf(d m the Left In the closet.was one old amplifier, Charles Dargan, chairman of the co.m·
_R>eeulate on bow high unemployment football i...~~lum, . eight,• !WctOPbooes, a which, Hagg11rd said will be booked up mlttee that favored the tax override
!night rise· or how strong he think , aound rraer, a tur,ntable and a speaker to pennit partial use of the audltoriuhl. last March said the board had a man·
• mi' ht be s from tbe •stage waD. !'I couldn't even guess what we'll do da'-from' the people to provide the ecooonuc recovery g , thla year. The ... .,, .... lfiin711QijllDent;&ggard-aoool repisclrig -the reot," Haggard sld. ~ He p.ld at thla point . the nation ii said, ~-br~·, ~.' lriltalled during best educational plant and process
;1t a watenbe<f. ol economlc policy -~ ti of th uditorl available. .
)he reasoq for his rather ~ng .state-The '~°:J;n;, bee ~dded ~ not Th R • . "We're kidding ourselves if we think
;nenl lo Congress last weet on !IS record covereil tiy hililrance, bui ach ~ ' ' e ' USSl3DS that by aavlng money thla year. we
of a,ee~ and speodtn:g money. 111 marked •IJ..BUSD " applied with a · won't have to pay more in ~ long
"wnen the American people learn that ' · run.'' • the big ape1idera 1!1'Congrea1,are prtmarl· :::-::; :;.oc11 wblcll would be dH!icult Are Coming 11ay Campbell, a large property owner
Jy responsible for higher pnces, and POUce deecrlbed the burglary as "a tn san Clemente, disagreed sayina:1~ost
'eventually even higher taxes, I thlnt v~ job 11 a~ntl, the work £ • taxpayers would prefer to have a arge
'tlull the American people.~ -·Oii ~ ' 'wbo ~·•·jll'Ocl!e-ledge oi !TIO Li'on Sa an les reduction rather thin use the money ,iite b,tr apendm ~tiUcally. tht IOU fuStalfa'°iTho and wai equipped .l ' ·to maintain their lnvesbnenl (school pro-
On olh« toptca . wttb all Ille toois ·_.ry lo di!conneet i "~-d be per!)'). district' , -Campus unrest. Nixon aaid it would and remove tt. Forty-two sc el1U61.0t an crew mem rs He hinted that in view of the s
.not be news to conclude one way to 'lbere wu no. vandllilm and "no from a sophisticated Russ 1 an surplus fimds perhap1 the need for the
bring peace on tilt campus would be damage 1Jijontl Whit they bid to do oCeanographic vessel. vt,ere schedQled~to tu override bad been ei:aggerated.
to bring peace in Vietnam. But he said to 'reach threquij>ment. 11 • ' visit Orange .c.ounty's newest tourist at-
he wu not sure it would bring campus Apparently/ pinlog entry by a slap traction today .. Lion Country safari.
peace. door, Ille , burslar drilled a neat hole Spokesman for the L<mg Beach Port
-Deftnle Cuts. Ni:1on repeated th.at in the door Of a Mortp closet' on the Authority · said arrival of the 265-foot
-..hlle be bu abllled much apending from side of the tli,e and reached ln lo ~Uori !hip "Raduga" -whioh "def~ to noodefeose Jll'Ol?ID!.I it ii 0~ I\, . means rainbOw -requires special ~lilllic · lo anggest money for . big, WJre cutten 1fete uaOd lo, galn emy ciearane< from tht U.S. Stele Depart· ''lftew domestic programs can come out · ment.
'·(If 1Ubstantial defeme cuts.· t , Port Authority apotesman said It wu ., 'Tus' tin •. , . Ma~ "· . _ t· the Sir•I 11uss1an !hip ever -lo land ln ., ' "'---' p· ,.,.;. 1 ~ ' ,-.m, and·t/le llfll In,~, walen Jr'~ .._._. " ' I, ' •I llnce \949. < .... ' < 1"
Hi h S h I 'l1le 2,4.SS-ton veSSel, staCked wtth
VISIT •••
I '.
'.local climate.
One olh« fldor In tht repealed ahOrt-
term visits, 90me 1ourct1 have uid,
Is tht worry that demonllraUoos qalnll
1l1e admlnia1ralion policy ln tht·Jndochlna
war might reeume in San Clemente if
tht !i~ns malnla!,!i<d. resident< for tht
eolire'iitonth of August. .
Some top 10Urces have indicated con-
cern-about. tome diuenter activity ·next
moimi"and a conclusion 'col!ld be reached
thal tht short, blll)' visits could curb clwices for c:oncerled. advance Organ.lza.
tion by leaders of dlsaidenl groupa.
A huge antiwar demonstratioti occurred
near tht WeStern . While Ho-durlng
tht Nlxooli'•proloqed ~ugusl vacation
last year.
Thus far no indkations hive been
made public that .Slmllar occurences
were planned for thi!: coming August.
made public that 1imilar occurrences
near the gates of the estate this year
was the brief visit by a selt-styled woman
candidate f or the U .. s. Senate w h o ap-
peared the day of the Presldenl'1
departure.
"Send me to the Paris peace talks,"
proclaimed a banner attached to the
miniskirted redhead's pink parasol.
, 'g · C 00 -oophisticated electronic gear, arri~d
' " !.looday -wornipg. 11 <Jell, c~u.o • .f&ru,
nlm shortly before the disastrou.s 'earlhqi.JB.ke. Site u own 11 had been ln Mexican waters recently,
ostensibly seeking tuna SChools for
'!be ''l\Jiun \Jnlonllllgll SchOol District
may be getting a new high school, but
they are not sure where they are going
to put it, or bOw they are going to
pay for it.
"No declalon baa been made as to
where it will be," said Jack Roper,
Jssistant superintendent of the district.
Asked about locating the achool in
the · Saddlebad: Valley near \he ln-
terseetion of ·El Toro Road and Trabuco
Road, Roper aa.id the district did own
a site in the area, but "It hasn't been
brought before the board of trustees
yet." Be .said the matter would be brought
up at the n.en meetlng of the board
00 Aug. 10.
At a recent meeting of the board,
SUperlnlendenl William Zogg I o I d
turstets that the b u 11 d I n g of
the University Park High School will
deplete tbe district's bond money.
Roper said tht district "will probably
recommend a bond election to the hoe.rd"
at the nut meeting.
Russian fishermen. ·
The craft Is 'en route to Its home part,
Vladivostok, with Captain Mikhail Volik
In command.
There are 73 aboard, including ten
scientists, two of whom •re women.
The group was scheduled to tour Lion
Country, a nproductlon of the African
veld, at 1 :00 p.m. today. The SOO.acre
facility opened recently.
The groop was to arrive by bus. Lion
Country officials said they would roll
out the ''red carpet" and show them
every courtesy.
Sihanouk Family
To Leave Palace
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) -
The government has ordered the queen
mother. to vacate the royal palace by
Friday, informed sources said today.
Walter Hanson
Laguna Rites Set
Funeral services will be held at 11
a.m. ·Thursday In Sheffer Laguna Beach
1'!orl~ Chapel for Walter Clifford
'ljmiloil Of Lagtilii Niguel,,who died.,SW>-
day at the age of 58.
Mr. Ranson, a native Californian, is
, llijl'v\Ved ,by ~(1wido,r,, Wartda, a sOn,
· KentOO,. 'nd I' <IaUgJiter," Marilyn, all
of the Jamily home, 3168I,Crysta1 Sands
Drive.
Also surviving are a brother, Raymond
Hmon of Beverly Hills; three sisters,
Mrs.. Helen Sto~es of Sunland, Mrs.
Evelyn Weinstock of Altadena and Mrs.
Lillian Harbaugh of West Covina .
Burial will be at El Toro District
Cemetery, El Toro.
Mrs. Holt Rites
Set in La guna
A private memorial service is planned
for Muriel Jean Holt, 2448 Lomita Way,
Laguna Beach, who dieC Sunday at the
age of 52.
Mrs. Holt is survived by her husband,
James H.; two daughters, Miss Pamela s. Holt of Santa Monica and Mr'll. Harrold
Moore of Burbank; a sister,. Mary Beth
Proct0t· of Tustin; and by one grndchild.
Sheffer Laguna Beach Mortuary is
directing.
~ / UP'I T ........
BODY ·DISCOVERED 'L~urto M~rnlnif,1n
Mo ck Brush Fire
Drill Prepared
For Cr:u~ty UnifS
The sirens oi some . 20 fire trucks
will be waili through Laguna Beach
wfdnesday . ing, but Fire OlietJbn
Latimer wan to assure residents in
advance that will be only a practice
~ration.
The Laguna Beach Fire Department
will host a cotbttywide mutual aid drill
in the Park Avenue-Temple Hills Drive
area from 8:3o to 10 a.m., Latimer
said.
Between 18 and 23 fire trucks represen·
ting all fire-fighting units in the county
will participate fn the drill, battling a
mock brush fire extending from a paint
of origin at 995 Park Ave. up to the
·Top of the World area.
Approximately 100 notices have been
distributed to residents of the area, ad·
vising them of the drill, and requesting
cooperation, Latimer said.
At the conclusion of the drill,
participants will assemble at Top of
the World School, behind Laguna Beach
Fire Station 3, for a critique of the
ses.sion.
Kidnaped
, -I Gi~l, 16~
FoundDead
r-.
LANSING, Mich. (UPI) -Two boys
walking a rural road near here found
the body Of Laurie Murninghan, 18, the
object of an .intense police search aince
lbe Wll ltklnaped 4Ut1ng a holdup 11
dl.y.1 ago. ' ; .
Her abductOr tettiali:ied" ..i.t l'arge today.
~Ming Police Chief Derold Huiby VOW·
he. would ''Jeav,e . .no, stone,witunied until
the person pr ~ .. rupo'n.\tble for
tht trage<lf a,re .bf..,pt to JusUce.''
'!'he body of.the prett)'I blonda. daugllter
qi Mu E. , Munll!igban; 'fomet" mayor
of this state Caj1ta1; "''U 1oimd Monday ~· high 'grass 1and .... e00.~ near :3 JaR
about. II feel· from ·fli• road: She WI!
clad in u.e •While . blOuSe, red belt and
blue miniskirt ·she wore when ahe wu abd~C\ed ~uly 9 from ihe iift shop
where she wu employed ffu-uie Summer.
Identification was confirmed tlu:ough
Qental comparison, Husby· said. The
cause or Ume ol death wat 'Dot ' lm· ~ediately determin'* but Husbf ~d he wpuld Teveal the re!Qlts .of an autopsy
at a•news conleredce.to;flay.
'<At thia point I bye no knOwledge
,of. anytbinj and I'If''happy I .don't,"
Husby said when ·contacted at his -home
early today. "I haveh't heard the results
of anything yet."
The names of the two boys who made
the diBcovery were not di.!cloaed.-Huaby
said they immediately summoned .... of.
ficers to the scene. '
Mumlnghao, who _..,.nl lhO, earty da)'I
of the JnvestigaUOn at the Lanstni Police
Department work'.ing with police, was
not available .for comment, DQr were
other members of the family.
Gerald W. Graves, Lanalng's mayor,
said be was "stunned arid greatly grieved
by this senseless crime. Our hearts and
prayers go out in deepest sympathy
to ~urie's family."
Miss Murninghan was kidnaped from
Gallagher's Gilt Shop by a gun-wieldit'Jg
bandit during a holdup which netted
$&0. The owner of the store, Mrs.
Christine Gallagher, was pistol-whipped
by the man, and when She reeovered
from her injuries was able to help
an artist draw a picture of him.
Lagnnan Opposed
1 • j '
He Raps Huntington Fluoride
Huntington Beach Is going lo fluoridate
its municipal water auppJy.and a Laguna
Beach man is unhappy about it.
The Huntington council v o t e d
unanimously Mo,nday night to authorize
fluoridation after a 7D-mlnute public
hearing on the controverSlaJ issue.
Huntington Beach th u s became the
second city in Orange County to approve
fluoridation . Fountain · Valley okayed
similar action in a 4 to I vote several
weeks ago.
One foe of fluoridation voiced his fear
that other county cities may follow suit.
John Sinnette, a chemist of 507 Canyon
Acres Road, Laguna Beach, spoke at
the hearing and likened fluoridation to
a contagious disease.
"I'm afraid it may spread to Laguna,"
he said.
Sinnette maintained that it had not
been proven that fluorides will not be
hannful.
Huntington Beach resident M r s .
Bernard Gage urged that the Issue be
put to a public vote and later Councilman
Ted Bartlett moved that the matter
be plactd on the General Election ballot
in November.
Councilman George McCracken backed
Bartlett's moUon but it was defeated
4 to 2. A motion by Councilman Al
Coen authorizing fluoridation was then
pa~ Without dJSsent.
Water Superintendent Ed St an g
estimated the cost of injecting fluorides
into t.he City Water supply to bring the
fluoride content . to one part per million
at $18,825 for equipment and '6,250 a
year for the sodium fluoride.
Stang estimated that it will take five
months to install the equipment and
start the program, intended to reduce
tooth decay in children.
The water superintendent also revealed
that natur•I fluorides are already In
the water supply, varying from 2/lotbs
to 4/IOths per million.
She left suddenly when a summer
thundershower dampened the chi!!lz and
lace on her outfit.
Divorced Dad
Visits Kws-
Ends._Up in Rome
In a break with the monarchy, the
eovernment of Premier Lon Nol has
cut off all funds for operating the palace
·and told Queen Sisowath Kossamak
Nearireath, aging mother of ousted Prince
Norodom Slhanouk, to move to a small
house near the Independence Monument.
The sources close to the throne said
the letter k> the queen1 mother advised
her that she would be given the use
of two cars for her personal entourag~,
which includes Prlricess •Bopha Devt,
prima ballerina of the Royal Cambodian
Corps de Ballet.
GRAND OPENING SALE!
DAILY PILOT
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ThoM 11 K•n ll E41tor
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--
' ' ' ' '
An alleged case of chlid · ·~ by
a father paying a post-divorce visit tb
his childreJ? 1tn San Clemente reached
lntemationavproportions Monday.
It began last Friday when, police said,
Beniamino Palazzi came to town to visit
h1s two children, Dino, 5, and Laura,
6, at the borne oI·tbtir mother.
The mother, 'M:ra. Nicetta' Pa1ard of
215 Granada-Apt.· 3, told' police her
estrapged hUsband took his usual vlslta~
tion rigllts with ifle chifclcen, bu\ didD'.I
return with them SUnday as dictated ·by a settlement. , on Monday,she recelvocl a tOleiP'am •
"The children are fine,'; It.II.id.
It came from ~. JLaly .. ,
P akistan Lal>or Camp
Raided; Sl~~es Free
DACCA, East' Pakistan (AP) -Police
have rescued ·19 persons from slave
labor camps in jungles In the Chlttqong
Hijl district some 270 mues ~ aouU>east
, of Decca, the district commlsslona said
·today. Police 9JT(ls_ted eight camp
opcratOI'! but said others ~apCd, ,
Most of the victims were teen-11gers
Jurclf into' .the jungle! by prom.lsts or
!·ow paying $1 a day pl us board 11nd
od3_ing, rrhey trekked: 00 mlles into the
jonkle and then Wt'rt forced itr work
from dawn to dusk cuulng bamboo and
.breaking ii.Ones wJth no pay.
~/
The decision to oust the queen mother
from the palace grounds led to im·
mediate speculation that the government
which overthrew Sihanouk "on March 18
again wu on the verge of proclaiming
'Cambodia 1 republic.
~ightcluhs Get
,Government Loan
~·~· _,w ASHING TON (UPI) -A topless
nightclub is entitled to a Small Business
Administration loan the aame as any
otber leglUmate business, according to
SBA DirectOr Hiliry Sandoval Jr.
Sandoval told the HOUs6 Select Com-
mlttee an Small Buslntss Monday that
11; $41'.000 relocation loan was approved
for a club featuring topless go-go dancers
tn Denver, Coio., because a Federal
Highway project had forced it lo move.
He Said the club met all the legal
requirements of the state ot CoJoradP,
and "There was no w11y we· coul~ turn
lhat (lhl' loan) dov.'n." .
Sandoval was questioned closely about
• lhe nlghtcl~b lo11n and a . loan to a
Virginia furniture nir.1ufacturer. Both
loan5 had been crlUclzed by syndicated
colwnnlsl Jack AndtrlOn.
We are pleased to announce
the open ing of ou r second sto re
in Tustin. We have plfrchased
"Red Hill Carpets" a nd the new
name will be "Alden's Red Hill
Ca rpets & Draperies."
e IN COSTA MESA e
.CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Pl1ctntl1 Avt
Phon1 ~83~
In conjunction with the open-
ing of our Tustin sto re, we have
several spe,cia l s in our Costa
Mesa store. Please come in and
see us.·
e IN TUSTIN e
ALDEN'S
RED HILL
CARPETS e DRAPES
18374 J. lrvln•
Phono U'-'344
VISIT OUR ENLARGED REMNANT ROOM AT OUR COSTA MESA
STORE. HUNDREDS OF REMNANTS AND ROLL ENDS.
• (
~ I
T"""1, Joly n, 1970 L DAILY I'll.ff tJ
ltecord C:rowds · Visit Art FestiVals
Two C~tnps
Sue Ashburn, 15, El Toro, raised her .Hereford, "Ferdinand," from
calf to grand champion of the 1970 Orange ~ounty Fair. Sue, a mem-
ber of the Mission Viejo Future Fanners of America, saw 1;140-pound
steer sold during lair's Junior Livestock Auction. to Mission Viejo
Campany for $2,394.
Laguna S·chool Pay · Raise s
Need Board 01( Tonight . ' .
Salary agreements reflecting an ap-
proximate five percent increase for
Laguna !leach School Dis)l:ilt.,, ad-
ministrators aiid teachers' \ \vlir' be
presented to the school board for fonnal
approval at its regular session tonight
at 7:30 o'clock in the district offices.
The board will be asked to extend
the contract of Superintendent William
Ullom to June 30, 1972 at a salary
of $27,500 a year, up $1,000 from his
present rate. The superinteadent's pres.
ent contract runs through June 30, 1971.
Carl Klas s Wins
Laguna Beac1i
Surfing Contest
\Vith fair skies and some fine four-foot
breakers, Carl Klass, 18. of Laguna
Beach rode the sY.-ells lo (irst place
in the 16th annual Laguna Beach Surfing
Contest Saturday morning.
A· contract with Dr. Charles Hess,
newly-appomted 1uistant superintendent
for business, would take him through
the 1970-71 111Chool year at an annual
salary of $21 ,818.
Also up for approval will be salary
agreement with school principal.s and
classroom teachers.
The board will receive a letter from
State Superintendent Max Rafferty,
reporting unanimous approval of lhe
State Board or Education for the
Gapistrano-Laguna Regional Occupations
Program.
Trustees Mrs. Jane Boyd and Dr.
Anthony Orlandella and Dr. Robert.
Reeves will report on planning progress
for the joint vocational training program,
scheduled to start in September.
Revised graduation requiremenll for
the high school and the high school
course of study will be presented for
approval.
The board also will consider entering
into an ' agreement with Affiliated
Properties Inc. to undertake, for the
~um of $1,500 a review of grade& on
the school dlstrkt's recently acquired
property on Alta Laguna Boulevard to
ascertain the feasibility or using excess
soil from the school's land within the
local area.
Grand Jury
Backs UCI
.;Hospital
By TOM BARLEY
ot tM 0•111 ,. .... tMlf
Plans for the construction cf a
University Hospital on the UC Irvine
campus have · been endorsed by the
Orange County Grand Jury in a mid-term
report calling for the closest J>OS.'ible
lia.scn between the completed flclUty
and the Orange County Medical Center.
"Two hospitals would best fulfill the
goals of the Medical Center, the (Irvine) ,
College of Ptledicine and the community."
the report states. "This In no way con-
stitutes a duplication or services since
we are discussing two totally different
types of hospitals."
The Grand Jury rtport points out that
OC~IC is "Ideally situated" for the public
service it providt:s, but that it would
be impractical to add the needed
teaching hQspital to the facilities cur·
rently housed on lhe coonty's Manchester
complex.
In any event. the report adds, a
teadUng hospital must, by its nature
and mission, work in c!Ose conjundloon
with a school or medicine -in this
case, UCJ.
An off-campus hospital is not fea!lble
at a time when "the trend in medical
education is to have students in direct
contract with patient! much earlier in
their scholastic career," the rtport
states. And it k>oks for "the lntegraUon
of the program of the School of Medicine
with other departments of the university,
such as behavioral and social sciences,
engineering and the various biological
sciences."
By the same token, the report adds,
"any plan to move OCMC to the Irvine
campus in order to combine It with
the University Hospilal would Jtriously
impair its ability to serve that secment
of the community for which It is primari-
ly opera led."
The compilers of the· report reject
recent arguments that populaUon growth
in the southern portion er Or~e County
might justify the moving of OCMC to
a more central location.
"ll Is unlikely that any large pert:en·
tage of mandated (Indigent) patJmts
will originate from what apptar1 to
be developing into a relatlvtly hlgtl. !OCio-
economic area, the report points out.
It y.·ould be much' better and ln the
greater public interest, the report states,
ror authorities to plan for future high
population growth by supplementing the
University Hospital and the Orange Coun-
ty Medical Center with "a system of
outreach clinics throughout the county.
"These two facilities (should) be con-
sidered as the nucleus of a com·
prehensive health care p r o g r a m
coordinated throughout the county and
involving not only hospitals for acute
illnesses, but much needed beds for
rehabilitation and mental health," the
report adds.
tt adds the warning that the creation
of two separate hospital facilities should
not lead to the duplication of. equipment
and services and urges the absolute
coordination ol both hospitals. It notes
the assurances of the OCMC ad-
ministrator and the Dean of UCl's School
of Medicine that such planning is already:
under way. Klass took first place in the top event,
senior men's board surfing. Bili Palmer
swept in second, and Tom Sholseth was
third.
Held al Brooks Street Beach, the meet
drew 58 contestants, all from Laguna
Beach, and an estimated 800 spectators.
Surfifli great Corky Carroll kept thinis
alive with his colorful commentary along
with the events. makifii a special note
of all those who wiped~ut and ended
up with "a scmdcrab sandwich,"
Two Utility Firms Apply
For Generating ·Plants
A new division this year, for boya
under 14 years. brought enough entries
to keep it on for next year.
Other winners include :
J11nior f\fen's Surfing: Mike Armstrong,
first, John O'Cornnor, second, Alec
Nelson, third.
BGy!li' Surfing: Doug Brown, first. Jnn
ni11ger. second and Richard Deal, third .
f\ten 's Body Surfing: Jim Ray, first ,
nan Glass, second 'lnd John Ruvers ,
third.
BGys' Rody Sorting:: Kurt Westgaard,
first and Matt Lara. SecQnd.
The Cy Chambers Award r or
sportsmanship, citizenship, and surfing
ability went to high .school senior Da vid
.Xerr. The award commemorates Laguna
athlete and student Cy Chambers, who
died last year. The petpetual trophy
Is kept at Thurston lntumediate School.
where Cy was the first student body
J?fesldent.
1 OhiQ Memorial Rites
Held for Deane Garr
f\1e:mortat services were held In Cin-
cinnati, Ohio, for KeMeth Deane Garr,
\Vho died In Tacoma J>ark. Md., July
17. following 1 long Illness. He was
16.
A resident of Laguna Be.ach for several
ycan, Mr. Garr had been associaled
vdtt1 Blackmarr's Laguna B t 1 c b
Furniture on Forest Avenue •
•
By JOHN VALTERZA
ot Ille OtllY PllH ltfff
The two utility firms serving electricity
to the South Orange Coast have applied
to the slate Public Utilities Commisgion
~rue) for approval of two huge nuclear
generating statklns near San Onofre.
But several months will elapse before
hearings by the PUC are scheduled for
Southern California Edison Company and
San Diego Gas and Electric Company
y.·ho want to build the two large
generating stations on about 84 acres
downcoast or the existing nuclear plan
at San Onofre.
Applications for 1pprovat of the project
by the Atomic Energy Commission were
filed earllt.r thll year. Appearances
before that federal body have not yet
been acheduled.
Both the PUC and AF.c .llearlnp are
expected to last tor week1 -and perhaps
months -Edioon tpOke....., said tDdey.
'111e $450.mlJUon plant. are..expected to be the 111bjecl of lengthy te;tlmony
by ecology·mlnded speakers, they said.
Proposals ror a conventional fossil-fuel
plant ln Huntington Beach earlier this
year wen stalled for ltVtral months
while protestors presented their cases
befon! the PUC.
.__Al San. Onofre, where the ecol~ical
Issues are dllferent, the two utilities
(San Diego Gas and Electric bolds 20-per•
ctnt inttrest. in the plan) twin reac-
tor!! will be proposed.
Each cl the new ones would produet
double the amount of electrical current ·
as lhe present one which has been in
operations with no accidents, nor
noticeable pollution in the past two years
of regul8r operation.
The two new comple:ie1 will serve
the electrical needs of a city of 2.~
million inhabitants, utility spokesmen
have claimed.
Generators -the conventional steam
type -already are in the process of
being purchased.
The nuclear chambers provide the heat
for steam-driven dynamos.
Each of the cylindrical nuclear reac-
tors will be built In hollow1 1lon1 Ille
beach line on land JeCUrfd ll1der a
long·tenn lease w:lth the Marine Corps.
Among the changes ever the txllttn1
plant are shielding for the UMlfhlly
electrical lrlnsfonning equipment and
pos1lbly modem<feslgned tr111S1111tt1n1
poles.
Instead of the 1tadlllon1l lphei.s,
dom .. shaped cyllndm will house tbe
nuclear generating machinery.
Despite the early applicaUon for cf·
fle\al governmtnt approval of the plants,
completion and christening of the prc>-
posed nuclear piles are at least six
or seven years orr.
About five years of pape"'-ork ind
construction will bt requittd befort the
two generating ltltions be1ln thelr
shakedown ttsts.
The tests require another year or mort.
before the pllnta becorn< fully opera·
tlon1L
DAILY "ILOT stiff ,. .. i.
ART·A·FAIR'S ERNIE TATE PREPARES HIS BOOTH
Th ird LaguM Art S-Runo Throvgh Aug. 30
Democrat Mize Drops Out
Of Special Senate Race
Democratic nominee Dwight W. Mize
did not file ror a special ele<:lion in
the 34th State Senate District before
the dealine passed Friday, thereby
virtually aa;uring victory for Republican
Dennis Carpenter cf Newport Beach.
Mize, who will op~ Carpenter for
a four-year term In November, uld
he decided not to file for the special
vote because he fe lt the election "''
an "additional unnecessary expense" for
the taxpayers.
Carpenter will have one opponent on
the Aug. 11 ballot, however. Republican
Dougla.I Irvine completed his filing Fri-
day.
The election was called to fill the
vacancy mated by the elecUon of
former state Senator John Schmitz CR.
Tustin) to the U.S. Houae of Reprtsen.
tatives.
The winner of the special election
Baton Twirling Skill
Offered in Classes
Baton twirling classes sponsored by
the Laguna Beach City Recreational
Department are running this week
through August 12. Classes are held
on h-londays and \Vednesdays at t h e
high school girls' gym . Beginners begin
twirling at 1 p.m., advanced at I :30
p.m. and intermediates at 2 p.m.
Registration cost for the eight lessons
ts $2. For further information, contact
the re<nation departuient, 4H-1124, E.ii:t.
40.
will be sworn In Immediately and will
serve until the end of the year.
~tlze contends that the special st~ion
of the state Legislature Is expected to
end around Aug . 15, which meanii the
taxpayers will be paying about $7 ,000
in salary for the new senator for tht
rest of the yaar. • ; ~
County Clerk William E. St John said
the special election will cost about
SI 10.000. Therl will be Mt precincts
and 380,000 voters.
Budget CU:t Pwn
Faces County
Oranae County supervisors are today
awafUng a rtport which la expected
to ltrtngthen their belief thal mere than
$500,000 can be cut from the 1171)..71
budge:t by slashing overtlme, travel e1.
penses and ertra he1p.
County Administrative ()(fictr Robert
Thomas has been ordered to rttum to
the board 'Illursday with his views On
the effects ol a blanket 20 percent reduc·
tion suggested by Supervisor David
Baker.
Baker, who has been oppoted to
nil departmental requests for extra help,
suggested the reduction as a means
o( effecting a cut in what is presently
a $209 million budget,
The reduction, if approved, would
represent one sixlh of the upected dif·
ference between spending propo!aJ.s and
the COW>ty's estmated income If county
tax rates remain at the present $1.67
for eacl) $100 ol asses!ed value.
Here's your cue!
60 Foreign
Di_P.lomats
See Pageant
Benevolent weatbtr prevailed durlns
~ weekend u Lacuna Beach tourism
swung into high gear with the openlnS
cf three art festival!.
The Festival· of Arts reported that
9,llf visitors toured the Festi.Yal grounds,
with an additional' 7,716 viewing the
Pageant of the Ma.slers, for an at•
tendance total or 17,733 at the grounds
Friday lhl'ougll Sunday. Attendance Is
about 3,000 persons greater than c~
weekend last year.
Sixty of the visitors Sunday evtcin.g
were members of the Loe Angeles
Consular Corps, which Is I groupinl
of all Uie foreign consulate officers in
the southland area. En route to the
FestivaL of Arb, the corps had .dinner
al the Balboa Bay Club, arriving in
the Art Colony just in time to Re
the Pageant of the Masters.
'The Festival treated the officials tG
a look backstage to see how the "livln&
pictures" were produced. ·
Sales, too, are up at the Festival.
Although no figures are available, since
the Festival doqn't take a commission
on works sold. officials report it's a
good year fqr exhibiting artists.
· As in the many years past, the FesUval
restaurant is busy keeping . visitors fed,
and the trams. often as crowded as
a San Francisco trolley car, are busWni
around town.
"It's the best one we've ever had,
we'n dellgbted," saJd Ernie Tate, Art-A·
Fair grounds chairman.
He reports that the show brought MO
people each dily on the opening wffkend.
Sales totaled $3,000 which is a new
record setter for the exhibition at 346
N. C<tast Highway.
The only incident that marred opening
night al th e show was an electrical
failure along one side of the grounds.
But it .was quickly repajred, after a
faulty wire connect.Ion was discovered.
Things at the · Sawdust Festival
''started with a bang" Friday, and "have
ke'pt on banging ever since," according
to publicity direct.or Peg Smith. S a 1 e 1
on art works have been about $500
for the first three days, with many or the smaller art items sellin! fast.
All the artists held their first weekly
polluck dinnet Monday '\Everybody chip-
ped in, and it was absolutely wild, t'v•
never seen food iO so fast," P.lrs. Smith
rtpOrted.
The only problem at the Sawdust
Festival. she said, Ls many visitors just
caii't deckle w.hat is the art work for
sale and what is the booth. "But then ,
everybody is delighted with it, anyway.''
Laguna Building
Workshop Op~
' A limited number ol openinj:1' ire
still available for the C<tmmunlty
Building Workshop, to be held this 'Thurs-
day, Friday and Saturday at Thurston
Intermediate School in Laguna Beach.
The workshop will be conducted by
Dr. Jack Gibb, author and organJzational
consultant, and b1 designed to provide
the individual the basic theories of com-
munltf building, such as the club, family,
etc.
Dr. Gibb is co-author of a text on
small group experience, • 'T ·G r o u p
Theory and Laboratory Melhod," and
has w o r k e d with several behavioral
sclence organizations.
Interested persons are asked to contact
St. Mary's 'Episcopal Church, 494-3542,
for further informatlo~ on the workshop.
1i 4Jh'x8' size 699°0
* l'" slate top
*Weighs 1000 pounds * Olive, r~d or gold felt
I 1
--
'
I
I
' DAILY l'llOT
.Njteav,y:rairls·~l)limea
l!lilis .lil!llUd'!f., 1be 1rlfeeter .o1-1n-
wlvemeat .. .., <PL PMi'lC Jtloel
<(lowdd'8 (Play ''tllay Jl!ever':" The
•Show cOlllinued ""' -...ar!Y ·two
,iltctle$.of .. ., .i.ked.~ the
~ielld,-,U.otli!ile. Wllh•ater
111>Qut'hi& <allkles, 11cior-lfi <W•l-
r...1 waJkl!d :omll!Je :alfd 'delivered
ti# .lllo.Yll ,111111l "liDI>.: ';! MJ$, It'• _., ....... ··-· •
•
TuesdiJ, J11l1 21, 1~70
Manslaughter
Charge Facing
Bus Crash Driver
4ILEllTOWN. Pa. (UPI) -LehiP
o.mty --IEj Gearp Joeet* said be woald file fn•oluatary _.......,...-... ....,. opinlt the
dri .... ff··---... ---bere !IOI -. lllll>or ...... i,,..
llland c:hlJdren .and li\iUrill& 5Z other
peno111.
J-11 -.. lmmigalioo _ ..
"'probable CIDle" to· file one dlarge
for each death apinst H~ Daye,
40, of Montclair, N.J. Daye was listed
in fair condition at ADelltown hospital.
The district attorney said charges
mlgbt be f'tled later against the bus
company which leased the bu3 to a
charter tel'Vice becall.9! Of faulty
merhanicaJ parts OD the bus.
Jca!ph said the bos' tarbomet.er, I
speed recording device, apparently was
not -king during the trip. He said
it c::ontaimed no rmrded Jnformation as
jo tbe apeed of Ille vehicle.
The bas ... carryilll Ii -fro ..
the Hillel Day School in LaW1eone,.N.Y.
when it skidded OD raimlict route 2!
Dell' here and went 05leJ' a 50-faot em-
-Tiie clllldn:ll aod aeveral adult
QIUDBe1on 'ftl'e an a Um of the
PemilJhaoia Duldl aNllll'l'-
IJoJe, who 1ulle1 .. i: bUd ud chest
hQmW in tbe --. ml a -ible
'-'! -lallr, was In the ho<pital's
Kompong 'lbom southwest of PhnOlll
Penh, near Svay Rieng .eQt of tbt
capUal, and on tlle-banks Oi Tonle Sap,
thelake-aorthw..t<lf the city.
~ --fGuPl the blr-
... !iatlle ..... Ille Combodian "'""
d Tut .ll<o$ -t• tiiiJ,. wes~ · _.,, Sl;aoo, ktbic 5Z Rod troops
Md capluriog 23 -opokesmen
aid. Tiie -v--th<J'
loll tjll'llO deod -11 -
Ecorwmy llb Healing . . , '
Say Cabinet O~ . ' .
w.wnm C11PQ -1lt .,
lietlolaj Dali! IL ~ -a.-....... ~ ...... ..
-•• • • ... 11111 ln-
flatiomry pwa Wl!l'9 ~ md
........ ..., lmilior -lllil ,...; -•bellthier-. "Oar P"""'N-II beilrrl rewarded,"
Kennedy ~ -the -Semd,e »-mjc l'mwnittee. '"The
-policies of tbla -are wwtuc. "-
~ -the -is llllkiro& a tnmffioa fnJm aeveri infladkm at
tile ..... limo It is ailjmtjac from
• "• war-tnne ·to a peace-time economy.''
--. Laber -SecftWy Jomeo D.d1odpoo, predided that .OllY
further' ~ increase• in
•••qlijjuimL cauld be awided u tbe
--·-puram ils AUn'lai\loo l*CCI™ Dile awildd&g to a peace-time emnrwny.
'Die Cllinet memlwn' C1141d*
-•• ,.,... faUowd Prelideat Nimn'•
own prognosis of Monday in which he
saw an improvement In the economy
the remainder of the year.
Kaanedy said the tn11sttio11 '1o a more
-"""""ll'" bu -aome tempcnry hardships -llUdl u
'Tiger y.gei:i'
To Be Destroyed
SAIGON (AP) -The Saulb Vi ...
t11111e111 ..,..,....i llid todlly It wiS
...... ;. ..... ...-"Iller ..,., ....
lbe Con Son JUnd prillD and reprac•
--.... dis:ipliMI)' ceDs.. The cells, center of intemational co..-
troversy smce· two U.S. coagressmel'
revelled their ftiltence two weeb ago,
will be clilmanlled immedb!tely, •
~l!UI.
Wilen Schoolcnift tiounty, .Jlich. . ~ Can! mil
unemployment -and "compllcales the
tuks of ecommic paticy." Howcua, be
added: "The remarkable thing, to my
lie added that a omvey of South Vie~
nam's correctiml1 matitutkm will be
made with a Tiew to lllCft imJKVVementa
as the government can lfkrd .
,d~::U>hnH~.oaw
,a.tiff 1L:lo)Ol 1~ letlhis,ciog run
~wttb.JDOtleaab -or.collar. Jones;gave
&a!Y -a 1tcJ<;et. '~is ·dog ·was TUn-
,niqgJn illlo'8tQet. on .the:Ji®walk,
>will> no i*all, ""'~r .. no Jags.
fits far -as ~Im "conoemed, -nol>ody
Jibould ~·· ~ ti:eatment ui*r ,J11e .la"'.," ..!ones ..11iid. llut. ......... -~~ii?'• ~ !IO'J1.uthQt!ll1fbe-on
.an\! .added It was "thinlz)"' for
Gray to ticket Jilin. JO!lel .tpit. • ~ud""""9ihoodlllndi!oun-
tain, N,C • ....ui .""1 +wi <lbair .com
""l!' in.a fffl ilays, 'l?'lt-tbey:U'bav•
tq,i.,t .. "'°',$he roof of their ~re a. IA• ..it: ll'he ®'untliln ll>I'Qlbe<s
fiave been growing their crop• Oil e' *'JI fOf ilMDr ....... in .lhia ~
wtity ii'oout '211 mDes north
. '.ilmil!atOP ,.._ IJliO, i'll!!Y aloo
... liO-i-..-.. ••foot
... of. yotatoes JtoWil!c .., the
.-. l4otwilts "' .a ;falt Jl.Ulbl•
.. .wilesi lhef -<la. Cn!P-"In
l:11eat,.ear.s,'' .aaidiCoy, -'WJlave
1llied Je<llliller-and ·'P"i"lll-' "'ater <Iii '!be cropo. Tile .-... <palatoes
m.i watenne!on• -Juot like ~ that come ou1 Qf Jhe Mid." • ~~ear tbe1'lllshd
Park 'Zoo ln l4JllQn ·:Ila"!' lligne4
~ ~ Jll;t1.be .an>orOUI
-cocb at ille llll!> lie .mo.ad lo • J.araor pad<. ~ daim ;they
can't «et ·lo oleep -1111 .of .Ille
birds' mating crt.. every night.
Awkcw~ethk
'W8iam A•h••. II, :and ilis -· -· e. mmt lllBir ?.Iii wed-lmc ~ Fliday. fte ADdre+rs, _,ti...,-dlla -el-
~~ <:Bloin ID Dattington, Wis., 'far II-·,,_ -~en
anti Iii~-.. 1lecipe for a long marriage according to .Mrs .
Anft:rews, ·"Just llang on, trust the 1.ord, and doirt mm ty vppoittm. ••
Showers Soak East Coast
POllibk Hurricane HeGMil Toamnl Cartral &.If . Comt
c.;ufer•I•
' , ..
• -----
I
-· ---_,, -... 1!1(111•
So1ton
luff•lo
Ch1rlott9
Chlcl90 Clnelrln1ll
(!~Ind ....... .......... ...... ,
F1"'>1flll;1
·Fort wortlt
··~ lndl1111.-. ,_ ,_ -"" ..... _
-..W WM c:tni.r.d fu.f -D lflollntll"--
... MiUll\ of p---,..... --.,....,. .. , .............. "'"""I -· •1:sm1•.,..,....t..i•f/llr ...... --..-.st. ......
Ol'lllltlMl·---~aftd-_.._
Gulf ·---v ... llffVY flMM!ll M ,.-., ........... ................ ., .. _ --·------· ----· .... .......,., ,...,. ... WCI Ml
.. _
....... fl .. tl:JIL uu.•. Ml~ -. ..
----~ .............
ill.WOii)'
...... -·~· .,...,.. ltlctlmliiiif .................. -.... __ ....................... _. ttit'--dtY"
-.. ... ........ -...ia.., ............ ~ , .. ......_
(-.,---~---...... ~ ~. ~ MtM ll'llllld T8'TIH
'""' .wtHtrtd 111 llftlWi In tht u-r W11lllnt!011 rot 111!11 MOl'ldtV. WIMllPttl
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General-Jet $
4-PLV ma1 con
• Tough Duraoen®
rubber tread
• Famous dual
tread design
6.50-13 •••••••• 11-4.15.
11.25-1-4 • 15 •••• 110.95.
8.~14 •••••••• $21.-45•
7.75-14
7.JS.15 • Tub<lless wha...,.u
Pl'icaJlll\I• 11.71Wa..s.J
F-.:t. Es. T1r.
'*tit•
M(lelldifll
on•l-ptUI exeh9np ~ltf.
PREMIUM TIRE SA• E
Premium is General's design1ti011. Ther• Is no industry standard for premium tirts
FIBER&USS·BELTED &TW . ' '
The more youbuySI"'
... the more you 11'1:.
Di9alunts off our rezularse\ling prices
Have You Checked Your Boat
And Camper Trailer Tires Lately? 3-Ban GOLFER'S VALUE KRAFTREADS
GENDtAL
JET-RIB
WHITEWAUS
ANO K.ACKWALLS
FOi BOAT
AmCAllPEI
TUM•
·-..l.-• rm .. nms ftr lti6' --.1 .... ..-a1111111•
---
JATO SUPEfil 100
, 'G.1!9<ll'I ltclOI')' rlll1t>od <-Ids) ,I
2for :'.
•llA!,,. C.'tv,c.._
~·-1! ...........
NIYllZEUl'TWI
6.§0.ll 7.7$-14 ••
7.llO-ll 7.JS.JS 6.95-14 6,15-15
7.»-14 7.75-15
-lllUWl'10H ,
GTW SALE ENOS JULY 25 ONE WEEI< ONLY•
IEllEUL n•
._ laaF I
COAST~
WEUL nu snw.1..._c:-._
541-1711 60 IOJJ
AYaY
GINIRAL TIRE
saY1a
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San Clemente
' T odaY,'fi . Final
. Capistrano EDITI O N N.Y. s-.ek8 i .
'' VOL. 63, NO. 173, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES .. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
' ' (
,TUESDAY, JULY 21 ,, ~97.0 t• " .,
Nixon Changes Style of Clemente · :V acatiDDs
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of *' DellJ , .... Sleff
Presld.ent Nixan . ~ms to be chan&inl
his style for visits to his seaside villa
in ·san Clemente' -focusing more on
Jo.day working visits, instead of the
eapected repeat of his month-long stay '
of last August. _
The ·RCOnd such l<ktay vWt this sum-
mer will it.art Friday whtJt the , Chief
E1:ecu:tJve, Mrs. Nixon and daughter
Tricia ,fly in for 10 dafs in tbe IUD
n
and top-level conf....,,... and a bu'1 workload.
Ahcl Pr.., Secretary Ron Ziealer aid
M911dly 1 ~ 'Yet another to.day slay
b forecast fOt mld-August ..
List year, a few inorithJ after the
President bought the former Cott.on
EState, the President moved in for an·
entire month, bringin& the-cabinet, other
aides and hundreds oC . Whitt House
workers.
But 1ince then the Presid~al visits
Peopf,e WiU Hale . '
Presid.ent Vows
No Viet Dictums ' '
WASHINGTON CAP) -~l Nix-
on says the future government of South
Vietnam must ,be selected through elec-
tions -not imposed on the war-torn
nation by negotiators in Paris.
His administration will not stand for
Fraud .$,pree
Suspect-~s~ys
Not Gui lty
A self-styled· expert on b'anking and
finance who police alltge launChed in
intetrnational toraery spree •from ,,San
Clement& entered a . plea of innocent
Mondiy to the fekinY charges in South
Orange County Mupicipal Court ..
The suspect, ·narrell ·Graff H'1'm of
Salt Lake City, UtaB, will· appear in
the Um!: Court nexr Monday• morning
at a preiimlnary bearing to determine
if the · 44-year~ld travder should face
trial on the cha(g.. The hearing will
&la.rt at I a.m.
Hafen, arre!ted after months of
laborious tracing in .sevei'al countries
by San Clemente detective Leonard
Goodwin, is charged wJth passing
thousands of dollars in worthless checks
in -the U.S., Latin America and Europe
afte'r ·an Initial alleged incident at the
San Clemente branch of the Bank of
America last May 4 .and S.
The college graduate in finance was
picked up early last week as he, his
wife and their four children arrived
In Los Ana:eles from Coma Rica .
Hafen, who also was held lnitially
on federal charges of flight to avoid
prosecution, was formally charged with
the San Clemente allqed for&~ in
municipal cOOrt last Thursday.
He was granted a delay until Monday
for entering a plea. . .
Goodwin folloftd the.man yia teletype
and letters -on 10 different hops from
country-tiH:ountry. .
an imp:ised · CQallUoo. government, tt>e
President uid. :'1111\Ult be~ aovernmenl
selected by the people of South Vi~tnam."
In a wide-ranginc news confertnee
Mon(iay, the President alao said be would
veto a bill setting mandatory quota$
'¥' any impor:ta •J<CeJ>I. textJjes. SU<h
quotu, he' ia.Jd, are not 'n ~1he hat~I
Interest -and micht aet ,off an in·
teroltioUI .tr.ade war. ' ' • 'l1Mi Houe Ways ...... Mtlnl Cemmiltee
has proposed ' quotas. on lhot_-aad tulile
imports.
Beyond Vieblam. .lad Jmporµ, Nixon
__ _. -a ',..m~ of' ti>P!Cs at the ~ newi Confetinee.
He said .the U,Jllted St.it.ea, 1w no
idea .of using 1 armfld, fGl'C4!f to apel
the Soviet, Union Irpm ~ ¥~ ~t: ·
promi"!I no "viii!'* sq~ad al Depart·
ment·ol Ju~~c~ agen~" will torce achool
integration bi the IOUUl;-pred!Clod voten
will · turn : qaJn.tt :' big spinden . in
Congresa;1 forecut aa ecanomic 'Uptum
for the La.st half 1of the year and &&id
he sees little chance /ti. a ,.U cut durin&
the next two years:
The .Pre!;dent announced · plan.! for
a major meeting on natiori.al defense
and. the detenM bud&et at· the Western
White House July rT,1 followed by con-
ferenct1 on the domestic budaet for fiacal
1972. .
In ruling out any imposed ·coalition
govem'ment in Sai1on, Nixon aaid ~
hl!I oo .significant diaqreement with
South VletnameR: Prea:ldeftt · Thieu in
thia retari:I. But he said the United
Sia~ S\ill ls wllU., lo listen to any
proposa,ls made by Hanoi ·at the ·Paris
peace talb. •
The Preaident w.as in an amiable,
breezy mood at times alter he USUl'pf.Cf
press secretary Ronakl L. Zle1ler's after.
noon ~elinc in the preu cuwters at
lhl Wblta Roule lnd converted It inte
a newt cmferenciln,bla own office.
nie school ~lion quelliooinc
centered 'around cr1Uctam of ad-
mlnlJtraUon policy by Sen. Strom Thur·
mood (Jl.S.C.), In a Senate 1peech Fri·
day. • , .... . , •.
Thumiood, jumping on what ho · said
were arbitrary an4 discriminatory ac·
(Seo NIXON, Pap.I) .
have been more condensed aDd much
more active.
Duttng the most recent stay the Nixons interrupt~ a busy official schtdule for
a gala visit to a niece's weddJng in
NeWP,Ort ,Beach,. followed the 'nezt diY'
~y a prec"/eril.oetting 'flight lo quat ..
rava1ed Peru by Mrs. Nixon, .
'. The '.Otlet Executive conducted the
first~ver appointment of a cabinet
melnber . ou't.side of Washington, n .. c.,
durtna .that pa.I stay -ihe sw~·in·
ol the new Secrtlary of Labor 1 James
Hodgmn.
That, coupled with the awearin1 in
of three other top aides, a visit by
the Romanian Foreign MlnJste_r .aqd ~
on domestic ·and foretkn affairs with
his top aides ~ am~rs ~Cle
the last vi'sit particularly busy. , J '
The summer weather in t,he nation'~
capital, Which is mu'1gyaDd;un-
comfOrtable, obviously Ls , a f,ctoi in
the rapid·fire P.residential vb:ila here; ..• -
"
.. '·
and"during the most recent voyage to
·san Clemente ftllr. Nitoir seemed
eepecially exUberant aboUt 'the Orqe
Colst sun and balmy br~zei. -r
. Whe~ he accepta top-level visitors, tbe
·villa's pool Is the mo!t 'pOp.alafl vtsitiAg
are·a and during a recePtD for Hodpon
-and1 aides and fr;ienda,: ll)e·· fr\sidtnt
~med 'ven . 'ore ~P(OUd -tha~ ~ver, sources said. _ -· ...--,
"He kept aaking us to take: waiks
around the grounds and gardens and . --"\--. ..
• ::; -,
c ,, -' ; -" ; -''
l;
"")led· e<peclxlly ' prpud ahd, ~UIO!f
thb tin)e of II). horn<, file -!her
and the entife 1vllit, .. 1one auesi recalled
today. ' , , . './ The Wl)il.e Hou• press, CQfJllll., w~
foll"'(• the """"8~1t~llon jaunll Ji¥e
a gaggle ""'° ·P~ '!ill> ili• <>raoca
Coast environment as ~I. : •
It'• • challc<J OI\ .tbe repof!on .ta
doff suit coats and ties 19 aarDP.&e rtbc
<Boe \'lllT, r.,.11 ·
1 1 • f ' ' l '
I '• I • :
' • • , .J •• ····r .e· ' .
' .
' '
Gran~:·~~Y·
Acts eu .·2,~ -
' ''Cult' Cases'
' ' By TOM llARLEY
Of,,.. Deltr PW Stetf
Flve1persoos linked to the "devil cult9
killing of a Mission Viejo school leachei' and·~ f~tal ~Ung oi a sen.tee station
attendan.t were today ~on murder
chargoi by lhe Or.,11" Cbunty Granrl
JUrj, } I ) , .1 '. .
'nle pan~J.endcit ·three days ci! hHrlnp
by Indicting Stephen C. Hurd, 20, Herman
·~.;' ) ..... : .... ' •' ' ) I ,\
'Tile Vendors' •
' . Pal~• by Al<Jandto &.,.1 Hid.;ia••re ~'!:!'··" "UfU•'Bihl :v~orM .fud "l:Jttlc-rl.it['y~c\r:"·'
ed in. thi~,panel duri9~ 19'/0 Pa~t ·Of tile rs . Model• a're"(fl'O/li left)' J1ilin Evans-'llRI Sindy ·
' . Henclilck Ta~, It, botll·triliil<lta ind
Ql<illopher Dtrwin G~,. .17, .~
Potlland, OrecoC\o . '!JI the ~g al
Mn.. i'Jorenee Nancy Brown, ii, al 'El
In La!l.!!!1.•. Bl!.Bcti.' L,ivipg piCtures lncJud~ (~m. Baker of· Laguna · and ·Donna, and Clay, /!Ulter of
left) '.GOi,ng -t~ Ma~k~t,''l ."Little FlQw~r. Vi:n<lo~." EI Toro.1 • • ,. • ,
• ' ' • f • •
Building; PU,,nning · V :riit ·
' '
Divi-sion Winswg:un(l ·OK
By BARBARA DUARTE
r •• ot IM...~l'f .,._ ~lttf , . Pl~Minl Cooi~ion>n ;tam,ped ap-
provil · on d1Vlslon <I. 'blguna. Beach
buildiflll and plall!ing d~parlm<nt.' Mo ..
day night with a wmtlng th•t adequate
ataff ls· esaentW to amooth enactment
of the plan.. .
Roplying )o ·Camcilman 'P e l er
Ostr~'s ~ganiiation prr op osa I,
plailners forwarded recommendaticm to
the City C.OUncil.
ComJ!tissionera propoeed a "distinct"
separaUon of building and planning
departments with a direcl.Cl for each,
re~ directly to the city manager.
Duties I o{ the planning &taff will be
to, cUtect all vatiances, zone chln(es,
conditioqal use pennits and site plan
and ALS reviews to the Board or Ad-
justment or Pl.a.Ming Commission. !
· PfeP.fl.alion of staff .reports, zoning·
· amendments ~ precise planning studies'
also fall under ~e jurisdiclion. of plan~
nin&. ! •
" '
Building will be responaible for ad-
mhHtratioo -1 t!Oforcement of buildii;ig . . . ~-. . '
ltld izoninc • regulations, housing codes
aDd ~lal . c;oodiUons or . approved
variances or condiUonal use pennii a(r
· pUcatioos.
Qltrander's ·bid·to enlarae · the Board
1 ol Adjustment to five professional men
was revist<f ·tO U:cludt ltlff Members ' ' . rrom vOtiDg ',i~tua whlle retaining the
preSent melnbehlrilp of three. · .
Pla.Qners further agreed ' that mem·
. bershlp qllalificaUon shoul;d not ~ so
. rigidly d~ that It ties the mayor's
hands. in aelection of board , members
of "°y particular background.
"ln lhe· opinioq of lhe Planning ,Corn-
misslon1~' wrote COmmipion . Chairman
: William · Lambourne, "above · reoozp-
. mendationi will provide , a. 1dilt¥
. departmental ll!lplratlon with 1 cl~r
respOnsibillty_ to effectively ·111d el·
fi~ly aerve the pub!Jc.
" ''
·It's Apple Pie
' . ' '
And · F estivaZ: ' ' '
Nearly 100' dlsabli!d veteran:! and, other
servicemen . were .trea~1 l1onday ,nlglrt
; to ' ·fried 1 C'1fc~n·,:d;nnf!, a~d. ~
apple pie by the local post· =i o{ the
· 'Amei-it an· Legan .·~ :then were: gu'tst.s
of'uie Futival 1of Arts' to see' the' •Pa,ui\t
.. ot, the Mast~rs. . ..! .. 1 1 . •
Such. an evening,11 hefc::'fi¢h -y~r
· bY the Ametlcait Legion, I the ·Veterans ' ~ . . of Foreign• Wars, arid the VFW AUtillar.y
In cooperatio n with the F'5trva1:; Tl;e
post provides the home co0ked 111eal
and the Festival · daoatea tHe ,ilcket! .. -. ,. ' to the Pageant. · .. 1 •
The dlaabled vetuans come from the
V•teran's f!dJ>WiillrOl!On , HolpiCal in
Long Beach, lransporud ' lo the Art
Colony by .the 4.merican Red ~·
The other ~rViC~n 'are wider t{~~
ment at the Naval Hospital at Camp ·
· Pe'ndieton:. ' · · • · · · '.
Ma11y of lheJ m!n have ier;Ved 1
11n
the Vielnam 1 ccfullict; 1~ferin1 cOsbbit
roro. ' r •
. Ailh'ur Crali ·Huise. · 11; of GllrClen l ' ' ' • • , Grove, Tay!of and Hw;d are 'allo ~
wKh ttie1 ml¥'der of Jerry Wayne .ca run.
2111 Slnlai Ana;Jtrvk:e aW.tloo at~t~
Mtllrile Mff Danleb, 20, al Santa
Ana,.la. charced with btiol'an aCCeUciry in~ mur.derl. She-Js,cu~~y;~f"ln~ a 11\1.day ,..,.nee in Or,.. COwJty
jail•oD a nercotics violltion.
FoUf of the five pe?'IOftl' lncUctecl-'Will
be aml~ed 'lster tcicl~y'he!ore Su/i<!'io<
Court Juilge:James ,F, Judil"r ~ ~
by dillrlct-~tor~Y Cecil Jll~ ~lllOV¥ ,
the cue from the municipal cQU!'t ~nL
Hieb tiu ai\ed Or•n· autbmities ·
lo expedite .extradlilon '~rqc'eedmp 'which
wo<ild ena)lle them to relprn Glbbo!ley
to Orange · Coul)ly to, stand trW for .
the mui'dU ol'Mn: Brown.
Mrs. erown•S .body, minus ita heart,
lungs and· rltht arm, and bea'rinl multi·
pie sl!M wounda was fowd. -lait ·June
'15 in1 I shi!JoW grave rc)ff the ·Ortta:a
'Highway. ' ·,..
In\'Ullgation or· the killing leCfr. to '.
·reports whleh have since tieen 'sUbltan-
'tilted that the woman ' was the v.ictrm
of satanic orates before and 'after her
death. · ·
Carlin WU hacicff .. nd bludg....,..S, to
death and, dlllQpl!d on the wUbrooin
noor of b1a service 1 ~Uon last_ JUne .
I Jn a ~ that piovtded a p I
of leu 1than fl~ for hla attaCkers. .
And•durlng ,lhele trips, ~ln charg-
ed Hafen spread a trail of. bogus checb
wi,lh thousands of dollars·iqvolved ..
No ·Indication ·has yet come if the
several foreign banks Jrlvolvfd · wUf file
cbarus against the traveler in tJle:lr
home countflm. ·. Hafen sUll .is being held on $31,500
bail Or'!' the loeal felony charge.
Ne~p·9r:t ~oQsts .Route Bi·ll
. '· .
caauaiuu. '
: GCp~rEd . T~l A:s~
' '
Hulse and ' TS:ylor 1 were 1 certified u
aau1ti in lernu Of lhtl 'mu~or d;.I.;;
eirller thfs week in 11 move d~
lo 'emure' ,lhe.I~ inCfullcin ' on· Ui~ If'"" jury indic:tnienL · r-
. ' ~
Ball on the federal cue was set at it.OOO on the day after Hafen'a armit.
No members of the man's family have
been held, officers said.
'
Police Seeking
' ' Rapist Iden tity
Orange County Sheriff's lnveatlptors
are todly looking for! chiea to lhe kleritlty
of a man wtlb raped a~l&-year~kl Sou\h
L;aguna girl at knilepoint:
The vlcUm told officers that lhe was
~fered a rtde Sunday· night by a man
who picked her up .on 9outh C<Ja1t
Highway in Lagun• Beacll.
The 1irl1 slkf the man, delcr:ibe.I as belnl about 40 lo U ,yoar1 old, then
d l' o v e her to a aeclUded arta n e itJr
Monarch Bay and riped her.
The victim said 'lhfl man then drovB-
her to a 1tJ:ffl near her South LactUla
home and ordered her lo leave the car.
. ' ' ' ' '
Badh S R l · ··v · · ·. N:eur.' 'Rate_ . , 'Bn•><•.t ',. ~m ays eso .ution , Will · Aff'!ct Senat,e · ote .. :·: . , , " , '-'."."" ,
By JOANNE llEYNOLDS
ot .... °""' ~-.,..,
A.wemblyman Robert Bacllam today
decla...O a noc>IOllal I""!" M"!'Ct•Y
nigl)t by the Newport -C11J Council
"'pporting hli anlJ."-'l1 lqlalilion
Wiii hH< "a greal,elfocl" m Ille _,e,
al the bUilt11roup the-.. ,
'lllo,Newport reaolulioa, iolroduc>e(by
Councilman Howard R<lprs, ·calls for
Senate ap!Jl'OVal al the bill without
amemmml. ~ Council approval ; 'w a 1
unani'mous. :
Bidham'1 bill. whicb · pa&eci the
J.Membly in ia .. ...June,.. W(31\d delete
the K<lion al U...piopoled ·Pacilic Coul
Frooway,.,... ~ ilrOuleyJircl ln ,Htin-
llntrlon 8-11 lo the C..... del Mor -ary. . . .
unanimously backJ a bill wllhout amend·
mt:Dt,. you. can bet thaL will hav~ a
areat effect oo the'. vot.ing," he said. .
Badham Pid the ~rospecls for pasaage
ol ~.blll "look good:" \!eh .. asked
f0< • 5'r1ale Transf,"'rlalioo COmmillee he•rll'I on ttie propoW Oll.~.•l· ,
Nearly• 70 members of the Newport
Treewa'y Flghiera weri priseot Monday
night when' 'Roger! ~ ar1«! Cowicilman
IJJtdsley ' Paraons each introduced1 a
molulion backing the Badham bill.
The mOet significant d I ff e r e n c e
between the \ two was that Rogers' OP':
pQftd.Jurtber study of .1.route &Qywbere wlbrin cily limits and suppot'jed lhl
bill wlti1iut IJhei!dm<IJI. I ,
Panons was not specific on the mat-l<l'4 9f reMujly, or amendment lo tho
biU.
. Mc~ expreued concern oyer ~liat 'For. ' 'Ea~Ly,.Re,lief' I
the community could e.rped wlth the
· delfltion ot the freeway. · , Revising. , its , appllcaUon r to the
. "We're trying to plan qo>"'"fot a.solu. Calilornia Public UWitles Commlsiion
lion. ~ ~ the future,.. Hirth iaid. ~"The lor a '~·~ lncre~se-~ ~ off~) srowJnc pl)yslcai traffic proj>lems ha .. to be r _, __ aUng coota;General·......,,.no'Con>-
1 aolved and aolved on 'fRts, not withes upcl" ~ ... ~.,. ...
or deslre." , •· • · pany of California t\I• asked ·for "~ly t
Some · alterpativea outline<!. ·by ·: the ' reher1• In' the ·amotfttt o1:.1s.s million.·
rqayor lnchlded development, of ,art.trial The al]lendtd request. will ·oo:t ~
· highways to Leed the beaCh clJy from • the a;>lflPany'I Lotal reqtiest1 for Jncr
an inl(nd free,.ay 11 tlie city's •"l"'lie, amounting ,to 186 •mlllloif, I<~ I
A '8imllar plan IJ bOinc used In 'IHµna · Richard 'L. Oli!IOll, vice'preoidOtlt.' • I
' O.acli,1be•said. · ', · • <<elJ,jal Toi~· now;IJ'liae'<l!>I 1G ~ · M~is !~iJh, If'~ pa-· /Jl:tbe ; ln<fei• .ajther ' IO~. ad,I .lb~• I
r110lution, ij"1 fllllliilld~ the ~ · urtll rates'. or 1oci1 :f"'loe r>~ lo
: bill :lhe 1"wqr~ wlll ro,aliY' becjn I<> fllid . obtaifl rell•f' .in tli< I ',reqilislOd. '1
a aoluuon. •· , , • 1 11'il supplant.a an .ear request tor
"The most important a11el of the · pet111lasio~ to' make "~arly rtliif.' In-
area, fl( .ttefd ot,rtht1bay and beacbts , cre11e1 in the\amount1<lf •11:4 milUon.,
Is the peoplo. And foo U!at l'O""I,• l which wu locluded in the (b\!ral in.
'
. . . '!~~·~ . I ·
' Mostly fair . 'illroulh w~t
'11ay~ 'the.1 wu~MJ)!lln. UtUe item-
peratllte C1Jan1e' Ii' upeelicl· wllh
highll "$lo the nl-. SolDt night and ear momlq low cloudl ·
are also . '
Badham Pid today ht was pleaM!cl
-the olllciai-1Upporl tlie city iu..
iJv!ft hlJ efforll.
"Wben lbe only cily In v o I v t d
While all council members obvioUsly
favored the Intents or the reaolution, onlY
Mayor Ed Hirth and Councilman Don
have to •ul!IJOrl Cound"'u ~· crea,. application llled,'l'llll Uie ,~UC on
resolution," IM! aJd.· " May ti. 1 , • 1. ..... ··~ •• f I \-"------'---'--'"'""--'
• . , ,,
•
1 _a ~lv l'1(or .sc Tlll!dlr, Jllil 11, 1'70 l
• . .
F-P"tffl I
NIXON · ..•
11oo1 by C-. ldmlro.tratlon, ell><! threats
lo Ibo la -• of private ICbools
It\ "I' lo perpetualo ,.gregaUon and
Capo tut·s Allowe ·d Ta·x Kidnnped ·1
G:ir~ 16,
.-r. tormod a llfOl'QIOCI lnvuloo ol ............ 'Jlllllle llt...-
lawym to uoure !on:ed Integration of
publlc ,.boots In the South.
School Trustees Shave Override Amount f
Nlton said Thurmood objected to an
odloe lhal bu nol been taken and
tboro Ii no tnt.nuon of taking -"tbal
ii of lending '1fgilante 1q11ads, in effect,
lro!ft the JusUce Department, lawyers,
in to oOeroe the SOuthlrn school districta to lntegr.att, II
BJ PAMJLLA BAU.AN .. "" .. .., ..........
C.plslrano URlfted 5ehool Dl"'lct
truattes ''oted unanimously Monday nl&ht
to reduce the permlaalble tu rate by
17 ......
Thi! means that property owner1 who
voted Jn '.March for a 50-cent tax override
wUl bl Pl1lnl only 1.7 canto mon Uwi
they dld' lul )'w.
Superintendent Truman Benedict aald
that tight budgetary controls, a reduction
in permls\lve taxes, interest on WllOld
bonds, and a 19.1 percent increase in
assessed valuation had created surplus
funds.
Tiit ll'n>tnd-laa on Sootbern ICbool ~ !ollowtd Iha swllch earlier lo
Ibo Mldeut. A reporlAlr aaked for
clarificaUon ol Ni1on!c , approaches to
probJerps oj the area and SoYtet move-
~t ·there.
Weekend Thieves Loot
• Nlaon ftcaued having said In his July
I loltvlsion converutloe Iha U.S. tatereol
II puce 11111 .._tUon of the 10verelp Land independe'nce of every state in
Laguna High Equipment
, area.
Ht said the power balance has nol
tiMn upttt. but the movement of Soviet •pons and men to the 'Ml.deut to
tha n the weapoo1 Cl:UIU t!lll country
eoncm 11 becaUM a continuation could
Up the ocalet.
He said ann1 eecalaUon, parUcularly
.the use of troops in Ute Mideast, in-
Creases the risk ·of a confrontation
neither side wants.
.. That is why we are ·putUng ·1Uch
emphasi.s on our peace initiative. That
Ii wb)'' we havf nol ·-1111 sale ol planet . or delivery to Israel
at thll' time becluse 11e want to stve
that peace btiUatlve •very chance 'to
11.tcceed," be said.
Ni.J:oo uid he wouldn't ,and shouldn't
speculate on how higb· unemploymi nt
might · rise or how strong he thinks
economic recovery might be tills year.
He aald' at this Point· Iha nattoa Ii
at a watershed of economic policy ._
the reason for his rather strong stat~
ment to Congress last week on its record
ol appropriating and spending money.
"When the American people learn that
the big spenders ln Congress are primari-
ly responsible for higher prices, and
eventually even higher tues, I ·think
that the American peoi>le will turn cm
the blc apendera politically."
On other top!Cli:
-Campus Unrest. Nixon said it would
not ·be new a to conclude one way to
bring peace on the campu1 would be to br1ng peace In Vietnam. But he said
he wu not IW't It would bring campus
peac<.
-Defenae Ctits. Nixon i.epeated that
while he bu shllted much !pending froiTt
defenae lo nondef..,. _,..,. 11 11
unrealllllc to .Uqest money for bis,
new domestic programs can come out
'of subllantial de!e.,. cul!.
.f'rem Pllfle I
VISIT ..•
local climate. ~ other factor in the repeated abort·
term vi.sits, some sources have said,
II the WOl'I')' that detnonstnttoaa agalnat
tbe idmlnbtraUon policy In the Indochina
war might resume' ln San Clemente If
the Nixona maintained realdence for the
entire month of Aupt.
Some top aources ~ve Indicated con-
cern about some dlsaenter activity next
month ~ a conclusion could be reached
that the sbort, buly vliill could curb
chances for concerted advince orsaniu.-
Uon by lead.,.. of diaaldelit tir<>ups':
A huge •nUwar demonstration occt.irred
near the Western White House during
the Nit:ons' prolonged August vacation
last year.
'Illus far no lndic:ationa have been
made public that 1imilar occurences
were Planned for this comlng Auguat.
rriade public that 1imJlar occurrences
near the gates of the estate thl1 yeir
was the brief vtait by a 1eU,.,tyled woman
candidate for the U.S. Senate who a~
peared the day of the President's
departure.
.. Send me to the Paris peace talks,"
proclaimed a banner attached to the
inilii.1kirted redhead 's pink para.sol:
She left suddenly when a 1umme:r
thundel'lllower dampened the cbinll 11111
lace on her outfit.
DAILY PILOT
Ro'Dotl N. Wo14 ,,,_.lf.,,1 11\d ,,utiri.w
J1ck R. C11tl1y
Viet '1't1:01111t Ind ~•I Mll'llW n..,,.., 11:,,.w
fdlttr
TI.oMaJ A. M11rphfn1
~91"1 fdllOf
AliJiaN P. Nill
Sovfh o..-C-ly l:f!IOI" .......
COlll MIA: Dt Wu l 11'1' "'"' H"""" •••di~ 1211 W•I .... , ..,,_.,,,.. ·l..twM· ltoll(lri; U2 ,.....,, ,,_
,._.,....., •..e11: 11"1J l•tOI ..........
kn c;,._tr. XIS HW1~ I I °"''"' llMI
More lhln 11,100 worth of IOUDd equip.
md, much of It new, wu 1tolen from
tbe ·Laguna Beach High S e b o o I
audltortum over the weekend by ap-
pUenUy lldlled burglars, police reported
today,
''It's completely sickening -they
cleaned the place out except for the
apeakers Q)ounted blCh on the walls
and now they're not connected lo
ID)'ttiiiW," Aid medla coordinator Ray
~ggird. In charce of the school's
teehnlCaJ equlpmf:nt. ·He discovered the
borgllty Moeday momlog.
1.ltted u milling an two amplifier1,
Including a portable one used in the
f9qtball stadium, eight microphones, a
80Und mixer, a ttirritable and a speaker
lrnm..the stage wall
~be ampliflcallon equipment, Haggard
salCI, was brand n.ew, installed durinc
-J'OllO\'allon of the •udllor1um. ' \111 • eqoilpmeni, ha' added, · i, not
c:OVered by Insurance, but each pleca
is matked 0 LBUSD/' applied with a
meW otancll which .would be dllltcull
to file off. .. ~ --f
Police , deoeit ,the buJ:glary u "• very ,clreltd 1'· apparently the wort
o1 ........ .,. had prte1oe Jmowledae of
tha IOUDd lnal!tlltllon and was equipped
with Ill !he' looli necetlVy lo -and ranove it.
There wu no vandall.sm and "no
damage be1.'JDd wbal they bad. lo do
lo reach the equipment." .
Apparently plnlnc entry by .e stare
door, the butflel' drlllad • neat hole
In Iha door of • lllorllt clooet on the
lido of ·tht 11e1e 11111 reacllld In . lo
open It: • .
Wire cutten wera. uoed· to 1a1n •ntlY
'f ~stln ~ay Get
High School-
Site Unknown
Tile Tustlo Union High 5ehool D!Jtrlct
may be eettlng a new high school, but
they are not sure where they are going
to put it, or bow they are going to
pay for it.
"No decision hat been made as to
where jt will be," said Jack Roper,
assistant superintendent ol the district.
Asked ab<iuf locat1n1 the lcll601 In
the Saddleback Valley near the in-
tersection of El Toro Road and Trabuco
Road, Roper aald the district ·did own
a site in Ule area, but "It hasn't been
broughl before the board of trustees
I " " ;ye .
He said the matter would be brooght
up at the next meeting of the· board
on Aug, 10.
At a recent meeting of the board:,
Superintendent William ~ to 1 d
turstees that the b u i 1 d 1 n g of
the University Park Hlsh School will
deJilete the district's bond money. RoPer 1ald the imtrlct "wlll probably
recommend a bond election to the board"
at the nest meeUng.
Divorced Dad
Visits Kids-
Ends Up in Rome
An alleged case of child ateallnJ: by
a father paying a. post-dlvoree vil1t to
his children 1n San Clemente reached
International proportions Monday.
It began last Friday wflen, pollCfl 1ak!,
Beniamino Palazzi came to town to visit
.his two children, Dino, 5, and Laura,
6, at the home of their mother ..
'I\te mother, Mrs. Nlcetta PaJaui of
215 ~ranada Apt. 3, told police her
.-anged bUJ~ took his u.oual vlslia.
·uon.rlghls wllh the children, but dJdb 'I
return with them SUnday as dictated
by a aettlement.
On 'Monday she received a telecram.
''The children are fine," it Said.
It came from Rome, Italy.
Pakistan Labor Camp
Raided; Slaves Free DAILV l'ILOT, •illl -.'.°'Jell II ~rtaf !ht
....... l•l'AU, 11 P\11111 .... lhlly ··~~' s..... ~ ht Mlll•t•ll d ll-,.,. LfOllN •ia.:d•,
,.....,. 1""'-CMll N.9>1, H\lllllllf'"" ~ .,.. "-'-"' v•1i.~. •1ot11 w1111 ·-DACCA, East Pakistan (AP) -Police ,..-.1 H ltlen1. 0r*'9C' (Int Puti11611"" ~ ,mu,. p11 .. 11 ,,. ., nn wm have rescued J9 persons from slave ::,-:,,:..':'~~~··°'· "" ,. *"' labor camps in Junsles Jn the ChlU.cong
,...,.. .. 11141 ••1.4121 Hlll d1sttiet t0me 270 mUes southeast
1 a..lfW All.mltT .. •u '''' of Daccl, the dlstrk:t comml"loner said s. Ch, srt• •• 0t-1.,......., tode.y. Police arrested tij:bt camp
· ,.,,, .. fti-4421 . oper,ator1 but said other• escaped,
~t. 1,,., 0 ,..,. ~11 ~UMllM Moat of the vlctJms were tetr»sus ~. ,. iw• •11tln, "1"'"'1'°"·" lured Into, the jungles by promise• of :re.:, ~ ·~~"'t•;:. Jobi paying fl a d1y plu• board 1nc1
llllJMIM "" ...,.t -· lodlilli· They trekked 60 mlle1 into tl'le -... (• •",. .. ii. •i ,......,. '*"' j I and ~--I •r,. c.tt• Miia. ce1~1111, IWKN1• "" ung e u11m were orctd to work
"'""" ·u.• -""''•' .., """ u .. -"'ir' from dawn lo dusk cutting bamboo ind ·L-M-"'"'-~_'"-'-"'-'""-·-"_·•_-_..,_. __ _._. breakinJ; stones with no pay.
I
to the light cage wbert addlllonal equip.
ment Waa at.itacbed, and all the -Items
were carefully dlaconneded, police said.
All the equipment was kept under
lock and key and had been cbecked
by at least two persons Friday night,
Haggard aald.
Arriving: at the school Monday morn·
ing, he fo und several doors leading from
the auditorium standing ajar, apparenUy
left open by the burglars to iil3ure ·a
choice or escape routes during their
operation.
Lon of the portable stadium amplifier
was not dbcovered until today, when
the complete inventory of sound equip-
ment was re-checked.
Left in the closet was one old amplilier,
which Haggard said will be hooked up
to pennil partial use of the auditorium.
"1 couldn't even guess what we'll do
about replacing the rest," Haggard sid.
The Russians
Are Coming
To Lion Safari
Forty-two 1etentlltl and crew members
from a 90pbiltlcated R u s I i a D
oceanoeraphlc veuel were acheduled to
vialf orange County's neweat, touOst 1'6
traction today, I.Jon Country Safari,
Spokesman for the Loni Beach Port
Authority aid arrival of the 265-foot
ezplorauon ahlp HRa~ga,. -which
means rainbow -requires special
clearance from the U.S. State Dtpart·
ment. W. Pott 'Authority opok."l',an said It wu
the first Russian ahlp eVer to land 1n·,
lhal port and the flnt In lhete water•
aince 1M9.
'Ibe 2,435-ton vesse1, stacked with
sophisticated electronic gear, arrived
Monday morning. lt left Callao, Peru,
shortly before the disastrous earthquake.
lt had been in Mexican waters fteehtly,
OlleOJ!bly ,..king IUna achools for
Russian fishermen.
The craft 11 .en route to lta: home port,
Vladtvoatok, with Captain Mikhail Volik
in command.
There are 73 aboard, including ten
scientists, two of whom are women.
The grou p was scheduled to tour Lion
Country, a reproduction of the African
veld, at 1:00 p.m. today. The 500-acre
fa cility opened recently.
The group was to arrive by bus. Lion
Country offlciall 1ald they would roll
out the "red carpet" and show them
every courtesy.
Sihanouk Family
To Leave Palace
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) -
The government ha.s ordered the queen
mother to vacate the royal palace by
Frlday, informed sources said today.
In a break . with the monarchy, the
gov~rnment of Premier Lon Nol has
cut off all funds for operating the palace
and told Queen Slsowath Kossamak
Nearlreath, aging mother of ousted Prince
Norodom Sihanouk, to move to a small
house near the Ind~ndenee Monument.
The aourc:es close to the throne aaid
the l!tter to the queen mother advttttd
her that 1he would be given . the use
of two cars for her pert0nal entourage,
which includes Princess Sopha Devi,
prima ballerina of the Royal Cambodian
CorpS de Ballet.
The decision to oust the queen mother
from the palace grounds 1 led to im·
mediate speeulaUon that the government
which overthrew Sihanouk on March 18
again wai on the verge ol proclalmlng
Cainbodia a republic.
Nightclubs Get
Government Loan
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A top!""
nightclub Is eniltltd to a Small Business
AdmlnlstraUon_Joan the same as _any
other leglUmate business, according to
SBA Director Hilary Sllndoval Jr.
Sandoval told the House Select Com-
mittee on Small Buslnea• Monday that
a J41 ,000 reJocaUon Joan wi1 approvtd
for • club featurlng topless l(>-10 dancers
ln Denver, Colo., because a Feder1l
Highway project had forted It to move.
He said the club met all the legal
requirements of the state of Colorado,
and "There we~ no way we could tum
that (lhe JO<l n) down."
Sandoval was questioned closely about
the nightclub loan and • loan kl a
Virginia furniture manufacturer. Both
loant had been crltlclud by ayndlcated
columnist Jack Andenon.
<
Tilt tu nclucUon Npments a n ... nl
dtcl'llH ln perm.llelve taxes and a 20o
cent reduction Jn the allowable 51).a:nt
tax override.
1'That· would lt.111 leav• ua $&M,501
in our undistribuied re.ervea." said Benedict. ...
He recommended retaining $300,000 Jn
the reserve fWKi and spending the ad-
ditional $264,501 for special projecbl.
Among priority items to J>e considered
by the board are the relltituUon of a
remedial reading program, microfilming
disltiot documents, paying off existing
bus contracts, establishing a centtaJized
office dJctaUng and lyplng departme9t,
fulfilling more maint~nance requesbl, and
installing more fire detecUon devices
required by Insurance companies.
Benedict also suggested that the board
cooslder taking the tile roof oU Las
Palmas School in San Clemente to nvold
structural failure, providing two portable
classrooms for Las Pabhaa to use as
a mulUpurpose room, grading the Dana
Hills High School slle and building ' tbe
Richard Henry Dana School addition,
most of which are re fundeble by the
state. Trustee Fred Newhart Jr. suggested
lowering the tax rate only 35 cents
and taking advantage of the available
funds to complete aafety, maintenance
and constructk>n projects that would
eventually save the taxpayers money.
Trustee Harcourt Bull suggested lower-
ing the tar rate even further.
Charles Dargan, chainnan of the ro.m·
mittee that favored the tax override
last March, said the board had .a man-
date from the people to provide the
best educational plant and process
available. . 11we•re klddinl ouraelvea if we think
that by aavinC money thll year' we
won't have to pay more in the long
run" · Ray Campbell, a large property owner
In San Clemente, dlsagreed saying most
taxpayer• would prefer to have a large
tu: reduction rat.her than use the money
tO maintain theit' inve11tment (achool pro-
perty!. th ,,.~·· He hinted that In view of e UJ,MI. '"" s
IUfPlUI fund• perhap• the need for the
ta.I override had been ei:aggerated.
Walter Hanson
Laguna Rites Set
Funeral aervlcea wW be held at 11
a.m. Thursday In Sheffer Laguna Beach
Mortuary Chapel for Willer Cltfford
Hamon of Laguna N!pel, who dled Sun-
day at the age of 58.
Mr. Hanson, a native Californian, Is
survived by bit Widow, Wanda, 11 ton,
Kenton, ·and a daughter, Marilyn, all
of tbe family home, 31681 Cryatal Sands
Drive.
Al&o surviving are a brother, Raymond
Hnaon of Beverly Hills; three ala:ters,
Mrs. Helen Stokes of Sunland, M'rs.
Evelyn Weinstock of Altadena and Mrs.
Lillian Harbaugh of West Covina.
Burial will be at El Toro DJstrict
Cemetery, El Toro.
Mrs. Holt Rites
Set in Laguna
A private memorial service 11 planned
for Muriel Jean Holt, 2448 Lomita Way,
Laguna Beach, who diec! Sunday al the
age ol 52.
Mrs . Holt ts survived by ber husband,
James H.: two daughtera, Miss Pamela
S. Holt of Santa Mon.lea and Mrs. Harrold
Moore of Burbank; a sister, Mary Beth
Proctot: of Tustin ; and by one grndchlld.
Sheffer Laguna Beach Mortuary is
directlng.
Eound·Dead
~
LANSING, Mich. (UPI) -Two boya
walking a rural road near here found
the body of Laurie Murnin&haD, 16,-the
object ol an intense police searth ·Ii.nee
ahe was kldnaped during a holduj> lJ
days ago: •
..
Her abductor remained at large today. -
Lansing Police Chief Derold Husby vow· '
U!'I Tt..,.....
BODY DISCOVERED
.., Lauri• Mumlngh1n
Mock Brush Fire
Drill Prepared
For County Units
The atrens of some 20 tire ...ctruc:ks
will be wailing througb Laguna Beach
Wednesday morning, but Fire Chief Jim
Latimer wants to assure residents in
advance that it will be only a practice
Operation.
The Laguna Beach Fire Department
will host a countywide mutual aid drill
in the Park Avenue-Temple Hills Drive
area from 8:30 to 10 a.m., Latimer
said.
Between 18 and 23 fire trucks represen-
ting all firt?flghting units in the county·
will parUclpate In the . drill, battling a
mock brush fire extending from a point
of origin at 995 Park Ave. up to. !Jle
Top of the World area.
Approximate ly 100 notices have been
distributed to residents of the area, ad-
vising them of the drill, and requeatin1
cooperation, Latimer said.
At the conclusion of the drill,
participants will assemble at Top of
tbe World 5ehooi, behind Laguna Beach
Fire Station 3, for a critique of the
seaaion.
he would "leave no atone unturned until
the person or persons mponsible for
the tragtdy are brought to Justice." ·•
The l>ody of the pretty, bloedf dauC!iter
of Mu; !;. Murninghan, former. mayor
of this 1tate capital, wu found Mond~ .,,
In high grasa and weeds near a lake
about 15 feet fi'om the road. She was
clad tn the white blouse, red belt and
blue miniskirt she wore when she wal ·
abi:tucted July g from the gift shop
where she was employed for the Summer. ·
Identiflcation was confinned throu(h
dental comparl.ton, Husby said. The
cause or time Of death wae nOt fin.
mediately determined but Husby !aid
he wouJd·revea1 the results of an· autopsy
at a new1 conference today.
"At this point I have no knowledge
of anything and I'm happy-I don't,''
Husby said when contacted at his home
early today. "I haven't heard the results
of anything yet." • r
The names of the two boys who made
the discovery were not disclosed. Husby ;
said they immediately summoned of.
ficers to the scene.
Murninghan , wbo 1pent the early dayt ·
of the Investigation at the Lansing Police ·
Department working with police, was
not available for comment, nor were
other members of the family. ·
Gerald W. Graves, Lanli.ng's mayor,
said he was "stunned and greatly grieved
by this senseless crime. Our hearts and
prayers go out in deepest sympathy
to Laurie's family."
Miu Murnlnghan wa1 kidnaped from
Gallagher'• Gilt Shop by a gun.wielding
bandit during a holdup which netted
$60. The owner of the store, Mrs. ·
Christine Gallagher, was ·pistol-whipped
by the man, and when she recovered
from her injuries was able to help ,
an artist draw: a picture of him.
Lagunan Oppo.sed .
~Raps Huntington Flµoride
~ ' . . ! . I • . I '• . ' ; -• ... .J Huntington Beach ii going to fluoridate put to a public vote and later Councilman
its municipal water aupply and 1 Laguna Ted Bartlett moved that the matter
Beach man Js unhappy about it. be placed on the General ElecUon ballot
The Huntington.• coupcll vo ted in November. ·
unanlmoutly Monday night to authorize Councilman George McCracken backed
fluoridation after a 70-minute publlc Bartlett's motion but Jt wu defeated
hearing on the controveralal isSue. 4 to 2. A motion by Councilman Al
Huntington Beach th u 1 became the Coen authorizing fluoridaUon was then ,
aecond city in Orange County to approve passed without dissent.
fluoridation . Fountain Valley o~ayed Water Superintendent Ed St an g
almilar action In a 4 to 1 vote several est.imated the cost of injecting fluorides
weeks ae;o. into the city water supply to bring the
One foe of fluoridation voiced his fel\r fluoride content .to one part per million
that other county cities may follow suit. at $18,825 for equipment and '6,250 a •
John Sinnette, a chemist of 507 Canyon year for the sodium fluoride.
Acres Road, Laguna Beach, spoke at s · · ill · the hearing and likened fluoridation to tang estimated that 1t w take five
a contagioua disease. months to Install the equJpment ·and •
"I'm afraid it may spread to Laauna," start the program, Intended to reduce
he said. tooth decay ln children.
Sinnette maintained that it had not
been proven that fluorides will not be
harmful.
Huntington Beach resident M r s .
Bernard Gage urged that the issue be
'
The water superintendent also revealed
that natural fluorides are already Jn
the water supply, varying from 2/loths
to 41 I Oths per mtllion .
/,
GRAND OPENING SALE!
We are pleased to announce
the opening of our second store
in Tustin. We have purchased
"Red Hill Carpets" and the new
name will be "Alden's Red Hill
Carpets & Draperies."
e IN COSTA MESA e
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e' DRAPES
1663 Pl1e1ntl1 Av•
Phone 646-4131
In conjunction with the open-
ing of our Tustin store, we have
several spec i a Is in our Costa
Mesa store. Please come in and
11111 us .
e IN TUSTIN e
ALDEN'S
RED HILL
CARPETS e DRAPES
11374 E. lrvlnt
Phono 1384344
VISIT OUR ENLARGED REMNANT ROOM AT OUR COSTA MESA
STORE. HUNDREDS OF REMNANTS AND ROLL l!NDS.
.. '
I '
'
'
• • • • < " • • • Jo • ..
H• "' w .. .. ...
'" ., ... ...
'" ...
H• •• ~ ...
"' "' ~. .... -... • Wo ...
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Stt; IN
AM
c~ -llffl , ...
'" -· "" ~. .,.
'"' ,M,
lltld
""' ... .,u,
·~· ...
U11!t
Jom
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\'1¥• ••w W11'
•Ill• ""' Wl!!I .... -· ..... -•••
GOM
$111"<'1
'"'" N11!1 ...
ol H .... o. I w"''
1
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Lor
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=•
For the· :Record
Meetings
De.th Notl"u
•ALDWIN •d>li•~ ltld'Wln. 0.lt of dHll!, JUl'I' It.
SvtVl'l'M br 1111 wtt.. M•L L-&.JO.
Win, Coif• Mes.. 5'Nlu1 10 NII WW. ,.....,.,, JulV 22. w .. 1c11H Ntort\N"'
c11-r. lttwpaort H•r110r Elk1 llfflcl•tlnt. lnttfnlen,, lriellWOOll M-'11 ,,,.,
WM!cllff Mort\lfry, dltK1&rt.
-HANJON
Wtllw!' Cll"°'d N...-, ll .. 1 C"'1ltl
Drive, LltU'lll HltUll, o.i. of °"'"'· Jutv 1,. Silnl\1'1111 lw wfi., Wendt c.1
11111, l(f!llon L., •lld dol119htw, Mtrllni.
t tl et hMle ..,.....; We"'9r, lttrmoM
Hen-,. 1"''1'1l' Hlllt.1 l 1ltter1: Mr1,
IW!en Stak11.. S11t1ltricl1 M•t. l"Ytlvn
Wel111loct, All9de!l.IJ. Mrs. Llllt.n H..«-lte~, W-.t cowir... hrvk.. wltt bt
Mid II AM Tflll'1dt'll, .lull' tt, ti 1114fflor
U-11.1111 kficll Morn.llrY ClltMI. ,rlYllt
l11t.rrM11t at 11 T-Ol1trld c-i.rv.
II T-. Mltffw LHVN It~. dlt'Ktorl,
Hoo.T
Muri.I J•n Holl, 2UI Lomll1 Wt11, L ..
-INci'I. O.t1 ef dHtll, Juty 1•. S11r• "IYM br 1'11.rtMnd, Jt!'I'* H., 2 deu1hltr•~
Miu '•melt S. Holt, Stnlt Monlc1; Mn.
M1rrold ,,,._.., l1,1rt..nk: 1l1tltl'. Mltrv
lk111 l"rec:tor, Tustlft; 1 1r1ndchlkl, M•
11'1«1•1 Hf'\lk:t wm be 1""""'!C9d •' i.tv
dolll. Shttler L11u111 IHclt' Mcwtu1ry,
dlrec:lllr1. JACO UIS
Ht.i.i' Dell• J•«1UK. tol W11t 11th. No. •• Coate MIH. 0.1• If llQ1'h, July It.
Survtv.d by l'lu1b9nd, 111r11 -· 111 .... "'91111, Wntmln1•1 """'a. Mt. •nd Mr1. Clllrlfl (. t..onlJ, IC1<1t, W11hl,..lon1
4 llt•I'-"': \t1re1J, IC1<1I, W•ll'lmtlDll/ Wood•""· MIM V1llW, W1lhlno1..,1 Ootltld, W1ll'l r,..1on1 Vwf'!on, S.n Olne1
•l1ltrlll l'rltd1 Kun!J:, 0•190!1; Zllm•
Slell1r, Ortton: Slyv11 McN1ll', l.o!le
l•cl'li J t rindclltldren. Servlcn, IO:lO
AM Tl'lurMllY, kultiern l1ptlll Cl'iurdl.
COiii M111. lnllf"l'lertf, l"tllWOOd Mt•
morlll P1rk. hll l rOldW•Y Morlll1,...,
•lrldort. l(ILLllll
Clllrlff I . IC1li.r, #3' Avtnlde Mt!M, er-"· survl'nll w w111, Ml11111tt1 11 .. -. C,,,.rl11 11. Jr., 1l11et', Vlrtlnll Dunn,
lervl«I Wld ..... clly, J:JO PM, Cl'lurel'I 1f
"-lltc .. Jonel, "°"'' L.1w11, Gltnd1l1. wl1'h fl'lit lleY, Wtlll1m J . Mllden\1 ol'll·
cl9t1M. OllCltl' Breltllfl Momi.ry, Hunt•
l1'11lon 8"ch, cUrKlon.
Mlllllll
llllldllnl A. Mtrrll, 20l62 Woodl .. L•l'lf,
Hunll~ a..dl. SuNlwd br wii.,
Sulln I ., "llll'lltr, IC!mblrly J., f1lti1r,
lruct Cl. StrvlCl l Tu19Hv. l PM, OUd1Y
l~ll'llra CMpel, HU!'lll,..ton 1 .. dl, wlll'I
tM lleY. J-I!. Citric of Ille Trlnllr
United Prubl'1t r1tn Clwrtl'I offleltUnt.
M4:NISH
Jtmet MeNlll'I, .U Wtll 1'1h Strffl,
C•!t M .... O.lto af dfftl'I, Jvty It. Sur•
vtVld llY wlf9, c..-i.wi.1 J brolt!frt: PMil.
1"r11NH1!. Calltomle: How1nl, Ctlltm.
W1i.hl1111ton1 lloMrl, $1'1el!on, W11hl11t1!0t11 tllltrs~ Anni Wl'lltson, $locil!on1 Id•
NonilY, hr! Orford, W111'1l11t110111 M1rY
Wlllllrna. Co111 Mui. krvkn will be fitld 1D:JO' Wldnt161¥ 11 ltll 8/'09d'Wt¥
#«hllrY Cl'l-1 wllfl Sttl1r!n1 ~IOllk
Lod .. of H•POrl 1 .. ch olflcltlln•. 111•
'-"'· P1clllc YI-M-1•1 ... ,k. ltH lroldwlY Mortutl"f, dl,tclotl.
NISTI
GIN Mtrle Hnll. Ottw of Of:•"'· Julr 1,, S!Jrv1Yed by htr l•lhtr-. Gtnt Nt,il,
s1itrrn1111 Otk11 moth1r. Mrl. B1rbrlr•
Nn!I, N'"u1ort s..cru Q ~lfltr1 : Ntll
•llCI Mtrtl.; 2 t lltwrl: Lori Ind Otn1, IH
ol N""'1 lfl<h. Strvkn wlll bl Julf :n 11 1 fllclocil. Wntclllt MOr!UtrY Cf\9.,
... lurltl, P1cltlc ¥1.,,. Memorl1I 1"1rk.
wntcllff Mor1111rv. d!rtcton.
ARBVCU.E & SON
WeotcWIMortul?Y
If! E. 17111 SL, Costa Meaa -• BALTZ MORTUAJll!3
Corolla del Mii' OR Miii
Cosio M,.. Ml HIU • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
UI BrMdny, Cotta MeA
UW4# • McCORMICK LAGVNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1795 Laguna Canyon Rd.
U<-MlS • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK CuMlorJ e Mortury
Cl:iapel
llOI Pacific View Dme
Newport 11<1<•, Celllnlll -• P!ZK FAMILY
COLONIAL FVNl!:RAL
DOME
'llOl llGID A ...
"~" -• ~Slltr-"r~E•R MORTUAllY
Lqna Beoc• '91-llZI
S.. a.meai. 41Mfll • SMJTllS' MORTUARY
117 Mali SL
llualllftao lludl -
Hearing Scheduled for Santa Ana Docwr
Births
•T. 'OllPN HOIPITAL ..... M;;u'~'·;.llW.r! I". Gklliltr,
t lrl -· CO.ti Mt ... J111\f J Mr. ,..f'I! Mra. J..,.... I. Mi:Mtll,.1. ~1~~ l"lkt Nt. l. l'aunl•lrl V•llt1.
Jul'f' • Mr. Ind M ... G•ry R. H .... '"u g:;:tltll Lint, "1tnt1111lan IMO.,
M•. 111\0f Mrs '1?-.!..__ J l1ITTlll, ~f,~ 111.r..ri. A;;r.c: wt11niln11tr, ~OA• MIMOlllAL HOIPITAL PttlslrTl"llAN
J-u. "" Mr. 1rld Mn. San'll Mtt•"'-· Jim ~r'l*''"r U.111, unl!1111'1111 1..0.,
M'o· 'nd Mn. AINI Mllrt~W Ctllllllf r1v1 ... .,.,...,, tlffd!, "'-... iE,... Mldititl ya. 714 ""'"'""' Ollt· Mae. t!o1 Mr. "= a. U.-111 G.._,. Inf M':!' ,'f) ·~i: NC::.!.:t"t.v~ !1J6
An.h.irn 'ii .. CM'1 ~b°' Mr.. Ind Mra. Jotin l'lden. 11.lfl T•1n $1., LAnf a..cti, Mr. •lllf Mra, Robtrt McGenMhr, ~~bo:'lllOll $1. Ho. '"' C1:11f1
Ju111 16. 1t1t Mr. tllCI Mrt. k11tll L. Ntlion. m luw1'"11 lld .• Cein1nt dtt ~r. 11r1 Mt, tlld Mr .. Jolln ~. o.n1-' =-' Cltr9Jllllll, Nuflllntl'Oll lfl<ll
Dr. 111d Mt1. 11!!!1111111 8. Wrltfll, =-W. OC..11 ,ront, "'"""'"" IMCll,
.,.,.. 17, ''" Mt. tM °"'" 8ovt1 W. ~ ....... ~ F1lrw1y f'IM;.; Cot1t Mn&.
Wt....,..., .. N 8'Acll, """
3 C.Olleges
Get Grants Mr. tlld ~r1. ~' H9"1n, 1'-11
Mr, 4lnd" l'l. R 1rd JlfdY, •It
Ytf'lllG Plitt. '"""'· 1lrl LONG BEACH ----Mr. Ind MrJ. 11D11111 Ftrftn, 161 -!Uli::'C
c1nt-tr st .. co111 Mesa 11oY Orange County colleg,. will J-IL 1t7t Mr. •ncl Mrw. lt9rl•n Fr1t, 6U lelUI. receive grants from the U.S. COlll Mt11, boy
Mr. •nd Mra. 1"'1"Y W1ttl. 27111 Dept.. of. ,Jtl!>tice under the ,..,.,r.ori., <Mt• Miii. 11cw 1 __ Enf
Mr, •lllf Mr1. ~n!el Ptlk1¥, :1o.1 .Md" otcement Education PUBLIC AUCTION
-4'111 $~.1 _N..,orl 8~, 1lrl p ordin M,. I,,., _._ M .. r1co · .....oo. ue1 rogram , ace g to Rep. HUNTIN•TON l•ACN WATlllllllOllf ,AllCll.
W•11111 "".i!.:'·1i~·1~ "''-Craig Hosmer (R-Lona
Mr. Ind Mr .. '""'"" J. Cr1(9, •1'2 n---") l ff'Cfl, $tnl• Alll, aio1 UC~I •
PalMI C-2 P•OPIRTY ON THI CHANNIL
TUIS., JULY 21th at 2 P.M. (at the tit.)
Mr. 1nd Mr1. G•rv A. G11u111ti. 101 The funds, totalling *lfi.200, HtllOll"OH1.C«0111 dtl Mar, boY • Mr. Ind rnri.. u.ir1 Olrultfll, di will be used by the sdlools 162'7 lo. PACIPIC COAST HWY., HUNTINGTON llACH
M~~· ~~~r.1r1ctJ .s.ton for grants and loans to SltwtM ,_ .. Ille ~ ......... t• 1W IU CU.• .... fM4 .... ft,)
Tiiie. le. I rlrt 111,lrt1Mtlt .. ~ -It Ille W 1'111 ..... WllW
it• .. 1rv1nt, 11ov _.,..i. •-··"-cti I fiAr. 1nc1 Mr•. Jolln Eltlott, 1011 1onn11 ••\an:"ni.;i e11.11.:;r a ve n or ~ · Turec•. Coton• dtl M••· pl&Ming to enter the law en-
Mr. lfld Mrs. J1rMS It. Wilen. 711 !......._,.._,, field.
~ 111 ,... ..iire -· 11cllMlt f!Mllc ... lffl'IMI. ,.,. '"" _, IH'lc.lltl,., tk., c•ll ..,.. lfllc1.
5ft1ll~r Dr .. COii• Mtit, t lrl · .,. .. ....,......,
Mr. ,,,., """'· wmlim "· llllenl, Santa Ana CoUege wi'll l1J PetrJon NO. 11 A~m, t lrl Mfu,.~""'r1i::'·Ln'.?'1iu~ti,,,i:-'i.~; receive $7,200, F u J I e rt on M~:/nd Mrs. w11111m 1C11111 w1tton. -Jtmlor College $3,600 and J~irl' 0¢1111 ltvo., CM-dtl M41r, Orange Coast ColJ.ae $5,4®,
u,...t lzchnlvt R .. lty AuctlMetn lft ~m.rlc•
MARSH DOZAR ~ .. 1 ltteff Auctlo.-
1116 IURfON WAY. 1 ..... 1, Hiii .. "211 NY 44l Sith It,. NY 10011 •l J-2t, lll't '"'O
M•. tnd Mr•. Otvld L Clart, t21J =~"~-~~·~r~..i~~d~. ==--:---,-~!!!!!!11!!!!!1' El T11110 Cir.. Founltln v1111r, t !rt Mr. ~nd Mrs. Tl!llll'h1 l'oti.,-1._107 t:l 1n1r DI"., AP!, C, c-.11 -
Mr. tnd Mn IAlrY SM!""""' »ld s11....,. S1111r il:d •• San Ju1n C.tll!r1M M~111d Mrs. 1....,.i11 T.,,,,..... I• Cl11, M.-.orl ltad\, bef Mr. Incl Mr.. JOIW! VIYlfllO. :Nflt l•llilr Orlve, Ml11lon YltlO. bDY Mr. •INI M"• Ken"'tn C:r .... 111, 741 Jt""S I! .. A•I• 8, COiii .....
M'/'!" 1nd Ml'l. John M. H .............
l'OOtl Ordlld SI .. Sanl1 Al'lti t lrl Mr. 1nd Mr1. Ciro Rtm ru. AlltllMnY, COM M ... , 1lrl
Marriage
Licenses
M1rrl1ff llc111"s Wlft lnuld to
Ille lollowlnt ho# Jul'f' 1•: OTIS·LAROCML!LLL! -1lom11rl(: L.,
ll. noe Pet.,IOn w.~ ~,. MIN. •nd M 1tl111 J , .A. CAYANAm'tt,~NPic -Ot'lld M., 2', :Jll F ~/.. CCIII• Mt11 Ind Nlf'IC'l M .. 1, Artedll. IAAOr·OUltO~HIC -Mkftttl 141 ~;, ~ t ... =· M., 1 JI
$0.,P,!i_ltGa!H·WALICER -Jdln{. fl, F, E'Gfn' COii• Miii Ind ""If'/
11v.t:J41Lo'llt'li1':.... Wlllltm F., 20, usM: tnd 111r1rie M.. \6, 17)1 Mick•• Ln .. •vntt1111on le«h. MILLElt·IOWAM -Ktlll'I w .. J6.
6'5 P1rt; ll\'CI,. (Diii Mftl, I nd
JflYtt A. 25~Monle111r, I LACICBUftN ILLEltS -ltoillft V., 21, UOll Id Clr,thl Hunllnwten z1l~·.~at .... 11:•~ Wlu~'..,~._ LI Cl"IKlf!ll, Ind T.t.T.:' 1 .. ):121
Kttl Or., Cor-Oel Mir.
MAltTIH·WALLACE -l'"rtd w,.,_~ 251' S111t1 A,.,. Aq .. c-.11 ..._ '"' ·-1 It. lt Clfll!JI Plf"t. MUltOOCH-P 11:il1N~ -Glrv M., t), 1t3f W, Caltt"kwr, NewllOrl a.Kii.
•nd Vl<1Jnlt A .• 20, M-•l-. MOSLEY·HOltN" -Jlmmi. L., 26, ~ ~I'll• L .. 2'~ Wl2 Mlfltnlm SMtik:MVCJ~7~ -.=-i·ld~E., 21,
2001' M1dl111d Ln .. Hllftll _ _._ lludl,
tt' Crnlti1• L.~20, L-....,0• l 11 YE.JOHNSO -J • rcltnl 1nd laudll ~,., ''19~
'""2r: .... """'~""' -· llEYHC os.fW.1cK -ltldltrd M.,
I" ~· ... -...... 1 C I F ltll'I V.il , Klitff..G t1Mim"AFJ"'" -fr: "l., ~I, ton o.t!Yi.bu•I or,, Hvntt"I'"' 8ffcl'I, I nd Oeborll'I ,Ii,,, 1 •
Tor,..ntt.
Dis solutions
Of Marriage
DPEI l II IA• ACClllT
•E•FREE!
Newport Nalional pays the higilest
bank interest anywhere on your savings,
and at the s.ame time, offers a
col1ection of exquisite miniature
reproductions of original oil paintings.
. Antique gold framed and set off by
rich velvet, they add ~finite charm to
your home, or office, or special gifts.
Open your new account today,
lltsu1111J a $15.00 Yalae!
NE.W $500 ACCOUNT-GET ONE FIU I
llEW $400 ACCOUNT....BUT ONE $ .95
llEW $300 ACCOUNT-BllY ONE $1.95
Nnl i200 ACCOUHT_BllY ONE $2.95
NE.W 1100 ACCOUN1--BUY ONE $3.95
••
l"'l ,,,_..,. 212 M7-t13t
Um It of two FREE mlnlatum rtltrdl"• of amount or dtpOlit owr SlOOO •
A beautiful d'l1911Y of tllese dU'alo! miniaturts 111119 offices.
5
T"""'7, Ju~ 21, 1970 DAIL y JlllOl' I '
•
1
I
I
..
• DAILY PILOT SC T utsdll, J•IY 21, 1970
1'1oney's Worth
"::II:&..-. mcevn.:_1'MI: lm~=-~ .......... -
aM ~ DOltOTin' SMOIEM.tr.kE. • r. • ....... OOlltOTI4V K, $MOIMAlCl.I
OOllO'f1CY L IHOl.MU.l. • • • ~TM'r Iii.MO JHOIM,AKE. tkl Milt. WMtlllN tt. iMOEMAll!. MA$, ., .... IMOl~e. .......
MOTKa 1$ Hl .. 11Y OIVIN to llw ~ ............ _...~, Profitable Field
...... --........ c:Miln. "''"" ... -...... .,. ,...,.,... ,. tilt ......... Wit,.._,.,~. In =...,.-..::_ :'~~,_o: ~::;: Let's say you•ve watched ::....., ~ cJ~•· te,,.::... ": thJ antique car buff who llvts
....., J15 w.1 TMl'd sttttt, $1111• nut door buy up a steady
:t"~M ".:!1·~'"-.:'"!: procesSlon of old, rurKlown
-:;,.~~ .... "-tM -~ .... ":: Du e 1 e n b e r g s , Auburns, ~ flf'lt ~., frll• notlct. Fr~k!Jns and Hispano Suizas
o...,J.....,t0.1m I I f th and JOHN KILL y SHOfJMICE or a <0qp e 0 ous
E*""" ., tnt wm fll doU111 each. tinker with them ........ ..,...... CIK.9ditnl "°" .... ,., .. ,.,._ a H.-s evenings after work, and
::._ ... ..._ ~ .,,.1 resell them 1rter they've betn ,.......1 m•> MMQI restored for $10,000 to $15,000 " .................. . .,"*"....,. or.,. ~ 0.111 1"11ot. •piece!
Jvt't u. 21. ,. .,.. ""''"' 4 1'" '"11e1 You've watched what began
LEGAL N001CE as a prohtless bobby tuni into
M1M a lucrative, moon-Ughttng
c••Tl•tCAn °'" D1sco11nMuAMCI! operat100, and now you're °" us:, :~~o~•:mNM•NT wondering: "How·mlgbt I get
THE VHOl!JtSIO.NEO de M"* «rtlflo into this profitable fif:ld?" .,,,t. "*""' 11tn 1, 1m tNv «•Mii H io c1o-..,.. _ _,., -. 11ct111ou1 """ ere are guldehnes from
rl&PN of TAI fl!JttNTING AtlD VAIUTYI"" Edgar Jurist, n,..sklent of the
IMO ~ 1.... ~· Coltt M-, I'""'
ctntomi.. Wllldl butlneN Wta '°'""'" V1ntage Car Store m Nyack, ~ °'"':r.=iow.:=""'°'fOtl~ New York, who pioneered
.,. ~~ ~~~ $r •• 2319 T11ttln retailing in this field , and
A,,_, ~ ••Mfl· e.wto,.,iit. other <;ar buffs I've been Jn·
Tf\oll'IU A .,11_ Jr., :lS1 IE•" t . I inf U '"" srrwt. GoPt ~· c.11f'llt!l11. erview ng onna y 1n the
c.rt111t1i. w tr•nACt*' ot w1111•• paat few months:
"'"'9r "-tMYe flctl""1t -· tlld •"*"'11 .-,,.,.i,1iw~ t11e"""· .... .. -Read • n t i q u e
t11' \fl tM tfflCI of IM (;Ollllly Cltrll • 1,.,,
car
., o,...,.. c-tv. """"' the. H0>'11lo1" magazmes, cata..,6s a n d
.i-~rsl* ~ ~~n r.·221\d dl'Y boob, t? find out what models
.rJ.,.,_.1•1C1-are avallable at what pnce s:. ~= :· :=~~: -study such "bibles" as Hem·
"u"lltMO 0r11!d Coatt 0111y "JIOt ..,..; .. g•• M•'•r News bl. hed J-JO tlld Jul\I 7, 1 .. 21, 1'79 11U.11 ..... , " vw , pt.I IS
LEGAL NOTICE ·-calTl"ICAT• °" •VSM••• ll'l(TtTtoU• NA.Id Tiie undt,..19fltd .. certtf'r llWY ....
ctonduclllll • bullntUi ., 1-'"'°""""'· Founlll!I V11ie,., C1Ufon1ta. ul\del' the
ltctitlOVl firm fltlN et NORGETOWN CLEANERS ind !1111 Mid firm It ~
_.. ol' "'' fo!lcrlrl"' """°"'' wllost fltmtl h'I NII Ind P11Cft of r91!denu
...... foltowi: MlrtlYll L. ,...., wun.,,.
Jr., 17"1 N~lll l..nH -..di. C•lltornlt
T •1rry,
HUftllftltoll
01flcl Junf 20, lf10 ~rllYll L, ltl'l'Y Wllll~ T, l1rry, Jr t llh et CtllfWnl1, Oftl'Nlt C.OUntv Oii J\1111 10, 1f11, Mfo,.. nu, t Ncrl•N
Publlt ht l f'CI IOI' Mid Sl1!t, HrM"'lly •-!'Id Wllll1m T Ind Merilyn L 91rrv Jr, II-fo me fo M the .,.,..,. """°'' Ml'n" .... 1\lbacrlllael to 1111 ._l!Mn lnslrvllMfll •NI ~110Wl'°9•
'" 1'htv nlClllfd !he .-me IOf'FICIAL SIEA\.I Gltfm H. ?trnm•rrnan
Not1rv Putillc.Ctlltllfi111
Prlncl11I OffiQJ In
Clrtltlll CounlY M~ COll'l,..,lfflorl E•~l111t
Ju,.. .._ '''' Publlthetl Or111t• Coe1t Otl1~ "'"°'' JuM JG 1f'od July 7, l" 21, 1f10 1117·70
LEGAL NOTICE ,....,,
NOTICI TO CRIOITORS SUPl•IOtl COURT OP TMI ITATI 01' CALll'OINIA l'O•
TMI COUMTY 01' OMHOI .... -Estll• " II/A PEARL Ur.Ml. DKet .. .. NOTICE IS HEll:l!tY Gf\IEH !e "'-
<r..i!ltorl ol' IN tbOvf! ...-m..:1 dececl•nl l'lql tll ,,__. hlVlnt Clt lml lltlrill
tl>I "Id *<:Id•"' ire fl1<1111.-rre tri. tl\MI, Witt! Ille lllUUll'Y voud\ers, In ~ oftlee If ~ clle•ll If tf'le 1bove otfttllled (OUrt, w ,. prntnl ltlfm, wlltl
tt>e ntatNl'Y YOUC.hel"lo to ''" Ill'> ~~,..11!>1d 11 tht lfl!c• of hl\ tllorflllY,
llOY S GIOROAHO, I010 Nortll ~ln Strtet, S.nt• Ant, C.lllornlt , wlllci't b
1111 pt.ct (If bullnts.t flf the-Ufllkrlll!Md
In 111 n'llllit,.. ~11n1.,. to ti.. flllll If 111d i:rt«CH!nt. within llOur monllll
'"" tilt' flrrt 111bllc1tlon If lhla f!Ollct.
Oti.c! JUnt u. 1tte
1.. .. 11, Irvin LMr
E•.Cutol' of 11'le Wiii !If tht oboll• 1111'nld dec..Sen!
ltO't S 41010.t.NO 11\t MW'I• Mii~ Strttt
SM!tt A1111, Clllfeflrllt nJt1
Ttl· (JUI SO·l"' A"'"'" tw l:W.clltw '°vlllls!Md Ortllfft Cotff O.!!v Pllo-1
Jun1 '°•!Id JulY 7, u, 11, 1'71 HfO.l'G
LEGAL NOTICE
••R Ul4 INOTIC• TO CR•DITOll
SUPl:RIO• COURT o.-THI:
lfATI 01' (At.ll'ClllNIA POlt
THI COUNTY OP OIU.trtOI
Jiit, A"'61"
Etltle flf e LINWOOD VICIC •k•
EJI NEST LINWOOD \/lCIC, DKluld
NOT'ICE rs HEll;EaY GIVEN '" ttle <1'9dltor. of thl 1bov1 Mmed dKldeftl
.,.,, Ill "'""' h1vl11t d•l .... •o•!MI ~ a.Id e..:.ie111 ••• rei:.ulrld to flit
lhetl'\, w!tl'I tht ne<••••TY vouchtlrs, In
lht otfk 1 fll ~ clerll of tl'I• 1b0vl
e<1t•llld eourr or to •••MIU lhlrrl, wllh
.,,. llf(tUITY WIUChlfl, fo fl>9 un.
dtflltned •I 1111 offlC. If hit l lloml'YI,
Wlll'r'Nlfl a. kllm\dt, \5lll Wnlcl!!'I orrw,
SulN no, Ntw!Hlrt Bttd\. C111ror11!1.
wtlleh II !fie DI•« of bu1lntH flf !ht
u...,.,rtlt!lllCI In 111 m1llet1 oerhlnln•
to 1111 tstet. of s.110 deatlent within
l'ollr "'°""'' 1ner ff!• t!ot PUbliUlllon .., mtt notlt1
011!!1 Junt '' IJ)'(I Wlllll"" V!Ck SChmlOI
E•e<utor crl flw Wiil of 1111 tbo'le lllmed d.Cldfl'll
WITTMAN • ICHMIOT IAl WnlcNff Ol'IYI, Suitt J2f ,...._. tMcll. C•llferrllt ,,.._
T•b U1tJ '*111' A"WMl'I Nir lncll111'
"Vbl11111t1 Or1not Co111 Dilly PllOI
Jun• '° encl July 7, l(, 11, 1'1'11 llN 70
LEGAL NOTICE
in Bennington, Vt. and the
Sunday New York Time s
classified section devoted to
antique cars.
---Joln local antique-classic
car clubs and attended meets
at which seasoned enthusiasts
bring their prize specimens
to compete for pr1ies, to hob-
nob and to horse trade. These
colorful event! are held all
over the coontry at various
times of the year.
-Learn the b a 1 I c in·
gredient.s of value Jn antique
(pre..1930) and classic cars
(generally speaking, the btg•
ge r, grander ones, bu i It
between 1925 and 1 9 4 2) .
Speeif.icaUy, th1s means the
car's make the model, its rari·
ty, condition, engmeertng and
aesthetic excellence. 0 p e n
cars eg., to ur ers,
roadsters, -tend to be many
tlmes more valuable than
hardtop sedans and coupes.
Convertibles ran somewhere
1n between lhese t w o
categories. Any dass1c car
Ydlich was considered a
masterpiece when it was buUt.
thll is considered so by
sophisticated antique car col·
lectors.
A car'11 model Is all·tm·
portant · You can buy a fµUy.
restored 19O3 curved-<lash
Oldsmobile runabout for $3,500
today, but a 1903 Stevens
Duryea or Mercedes may cost
you $20,000 to $30 ,000 .
llowever, a car's age has little
to do with its value. Many
pre--1915 cars can be bought
today for less than $3,000,
while many of the greats
which were manufactured dur·
ing the 1920's and '30's are
unavailable, no matter what
the condition, for Jess than
$20,000 to $30,000.
Avoid antique car auctions
-until you learn your way
around th is field. Says Jurist:
"I've seen people bid more
than $10,000 for ugly, mass·
Records
Increases
• 30 minutes to Los Angeles lnternattonal
• Dependable D0Hav11lands, Instrumented like the big jets
• $10.80 one way (Includes Federal Transporta·
t1on true)
Sanla Ana lo LAX
5:50 AM 12:55 PM
6:50 AM 1:45 PM
6:55 AM 1 :50 PM
7:20 AM 2:50 PM
7:50 AM 3:20 PM
8:50 AM 3:50 PM
9:15 AM 4:30 PM
9:50 AM 4:45 PM
10:30 AM 5:10 PM
10:45 AM 5:50 PM
11:00 AM 6:30 PM
11:50 AM 6:40 PM
12:15 PM 7:25 PM
LAX to Santa Ana
7:05 AM 3:05 PM
8:00 AM 3:35 PM
8:35 AM 4:05 PM
8:40 AM 4:10 PM
9:00 AM 5:05 PM
9:10 AM 5:30 PM
9:55 AM 5:50 PM
10:00 AM 6:35 PM
10:50 AM 7:25 PM
11 :30 AM 7:35 PM
12:10 PM 8:10 PM
1:00 PM 9:00 PM
1:35 PM 9:30 PM
2:30 PM 10:00 PM 8:10 PM
8:20 PM 10:20 PM
CARGO CARRIED ON All FLIGHTS
Some flights ~o not operate every dar. For com·
plate Information and reservations, cal your travel
agent or Golden West Airlines al (714) ~71.
Golden 'M?st Airlines
TreHghRm
-----·~-=~~..----,...,.......---------------,------
'
Market
Synabols
N
I .::,z . . ,
!""'' •
T11tldq, .Nly 21, 1970 SC DAILY PILOT J'
.... -·
Huntington
Student Gets
Scholarship
Ray M. Rainhonf of Him·
tlngton Bead\, .!I Jt'IO eraduate
of Lakewood High School io
Lakewood, h8.!1 been named
1 Texaco Mult Scholarship
winner.
Ray Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. George F. Reinhard of
20332 Adrian Circle in Hun-
tington Beach.
The scholarsfilp la part oC.
a program ltlat enables Tex ..
aco employes to provide col•
Jege education. far SON and
daughten with outstandil'lg
hlgjl ICbool re<onls.
Ray mliDtalned a 4.0 grade
point averap durfng his years
In hlgti ICl1ooJ and plans to
enter UC Berttley this Fall.
Divers Missing
,
I
JI DAllY ,ILOT Tutsd.,, July 21, iq70
Trial by Fire QURNlE ly Phll lnterlandl Panel Ru Annvers
Nixon Gets 'Goals' Study
Practical rraining Via Setti,.tg Bla zes WASHINGTON (AP) -A
ap<c!AI While Hooao pone! bas
told President Nilan the
auwer1 to till' naUon's pro-
blems may involve 1 de-
emphasis oo college educ1Uon,
taxes oo poJluters 1 n d
development of new clues to
lure residents from crowded
metropolitan areas.
panel declared, Is the lm-
poslUon ol laJe1 oo Polluters.
"In the competlUve market
place, ralslng the price of
pollution would tend to lower
environmental degradation, as
producers would have an lD-
cenUve Lo use manulactwing
methods that put f e w er
burdens on the environmtnt.
buying hablls." th• ... po11
stated. ly llUDI NIEOZIE18KI
,.,.,.., ~•boot the
-heal Ind pu!lfelll lmOke of a house fire tba,t
cao't lNtdQplicttod ln a drill.
It rtnp three alarms ln a
Inman'• heart, 1 ho o l l n g
lldtenalin in his veins and mllllic bb bact crawl with
ucitemenl.
Firemen like lo fight fl"''· upodAlly the lbrilling rlp-
roarlfC blues. 1be only troµ-
ble ii that there aren't enoo~
of them. So they set them ,
Anon -ISi: a legal stnse
-ls committed by Hunllngton
Beach firemen about 40 Umes
a year on old, abandoned
buildings that have loo' ago
outJJ'ved tMir usefulness.
Kent Holder, 31, who drives
one ol the big red engines
for tht Lake Street station,
oocas!onally gets to play
"firebol" 80 that rookie
firemen can practice ex·
tinJ!lllablntl the flames . .
He 1ay1 you have lo go
about It sdentilically rather-
than just running around with
a m~. looking l o r
aomedrlpg lo light .
"Firsr we looi at Uie sur-
rounding ar~a. tJf there ill
flammable materiaJ that may
, carry the fl~mes to another
structure, it must be removed.
"U a hooH is too clo.te
to other structures, or directly
under a telephone or powu
Jines, we may have t.o pass
it up and bum a hoo.se
somewtiere else," he said.
F'irt Mar'ttlall Cari Duncan.
S o m et imes, unexpected
things happen because the
neophyte fil'fJmen 1.1e just a
lltUe too eager to ple1se their
watching :superiors.
· "Fr~uently we find them
gelling In a little too cloee.
l've actuaUy seen the plast.lc
lights on the fire trucks
melted by the heat," uki Fire
Capt. Fred "Heller. ''But that
certainly doesn 't happen in
Huntington Beach," he added
with a smirk.
"Fire combat ls not a game
ol Mickey Mouse," explained
Ray Picard, the city's flre
d'lief. "The men have to learn
how to eat smoke aod feel
heat before they know what
It's all about. '1
He says there are tricks
to the trade, like now to pro-
tect younetl from blistering
and breathing properly when
surrounded by dense smoke.
''Soon our rookies team how
to take very short breaths.
Yoo lee. the air flot1t Jn just
Jong enough to retain con-
sciousness," said Picard.
Another method of ensuring a. suffjdeot_o_xyaen su pply is
to stay close to the floor and
cloM. to the noule, Capt. Dun-
can pointed oot. "We tell 'em
to push their noses right into
the carpet."
In an emergency, he added,
a man can usually draw a
fresh breath by tucking his
head Jn.side the asbestos coat
flap, where air ts usu.any trap-
ped.
"You knnw, when yoo look
at all the toxins released by
a fitt, theoretically, it's sup-
posed to kill you, '1 aa1d 1 Picard.
"And the men also have
to learn how to work with
r1diated heat which c a n
blister a man before he knows
it. He has to learn how to
lilowly rotate his body -]Ike
a pig on a skewer -so that
he doesn 't expoae one side
too long and burn ttimself." I
None of these self-preserv-
ing tricks can be learned by
faking lt, accordlog to
firemen. The training fire, 1
they say, Is the best way
of studyinR fire behavior, the
way it travels through a st.rue·
lute and the effectiven~ or
the equipment.
But because Oiey want to
do their part for ecology, Cllie(
Picard explained, the depart·
ment is slowing down on its
training fires . They discharge
"Well, you were invited, but who
invited your muse?"
too many pollutants into the--------------------
atmosphere, says Picard.
"In the past, we have aided
ecology by removing blight,
which is also an ecology issue.
Now it has to be a very
worthwhile project before we
proceed witJi burning," he
poin~ out.
In approximately II n1onths
the department expects to
have o. complete traini ng
fa cility incorporated into its
Gothard Street station which
will use natural gas and
butane -two smogk!ss fuels
-in 1 simulated concrete
house which can be set on
fire over and over again .
When that project. is com·
plete. Chief Picard promises
~is men won 't play al being
firebugs 1ny more.
Corona del Mar High
Honors 930 Students
or 2,225 s~nls who at·
tended Corona de! Mar High
School this year, 930 made
a straight "B" ave rage or
better during: the s pr i n g
semester, it was announced .
Among lhe nonor r o 11
students, 57 completed lhe
semester with sl.raight "A's."
These studenll are:
Se ni<JN; -Jerry Blum.
Martha Tilley. Stan Vermund
and William Viergeve r.
Freshmen -Francis Boero,
Karen Jerger, Vicki Kem -
me rly, Stacy Platt, SUsan
Racey , Lyn ne Rosenberg,
Lilliam Valde!I, Greg Wallace,
Terry Watt and Michael
Williams.
T-llUCIMh who t iN"Md 111 "1'1" or DtHitr l~lude:
S•NIOaS
"And higher pr lees for the
produeb that dirty the air
~d water· would 'induce
ho\lsebQl<b: Lo alier their
Looking toward !he end of
the decade, the panel forecast
the po.ulbllity of a ooe-~
bi~trol device w h l c b
could regulate fertility for j
ye 1 r ; t h r ee-dimensiooaJ
televisioo; an increase iJi
human o r g a o lr~planLs;
cootrol of the weather. aoa
Oie use of chemical! to
stimulate learning and
me~ory.
Althoogb noting predlcUona
that the U.S. population ma_y
be slablllzlntl, Ill• ..,,..i said
70 percent of the country's
peqple probably will be con-
centrated on one-tenth of the
land by the end o( the century.
And haH the populaton, con-
tai.nlng the ~t advanced and
most prospe.rous elemen~ of
the society, will live 1n three
g4'nt metropolitan belts -
State Getting Sticky '
Over Bumper Stickers
Booton-Washington, Clllcag<> SACR'AMENTO IAP) -It
Pitlah\lrgh·and ~an Francisco-wasn't until · bumper stickers
San Diego, 'the panel oo na-reading : "Ban DDT" ap-
t tonal goals said In a 228-page peared on slate vehicles that
staff report. Nixon w i"l l the Gener1J .Services Depart-
evaluale the report duri11g hiJ nwnt decided to get sticky
Hklay stay in San Clemente. over the ubiquitous Smokey
Few firm ooncfuslons-were Bear labelS which h av e
offered in the report, entitled routinely decorated state cars
"Toward Balanced Gr3wth: for year!!:, '
Quantity with Quality." The State ·officials wouldn't of.
panel said its suggestions were ficiaUy acknowledge any co D-
intended to stir public debate nlction )>et~een the new order
and generate concern i 0 and the anti-pesticld~ slicker
Cong bot .everal did so privately. -.:ess.nd d ''We just fell It would be ··~ tre towar settlement advisable to have a standard
of most of the poptilation in policy on . bµmper sli'ckers metropolitan areas can be since we never had one." says
reversed if federal , public and Charles E. Dixon, General
private instilutions adopt a Servkes Department director.
coordinated strategy. t h e "Our new policy is to disallow
study group said. Alternatives them." ·
swing. State workers say mo.st
of the state's 30,000 vehicles
are decorated with the con-
lroversial slogan: ''Prevent
Forest Fires" and aU must
be cleaned off,
"I don 't know what ll's all
about," said a Sacramento
t.mploye. "To me. it's kinda
ridiculous. It'll take about 10
minutes a sticker -probably
have to use a razor blade."
'"You gotta get any glue
of( the bumper , too," he ad·
ded. "Or it'll turn black."
If two thirds of the state
vehicles have their stickers
remo~ed at ten minutes each,
the cost would run to about
3,300 .man.hours. or -at H
an hour, -$13,200.
The men readying 1 house
for a "bum" make !lure the
utilities are disconnected so
that fires g<i -lhe way they're
planned. "W.e don't want to
~ 1urpriaed by any flaming
gas jets or dangling live
wires," Holder said.
Diesel oil, ignited by a
highway flare i!I used to start
the inferno, since gasoline and
other volatile materials could
flash back at the men, even
entrapping them.
Container Show
David Dunlap, Christine Gog.
gio, Marilyn Grubb, Becky
Hopper, Leslie Kittle, Gregory
Meeks, Jamie Peterson. Robin
Stetle, Thomas Va nderpool,
Dan Wallace and Pamela
M•-• A.C'1m~ Layrlll AC'1U, J"t<IYtl A•Pn.00.1, Otbblt Arnold, Llllbf!I , Arnold, Mlcllelt Arrt,....1, Pttrkl• A""1'MlllM_, Wllllam ltlll'Y, Linda lhlllll', \.olleetl l lnr>ltotn, ElllM BtrMrcl, Tell.It 8~r, I( 11 htrIn1 BetrOWoad l(,,r... leQINI<. T•KY B"'!Ch, S1r1h Btnaon. (hrl•ll a..,..1n I"" Wltlltm Bltl'I. KIY aer'lholi, l.UCl9 Bert.tllY, ertl
Bern1rc11 B""' Berl!ll'cl. Carl Bltl'Mf', Frt<I I ndlln, Crill Bltdl, Tlwnu BltlKtl, C1rol BltN>lt<I, a 1 n C' ~ Bl11mtr. Gtollrry Bourffol1, Bonni• llOY<I. Dd>or.r. B...,le. llob 110,.111. Cllrlt!I BrlClford, Marv llrr<:hl, ,,,._,lo:
might include fostering the Dixon said the o ff Jc I a I
growth of existing small cities, reason for· the ruling was to
building new cities a n d keep the cars wilh old $lickeN
generating growth in rural on them from looking messy.
areas. Workers in state garages,
Regarding sdlooling. the however. say lhe Smokey Bear
presidential study group said, stickers were es p e c i a 11 y
''Many people feel lhat too-durable. Wooley. _
Packers Exhibit Products Juniors -P.tarilee Allen,
Lucinda Bottorf, T h o m a s
Booghey, Claudia C a r v e r ,
Margaret Dav ies. Ch a r I ea
Grimshaw, Karen Heilig, Eric
Lagerlof. Richard Lee, Greg
Loitz, Jane Ma~. Lynn
P.iiller, Ken Neisser, Pamela
Osmus, Debbie Otto, Greg
Rose, Debbie Shannon and
Janet Stanton.
Br~. W...,y llroc:ke1!. Cr1i. Broom, JKob Brown, W-VNI llrOWfl, C:lrucllt lluckey, Bonni• 8yrt,r, StePhtn B11Hon 0ort11d Ctmllfll'll, BMbtr• C•nlltld°, SNlirY Ctrr. Chrrln Ctrroll, M1rn1 C1r1«, l"tft'ltllt Cttler·
Iv, flrlll O.rifl1tr1!4tl. Cnrlsll C<ICl\rln, W111w Conclt, J.,n Co11rov, Chrl11!nt Cole llrnntlll Cowl•.
great emphasis is already •·Jn my opinion." said cne
being placed oo post-secon-worker, "lhey hold a picture
dary education , particularly quite well."
The rookies, many of whom
have longed for mooths lo
get a position with Huntington
Beadi'a c r a c k firefighting
force, are then turned loose
on the blaze. Jt's their baptism
by fire.
"There '111 just no better way
lo train young firemen than
with a control.led hot fire . You
can shoot. water into a fieJd
all day lo demonstrate equip-
ment and it won 't teach the
men how to protect
t.hemitelvea," uys D e p u t y
ARE YOU THE
MAN FOR US7
-~ .. r.,.....,n . ............. -1r1 ..... ,.,
I IKll -.... II HrM .i ... ........... ...,.~.
W,...Mv.1_1Mt..,... .. (.,,. ........ ,...,.,,., ....
I ..... ~---ltf WI •ltcMt I ....,,.,.. 1m fw ,... MW ......
11m11w.
c..• celltd .... ,.,_. lilt-"'"· Mr. ,.....,_ cru1 ,.,ottn. •r WT"ll• .... lt1'-0.lly ,Ii.I,
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -
They 've prettied up the old
potato sack to the point where
you can hardly recognize it.
The familiar JOO-pound spud
holder used to be fabricated
ol a coarse, k>osely woven
material made from jute and
it was a dull brown.
Now the potalo sack has
become a colorful woven-
plaslic creation in pas~! hues
that could, transform the
classic sack race into a
glamorous event.
Its makers are assuring Oie
180 companies setUng up their
booths al tht Western Packag·
ing Exhibf\ton which opens
here Tuesday that the bright
new sack also can carry other
types ot product, grain seeds
and fertil izer .
The exhibit -large:st ever
held in the West -which
some 11,000 marketing ex·
ecutivea are expected to at·
tend at the Civic Center, also
features sudl innovatioos as
a new type of screw.off botlle
James E. Ric:h, D.V.M.
Announces the opening of the
NEWPORT CENTER
HOSPITAL ANIMAL
ly A11,.1nt1n•nt
644-5461
" DlrMtly Hhlntl
N.w,or1 Cln•m• Thutr•
Newport CttttW
cap which is designed to be
kl~.
That i5, it requires an ex.
tra movement or two that Jun-
ior Isn't suppo&ed to figure
out before Mommy catches
up with him.
A bottle made from a new
type of pl•Mic ill being shown
for fruit juices and other Ji.
qukts, replacing glass and in
some casa paper containen.
Jt costs more than paper, bot
is much llghter than glass
and relatively unbreakable.
New plastic and aluminum
foil packages for Wet soups,
salad dressings and cocktails
are on exhibit with the idea
of transforming t h e ap-
pearara o f supermarket
shelves.
One item attracUng major
attention is a huge paper con-
tainer molded like the egg
cartoo 1hat inspired it. ,Made
of papier-mache, It holds six
tons IX packaged goods or
machinery, and costs about
$2 per oopy. Unlike ils wood
and steel predecessors, u·~
dispo.sable and doesn't have
to be returned.
Addicts Ousted
JERUSALEM (UPI) -The
Interior Ministry said Tuesday
Israel will deport foreign
tourists caught or convicted
ot using or selling drugs.
Deputy Interior M in is t e r
Yosef Goldschmidt to Id
Knesset (Parliament) the use
ol hashish and other narcotics
was growing: in lsracl.
Sopl>ommtt -Jeff Alford,
BradJey Baker, John Btanpied,
Valerie Carderio, James Cote,
Susie E 11 est a'd, Karen
Feldman, Scott Hornbeak,
Linda Jacobus, K a r e n
Johl'lllOO, Thomas M<.Corkie,
William Power, Cindy
Schieber, Gloria Somer s ,
Plague Hits
Small Mice
Via Fleas
J•,.. Cr1I•, S!tnl1y CrlPDen, Jttl' CU"lmlMI. l.nntUt O.vll1, (tmlllt 0.y, J\1111 Olttwv~r. C1rol Dollft, We"""' Ootd'lr.llrr, 1(111\lftn Dunctn, SMrle Ebel'lltrlll, James Edmiston, C1r11er1,.. E911. Dl1ne EJ11t, Grrv Erick...,,, S1r1 Erlduon. M1rlc1rlr ErkMN>. Heidi EV41rlOll R<lbb Eztell. Eltle Frier, LHJll F-, Fr...t
Forll, LYnd9 FDf'lle'I', Lrl!fl "°"'·Lind• Fu, Gr" Fox•, •-Id Fr••IJ, Malltllne l"••ncl..._1(11, t.rnn Forst, Ulckl FrOlf, L1Yrlt G1ot. Robrrt G1rber, lltbelh Gl•C«n•UI, J~HrtY G<lellll, AnMllt Goltolo, R-r Gould. J1mn Gr.,,.m, 'fl111 Orvo.on, ll11ty
G11noer1o11t1. 11!1,..,._,. H..,;k, Suun Ht11, Mlrk Ht lin. Slit H•ll'll'Ml'.ia., 81t1r Htmmll!, Vlr•lr>it H1flt0fl, Joh" H-, alcll•r• H1rrll, IC1Jllltt11 Hirt. Jud\I tt1-J Su11nnr H1W1tlmon, GMle H1 ..... , 11-HIYtl, Jori Hulff, CMrm1l111 H-••-. CYnlllll Hew91t COO!nlt \.c kkmln,
Jttl Hlllm111 Dl1"' Hlt11'1rt1, Jim HI...,, Holly Mobbs, Johll Hoit, Dellor•h HOWtll, John 1.,..,, Br .. '""-J Julle J•,.,11. JenrHlel' Jotnuon, Ntll.Qll oh,_, ShlrlH J-a.rblrt !(111. Mt1k KtU1m, L1wr1nc1 Ktll· l~ter. Peler Krmma•i'I.
11!1fldy IC!1t!k P1t1Y 1Clr1t, °"""" Kle!n, 8racl l11twtr, Mll'Y ICrtbt, 01ve ICrolln OOl!fll L18rl1. llt1llClolph t.1F1rr. Mtrl ... LltrlflrY, Tr.KV lt"llt, •= Lim• ICrnMlll Llftlltlll Jullt t.lw ""''°"' w1l11rm 1.o111, ClndY l.OYftC!, Htlen t.uckhtrdt, 81rt>tr1 M.clnnrs, Anne MKlntyre, Fu1110 M~ llvbtr• H1nilOl'l. N1ncy Mllorou, 'ftrl M1rowlll, alck
Mlrvl~. Ctrol McCord. O o u • I• • MCCor\I•, M1"' MC0.0...111, Cynlllt1 MclC!nMY M1ur1en McKown. (ynlfll• McWhlr!. JIM ,....yer, GI...., Miiiar. Su•1n Minkin, JICk MllcMU, Jahn MCllld'r, Mtrk Mornlno,11r. Wlnlrm
Mllntf 111•11 M\lrv!~.
BURNEY. r .". (UPJ) P11rlc11 N1911, Jinny NM•na. VdU G•t•arv N1y. •lck Neff, N1ncy J nstttico·~ were sprayed In Newbrov~h. seal! Nrwc.omb. Christine ~ Nlt !sen. Lindt O'lr!1tr1. Totn O'Ltarv,
parls o( S"·sta r -unty 1' M1ry O'il\ff, 0.~lcl -011""' oa.i.111 llQ \A.I n jl:;'· Ly~ .... P1rk1'1uF1l,pO•rcY ~ •• ,1o11. Northern California today as ..:':;'.,::,..,~."'"' A11n "cH111c1, J•rH•
Stale Health Departmenl ol·'jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
oo the four-year degree ancl So, lhe Great B u m p e r
thal possibly there are many Sticker Purge gets Mto full
students now in college who,:;;;;===='='===============~ ~i:.,~ really wan! lo be BIBLE THOUGHTS
Perhaps college should be NAKlDNl!$S: Tod••; on• 11•t promi1,u·
de-emphasized, the panel said. 0111 n1k•dn•11 •nco1t••g• by mrn in high
But Jn any case, the nation pl1c•1. Ev•n tom• t •• ,h.,. s•y th,., ••• •
110 h1rm in l u'h "11lf·•1pr•11ion." Court1
should examine approaches to •PP••r pow•rl••• '" iuppr•n aOTTOM· higher education. LESS t nd TOPLESS 11hibition1, ihouqlt
One answer to pollution, the polic• do ih1ir p1rl by miking ....... .
I
600 CONOEMS SUCH LICENTIOUS
NAKEDNESS! Him w~t CURSED b.c1u1 r ht d11!t fri~oloyily
Pow H dlin with _hi1 f1+h1r'i n1k•dnr1t !G•n. 9:11-171. Ad•m and Ev• hid all g th•ir 111k1d11111 1flr tlo•y l•t•nrd GOOD from EVIL; thouqh
b•fo11 thi1, th1ir 111k1dn•11 Wit 11 t+t1t of childr•n, without
Petl't1'ons Set 1h1m•: !Gin. 1:)5, ]:171. Mo111 ·b~orrtd '"'• n1k•dn111 of
hi1 p1opl1 11 ihty f11tl•d, dr111lr i nd ''1011 up to pity" !E1.
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) ~
Sponsors of petitiom calling
f<r better treatment c f
American priJoners by North
Vietnam have ob ta i ne d
1,165,570 signatures in North
Carolina.
The petitions, sponsored. by
the National Guard and the
Jaycees, will be mailed bfxt
week lo the ambassadors in
Wa!ihington of seven countries
-France, Sweden , Romania .
India. Russia, Poland and
DeDmark.
12:6, 21.211.
Tho1r who p1ln1ni1• "bottoml•t• ind iopl•i•" •xhi b ition1 ,,.
II g1tilty of i111mor1lity 11 trt tho1• who product ind p1rtici·
p1I• in 1uch. Atk yours.If, "Wo1tld I lilr1 to ••• MY mothr.
wif1 , 1i1+•r or d1u9hl•r 11hibit1d p1tbli c:Jy in 1uch m1nn••1
Would I likr to b1 c•ught w1t,hin9 1Yc h t n •1hibition wh•n
thr Juil9•111•nl Dty d•w111?" A r1c<1rd i1 m1d1 of our d1Hy tC·
l ions t nd lhi1 r•'ord wilt b• th•r• lo f•c• 11• in lh• JudgtlTI•"*
Dty I P1m. 11•:1.12, R•~· 10:11 .15, 2 Cor. 5:101. "Bt not d•·
c•iw.d; God i1 ""' moc••d: for wh1ho1w1r 1 lfttn towlh, th1t
1llall h• 1110 r11p'' IG•I. 6:7, Rom. 1:)2). USUALLY, th<11•
who 1dvoc:tl• n1ktdn111 on the tl•91 for "1•)f·••Pr•nion" 1110
••• inl•r•tl•d i" olh1r immor•I 1in1 litl•d in Rom. 1:26-11.
Thro1t9hout hitlo•y 111lion1 h1•• J:ALLEN wh•n thr y 91w• lh•m·
11lv•t to immor1litv. d runk•11•u, lic•nliou1 n1k1d11•11, lying
•~d br1•ktlown of LAW. Unl•n th• 9ood p•opl• of our le~d
ri1t in ••billion, AMERICA is doom.cl. ChYrch of Chri1t 117
W, Wil1on SI., Cot!• Mt11, Ct, Ph. 5'41 ·5711, 6'46·5761.'
ficials sought to kill fleas car.II
rying Bubonic plague.
The pleague , whlch
depopulated whole area!! of
Europe and Asia during the
SPECTACULAR MID-SUMMER
Middle Ages, has been found
among rodents In this area
and is spread by fleas. ALL
OF
JULY
ALL
OF
JULY
•
LEARN TO. SWIM
Both cases among humans
thi~ year were traced to the
McArthur-Burney Falls area,
but 3Pfaying has been carried
oul also along the McCloud
River in Shasta County and
in a wooded area nea r the
11unler·Ligget.t. ml 1 it a r y
.,
AT YOUR
ORANGE COAST YMCA
642-9990
reservation in Monterey Coun-
ty. No human has been in-
fected in the latter two areas.
8odl lhhs year's victims are
recuperating in hospital!!.
Rough it ...
AT THE NEW RODEWAY INN
NOW OPEN AT
COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA
Convenient to Disneyland, Orange
County Airport, Newport Beach.
124 gracious rooms all with
color tv, Spanish architecture,
pool, Hawaiian Skillet Restaurant.
Ideal family (or business)
headquarters for Southern California.
Phone (714) 557·8700 for
reservations. Located 5 minutes
from Orange County Airport.
'%u ilo tlt'fra1€1ing... •
"Le.a>e lh:"RE-Ofro ui;.
~
Savings from 58% to 11°/o and more·
on all our entire stock of
famous imported and domestic e CHANDELIERS e HANGING LAMPS e WALL FIXTURES
FREE $9.95 DI MM.ER .. ,. ,. .......... , CRYSTAL CHANDELIER
• Use BankAmericard
Master Charge or
or Our Convenient
Layaway Plan "'
ELECTRIC & LIGHTING
222 Victoria Street, Costa Mesa
I Across from Gre•nhavtn Nursery I
Special Courtesy lo
Builders & Interior Decorators 646-3737
-
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Tlltldly, Ju~ 21, 1970 s IWLV lltlOt :J . ' .
2 Firms Seek . On of re Atoin · Stations
Wishing . Well.
Vie jo Principal Wi~ Post ·
By PAMELA HALLAN
·Of .. Dellr '*' t •tf
Rebert Bosanko used to pass Mission
Viejo High School on hls way to his
awnmer home in San Clemente.
"Doy, I sure would like to be'princiJ>ll
ct that school," he would s a y to his
wife.
And that's exactly what he i1 ioday.
Since he k>ok over hia duties oo July
l he's found a great deal more to
admire than just a nice looking building.
"I've found that the school b com-
munity centered," says Bosanko. "People
are interested in the school and this
is a necessary ingredient.
"I don't lind in this school the apathy
toward education lhat is pre!ent in many
communiUes, The school is the bub of
the community."
One area in which hti is pleased to
see an active community interest is
in combating drug abuse.
"l think good results are bound to
come from this cooperative effort," he
says.
The new principal has a great deal
of railh in young people. "I don't worry
about the future of llOCiety." he safs.
Bosanko prerers to remember what
1'-fark Twin wrote about his "generation
gap."
"He said al 17 his parents didn't
know very much, but at 31 he was
amazed at how much they had learned."
Bo&anko admits he's learned a gnat
deal rrom two young people, his · 19--year-
otd daughter and 18-year~ld son. Both
are working at Di!Jleyland thl.! munmer.
He also has learned from the young
people he's associated with during many
years or teaching and high school ad-
ministration.
A graduate of Bell High School where
he was student body president in 1944,
he eventually returned to Bell after eam.
Ing bachelor's and master's degrees al use.
"Drug abuse is probably the most
Rvere problem young people have to.
day," said Bosanko. "It occurs in all
communities, even affluent ones since
those young people tend to have more
money to spend.
"Our superintendent, William 1.ogg, bas
• concentrated program going on this
11.1mmer. Committees are meeting twice
a week to formulate a district program
on drug abuse."
The committee has educators, students
and coottnunlty leaden involvf.d.
DAILY ~IUIJ Sr.n''lltM
WISH BECOMES REALITY
Mission .Vie jo High'• Bo11n ko
"They are making a concerted effort
to do all that they can," said Bosanko. :·0rua: abuse isn't something you can
remember one day and forget the next.
You have to have a continuous program.
You can never le.t up in this area.
He beeame vice principal in 1959. In
1966 he became principal of Venice High
School, whert he l'l?mained until taking
the Mission Viejo job.
"I was tempted to leave education
only once, and that was an offer to
take a job in the mathematics field
in industry," he says. "I decided my
dedication to education was stronger than
the money indUJtry waa offering."
The Bosanko's are now looking forward
to life at Mission Viejo High.
"We'll probably live in our San
Clemente apartment for awhile, but my
wlfe, Esther, is pushing for a home
in Mission Viejo. She k>ves the com·
munity," be says.
Doth of Bosanko's children will be
In college, bµt he won't be lonely -
he'll have lots of teenagers to keep
him company come September.
Democrat Mize Drops Out
Of Special Senate Race
Democratic nominee Dwight W. Mb:e
did not file for a special elecUon in
the 34th State Senate District before
the deallne passed Friday, thereby
virtually assuring victory for J.\epublican
Dennis Carpenter of Newport Beach.
P.flze, who will oppose Carpenter fOf'
a four.year term in November, said
he decided not to ftle for the sptcial
vote because he fell the elect1on was
an "additional unnecessary expense" for
the taxpayers.
Carpenter will have one opponent on
tht .Aug. 18 ballot, however. Republican
Muni Units Map
Mutual Aide Plan
''Hands Acrqss the Sta" was 1 popular
mutual-aid label 1 few years blck on
an international level.
ln the Capistrano Bay arta this week,
the phrase might better be "hands across
the creek ."
San Juan, that ls.
San Clemente city rouncllmen have
launched an effort to increase mutual
1\d agreements with the City of San
Juan Capistrano.
The mission city's paint ltripinl
machine for streets is the reason.
lt Is something which San Clemente
dotSn't have, but might need on occasion, '° councilmen agreed to 1ppro1Ch San
Juan of(icl1l1 to see ii the machine
could be rented.
'nle City of Laguna Beech recently
borrowed San Clemente's hydraulic
teWe.r cleaning machine.
Mayor Walter Evans auggttted that
the city staff inquire into the p11nt..atriper
loin.
Mrs. McC oy Leading
Lake Forest Ladies
Newly e:tecttd members of the Like
Forest Women 's Club have taken the
rtlp• of the club'• a<tlvlllea.
Pttsldent for the comlnf !<rm II Mn.
Gloria McC<>y. She 11 Ulllted by Mra.
Sharron Kiffer, first vtoe president.
Other ol!lctrs Include Mrs. Rita
WI.lion, second vice. pre:aidtnt; Mrs. Jean
Anderson. third vice prealdent; Mrs.
Faye Miller, secret.al')', Mr1. Veli
Mact..ean, treasurer; ~frs. C11irolyn H11rrl10n Is partiame~
tarlln IJld Mr~ Jackie Belm II bll1orWI.
Douglas Irvine completed his filing Fri.-
day.
The election was called to fill the
vacancy created by the election of
former state Senator John Schmitz ca.
Tustin) to the U.S. House of R<prmn-
tatives.
The. winner or the special election
will be sworn jn Immediately and will
serve until the end of the ye.a r.
r.1i1.e cootcnds tha't the special seg.,Jon
of the state Legislature is expected to
end around Aug. lS, whk:h means the
taxpayers will be paying abQut $7,000
Jn salary for the new senator for the
rest of the yaar.
County Clerk William E. St John said
the 8J)eeial election will cost about
$110,000. There will be 649 precincts
and 360,000 votera.
DAILY ,ILOT *ff l'tlft
Cotton Cnnd11
The Fiesta Is over, but the
memory lingers on. Maggie
Ettinger, 7, San Clemente, can
remember the parade and·eat-
lng fuzzy, ~Ink cotton candy at Plaza Park.
GrandJ~
' .
• •
Backs.UCI
Ho spital
By TOM B~RLEY
Of 1M Olll't f'lllt INN
Plans for the construction of a
University Hospital on the UC lrvlnt
campus bave been endorsed by the
Orang~ County Grand Jury ln a mid·term
..port calling for the clo.!est possible
liason between the completed facility
and the Orange County Medical Center.
' ''Two hospitals would best fulfill the
goals of the Medical Center, the (Irvine)
College of Medicine and the community,"'
the report states. "Thi& in no way cc'n·
stltutes 1 duplication of services since
we are dlscusslng two totally dUferut
types of hospitals."
The Grand Jury report potnts out that
OCMC is "ideally situated'' for the public
service it provides, but ttiat it would
be impractical to add the. needed
teaching hospital to the facilities cur·
renUy housed on the county's Manchester
complex.
Jn any event, the report adds, a
teaching hospital must, by its nature
and mission, work in close conjunctioon
with a school of medicine. -in this
case, UCJ.
An off~ampus hospjtal is not feasible.
at a time when "lhe trend in medical
education is to have students in direct
contract witb patients much earlier in
their schola.sUc car.eer," the report
states. ·And it looks for "the Integration
of the program of the School of Medicine
with other departments of the university.
such as behavioral and social sciences,
engineering and the various biological
sciences."
By the same token, the report adds,
"any plan to move OCMC to lhe Irvine
campus in. order to combine It with
the University Hospital would seriously
impair its 1blUty to serve that segment
of the community for whlch it ls primari·
Jy operated."
The compliers of the Teport n:je<:t
recent arguments th1t popu11Uon growth
In the IOll!hem pGrtlon oL Oranp County
might justify the movfni ~or OCMC to
a more central locatkm.
"It i1 ·unlikely that any Jarp percen-
tage of mandated (indigent) patients
will originate from what appears to
be developing into a relatively blah socjo..
economic area, the report points out.
Tt would be much better and In the
greater public intt.rest, the report states.
for authoriUes to plan for future high
population growth by supplementing the
University Hospital and the Orange Coun-
ty Medical Center with "a system of
outreach clinlca throughout the county.
"These two facilities (should) be con-
sidered as the nucleus of a com-
prehensive health care p r o g r a m
coordinated throughout the county and
involving not only hospitals for acute
illnesses, but much needed beds for
rehabilitation and mental health," the
report adds. .
It adds the warning that the creation
of two sepante hospital facilities should
not lead to the duplication of equipment
and services and urges the absolute
coordination of both hospitals. It notes
the assurances of the OCMC ad·
minl9trator and the Dean of UCI's School
of Medicine thlt aucb pl1Ming la already
under way.
"We must atop planning ahead for
just five yeara and ltart planning ahead
for 15 to 20 years if we are to
preputd for the. immense Oranee Coun-
ty populatlon which seems inevitable,''
the Grand Jury report warns.
Sa1i Clemen te's
Trailer Curbs
Due for Airiiig
City-proposed amendment! to the San
Clemente zoning ordinance putUng a
crimp on parking of trailers, campers
and the like on private property will
1et 1 hearing Wednesday before pl1mlng
commissioners.
The hearing, postr:ionf.d at the Jut
commission meeting, will be&in 11 7 :30
p.m. ln city counctl chambers.
At tssue wilt be an intricate .et
of proposed changes tn tilt regulations
governing how the campers, boats,
trailers and camper . buaes can be parked
on private tots.
Here are some of the major points
of the code chanee:
-Campers, camper cars, bu.sea, bolts,
tr1l1er1 ind buues can be parked .on
private only If the parcel Is either a
ccmme.rclal lot pavtd with asphalt or
cement and UcenRd for Jtoraae. renlllt
er transfer: on the rear half of 1 vacant
lot ll1d compleltly ocreenfd from tilt
streets on whlch the lot has frontage:
In a garage or carport behind t he
front.yard 1etb1ck. ,
-Pauenger vehicles can be parked
tn front ol the front-ya.rd aetblck as
long as they ire pa.,senge.r vthkles defin-
ed by the state Vehicle Code, pickup
trucks not UMld for <.'Ommerclal purpoae1
or trucks on buslntsa calls.
' I
LOngWait
••
Two Cha11aps
Sue Ashburn , 15, El Toro, raised her Hereford, "1'~erdinand, '' from
calf to grand champion of the 1970 Orange Coun"ty Fair. Sue, a mem-
ber of the Mission Viejo Future Farmers of America, saw 1,140--pound
steer sold during !air's Junior Livestock Auction to 1'-lisslon Viejo
Company for $2,394.
Swallow's Day Director
M1·s. Etcl1eherria Dies
"1r!I. Prudence Carmen t:tcheberria.
a San Juan Capistrano native who for
year11 pl1t1oed and directed the aMual
St. Joseph's Day mission -pageant and
served as a teacher at Old Mission
School, died Monday. She was 43.
Mrs. Etch1ferria, born In San Juan
Capistrano in 1927, had :served as a
kindergarten teacher at the mission
Clemente Oka ys
New Trash Ba gs
.
The large plutic trash bags put on
the market recently have won official
city favor as the. approved way of gettin&
rid of refuse In San Clemente.
City ltlanager Ken Carr ·said c i I y
hired rubbish crews perfer the plastic
bags with their wire ties over the con·
ventlonal trash can. He urged residents
to use the bags exclusively for their
rubbish.
The containers -some roming com·
plcte with a stand to hold plastic bags
open, are available at several businesses
in San Clemente.
Some are offered on large rolls, instead
of smaller -and more expensive boxes.
Spokesmen for the city's contracted
rubbish collection service sa1d the bags
ellmin1te morning collectioh . noises,
damaged pennanent containers and are
easier to II.ft than the conventlonaJ metal
trash can.
school for the past three years.
Also a dancer, she planned and directed
the 'ltinual '~ageabt It the Fltita Las
Goklndrina.s for many yean teachlng ~I ycunpters Spani&h and lndian
dances. " Mrs. Etcheberrla was a member or
the Old Mlsslon Women's Catholic Club,
lhe Southern Callfomla Eskualdun CJub
and the San Juan Capistrano Republican
Woman's Club.
She leaves her husband, Louie
Etcheberria and three daughters, Anita
Louise, 19, Carmen Marle, 17, ind Grace
AM, IS,
Rosary will be recited at Old Mission
Church Wednesday evening at I o'clock .
Requiem Mass will be celebrated Thurs-
day morning at 9 at the wne ch1pel.
Saddlehack Masons
Seeks New Me1nhers
Masons in the Saddleback Valley can
k>ok forward to a Ma!IOOic Club and
temple in the near future, after recent
approval was given the group by lhe
Grand Lodge of California.
Applications are now being accepted
for charter memberships. A-faster Masons
who wl!h to join are asked to attend
club meetings in the Downey Savin1s
Office, Mitslon Viejo, on the sec<ind
and fourth 'I1lur.sday's at 7:to p.m.
For lurther Information . c o n ta c l
Manuel Avila, 495-542:9.
Here's your cue!.
-
Expected
Before Okay .
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of ,.. Dllfr ,. .. --' The two utility firms llln'lllC •lectric!IY ••
to the South Orange Coast hav. •PFlled
to !tie ... It PublJc UUUU..· Comrn-
(PUC) for approval of two bu1e nuclear
generating stations near SU Onofre.
But several months wlll elapee before
hearlnp by the PUC are BCheduled for
Southern Callromia F.dlton Company and
San Diego Gas and Electric ComJ)lft1
wtio wanl to build the two large
gene.rating !tatkm on about 14 ac:ra
downcoast of tilt hlstiq nuclear plan
at San Ono(re.
Anplicatlons for 1pproval of the projed.
by the Atomic .&lergy Commission, weM
filed earlier this year. Appearmces
before that federal body have not yet
been sc~uled.
Both the PUC ll1d A~ hearlnp .,..
expec~ to la1;t for weeks -qd perhaps
months -Edison spokesmen aaid today. 8 Tfie. S4SO.m!Uion plants are expected
to be the subject of lengthy ltstlmoey
by ecolog.v·minded speakers, they said.
Proposals for a conventional fossil-fuel«
plant ·in HunUngt.on 'Beach · earllt!r .this
year were staDed ror several months ..
while protestors presented their cuel
before the PUC.
At San Onofre, where the ecok>gic1l
lssue:s are diffennt, the two utilitl.es
(San Diego Gas and Electric holds 2fJ..ptr'-
cer'lt tnteresl In the plan) twin nae>
tor' will be _propo:sed. ;.
Each of the new ones would produce
doUble. the amount of electrical turrent
as the present one which bu been in.
OJM!ratkms with no accidents, nor'
noticeable pollution tn the past two years
Of rellUl&r Optra,l.ion.
The two new comple.xu. will 1erve
the electrical needs of a ctt.Y of 2.S
million lribabltants. utility .pokesmen
ha"e claimed.,
Generators -the conventional steam
fyl)t. -alreadv are iri the process of
being purchased.
'The nuclear chamber& provide the heat
for steam;d.riven d~s. •
Each of .the cvllndricaJ. nuclear rue:-1 tors will be built fn. hollow1 along the
beach · line on land ~ undtr 1
Jong.tmn le.,. wllll the MarJne,Corpo. .
Among the changq over the utsun1
plant. are shleldlng for the WtSlghUt l.
electrical transfoi-rri.lng equlPment and \
possibly' modem-designed transmlttin(
poles.
Instead of the traditional spheres,
dome-shaped cvllnders will house the
nuclear generaUng machinery.
Despite the early appUcaOon for of·
ficlal government approval of the plants,
completion and christening of the pro-
posed nuclear piles are 1t. Jent JU
or i.even )'ears off.
About five y~ars of paperwork and
construction will be required before the
two 'gfneratlng Jtatlona beiin their
shakedown tests.
'Ille te&;ts require another year or more
before the plants become fully opera.
tlonal.
SafetyClass Finish·es
Eleven $Upervlsory employes of the
City of San Clemente have bef:n tjted
for completion of the Supervlaor'a Safety
Course conducted recently by the State
Compensation Insurance Fund.
The employes rectlving ~rtlflc1tes for
the course are Howard Blrdlew, .Orvel
Bodey, Gene Boi'awski, Bill Eshler, Mert
Hackett, Ray Kruszona, Art LopeJ, Al
Mlddltton, Robert Olivares, Gerald
Teachout Ind Bernard Wottle.
* 4l/2'x8' size
699°0
* l" olale top
*Weighs lOOQ pounds
·*Olive, red or gold felt
' '
..
~ -•
.
I
4 ~V.Pll.llf
Ten · Battles ·Raging "Near. Ca~h·odia.~ Capif<>.l
' .. , .
PRN0M PENH (UPI) -C&mbodlon .._.llll!Md to ..., Communln Wllll · -="' -of the _ ..... n1·1
main -.. -norlhwlllt o( -.. P<nb today la one ol 10
dllbeo Mp>rted from all sides ol the
clly.
Guen111' -·-Ille ... tu at -·· 40 llllllo from lbe capilal. Monday WMler an Intense mortar barrage
but, mililorJ apokeoman Aid, were held
al ~ ---pie Diahl and mi.
' j •
-~YI f .... Dlilf' Plllf ltll>
}J Me\7 .rains whipped Minne&•
poll! Saturday, the Theater of ln.-
..ivement waa presenting Noel
toward'• play "Hay Fever.'' Th•
dlow continued as nearly two
b:lieiOi water ·1eekea through tho
fOOf and onto the atage. With water
;bout hi• ankles, actor Kollh Wal•
·i.ra walked on1tage and dellv~ed
tha play'1 nut line: ''I say, jt'1
raining.'' •
Th< Drai/cot.r~ E11Qltmd parilh
council ha a&ked Jot . .1peciol 'po-
Uc. patrol& to move on couple-1
at tM vWaoe'a favorite courting
t the cemeteru.
• When Schoolcraft County, Mich.
dogcatcher Ed Jona1 recenUy saw
Sheriff Lloyd Gray let .his dog run
will\ np Ieasb or collar,-Jonea.gave
Gray 8 ticket. "His d'lf was run·
ning in t!le atreet, on the sidewalk,
with no leash, no collar, no tags.
As far as I'm concerned, nobody
abould ~ve special lreab!\<"f
under the iaw, •• Jone& said< But,
according to Joae1, Gw-iri1 bo"'
-refused to authorize the citation
this morning by ~government def-•· . The government of Premier Lon Nol
11 1llilc lbt lloqieu Tnlqll!g · Cenler
In Ill ·attempt lo mold .. effective
ll'll1Y fJom raHai volunteers· lll1d dr.o-. 'n!e.ll'IJlY II lft OD bolb.arma
andamrnuollloa., , . · ·OlflciWa <OllUlllll1lque llsued In.Saigon
&Iii !'boom Peoh Jiited Ill Viet C o n g
~ Ncl'lll v1otnam ... slA"1 fl!.~ paat
lhnl . cla1I of. fl&btlni, 107 pl u..n
ln three batUOI Monday with South Vie~
nameae forcea near lhe border with
Vietnam.
Clmbodlan -· lri tbe flgtiling ,..,. put at one d!ld and I.I wounded, wllh
Salgon r<porlfng three of Ila soldiers
aialn lllCI 40 wounded In 1he bonlel'area -· 'Ibe South Vietnameae aid 1t was
the heaviest combat they have en-
coont<red lince enlerln1 C.mbodia In
late April and early May. In addition
Israel Claims Air .Raids
Keep Mideast Status Quo
' ... By IJNl'l1!D PRDS llft'ERNA'nON4L 'l1ie laraeU llOllalop air attacu began
An EopllOa mllilary lljiokeoman hid May :1Z ail« a one<lay lull bniught
ff Iaraell planes stzuck a!oni jl)<'Suez by a deserj land aionn and tiave con·
. canai today In the alst ~U•• day 'Unijed .. •~.. '!be aenlor la r a e I i
of IUCh a~u and that Egypt'• air ""'"""""'" Aid 1he allacila h a d
dot-drove them back. An Israeli prevented Egypt from atr<nitbenfng ils
..,.._,, .. said Elgypt had replaoad Ila ml!slle·det ..... but'had not prevented
mfallle alfa knocted I>"! previoualy. Em>t lroln hplacing U-lost.
On the pollilcai leVel, Ille semiofficial The Egyptian announcoment ol today's
AJ.Alnm newopape In Cairo said Egypt air 1Uack Aid tbe pi..., attacked on
will llff the United States aa anawer the J)011hem and aouthern Jeet.on tor
cia Its Mlddle Eu! proposata wllhln the two houn lllCI that "our air def..,.
nl>lt few days after 'c:oneullallonl with iyolana eopged the attacking aircraft
Ila · Anb afllM. llrael has wllhheid Ill and prevented them from r<adling their
, ---~Arabreactlcio. · •objectlte."
'
and added it was 1'cblntzy11 Afor
Gray to ticket him. Jooes quiL • · •. • • Coy and Worlla Fountain of Foun-
tain, .N.C, ·will b8f.Vellt their C0\'11 ;
cropio' a few days, but they'll-ave·.
to Jl'4 up on the roof of their atore
to. dd It. The Fountain bmtber1
have been growing their cropa on
the 191' of their store in this small
community about 25 miles north
of Wllmington since llleO. They alao
hava IO watennilons and a 4().foot
row of potatoes growing on the
roo(. ,Motorists do a fast double..
take 'hen they see the crop, "ln
recent yea.rs ," &aid Coy, ''we have
used fertilizer and JPrink:led water
on ,the crops. The com, potatoes
and watermelons taste just like
thoU that come out of the field.'' • Rtli4ent& llvlng ~ the P111het A~an Gothic
Parle 'Zoo In London have signed
petitions asking that the amoroos
peacocks at the zoo be moved to
a larger park. They claim they
can't get to ileep becsuse of the
birds' mating cries every nigh!.
William Andrews, 96, and his wile, Hattie, 93, mark their 75th wed-
ding anniversary Friday. The Andrews. Who have lived in a remodel·
ed log cabin in Darlington, Wis., for 68 years, have seven children
and 66 graqdchlldren. Recipe for a long marriage according to Mrs.
Andrews , 0 Just hang on, trust the Lord, and don't marry oppo&ites:"
Showers Soak East Coast
Po11Uile Hurricane Headed Toward Central Gulf Coast
"'-rt MMt!IM" ....,. UIM -. .......
wlMI Jll9hf .,.. !Mn'lfM '*"' ~
-~·--""''' ...... "' anwllllftl tldtr _, WednllcNI~. Hll!I
-~. c.atf•I IMl-•9-tMN 1-64 " 14. lllllM .......... 1111'" ,_ fr• a M 15, Wfltf' --•IW. "4. ,,._ ~ fl'Mllld9r•ltrm ,...., tllrv
.......... !ft ~ti Altl:lfmt.
i.tt MMdet ~ '"'""' trt fl. ., ~ wrootr111 .... ,.., ,,_ tlMf -•!Ml .., "11ll00f' lnf'lll t((ttft,
' t
----··-~
•tdl'f WU ttrUttM IUll _, :IOI
mlln MUlll of Pl'l!hcolt, fl1., ,...,
0.'fbrteit. PMk wlndl Wtr1 t lll!Niltd
t i .U "'"• 1n fltur. COOi µ _....
Olllt tl'lt Etltl!'n Mtbofid •nc1 t~
Gulf 1111u trlttitrM oc:ca11or1111r he....., lflundtr.tonN. ·
Mor-. •htn t IMMt tf t1l11 dl'WICMll LOl\t¥1t'W, Tu. ....,,., tt'lllt mueP1
llOllf9d Olltt Alltfllowft. ~ 1Mf1. • clt'f. llffllltrl\' llMV'f · hit
Mtllollt OI IMtVlt...,_ Loub!111e, Ml•
.ab1l•l I JICI !tit Ctrellf'llt,,
Kt tfthirltt Wlfll J"#tf11d, T-..r ..
lu,.. lltltflf'td lfllo lfll 1)1 '"" Oc:· CllloMI Alli O'ltl'll'-111 In • ltr.. "" or tllt mldcont~t frwn tllt Gr11t
ft11ln1 te lfll 0 .... 1 I.I~•.
toolw .,..111fr 11M c.-..rt 1tr•1 t11t
l"tefflc NOrltl,...1, whtrt -lnllnd ., ... lwtlllfff In ftlth6 111 lllt UPHr '°' 111111 Mondtr.
I
AllMlll' .Albuclut,..,.
A.tl1nl1
•llllNrdl ""M """ 8urt110
Chlrlollt
ChlCllO
ClnCIM&ll
Cltvt11nd
Otftvtr
0.1 Molnss
Ot!roll
Ft lr!Mnlct
Fort Woflh Htllne.
lncll•n.•11.•-
Jtcksonvlllt
JunHu
K1n111 CllY
Loi Al!lllU
-Lou!1~Hlt
Mtmllillll
Mlfiml MllwM.i~ Mll'lfttt ·, .. st. ~I
N-Or!MM ~-=-C>Mtl'll itlln..1..tllt -. '""'*"""'' . l"erllal'ICI, Mt. PC!fll1M, Ort. ""'kl ell\' ll:ldlmonf
II, LOUii
Ill! I.Ml City
lilt P•
Stn ,.rtncltet .....
T-N W11hl~IOll Wln111 .. , . ..
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they found the bOclles of 20 guerrillaa
1laln in. air strikes. ·
Military spokesmen ln Phnom Penh
said Combodlan · ~ had recaptured
an 'olltpoft at Stang, 30 muea 10Uthwe1t
of lhe · copltal, and had cleared tbe
mountain resort at lGrirom, S6 miles
l!IOUth-southWest ()( the city, in fighting
Monday •.
Communist fqrceo caplul'ed the 'outpost
at Srang on SUnday wheft1 molt of ill
defenders were out on patrol. The
covenuneat said the camp was b a c k
In Caml>odia bandl Monday af-
arter air 1trlkes killed 21 of the guer-
rillas.
cambodian troope were reported
launcb.l.ng. f. aweep around Xlrirom, the
resort . .town held by the Communl.stl
for six days unlil last Thursday, following
a guerrilla attack from Olltelu d'Etat.
th.e former retreat of ousted Prince
Norodom· Sihanouk.
Spok .... n liltod otber cWbet near
Kompong Thom aouthweit of P.hnom
Penh, near Svay JUeng east of the
capital, and on the banks o( Tonle S•p,
Ille lake northwen of tbe cliy.
'll>e South Vlelnamese fought the big· itst battle near 'the Cambodian town
of Tuk Meaa about 140 mllea west-
soothw"t of Saigon, killing 51 Raj troops
and capturing ts we-pons, spol(.esmen
said. The South V(eln....., said they
lost three dead and 11 wooncled.
Manslaughter
Charge Facing
Bus Crash Driver
Economy :Ills Healing
Say Cabinet Officials
. .
ALLENTOWN, Pa. (UPI) -Lehigh
Cbunty district attorney ~rge Joseph
said · he would file Jnvoluittary
muslaughter charges today against the
driver of a chartered bus which crashed
near here last week, killing seven Long
Island children and injia:ing 52 other
persons.
Joseph sald aa investigation showed
"probable cause" to fik-one charge
for each death againlt Hubert Daye,
45, of Montclair, N.J. Daye wa!I listed
in fair condition at Alleatown hospital.
The district attorney ·said . charges
mlg;ht be filed later agaWt the bus
company which. leased the bus to a
charter service because Of faulty
mechanical parta on t.hetbus.
Joseph said the bus' tachometer, a
speed J'tC(lrding device, apparently was
not working during the trip. He said
ft contalaed no recorded Information as
W the speed of the vehicle.
·The bus was carrying S9 perso.is frorri
the Hillel Day School in Lawrence, N.Y.
when It akl~ded on ralnslick route 22
near here and went over a 50-foot em-
bankment. The children and several adult
counselors were on a tour of the
Pennsylvaala Dutch co'unt.ry.
Daye, .who suffered head · ud chest
Injuries tn the accident, and a possible
heart attack later, was in the hospital's
Intensive care unit.
\V,ASHINGTON (UPI) -Treuury
Secrelary David M. Kennedy gave
Congrea a glowing report oa the naUon's
ecooomy .today, contending that In·
flaUonlry pressUres were reoedi8a: and
predtct!ng furtber progreu this yoar
toward a bealU!Jer economy.
"Our patience ii belna rewarded,"
Kennedy tealified ¥ore the u .....
Senate E:conomic Commlttoe. "Tbe
orthodox policies of thla adminlltraUon
are workin&.''
Kennedy 1aid the economy ls making
a transitian from aevere Inflation at
the same time It II adJUBl!n& from
"a war-Ume.to a peace-Urne eco'norey ,"
Another witness, L a b or Secretary
James D. Hodgson, predicted that any
further significan~ i n c !" e a s e a in
unemployment could be avoided as the
administration pursued Its anti.inflation
program Vo'.hi!e switching to a peace-time
economy. -
The cabinet members' optimistic
statements followed President Nixon's
own prognosis of Monday in which he
saw an improvement in t.he economy
the remainder of the year.
Kennedy said the transition "to a more
civilian.(lriented economy" haa caused
some temporary hardships -such as
unemployment -and "complicates the
taska of economic policy." However, he
added: "The remarkable thing, to my
General-Jet $
· 4-PLY
NYLON CORO
•Tough Duragen®
rubber tread
• Famous dual
tread deaign
6.S0-13 •.•..••. s1,,es•
8.25·1• & 15 •••• $11.95•
8.55-14 •• , ••••• S21.46"'
mind, ls the relative amoothneu with
which the economie' adjultmtnt hu pro-
ceeded, given au the difficulties in·
volved."
The nation's most pressing econOmlc
need, Kennedy said, Is more productivity
growth and better price perfonnance.
"Thole thould be forthcoming over the
remainder of this y.ear and into 1971,
providing moderate--and -s-e n s 1 bl•
economic policies are maintained," he
said.
'Tiger Cages'
To Be Destroyed
SAIGON (AP) -Tile South Viel·
name!e g<ivemment said today It will
demolish the so-ealled "tiger cages" at
the Con Son Island prison and replace
them with new disciplinary cells.
The cells, center of international con-
troversy slllCe two U.S. congressmen
revealed their e:a:istence two weeks •i<>•
will be dismantled immediately, a
spokesman aaid.
He added that a survey of South Viet·
nam'1 correctional in1titutiona will be
made with a view to such Improvement.a
as the government can afford.
7.71-14
7.71-15 • Tub1ln1
wl'litew1tl
Ptk.U plu1
$1,78 to S2.5l
ftd. E•. Till
J><tf llrt
dependlnJ
on 1i1q plus
1xel'l1n11 ~inf.
PREMIU.M TI RE SA• F
Prtmium II Gtne11l'1 des!&n1tioll. Thtrt is no industry standfrd for pr1111h111 Um
FIBERBLISS·BELTED GTW ...
The more youbuy·&AVE ... the more you
Discounts oft' our regular sellfng prices
Have You Checked Your Boat
And Camper Trailer Tires LatQly? 3.ifau GOLFER'S VALUE
If SM #I,,,_,,,.,,_
wit•
G£H£AAL
JET-RIB
WHITIWALLI
AND BUCICWALLI
FOR BOAT
AN' CAMPER ·TRAILERS ·
• "IP llolttion
• Frt t rolli~I ltr llitll
\!llld Optftlioft
• Joup ftl'!Orl co..~ ,iltt
JATO IUPlllt 100
BOLF
BILLI
GTW SALE END S JULY :.>r> ONE WE EI< O NLY!
IENEIAL
TlllE
·ha lws•: • COAD
GENERAL
TIRE
SH W. lttll., C11to M-
140.5710 64 .. IOJJ .
AVIRY
GINIRAL TIRI
SIRYICI
1 H41 ,_., """-4. Hntl""°" '-h
~7-5150
' • \
'
• • , •
•
----------GINIAAL TIMI••• WOfllTH DM¥-. ACIOlt TOWN TO GIT ---------,.;i
• \
I
T-, J,ly 21, 1970 -u DAILY !ILOT I
CHECKING
,Manson
Subpoenas
Reporter
Boy Killed in Race Violence
•UP•
Miiiiskirts Don't
Reveal True Leg
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
CUit leader Ow'les ?.1anson
took a verWI slap al tbe
establishment ,.fmday In the
Tat&-LaBlmca murder trla.l u
the prosecutlon e 1 e r c l s e d
peremptory challenges delay-ina final jury ll<lecUon.
Mamon, 35, accused master. any alternate could be db·
LAWRENCE, Ku. (UPI) -
Awhltete< ..... ->l the Uolvenlty al KalllM waa
"1ot and killed Monday night
and a Negro gradu1te student
WOWlded durtnc v1o1a>ce non1t
of the uni~ campus IA
tblt raclalty teoo< city.
H..,, Nick Ilic<, II, died
lnstanUy from a neck wound.
Rice, of Leawood, Kan •• was
about to enter bis aecmd year
at the univenity. •·we have plenty of wit.
-·--!aRwl>lle fleeUlc oMotrsi'' M&btant
Cowlty Attomey Miiie Elwtll
aid today. "But no one heard
any shot,, or aaw where Ulty
came from."
Menoa Olds, U, of Toptb,
Kan., was shot and wounded
In the calf. Olds lo I fl'l<luale
Jtudent at tbe Unlven:tty.
"I just ll>med '""'811 wh•n
I bMtd ocrnMhlng lhat llOlllld-
ed JIU flrecrac:uri and r.11
a sUnclnc teMalioa," Okk
By L. M. BOYD worked the Okt West trail mlnd ot the seven slaylngs, missed without caux. ~. f T as to Dodge 1t was e--ted that nMNO.t• A 4 5. YE AR .OLD DI· \ll •• es rom ex apparently became angered -!"'" ..-~-
VORCEE and a 3().ye&Hld City, how many per drive?" when he discoveftd a reporter would require several more bout s days wilh the trial'.s opening single girl have exactly the A. A 1 • for an underground weekly prosecution atatemt!nt pro.
same mathematir;al expecta. TWO 1111N~ A B 0 IJ T · was sitting in im, back row baWy coming next Monday.
lions of BetUng married. clams. Never cook one that of the rourtroom while other
Exactly, exactly .• IF YOU Is open and never eat one newsmen were closer to the In other developments, the
DON'T believe we only recall that doesn't open when you bench. defense subpoenaed a
Chet Huntley Denies
Two Quotes on Nixo11
h II Sh .rt h nd newspaper reporter in an ef-BOZEMAN, Mont. (AP) -~· at we want to reca , try cook u, okay'! ... JUST ABOUT " ave yOllr mou ae e a fort to unearth the source of sketching Crom memory the ANY experienced baker will get a haircut -then you Chet Huntley of U'le Huntley. I · I wi•• ••· t f th " one of her stories which plao-nstrument pane on your car. tell wv.1 it's illegal &o bake can sit \,II u..: res o em, Brinkley news telecast says N · 10 •· ' -II •• ..1 ed the slayings at a much
I ot one man 1n can uo a eake in the shape of the MaMOO ho1_ e.~ 1 11 1 . later hour than the pro-Lile mq:aiine made a
l. White HOUie, but why ls a Earlier, uawyet::Mor a our secutioo contends they took rni3take when it quoted him
LEG AND THIGH Wh mystery. defendants - a n s o n , 15 •• ,,.1 11 ""'•btens me" -en Patricia Krenwinkel, Susan place. <W.JU• ....
you say sbe has pretty legs, RAPID REPLY -No, alr, Atkins and Lesllie Van Houten, The subpoena was servtd that Richard M. Nixon Is
Huntley, tra. retlm from the
telecut after the Friday nlgl>t
show and will devote full tinl"
to developing a lo1onta·
recreatk>nal complex.
The newscaster •1so dlso"
ed another quote in the Li
lnten1ew: "111e shallowne.
ol the man -President Nixo1
said. ''Then. 1 ta e w What
hai>J>'lted.•' •.
Douclu County Attorney·
Dan Young confinned one
nrebombini and sakt at least
one car wu overturned ln
!he sired by block youths
qered at the kllllna of a
young Negro by a pollctman
11$. week. Police u.sed tear
aas to disperse a gf(lUp of
youlh> who •arlitr pelted
them with .-., bottla and
other objeeta. No one waa ar~
rested.
Pa!rolmon R<>n DaiquHt
IU!f•red a deep cut over lib
rigt\t eye. He ~ved MVeral
stitches it Lawrence
Memorial il<lopital and relllm-
ed to cMy.
"Everything is quiet l"W
and we hope things will stay
that way," Elwell s a Id.
"However, we are as confused
11 anyone about what really
happened."
Ooutlw ·County Sheriff 11«
Johnson, Highway Pa.tr o I
Superlotendent Bill Albott,
Pollet Chief Stanwi:r, YOWll
and Elwell met In tmerpncy
session early \Qday to map
strategy in event "the worst"
happens and "to flgur'e out
(Xac'1y what triggered the
outburst>."
A witness to the "1laotlng
said RJce was rumtng from
offtce<s when a~ ~aa lired.
-Wim.s. aald b.e tllougbt !he same bWld' m!1ht
have rlcocbeted off Rica and
61luck Olds In. the leg.
Lawrence olliciab. requested assia.tanee from H l g b w a y
Patrol troops in n e a r b '/
Topeka .00 Kansas City.
Ten troopers wen sent to tbe
area.
·····················~ For the first time since completion
th•re 11 one offke suit. •v•llable lb •
young fellow, bear in .mind it's not true that your hair stood in court and announced M P.1 a r y Neiswtnred, a president.
lhe science boys insist only grows slower if you get it they could accept the ti pro-reporter for the LOllg Beach ln a letter to the Bouman
that portion between the knee cut during the dark of the spectlve juror! seated in the Tndependent Press-Telegram. Chronicle, Huntley declared
-overwhelm! me." 1 The Mercury Savings Bldg.
7112 Ed1"9er (•I BHch Blvd.)
• • • • • and . the ankle can accurately moon, certainly not. What's jury box. ~frs. Neiswender interviewed Monday he actually said he T k G
be described as leg. What true is this notion i ! A panel ot 12 regular jurors a nelghbor 'of actreM Sharon "worried about all presidents 0 yo roup • A ~••11tifl.il, 4tli fMot 111/t•, p•rtiti ot1"1 •ltd fi1i1li..I. •
mlniskirts reveal that most spreadin£. Rapidly, too. You was aoproved a week ago and ·rate last August and quoted or the United .states _ Asks CS Ban • •PP•••· too USEAILf: ~--··• f••t, .M ,., ... 1c11 •N •
Huntlntton Beech
I
I
1kirts don't is thigh , not leg, wouldn't believe how many the sl:r jurors in question him as saying he was awaken-whether they will stay healthy, 11+iliti•1 -$500 P•• ll'lo11th •• ~11•lifi•d t.11•11• •it •
they state. Our Language man people now claim it's absolute would be alternates t.o take ed about 1 a.m. on Aug. t whether they can stand the TOKYO CAP) -Because • r,.,,·v••• '~'''· •
finds this noteworthy, but oor fact. the regulars' places should by shots and sen.ams.· The strain, their power, the or the nolse, the Aklshlma • Co ll Mr. P•rliit 140.4050
!Ave and War man thinks any ot the 12 become ill or state is expected to contend decisions they make, and our city a 1 se: m b 1 Y voted ~• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I it's irrelevant. Your queations a.nd com· f0teed to absent thtmSelves the killings. at the Tate tendency to make monarchs unanimously today to Uk that
EAST CHICAGO isn't In ments ore welcomed and from tht trial. mansion toot place about out ol' tbem.'1 the U.S. Alr Forte's &lint
Illinois, West Mempbjs Isn't will be u.ttd in Checking However, Deputv Dislrict 11 :30 p.m. on Aug. I. In New York a Lt f e new C5 Galaxy, transport be
in Tennessee, East St. Louis Up toMrtver poarible. Ad-Attorneys Aaron Stovtb: and Mrs. Neiswender said the spokesman said n e 1 the r banned from nearby Yokota
isn't in Missouri and West dres1 lettna to L. M. Boyd, Vlncent Bugllosi went ahead neighbor asked that his name Huntley nor his employer, alr but. 1be f\rst of the
New York isn't in New York. Bo: 1815, Newport Beach. wilh use of their allotment not be used· and she declined NBC, had complained. to the big planes arrived from the
What other slK!h towns can,,_C.:.•.:.b.:J,.:.9.:.2.:.660:.:..:.. _______ o1_._u_ch_o1_1..,.;;_es_und_er_w11_1c_h __ 1o_mU. __ e_hi_.,_ide_nU_:ty_known __ ._m_'l-"--ulne-· _______ u_nlted __ s_1a1_ .. _•_ar_ly_M_..my __ .1 you recall that are s o
separated from the mother
municlpalties?,,.
REMARKABLE HOW many
dtizens devoutly believe they
function better ii they sleep
with their tieads toward the
North Pole! Ropeated publish-
ed reports clabn the clown
Jerry Lewis to be one such,
but I can't vouch for that.
PUBlJCITY -"For many
yean," 'it's writ, "the great
Marlene Dietrich pakl a public
relations fellow named Russell
Birdwell about $25,000 a year
to keep her name out of the
papers." Do you believe that?
I do not. But in those earlief'
days when that thing called
public relations wu stiH in
iLs adolescen<e, Mr, Birdwell
-.i bis cunning proadl
lo publicity on Ilia '?nalylil
of the nature of newsmen.
TEU. THEM not lo pdnt It,
saki he, and they'll print it,
repeatedly. So k>, M is s
Dietrich's name cropped out
in the pulpy pages. Like
finger,>rints on wet paint.
CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q.
"Can a certified check be
stopped?" A. That tt can •••
Q, "How many diamonds of
100 carats or more are there
in all .tl'le world'!11 A. Maybe
20. , .Q. "Those cowboys who
Tokyo Exhibits
TOKYO (AP) -The 12,611-
ton ship Sakura Maru will
call at 12 Southeast Asian and
Pacific ports with industrial
exhibit& between Oct. I and
Jan. 23, the Japan Induetrial
Floating Fair Association an-
nounced.
_,,_
M-t 611•.-
D•ll .. ry
Mtin• I p.m.
673-3510
·iii
' ···:Y••r :)lupi"~ !'"'°""' '1• a..< U1t;....ic 6'.I! -·-COASf SUPl'R MM!(£\
Sl4T l.~h..,•°""'"'IH..
_1
i
ii ' '\~ I
ust56~
aweel{more ·uts ou
1in;touchWith t efu • re.
For an average
of only 56¢ a week
more in utility bills, you
can have the comfort of an an.
electric Medallion Home. Con-
venient living at your fingertips.
Just as it will be in the future.
·\The cost of electricity for the
average all-electric Medallion Home
isonly56¢aweekmorethanthecost
of both gas and electricity for the
, typical home using gas. This was
·established in a survey of more than
8,000home$. Bills were typical of a
family of four livingina3-bedroom
home. Half the homes surveyed
were all-electric Medallion Homes,
whereeverythingwasrunbyelectric-
ity-no gas. Electric cooking. Elec-
tric heating. Electric water heaters.
•
•
• The other half of the homes surveyed
used gas. Here are the findings:
., l\LLEL!Cn!C OAS
AverageWeeklyCostof HOMES l!OMES
Electricity $5.44 $2.61
Average Weekly Cost
of Gas
Total Weelcly Cost-Gas
and Electricity
Extra Weekly Cost of All·
Electric Homes
,,(). -227
$5.ff $4.88
.56'
Wouldn't you prefer a clean,"
cool, flameless electric kitchen?
A quiet, clean, space-saving electric
water heater? Flameless electric heat-
ing with room-by-room temperature
controls? An all-electric Medallion
Home has them-plus built-in
provisions for the all-electric future.
For the good clean life-live
electrically. It's more than
worth the 56¢ a week. 4 ' t=
Southern California Ediaon
At your
• service-
another new
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Hu~ntington .
Beach
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HOUSIHO
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South c .. 11 Pl•••, , .... ,..97Cll
NEWPORT llACH -2017 San Joaquin Hiit Rd.
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SANTA ANA -204 W. Fourth St ........ 547..s.491
• BAD,y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Drug Battle . Goe~ On
Wl.s.preod drug abuse, a national problem and
ICllDdal undrea111ed of only a few Y,ears ago, continues
deoi>ltA! Increasing efforts on many fronts to bring ti
lliic!er control.
More errors thafi answers have so far Tesulted {tom
the trial-and-error appl'Oach ~ o!herwlse drug uaage
would not conUnue at a biiJ1 1.•vel. But tbere are alsp
lips of succe11 ai more ra_t onal 8pproaches replace
counter-procluctlve alarmism.
In law enforcement, ior example, emphasis has
been •hilting from clobbering drug users to going after
professional drug peddlers. Tbe effort is International.
'the federal government Is working to cut off imports
from .sucb countries as Meldco and Turkey.
Laws imposing UJU'el\lliltic pe9allies on drug use are
being revised. One eaatern governor has even gone so
far as to recommend tbat the courts be allowed to elim-
inate criminal proceedlngs on minor marijuana c.ases.
California Isn't going that far-yet. The Assembly
recentiy pa1Sed a bill which would reclassify marijuana
from tU present status as a narcotic to that of a restrict·
ed d1111gerous drug, but without changing the penalties
!or violation.
11Je Asaemhly bas also passed a measure to provide
Ugbt controls over the manufacture, sale and di stribu·
tion of dangero us drugs. The action was based in part
on an estimate that last year more than 16 billion am-
phetari1.ines and barbiturates Were produced legally in
the Unlte4 States. That's nearly 100 pills !or every man,
woman an4 child. ·
Alsembly Speaker Robert Monagan reports the
main tbl'Ult or the bill is to asaure that legally-produced
drugs are not diverted into the illicit marketplace. He
said It has been reported that almost hail o! the legally-
produced drugs In the U. S. are distributed Illegally.
This resu1tl from theft, "dummy" companies buying
through the mails, pilferqe from hospitals, doctors ..
Why Are
Great Chefs
All Men?
Speaking ol the dlllerences between the
sexei:, as I was last Friday, reminded
me of a Une in Ned Rotem'a amusing
Paris Diary: '1Halrdreuen, harplsta,
coo0 -.,.. are .....,.., but the beat are men."
And a famous expert bridge player
ha! likewise remark-
ed publicly : "Women
are better bridge
players Lhan men,
except Lhat men are
best." What he
meant was . that
among the general·
ity of players, wom·
en are more profici·
ent, but the top doz-
en or IO are all men.
It ii relatively easy to see why a
man would be superior to a woman
at brtdge, because at the highest level
the llJlle call• for trait.a tl'lat seem
more masculine thin fernlnlne-boldnell,
coolnea in a crisis, and an intense
desire to win compeUttvely.
BVT rr ;IS HARDER to under&land
why the leading chefs, !or instance,
should all be men, when oaoking It sup-
pclled to be a woman's province. Or
why the most popular (and presumably
most lklllful) hairdressers should be rnea
-and by no means all oC them hornosex-
ualt. nm leads lo the general queslion
of ''creativity," which has Iona perplexed
psychalolllll and ooclologtata -w h y
has there never bee" • rem a I e
Shakespeare, a femal e Mozart, a fem ale
Rembrandt? Is creaUve genius limited
to the male of the species, like plumage!
ONE LONG-Bl'ANGING theol'.Y Is that
woman'• particular "creativity'' bas been
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Did you know that almost hall o!
U.S. women 21 or older (nearly 2S
million) color or tiJlt their hair -
a $!50 mil!Jon industry? We should
be In tbe catering.to-vanity buai· ness.
-T. M. C.
Tllll ,,....... "'"9c't9 '""'"' ,,,..., ....
..utWtfr .......... ----· leM ,_ Nt ...... II Oilllnr OW. Dl+lf ,_
subsumed to her role as a mother -
that what she creates are babies, and
all ~ .. ~nero. intuitio1t and ambition
are focuse d on thi s project of
perpetuating the race, 50 that llltle or
the "libido'' is left over for artislic
or intellectual productions.
Another view is more e11vironmental,
and leas biological: it holds that women
have tradiUOnally been kept away from
artistic pursuits, except as a hobby or
a social grace; that male chauvlni.sm
has . beld women 1111 the thrall or
domesticit)' and Instilled in them a kind
of "slave mtnt&11ty", so that their self.
esteem is maintained at a low level
and they don't aspire to the heights
of artistic creation .
BUT ntJS, EVEN IF TRUE, wouldn·t
explain why women aren't the best cooks.
or hairdressers, or even couturiers. If
we don't subscribe to the doctrine that
there is some inherent "inferiority" in
womeft (and I don't for a moment),
then this male pre-eminence must signify
that women, as a class, are less in·
terested in "things'' !haft they are In
''people," and are simply not motivated
as forcefully as ·men are to manipulate
and conquer external object•.
It is in relating to other humans 1.hal
women have an evident edge over men,
which is why I would prefer to St"e
more of them i111 the parliaments of
the world, and more politicians .In the
beauty saloftS.
Notable Summer Books
Ju\Y Is nol«lously the dog days In
book publishing. But you leave the field
f« a few weeU and look what happens.
John UpdJ:te, Amerk:a'a most prominent
Calvinist writ.er, coma up with y,·hat
mty ho his bell book, "Qecb, A Boot,•
really a collection of short stories about
t Jewish novelist in his mld·flftles (1s
though the Jewllh writers hadn't done
th1t to death). Thia ls from a new
and successful polnt of view, funny,
and compared with ''Couplta'' clean as
Huckleberry Hound (Knopf).
WHAT DOES GORE VIDAL do for
11n encore all.tr "M1J'a Brttklnrldge"!
•'Tw• Si1kr1: A Mr:m• .. tbe Forni.
of a Novel," a fine, dirty virtuoso
performance by the fumlest writer ol
his day. Vidal'• speclltty ts clobberinc
lhe cultural abounllty •IOUlld. us, ot
lhe dirty culUatt llOllnd .... "' Is
literal•. -. hflbbroW eally. "Two
Stst.en° LI a IOl't-clf novel wtth t
dulradtr named Gore Vidal who hit
a lave lffalr with a Ht of twlna, 1latu
and brothet.
'lllel-e Is sequence In mJlholoiy here
in Wblcb lbe ,,_ of a hlPfr nprded y-tmpet\lr l'llrrlOI lbe rich<sl
merchant Jn tht known world -a not·
too-lubtle co1n11flttt on Vklal't NmJ..
Altdve JIOQlllllno Kenn<dy Onullls
(thq .sbared ID ~lldijnclO>I llcp!Athft'),
Wilh Vid.aJ, the gossip quoUenl In 1tl1
work 11 Important (Lltlle, Brown).
"ZELDA," NANCY Ml LY 0 RD ' I
. .,
....... ()(I e •t • ~--~ -·....,-,°?'~
• 'The Bookman
I -_ ___,
n.c;tatement ol the F. Scott Fitzgerald
saga from the fonner Zelda Sayre'a
point of view, has generated some ex·
traordlnary reviews. Elizabeth Janeway,
in Saturday Review , got so critically
tarried away that she nominated lt for
both the National Book Award and the
Pulitzer Prize. The Jo~llzgerald opera Ja
our own dTrls tan and Isolde," as I
noted in a review here last month,
11ncl when you look at the competition
tn the rirat half of this year, MJss
Janeway may have a C3.$e.
A LITERARY Investigator named Jay
'Martin 1tves a cradl&to-greve aet0unt
of that wonclerrully distinctive novelist
ln "N1 tUa:ael Weil: The Art of Illa
IJfe" (P'arrar, Sltau1). West died, at
11. In 11 Car t:r.uh the day after Scott
Fitzgerald dkd, a terrible week in
American letter&. "Miu Lonelyhtartl,"
"A Cool MWlon ." "The Day ol tho
l«Ult," a decade of work th1t 11etttd
Wat les.s than S2000 and forced hlm
to write tttrible movtes for a llvlne. West wu • pOtcntlal rathtr than
greet "11ter, but "The Day of the
Locult" atone made htrn aomethlng very
clo<e to the Dootoevsky or the Hollywood
nwfl, This la a sumnier event we hopa to d1scuu at greater length.
William Hoau
offices and pharmacies, and diversion of ablpmenta
aiated for other countries.
In the area of treatment, Increasing use of m•tl\8-
done as a means of taking addtcts oil tbo d1D1ero\ll
heroine Is expected to result from new regulation& pro-
j>osed at tbe federal level. Some metropolitan areas ere
experimenting with various programs to meet the needs
of addicts. And there · are even drives by those most
susceptible to drug abuse-blacks, students and radi-
cals-to warn their fellows away from the practice.
,Jo education, factual presentations are replacing
the scare tecbnique based on distorted or untrue in-
formation. But there is doubt these will succeed as long
as the problems of poverty, social frustration, racism
and war lead 1to chemical escapism.
As long as basic .causes remain, treatment of symp-
toms is not likely to provide any enduring solution to
tbe drug abu•~ problem.
T1·ave~g by Unicycle
Never Underestimate the power of a woman, es·
pecially one-with about 40 dozen freckles and a unicycle.
Durtn.g a week in which war, economic crisis, Satan
worship arfd cannibalistic murder made headlines,
Jacq~e, Douglas made them too, In relreshing style.
The channing Coat a Mesa miss. packed the neces-
sa ry essentJaJs-including her orange bikini-and rode
oU on one wheel for San Francisco, reaching Ventu1t
by Saturday.
Why would a 21-year-<>ld woman tum her back on
home in such unorthodox fashion ?
"Because it's never been done before," explains
Miss Douglas , who also wants to lose a fl:W pounds and
gain a few dollars ·from a magazine article. about her six-week odyssey.
Can you im~gine an editor turning tbat story down?
Dissatisfied, Bored, Vn111otiv ated Students
'Right' to Go to College Questioned
WASJflNGTON -After wa d inc
through two solid pages of_ contuaed
and confusing mid·summer muslnga by
college presidents in the New York
Times, two Points become evident;
I. Colle1es and unJvenltlea are In
a severe ftnaDCial bind.
2. Too many atudenl! are tttendlng
them who do not have much idea why
they are there, or are there at the
wrong limt, « too fool, Ind don't lfl<e
Jtmud>,-.
o,K. miPe Si>tm A,inew ts IWrih
flltritng to. lie has
denounced as "su.
percilious sophisti-
cates" those adv~
eating 1'open admis-
sions" to the uni-
versities. He has al-
so criticized the
"strange madness"
or colleges and
universities admit.
Ung studenta: on the
basis of racial, socio-eco11omlc or ethnic quotas.
WHETHER FROM Agnew or the col·
lege president•, what is actually comine
Into queatlon ..., ts tho 1ooc1 old
familiar to all of us. HlJh coats, recession,
declining Inv""'tment Income, Inflation
.. ~ are the main causes of college deficits
~ and threatened deficits, just u they .,....,.._._.._•..:c:...:::;..cau111o1 are responsible for the present stringency
in IO many penoaal budgets, There
is an added factor at the universities.
Alumni and corporate donations are
declining for the perfectly obvioua reason
that disorder and dllcontent on tf1t cam-
puses, and, Jt ca.n be 1 d de d •
dialll&Jsiaament with the ptNent aenera·
Uon , ,o! oolea:e admintnraton, causes
dOnon fo -r ti their cmtrfbotlona are going to a Uleful purpose.
Amerlcu concept th•t 1ny boy or lfrl
who dulre1 a cone1e education Ja en-
UUed by rllfit to have it, wl'lethtt he
can amt>rb tt or not.
Soma colle1e ~eats woold d<ey
this when It ts ttatad t!iat w1y, althoulh
Vice Pi'llldint ~ mlPI no~ Blit
It comes thtougtt In wl!at !lie eollege
presidents have to say that they
reeognlr.e that it la costing more money
than U\f:y've got to carry on educationaJ
programs for dlssatlBfied, bored and un-
motivated students. •
The conece presidents reflect also their
concern with the public ruction against
colleges as a nursery bed. for the flower.
1ng of revolution. They are concerned,
too, by the reiUltant threat.a to academk:
freedom, althouah It wo111d seem that
the greater threat to auch fr«d<m artae1 ·
on the campus itaelf, and from the
students themeelvea, than from the ex-
ternal commu.nJty at lar1e.
THE MONEY QUEll'l'lON Is not un-
The college president today g e t s a
lot or sympathy but little confidence,
either from the student body or those
who watch the presidents Jet the student
bodies get out of hand. The symposium
of college president!: ( 1 l of them from
eastern colleges) illuminates triis,.point.
Irresolution in y,•hat they have to say
is quite characteristic, and It is eviden t
that they are shaken and confused by
the challenaea which have arisen on
their campmes from the bored, un-
mot.iva\td and revolutionary.
THE FORMER NUN, Mrs. Ja<:quelline
G. Wexler Wbo ii now president of
Hunter College, Is an ardeflt advocate
or making it possible for greater and
greater percentages of the populat1011
to go to any school. But, equivocally,
Mrs. Wexler also wishes to make it
p~ssible to go somewhere else than school
-just where, she did not say, but
presumably Into some kind of an oc-
cupation or occupa.Uonal training, 'which
would certainly please Vice President
Agnew.
Jt is not dlfOcult to draw the cohclUlion
even from tlx:tle who 1dvocate free and
open admialon that what they are trying t.0 ivoid 11ylfig is that too many yaung
people are in college who are better
fJtted to be elsewhere. Kingman Brewster
of Yale came clO!le to it. He aald the
most highly motivated and most talented
are · now bored by 'various parts of the
educational process. And then he added.
"I think some people slay .In achool
too long; some people stay in college
too long; some people stay in graduate
school too long."
"A TIRED AND Impatient society,"
some of the president& fear, will not
be willing to pay· the price for tuming
out rebellious or bared college genera-
Uons.
Protecting Our Air, Land, Water
By ROBE RT MONAGAN
Speaker
Californla State Assembly
Legislation based on recommetK!aUons
made by lhe A11sembly Select Committee
on Environmental QuaUty cleared the
Assembly Ways and Means Committee
recently in what was probably un-
precedented action against the spoilers
of our total environment.
I doubt if there has been a comparable
week in Sacra1ne,.to when so much was
done to enhance and protect our air,
land and water resources.
The aelect coinmlttee, which t ap.
pointed earlier this year, was composed
of key ctimmiuee chairmel who hsve
been vitally ctincerned w 11 h en·
vironmental problems. They produced
an outstanding committee reporl, detail·
Ing 34 major recommtlldatlons on ways
and means to clean up our surroundin1s.
The report prompted Secretary George
Romney of the U.S. Department of Hous-
ing and Urban Development to comment:
"THE SCOPE AND thorouahness ol
the analy1;is of the total problem and
ol the IeaislaUve and exeC\ltive re1pon11ea
propo~ is remarkable. \Ve have not
seen any comparable atate government
report to dt1te."
The secretary's comment was juat one
lndicallow or how well the special com-
Bu Geor ge -...,.--,
Deor Georae:
Holding onions under waltr whe1
you're peelinc them wW keep you
from crying. HELPFUL
Dear llelplUI:
There! 'l'hert! See the g1'1de ol stuff I get?
Put down that onion, kid, and
get mlx.ed up In an eternal triangle!
Thal Is my advice to you. (Try
to do It beloro tho !Ith.)
(Write to Gtoree. the problem
columnlst. Plea1e specify whether
you are sendlllg problems or would
like to rtcetve some problems by
!'!turn mall .)
' I
' c 'uest Rep~t
mlllee did Us job. Another Is the
favorable action Laken by Wayt and
Means on the commlttu'a Jeglslatlon.
The measures approved and 1ent to
the full Assembly 1stabllsh broad 1tate
palicy and provide financing for &-
vlronmental protet'tlon pragrams.
Some of the measure1 approved (and
a brief aP1alysis) include :
EDvlronment•I Revtnue Act of tm
-Provides fi nancing for envJronmtntal
qualily control programs tiy cootlnulng
part of Utt excise tax on automobiles
eow being phaaed out by the federal
government.
Eavtr..mNllll Qulllly Act of 1171 -
MIJldata all 1talt and local government
apncle1 to conaldtr the impact ol their
programs on the environment prior to
action inatead of after dama.ge may
have been done. Requires reporta hlfore
state qenciea could requut other than
planning funds on any Pl'OCl'am which
may have aign)flcant environmeiltal lm-
pact. '
Gas Ttx Refwm -Constitutional
amenchnfllt auth:l'izinl Le1lslature lo
allow hl1hway user taxes to be used
for vehicJe.caused polluUon control ,
publtc transft fiaancini, aM bond issues
for any user tax. ap~ed purpose.
Class , Actwn a Delusion
Of the hundreds or conlumll' ~~
bills In the national Je1is1aUvt . hOpper,
none •rt more of a threat to the long-
term welfare of consumer• and to the
free m•rket than the tcK:llled cla,a
aoUon proposals. 1be more extreme of
theae proposals would Jeopardbt the
good name of many cl tl'ie country 's
most respected buslhtu bllt.Jtutlon1,
trelte a condition or CiliOnlC leg•llstic
warfare between consumerr, retailers
and manulacturen, at 1111•t COit to
both, and end, In ill Jlkalthood, by
destroying conlldence tp the U.S.
market.inc aystem.
IN WENCE, the clau ac;tlon Is •
form of llJ!gallon enabllnc -le with
Similar individual clalmJ to shtre lqal
coots by Jolnin( In I l'OUP ltl!luil
A single comp1n)I COll!d bo subjected
to e:l1lm,, or millions of dollars t.o say
nothing of more mllllons tn legal costs.
Many companies coukl be forced Into
bankruptcy and others would simply have
to pan the financial burden of such
a ault along to cuitomers In hight:r
prices. So fnr as prottttlng the consumer
goes, Ule clau action ldta ls a dthWon.
A consumer with a grl6vance would
hive to go throq&b 8"11)' complex teaa1
step& under a cla.sa action law to seek
redraU; and, 1n the end, the question
remain. open 11 to whether any claim
would be collected. We already have
law• •Sain.at fraud and mlareprrsen-
tatlon.
MOIT OONIUMEM can achieve
speedy redreu or 1 ar1ev1nco by going
to lhllr Joe"° merch1nl and complaining
ol the prodlld or "'"'Ice th11 displeases
than. Conaumera Jeeklng recoune undr:r
one of. the clan action proposals If tt became law would spend many ye1r1
as parUclpan11 or a l1w11.1ll. Class action
proposals, rather than hnprovlng the
regu latory mechanism , would amount to
a declaraUon or war on the free markot,
wllh consumera iervlng aa fronlllne
troops under the command o l
bureaucrata and lawyen,
lad111trt1I Niwa R.evtew
Office of Plaanlnr ud ReHarc• -
Abolishes present state ·Office of Plan-
ning and ties planning a n d lm-
plementaUon together by establishing a
unit in the Governor's office to provide
staff as.tlstance in comprehensive ell"
vlronmental plannlna, land u1e and lhe
establishment of an improved en-
vlronmeatal moni\Ori4\g syatem.
Slate Lands W I th Envtronmenlal
Vtlur:a -Requires State Lands Com-
miss ion to Identify tide, submerged and
school lands wilh unique environmental
values and recommend to lhePa:lslaturt
actions requi~ to al!urt ~rmahent
protectiOI of auch areas.
EnvlnMlmental DtmoaJtndoo Anal -
Establishes committee lo develop and
recommend envltonmen~al test programa
to develop better methods and technlqufia
for coordinaUng progr•m• affectinc the
environment. The federal government
has i~aled an interest in workln&
with Calli.nit to develop cooperatlft
demon1lnUon programs.
Final fpproval of the 1elect com-
mittee's recommendatiom: will htlp prt-
vent delJ'ldillon .and assure all elUze111
a more orderly process ln srotectlni
C811fomla's nltW'll surroundlnas.
.... 1'11111~
'l\leoday, Jul) It, ll'IO
The e(!ltortol pqe of the Dlrilv
Pilot 11111kl to Ulfonn and 1tfm-
ulatt reockn b11 pr111nting thf1
n1wqiaJ)'r11 opfnlotU a:nd com.-
men., on topk1 oJ h1&nc1t and aJbitijlqlM•, by P"OVldillg a
foi'Um for Ole "'l''Uf.1011 of our r•a4er1' ,opfnfort1, and bv
pre1ntbJ~ Ul1 dtvfrs• vi110-
pointf of f1'/0f'Trlfd ob1mier1
ond 1pol<t1m•n on loplci .of lhl
day.
' Robert N. Weed, Publi1her
E b tr Q b tr t ft 63 2 > j "'.lier. .................................... ___ ........................... .::;;;;;.;;;;.;:;....,======"'=--= ....... --........ --... ~-------~.
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Tursday, J11/y 21, l'J70 · DAIL V PILOT f
•
Diseount Prices
.EVERYDAY!
. . -
USE YOUR MA~TER CHARGE OR
BANKAMERIC:ARD TO PURCHASE FREEZ~R BEEP GUARAtHEED TENDER
AN D FULL OfcF LAVOR, CUT AND
, _ _;i:o;:__ !
+ ·-,::J
PllCIS IFFICTIVI WIDNISDAY TNIOUIN TUHDAY
JULY 22,23,24,25,26,271. 21
WRAPPED FREE • .
-~ ~ . ' m
· i"it.\o'ti cooLERvs 10
' • 39c
DEL MONTE e CHOC., VAN., BUTlERSCOTCH,
Puo·o -ING cuPss:;· • 59c
BlliC R!BBON e GOLDE N DELICIOUS .e 25-0Z.
APPLESAUCE s~~1 •. 31 c
40-0Z. e BEEFARONI, SPAGHET TI & MEAT BALL S,
BEEF RAVIOLI • SAYE Sc t1t 74c
CHEF• BOY• AR •DEE .
lillNEAPZPCLE j5UlC~ ~ 31 c
DELMONTE . 303 CAN . SA YE Sc 22c
CUT GREEN BEANS tit1 . cA'rs ui> 14-0Z • SAVI 3, ~ 20 c
"'6-0Z. CAN e GRAPE, RED, APPLE RED
HAWAIIAN PUNCH t!t1 34c
USDA Grade A e Whale Body
FRYING
CHICKENS
c
lb.
USDACHOIC,E • lEANANOMEATY
BEEF SHORT RIBS
i~;;i;;;R Round Steak 9811,.
FAM ILY PACK CHOPS e EASTERN QUALITY 891b.
33c
SLICED PORK LOIN
FARMER JOHN SKINLESS e 8-0Z PACKAGE
LINK SAUSAGE
-.
WHOLE KERNEL ·()!<• CRIAM 4 STYtfe :J0:J..CAN e SAVl3c
DELMMTE
GOLDElf CORN
-a~
BUDDIG'S • 3-0Z • ALL VARIETIES
LUNCH MEATSsAv11c •35c
PEN & QUILL • 12-oz, •SAVI le 21 C
Imitation Sour Cream .
('INNAMotiRo~LS ~ 29c
vo.tisoNAvo6i/~~-22c
FAD e 8" e SAVI 14c
LEMON Meringue Pie
FRENCH AMERICAN • 1-LB. tOAF . ~Vl4< Kound Sour Bread
~i5v)T,~0Lte BOUTIQUE OR DESIGNER
Kleenex Paper Towels 29c
BOUTIQUE •PR INTED OR ASST• COLOR S
SAVl7< 22( Kleenex Facial Tissue
TREESWEET • 6-0Z. • FROZEN• SAVI 3c ORANGE . JUICE 24 c ... · 7-0Z. BOTfLI. EX:RA ORY . SAVEi<
MORTON DiNNERS • ""''" • 20-oz. • J'X JERGEN S LOTION
MvACA.RONI & CHEESE 39c ~ '* 99c
PICKSWEET • 24·01, • FROZEN • .
MENNEN'S • 4-0Z, • SAVI 37c
~i:i:J BABY MAGIC l·~~ BABY O~L •42c
PEAS or CORNsAv1•c 11t13Sc
DUTCH PRIDE • 1/2 GALLON • SAVl6c 39c
IMITATION ICE MILK
•f Oi"Glf S"COf f if.
•f AClAI~tf SSUE ......
37
c
7-0Z.89TTlE o SAV141c
v.n11 .. ·VENTURE HAIR
TONIC e7fc
•
BOX0'40 0 REG.OR SUPER
·~ •TAMPAX -~ . SAVl37c
' .. · • 149
49-0Z. BOX e SA Vl 14c
it1PUNCH Of J,f RGINT
c 4-0l. • REGULAR, DRY, OR O!lY • SlYIJic
Protein 21 Shampoo -.8'
FRESH e DEPENDABLE QUALITY
GROUND
BEEF
EXTRA LEAN e 1-lB. PACKAOf
FAD SLICED BACON
OSCAR MAYER e 12-0Z PACKAGE
SMOKIE LINKS
. VAN DE KAMP e FRESH FROZEN e 8-0Z. PACKAGE • HALIBUT STEAK
U~DA CHOICE e TAILS REMOVED
'
T -BONE or CLUB STEAK ) 3!
Golden • Rip•
BANANAS"·
forge • Crl1p
CELERY ""
Frtsh • Or1gon
Blueberries
c
POUND
LARGE e SWEET
CANTALOUPI
c
IACH
FULL QF FLAVOR
PLUMS
LA RODA
WICK ION
NUDIANA
ALL PURPOSE e WHITE ROSE
POTATOll
• .
c
lb .
1oc
19c
j39c
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FRESH CUT ,
ALL VARlfTllS
CA•NA_itONI
c .. -
Schick • Pockoge of 5 • Double f dgt •SAVI 17c Platinum Plus Blades 72' ._ _________ ~._ _ __.
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I DAILY ·,llQT T11eMt.,-, July 21, 197~
No Gunman F ound In Park
LA Policemen Hunt Alleged Sniper ANIMllegk Pilots Ask' P _enalties .......
Group See ks Stiffer Raps for Hijackers
LOS ANGELES (UPI\
More than 60 Pollctmeo spent
U\rot bows ICOUr!ng hilly
Elysian Park for a sniper
Monday.
They nu.shtd 1 IM)bo from
the brush . but were unab!e
to find any physical evidence
-such as gpent ~idges
-to verify a report of a
ln1per tlrlng on two olOcers.
The Urtt sniper report came
from OOicer Robert C •
Martinez of the California
Highway Palrol wbo said two
shots Wert fired IL his Cir
as be drove alon& a transltlon
road in the park near the
Golden State Freeway.
"I'm quite sure they were
gW\Shob,'' aald Martinet. He
said the sboll teemed to have
Hottest Mareh
come from 1 .hillside aboul
500 fed away. They sounded
like the fire from a .38-calibcr
pislo• he sold, I
No bullet holes v.:ere found
in UM! Highway Patrol car.
At the Mber end of !he
park a short time later, a
Loe Angeles Police Depart,..
ment sergeant, Tom Proctor,
reported he too had been fired
on. Again thert was no
physical evklence.
Forty LAPD officers and
20 Highway Patrolmen, many
carrying riOcs and shotguns,
made a methodical search of
U'C park. The hobo was qes--
tioned ud releaaod. •
About half an hour after
the manhunt· began, rttldenls
oC the Academy Road area.
near the park reported a man
with a a:un was in a backyard.
Police rushed to the scene
but found no suspicious
characters.
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•'fVf.. Ht4RPOf 1"f5E ANT'IQtJfS-
··nlE.OU.Y .4Mf.~ICAN S~E.~:
. -
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -beroea. ,Jn lac!, most coontrles He aald 11ewarde.,.1 wlll
Airline pll«a want stllfer !'all u-and later uoe •them be 111pplled variolll devl«!s penalties for plane hijackers ( n 1abor camps." that will enable them to
-lncludlng death In aomo The •Ytll'Old airline c1p-dlaable 1 h!Jocker. Bui. he
c...,, taln • from Alllanla 1 1 I d reluaed to dlaclooe any delalli.
Lee Wnes, vice preaJdent allbou&h biJac:king tn 1'10 bis "We're a l 11) COMlderlng
of the Air Llne Pllots Aslocla· falleQl off by $0 percent. In arming our crews. But that'• lion, said durlng the organiza.. compariaon to 1Nl .year, the a.lona·fanse J>O!llbJllty."
Uon's 17th Annual Air SaCety airlines will 1091t lritpose new .. Hijacken do ·a great
Forum that hijackers have safety measures. diuervice to our customers,
been getting off t.oo easy for He Wei airllnet are thJnking bot they make I r e a t
too long. of screenina ·passengers and newspaper stories," .i a id
Ht! said the courta have using a magnetometer to Hines. "I only w is i1
Viet Vete ran Tr eks Valley
DEAm VAL LEY -NA-
TIONAL MONUMENT, Calif.
(AP) -A O•g-<arrying Viet-
nam veteran, marching across
this burning desert area in
mmM>l'J' of, "all m)' good
friends who didn't c om e
back," plodded on today
behind schedule but still
detemtiotd.
only an estimated 23 miles
Monday -oft the .2$.30 mile
a day pace he hoped to set
for bhmelf on the l»mlle
jaunt through temperatures
sometimes reaching 1 3 o
degrees.
Reagan, Borman Vie~·
Lockheed's Jumbo Je t
Disabled
See k More
State Aid
started to recognize t h e detect any hidden mctala, like newspa,pers would start really
seriousness of the crime. •1we a knife or gun. publlcliing the eonvlctloru of
were successful In getting one "There will also be tighter hijackers. Maybe then, many
hijacker life imprisonment," cockpit security,'' said Hines. potential hijackers will be
he said in an interview. "Larger viewers will be in--discouraged."
But there should be a st.ailed &0 that a pilot can 1p;iiii;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;mj
minimum penalty of 20 years, quickly set a wider a re a
and a maximum death, Hines without having to leave his
said. seat. Buliet..proof cock p 11 INVITATION
Am\Y S. Sgt. Jack Nelson,
34, ol 0-land, Ohio, made
"He didn't have proper
cloUiina,'' explained Nelson's
brother Arlen, who's in the
two-member support party.
lllDAL U•tSftT DANISH. P\JI N"U•t
ACCllSOIJU IXICUTIVI •lfTS
~ 1\\w""WL
itllerlors • il\llll• 1'$ c1onr;-~
2'40E -.Cout.H"'!I., Corona 4.1 Mor
Doll~ 9:lll'oS:io Tel: 673-271/0
,,.. • "' n ... s at1A -Mw••Cn-
DOES YOUR BUSINESS NEED BETTER MAI L
ADVERTISING? I'm not• prinw.1'11 use your
prints or find one for you. I tUe the r•pontibilitY.
All jobs, large and small, requiresorM pl1nning.
The more complex the job the greater the need tor
thorou5'1 planning from begiMing to end.
The sensi~ and economQ way to solve the
planning problem is to use• single murce for yo.ir
comprehensives, design, layout, type, paste-t1p, sep.
arations, and printing,
Know-how is more than half the game; it ii the
game. The next time yw have a brochure, catalog.
direct-mail piece, booklet, manual, price list or 8<1-
vertisemmt consider Jerry Longbrake. 646-4666.
Denture Invention
For People with ''Uppers" and "Lowen''
The nearat lhill( 'to hi.vine 'fOAJr ~Protect 1wn1 from twu:ilia(.
tnrn teeth it po1111ble. DOW WJtb a YOll cat men mt.inl17-ttl,joy
pbttic: aUttl m.co..y that .0-aoolet.~
tually holds bolb. "uppera"' and "P'lxooEHT may help'°" ll)eat •·1owen•1 u J1tta kJMt ,,.W~r. more dearly, be more at eue.
ll's a revolutionary dumvery The special pencil-point dis·
ailed FJXODENT, for daily borne pt'Ner lets you. spot FtZODli:NT
111t. (U.S. Pat. 13.003,988) With with prec:ision ••• 11111tf1 ntdd!
F1xao1t.'-r many denture we.,-crs One application rnay last round
now eal. speak. Jauab. wllh Ilttlr: the ck>ck. Dtnturee that tit are
Y.'otry of denturtS comina: looee. c11coti1l lo health. See your F1:zoo£N1' forms an elastic dentist reiularly. Gel euy-to-memtnne that belpi ablorb I.he uee FIXOOENT Denture Adhmivt.
ahock or bitinr and ~ng-c:.ttam at all dru( a:iwtm.
PALMDALE (AP) -Gov.
Reagan and astronaut Frank
Borman were among tho5e
cheering aa Lockheed Aircraft
Corp. proudly displayed for
the first lime its version of
the jwnbo jetliner.
The occasion was what is
called In the movie business
a Sllf!&k previe\v, since the
official "rolloul" ceremony
isn't slated until August when
the jetliner is supposed to
have all the Hnishing touches.
Technically. M o n d a y ' s
ceremony was to dedicate the
$50 million ~mbly plant and
flight test· center in the
Southern California d e s e r i
where Lockheed is building
the $15 million TriStar LlOlls.
But Reagan kept casting a<i·
mirint: glances at the fre$hly
painted massive jet just 20
feet away from his speaker's
stand inside the main new
aircraft assembly barn-lar-
ger in area than the llouston
Astro-Dome.
Mw·phy Enters
Innocen t Plea
Stay in one luxury resort and
see Mexico, the Panama Canal,
South America, the Caribbean,
and Florida in 15 orl7 days.
PrincessC~tothe
Caribbean.
Slay io lhe ~OlC ocean view room C¥Cl)' ni&ht and explore
tlveditrcrent worlds. Sail the Pacific and the AU antic. Cruise
ahe Panama Canal bydayligbL Seo sucb cx:otic ports as
Acapulco. Maz.aUan. Cartagena. eur~·cao, Nmsau,.
AatiJua,. Sanla Marta, Port Anlon}o, Port-au--Prince.
Enjoy the most luxurious sea.going accommodations
available-the lavish, l.M:ly ~Cruise abiPI
whereevcrydollaro(your !am brings you more
in convcnicncc, 11pecc, and pleasurable pampering,.
You'll ba:ik in air<Onditioned luxury while your
resort does the ttaYdills. No hap lo pad and unpack.
No nscniatiom to come unreservt.d. An attentive
crew of several hundrOO fun-loving ItaJiam will l!Opoil you
"1ihamcJa;sly and feed you fabulously, You11 nrlm.tun,
danoe, cnioy a showboat's con1plemeot of live entcrtainmcu1.
JnoYies. skeclshootioi.dect pmes, health si-. a ph,
aociaJ calendar, aod the perfect relatttioa which oolyOCllllD
tra.vd can provide.
'fherc'11 never been more to tiOC, more iD do, more '""
enjoy since the invcnUoa ot vacatiom. ean your tnvd
a sent now while cboicccabim arc ltill available.
Or call P~ Cruises:
(213) 380-7000
15-doy Princess Coria Cruises
Los Ange les to Fo•t L•ude•dale
Oct. I.
Fort La ude•dale to Los Angeles
Nov. 30. $575 lo $2625.
17..doy Princess Italia Cruises
Los Angeles to Fort Louderdale
Dec. II, Jan. I 5, Feb. 19,
Mor. 26, April 30.
Fort Loude•dale fo Los Ange les
Dec. 28, Feb. I, Mor. 8. Apr. I 2,
May 17. $650 lo $1700.
3~-doy round tdp $1250 to $31 00.
New low Family Fo•es
All Cruises.
'
TheS.S. CarllC.11111 M/V Jlllla are
of lllliu ,..,. .. ,.,
(
r 3435Wilabirc:Boulcvard Dopt. OP 1·21
Los A11JClcs. Calirorma 9()005
I feel a cnti9e comin& on. Plcae prod n'IC witb
pcrsuuivo Prioce.u brochures.
O Mexico O Clribbcan
O Aluka/Canada D Party Cruises
"'Hijackers are never doors will alao be install~:·
SST Ban Bill Killed
TO ALL SMOKERS
Y •11 •r• 11:orilli•lly l11vit.d to
otto!MI • F~tE pto1011totlo11 011
tt.. S1110 .. i11t rrobl•rn orMI how
:1.,011 eo11 rllll youn•lf of th• ho·
ii:u. 1; ... , • l'.M .. J11ly 21, lt70.
Thia pr•1111t•tio11 h •P•ll·
1oroJ by tho Notio11•I Anti•
Smoki111 Cou11c il.
LMrll Mw yM CM QUIT
llll'Kt k LlmltM • Cell
H-,.,. Yt11r 1 --..111111
Enjoy lh• lhrill
of an Old Fuhioned
LogRld&-
Knott'• newe.l
attraction.
It'• Excitin8t
TJiU onnounttmml Lt undt:rno circum•lo.ttCf!I to br: eonaidr:rr:d an offr:r to •ell or 0.1a.110licitation of an offer to buy any of thr:1r: stturitk•.
Tht: offr:rin1 i• madt: only by thr: offr:rinz t:il'tular, cop~• of which. may M obtainr:d at the mr:r:tinl or from Pa£ffic Pltue..
In~H.on in thU 11yndkatc 1tt1ul ff bona. (idt:. ruidr:nt• of tht: Stott: of California
1uiJh a: minim.um""' u:orlho/ $50,000ond a minimum annual income of $20,000.
Wednesday evening, July 22, at 7:45 p.m.
Come to an investment meeting on •.•
,. TAX SHELTERED
REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT
with a participation of $10,000. you may enjoy
•CASH FLOW
• TAX SHELTER
• APPRECIATION
• LEVERAGE
• EQUITY BUILD-UP
•
You are invited to attend a11 investn1ent meeting at t he
Mariners Savings and Loan
1515 Westcliff Drive at Dover, Newport Beach
Wednesday Evening, July 22, at {:45 p.m.,
call Mrs. Wallace fo r reservatio11s a t 547-5167
PACIFIC ~LAN OF CALIF.OBNIA
18 STATEWIDE OFFICES
I .
SAN FRANCISCO • OAKLAND • MENLO PARK • SAN JOSE • SACRAMENTO ' LOS ANGELES • ORANGE ' LONG BEACH
• I •
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SMlllr ·-AM' CCII lo
morl1I
dlrltdt
Charle
CViM'll _, -..... -· cMollM ·-Jlldl••
MIJl'lllll ... ,
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U"llod ,,_
CCllll
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Wllll1n
held I•
Mor!UI
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N111t, .... "' --22 •• : ......
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35 N.,
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For the
MeeCltlfl•
De•th Notleu
•ALDWOI
l!itw1ri1•81lllwl11. O.lt ol dMlll, Jllll' lt.
Survived b'I his w!M, Mrl. L-.. ld-•ln, c.te Met.t. S.rvlctl1 11 AM W•
""'41.,.. Julr 2', W..lcllH Mo!tHrY
CMPll. ~.,.._, HMtlor l!lk1 ""lcllil"'-lnlffmMt, 111111--.:1 ......_Jtl ,ll'L
WMICllH Moriu•l'Y· cllrec1or .. ......
Wttter Cllrforll lffn...., 31"1 Crn!tl
Drl.,., \.aWM N191MI, o.i. of .. Ill,
Julr It. Suf\11¥td IW WI,., WM!lk (,,
-· k.nton L~ Ind dtu11!Nr, MlorllYn. 111 of llotlle ldd,...I brofller, ll1't'Mftll ,..f\IOll,, ~ Hlll11 .J 9llttn1 Mra. ......., Sidi;"-Svnler!d1 Mn. l!:wf'f1t
WtlMtodc. AltadM!a1 Mn. Liiii.rt Ht...
119v91\, W91t CO¥lrlt, Stl"YicM ._..,, i.
held 11 AM '"""'""'' J11l1' 2J. .t Sheffer Utune hfdl Mortu1ry c~. """lit ll'ltfl"ll'ltllt ti El TOl"O Dtltrld C-i.n<.
El Tort, Sfltffw U-IMdl. dlNClw .. --T """1'11PI .S.n HClll, 2""f Lomll1 W1v, L ..
-...... Del• of clffth, Jvl'f 1•. SVl-'llV.cl IW llu .... lld, J-H~ 2 owttiltrl:
Miu "•IMI• $. Holt, Stntt ....,lui Mr1.
~rrold ~ .. llu"*'ll; 1lltw. M.lrY
9'fh P!OK!or. Tuttln1 1 trMlklllN. Mt--
'""'191 _.,1c9 Wiii M anl'IOl,ln(td ti a.tw
M ii , s,_,,.. L-..... IMCtt Mertu.l'Yt
_,_._
JACOU•S
Haul Dlflt Jecqun. 11113 Wnl 17tfl. Ne. 311, Catt M9u.. Dile ef l!Qlfl, MY IL
~., b'I' lw,lsbend, hr11 -· "''" ..-.i. W..tmlrlltw1 ••tntl. Mr. •nd
Mtl. O..tlft E. Lontl, k_,,, W"""'*'-''
" broth«I: Vlrell, ic..t, Wnfllftltorll
Woodrow, Mui. V11i.,., WUl'llnll .. 1
Donald, W1lh1Ntoru Verl!Oll. Sari o._.,
1111.,..; Friedl K11n1t. or-1 Z11tN
Si.!~r, Or-; l,.,..11 McN11f', ~
Bffdli S tr...sdilldrell. Servkft. IO!il
AM Thurldly, loulMNI a1,tl1t Cl!urcll.
CMll Mew. lnlt"'"*"I, '"'"'...... M .. morl1I P1rk. a.II lrOICl.,..IY Mortu1ry,
tl!rldon.
K•LL•R Ch1rl11 8. ICl'll1r, ft3' Awn!dl Mille,
CY!lllUll. Survhlld llY wife. M'-11• I!., '°"' CPllr1n 8. Jr., 1l1t..-, Vlrwlni. °"""· 5-leea Wl'llnlltdlY. ,,. PM. Cl'lurdl of
tl'le Rtc-im.1, l'w11t LI...,, GIMClli.,
with the R ..... WHiiom J. Mlld91n1 llffi-ciltlft9. Dlldll>' llroltttrl Mortwry, Hllnf..
lnt!On a.di. Clll'Ktwl. M•RRIS
lltlcti..rd A. Mlrr1s. X*t Wood111 L.1111,
Hi;11titwtofl IMcll. SclfYhlM bY wl ...
SUI.Ill 8., delllhltf', Kll'fttllt'IY J., fltlltl',
I ntel Cl Slrvktl TlletlHY. I PM, DllCllY
BrrMllra Otllllll, Hllfll""1on 811<J1, •1tll
the lit..,, J-E. Clift: of !lit Trtnlh' Unit.cl Prubytm.11 Clll.lrth offldlllrlt.
MdUSH
Jt"'" McNllh, ... Wiit lttll Slrwt, [Mii Mfta. Dtlt Ill 1111111, Jvty It. Sclr•
vl..-.1 bY wt ... Corl-1 l bnllhln: P.ut, Frlftl0f11, Cllllornlt; How..,CI, C1tlam,
w1.rilnt101u lllobtrt, Slltlton. w1111in.111111 1ltten: AMt W1'11t-. Stoc1r;1 .. , IC11
NordlY, Port Orlorcl, W1.ril .... ton1 MtrY
w111i.m.. C01t1 """"'· Strvlul will Ill Mid lD:XI W..,......Y 11 Boll lroeclwlY
MorNlfY C~ wllh lffftrlrlt Ml-le
Loctte of Newoorf lftdi otlkla!IM. I,,_
t-t, Pte:lfk VllW ~I P1rt,
8111 lra'ldWll>' Mortu1ry, director .. MISTI
Glnt Mori. Nntl. Dtl• of llMtri. July 11.
SUrvt,,.. b'I' hlr t1llllr, o-Nntl,
Shlrml" O.k1; rnolhtr. Mn. ·~l'tll;·• "1tstl. N-part ltochl 2 bf"&lhln: Nttl
ol!d M1rk 1 2 1l1ltr1: Lori 111111 Dtn1, 111
(Jf ,._, tt1d1. S¥vlc11 wlll 119 Jl/IY :n 11 1 o'clock, Wntcl!tf MOrtll•l'V CMio-
.i. aur111. PKlllc: Vll'W' M-1111 l"trll..
W"tctlff MOrtu•rY· dlrKlor1.
ARBUCKLE • SON Weotelllf M-"'7
4%1 E. 17111 81., Colla M-
IN 1111 • BALTZ MORTUARID
C.... del Mar OR Miit
Colla M-Ml MIU • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Brolldw11, Coltli Mell
UMIU • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
l '1t5 Llpna Canyoe Rd.
4H-Hl5 • PACIFIC V1l!:W
MEMORIAL PAltl C......,.M..._,
Cllapd
UM P1cUlc View Drt•e
Newport 11eoc•. Coltlnl1 -• pl!l!I[ F AMIL T
cotONIAL ruNl!llAL
HOMS
'lltl-A,., W-ler-•• S•RU....,"l'"ER• MOl'l\JAftY
1..ap .. -. •1111
Su Clemalle -• SMITHS' MORTUARY
117Mlfo8L
Bnllqlao--
Record
BlrChs
Tu~, July 21, 1970 . DAIL v PILOY I
Abortion Law Tested LE~~;,nCE .. w ... :;;~g ..... , .,~~~~~.
Hearing Scheduled for Santa Ana Doctor
Cl•Tt,H:ATI Ofl C:otlPOltATtOll ,0. OllTRICT ITATI Of' CAL,lllNlllA ll'09:
TUIOACTIOlf °" lltlSINISS UllDeR NOTtCI INVITI ... elOS TMI CDU .. TT Ofl Oll.\Nel: PknT.c>vs ...... NOTICI ts HllUl•V OIVIN flrllt ... ....,.. TM ..,....,......., c._e"9tl -. !tit ... "' ti l..._tlM ol ... ,,..._.,.,. E.dt'9 of OlAI( O, LUCA.I _, DfAtl ...,... eotlffJ ft\tl 1t 11 CIM\Ktlhl M9tll V!llf'" kMlll Dtarrtct If Orlr!ff GILL.ti LUCAS lb OIAN LIJGU,
1 u""""' ~b!nl"IH 11 tll T"r'"" C-'Y, C.11'-lt, wltl •Kol .... loflltd o.r;a.-. 81o.11t\11rd. ltlOIWICIO llldl. CalltorrNe onif .i.,, ..,. '° ll ~CICI A.M. ti! ttlt 2tll'I lolOTICf IS Hll!ltllV CIVIN "9 W. ,.-E. TrYlll\, AMlltJlft, C1llfof-11l1 llrlMr _., of Jvl' lt10 ti tht ttllU of cndl~1 of !flt fflw ,.....,.., ~ ._ TO !ht fldlllol.it firm -M' ere.I co..,_,, wloil khotl Olilrkt IKllflltl 11 llW INI 111 ,...._ Ill.,.,. c.lllllN ~ u3 M BARLEY Berman pointed t.o the cur· in the event that the Jurist -i """ .. 1111 '""' " _,_. ., P11C1<Wl1 """"111, c.r.11 .v..:w,_ a111or1111 "" wtd d«tdetlt ,,, r.-.irrw11 "' ni.
Of l\t DlltJ' IM J ~.1 ••· ~ fU•.i Ille t.llewtM Qll'•tlloll. ...,,..., .. .,llltWI II Miid! ftnlt uN bl& Wiii llt JVllll<tlr lllilm. wll'll 1M lllC-l"f ~ ir. '"' s1ttt reni New York abortion J1w rues YHI "'"" "''l.l'les QI ,i.e."'_._" .. 1o11ew1· ..-....,. ,_... w :. in. ott1c1 ., 1111 chlfll " ""' ~ SANTA ANA __. A '"'·d San-as suffi·,.; ... -.l • ..., ••·t the •aainst bis clients are ~ En1 .. or1 .. -. 111t~ tC.O 1. ''""· •TAKE~ PICllVP Ttt.\ICKS '"""" c-.it1, ......... ...,.. "*'"• w1111 "'IN ,..._., f"l""' II~ -:'9 A,MMllll, Clll'9nllo, At/ ~ IFt '9 "9 I" KConMllC:I lhl ~ ""1CfWn, le tfM -ta •--Munlcl~l r .... 1 ju••e C:tlifomia statute can no Juttified. w1TH1E1s 111 II•"" •hi• 1mi ••v ., .... 1111 cMc1111on1. •1111f\lc11M.. 1 n • dtrtr..-ot 1111 °""' ., ,.., A,..,.,..,.. ~... r-.....,_ ,.. Junt 1'7t. SN<lllc111on1 wfllth 11t now "" 11i. In Hl.HWllJ, Hwwlti w 11~, .,. • has been ..iven the tek ol longer apply to any woman Earlier motions by Berman ' MONoTo irNTE11:,.11isEs ,,,., "" llffl« ,, tht PurdlltJ"' A'"'' nl'lf ill'Wf, "'-' ...,., c.""'"'' •• ho •· t Dd ~-••-.. h •• fed I d /FON"' M w..u • • 111 &1td Sdllol Olth'lci, 1u1 PIKontll tHQ. ""''ell ,, "" •IKI or 11iu11-determlnlng Jf California's w see,.. o e ,~r pcepan4 ullVUg U'le era an ~ l<ltlit • """ A~-. c.i1 """'• c1111e,1111. ., 1111 u111tr11t11t11 111 tn _tttn ..,... cy in a doctor's clinic/ 1u•\•"'iot courts have been s1':1.n J, ,. ........ .., f!ICll 1:1100.r mu11 "*""l' • 111c1 •,..11 1t1n111e to "" "''''" ., MM •"""'· contro'Versial Therapeutic r:-_____ , Stcrt1•rv 111 1111 torfll fl • ctrtltlH ., Cllllltr'• w1111111 1&11r """"" t"9r 1111 ·,1,..1 MID
Abortloo A, ct. IJ applied to Judge 1'tomson.hld.earlfer uns~"1..~uJ. ITATE .,. CAl,.UtOflHIA Cht<k .,. • Md bond 1"111•1 IO !lvt ""'., f!llt; f'IO!ltt Ml'Ctnl l.'ltl of !lit tlNlllll of IM 0.'-t Jl#Y )4, 1t10 Dr. John S. Gwynne ol Santa agreed with Berman's argu-COUNTY 0 ,. OllAWGE 1 " ...,, -• ..,. .... ,. "" ... , 01 HNI• P••Y ·L11tu. Ort !Ilk 11'111 "Y of Jllllf. ltJt. Mf«1 lhl """'9Ml•MQI t.11111114 kMol Ohtrlcf. Mmlllbfnolrhr Ana ls corllf.llutlon&l. ment to the point tti.at any ..... Mor11n M, co11tn, • ,,.011,., 1>111111c A ,.,,.,.,._.. 1w """ .., '""''"" ., "" 1 ".,""
Juda. Philip E, '8chwab Look woman should be allowed lo Castellaw 1" 11111 for .. 1c1 ,_"' ..... $111•. It IM cll.Cttlllll ., ,,.. Ol1lrlc;t. '" 111& .... :!..t ~' .M ••11dln1 tlltflln. dul't cetMllUlolWCI 11111 IM ffffll ., ltfklr• I& ...,,., t111o •uch MUltWrTJ:, NIHl'WITI & llMI•
on that cbote in listening to seek an abortion. But be -"· --~... _,...., ,..,., .. 1 M. c1111'-'• tilt. -•• 11 111e dtlC* ... ,,..., ,,,_ ••• b "·-d~·-•ed ••-'•( 1 l....NI.... Wlllfrlwft Mid Alttl J. NIWl'llrl k-wlU r. !Of!l'llld, If IO a.w vi , ~ 911Cll, ~ ttUI 1ppeCUO'll y a~ney Moses cacuu wic '""es a.....,."""' 1ot,.,. 1ot M 111e ,.fftldtnt 11111 i.utt..., llelld, '"' (llH -""'1111 wt11 .<.., Tll cno ,,.._ :>--,
Berman for the dismissal of code in terms ot its insistance N ed "' !ht '*-'11911 ""' -utHI 1t1t tori.11H » ..-. sc11ool°01tffkt 11.ow AtMonlotvs..,. ,,....,..,,,.... • am within 11111'""""1 "' lllolltlf Of .... COi'• Cllln!'r. ll'ublf~ Or.,,.. C-t Oolly Liit .... abortion diarges 1ga1n1 t that such operations can only ::'~,.,. ";:,'/".:"'· Mii.:-.._. ,., biddlf" ""Y •llhdf1w 1111 w w J..ty 21,,....., A1111nt 4 11 1,,. 1m.11 Gwynne, 21, and tht physl· be performed , in supervised ""..;::, w..• •ICU* ~":\!",;'~°':~'111e=.,..,. LEG ' '
cian'1 mother Mn. Rub..... and carefully re 1 u1 ate d Director wlTNEss '"' 11111111 •NI omci.1-1. Thi a-11" E"""'°'""., 111e ~-AL NO?lCE ,,,. (0,.J'ICIAL SE.ALI ~II Ullfntd kMe1 Ol1trkl •--1-------=-c~-----Unruh Gwynne, 56. clinics. Mtrtfn M. Colltn "" •IQ!lt ,, .. ._., 1,.., ., 111 Mii. T.-m
M th Not1ry l"!llllk.C1llf0lfllt •<Ill 1101 lll(HllfHY t«•I !flt '-tll NOTICI TO CllOITOt:I
0 er and son were Ir-His endorsement of the °''"" [111/nf'r bid. flld lo ••hot .,,, lllfwrnlllty ., SO,.llllllOll COORT °" TMI ruled June 1• at Gwynne's -•·rges ,,.,.,;,..,. ..a._ ..l.y11·.ian SANTA ANA -Rel' J . N<Y c~ ,_,,... 1n1911111rl!'r '" -w nah•td STATI OPC"ALl"°i:Nl.t. 111011 Y Uld _.......,.~ ~ I"'' ..., • M.!rch .. lf13 HEWil'ORT-Ml!SA UNl;-11!0 TN• CotlffTY tW' MAM• Santa Ana Clinic and booked and lti ~--· -~ t Castellaw, as90Clale county Ul! N. ,,...,...,., 14111• Ill, $CHOOl DISTRICT -A ..... S &ss-.cui appe .. ~ O _ _._,_:J..ati o/ . .,,.~ $Ml1 AM, Ct lll. of Or11191 [lllln!Y, C1lltwnl1 Est1i. of JAMii Wll.l.IAM Moc:CAI•, on lbortiondlarges whid!. had eliminate Dr. Gwynne' I -1--u:N" ve ficer, IOCQ COMIN. ITOftlCI • OWIN •• 0.-IMl!y "'""" ,.11'1tr ... I J~ES WILLIAM McCAii. ·~ brought Gwynne and his at--·I ,-··--1cllnlc1--been named director ol ,__ ATTORN•YI AT LAW P\ll'd\61"'9 """' J. w. Mict'.l.IE. Dtt.111d. ,...,.-ar 1141 ohlll:"t: ...... ...~ nit ...,.. .,.......,, Svllt Ill ~11· NOTJC{ IS "llllEIY OIVfN Ill ""
1T. JOSI PM,"°• ll'tT.+.l tractive assistant, D e b b i e that category. batlon services effective July s11111 ...... c11111n111 ttm D1tld Jul¥ 11, "" cl'ICl119t11 ot "" 1bow Mrnf'cl dtceftrot ,., M ' 19 f Wh" · .., t1I: hS-11'$ 'ulMllllH Or-• CNlt 01Uy Piiot, lfltl ti! --"'°'!"' d1lrn1 IHlllll M•~· l1'd ~. Jtolllrt F. G .. ,.... eyer, ' 0 1ther, into Judge Paul Mast or lhe ~·· PIJblllMd Orin .. CN1I OtllY Piiot Jul• u, 11 . lt7tl 1m.10 lht .. Id dlc9ftnt .,. rMYlrW to Ill• 1 Odo!• A-. c.11 ,.,,_, court on earlier occasions. OasteUa, w, 37, an aide to July 14 11, 21, 111111 .+.u1ual _., "~ 11t0-10 "*"· w1111 11141 Mttt....v WMhtrt. "' same court set the precedent LEG., N,._ 111 11ie onic. of "'' ctm 01 "" M. 1t1c1 Mr•. 1~ 1. Mc.Miit Gwynne and Miss Meyer by whit'h Berm.an challenges County Amllristralive Officer LEG•• NOTICE AL v1lCE •b&W,_ .. •"'lllfd t111t1. • 1o _, 111tm. ~,ir P111:1 Mo. 2. F°""'''" v111;:: have been ordered to face the Cllifomia abortion I.aw Robert E. 'Ibomas, has been AM Nmt :i;,"9"i.n.d":"::,"' °"~,~~~
J111"' • preliminary hearing before when he ~-·-k down the act With the county for six and Miii utl ClllTll"ICATI OP IOSINISI GIEOll:Ge. FlllTZ & IELGl!lt, Alhll'MYI Mr. I MI Mn. ~,.,. R. "'"" 1"82 Jud Will" OU~ ··u HOTIC• TO CllllOITO•S 1'1CTITIOUS N.IMI ,, L•. 11Dlt c"Rlltlww l111l1v1tt1, Tor-g:;tlelf Lint, HurUlnotOfl BHCll, ge 1am 'Jbomson ol the a s u n c 0 n stituUonal and a 1w:11 years and has acted suP•11tio11t coUllT 0 , TM• n.e u...,.rs1t1111t 11o c.ruty lht¥ 1•• rtnct, c1t1fer1111 toJD41 Wlllcll 11 tPll
. _,.,.,.' same court on Sept. 17, Judge as liaison between the CAO STAtl ol" C:ALll'ORN l.I ,.0111 conducllnt • &<.;1!111" '' iiu Lot•n Piie• ot 1111$1""' ot ti!• un4i1,.1,,,.. 111
Mr. •nd Mi:.•~ '""""' J. 11u,,u1, dismissed abortion charges '"' co~TY 0.,.. OlAN•• No. '· c111•• Mau. c1111oml•, u!'Kltr •M l'lllllers ""11"'"' It !ht' "l•t•
•1f,'.u, l11S111re, A11. o. Weall'rlrn111f, Sdlwab decided to order Dr. a gainst Dr Robert C Robb office and U>e prob 1 t Ion "'" .t.""'I "'' flcUll0111 . 11rm 111111• 111 Jov0t1 .ot wi. ~~• • .w1111111 ftur '""'1111
•••• M•-OAL ••·••ITAL Gwynne and ltis mother to . . ~-N-•nt M' G . 'd E1ll1• ., NICHOLAS G. l.AURIS Productklr\1 '"" ll'Mol Uld firm It "''' lfl4i f1~11 JIVbllclllon Of 11111 """'· -lllTT•t N of Laguna Beach. ~ uu,. , 1$!1 rt er sat . Olctlltd • com.....d or tl'lf +o11ow1111 Hnot11. Wiiow °'"° JulY 11, 1"'
'"1J':!. ~t.1,Jt face a preliminary hearing on He lives in Santa Ana with NOTICi: IS HElllEIV GIVEN tit ""' MIMI In lull Intl pll(9t; of rtlldtnu WILLIAM J, MtcCAll, "'11· _'.!!'/. Mn. """' Mii .... , •m id nti I bar District Attorney c e c J I . . t f'tdltor• "' '"' '"°"' lllmtd d«tdtnl ,,, •1 ~llowl; Admlnl1lr1tor
.'
r'.,. l-. Hu1111,..,_ lllCfl. e ca c ges Aug. 13 in Hicks' res-~• to Mast's his wife, Irene, and four,._, 111 ""°"' 111.,1111 ciolmi 1111n•t ~11111 c11i.""r, 1u L-l•Y w.v. 01 •ht aa11t•., tht hlJ courtroom. !"''_... ..&.iJd -~ a ~ I an tht ww dtc"""' ore ,..,,,_ " n11 A•ctictl1, c"11. •bov• dt«icllnt ""0rt: ~,:;.:,bf!_~~·~ C.t•ll11e dis missal was to obtain an u1 ren ml\.I w s ·~ 111er Y """'· ..,1111 .,,. lllC'IUlrv YOUdlt•1, In c11t!ord T. Cul~•'· 1us Mt111o11 or .. MlccA••· •~ff•, tit in Ms. 111c1 1111 'Ml(h;11--Ho 114 Judge Schwab will rule empJoye of lA>S ~eles Cowl-trio oftk• ., "" d•r1c " ,111 ,_..,, c .. 1. Mtw. c 1111. a a1La•11 ....._.. eo.1' Me11. 1111 "" be Orange County Grand Jury ... 11111<1 (;61.!rt, ., 1o ,,.11111, thlm • .,..1111 o,,.,. J111w •· nio 1..,, c,...._, ...... .,..
Mt. Ind Mi'L LMftl Gt-"°" i:m tween oow and Aug. J3 on 'ndi . t th Art ty. "'' MU1MrY _,.,.. "' .,_ urt-Fill• c .... rn1r Twr111ee, c.1,..,..,... LJB.,.., A ...... ,....._, a..cti. "°" Berman's motion th.al the I ctment aga.tns e ... ft~1,.11 holds bachelor' den""*' 11 the on1c1 0. 111, •llomtY · c1111orc1 T, cu1-T91: cn)I nM#I #r. Mn •• ...._.. Cl'lll. 2236 Colony physician. ~aw a s PnElll c TOlllNAY uoo Mims Al'lft . STATE 0111 CALll'OlllNIA, A"'"'"• .... Mrww.tretw
'" St .. c.i. Mete. bow" charges against Gwyme and degree in political science Suli. ,., • Cot!• MM.. Cllltou1i. m':: LOS ANGELES COUMTY: P•Allbl\H Or-Coe•! 0.1" Plll!I, ~~~ ... ~ ~. 5:::'"' 11
• hia mother cannot be justified Bennan's hamolioM f 0 r frun UCLA and a master's :.~i...."" 1:~ :_~~fllU......:!in:::: P:1c:J':Z ~!, 1l:' _:or;,,":· .!=1-;: 1'-"-"-"-·_n-:''"-='=-=.o'c"::C'c'·c'c"'::,.,::'"":::• L~-~ "ir"No.~~i tiinct the California abortion dis;nissal oft t action have degree in government Crom to "" ''''" &t w r• Clfclcltllt. "'""1" ~~~1!rF~~·':"".:.. '': ~1111;! LEGAL NOTICE '
.I.-I&. lt1'1 code is unconstitutiona1. been dismissed and Dr. Robb. Cal St.ate Los Angeles four montl>I tit• IN tint itublklHon .. ,.... ,..... _ ... lubKrlt1tc1l---;;;;:;;;:~::;:=::c-::'.:"".=c,---
#N. ltld ~-Kllllt l . "'"--m 67, of 34567 Scenic Drive, Dana:J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;iiijj ofo'::!,/'%'f:·L "'°· ht'"' ""'""'" hu~t •11111 ·~ st.1P•11tK11: cou11T o" ™• S..W•rcl lld •• Col'MI dtl Mir, 1lrl hed led John Llurli td '""' t11tcMltd Ille 11..,.. ITATI M CAl.INtt"IA f'Ollt
Mr • ..,., Mii. JoM P. °""ii:-Point. is SC u to faee AC1ml11hlr1tor., '"' E•l•lo (Of'"l'ICIAI. SEALI TN• COUNTY Ofl Oll.INel 1::4 CJ~, Hull!!""°" lkh 3 Colleges J.UJ'Y lnal Qc\ 26 1'n Su-1·or Yovr 1clv1rtllln9 w11 11•11 b, el !he •bwf n.tmld dleldllll Evoft9f"UM Mlhbertir HOTIC• o• H":,,',"" .. "0 , ••TIT-Dr lftd Mn _ .. _,, I -· ' ~-•ITI• C. TOON•T NoltrY Publlc: • C1IH1r11l1 ... . . ...., . • C-·•. ' tho111•..cl1 of r11cl1n • , . Whon ''" ••-, A--. ••I-... Prl11tlp1I OUkt In POii: Pll:OU.T• CW WILL AlfO "IM :,. W. OC..t1 F,Oflt, ""'"'°" at.cfl, uu.t • ,.._.,, ·-.... •• Ll"T'Tl"llS TWSTAM•NTARY f No J-11, ''" you Wlfl clo1.cl. COiii Miii. Ctllf, "'" [Ollllt't' of LOI Antt!tl IONO 11:1001111•01
Mrm ~ Mr1. '°"' w. '*""'"· G t G ls Ber1nan has advised Judge TAI Is Y•11' ...... , Ir.:: Alll'n1111t1r1111, ::,,;=1;;~,~..,1,.. E11.,, or v1oi. a. "If'""· OtcMMd. llow' .,...., Pl1tt, COii• Mwo, e ran Schwab that he intends to fi)e Pubtllhed O••llM C:1tll 0.l1¥ l"llol P111tll.ritd Ortntt C11t1 Dtll'I' Piii!, HOTICE IS HElllEIV GIVl!N th1 t
Ml. Ind Mr .. J-H"'ln. .,, a writ ol prohibition -.. in..t 83S-7n7 Jul• 1, 1 .. 21, 21• lfl'O ini.70 JulY u, 11, 11 ""' ""'9U1t 4, 1tio 1n'"H1 Securll'f' 'Ktttcc H111on11 &tllk his 11114 w1...,.1Y Dr., "-1 9'llOI, ltW .. _........ 111,.ln • 11tlltlon fol' -btlt of wll
Mr. •1111 ,.,,,.. Rlclwd Judf, lllU the Santa Ana Munieipal Court LEG" "~CE !!" "', ,,""'-,_ &t L1ttt,.. TMllll'ltlll1,.,. Ver-Pita. lrvfM, tlrl LONG BEACH -Thtte n.u l-.Vll "' t !No aond 11:-lrw:n •
Mr. •nd Mra. Slbl"° F6rl-.., LEGAL NonCE "'•'ffK• 1o Wlllch 11 ,.... '°' turtlllr ctr11w at., Ji:!•1rnt. ...,. Orange County colleges will P.a1'1• -.1rt1cu1,,,. 11111 ""' 1111 11,,. 11111 Meo
Mr. Ind ""'"'· Hll'llWI Fr ... "I llldt. receive ~nts from the U.S. 1"·11142 CIRTIPICAT• o .. IUSINltJ Of llet•lnt !ht "'"' .... Mtf'I Ml
C•I• ~ iboY ··~ PUBLIC AUCTION P"ICTITIOUS NAM• ,.,,. A111111t 1. lt10, ,, t :J:I l.M., 111 Mr~ M~ . Bltry Weit, 2711 Dept. of Justice Wider the Cllll'~rc1~i\~:u~' N~UJ~NISI Tiit Ul\dlr119Md don c•rtlfv 1111 11 tht COllrtl'VM! of Offarlll'lt<lt No. '
Mr. •ltd"' Mc::!' =. ii:-11w1, ,.. Law Enforcement EducaUon ,,,. unotrilontd doll ci•llTY 111 is col!duc:ll11t • bll1l111u 11 uoo w111 : -:1c11 court, 11 7tD Cluk co"'*' Or Ive u: ..... .r.:' St."! "'·--::i~ .. ,_,~~ 1-1 p HUNTINOTM llACH WAT•ll,RONT PAlllC•L Col!dYclltlo I butlntll1 it 1'1 I 11'11 CN1I Mllh.,...v. N-' I I I c II ' ,"'' II !ht City of llrtl1 AM, t..Ulllr· .... _, ... ""'"'am according to Rep s · c1111om11. unc1tr "" 11c1111ou1 """ n•me "•· w ""'Al'I., No. '· II •¥•• I ' lr1tl. COlll Miit. C•1lfernl1, ~ "' ,,.l!Wll'Oll:T ORAPMIC5 •I'll llllt Nld 01tect July'°· 1t7tl • _,_ 11, 1111 Oraii HO!mer ( R ·LO ng PRIMI C-2 PROPIRTY ON THI CHANfitlL flit 11c:1111-tlrm "'""'&f U.S.A. TAPES llrrn 11 ~tel 01 flll 1o11ow111t ,.,.., w. E IT JOH,.
""• IM Mn. 51911htf1 J, Cr.II, '6141 Beach) TUIS., JULY 2tth •t 2 P.M. (•t the a lt1) r::: 1~~1:141 ,.~=. ~om= ~ wll< 11111ie It! f\111 •11111 ,toe. oi C Counf'f Cler• '
lrdl • ..,,,, Ant, llDY • 11111 •Ml Pi.t. of ttSLdltlc• 11 •• follOWll: r11!6fftce 11 .... 11owa: """· Ottw 1111 Mlll•P'lll Mr. llnd Mr•. ~rv .t.. GllWlt. 1W The funds, totalling $16,200, 16217 lo. PACIFIC COAST HWY., HUNTINGTON llACH Ar1t1ur s. Tfftdltr, IW Slllrrl,.twi Owov ... G. ~br•k• AK.I J1nv 4" W•t T .. 111 llnlt,
Mt Ht""'-tMf...--•1 ~'· = will be used by the schools Plte1. N-1 8HCll. C.Jlfwnlt . l-llr•kt. 1a1n CUii Drlw,, HunllMIOl'I ~:r· ,~~· ~==-~ll o....f:. Cir-~J.,, ,r;:: • .QI Slhtllltl r!Pt .. 1111 , ....... I,.,. •• ,. 11¥ tu (U.lll""" ''* Mfl. fl .I 0.lect Juty ""· 1911). lel(ll, C11l1111' .. 11. .1tH.n., ... _ -· tw. Ind """· JMr111 .5(ol! • .cas klon for grants and loans to n111 I• • rt,. •Plllltlvrltlw " ~1,. -., ""' "''' 1v11i.tti. ••It, Arll'lur s. Tindle< 011ect,.Ju1, 10, 1'1'1. ,..,.n~ -Or .....,., lld .. lrv!M, lloF -<·...1--f. ••!..-• • ~ Ill 1111 4'1!1kt tr.a. lhcMlll!t llMllchtt1 IW•lllllttlt. l'tf' ,i.t ""' 11•'9 of C1lltornl•, Ori ntl [OUlllY~ IYlll G. ~br1k• , ' >• lllM Nit DtllY Pllol, IN. -Mr'I. Johll Eliloll, 1011 ..,111to 1>1uuci1~ e!uft:r active in or ~ •• m: .. u• 111r tffki. °" JulY '· 1t7t. ..,...1 ""' 1 "'ot•rv """ J•rrv Lontbf1k1 ~u.,. • 1:1, v. 1t10 IUS.1'1 e:'"' Ttrr1«. c:or-"" Mir, planning w enter the law en-Pue11c 111 '"" t&r wld st1i., Mf'lllllllY s11t1 ot c.111or1111, '<>flfllt C:-":
Mr. tfld M#•. Jomes "· w11111o 111 urw .. t E11.1:lu1lve RMlty AuctlonMf• In Am1rlc• _,llCI Arll'lvt s. Tltl!dl•• 11-" 1a On Julr. 11. ""' Wtor1 '"'• • Me••~ Slllllmlr or .. COit• Mao. tlrl forcemera field. '"' 10 bt !!'le Hr1o11n wholr "'"" Pllbllt In •nd for 11111 s111t. Mnontllv LEGAL NOTICE
"'•I• ·~~ ... w,,illil~ ....... "'-:. a.t0,01&n1. Sa!!Ut Ana College wi'U SH DOZA 11 IUblcrltled 111 .,,.. •1"'1" 11111n1rn ... 1 -'" o....1w11e G. L-brH• AKAJ-~;;;;;;;;;;;;-:::::::c:-c=-==--P · ...._w... MAR R •nd Kkllowltdot4 hi htc11ltd !hi &1mt. Jemo ~llrtkt k-h me It br! IUP•1uo11 COUIT °" T"• ~"'~'"""!""....,.~...'::,.-a~; receive $7,200, Fu 11 e rt on ltaal l1tate Auctlenaen tOFFICIAL su1.1 1111 """" """'' "'llM' 11 1111>KrlbllCI IT.ITI 0 ,. CALl~OllNI& ~Ol
"" Junior JOltlll E. Divis lo 11\t WI~ 11111,_l,ll'lf "*'-ltdl• T"a COUNTY°' Oll.l.itfl IN~Mn. WIHlom l<lfftt w11-. College $3,600 and 1116 IUltTON WAY, lln9rly Hiiia, 90211 121•i 272-tW Holt,.., PuOtk. C•ll'-11 ~F";it1:r:LJ~ "'"'· """A...... ' ........ eor-•• ,,_, Orange Co36t College .$5,400, NY 44J ... It., NY llOlt 212 M7-tlJO •"·-llld"!~~· 111 lltbe M. c-"' NOTICI OP N•.lll!IM °" PntTJOlf
oO • -~··-.._..., ....., ...... -.... l'Oll PIO....TI ti' WILL ANO .-Ollt
,. Hosmer u.ld. ~~'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!!!!!~I My Cornml11lon ••Jlru _.,.., .. _ ......... Hlltl'nl• ISJU&NCll 01' l•TTlllS TUTAMIM-"''· •fltl Mrto DIY I... Cllrt. tna.,::, ==::========== JUl'lt 21, 1'74 l"rlndHI Oftlot I" TAlllY TO PITtT10N•11t El TIMO or.. FOt.tnlllfl Vlllty" Pubtl.r..d Or-Cltd OtllY "llol. Or11111 '°"'""' E•""., WILSON IU "'·"'= M-Tl_, ·-· ,,, J·-1 '' TO, ->>->->o MY Cornrnl1a.lon E•,Crn GIHI!" lUTMl!lll, '"" ... t •. ~·· ~" ' ' ••• "' ,,.. l1pl. u. 1tl'3 :~ k-II Gl!HE lUTH•Jt. o.c.. ..
SM II' Or .. APT. C, Cltl• -LEG" ~-c· Publlll'IH or-Co.It Olltof Plk>I, OTICE Ml~-' Mrt.ktY SMlllfl'ltt1, :111'2 ..U.. 1n111. "" July 14, ,1, !I 111111 Ai4WI '• U11 · 1211·1' t H IS HEIU!IY GIVE,. Tlltf 5111/w 5-•~ Slt1 JI/Ill C""*ll'll -Id I . IHC-1111 llltd titr.111 boY ,..mn • Hltltcon for .,..'-" WIU llMI Mr. Ind Mu. EV1ret11 TllM'llo 1• CWlllTl,.ICATI o" IUSINl&I. LEGAL NO'f1CE for 111.,.nco ltl Ll'llo .. T•t-111,. Ct1y, ~ ludl, bw . '°ICflTIOUS NAM• let Pl'ftl,_.., rtflrt11q lot Wl'llal le
Mr. llid Mri. Jolln Vl~lio-,. 2'fll 1'1111 undtrlltned doet ctrllPV ht I! 1"·1'74' mtdt fol' l'ul'lher "'llc:uftf1, Ind lhtt M11': ~..,._ ~lulonlh Vf8Mtll, 711 C'OMucllnt , buSl""9 11 1"4 libcock, CIRTlf'IC.t.TI 0,. IUllNltl the II,,_ Ind ll1t1 of hffrl"9 N
;itml' If., 1' API~. Colli .... Coil• Mell, C•llfor11l1. lllldtr !flt fie· jlrlCTITIOUS PllM llmf n11 bttn tit for Julr Jl, lflO,
boY llllou1 firm 11.rnt of TAB Pll:INfl,,.0 trot! Tiii ima.11 ...... to Ctrtlfv llltl trt ·-I f :,M •,.m •. , 111 ll'lt CClllrl,_ 1tf
Mr. llld M,.. Joh" M. H.....i....-. 111411 Ntd firm 11 cornJOHd &f 11'11 c.nduc:tl11t • to-H•l111rt/llp bu1!11111 11 r lnlfl o. J ot 111d Court, 11 *91 Ordlld SI., St.nit AM, 1111 folk>Wlft9 "'"°"' w11oH n•ITll tn fu!I 73DO Htrbw llllllw1r~. Coslt Mell, 1llll Clvlt Centtf Odvr Wesl, 111 !ht MT. -' Mrl. Cll't fl:..,lru, 111111PllCI&f111s10trw:1 Is 11 follow•: Or1""1 COun!'r, C1rtfornl1, undl1 1111 CllY &I S.n!• Ant. C•llfort1ll Alllll!lflT, CCU ~· olrf Tllon111 A. ll•umt, 2J1f Tu11111 flctlllolll firm nt1T11 ol \llCTOlllA'S Dfled Julr IJ. 1'70
Marriage
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9 CONYINllNT OFFICIS SDYING OllANGI COUNTV
Aw,.rt Otfk:I Mld!et1e1n 111 M1tAtth11r 133.3111 • 11,.w. Oftlcl ltplde 11 J1mbot"n &•t.J l•t .. /
C.ll11t 'ut Oflkle Hiltwood ti Comm011W11llh 171·2900 .. Sallltf Hilb Otfict Htfbor tt Brt1 17t ·7190
Sopttlor Olkt S11ptriol' ti "8ct11tl1 642·9511 • U111Yt1111:y Offlu Elat Cb1pm1n It s111t Coll tr• IJt.4140
W1ttdln omc. Wtstcl!ff II l>lwtr "2·311 I
Seti hid! Ollk:1 Ltlau.r1 Woild, St.II 8e1d1St6'27ll • La&u• Hill& Olllct IAIM1r1 World, t..1una Hfll1130·3200
.I,-, N.-t 8tldl, Callforl'llt 11111 11111 Mid fir'" la cornlOlld &f W. E. IT JOH,.,
01IM J....,. 22. 1970 Ille foUowl111 ""'°"'' wt1tM fl.mu .1n COl/llf'f Cieri
Th&lnls A. ''"""' full 11'1'11 tllct ltf '"kllrlce t.. os JIP"'11t•Y o. "-"''·
11111 of c111fom1•. °''"" c111"'y: 1111111w1; .. NitwHrt Cftflr °"""'· On Ju"' tt, 1no, b91or• ..... • 1"11111 s11 .. tr, 11024 """'lilt. ""'· lllfll fllMt.., at,
Holtry Putllk In '"" for Nld 111!1, ,., Qo<ofnty, C•llfonlll. ~1kKfl, Clll"""' ..,...,,..,.,. 1PM1rtc1 ThorM1 .+.. ''"""' l!dlll L. Moftttt, 11X1 l11t Tlllrd ,..:_ ... ~ kMW!1 lo ITll lo 0t 111t _._, w11M1 llrMI, 00wntY, C•ll!Offtl.. ,...,,.., ,...,jltlllw
"""' II IWOtcrlbtd tra Ille wltlll" Ill-Dllld J11111 fl, lt7'. Pl/Ollsllld OrtMe C...t 0.1~ "•Jot. ttn.ltrllflt • .,., te:krlowlldttd ... nlQllM l!lSll! STALl(llll Jul¥ 11, 22. 27, lt70 u:n.11
11141 """· 'IONA I.. MOF~ITT (OFFICIAL SEAi.i Stoll Ill C1Hlomll, Ort1111 Countv; LEGAL NO'rIC!
A. Lft Adtlr On JI/Ill 11, lt1', lltfor'I me, • M&lll'VO--~;;;;;;;;c;;-;;:-;;:=::=c:;:.,---,,.ot1ry Pu91k.Col11omlt Pulljk Ill INI l.r Mkl Shit., -1Gr11fty l NOTIC:I TO ClllDITOltl
Princt .. I Ollltt 111 •-!'Id Elllll S!lilltr •lltl Edrlt L. SUPlltNllll COUllT Of1 TN•
O•lfllt Coun!'r Mlfftlt --· ,, "" It .. .,.. --ITATI ·o,. CALl,.OlllMl.I "011. M'I' C&mmlnllft Ex1lr11 wll&N fle/M1 •rt 1ubec:rlbld lo !flt; TNll COUN'rY CW 0111.t.NO• JulY II, lno wlllllll lnlt.-nt I"" te:knowi.cllM flllt NI A""4M
A. l•• A0.1111, .ltlwrlot'f' 10':~riA~S~L1j E1l1t1 &f M.l.ltY 1. OtWOl.F, tilcl Utt Wntcllff Drift Jlllfl :bl kflOWfl •1 MAlll' ILEll OtWOL,., Otuff. ""'-' Mlcll, Ct..,.,... fM6I A:ot1trt1a. lt\l'blnJt1lrl w .
PUOIWltd Or•ttH Cotti Otllf Piiot, Nohlrv Pvbllc.C.n11r.ni. J<fOTl~I! IS HflllEIY GIVEN to lhl
J-J:I Ind Juty 7, 14, 21 1170 11N-70 '°rl11C1NI Offret In tred!h11'1 &f l~t ..... ••-~ -
----c:-;=:;c-;-;-;c'==,,.----I Or1nt1 Counlr U ,_,.,_ Mv CommlulOl'I t:nlrea 11'111 • Hf"IOlll J\oYllW cl1lm1 •Nlfltl LEGAL NOTICE Jur11 '· 1m 1t1e w1c1 0tctdllll 1r1 r..u11w " 1111
•------o-=::-------IAllCI L•I lll"OP, All•MW ::::'"Ottt'!" ot""tttt~,.l_'!rv,,-... ,...,1• T.Jfrff llU C1Hftnil1 .lvt-""'~ Sll/111 0111, C1tlflrnl1 ""trttllltd COl.lrt, or lo ••Miit! lhttfl. wllfl StJPlllllOJt COURT 0,. TM• P~lllllM Or..... C11t1I OtllY Pllol lll(tu1rv voudlef-1, I & Ille u,,_
STAT• OP U .. l,.OllNIA ro• Jlil'lt IO"" Jul¥ 7, )4. II Int Uf'l-70 dtt1ftritd I I "'' ofllt• of """ Alllt•lllY•· TH• COUNTY°' oa.t.N•• , Elltr, 81r .. 11er. My.,. & Smtih, •
No • .....,,," llrore.s1on11 COl'portlkln, 1601 Wnttlltf NOTICI OP NfAlllJfO OP" l'ITITION LEGAL NOTICE OrlYfl, P.O lo• 1m, Nt'NllOrl 8ioth, 1'0111 l"lllOllATI 0" WILL ANO l'OR C1Fltor1111 '1U.I, Wlllell la Ille 111C1 LETTllS T•STAMINTAllY OI bllllfll!ll of tho undtt1ltntd tn 111
E1l•le cl Fll:EO P. LE.1.MtNO, Ibo , T·J.lllt mllltfl otrl1/lltnt 1o. Ille •1111 vi kl'ID"'" •s F. P. LEAMING, Oeeeffld. NO'TICI TO CllllOITOlllS &thl decldlnl, wllhllr' ffNt fnlllll\ri ~
NOTICE 15 MElll!BY Gl.V(N.. Tll•I SUP•llOI COtJll:T 01' T"• !tit 111'11 111bllcl!lon of t~lt no!kt, DESSIE H. LE.1.Ml"'G ll•t flltd tlotlln ST .. TI OP CALllllOlllNIA ~OR DotM July IJ, 1'10
I H!lllOl'I for tor..ti.te of wlll I/Id for THl'COVNT'f' OP" 0111.INOll NEWPOltT HATIO,,.AL &ANI( luu111Ce of Ltlttft Tttl.tlnlfllotV i. Mt. A.Ulll 8y: Pttrlcll FMlor.
.... Hilfl-. rlltrMi;t '9 Mllcfl 11 £11111 ., Ml,,.NIE CALOWEl.l. •!so T,ull Adrnllllltl'•llen Olfltw. mtdt lor furthtt' Hrlkultt1,. Ind llltl ktla.,..n It MINNIE S. CALOWELL, 1t10 Adml~ll!tolor ot 1111 111111 ll'lt time llld lllCI &I llt1rl111 lllt Nmt kllllWn 11 WILMELMINA S LATE 111 -1 !he ....... l'lltl'llllll dludlnl
"'1 belll Ml lot JUIY J11 1'10, •fl CAL .P Will: LL, 1M k-H llLll, IAllAJNlll, t~Jll '''"" '" flll eourt,_ of 0.tt-Wll.HILMl/'IA I . CALOWf'\.l, Dec:fflld MYllllS & SMITM. """' ... &. l II Mid C111.1ft., " M lrfOTICE II "EllEIY GIVEN ft Ille .I, P~I C"""'•IMll. Chllc: c..,,..,. OffW Wes!, In !tit 'CIPY C.-.df\'111 ., Ille ,.,.,., lllmld dKtdetll , .. Wltldlff DrM of 6tnt1 A11•, C.Nfl:if11!1. 11\11 Ill --111¥11111 cltlll'll -l11st IP.O .... 1•>
Otttll JulY JO, .1'1t. 1111 Niii dtcedt"' 11'1 ..-lftd fo 11111 ""-"' lllcfl, C111fw1111 f1UJ W. E. ST JOH,., "'*"· wlfll 1111 lltCllMr'Y 'llWcl'ttfl, 1r1 Ttli 111•) '41-19 COl/fltr Cltrlr. IM offlct ol !he cllrll pf lhl •~ A"'""'" ffl' ............ ..., INEPl"AllD, MOl.LIN, t11llUtd ell/rt, or tra IH'tMiil f!ltm, wllll PUbUlhed Or ..... CO.It Dtl~ 'llol,
lllCMTllll & NAMPTOlf lht ntcHllfY -"""• le 1111 -Jlol!V'21. 21 llld AYtYlf '-11, 1111 llN-Jt
U1 ... Ill""""' J...... "'~ltnW If 11\1 oflfct ~ llltlr ·~·1~,;;_--;-:o=-:7'-======'='-c:;C,; Lii A ........ c ...... Mll J.l.Ml!S P. MICICl.IH. "· 0. loir :Mii. LEGAL NOTICE
Ttl: U1JI •1111 Ttrml111I Afl!'llll, l.ol A-If'· c;.11torn111-~=='"""""",:,:="'~~-.lllll""" .. N........ ~ WlllCll Is flll llllct ti bu1l111U NOTICI OP SN•lllP"rl U.ll Plltillhfd Or-CM•I 01111" "'llol, of ll'lt lll!dt,.lt...., 1n Ill 1!111!111 ..,. MATHlll: ,EDell:AL ClllEO!T I.INION,
Jul'I 1-t. 11. 21, 1'1t l?Uo11 l1tniM " IM ttl1lt! of Nloil ~I, PF11~11ft \II, l"AUL 8. McCANN, ti •I l----:-:::-:0-,..,-:--==---lllfl'"I" "'-"' "'°"1111 111r ""11n1 fhA!ice-Dlt.lldtnt No. "111. LEGAL NOTICE ttltl of~tllll l'lolke. IY Y1rtw ot '" "'°'"°" luu.c! Oii 0'"',',-,.,','•"'w"•uLLAl " """· 117' 11¥ l!lt MunlclHt c_,, • . llCtMTll!'lll Mulllc:IHJ C-1 Oltlrict • &AR Ult JIJ,,.t! ITEHL y C111.1t11Y of locr•llll!llo., l!fll o1 Ctllfltlll .. IUPlllOI: COUIT Ofl TN• .l!xe(lllore of !ht .. Ill 11POn 1 """'"'"' ~ 11'1 ftwr
ITATI 0,. C.ILl"OllNIA "Oil JAMIS~ttri'i~"'"*' d.ctdtnt. &f fMfHElt ,EOl!lltAL Cll.EOIT UNION
TNI COUNTY 0" DUNel p 0. ... ., Ttnllftltf AMiii! 11 11/dOlnlflt cr.tllllt Ind 1111t11t PAUi.
.... A.... ltf A ..... C--*14 8. McCANH '" ll/dtn'ltnl Mier, .liiiW1111 HOTICI 0, "llAlllNe Off "1'1TION T:~::.a) .,_7Uf I Ml btllllCI Cit 12.-.11 KhlellY 11111 '°°" PllOIAff ._01" Wl .. L .... l'H A. • fllr .__.. 111 Mid luC19tnftll 111 tl'le dllt Of 1111
.. ITTl•t TftT"MllfTAllY "1.lbllsflid Ort"" CO.ti O.llY Pllof l1.oi1"'1 If Mid ...wttcon, I Mv. E1l1l• of EtxrAll •• WITMER, o.ctM-Ju ... •fltl Jl/IY 1 14, ,, Im 1100.IO .... 1 .... -Ill 1111 ,...,.. tlllt tfld fd, ' ' 1111111' .. I of Nld l\llllmllll -hit If! NOTICI!! IS HlllEIY OlVf!/lf Thi! 1t1t ""'""" 111 1111 COUll!'r of Or.,,..
HAll:llltt!TTE '· WITMER N• tlltd fllQAL NOTICE $11" of Collfornl .. "9cflbld 11 foll-: ""111 • .. tlllotl tor PToi.tt fl/I Wiii !Al S. vi Trott Nt. 14' Ill Hie
..... ft)r lHUfflCI ., Lrlllrt Tnlell'llfl!lh' . T.... cllY or Lq-lttell. COUlltY of 0r.,,..,
lo "'lllOfltr, ,.,.,tnco to Wfllcll l• NOTIC• TO CRIOITOll:I 11111 of C1lltornl1, 11 -ll'llP _..,.
ll'lldl kw l'uttlltf llrllwltrt, 11'111 tlltt IU,.lllllNlll COVRT OP THI kl boOll. b ..... *' ol MIK'lll-
11>1 1i-'"" Pllct If ....,.IM the IT.ITe 0111 CALll"•lllNl.I '"Oii Min. ltl lllt Clfflcl f/f 1111 '°"""" """ 1111 ....... Mf fOf" J111¥ n , 11711. TN• COU .. TY Ofl OlllANOI rtcordor of MW COlllllY. Tlllltl\lr' Wllil! ti f:ll 1.m.. 111 1111 COii""-'! of ... A..... .ii 1Mf 11 ...... JI, 1111 I t fl Im 111I1,
°"N"-111 "'· I ., lltd eeurt ••• tst111 If MAlll\"L AlllllWGTO N GEO. l'ltrtdllt.,,..,,. •n• ·~· 1111 Cl¥~ Cll'ltlr Drfvt W11t, In 111t D£S. Olclnld. """-"' lllilflllfll f/f II\ llWWIM -Cl!v of 111111 .Int, C1Hfor11la. HOTICI 11 HEllll!BY OIVl!N lo !ht Hrt1tm"', O.!M J111¥ It, ltn, Cl'td1"" If 1111 '°"" flllMd dKldtfll NOTICE IS HEltEIY OIVIN ttwt W, t , ST JOMH, 11111 •II WIOl'IJ ttovlM dllmt Htlf!Sf Oii I ...._, Hit. If 11: .. l'Clldl:
COl/f'llY Cler•. fM wlcl ~ tr• ,_,,td ht ni. A.M. Ill Mltll ~. ~. '81 OU1tY•A. URl"INTlll & lllenl, wl!ll 11W flKIUlry Wlldllfl, It! Cl¥k Cloltlf Or. W. 119 W. 1111 II.I
l.llll'tU Ille 91flcl ti ""·dirk ti t11t ""°"* Cllt' ot Slflt• Mt. Cwr!tY If or.._ Utl ~ ...... 11111111111 .wt, tf ID ~ 'llltrll• With ttott vi Clllfortlll, I 111!11 ... 11 ...
l",O. ... 17" ltll ,..,....,., 'l'WdWl, ,. .... """" IC;l(llM .. ""' ~ ............ ""' .......... ...._ C.W. _, dlf'I ..... tt ,._ dflc9 11 1111 ''*'-"• ~ llwflll .,_ If Wit UllflM ... ...
•T•h .,,...... -11.0Y S. OIOlllOANO, lilt Nt1'111 Milt! 11 #It rl9flt, tltlt IM Mtw9t "' llW-. flrt l!l'ftt, 111111 A111, Clllttrl'lt. ""'lcl'I 11 .... "*'""'"' M1ot I" 1111 .... l"*llllltd Ol'tllOI C..t 0.11¥ PIMI!, 1111 Pita If Ml-of f!lt ..-...~ ~ ~. er M -" """"'
JUIY 1"' If• 2), 1'70 , .. ,. r. 111: IM'ltn Mrt•t111,. .. tht MM!t •t m1Y II _,.,. .. Mil.,., MN
STARS
Sydl'l1y O'"'" It •111 of th•
wotld'• 9r•1t 1sh-•l•t•~· Hit
colu'"" 11 0111 of th• DAILY
PILOT'S 9111t f1•fur••·
.... .......... """"' ,_ lf!Onth1 tltevllll\, wllfl kCt\191 ......... .,..
rtw '"' """' Mlollc""" " tfllb Mlkt. c.Mti. Otltd J\11'11 2', lt11. 0.JM 11 Soni• AN, Ctllforfllt, M 0.Yld IC. OldlttJ ), 1t10. •xMvtor .,, ... Wm J~f5 A MU&ICI(, ....... ,. « lilt t~ r.tmee1 dKM111t c-"' of or~. t..11"""1e ROY I. OIOll:OANO ly C. A. 111•1'111111, 0""""'
1111 "'"'~ Mtl~ ''"'' o...iee. Mu"'""' a .... Sto"ll Au, C..Hltnllt '"ti l"lll!llilf'I A""""' Ttl1 lnl) f.l,_IUt fl' Ill Slrttl
Alltrlll'I' 1tr lltcwltr Sit!'=, (1111, "'" !'============::::'.I Pull!l'>lltd Or-f C°"t Dtll'I' l"!k>t, Pu 1""8 I.HI/Ill ... di 0111¥ fl!lot ------------------------------------------Jilnt JO •1111Jw"1, U, JI, lt11 11•11 ,hllY ,, I._ ti, lt1' lhJ.ii
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' DAll.Y 'llOT '""""· JulJ :u. 1970
1'foney's Worth
OVER THE COUN.TER ·Complete-New York Stock List
LEGAL NOTICE ,.,,,,.
C•RTlll'ICAT• 0 1' -DJSCOHTINUliMCI
0. USI ANO/Oil AI AIUMIJO•IHT 011 llJC,ITIOUS NAMI
THI!' UNDl!!llSIGNEO C10 1191".tlf (trlllr
11\.oit, ~" .... MllY 1. lf?t """" (MM'il 10 clo bualMll -rtle fldlllOln llffll ,..!M Of l ... 11 PRINTING ANO VARITYP·
ING llf 16'A 1.-U, Cott• .!MM, c.nflJnlle. wl\ldl Minna .,_. hw~rff
_,...."" tfle '°""""" """°""" wtaot .,.,_ In fllll l.fMI pi.c. ol raldetlu
•••• , tvl ..... -.wit: ~ A ·-· $r., 7ll' Tut.1111 A-. ,._.. ~ Clltton'li..
Tllofl\A A -.U-, Jr~ 2$2 E111
ltfll Strett. C.'9 '°""' Ollfomll. Ctrtltlt1tt tor traM.ldlOI\ of lll,l11Mh
ulldef ..... •bow• ~lllou• J'la,..., '"" ~Yll ., ""'bllullon """'°'' -Ot'I fl It Ill the ortkt flf rtle CQll!ltv C lolrll ., °'...,.. c-tv. U1111w "" "°"'11-,, StdlM t4'M ef h Clvll Codi.
WITNESS -Nnda lllb ttncl llY ef J-. ltl'll. n.cm.1 A 1._, Jr,
~A.S.umeSt.
Pllllll...... Or-(oaf! 01llY li'llert.
J-..... JlllY '· , .. ,,, 1'111 llU-10
LEGAL NOTICE .....
ClRTllllCATI Of IUSJllll
llKTITIOUI llAMI
Tiie 11ndt"ltnff lllo certify tM, .. _.,
""'°...c.flllf f bullMU It 1 .... l f110tfM.lrtf,
FoUfli.111 V1lln, C•Mtornl1, u~ flit
UctltloVI firm nl<M el HOltGETOWN
CLEANl!'lt5 1t'ld 11111 .. Id lll'M 11 c..,..
HMj:I of tM ll)!kiwlne ""'OM. '*'!OH Ila'"" '" f\!!I •nd ,,_ ., tttll:ltnt9 ••• ii lollowt' ...... rl1Y11 L. t t'ld Wllllam T, ,.,,...,
Jt,, 11at1 N-ltf I.II.. Ht;ll'll"9f0tl
flffd'I. C..llfortil•. o.r_. June ft. 1m. Mir!,.,,. L ltrn Wlllltm T, a.rt'f, Jr. Slelw ol C.lllOt'ftLI, Ol'alltl C°""IYJ Oft JllM a, lf7'11, Hf-mt. 1 N611,.,
l"lltllk '" end tor """ s111e, H•-llV •-•14 wnn1m T . .,., Mll•llm L.
&•rf'I' Jr. k_,. tro t'NI ti) M !hi
--Wl'ION -· ••• 1t1.1bKt1btd to lh1 wltflln ltllln.im111t 1nd 1cknowledt·
eel thlY titKUtttl tlle ,...,._ (OFFICIAL SEAL!
GllM H. t l,,,.,...r1Mn Hoi.r'I' l"llbllc.C:1lltort1l1 l"rlndNI Ofll« lt1 Or•11tt CWftty
M'I' Cerftft'llUkl!I fq,1rn
J-.. 1'7• l"ultllllMd Or1t111t COi• 0.11'1' l"lltlt, JllM _. 1nd Jt;IY 7, 14. 11, 1t1' llll·ll
LEGAL NOI'JCE , ....
tl!OTIC:• TO CllOITOH IUl"•llOlt COUIT O" TMt ST.\TI O" CAlll"OINIA •Cit TMI COUNTY 01" OltANGt ,. .........
1!:1!1lt ef IVA l"EAlllL LAMB, OKt"" ... NOTICE IS Hl!ll:EIY GIVEN 19 11'11
Cf'edltor1 of "" ..... ""'"" cll«denf !'Ml 111 ... ~ MYlnl citll'fll H •l .... 1 I~ Mkl ~I IN '911111M fO flll! "*""' wltll "" ,..,..,..,., \IOllCIWI. ltt
llw office .. "" (tef'll .. !I'll ttleYe
..,titled '°"""• .,. to "'"""' lfWftl. wltll ,.,,. __,y YllUdltR. to 11w 1111-
defsltlllll ,, !fie ottic. °' hll '"°""""' llOY s. GIOltDANO. lOlO Norrll Mlln Slf"ftl, S.nt1 At11, C.Dfortil•, wtlldl i.
"" •Ila el b!.1$1-of #le undertltMd lft 111 1Mlttn Nrtlllnl"' to flll .Sit"' ot .. 111 lleetOeftl, wllhlt1 ~ "'°"'hi
1Utt the llr1t P11blle1t1on If tfll1 P1tlk1.
O.lf!d June ''' 1t70. LnH1 lrYln L11r
E~Kulw ol fl'it Wiii of Tiie lbo'<ol Nmed ftcllftnt ltOY S. OIOI OANO
'"' ,..,,,. Mlllt ., ..... 1an11 A11a, c111ten111 nm Tlf1 cno 1'1·1'611 A1*111Y fw lf:XtcVMI' l"ublllhold 0r.,,... '°'" 0.llY 1"11111, Jvnt )II 11111 J.;IY '· U, 11. 1t70 lll0-10
LEGAL NOI'JCE
Antique V ehicl,es
Profitab'le Fiekl ~~·!!!l'! ,· .11.
-ID''T~ l:J! ........ "::' ... ........ ..... N::i ~lrt l: H~ Y~A:J ,,,.1no ~ .. \. .. i¥ 4" ' It•• '-!. lll'i't 't'2 ~~~~~a'
Lel's siy you'vt watched produced cars with ho tt;N.,~ • .-'7. F,iG'r• ~ 4! " 001t ~l ':ft'ID.l,d ,,r,.;-"'L'rr~ (ci. ~ ·= "'~ E~'1.v~1
ll'i't q; Lnll::v. ~ n~ $1 ·; i.. '~ =:~, :n.·
the antique car buff who lives hiStorlcal Interest -cars ~ ~'lttu11u .. Ft!.., WF lll m " ~ .... .,.. •Iii '"'"' ' 1'Vi ~~1~
next door buy up a steady which would bring no more wo:.::f11l•t1;:! ~:;:,1r; '~ ,Hi .. ~~. ,. rm :~w ~ta lt'i't t!f .. ra,~
procession or old, run-down than $3,000 If they were put ~~~",,,;~ .. , '~:; ~:l"~rnt 1#:t' u~ ~ 1:i..t'' 1i 1~ J°':-,.."' 11 J1,1,, ~~c;e, 1•10
Due1enbergs, Auburns, on the open market the nui :'.':::*11;n~1~11 tn !:i'r's.. •"" :"" ,,".-::,., J1~1f1t :f.::~s 1114 'lu ~~loCni•
Franldina and 1-0spano Sui:as da.v... ~11:11 •\-~~ 'E :"' ~ :&:v c~ l~~ ~ i;' fi~ I"' i~l Ir~ i."
for 1 oouple of lhoth~ Get the advice of tstabllshad ~t..Md 1bl:f.ktc1l ._ ?! i~ I~ §fr•~ 1lv. 1t 111n o: i'1i J]'tt :;W[~"
dollars eadt, tinker wi uEm dealen on types and prices :_ ;:::= 1 tm"P ~ m R• s~~ 1z1t .t~ ~:ntc~ 11,., t1. ~ t..~ .'v'f.
evenings after work, and nd 11111 111t o.v. Prices rtn11.1 10\li nv. 11111htU c 1 °l\; r1W":t11 o 1f\ ""' A ~ ~ -·II ~m aft•r '"·y've "--n before you spe. yOUr money 11o t101 llW':iuae •• Svc ov. ui~ 11:111111 El 14\t uw; ,~,ob Ii "" "" A\I 1 1""'" ll"P Ul'CI ll'C'I: II h rUcuJ rllllt ft'\oltkllD, Alr<'ft 1\, 1'6 !tYCI! Sii ,. 101 r I H ""' )O\l!o A i' restored for $lO,OOO to 115,000 -or, u you ave 1 pa ar ft'l~•lldt'Wn IH" c:om-KLMt k 1" 11. ;•vm ~D u~ 1'\l!o = /"' •a A.1.1 .
car Jn mind, get a ..... olcssional T.st1ot1,.,, ,~ '"' 11:1L1r:r :.~ :\: 111['L:d' !t\t L ... T~m1 Fo ... "!,_ ~1ll"s1~i' l!pieCC! ! Al. I "' Mr Corp ~ 41'1 •ltt .. l !~ p I~ u~ u~irtc l' \:; "'I "",1~"
You've watched what began appr.uaa. . ~flf'1~ 1iv. 'Ill ~tZi, r~ sU' Ii:~!{ sr: ~ i'i\'I ~~ ~1b'i'1 2l1~ 21°" ~J~ift' 40e
••• Profl.tless hobby tum 1·nt0 Before you lure a nN\.o AVM tP 10 10\.'I , .. .,. w ~'""'ff~ 11:0bi'n ~ 1• 21 .~, "~I '" , A co. 1.• . r• v Aberle In '"" tlllo lob ll:llb J I Jto111ton JU. '"' r:-, ~."" 11 '!" Am11Sin l '° a lucrative, moon·lighting fess1onal car restorer, con· :r.i1111E1 ft.! 1U' '"" ~\t ,":t I =: frtJ J~ 2Jl'I u 1!-~L ~"' ~"' ~\~' ,;~'°
Operation. •·' now you're sider the fact that many now Af' 1no111 '~ l'A wt c iu '" ff" Ho ,, •• ..o o PtnP 21 11i.:o ""'Hiesl .r."' •N gl f ., OOO A rbrn F tt4 t"1o ra:j.'' I ~ Uer l\~ ' llhl SY f '"" Aft'llH llf~.30 v.·onderlng: "How might I get are ctiar ng rom ..,, to A~ H J~ •14 ,. sc 1 '"' li'l4 n1n " l"i} 4 VIII llld 2 21 M1rF1ur .ao
into tlili profitable. f~ld?" $30,000 for their services -~ wr;: f~ ~~ G::.en 101 ITv. ll f"'~~,in f\< fit ~!k'.0s. 1~\t 1~'\l ~ "~~nn ·30
in many cases, rnort than :1'0a~~· 1~ 1~ ~!1 ~ '!~ 11~ ~ .. ·~ ,j~ 1~ ~~~onJtl! ii'"' 1l" ~·::J"r.J: ~~~ J::i~. ~;:~~~~ 0~r: you're likely to get back ln :I~.,~ ~~ !~ r:iJ ~~ :>': :~ k~l:t': ~ 1~ 1~~ ~:?,~we: l™ \1"' ~r.;•.:; ffs
Vlnta-Car Store in Nyack, a resale. z:i~"'n 1~ l~ ~~ocJ."' r' ni. ~r:'1~ 1~ 1lt: ~~~""' ~ ~ z:'.s~""1.10"° O¥ • A 1!1 Lib J\• Jn HIMYI" S It 1f'4 _,.,. \8 l<Ai s••l'I HG Im 1' ACrySllw I ... New York, who pioneered Don't attempt a ma1or Am EJo• ... ,,_ '5V.1t4.1v1n In 1"1 1•\ c G•11 •Vt ~ 't' " l'j!. AmC"f'•n 1.n • . b If Nft Furn N 6""' K11'1•ed F !ti' 20\-'t ffn U11 •1V. •v. • Tt Am 0111111 1 retailing in this field, and restoration JO yourse on an A 0...111 ..,~ .a Kl•tt \1t 'M Jl4 Mndal'I 6 , .. wHtt R1 • • AOl11t11 .• . · I Am In.cl 15\l 16\.'I H~ nl l'• tl<I mf1~· M 6 "W1lcl1rt1 I"' "' Am Dll•IV'•' Othf.r Car buffs }1Ve been in• expenSIVe antique Cat Un ess A Mldlt1 t t \'i Hiii Yn .m ;!;, '9.lld SI s 1 m w111no M 1 ~ 11'1. ADllll 1)1 .... ·-•~ Inf U • th hi hi · ed t ., sr Goer 1~ 2i,, H,. m El" ll ~I war U'• 1 ~uc11 I" 61/,i •"-AmE1Pw ,_ ... tc..i v11<"1nJ: Orma Y lfl t YOU are g Y expenenC 8 .. M r. pf S 4 Holobft'I 7!Ji 'lo '!:1E Tel )6'1 f ~ i:~rn /j,A }\1 m "'"' Enk• 11
past few months : it, and unless you have the ~::h.J:1\ }F! ~V' ::::'~ G1 31,1~ 11:f! :u11Gsg~ 11!:: ,::i, w~l: ,.,: f.i! :~~ftl /,tt,
-Read a n t i q u e car near-irifirute patience to tear ~~~:" 1.!; ~~ ~ ~::ik ,f;1 ,,~ ~" r:~1;w: ,f.' 1~~ :Z1~1:'h n; 1114 :t~!n'rf'~
magazines, catalogs and the thing apart nut by nut, !~:~ ~ Jtt 3~ EH~' Gp• 1l:Z j11¥t i: 11:r$"' 21 °" l'l;?~~~i.,,Pl: ffi ~ AmHoii .10 ooo~. to find out what model$ and put It back together -~r.•, ""•P l!~ !,!'h ... ,.," ,',''• ,~,"•'•• 1111 HPd 11~ fl\~ 1!)'.•lot1t w 11v. 1•'" ~ = ~so1 A'll ,.. tr. ,,,. .,., ti ., lt•lt Sir IV. t rdnY E 1li ~'\'I Aft'\ Holp .14
art available at what prices. replacing or reproducing ~Cc ~i ,k. ,!~ r~ AJ~ ~ t•4 ::!~tT" .so
Study such "bibles" as Hem· every single part as authen· ~~d 51_, 'j~ ~ 1:: ~'ic \~ ire A.Me1c1: ~~
ming'.s Motor News, published lically as is hum.Mly possible. l:~·~.inr 14= '!~ ~.c:i, o :;: ~v. ::r.,~!•l1G
in Bennington, Vt. and the (Some buf!a go so far as •,•,',~, ~ .. !.':. ~~ 1,• -"",', '"• ,'~~ MUTUAL ~'~~1~2
Sunday New York Times lo buy . o Id· fas h Io n~ d t~~ ,.. p~ ~ 'l~r·!~;n 1/~ 1f~ ~ Se~!~"'.J
classified seclion de\'Oled to aul~1ve up.OOlstery sewing =~llT.111 ?l~ fl~ .~: 1:· pf n fl~ ~mt::~ ~:
antique c11rs. m11chwes wh1c'1 themselves &11m tnd s 6 n11Kt . 1 '"' FUNDS ,'•m"••'•' tn.xi 6trtt H• 3' 0 Ion U ltVt U\~ 1 -Join local antique-classic need restoration before they Bf'' Lib '° •1 I• Sou111 »"tlo 21...., :~s57,,f1":!J
car clubs and attended meet! can be used.) And, naturally, g\~PISo: u"' u~·, 1:= [ ~:Z f ~ ' s~111r 1.611
::It Which seasoned enthusiasts only authentic vintage color l1il~hr HI ri~ ~t: j:;n Wil ~~ 'l 'Ji ~'f'& r.:: Wt'
bring their prize specimens schemes are permissible. f~111at~1 I~ j~ Jfff.i'~dl .:z ~' 1Nvl!s"T1NG !nY co.t. 1 ... w.u ~~~!1 2:tt
ho . 8,,0i11e C tU 1014 Tlll'ltll p 11 11"'-COMl"ANllES 1nv Guld J. 1 1,11 AWW!flf 1.25 to compete for prizes, to b-Recognize that to restore &oor Ali I~ IS~ 1(11Ht 51 5''A 51 HEW YORK {AP) nv IMtc l· l 5,U AW.;\'' I 15 -~ nd hor -.I """-llol C•ll 1 N 1(11151 flf 17 II -Thi lollowln11 -lnYn 901 .t4 ID.II ,.w ltlt l.G 11VU a to se tr ...... e. ''"'~ a car .,...._rly you must have Brld sn 1t ~ K11111r ,, u,. 1111ot1•. N1>11lled DY 1n.,e1tors Grou11: Aft'\ WK
lo f I ts h Id II r•vr-. . 9r111 Sc• l~l'.I 15 Kiit Grn Sii. tllt M11i-I Auocl· lOS ndl l .;it J.6' Aft'lll'Oll .M co r u even are e a nol only the ability bul the 8,...n Ar 1 111i K•v•ft'I J'" l>..:. 111on of S«ur111a M111 1.4' t .u .. ft'\1-e ·'!' •• "· -•m-at var1·001 f . . 8•1nh 81 u v. 1Jtli" Keer T 61• '"' Oule•1. fll(., 1r1 ,...Cit l.U J."2 Ametek -over uic .. v ...... , costly actlihes: a garage and &ucke., 1~ 1 K•ll•" 1~. ,N 1M ,,1ce1 .111 wti!d'I s1oc11 u .oo 1'.l1 .M.P 1ne .st "-f ••-th I Bernuo 5 lJ"" l ICtll...., 151111 •v.i. !MM H(llrlHa S11ec1 1.61 f.:W /.MF Inc ,ll(t u.iues O un:: year. e proper too s. §'c Leas •{lo 5\1. KeuU e IV> l\(o toVkl l'llYt been v1r P., s.10 t .1t .,,,.Pt~ c.,ro -Learn "· b a I j c In· 11 w sv 2' 2,.., Kt"tl Fib 11~ n-. l!Old lbkll or boi.rfhl Inv Jt•lh '.10 .ut Arru1N ,•,.~ u11: So go slow -and read rr.c:o 12v. 1m ken c'" •'·• ' 11lkedl Mond1y. brti 15.56 ,..o.1 ""''" . ·~J ts f I 10' t'q • I he C1110n M 61 ... ICevsl PC ''" 1 11.i Atk lw~ I.to J.tO An1oeoncl 1.900 &""en o va ue an 1 ue tomorrows co umn on w re t:•mM a '° •l Klno 1nt1 '"" "' Awn:1n 1.w. 1.n J Hric:oc:k '·• •.tl Andi t1acit ,-1-) and classic cars . . b . be ~nrad JI\ I" •111111 I' ''II , .... AClft'l!r1nv F11nd1: )af!Ae;ln "·'J 1'.f3 AIKIM"PNsv, ~
,.. ¥ g~ antique car argauts can 111 Ml!M 151;, 1 "' "rk tP l , Grw1t1 '·" s..M ",.,,,_ P:unc11; And Ct•Y ... v (g.n-ally speaking ··-b1·g f od tod 0 Sow ,1~ 714 KftlP Vol 11 .. lncom ''""' J.11 AllOllo 7.Sol 1.2' APltNCP ,2S
... ' UH: • OU ay. •• ln!A l'• '"' l(,..lllr iv. JV. ln111r ,_,, '·" I"' 81 II.Or H.h Al>COOll 1.171 ger, grander ones, b u i I t 1pTch 11\ ;p,i; LMC 0.1 ~ 1llr Acrv1u1 '.l1 •.n 111 62 1t.011•.11 "' '\"' 1rr Qe., I~ fl.~ Linet In "fil tiV. Affl!letd •. It '·'° us IU 1.1' 1.5 ARA ve.J,.-between 1925 and 1 9 4 2) . •rte Bl 2'>1 3 Lind lies " • Atur1e S.31 5.31 vs Kl l.ll l.'5 Arc•l•N 1nr G1t lt ltJ.11 t•M Wd YI F't Afl Aft'\ I' .Sl .56 us K2 ~-°' '·42 ArUllN 11t 2 S ...... ,,.,.11y th1's means the B nkAm . g'' •G ,,. "'" ·-on 14 2""', A l1l"e 1.11 '·'' u, Sl 15.14 H.n Ard! 0111 l !""" ' a er1ca 111 CID Ulo I'll! La;.;,,. M U'Mi lo"'o All!lll Fd I .... '·" Ill 52 1.71 '·U AtbPS.,C I.Cl car's make the model, its rari· inti~ 1,.,.. » uac1Y Ld i1 Nnuo '·'' 5.1• 111 $J •.01 1. 1 Ar11n1 os .20 Ct" Vl"S 11 1 7'~ l.i, COii 11!. , ... 1 ... Am BU!o 1.N J.10 VI Sl l>I j· An'hC051 1.60 ty, condition, engineering and (lllrnte 2 21fr Leiilll' G ll n Am ()win UnlYIJI POll r 2.N .1' Armco ltl'l.111
!l'llrt o ~~ 6\t uw11 BF nv. 1 I'> Arner Elllf"es1: K"'-lckb S.U 6.4'i Arm11c,• ,~. aesthetic excellence. 0 pen R d 11m L•• , 1.,.. Linc Ml11 .~ ,''•' ~111t •JS 7.16 ICnkk Gt 6.a 1.oJ Arm1tu _
t ecor S M1 Ind 1'1o ~ LODl1w .,. ncrne 7.tO 1.61 Lrx Gt111 1,7' 7."1 Aro Cor~ .ff cars -e .g.. our er 1, 11e1 u111 1211o ,3v. Loll uv ,,...' ,j'•lt w,.1 1 . .u 1.u t•~ llldl 12.l• ll.1'7 Arvin tnd 1 ~-nd to be 111 l!lr&I S1 S' t.oa Errn ~ 6.'1 lbetlY '·" .5.ll ~Id Oil 1.20 roau;,i.oc:rs, -te many ht ls1 s 107 110 8'LYnc,h c 11 """ S1k 1.0. 1.n LU• srk '·" " A14<1 Brew
t. I bl th thrl1I Pl fl f6 d GEi 12'11 U Am otv l.r.I •.30 Lllr lnw 5.t4 6,4' ......., OG J.jll 1mes more va ua e an J ,1,,-.1 1,~ •V; """I Rnf s\'i • Am "" s.D.i s.so Linc: N11 1.~ 1.1• AsM1 S1>t ',·:!
h dt .. ~ and COllpe! nc1•ea ses C !Ir U A ll'• tit.I ji;\1 lktl 6t 11 Am lnW •.5l 433 Ltn1 2.11 l.0. AWTrtn ..,. ar Op ;;.;..ans • tf•li U & 11•~ 2l'M Momr A' 1'• 1~ Am Mui 7.ll 1.02 L09"'11 S.yln; AllC1rEI o.~
Convertibles fall somewhere t tv Inv 1JV. 1• ~1n1n M l\11 !~. ""'N Gth 2.1• t .•1 C•Md 11 ,31 l1.n AIC11re ,,., , Clerk Ml 21 2'2 M•llO• C S l Am Pee un1v1ll Cll>lt I.SI 1.51 .. II lllchlld 2 'n 1.~t een these two I · d !l1vh>tl n• 1:i;. Mar Mtq I ""' Anchor Group: Mui 11.lj 1!.12 Alllitch l)IJ.7S 1 U'C w · Increases n earnings an 11n1 M•r ·~~ 1•1o Marft'I G• II'• t c1p11 6.4 1,10 Lui~ l•1t t .fl 10.1' All Rich "' l
Ca•-gori··· Any class1·c car d . 1 k-' h 1t11on o s1.1 s'"' M Brow• 21 •r orw1t1 , .... , •...s M•on• 1n 1.11 1.60 At1Rch p12ao ~ .....,. e p 0 SI S mat t:U t e krw Co 131'1 1.-.; Maul LP I Vi l IMmr 6.10 7.'5 M1nhtn ,,U f ,5' A!lai cl>lfT\ I
"hi.ch was cons1'd"ed a f f B kA · f&r o s ~ M•~tr o 11v. 1 Fd lnY 1.u 9.tt Mau Fd 9.1 4 10.02 A••• cw, per ormance o an mer1ca .:i•• ca " so Mc uv ,, 23 "l!i' 36.50 "'·"" M1s1 G111 '·•' 1G.:l!I Aiiscr, ;.."* m.s•-rp1·-ewhen"wasbullt c u· f th lod oleft'I e ru llliMed• G 'lll'>l4'h Aool Fo 6.t• 1,5&M•» Tr 1j:il"·"ATO ne .o&1 "' "'" •• • orpora on or e per en· ollin1 F , 10 Mtdlc H "' ''I.I Aooc • 1.0t 1.n .t.\llts -s 2.1$ A"'°'"' """ SUJI ill COl'J&dettd S0 by ding June 30 1970 •Ion Str 11 23 ~ed MIG »'It 21'~ Allron J.7' 4.0t /Mll'ler6 .H f.M A.;tomln 11\d ·"""' · 1 • .. nmc:1t n'h 13 Medi•" JO l0'4 ,.,,_, HouthlOfl: Mlfld Fd 11.u n . .-AYCO Cp .tilt ~~ated antique car co . Fl.dor tedlhe _six montbhs. f con-'"E ~~ ~f,1 ~\• S~'i ~~ '~ 'fil f,~ : i~ i:fi ~~f~ 1W 1!Jl ~~ ~~"
A car's -~..iel is all-im· so 1 a income e 0 re "" '"' ,{l 1~ ~""'"' GT 16~ 1fa a~'' 1:s1 ~]' ~:F ~C:.. ~:~ !:~ 1..V&t'pS'1.i':
nNU securities transactions of the ~';0c~ ~ ;"'~~:~al ~Vt 1l !t1eon 10.n10Jt MllUS GY 111.1110.11 A.lite Oii ,nt portant: Yoo can buy a fully· ho'"' f "' , 1 1"' 4 AKr , ~ ••• Knt 1.n 1.n Mu 0ma •.11 """ one·bank JU.Ing company or m: T':c ~ ... ~ Sc , '\'i ""' Giii •A1 5.JZ M11 <>n11n !·" t ."5 &•bdt; w '° restored 1 9 03 curved~ash Bank of America rose 6 per-::'Todl u~ ~ MnnT"'c: 11'-" 11~ =tt: '" f:JI ltJ :~: f'~t 11:~ 11;;, ~:r,~1t ti,
Oldsmobile runabout for $.1,500 t t 173 ~ 000 12 13 ontrta ™' 1~ ~ft'\ P'lf IOU 11~ BOl!CHI SI '·"' '·" NEA Mui .21 1·· 91IG ~a..ll today, bul a 1903 Stevens cen o '"'"' or , ontr•t1 n 1o N\ oor1 " 1\.4 • Bo.t Foti '·" , .. 1 H~r rlld l~ .13 6•,..Pn1 1~
Duryea or Mereedes may C06t per share after provision for ::'~ L 5JYt i~:z M1~·,~A :lt~ li~ t"°',, st ifJl 1J:Il ~:: ';;!, s .. , •.u l:"n:~ :f.~,s
loan losses I"' Yr n v.. Ul'I MtoTr ""' 41/i """ au!loc:k C•lvfn: B1lan t .11 t.N Bk of Ct! l .3' You $20 000 to 13 0 0 0 0 ' rwlrd II\; l,\lt Molch M 4\li YA Bulk:k 11.'811.n Bond f.St j·O? Binkctl NY 2 • • ' This C d ·1h rn Mot • 9 i;;io1 Club I~ t ut tend" la.tt 1$.27 OIYld J.50 .ll eenk Tr 2.M However, a car's age has little om Pare WJ , .. , Mh 1~ 1r. Muellet 6._ 1•.t 01vtd l.1• l.45 Orw111 7,•1 .10 &irbOU 1.sa1 $68 88S 000 12 01 h ron Co 19 311\\ ~.~trill l's !ff )\lo NelW S t.16 t.tl Pf Slk J.77 •,?1 Bard (:Jt .25 to do with its value. Many • • or · per s are t1,11ct1 1t """ s vl'I' LE 1 v. 11 NY vni u.11 n.~ l<Koin '·'l •.1J BK1< 1 .,
pre--1915 cars can be bought per share last year, adjusted ~L~ IU ;," N~frlQLI~ 11~ 1ffi ~8~~.''" /:~t ':ll N~1~!1,111 t~1 Jl: =::~ '~!·'°
today for less than $3,000, to the same basis under the 't• O: :~ ~ ~:'tJ: 11 i 1fl; ~mfnv t!f 1.ll ~:..,": ~~ 11:~ 1l:" f:ir ~ •' 1 new Federal accounting rules 0.11 01n lt\i )II Mc~ t1t 1,,.• l~ p11 Sllr s.11 s.11 New w1• 10.6' ll.6S 8,1111n "2JO •ilile many Of the greats • 0.lltn I" 2'' ~ Nit 'EOU'f I ,,.. nl Shr t,n 10.62 Ntwlon U.111.l.2] &.lllKl\Lb ID
Which Were manufactured dur. De~·, •• 'mcre .... ...i .. r=: per 0.Yls I'd "'" s" NII G&O \511\ ' •Ml ... 1'11nda; N!ch $1rg 1.21 1.21 ButTL•b ·10 r¥¥ 1..:1 .,<>C\I u... -DIV Mir 13\lt 1~~ Net L~ ~ n \'i 81l1t1 t.t• 10.M HO<"CISI IJ.11) ll.to 8Nrlt111s j
•A• HM ing the 1920's and '30's are cent lo $23,353,866,000 com· g::-i~ 2tw. tr ~:~ :te~ 11\tl 1il ~o:;,,,si 111 !::; ~':."!' l~ iJt t:: ~:! ~, 1u~~~1fo•11: Tgo~~;o~~o~~' unavailable, no matter what pared with $21,926,995,000 at R:l~~ ~".: .!:~ n':l ~:l ~ l~ i~ J'f:F~ B~~~ r:U ~'~ms :i:.~ :l:ff R:t-'O~~ 1i
STAT• OI' CAlll'OltMIA l'Olt the cond1't1'on, lor leM than mid year 1969. •""•'•' '••'"••'•Iii ~·,•, 'o™E 1,!~ ,L C1Dll 5.lt S.61 O'Neil ............ ,."",,A~, .7Sb lNlf: COUHTT 01" 01;4NCIE N G """ l.~ '""'° •.18 7.S2 Oi>oenh •. ti 6 fO ~.-el .SO N• . ......uu $20,000 to ll0,000. In other June 30 figures an-:..:ft'le ~~ ~ H1~t!'~'" 11'11 U F•n• s1.u".~' ODii AIM 1.•l ':ff l;~~~H1·~ E:~,=~1T ~N~~l~~o~;:..s_ •k• Avoid antique car auctions nounced tcxiay by President :C:'"1~r 1l~~ 1i~ ~\:\: t n ll f'i:r :::: J:ff i!f. ~~d ::tt 1~:\1 R:U rncr .61) ~.:i~~1.;"ot1s,,:e~.v n:::N~~ -until you learn your way A. W. Clausen, total con. ~i•,fM r' t~ ~~;,r11lt~ i"' !~ ~f:f~1 : "·"11·22 ~=~~ tv ::~I :::J :::If. <;c'l"
' ' od th. f' Id s J . t I'd led d ,.. • •• -a··· oii ,~. u. Eau!Y l °' l.31 P1 Muf l" l " .~, l/11t 111 peno•tt i'llYI ... ~II ft'll HI n'I 8roU IS It . ayS UrlS : SO I a resources amounte ti 01 141;, fS llA Ge• 11\lt lf'-" F'und t :tM t.U Phlle I '.'l l :!2 a::::l~t pl ::.,.,."'!i~:" ne:::..ivt<I~ •. "~ "I've seen people bid more to $27,617.296,000, as against ~1nN6 1~~ 1?"' ,,.: ~~~~ 1~~ If~ P..7or':: ::i? :::~ ~it:;"1"' I'.W, !:!1 R::::lf :.4~: ~111::;r~·ou~. :'toe:~~.·~~ than $10,000 for ugly, mass-$24,927,503,000 a year ago. ~r·i~M l~v. lf-4~ ""frl ~ l .~ ~vea'rr11 i:lf #:11 :~ E::l~' 5.J·'I.1' BIMI ~~ 1n1 lllCllUrY voudllft, to ,.,. ~1----------------------------IE"IC wl l"l ' lo Wit 11 nv. oinmc: 1,t 1 1.11 Plon F t.62 10.Sl :=: In 1 t 11\t llfn or 111 Ito !n' s~ I'd 1' ot kin 11 ''"' ems &d ,,Ol •.38 Pl1n lnY 1.11 JM Ele<lrw PllO e;r;.:i.":" a' SC11n>1c11. ~~ w~~" ~= E~ i:: ~~ 1~ :W~'" ,ti~ im II~ ~B l:ll l:Y 'rb<,!..~llftd,•~ ... 11." :~ ca;: Suite m. Ntwll>MI Beedl, C.1lfornl1, El l"t•EI 1~\ 12'lll ~! NI\ 5\11 ~ -AS 1.11 .,,, N E<I I·" •. ,. BltThr!.,1:~ """lcti i. llw Piie• ti 1!1111-1 llf 11111 E!DI SYSI 1!"1 II\ ~...C...I 11\'I UY! O!"llOlll 5."5 S.t1 N Hor 1 ,TJ lt,U <i;ltQlc ,.. lllldlrs19ntd In •II 11'191itn tt11e1n!nw Elder 11 I 6~ PEt · tlrl ll If lllltll &d ut11v111 Pro Fund 1.l'f 1." &I ! Joh a .... -.... of ••1a dladllnt. W111'11n 0 El Nit. l l\iJ .... , Ir (Volo '6\ii om• Fd llf\IYft •rDYOnl l..&t '03 .. , ' L ' . ' "' c 'I ·~ "' !'~ PIC Alli' 5 6 !~" j·Jt l.'1 >urll•n 1.45 t:n =~ HIUI '•""··-... ,'",,. •f!tf" !ht llrtt •u•llc.tlon range 0 u nty E CICl>V 11' \lio Pe~ FaE t7VJ 2tl'J oncord .11 t.11 Puln•m Fund1: 1111,.. Be~ 1·~ .., Eltrum '~ 51/o Pekco to j'" '" onsol In ).31 1,15 Equfl S.N '"" lobbll eni1 Ott.II Jllrit 2'. lt1t. f!.! C Sn 2'1t 3\11 Pancol 't 2\11 Oftlu I~ 1.~,. l.15 Ge-ore 11.ll 12,tl Boelne Co _. w1m1m Vldt Schft'\141 II 0111 SlVi S3 P•rt• Or S~ .SU ~o.,n Ml '· 6.22 Grtll !·~ !·°' BolaCia 25b ExKUIO<" ol 11\1 Wiii Moaul J•A , ' P11li;w H hi l\'J °"I Gift '·' '·" 1ncom ·" .G Bond Ind ,6) r. ... •tl!M nllflld •1G1C1111I to ft'IPS 011 JO\'o lOV. P1ul1v P ,,,. j1olo ore Ld 11,11 l•.10 Invest '·!! '·ll Elacl!Mlh 11I W"' •••• ' •• '.' ntf"9Y t UV. 2f P&Ylllt 7'\t VI MY C~P 9 Jll 10 61 Vl118 6 l -•·· ~ 1!'111 ... At l~I l"" Petti Mf t•~ I~ rn WOIY 0u11o>vlll Vove• s:4S " Boru"" 1.LV 1•1 w .. tt.M Dflff, Sv"-S2I Enn!• a , PnrlM T ui., 20 rn WO.I unav1U 111.10 TK!I l,71 :s. :or,~":•r 1.75 ,._. ._., C1Hflnlll HUI lnlwl)I 11:. 7 Pl E .... ln 1• ffi Vo/I M Sl.J1 51.27 leftre l.u ,:t.I ns ·'° Ttl! CTill 1*711' LAX, 0/\ c;,,rp l'l l"e Pa GAW 1 -Ill 20 og1w•ro Gr-: 111ntrel U.21 n.:11 &,OI Edll 7.21 Attln>IYI IW •""* •vii OH 7'~ )~ Ptnn l"IC 1'141 ' Kai '·" 10.lt ROMon1ft J.09 '-'' outn1 ll'IC l"llbtltMd 0r ..... CNl1 0.llY l"llol, • rl• TIC p~ ,,~ Pe$11 WI ~. ,,.,. ltwr 10.41 ILJt Slftrn Fd •.50 4,,, l~r:.:i~lr : June :11111\d J11lr 7, , .. 11, lt10 11N-1'11 Fl Ceco ,,,_ 1\• 1"'1rollt :JI Jtl~ Dftll1 $,&S l.Jt kllullr 11 ;;1 U.ti o• O .,'; .. ' F•b T~ ' '\»> Pftll:dQ ol " 5' g•t•tl 11.7111.n kU<!dtr F11'1Ch: "'
LEGAL NOTICE
I
I
• 30 minutes to Loa Angeles International
• Dependabl e DeHavilland.s, Instrumented like the big jets
• $10.80 one way (includes Federal Transporta~
lion tax)
S1nt1 An• to LAX
5:50 AM 12:55 PM
6:50 AM 1 :45 PM
6:55 AM 1 :50 PM
7:20 AM 2:50 PM
7:50 AM 3:20 PM
8:50 AM 3:50 PM
9:15 AM 4:30 PM
9:50 AM 4:45 PM
10:30 AM 5:10 PM
10:45 AM 5:50 PM
11 :00 AM 8:30 PM
11 :50 AM 6:40 PM
12:15 PM 7:25 PM
8:10 PM
8:20 PM
LAX to S1nla Ana
7:05AM
8:00AM
3:05 PM
3:35 PM
4:05 PM
4:10 PM
5:05 PM
5:30 PM
5:50 PM
6:35 PM
7:25 PM
7:35 PM
8:10 PM
9:00 PM
8:35 AM
8:40AM
9:00 AM
9:10 AM
9:55 AM
10:00AM
10:50AM
11 :30 AM
12:10 PM
1:00 PM
1:35 PM 9:30 PM
2:30 PM 10:00 PM
10:20 PM
CARGO CARRIED ON ALL FLIGHTS
Some flight& do not operate everyiday. For com~
plete Information and reservations, call your travel
agent or Golden Wost Airlines at (714) 636-4071 .
Golden \\lest Airlines
TruligJRm
F1lrlld T 1 l'~ Pftll Sub 161~ 111'1 '"'' t:d t.1' 10.n lnl Inv JJ,).I n.St B0•[•01~Y tit 1 OrlVf lv 10.M 11.l'O I PCI H,111t72 ' ~el .l?t
Don Veitch
Appointed
Manager
l'•ton&lioW•rd: 11 12.'1 1 .61 e811WY H•lt 1 811111 l.tl t.ll corn st 1.n .n r11wr Gt ·'° Grw111 t .• 10.IO Stt.;rllv Fvnlli: B~trnUG l.12 lncom .S,!7 S.16 Eouty 2.s1 t.1' &rown Co !P«I •&J 1.11 •~Yest '·" 1.11 e, .. ns~''' ·" Joe~ 11.1111.lJ Ult•o 5.3' J.M wnS!lo.-I.SO lbtr.! 10.51 11.SS jtlec Am ,.01 1.,7 1rvn1wk .10 ore! 10,21 11.IO el ~S 1 ,11 U.'11 it<:'l'Et 1.~ ntrVY 10.16 10.7' Sfnll G!ll 6.jS 1,:M Bulkl Co .&O '"f'' S." S/lam Fd 1. t 7.11 Bl>lkl Co Ill" S <1vl v 1,1/1 1.n Sllfar At 1•.nf1S1 Budo<!l In .64 E<1ul Gtll I '9 I.JI ~~ Ot1 n 12.17 u:11 8.;!fforp l.10 Elitl l'/112.U Side ··'' f.IXI 8ulov• W .ilO EYfflf In 1~.1111.11 Siome Fulld1 : Bunk ilt•ft'IO F·D CIP '·)6 '·1' C•tll '·'' 1.a1 BunkR pfl.30 F•lrld 1.6' 1.o111 lnvtil t.U '·'' avrr Ind 1.10 "''"" &u 1.11 f.11 Trv•I 1.'9 ,.1t Burl Nor t.'!'e "' ~rth 10 . ..i 11.<1 Sm1111 I l.6J .67 Bur1Nor .•·• Fld IP 1.10 10 . .a Swn In! 1,!1 7,ff llurnd'I' 10 Fkl und 170'!:'1 ff .. $winy I '· 0 '·°' B1tr1"9n1 ,60 Donald D. Veitch, vice r1resi· Fld trnd 1•.0110.n Soffr Inv 12.00 n.u a11snunv .rat . r• Fln11'1Cl1I PrOll: $oec:lr1 $.!Cl 6.Gl dent of Western Title Guaran· o,nm l.'-' s.n srFrft'I Gt v""v•ll rnc1u.. l.'? ).i.t s11:e SI ]6.SG ll.50 C1bol CD .10 ty Company, Orange County ~!IC""' 4 •1 s.11 s1t~ft'l1n ~und1~ c11. F1,,.n1
D' . . . Yf/11 l.1( f.ll Am Ind '·" 6 13 C•ll•hn Mna 1v1s1on, was appcunled county F1!F "' 1.u t.n Fk!uc s,:io 5,10 C•m~AL .£f•
boa Ftlln 011 6 ll 6,11 Selan 2.61 2.tl Clft'lltS~ 110 manager at a recent rd F11 1..01~ 6.56 1.1t s1e1n Jtoe ,..,,., CdB~w ,,;.
f di ti Fsl lnS1-7.ll 1.0!I B•I U.S1 ,_,. (d P·c·J?O o rectors mee ng. F11 Muni 1.u '·" ca11 ~ '·" &.ss i··~iJtd ·10 F•I NII 6.05 6.61 Sloe'< 10.iit IG.60 t BJ 1 Veitch joined We s tern ~" Sie•• :j0s1 n.,, ju• 1nc1 !·" i·" :~br11~ !~
IUe in F ruary, 1966, as ~l:' l,r;;t : . .z: :,_ij ,U"i{ •°-' t:fl .~:A; 1roP~a.tir s T eb Fie! C•~ $.}$ .. VP\"$! .10 .U i••!ltll .,
head or Title and E.~cro\\' Op-Ffld c111 l.•J l." Tead'I,. 1.•s '·" .~:Tc 1 ,·:&
P . II' I l'oundU .... 1.12 TK~ncl llftlvtll rrllfw~ ".o eratlons. r1or to estem, ie "°"'"' 1" •.n TM1>"°1 s.tt •.Jl ·~., 01 2;
servccl n1any years with a F'c1:tT'l Grt'•' '·" '1;::: ~~ 1::V: '~:U !k :~'J i ·'°'
'
·11 O • · Grwlft j/11 i.~ ren Ceo 1.lt t.l, 1 ll~ll; .tab I e COmpa Y In \'SrlOUll y,111 111 •. ?$ Tr1v £<1 r·" ,,n e:..lr 1'.20
cr.paclllcs and also scrv!!d two F,: !.f; l:!~ t~or ~f 111# 11:ll ~o ~""'
Year' a' vice prcs.idcnl and Fil tr.o.1111 •.l• t..11 ~~ inc J·'• 'lJ ,, • ..J'"J"·'? Fund ""' , :~ a.02 UnlL Miii .11 1.4 cllft 61A4.JO
menager or an lndepr:ndent &:!."'lee tt ~.~~ t~1·c~pru ~:!J I::! ~IM .JO
escrow CQmpany In Hunting· &i:.·~''s.c: J.).1 l.'11 u~~~ft'I F<Hlll!~~' '·'! ·~:1nt'\f 0J~'i
ton Reach Apr F s." •.51 1ncom 1 ,!111.1 eni ~5 1,11 • lt Fd !·" l,6) Sden S. ' t,«1 fflt t 1!1 l Veitch Is past president of ccm s1 • .u 11.11 ,,.,,.. •· 1 1.21 lftM w \·" frlhFO A S.llO !.ll Uf'd C1n 7.56 1.16 trtl JW 90 the Orange County Ei;crow '"' ind u.t• 1 ·" 11\\v• Ltne F11; '"' ~· .:"l A~socialion acllve S!J an af· ~:~~ ~:JI lo:n l~ln :::J l3 rr1~'1Y.60!! • ' be f h II H1m111on: S~ 111 l·fl •·~ trt.tted 111 flhale mem r o t e un· H.FI JA' 3.tl v .. c1s '1tl I l' FfnfR ~
Ungton Beach-Fountain Valley H!'°.:.,.. i:U t·ll ~=bt l: i :, 11ldllrn f''.Ji ~f\!Wll 1.11 •. ;; VI~. lndtl' ,fJ ( 1' l'lliMS I BQard of Realtors. • member ~ ~ •·n '·" v11i1~ ·"" 1,11 ~~v 1_..
of lhe Huntington Beach Elks ~""" J:~. tJ: :::~ ~ .1~:~ lflJ ~" ~.°'
l.odge. and on the Escrow H"ll!t,,,. 1~:lT 1l:~ wr~l~ln Yfi'1·D =trft 1, 'd 1 eo .,1_ 1 tMMl'ftfl '·" J" 1~, 'l· 1 . htft'\MY 1.11 " v sory mm1 ~" or ''"' ~r~r .. ,~ ,.ii T:ti' , ·~ \" Orange Coast College. 111 P: I:~ ~ff ,~,w t~l ;· .. 1 .r'J Ohio '
Veitch lives in llunlinglon ~:,~: t·:t i:~ :Zf~~ ~~ 1111 ~Jt°"T1t'
Beach with his wire. Carol, Ii ,rJQ i~ ':Y "!'~iJ~\r. 1~· 1l:12 ~~:~lf r" '1
daughter •• lulene. and t1,1,-o !1111 lf'md 1fY ,J~ ~/:.':\;1ri • j'Q ,·.& $·~~' ~
sons, Da\1id and I>c.rrlck. 1:WC'J l.if 11. :~t1 '" ,,, Jl ::!:1fv1f1.ur
1,
ltlarket
Sy11abols N.
•• "" !Mt\ """•M Hr "f"° ~
--~...--------
... ~ . 1970
I '
l,
DMl Y PllOt
Sol Zechter, president ot
Documentor Stiences Corp.,
Santa >Ana, announced that ill
• • Docwnentor" polnt-o(-1al1
systems have now betn m.
otalled at both ends o1 · the
continent. In rectnt weeks Ute
Santa Ana firm has made
deliveries ot production unill
to sites as (ar west as Los
Angeles and as far east u
Walbington, D.C.
Document.or S c i e n c e s
Corporation produces a pro-
~c:t whkh provides an WY·
t.0-ute, etlf-ccmtalned solution,
for tel~ data collection
and data process ing ap-
pllcaUon1.
'"" aystem •ta Jlself up !or _.,..,, ol the data
upon recosnttioa "-cod~
when tho documtnts are ln-
terted. Becauae of lts extreme
·~impllclty of ua, virtually no
traJnlng Lt req\dred for pre-
detannlned appllcaliom;.
New Broadway
Coostructloo II underway on
a ne.w M.5 mlQlon Broadway
department ttore 111 Oranae,
Calllomla,
Anchorln1 tho north end ol
Iii< new 61-am Orange Mall
shopping cenltr, the three.-
story •~-«>hdlUoned buUdtn1
ls K'heduled to open in Auguat.
1D71, according to Philip M.
Hawley, chalnnan, Bt0Mlw17
Department Stom,
I
\
'
-JI D~~ Y ,l'IUJT TutJdol, Ju~ 21, 1970
Trial by Fire QUEENIE By Phll lnterlandl Panel Bas Answers
Nixon Gets 'Goals' Study
Practical Training Via Setting Blazes
&aid I By RUl>I NJEDZIEl3KI
,,_., ...... 1111., about lht
Jn1-heal Ind pungent
-ol I house lire that coni beduplic1ted in 1 drill.
lt rlngs three alatms in a
fireman 's heart. s hoot 1 n g
adrenalin ln hls Veins and
making his '*k crawl with
excitement.
Flrtmen like to fight fires,
crpeclally tile thriUll\g rip.
roaring blazes. 'The only trou·
ble Is that there aren't enough
of them. So they set them.
Arson -in a legal sense"
-is eommitted by Huntington
Beach fire.men about .fO times
a year on old, abandoned
buildings that have long, ago
outlived their usefulness.
Kent Holder, 31, who drives
one ol the big red engines
for the Lake Street station,
occasionally gets 'to play
"firebug" so that rookie
firemen can • practice ex·
tinguisltlng the flames.
He says you havie to go
about it scientifically rather
th an just running around with
a match, looking f o r
something to ligflL
';First we look at the sur-
rounding area. lf there is
flammable material that ffiJ.Y
carry the flames to anotfier
stn.icture, it must be removed.
"IC a house is too close
to other structitres, or directly
under a telephone or power
Jines. we may have to pass
it up and bum a house
somewhere else," he said.
Fire M1f'9hall Carl Duncan.
S o m e t lmes, unexpected
lhlngs happen because the
neophyte firemen are just a
little too eager to please thelr
watching superiors.
"Frequently we find them
getting in a liUle too close.
I've actually seen ' the pla.stie
Jights on the fire truca
melted by the heat," said Fi
Capt. Fred Heller. "But \h•
certainly doesn't happen in
i!unUngton Beach," he added
with a smirk.
"Fire combat is not a game
of Mickey Mouse," eXJllained
Ray Picard, the city's fire
chief. "The men have to team
how to eat smoke and feel
~at before· they know what
it's all about."
He says there are tricks
to the trade, like now to p~
tect yourselI frOm blistering
and breathing properly when
surrounded by dense smoke.
"Soon our roo\cjes learn ~w
to -take very !iiort breath$.
You let the air float in just
Jong enough to retain con-
sciousness," said Picard.
Another method of ensuring
a sufficient oxygen supply is
to stay close to the floor and
close to the noule, Capt. Dun-
can pointed out. "We tell 'em
to push tfleir noses right into
the carpet."
In an emergency, he added,
a man can usually draw a
fresh breath by tucking his
head inside the asbestos coat
flap, where air is usually trap-
ped.
"You know, when you look
at all the toxins released by
a fire, theoretically, it's sup-
posed to kill you,"
Picird.
"And the men also have
to learn how to work wtth
radiated hea~ which c a n
blister a man before be knows
it. He has to learn how to
slowly rotile his body --uke
a pig on a skewer -so that
he doesn't expose one side
too long and burn himself."
None of these self-preserv·
ing tricks ~an be learned by
faking It, according lo
firemen. The training lire,
they say, is ttie best way
cf studying fin? behavior, the
way it travels through a struc-
ture and the effectiveness of
the equipment.
But becau.se they want to
do their part for ecology, Chief
Picard explained, t~e depart·
ment is slowing down on its
training fires. They discharge
'
"Well, you were invited, but who
invited your muse ?0
too m~ny pollutants into the---------------...:.. ___ _;_
atmosphere. says Picard.
"Jn the past, we have aided
ecology by removing blighL,
which is also an ecology issue.
Now it has to be a very
worthwhile project before we
proceed with burning," he
poin tftd out.
In approximately 18 months
the department expects to
have a. complete training
facility incorporated into its
Gothard Street station which
will use natural gas and
butane -two smogless fuel s
-in 1 simulated concrete
house which can be set on
fire over and over again.
When that project is com·
plete, Chief Picard promises
~is men won't play at being
firebugs any more.
Corona del Mar High
Honors 930 Students
Of 2,225 students who at-Martha Tilley, Slan Vermund
tended Corona del Mar High and William Vlergever.
School this year, 930 made Freshmen -Fr~ncis Boero,
a straight "B" average or Karen Jerger, Vicki Kem· merly, Stacy, Platt, Susan better during the s pr Ing Racey, Ly n 0 e Rosenberg
semester, it was announced. Lilliam .Valdes, Greg. Wallace'.
Among the nonor r o.l l Terry Watt and Michael
students, 57 completed the Williams.
semester with straight "A's." Thine •tudf!lb Who ,,,11111 ,11 .. ,,, .. These students are; or riet11r i11Ch.N11:
Seniors --'-Je•ry Blum M•~t Adams,5~~~~:1s Adsit, . '' • ArenMSorf, Debbie Arnold ti~!::J David Dunlap, Christine Gog-~f."°ld:~, Mlehtlt Arran•JI: P11r1c1. · M • ·1 ..... ven .. , ne... w11nam 811 eJ Linde g10, ar1 yn Grubb, Becky • •,111111. o;.0Ue1n l1nn lt•n.' El1lne
H Les!. Ki' U arnerd, Ttkl1 le•r, I( a 1h 1r1n 1
WASHING;TON '().P) -A
special White 11owie panOI bu
told President Nixon the
amswers' to the natloa's pro-
blems may involve a de-
emphasis on CQUege educaUqn,
tax s on polluters: a a d
development of new cities to
lute residents from crowded
metropoUt.an· ar.eas'. ,
panel d<clared. Is the Jm.
poaltlan cf tuu oo polluters.
"In ttle competitive market
pli1ce, raising the price of
pollu4ion would tend to lower
environmental degrada!Jon, as
producers would have an in-
centive to use manufacturing
methods that put fewer
burdens oo the environment.
"And higher ·prices ·ror the
products that dirty the air
aod water would I n d u c e
households · to alter their
buying habli..• lht re"°"
stated.
Looking toward the end of
the decade, the panel forecast
the possibility of a one-stiot
blrth<ontrol device w h i c }\
could regulate tertility for a
ye a r : l h r ee-dimenslooal
television; an increase in
human or g a n transplants:
control ol the weather, and
the use of chemicals to
stimulate I e a r n i n g and
memory.
Althougll noting predictions
that tbe .11.s. populaiion may
be .stab1liz1ng, tbe rel>ort said
70 pelcent ol the tO<llltry"s
people probably will be con-
centraled on 00&-ienth or the
land by !he '\lld <ii the century.
And half the 'populatoo, con-
tahllng the most advanced and
most prosperous elellients of
the society, will live in UH'et
giant metropolitan belts -
State Getting Sticky
Qver Bump.er Stickers
Boslot>Washil>gtnn, Chicag<> SACRAMENTO (AP) -II
PittSburgti and. San Francisco-wasn't unfit bumper stickers
San Diego, the panel on na~ fe;Sding: "Ban DOT" ap-
tiooal "goals said in a 228-page peared on · state vehicles that
stalf report. Nixon W l '1 1 the General ServiCes Depart·
evaluate th~ r'P?ft during.his ment ·decided to get sticky
10-day. stay tn San Clemente. over lhe ubiquitous Smokey
Few firm conclusiens were Bear labels which h av e
offered in the .report, entitled routinely decorated state cars
"Towitrd Balanced Growth: for years. · _
Quantity wit.ti Quality .. " 1be Slate offi cials wouldn·t of·
panel said its suggestions JV(!re ficially acknowledge any con-
mtended to stir public debate nection between the new order
and generate concerft j n and the anti-pesticide Stickel'
Congress. ' but several did so privately.
The trend toward settlement "We juSt .felt It would be
of most Of the pOpuJatioit in advisable to have a standard
metropolitan areas can be . policy on bumper stickers
reversed if federal, public and since we never had one." says . Charles E. Dixon, General private institutions adopt a services Oepartmtint director. coordin~ strategy. t h e "Ou li I stud)~ grt>up said. Alternatives the~.~ew po cy is to disal ow
swing. State workers say most
o( the state's 30,000 vehicles
are decorated with the co~
troversial slogan: "Prevent
Forest Fires" and all must
be cleaqed oil.
''I dop·t know what it's all
about," said a Sacramento
employe. "To me .. it's kinda
ridiculous .. It'll take about .10
minutes· a. sUCket -pr0bab1y
have to use a razor blade."
"You gotta get any glut
off the bumper, too," he ad-
ded. "Or it'll turn black."
If two thirds of the state
vehicles have their stic kers
removed at ten minutes each,
the oost would rtM to about
3,300 .man:hOurs, or -at $4
an hour -$13,200.
The men readying a house
for a "burn" tnake sure the
utilities are rUsconnected so
that fires go the way they're
planned. "We don't want to
be surprised by any llaming
gas jets or dangling live
wires," Holder said.
Diesel oil, ignited by a
highway Oare is used to start
the inferno, since gasoline and
ether volatile materials could
flash back at the men, even
entrapping them.
Container Show
opper, 1e t e, Gregory :"·~~ 1(1r1n lec-ne•, T•.c:v Meeks, Jamie Peterson, Robin iiW1rn:~ha::'.™"1· Chris!! eenr11,
Steele, Tilomas Vanderpool, eer~rdkl .~,t;.:z.,;.~~."ef!~/'~ •• ~~'. Dan Wallace and Pa.....,,la •,~!t . .!' ndf;,••·, cr111 e11C11, Therne
might· include fostering the Dixon said the <> ff I c i a I
growth of' existing small cities, reason fol'.' lhe ruling was to
building new cities a n d keep the Cars with old stickers
generating growth in rural on them from looking messy.
areas. Workers' in state garages,
Regarding schooling, the however , say the Smokey Bear
presidential !tudy group said, stickers Wert es p e c i a 11 y """ ......... 1•0 81i11'1Pled, II: 1 n d ., "Many people feel .tha t too-durable .
Packers Exhibit Products
Wooley. ',."""", ."'GeoffrtY eour111H11, eennle ., , bol'"' 81Wle, Bob 801elll. Juniors -Marilee Allen Chrt.11 11r1e11orc1. M•rv erechl, Milrk
• > 8r-, WtflCIY 8l'Odlett. Lue1Dda Bottorf, Thomas ,c•1i.,eniwn, JICOb arown. w..,.ne n,..,,...., , ra...-11. llUdl• 8uel1J, Bonl'llt 8ut-e.
great emphasis js already "In my opinion.'' said one
being placed on post-secon-worker, "they hold a picture
dary education, particularly quite well."
The rookies, many of whom
h#lve longed ror months to
get a position with Huntington
Beach's c..r a.c ~ firefighting
force, are th~-turned loose
on the blaze. It's £heir baptism
by fire. '
·~Tbere's just .no better way
to train young firemen than
with a controlled hot fire . You
can shoot water into a field
all day to dflQlOnStrate equip-
ment and it wOO't teach the
men how to pro tec t
lhemse\ves," says 0 e p u t y
ARE YOU THE
MAN FOR US?
o.r c•mtinr ,. r111111tr u·
,.....lltl 1111111 .,.. 1r1 "'*"" fff I IKlll met! .,... ii llrtf tf IDftf '*"' I ... ,...... _,.
• yw 11tv1 1 lllft'lln1I 1-I It ca"' .. 1n,,..1 (qao'*'l 1111111 I ... ftHflllM. kt .. dlKlll.I
I """'1111111 Int tw ,... llllf )'t111r
llllWJ'.
CIN CllllCI for ,.l'Hflll 1~11,.
Vltw, Mr. Jtfl-,UlJ) 111.,n,
•r wrll• .. II: lt~il, DflHy l"llet,
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -
They've prettied up the old
potato sack to the point where
you can hardly recognize it.
The familiar IOl).pound SJ*d
holder used to be fabricated
of a coarse, Jcosely woven
material made from jute and
it was a dull brown.
Now the potato ,:51ck has
become a colorful · woven.
plastic creation in pastel hues
thal could transform the
classic sack race ifltc a
glamorous event.
Jts makets are as.wring the
tall com panies setting up their
booths at the Western Packag-
ing Exhibitk.in which opens
here Tuesday lhat the bright
new sack also can carry other
types of produee, grain seeds
and rertilizer.
The exhibit -largest ever
held in the West -which
some 11,000 marketing ex·
ecutives are expected to at-
tend at the Civic Center; also
features such innovations as
a new type of screw4f bottle
James E. Rich, D.V.M.
AnnounceJ the opening of the
NEWPORT CENTER
ANIMAL
IJ' Appolntm•nt
'44.54'0
HOSPITAL
• D/r.ctly Mhlnd N•wport Clnem• Th .. tr.
Newport Center
cap which is designed to be
kid-proof.
That is, it requires an ex-
tra movement or two that Jun-
ior isn't supposed to figure
out before Mommy catches
up wilh him.
A bottle made from a new
t)lpe ci plastic is being shown
for fruit juices and other li-
quids, replacing gl~ and in
some cases paper containers.
It costs tn(ll"e ttian paper, but
is much lighte r than glass
and relatively unbreakable.
New plastic and aluminum
foil paekages for wet soups,
salad dressings and cocktails
are on exhibit with the idea
of ti'ansforming the ap-
pearance o f supermarket
shelves.
One item attracting major
attentk.in is a huge paper con-
tainer molded like the egg
carton that inspired it. Made
of papier-mache, it holds six
tons of packaged goods or
machinery. and costs about
$2 per copy. Unlike its wood
and sleel predecessors, il's
disposable and doesn'l have
to be returned.
Addicts Ousted
JERUSALEM (UPI) -The
lnlerior Ministry said Tuesday
Israel will deport foreign
tourists caughl or convicted
of using or selling drugs.
Deputy Inlerior Minister
Yosef Goldschmidt to J d
Knessel (Parliament ) the use
of ha.shisb and other narcotics
was growing in Israel.
VVU6"ey, Claudia Carv er, s, ....... ,~. ,'",',"" , Oonlld c .... P11e11,
M t D · h ,.,.,1 I~ itld, hllllY' C1rr, Ctwor11s argare av1es, C a r I es C•r<V!l. Ml•,.. c.,,..,, P1m111 .c~r·
G · h K H ·u E · ''· 8t!PI Cf1rls1e~n. cnr11u COCflrin rims aw, aren et g, nc w111,.. COl!de, J111tn conrO'I, cnr1s11ne
La !or Rich d , _ G Co~ 1(-Jtt Cowie. ger , ar ~. reg Ja~ cr11•. S1•n1~ C•l-n, Jett Loitz Jane Mash Lynn S.'!mrnl..,., """"'" Davin, C1mll11 , , ...... ,. Judi Oe-tlwJ~r, C•rol Dolin,
Miller, Ken Neisser. Pamela =: ~~':i'· f:!,~e£::~,,::· Osmus Debbie Otto Gre" c1.t,..rine Eg11. ·011ne en1s. G1rf • , • t> E•i,duon, Sara Erickson. M1rlorl1 Rose, Debbie Shannon and Eriaon, Heidi Eve•""" Rl>bb E11111. Ellle F1!9e. lttlle Fenn, Fr'1No; Janet Stanton. Foro, lvnda ForMv. LYnn Foss~Llnda ·
Soph Fo•, Gr~ Fo••. Beneolcl ,.,,,H omores -Jeff Alford M_MJtllM Fr1ncli~ovlch, lJnn F01'1l,·
B di B . ' Vro:kl Frost. l1urle G•ve Rober ra ey aker, John Blanpied, Girt.er. Lls«lh ·<>llc:.om111(, .kffre,
V I . C d · J Goel11l, .AnMllt GOHIO, II-Gould a er1e ar er10, ames Cote, J•me• <>r•ham. TIN G"'°"" a.Ii.,
Susie E 11 e·s tad . Karen ~~:i .... =:;k ':f.'1!:'1~ H=;,:.,.~; Feldman Scot t Hornbeak a .. 11, H1mmrn, V!r1rnl• l'l-•flSOll. John • , H1rmon, R!C111ro H1rr!1, K.1thlttn Linda Jacobus Kat' en .• Harl, Jufly Hew"l Sura.nne HIWllif!Mn., • enle H1vu, e•nM Hl'fe&, Jon Johnson Thomas McCorkie Heal..,, C111trm1Jlnt Henderson. . . ' • C'l'n"'!• Hewen Conni• Hfc;km1n, , Wilham Power C j n d y Jell Hlllm•n o1aM Hl11"1rd, Jim • • Hines, Hollv Hobbs, John H051 Schieber, Gloria Somer s oebor•h Howell, John , ... .,. 1r1~
Plague Hits
Small Mice
Via Fleas
• Jack...,, Julie J1rvis1 J~11lfer Jl)hnson, Nelson Johnson, Slllr tt J-, BlrWI 1(91'1, Mar-l(el!am, L1wr...a. Kiii· !1111er, Peter l(emmer!v, ll1ndy l(enr, P1ltv l(lr11, Daven l(leln, 8tad 1(1u-r, Merv Krtbl, Oavf l(rohn Donne \.18rll, A1ndolph leF1rr. M•rln1 Lenney, Trio-Lewis, GtHlorY Lima l(ennnll l!Nlahl Jul!t llv lntston, Wlhlam Lo!ll, Clnd'I' laJnd, HtJen LliCkhard!, 81rt11r1 Ma(ln!IM, An11e MaclnlJrt, Fuasro M1ctc10, f11r1Ht1 Hln119". NancJ M•ras.,, Te<rl M1rawlti, Al(ll:
Mer~ln, Carol McCard. O o u • I 1 i McCortle, Marv Mce>owtll, Cynthl• M(l(lnnev Maur"n McKown, CJntlll1 M(WMr!, Jant Mlver, Glenn Mtlltr. Su~•n · Mlnkley~ J1~k Mfl(llfll, John MOll<1v. Marlo; Mornlntstar, Wll!l1m Munce, Robed Murvln, Palrlcla N1vel. Jtnny Ha~ano, Gretorv N1v. Jiiek Nell. N1ncv Newbrou~h. Seo!! Newcomb, Cl'trlsll~ Nielsen, Linde 0'8rlen, Tom O'le1rv, M1rv O'Sl'teio, 08v!d Oliver OW.las ~rt, LVllN! Parkl'tur•t, Daro-P1rrloll, P=~~.tpln, Ann P1rclfl1ld, J1nl1
on the fOUl'.'·Year degree and So, the Great Bumpe r
that possibly th.ere are many Sticker Purge gels i'n to full
students now in college who,======'========;::=:=:=:=:=:;;:;:;
do not really want to be
there."
Perhaps college shoold be
de-emphaSized, the panel said.
But in. any case, the nation
should examine approaches to
higher edµoa~on.
One answer to pollution, the
'•
POW Handling
P¢titlons Set
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) · sponm of petitions calling
for better treatment of
Ametican prisoners by North
Vietnam have obtai ne d
1,165,570 signatures in North
Carolina.
The petitions. sponsored ,by
the Na tional Guard and lhe
Jaycees, will be mailed next
week to the amba~dors in
Wa.Shington of seven .countries
·-France, Sweden, Romania,
India; Russia, Poland and
Oet>mark.
BIBLE THOUGHTS
NAKEDNESS: Tod 1y on1 s11s promi1cu •
ou1 n1ktdntu •ncour191 by min in hii!jh
pli1c11. Evin torn1 t••O:htrt lily th•y •••
no h1rm in 1uch "s•lf·••P••lsion." Courts
app••r pow1rl1u to suppr111 BOnOM·
LESS ind TOPLESS 1•hibition1. thou9h
polic• do th•;, p•r+ ~Y m1k in9 1rr11h.
GOO CONOEM S SUCH LICENTIOUS NA'K~DNBS! Hirn w11 CURSED b1c1u11 ~. d11 lt frivolousl't
witlo. 'hit f1tl11r1 n1k1dn111 fG1n. 9;11 -271, Jl.d'1rn ind Ev1 hid
their · n'•k9dh~1.1 1ftr th1y l11r~1d GOOD from EVIL; though b1for1 thlt, th1ir n1•1dn111 w11 11 th1t of chUdr1n, without
1h1m~:. (Gin, l :lS, ]:27l. Mo11s 1hhorr1-d. th1 n•k1dn1 s1 of
h.i1 ptop l1 •• th1y f•••••d , dr•nk ind ''ro11; up lo pl1y" (f•.
)2:6. 25-271. ' Tho1• who P1troni1•' "boltoml111 ind top1111" 111:hib;tion• 1r1
11 guilty of immor1lity 11 1r1 tho11 who produc1 and p1rtic i-
p1I• · i11 such. A1k v11ut1illf. "Would I like to 111 MY moihr,
wife, •i1f1r or '•u9ht•r tJCh1bit1d publicly i11 1uch rn ann1•>
Would I lik1 to b1 c•u9S.t w1tchi119 such 1n •ihibition wil1n
th1 J11d91m•n! D•Y d1wn11'' A r•cord i1 tn M• of our daily IC·
tion1 •nd th11 rocotd will b1 th•11 to f1c1 111 in th1 Jud91m1~t
D•y ,IP1m . .1 ],:f·ll, R•"· 20:11 ·1 5. 2 Cor .. 5:1 01. "81 not de·
c•i~acl ; God b not motk1d: for wh1ho•"'' '1 man 1owlh, +h•t
1h•tl' h1 11110 ri!•p" !611. 6:7, Rom. l:JlJ.. USUALLY, tho11
"ho •dvoc1t1 n~k1dn1u on th• 1!•91 for "1elf·1ipr111ion" 1110
1r1 int1rHi1d ih oih•r immor1l 1in1 li1t•d in Rom, 1;21>·12. Thro119houl history n1tion1 h•v1 FALLEN wh•n th1y 91111 th1rn·
1111111 to. immor•litr, 'd1unk•n•11, lic1riliou1 n1k1dn111, lving
, ind Dr11kdowh ·of LAW. Unl111 lhil good p1opl1 of our l1nd • ,;,, in r•b1llion, AMERICA i1 doomed. Church of Christ, 217
W. Wi11on St., Cost• M111, C1. Ph. S'41-~71 t, '46·576J.
.
BURNEY, Cal<. (UPI)
Jnsecticides were sprayed in
parts of Shasta County in
Northern California today as
State Health Department of.
ficials sought to kill fleas car-
rying Bubonic plague.
The plea gue, which
depopulated whole areas of ,
Europe ana Asia during ttie j
Middle Ages, has been found
among rodents in this area 1
and is spread by fleas. )
SPECTACULAR MID-SUMMER
ALL
OF
JULY
ALL
OF
JULY
LEARN TO SWIM
Both cases among humans
this year were traced to the
McArthur:Burney Falls area,
bul spraymg has been carried
oul also along the McCloud
River . in Shasta Countv and
in a wooded arta near the
Hunter-Liggett in i Ii ta r y
reservation in Monterey Coun-
ty. No human has been in·
fected in tile latter two areas.
AT YOUR
ORANGE COAST YMCA
642-9990 Both this year''S victims are
recuperating in hospitals.
Rough it ...
•
I "
AT THE NEW RODEWAY INN
NOW OPEN AT
COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA
Convenient to Disneyland, Orange
County Airport, Newport Beach.
124 gracious rooms all with
co lor tv, Spanish architec ure,
pool, Hawaiian Skillet Restaurant.
Ideal family (or bu siness)
headquarters for Southern Cal ifornia.
Phone (714) 557-8700 for
reservations. located S minutes
from Orange County Airport.
•
Savings from 50% . to 70o/o and more .
on all our entire stock of
famous · imported and domestic
CHANDELIERS e HANGING LAMPS e · WALL FIXTU~ES I
FREE $9.95 DIMMER.,,. ......... .. , CRYSTAL CHA.NDELIER
• Use BankAmericard •
or Master Charge
Ou Con v.enienf_
Layaway. Plan
or
• • !
VICl tl,t. ST
ELECTRIC & LIGHTING
222 Victoria Street, Costa Mesa
( Acrou from Greenhaven , Nursery I
Special Courl"Y to 646-3737 Builders & Interior Decorators
(
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'
1 r \
~ •
•
l
•
•
• .
"
I
•
•
•
i ••
~ ~
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•
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• . •
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:
•
•
~outft Coot! Plaza Supplamant to Tht DAILY PILOT, Tuo1,. July 21, 1m
• JUJC'JY )[ {j[(t0
M 1 w ,.
1 2 3
5 6 7 \I 9 10
12 13 14
19 20 21
26 27 28
lhese Jre Iha Good Gt ' 'Days
• I And they're happening right now ... at South
1 Coast Plaza where we've taken the liberty to
turn back the clock somewhat. It's our old
fashioned clearance sale now through July 25.
I For your enjoy1nent, we're presenting an
'authentic interpretation of the music of the
;I 900's, Ted Bowers famous "Turn of the
1Century Revue." THE-PLAYER PIANO I USED IN THE SHOW WILL BE GIVEN
AWAY SATURDAY. Obtain slips in any
store, then deposit at the Carousel Court.
Show time at 1 p.m. and 3:30 p,m. July 22-23.
An additional show at 7 p.m., July 24. Also on
display will be Mr. Bowers' collection .of
afftique musical devices. More than a dozen
antique autos will be on the lower level , and at
the same time strollers will populate the mall
costumed in the era. Genuine ragtime
sarsaparilla, the drink of the 1900's, will be
served by most mall snack shops and
restaurants. We're looking forward to seeing
you .
1.
'
•
s
4
11
&outb Coast 'Piua
"THE GIANlllSt llAU.Of' AU. H • • 81llSTOLA.TSANPUiGPNlfl:WAY,cmTAMESA. I ' . ' .
OYll M fHff notlS AltD SllYICES. . .A Iii C•"1 • AIWt'1 ... 1ltry • Alrt>t'I • Atc•S.tl .. 1 & Lff,. • C, H. ltker • ..... tf Amerlc1 • l1rriclRI (1nlfle11 l1rt"'1 T1ll f11llllM1 • l1f'lltrHt'1 hlPr Mtw1\ iett. .. ,..,, I
C1•1t't Cflll•r1•'1 Slttt1 • (1•11 S•1e1 • C1r1Y1•C•11l1'11 Clrltf Y 1 (Ille Acc11ttrl111 Cltrls' P11lllt111 CllM't St1tl11try 1 Crtcktr Cltl1tt11 Jl1tlff1l l1p1k tC,.nl .. Gltry ... ..,. S.111 t0.9"1twU.. •ftt Jed's
C ..... S-,1fltl4'1SMl1 I flH'I fttlll .. h•tlr1111 I Pint WMftnlll•k1f1xS..tltCH1tPl111Tltt1tN1Tt.101ll11ft Gifts & C11uill11 •Gtttt1tt0tfttry Lttl. 1Gt1rtt•rNY• hl ... ·ll•llt 1 lretllll's I ..............
.... • .... ._. lhltleHn 1 Merrfs & fr11• • H.P.C. 1 •nett MHM CeftttrM t Hlclltry f1rwi1 • Hn11 tf f1ltrlc1 • Mntt 1f Mitt 1 Htttt tf T1iltrl•t 1 HwM 1f Tt"1 • ........ , ._.. ..._, • ........... ,......
,.,_.,. ...... • Jeyct She Tree • '"1'• t J, P. c ... 1e O,.._etrl1t1hpl11'1 DtllcttttNI i. l11t11rw9t•l11dt0WJt•leftltl Jtweltn ....... ,, ... t • Lii Petite • L9 S..,c:N l11tnrnt •~1 lltMl.Wu.'1tll•Alrt
htrftlM • M1rtw r•llrl1111• •Mir Ce.• Ml11 ll1w1Jl e O• Tt.1 le Tnwel • P•c• Setter• P•clflc S1,f191 l L••• • Plctwlck a.H11te, e TIM p,_, Sltrtp • ... ,..,_ .. s,.n1 & L1l1tA • 111 tf lallll •Ill .. t ..... 11111
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1ot11oo1 .... • Walll .. '• -City • Woloflotll'• '-1'" • n.. Wot s..1 • w1111""'' , .. ,,. • Wilot1'• MN'• wor1• • r. w. WMl•tttti • '""' Mattrtllf • l•li•'• Villtttt-w.,"°"
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2-SoUlh 'tNil Pl•ii• Svpplomont tO 'l'ha DAl(Y Pl LOT, T-.. July 21, 1970 ,_
South Coa st Pl az a Tim e· Mach ine This Week •
lS a
FROM MELODY l!ANCH Corr~ MoOnnan
I·
South . Coast Plaza
'R eplays' Old D~ys .
· , ... 1olde1>volced singing atar of
Carousel Courl al South the Turn of · the Century
f Coast Plaza becomes a "time Revue; -~ awarded the . top ·
machine" for the next four rating for the outstanding
days as it takes customers 1 uJ he •-in the North Costa Mesa sho~ 'fem~ e vQCa.llA at t Ar™'na
ping center back to the early Mus1c Festival. Very acti!e ·
1900s.' A "Turn or the Ce11· • in the musical field, st>e is
tury Revue" will be the main soloist. at the Bel· A Ir
attract~n and around it wi_ll Preabyte:rian Church and has
be built the theme o1 the made numeroua -"unp four-day Turn ol the Century • • ·1--
D•Y! celebration ~eduled f'I'" •and televlaloo , ~'"""!""'·
Wedi>esday, Thursday, Fri~ Her dell~ perOonality and
and Saturday. lovely 101J1 atyliql ,may be
Ted Bowers, c a r r1 e seen every -~~ Ion the
Moorman aOO Dolly Blair are Melody Ranch ShOw, where lhe performers who will bring she ii feew...d with the Jack
to life onct again the early Halloran singers.
~toos. DOLLY BLAIR -the ac-, .' ~ rn . .. y~ Here's a rund~n on the compllshed piaoilt witq the HIST QR Y ~N -'DI.Dr LA -· ~:a::_• native ~w~~·o-:"t~~i ' · i-' ,. · . ~ or California, has devoted a aololSts in the Twentieth Cen-1
The """ta Mea Historical si~-ol ··~·-:' ....... -.......... .,ir..'-.,......t...i ~for ;a.L•. and cid«, great deal of his life to the tury Fox production ol. the
'""'' ......, w \'lW'21 ,,,.... .---·~ t'l"'..., au"-tic 1·n•-eta"·n ol "King and I" and ap~ired Society h&s IM"llPUl'e<f a pie-1U1'81 1nc <.. 5ceoes'·1fmn.., as ~~Wd t+•&S i-aisiflg grain ~1 -r• µu
• • -'9 schools' ~' '"' · ' the mu&c of the 1900s. He as a violinist In the movie, torial display t o com-a-w..::'...... ~~~r ~blrley)'. !'l:w-o .-. pictures 8;;.•s ·in the style of the ·e1w.. "Counterpoi.t". She baa made memorate the 5 O th an-&"'-·~ .-..~cniua-.. .. -o ••3 '"-......., .. a~'vJtyexJantlmmedia'•'y show the are.as first school popular entertainers such aa many appearances uuou&< ....... niversary ol the city's naming "''"' ~ ~-._. .. __ c JH · 'th the be~-and A~-the ~~ L .. and the old Fairview Geor"". M. C.ohan, Bert .-xAA.111:.1 11 a omta Wt in the Carousel Court of Sooth 1un:: '-'""' U<:\;jMK: Lllj3 e\" Sal lo Trio her be · Coast Plaza. It will be on of the l~.'· ~I wtµch mce stood near WilUalll!, Uncle Josh and Sir va re , w e·s JS
'' H•rrv Lauder. ·1,Hi s Im-the featured vocalist fnd exhibit throtigh Saturday as There are two harv-· -. ~y· Orange Co'a.st -·,, 1 '~ r-:-· presaions of these· early enter"· P Dlun. part of the "Tum ct the Cen-scenes which iDustrate nnl College. Two Jll'OR)inent scenes tainers WUI be featured in tJle, · Bowers' keen Interest in
tury" days festivities planned activity. An old apple stani:I depict tti'e old 1 ' bus Ines s show. "Tum of ·the Century" began
by the shopping center. is also presented. DuriDe the district'' typical of that day 1 lhe age of 12 when be
The pictorial ~lay con-19'JOs Costa Mesa became - a a:~ral store. CARRIE MOORMAN -'the :cquired his first cylinder --------------...U.-------.:....------------~----phonograph. Today, his large
\ collection includes numerous
mechanical musical machines,
cylinder phonographs, music
boxes, etc., all of which will
be . on display and
demonstrated with the show. OLD TIME TASTE-Sarsaparilla will delight shoppers at South Coa st Plaza's
To be given away during "Tum of the Century Days" event. Harvey \Villiams, carousel operator at the
the show, is Ted's recently plaza, here recommends it as "the most popular and efficacious blood puri-
completed stereo album en· fier in use." At least, that's the way it was advertised in the 1900s. Most plaza
titled, "Whatever Happened to snack shops and restaurants will serve the old fashioned drink from now th rough 1910?" This reeord authen-Saturday .
WELCOME 'HOME'-Kees Van Miltenburg (right),
manager of the May Co.'s Costa Mesa store at South
Coast Plaza welcomes "home" Alfred Morrow, new-
ly a~ted operations manager of the· store. Mor-
row r&ally is already at home. He was on the staff
-of the Costa .Mesa store when it opened in 1967, is -a. resident o! Fountain Valiey and he and hls · wife
~ve a son wbo attends Orange Coast eollege ·and
·a daughter who will return to Fountain Valley High
School in the fall. The new Costa Mesa operations
manager has several years of experience on the
~xecu~ve staffs of various May Co. stores, includ-
mg the -South Bay, Wilshire, Downtown (Los An-
~eles) and San Diego stores.·
lodl fout?laza 1
Restaurant, D•liclatHffn I, Bakery
"A Sandwich or 11 Full Mea l"
e BREAKFAST
•LUNCH
e DINNER
BAN9UET FACILITIES
ANY OCCASION-SERVING UP TO ·150
PARTY PLAMRS
IUPNT mtl
MEAT PLATTERS -$1.15 pt• """°"
FI SH PLAnl RS -$2.45 po• """°"
ONN t ..... te 1t P·'"·
Phone 540·9022
JJJJ lllSTOL AT SAN D1l•O FWY. -COSTA MUA
l.e-.t ~ -Op,.._ M.., C..
tically recreates the en·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tertainers and music popular ,lj
prior to World War I. In music
and sound effeot.s, the listener
visit! a small town and Jt!
important events on side one
and on side two, the listener
d .e~oralor
is taken to New York City
to visit its well known theaters
and personalities. Perhaps one
ol the most interest in a:
features of the record is the
orehestra. Average age o( Its
members is 77. The oldest
musicj.an is 14.
Also on display in the m11ll
areas of the Plaza will be
a~entic antique automobiles
of the era .
" --~. --. " ' .\-: .. ... ' . : .· . -•l • '
I',\-•' Ii, 1 '1'1'
APPRAISALS
DIAMONDS
GEMSTONES
ESTATE JEWELRY
South Co11t Pl111
l ri•tol 1t th1 S111 Oi1to Fwy.
Co1t1 M111 540-9066
line
SECTIONAL AND WALL SYSTEMS
\ I,
S1elio111I will furnitr.ir• floot
11mpl11 , , , Al10 m•11y 11h1111
limp• •11d 11cc111ori•1 ~r d11c~
fir !lit 1a.,i11t1 fl,jOYil Shop
••riv whil11 11 .. cti•11 ~ colli•
pl1t1.
l
SAVE
•
-l1mp1 i nd 1cce11orie1
IJP
TO
n
25%
c ~ tb' ,,oasf .. ua IANkAMUICARD • ,,. ~I -J' J MASTllt CHARGE I Th•1 S4 Di,go Fr•tw•y, Cost• Mes•
Lower 111 ltwel -5<$0.7777
I
-L _____ _
,.
I
Prep Shop
HUNDREDS OF FAMOUS BRAND PANTS
STYLES . • • FLAIR-CUFF-STOVEPIPE
SIZES • • • 28 TO 36 WAIST '
REG. PRICE
NOW
,PRICED
'
• • • $JO TO $.J2.9S
SOUTH COAST PLA ·A
le~er UHl-Oppotit• Corouwl !
BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWf<Y
COSTA MESA PHONE 540-9121 •
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'°""' C011t Plau Suppl1m1ot to tho DAILY PILOT, TUM., July 21, 1~
It's ·Turn of The Century , Days at The Plaza
HAIR TODAY-Pat Alberts, right, ponders the t wo
looks available to Dale Salslrom at the flip of a
wig. He can look: as he does or as the hair on the
HAVE A BELT-Long, textured. sweaters -some
with belts-are on their way for fall. They're going
to m ake the scene both on campus and off, accord-
ing to fashion forecasters. This one, teamed with
track strips sport shirt of Perma-Prest material
is available at South Coast Plaza Sears store. It's
part of the Sears, Roebuck and Co. Kings Road Col·
lection of casual and contemporary men's wear.
CLEARANCE
FRENCH CASUAL
LUGGAG ,E
ENTIRE STOCK ON HAND •
FREE MONOGRAMMING
U.NU.MlllCAlD MASTll CHAl•I
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
UPPER LEVEL PHONE ~110
0,.. D.ity tO A..M, .. ttJI P.M-set. 'tH' P.M.
L_
Mesa Sets
Golden
Birthday
Thls month Costa Mesa
celebrates a birthday.
On July 15, 1920, !he namo
''Costa Mesa" offk:l.ally was
rec;<>gnlzed by !he United
States Post Office.
Helping to celebrate the
"Golden AMlversary Month"
which !he Costa Meu City
Council has decreed by J1l'O"
clamatlon, South Coast Plaza
will kJck off an old fashk>oed
days celebraUon that will run
Wednesday through Saturday.
heed he's holding does. Both wigs are available in
new wigs.for-men department in middle level of
May Co. 's South Coast Plaza .store.
Since Costa Mesa's naming
50 years ago, two big "boom
eras" have pushed the popula·
tlon of 200 In 1920 to ap-
proxJmately 75,000 today. The
1920s wiblessed one boom. 'Ibe
other boom perk>d was spnad
over the two decades ·following
incorporation of the city In
1953. Itisinte r es t l n gto
compart South Coast Plata
with the oneroom general
stores that were invalent in
!he 1920s.
In t.bo6e days the area was
called "Harper," after
Gregory Harper, a loca l
fanner noted for raising
barley. Harper was the name
given originally to a loading
platform and depot along the
Santa Ana and Newp o rt
Railroad which once ran
through the center section ol
Utt! dowlltoWn area. It roughly
paralleled today's Newport
Boulevard. The railroad was
built to connect Santa Ana
to its "seaport" (Newport
Beacb) and its "breadba6ket"
(Costa Mesa), where barley
was grown.
Catholic Roman
Moonlights
Priest
Congress
WASHINGTON (UPI! -
When John P. llanley returns
at night to his one-room apart-
ment ner the capitol, his life
as a congressional assistant
changes a bit -he must
read his Breviary, a set or
prescribed prayers for Roman
Catholic priests.
ln the su burb s of
Milwaukee, Wis., it's the Rev.
John P. Hanley, principal of
Catholic Memorial H i g h
School at Waukesha.
For six weeks th.is summer,
however, he is serving as chief
administrative assistant to
Rep. Glenn R. Davis, R-Wis.
"Father Hanley" (as he is
known to the staff) joined
Davis' staff after the con-
gressman's regular top aide
became ill.
The co n gress m an, a
member of the United Chu rdl
of Chris!, and Falher Hanley
had been longtime friends.
"At first I thought !her,
w o u I d be complications
because people would think
I averidenUfied with one par-
ty," he told UPI in an in-
terview. "But this is work
that has to be done."
He readily admits, however ,
that he has "Republican lean-
ings."
After some coaxings, Father
Hanley discussed the post with
his superior, Archbishop
William E. Cousins. who voic·
ed no object.ions. He said the
Archbishop thought it would
be "A worUlwhile experience."
"In an age of involvement ,
this is a very proper in-
volvement for a priest,"
Father Hanley said.
He noted, however, that
American Catholic Bishops
had taken a sland against
priests running for oCOce,
despite this, at least three
in
are s e e k i n g congressional
seats this year.
Father Hanley spends a por-
tion or every day contacting
his school office back home
on necessary matters, but he
spends mo.st of his Lime check-
ing the congressman's mail
or working on special projects
for Davis. He has made one
weekend trip home and plans
another before his summer
tour end!!: July 31.
The fact that he Is a priest
hasn't caused any problems
yet, he sakl, but to avoid
any possible uneasiness, he
al'L$WCrs the telephone with
the simple expression "Hanley
speaking." Unless the caller
Jmew him, he would never
know Hanley is a priest.
Heads tu rn occasionally in
the Rayburn office building
cafeteria when so m e o n e
shouts out, "Father Hanley."
But othefwise he causes little
stir.
The 4rt.year..old prie s t ,
whose brother, Daniel. is a
former Wisconsin St a t e
The location of South Coast
Plaza at that time W&J on
the border of the rich farm
area and "Gospel Swamp,"
part of the drainage basin
of the Santa Ana River. The
Plaza site also was at one
time the location o[ the
Segerstrom f a m i I y ' s first
dairy. Eventually, Harper was
!he name which !he whole
vicinlty was rt!erred to.
It was consistently confused
with "Harpe.rvllle," a smaJler
village near p re se n t-d a y
Garden Grove. l-Understan-
dably. mail and commercial
activity were frequently con-
fused .
Therefore, during March,
1920, W. C. Spence r, a civic
leader a nd businessman,
sponsored a contest for a new
name. He offered a $25
reward. nie winner was Miss
Alice Plumer, for whom
Plumer Street is named.
Manager for UPI, admitted M H ds
to being surprisod by the esan ea
· amou11t or work that goes on
in a congressional offlce. c G
''f"m amazed at !he dedica-us roup
tion," he said. adding that
he wasn't singling out his con-
gressman alone.
Twice a day, Father Hanley
passes by the capitol building
on his way to and from work,
and admils it av.TS him.
"I'm still corn-ball enough
that it gets me," he said.
He'll switch back from his
striped tie to a Roman Collar
at the end of the month
despite U-,e obvious excitem~nt
or his job here.
"Make it quite clear. J'Jl
be back at my desk In
Wisconsin the 2nd of August,"
he added.
Frank E. Anderson, 2078
Mandrian Drive, Costa Mesa,
has been elected president ol
the University of Southern
California's Newport Harixlr
Alumni Club. He will replace
outgoing presid!ent of the club,
Robert 0. Basmajian o f
Newport Beach.
Elected as vice presldei\t
of the club was Jack K. Sam-
muels of Corona del Mar while
Con Schweitzer of Newport
Beach w11 named treasurer.
Mrs. Ray Benson will terVe
as secretary for the next
term.
Udof'f'9 e . ~ ..
SUMMER
WHITE
SALE
ATSOUTHCOASTPL4IA
lowest Prices of th• rear
=·::::::.::::.:r.::~~:: 1• ...............
''Petula'' Bedroom Ensemble
SPREADS
-~~ 2499 UG.'40 2999 QUON.,
ICING 1
Hne ... ,_.. ~flll '"'••• ...... -11..,.._,.., ~1HtM .,._." ..... ,. -,....., .. "-t ........ Wrtiel • u• .... -Det1 allN Tlfftilly lalllfN -All 1 + tl1 -
An .... prkff -••t4, ... , "'*·
MATCHING YARDAGE 1 99 41" wW. _ .... S. yll . a yll. TIPPANY LAMP 29" Incl. Chain ~.-............. $45. ....
•
MATCHING PLEATED SHORTIES I
~----
.... 4.51
24" L ... 3",.,,
"!'t .... " .._ 4'*,.,,
lt ... 7.IO
45'' L ... 5",.,,
' SALE! Mm tllan 20°/o off "Stevens"
No-ll'Oll Percale Sheets !
J. P. STEVENS ND·IRON PERCALE PRINTS
e Jung la Cat • Big Rad e Flowar Pat'h e Cantabury ........
Twh• Pl•t
Twtn Plttllll
4.99
.... '·" full flat
full f ltttd
5.99
.... 11.SO
Q""" ,lat
Q\tMn flttllll
7.99
SALEI 20 '/o OFF ON J. P. STEVENS
Lnll!Y Sii-id Volvot
e PllNT5-SOLID~AC9UAIDS • Noc-• • 11, ltd .... _
I
.... 2.50 IATH
1.99
TOWELS I
119. 1.50 119. Uc
HAND WASH
1.29 ssc ...
Re9. 79c Fing•rtips •....................... Ste M.
R•9. 3.50 Both Moh ..................•.. .2.50 M.
Ste41t up tl!111 li11111 <101111 now with th11• per•
fe,t -.u11ity -To, br111d tow1l1 e Sh••h by
St1"re11tl All 1t low whit• 1ele prico•1 -Colo1ful,
Mi:er1ti•1, prec!Jc1I.
. ·•
•tt· 1i.so Kl1t1 flat
Kint flttM
9.99
Ud~'.J:"~~c=:.~· SOUTH COAST PLAZA .L, = Bristol l Sin Ditto Frwy
Cost1 Me11
Phooo: 54Ull2
Open Evoniop Uotll 9:30 P.M. -511. To 6:00 P.M.
•
For Top Sports Coverage
Read the DAILY · PILOT
I
1
..... ~ ...... ~r~t.~·TIM~Atl y Ptl'OT, Tues.; July 21, ltft
( I ,
·Recall 'Goo .cl Old . • ' '
REALLY DAD'S DAY-Werner Escher, public re-
lations director for Segerstrom Family operations
(including South Coast Plaza) congratulates Kris
Fernstrom, 9, of Costa Mesa, for winning Plaza's
"Make Dad An Angel Contest." His father, Russell.
beaming on the winner here, will go with Kris when
COCO TOP~ED-Ringling Bros. Barnum & Bailey
Circus clo_wn .Coco find s himself topped often \vhen
he takes his &.year..old son , Coconut, on public ap-
pearances. Father and son wiU be heralding the
corning of circus to Anaheim Convention Center
when they appear for two hours (2 to 4 p.Iri .) at
South Coast Plaza's Carousel Court on \Vednesday,
Aug. 5.
\
lntrodud•ry
Offer
I PAIR FREE WITH
PURCHASE OF 3 PAIRS
IWITM THll ADI
ALL NEW
ALL AGILON
ALL NUDE
Sheer panty-no
unsightly llnr
between panty -;:.:;;;..; J and leg.
Nude heel and
toe-perfect nude look to
compllmenl the
summer shoe
stylt'4i.
i\:.·.~~-~~~;· · .. :.•;
l!OSIERY
Soufh Coe1t Pl•t •, lri1tol et the Sin Oi•90 Frwy.
Coste Me1e-Phon• 540-•997
~ .
I __ '}
both the Fernstrom "boys" will lly in Angels' chart·
ered jet, stay in hotel with Ute team and generally
be honorary Angels at Aug. 3 and 4 series in Ou·
land. Kris will be interviewed on television during
the series and picture he drew of his dad to win the
contest will be shown "l)n the tube."
W onderfall Produces
Windfall1 . for Charities
Some of Orange County's rent donatlona were ·made:
~harltable 1nst1tuUOD1 receiv-Orana:e Coumy ChHdren's
ed windfalls this week when Home Society, Services for the
checks for 1 total of $750 Blind, United Cerebral Pally Center, Hope Haven School were donated by l he for Mentally R e t a r d e d
Segerstrom Family to 14 dif· ch 11 d re n , School for
ferent organizations. o r t h o p e d I c Handicapped
The gifts were comprised Chlldrtn, Big Brothers Of
of money retrieved from the Orange County, Easter Seal
Wonderfall In the South Coast Rehabilitation Center for Grip.
Plaza shopping center. pied Children & Adu Its,
More than $1,000 is "fished Protestant Welfare OOice, Ho-
out" each year from the ly Family Adoption Servk:e,
wishing well-like structure and Florence Critteoton Heme of
donated by the Se1enitroms Orange County, Jewish Fam.I·
to county charitable or11niui· ly SerVfce, and the Braille
tions. lnsutute ol America, and the
OrganizaUons to which cur· Pan-Cro OrganizaUon.
Sporrs Chain Ourgrows
Building in ,Two Monrhs
It was less than two miuis slte. '
ago that Chapple's S~rts It's obsolete already.
Centers, Inc ., built a new Acquisition of eight retail
25,000.square-foot warehouse stores in one purt'hase plus
in New Berlin, Wis. other expa~ion plans have
William 8. Chappie, presi· forced lhe doubling of the cen-
dent of the company which tral warehouse, Chapple said.
has stores throughout the The present warehouse will
United States -Including one continue to serve the chain
at South Coast Plaza In Costa of stores, expected to number
Mesa -announced today that 24 by the end of UUs year,
one wall of the new structure while workmen built another
1 will be torn down so the 2S,OOO square feet of floor
w1rehoute can be doubled in space onto the structure.
Tall \Dept.
HOSE ... II ... Sl .h
PANTS .... 1 ... t9 Sll.H
D.RESSES & SHIF-TS
.... ,_. te S4t.ft
SWIM SUITS ...... , .....
I
DRESSES
PANTS
Small Dept. I
v.1 ..... sn.01
PIOM
... ~
SKIRTS & SCOOTIRS
Y91 ... te Sii
TOPS ....... ''·"
NO JOOM TO UIT m1nH1M•I
COMI Sii AMI U.Yll
69c
$5.99
$7.99
$7.99
$11.00
$&00
$6.00
$6.00
SOUTH COA,.T l'LAZA
Lt-llW" l!Mr'9't ....... lll•1ter •rtttti •I 1M 1M D• """ ' .... Clllrtf CMM ... AIM!ic_,.
PHONE: ,., -1011
A~$0 IM "TMI CITY"-41 CITY l't.AIA, OllAH•--.M. 61>7Mt
I '---
at South ·Coast Plaza ·
'N O KIDS' GIRr REVISITED
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Slephuie 111111, the 1• ool·
lege valedlctorlan who
declared lbe would never have
babJea became "-the abape
the world ls ln, now says
she woWd like lo odopt one
"""" dly. Tiie pretty brw>elle, ZI, 11ya
she ~ "DOI tlllnkln& ol mar·
rlage now, allbouP It Is a temptation ...
J\ wu a Utile over 1 year
.,. when Sle!ihanle. -cam· es 11rcm PboeDls, ArlJ., told
the &E'adultion ·~ 1t ti:• elusive Milli Colle&e t n
OUland, •"ftle moot humane thine for me to do ls to have
no children at all," becawle
ot man'• ''unmiodful attitude
toward hil envlroament."
Today lhe viewa 11 a "miz·
ed blelllng" the national
publicity !hot result«!.
'It enablal me to get right
into·the ecology movement,"
she aakl ln an interview, "but
it sure made my life m11eh
futer.
"My dalinl life bu definite-out ol .-y and ouopended better orgaolzaUon o1 hwnan
ly improved. I've b e en publication ln June, eoolOIY, the rellUonsblp
meeting many people. .. Stephanie bu a pp e are d between men. and h1a en·
"It's really bani lo talk rOCtlltly on television showl vlroomelll.
aboUt babies. I feel lbai bav· and bu hid nwneroua public Stephanie would like lo write a book, 11an eum.Jnation of
In( a oblld Is DOI a responslbl< a p e a kl o I a n d r a d I o the plill._i,lcal roots of
lhlng for me lo do. But I q_...,.., all on behalf of papulailoli and eooloilcal pro-
would like lo odopt a child birth eoatrol or Ille need for blems."
same day. Ablolutely." -... ,.;;:;; ... t;.;;:;; ... ~;;;;::; ...... ;;:;; .. ;r;.;;:;; .. t;.;;,.:;;.,,.;;;;,.:;I Stephanie Is n o·w -..•• ""':'" .-u>• ,ui•• "''" .. µ ... POPULAR YARNS REDUCED uoemploy«I and looklng for
a job.
In the year since graduation,
sbe bas work«! willl the Plan-
n«I Paren!Mod Auociatloo
and the ecolOl!)'-orlented Eortb
Times.
"In bodt jot.," sbe said,
"I have been getting more
Information. Now I realise the
dilflcultles lluolviog problems
-they're moDumental.
"Worting at Pla nne d
Parenthood, I was able to
educate people, and · working
at Earth Tunes I got a chance
to inform people. The truth
can affect people, I think."
She has not had a steady
job since Earth Tunes ran
SPICIAL H ied JULY 22. JJ. J4, JI ONLY
• PARFAIT . IALL .... $1.Q $2
1'"1Kt Mr .,_., ~ A ....,..... .. P"" ........ .... I
• .~~~~~~.~·!!:LS9c I
THE
KNIT WIT
SOUTH COAST PlAIA
LOWll MALL
A&r .. ,,._ WHlwwtll's
COSTA MISA Pll. HJ·Jlll
OLD FASHIONED
Wed. thru Sat.
July 22-23-24-25
"Turn of the Century'' Suit Value!
SUITS
R,g. 169.95 & 175.
FAMOUS MAKER SPORT COATS $33
1"ou HatJt,1'1 Settl Yalues Like ';Ihtst Since The Days
Of Ctlluloid Collars And High-Button ShotS /
Dress Shirts I • I I I I I 399 No-Iron Pajamas • •
111. $6 Short Sl1•v1, Famous Maktr leg. $1 Poly11t•r & Catto• Now 1/2 Off!
.• 400
Better Neckwear I I • I 199 No-Iron Sportshirts .. 499
lt1. $5-$6.50 lltw f11lii1111 Wi4tlis Rt1. $1-$12 s•ort & le•t Sl1ev11
Dress Shirts ~ . . . . . . 499 Famous Knit Shirts .. Jj9
l•t· S7.S0·$9 L••1 Slttwt, Famo•• Maker ltf. $10-$14 Mlt•Y Styles & filttn
Famous Maker Casual Slacks ,
Reg. $11 .00 Permanent Pr-, Belt Loop
Styles, Check, Plaids, Solidi .... NOW $4.99
OLD FASHIONED PRlCES ON NE IV IVOAfEN'S FASHTONS!
Skirts, Blouses
&Sweaters
ltgVlarly to $19.00 "·
Missy and Jr.
Dresses
Regularly to $30.00
$
SOU,H!CO~ST PLAZA, COSTA MESA• ANAHEIM CENTER, ANAHEIM · o,,,. Wtt4Nig6116-S*"""Y.11to1,• o~,, Tb11rstl11J• """ p,.;a,,y t-.'igbt
I
• •
J
r
I
~Sewage Decisi~n ·n ,Limbo •
I • . Both Sides Air Views; lfearings Open. Until September
By TERRY COVILLE sewaa:c into I.be ocean at tbe Dr, Lan Carpelao, Univml-
Of "" Mlt'I' ,11M s11" mouth of the s.ma Ana River •• ty o( Clli!omia M Rivenkle,
Both sides have aired the.Ir . The board continued. and Dr. Rimrnoo C. Fay of
views in the coritrovenial pro. Thursday's bearing unUl sept. Venice, botb expressed COO·
posa1 to bring I n d u s t r I 1 1 II, wben 30ftlfl action might cero that Industrial wastes,
wastes down the Santa Ana be taken. improperly treated 1V' o u 1 d
· Rivet from Riverside for Spokesmen for the Orqe pcllute the ocean,. further k:Ul-
di1Charge into the ocean on County Sahltation Diltrlct ex-· 1ng marine ·life in the Hun-
After tr e atment, tt>e
!Uvenlde' w.,.., aJooc wllb
Oranp County sewap, would
be )ettl!oned oul of lbe eod or
lbe new sewage ouUall II 1111
""1 of lbe Sanla Ana River.
Rlvenllle Counly plam to
PIY yearl)'' r... to Oranp
County for the conatrucllon
of lbe :Ill miles in plpelme
and treatinent of _.... 1
C Huntington Be a c h and plalned how their facUitles in li.ngtoo Beach-Newport area.
Newpor' .. Beach. Fountain Valley and Hun-A large number of ecology
'l1>ey were heard by tington Beach would ,liitercepl students from . UC, !.\vine and
membera of the California the induatrial waste from UCR were also on band to
.-Reglooal Water Quality Con-Riverside and treat it before owose \tJe .shipment of
trol Board -Santa Ana difcharge into the ocean. lUvenide wastes to Orange
Region -who met last week or;1 Riclwd D. Pomeroy, County.
in Riverside. No action was foi-'yein'a consultant to the S3nltatlon districts ol. the
taken by the board on , the Los Angeles County Sanitation two counties are working on
proposed sewa,e ho o\: • u p D)JUict.s, ui<L .)be added an agreement to b u 11 d
between Rivenide and Orange wastes would not pollute the pipelines and sen lnduatrlal
counties. , ocean water. wastes from Riverside County
'lbe ,water board cannot op Oppo~nl.s of dumping more to tbe Orange County sanlta·
the se'wqe agreement, but • sewqeinkt tli"e ocean di.sputed lion District's two treatment
can coot..i tile dischqe of his claim. plants.
t I. f
30 CdM; Bafb'oa Alleyways
Slated for . ' Re~ovation
•
The aouth hall of the Bay Front to Collins avenue.
Induoa/y in Rlvmlde COllnly curreNIJ lmpounda lbe brm
from its waste in an evapor•
lion p-. bul bu found
II dilficull to ~ ol lhe
dried brine.
Thurtday's pobllc bearinc
stretched lhree houri wllh
more than IOI indh1dua1s
Jll'esenl. Sanltllloa ofllclah
had nol erpecled eo much
opposiUon for tbe 0 ..,,.. to
the sea" plan.
Lawrence cott'ey, chalrman
of ~e water quality boud,
said further written stale-is
on lhe 911bjec! could be llUI>
mitted f6f' board consideratlon
Priot to tbe Septmeber
meeting.
officei of the water board
are1 located at 6848 Magnolia
Av~ .. Suite 14, Riverside, zip
cod0 llZ506.
Nearly :Mt alleys In Corona
del Mar and on Balboa· Wand
will be recoostructed by Coxco
Construction Company In work
alley ·between Iris a n d -The alley between Collins
Jasmine avenues from 3rd to li"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijJ 4th avenues. and Ruby avenues from South
now under way. ,·
Newport Beoch city P\ibllc
Works Dlr«tor Jooepll T,
Deviin Jaid compleUon date
oo lhe '1ll,OIO project ' ls
Januaiy 15. .. . ~
Alley• to bcl molii' tnclUde
these in Corona clet ·Mar:
-The tilley b~erwee ll
Avocado and Acacia avenues
from Plciflc to Waterfront
Drives.
-The alley between Acacia .
and Begonia avenues from
Pacific .View Drive to Isl
Avenue.
-The alley between Acacia
and Begonia .avenues from 1st
to 2nd avenues.
-Half of the alley. between
Acacia and Begonia . avenues
from 3rd to 4ttl avenues.
-1lle alley bet.we e n
Goldenrod a n d H"eliotrope
•venues from Hei)ouope to
.fth Avenue.
-The south half of the Bay Fred to Park Avenue.
alley between Iris a n d , -The alley between Ruby
Jasmine north of 4th Avenue. alXI Oiamood avenues from
-The alley b e t w e e n Sooth Bay Front lo Park
Jasm.lne and La r k s p u r '1·'.Avenue. ·
avenues from Lftkspur to 2114 ' -The all~y betweeil Di.a-
avenues. i > · ·:·)nood 8rxi ·SaWl~ aveil.'*9
-The alley b e t w e e n , , from South B~y .1'~ to Park
Jasmine ahd •Larks pur··-Avenue. .
avenues from Bayside to 1st ·-The alley between Sap.
and Jalll'line avenues. phire and Coral av~nues from
-The alley b e t w e e n South Bay Front to Bal.boa
Larkspur and Marguerite .Avenue.
avenues from .2.nd to 3rd I-'------~---=
Fo• . . . FINE DIAMONDS
South c •• ,+ Pl•l•
llrittol •t th• S•n Di.go Fwy
C•1t• M1t• 540-9066
··-.. l llftµ -The west half <1f the
alley between Marguerite and
Marigold avenues parallel to
Pacific Ooast Highway.
-. The alley between
Marguerite and M a r i go I d
avenues from 3rd .to 5th ·
avenues.
-'I'lM; alley betwe en
NarctsaJs arxf orcbid aYeDJeS
ftom 3rd to stb nenueS .
NOWt
the Bric!e's
Tableware 'Ilousse'au ·
-....... -'lbe alley betw ee n
Goldenrod a n d Heliotrope
avenues running south ol. 1st
Avenue.
.-The alley b.el'f'een
Poinsetta and Poppy avenues
from 3rd ta· 5th avenues.
Alleys to be rebuilt on
Balboa Island are:
STERLING
and STAINLESS
in one pnrchase
at "8Vinf!ll np to
l
-The alley between
Heliotrope and Iris avenues
south oC 1st Avenue.
-The alley between Opal
' and Topaz avenues from SouU.
•100°0
•
' Buy a 4-piece .
'. International" ~terling
. Place Setting. 'Well Preserved' F.OOOS
Win County .~air Event · ·we•u· give you a
gift of a 6·pc.
Place Seuinlfln
, Intenuiiiona1° ,
r. Stainle0s Delnx'e
The winning entries in the
preserved foods contest at the
Orange County fair were more
than "well pi'eserved," ac·
cording to Dee Cox, home
economics supervisor at the
fair.
All foods entered were home
prepared and cll1!led by lhe
exhibitor "lrilhin .the pasl 12
months.
The winnera were :
' :tnd, Olhlt oldt"6 l!ld ... Nlllll.
J~; M1.._.,.. 8-ls. Yorbt Lin·
d&, llll'ICPI, Isl; M. LHl11n Osterm1n.
S..nl1 """'' 2nd, 1prkol; Eul• Cu, S1nt1 An1, 2fld, 111or!o;ol I nd
olne11>Ple: M. Lllll•n Osterman. S..n11
An1, lnl, 1prlC01 Ind PlnHl'Pll l
M1rt••~t llenl\is, Yori» Lindi , hi, ·-· M. Liiiian Oslenmn, S•nll """'
2nd, ptum: Eui. Ca•, Sa"'• .t..111,
lnl. alum1 Sll•ron Rice • ..,llllllllm.ht. 1tr111wt11r"; M. LllUan Osl•rmen, Sanl• ........ ltr•••ltlen:y; EUii Cu. Santi Ana, )rd, 1rr111~; Eull eo., S1nt1
OM. Isl, other llm.
JELllliS' Eul• Cox Santa ""n1, ht, 1111>Pi.; 2..0, u 1nbeny; M. l lUlen
01terrNn. Sanllo """'' plum, 111; M. Lllliln 011erm1n, Sllnl1 Ana, Ut,
~;'" ~~"\ef.1~1s1~r.oct13r~01~r.c.~ ...
SEMI • ANNUAL
HAID BAG
CLEARANCE
'
YOUR CHOICE OF
OUR LARGE SELECTION
REGULARLY sa TO
120 ' ,
'Yi PRICE
.Cfiic
ACCESSORIES H••""''!" , .. ,_. .... '""'
SOUTH COAST PLAZA-COSTA MESA
dllJdcl•
INTERNATIONAL$
STAINLESS DELUXE ..,__,,, ____ ··~
~~~~IGIFTS-CHINA-CRYST AL-SILVER-BRIDAL REGISTRY
:;;;: L•WM M•ll N •• , n.. w~u
Nearly Everyone 1 !,
Listens to Landers
. ' .
South Coast ?laza
l rhtol 11 The 511111 Pi•to Frwy., C•+• Mtt•
..... I i4f.J6J7
South C~1t "•IA S..Pfl•mont to tho.CAIL Y PILOT, Tun., J"!r ~I, l""';I ·:
. ·'. .
'
Shop ever/d.epattment for the values you want-for summer.
' '
' .,/
' r
r . .
•
. .. . .,
•
•
r ,
I
your very favorite casuals: . .
clogs and thong·sa ndals'
. . , '
You love .them, you love to wear them . Now, y01J'll • r •
haye them arsavings. The clog is white and punched
with perfs. The sandal is a flat-heeled thong. Creal · '.
·with pants, cool. li\tle dresses. Super comfortable too.
a. reg. 10.00 lmporled clogs from Scandanavia, .\vith
. white lealher perforated top, wood sole. 7.99 ·
b. reg; 8.00 La Vi sta .thong sandal, soft 5upRle 1¢atficr ·
·with brass rings. White or dark brown. 6.99 · .
boUlevard shoes 11 2
,_ .
• "
m•y co south coast plHf, s~n diego lwy. •I liristol, f OSla m•11, 544,9J2 I
shop rnond•y. thru s•lurd~y: 10 •. ,,;. to 9:30 ·p.m., sund•y noon 'til 5• p.m.
' '
• •
' r •
• : !'
• L-! '
I '~ ... ...
·'
•
. •
.
' ' ' •
•
• • ' l
I• l .
f 4
..
' . • • • • • . . • • . • . . • . • • . • • • • . . • . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . • . • . :· .. r :· . . . .
sz;z; u l., • 4 • = • • • 4
;l'~UINT1 IN Sl'ANISlf, BUCHANAN IS' DOUBLE THREAT IN CLASSROOM
''~·Pn 1Cfa11I C&....., T"'1111• ·loy1' Youth GJ'.WP All Part of VISTA D1y
•l
Wrd .. 1111
74••atldllrtdll>
111111 UIC.-.,,_gald.
'·
*
•
*
· Qclilll Ring
l7-cll1moud Stw·
liunlclollgn In ,._K._gald.
•
*
. ··= -
* *
j
I •
• 0 • ' ·-~~~-~---~· ..... I
..... •···•'• .....
were .a:n.·
tOl0.99 .At
' ' . •1•.• ••••••••••
..... 5.9&
1011.:ss
·....-.1··'. ,,. ' "
. .
.. \ :. . . . -... ...,._QtMltCNft'I fuhioft ........ .. -. ....., ... ___ .... .....
..... aeei11 '"'81't11w..'.Hot el-ttPN in.., ...
' ) I • •·
··-·~ .. loath Coast ?Im
FOR A LIMlffa. T:iME ONLY! ·:'
GOitU:AM ..
•
sterli:ng
' ' ' . ' • ' ' P J.a.-c.e>· '.:·S e.t .t :i . . . . . '
e
' '
SAVE $10.00
on each . ~pc. place-1etttng
:S.AVE $1.2;.00
·Oii each 5-pc. ~
' . . . .,
SAVE $15;00
Ofl .... 6-pc. pt.a 'Mnl"f I '
1a1N L. RllllTaY
' '
For t~ 'fifl.~1'
. in elegent , ·clinin9,
. chooie · m;,n· 21
Gorham :·s~rlin9
Ori9IMli·. '
•t'T ..................... n. ....... .
'
GEORGE MURRAY ,. . .
l n.'1111• -....... -~CIYIJA\ -PV•UUTtaal . ,
souTH ·co.ur';LAIA. casTA M•SA' -1it1i+0t.· AT SAN 01100 r:'Wv. .. ' '·1
' I
'
ng
PHONE 144-2700
. .
-: ,
•
_ Me~Q<n. D,escribes
•• ,J. • .,_ ... . . ...
•
S.Uth Coot 'PJu• ·Suppl....,.nfi.·t&.c:0.4JL'tl!l~!)T; 'l'wn"'Jµly1p1~~ _, -
AMERICA'S LEADING CHEESE STORES
liiiiiiiiiiiii
' ,
•• I
., .........
H~ ,ltt• Piii •I trllf91 ' : .....
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i.,. "· ... I
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'"•
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-"'\ -.. -;.-.; ---.... --~-....-------·------· -- --
I ..... <Ceut Pleu Supplement to Th. DAILY PILOT, Tues., July 21, 1970
Sf;Ordy Cat?
This little kitty seems to be scared over something.
Perhaps ''Little Bit" six-week~old feline mixture~ is
replying to this question about his famly back-
ground; "What do you mean, my old man's an alley
cat!"
'No Precedent Set' -
Says Queen Owner
·Gl's Contraband
Means Adjustments
SAN BERNARDINO (AP) So wh&I happens when 1
-'lbe scene ls a cu.stems fellow is found with a cannon?'
;hspect.ion center, with a Usually, authorities say, the
queue of more ~an 100 weapon is confiscated but no waiting with baggage in hand. But no ordinary line of vaca-chargs are filed. (){ten the
tion returnees this. 'The men men are due soon f o r
are all in uniform, Gls back discharge. One soldier, charg-
from exotic lands of the Far ed with smuggling marijuana,
East. had his coovictloo reversed
And c u s t om agents at on grounds a civilian court Norton Air Force Base. one
of .t.lJ.r'tt processing Southeast should have jurisdlction.
·Asia veterans, have learned Ano t be r oit~iscated
1o adjusl Item: pornography. Inspectors
Jnst.ead or diamonds or make a decision on the spot,
bigtime dope s m u g g I er 5 , putting into drawers material
they're more apt to turn up deemed illegal. It is saved
a machinegun or a mortar six months, in case the matter
shell -souvenir of a fighting goes to ~rt.
man who doesn't know such "Most Gls," says Hixon,
items are illegal. "are more Mterested in get-
And t:bere are sorpe who ting home than they are in
do know what's an the forbid-arguing about a,dirty picture.
den list, and try to gel it Many sign a form giving ol-
1throu..h anyway. ficials the rJght to destroy
6"' such property." Of these, ma.Dy chicken out at the last minute. While cuMns agents hunt for c ontra·band , U.S. "Some are pretty brave un-agricultural agents hunt for Lil just before they have to bu ,
clear customs," says one of-gs.
ficial, Robert L. Hixon. He All incoming aircraft are
adds that agents find con-fumigated 3 mMutes before
siderable contraband stuffed landing. In passenger areas
behind chairs in a waiting a stewardess walks down the
room or left in rest rooms. aisle spraying gaily. 1be stuff
abandoned by the faint of is sup~ to be non-harmful
he to humans. The idea is to :S~~ Hixon, holding up a kill all insects and larva, so
plastic bog containing what insects polenlllllly dangerous to
looked like marijuana: uwe crops can be stopped before
found it this morning behind they get started.
a toilet. We Hild, marijuana "We're careful to check for
more often than •we'd like to. fruit and packing materials,''
A lot is put in trash baskets says one inspect.or. "The frui~
just before the check. They could contain larva. The Phil Tozer of Davey ' a loating commercial activi_ty Jose their nerve." Asiatic rice . bore has beeri ~ doetn't tbink h l s sets 1tandards that are di!· One agent f 0 u n·d 8 known to hide in straw used
pleuure boat Pavilion Queen, ficult to follow,.be avers. disassembled Swedish sub-for packing dolls and
recently cleared by· t b e Tozer has been given a-tern-machinegun in the false bot-souvenirs."
Newport Beech city comcil porary permit to operate the tom of a suitcase. One GI Inspectors even have found
fer -music and liquor while Pavilkm Queen for 90 days tried t.o walk through with giant snails attached to cargo
while the city goe& through a bazooka antitank g u n • boxes. In one s h i p m e n t ,
making sight-seeing l 0 u rs • legal steps of adapting the Another was found with a live Formosan termite& w e re
isn't changing anything in ordinance. Bmm mortar shell found.
Newport Harbor. 1---------------------,-----,------1
"If there are 5,000 yachts
in lhe harbor, 4,900 ol lhem
are used fur wining and dining
;: and edertaining guests," he
• l8id. "I'm not setting any
pr.cedent far a higher use
d. the harbor;"
He aaid be doell'l~t agree
with those who b'esee "a
whole l1olllJa ping tbrougli
lhe hlri>or with a bunch · of
dnmb h1\111inc -the rail •incfnl' riboJd lllll1P and leav-inl 1 tlial of beer c:ans ID ~ the wat.e."
The cilf'• -onllmu!ce on
"
Men in
Service
Marine Lenee Corporal Doll
D. Wade ID, '°" ol Mr. and
Mn. DOn D. Wade Jr. ol
26&4 Santa Ana Ave., Costa
Mela, is serving with the First
MmiDe Aircraft Wing in Viet-
nom.
Navy Hoopilalman Michael
A. McKelvey, husband of the
former Miss Peggy E. Murphy
d 5.132 Edingff Ave., Hun-
tiqJtoo Beach, was graduated
IJ'Om Hoopilal Corps School
II San Di'!!".
Army Reserve Major Rene
A. Aqa1 has gradualed from
General Staff College at Fort
Leavenworth, Kan.sa.s. The
~ graduation culminated five ~ yean of study, acilve duty, !.~ and w r i t t e n examinations
, spollSOl'td by the 6220 USAR
•
School at Fort MacArbur, San
Pedro. He and his wife F.»ayne
reside at JIKIS Port ·Seaborne
Way, Newport Bead!.
TRADITIONAL
A~ERICAN FOODS
SERVED WITH A
FRENCH FLAIR
HOMI 0 , THI
"EIFFEL TOWER"
BURGIR
s.tll Clast Pim
CAIOUllL coun
lOWll LIYIL
• '
•
•YNOWS
IAVE
p\QU£
pR.\NTS
I 00 •/. Cotton-W1,b1bl1 ••I•& Widtb
100 x
tfG.
$1.2f
CHOOSE SOLIDS• PLAIDS
STRIPES• PRlm-. OIECIS
Sjtedal Colleetlon of
Cottona, .Rarena,
Cotto. alld Aeetate,
.Rilfota alld Cetton,
Pplfestel' aad Cotton,
I
STOCK UP NOW
PRINTED
LINENS
r1yo11 inti bl111Clt.
'•1itf1 nt, 441•5
99' ...
AT GREAT
SAVINGS !
Put your needle to our new sea·
son fabrics and grea~ fashion has
to be the results. Teztures are
new and interesting, Beautiful
colors in rich solids and pretty
prints. Hurry in and save now on
your new wardrobe fabrics.
5oafh foast '1aza SHOr IVIRY mNING
M•"4ey tflr1FriNy1l9tfl t :lt p.111.
s.t. M f ... 111.-$111., N ... M S p.111. COSTA MESA
High Voltage
Sears 48 Month Guaranteed
·Batteries
. ·1
Fits 90o/o' of
All American Made
12-Volt System Cars
Regular
$27.99
Trade-In
Price
Free Battery
Installation
Trade-In
Price
Prices Effective
Beginning Today.
No. 4303 4312 4335
437(136613534390
I lri 1 l' T11 St·a rs For \'our .\ uto :\('t'!ls and Sl' r\ il"es ...
SAVE $1!
I SAVE $3 !
Vinyl Coated, Wash Brush Sears Sturdy Top Carrier Bars
•Soll, pliable,.splil tipbrJ.Ues. 39-ln. Jong. ,
Retular
~u• •Fits all cars including compacts,
station wagons and imports
•All :steel heavy-duty channel
bars.
•Seethesenow 1tSem:l.nd8AVE
whUe quantitie1lalt. i r
i l
1••
12·1n. 3-Height
Jack Stand
LowPriced! JH
I
Adj Ult.able aupport: for ear,
trailer. JdtalfOfirtcrea-
tional trailtr.
SAVE34%! 7.5c Qt.
All-Weatherfil
S.per llQ'! i QtS, 9~
Protects as it lubricates
S~ial additives added. Re-
sists sludge.
,Double Slirru p
'TirePomp!ii
Low Priced! 99~ , ''C:3 E1. ! J
Handy pumptokeepinyour. !
e1 r trunk for emergencies.
SAVE '3! '10.99
Fire Extinguisher
Low Priced! 7 ff
Fights gas. electrical grease
and oil fire s. For cars. boats,
trailers.
tr mutner fails due to de·
feels in material! or
worlqnanShip or blow-out,
rusl-dut or wear-out whi~
original purchaser owns
the car. it will be replaced
upon return. fttt or
charge. Jf the defective
muffler was inslalled by
Sears, we will install tbe
new mufrler with
charge for labor.
A1k About Seara Convenien I Credit Plans. __ ,.._,.._ __.,_.. -.. -...... .. ·-----.. -··-· .. _._ ..... ,,, -•-•MM+ --·-• __ ,,_ ---w.. --· _....... . .. --.......... , ........... -........ ,Mll.A .... MP ... _.,l,_lelPA ._....._.,_., _ _,,.._.,.
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-........ . --.. .... ... ...... -.. ~ ..... ·-··--..... ·--••wrn
Regatar
111.!lt
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/ ""'.,...,.,.. Safi Cheese
The picture. {fraught with marbes. Maybe you're
looking at one, long, dopble-JornJed white mouse.
/Maybe it's two mice playing In tbe lenslet1s calnera.
Maybe somebody just said cbeese.
Orange Coast Bakers
Fare Well at Fair
Orange Coast cake baker!
and candy makers fared well
at the Orange County Fair,
wlMing many of the awards.
Mrs. Pat Stroich of Costa
Mesa was named baker-con-
fect.ion sweepstakes winner for
her Mile Hi Pie. -
Other county winners In the
sweets, baked goods, and con·
fections c om pe li l ion an-
nounced by fair h o m e
economics supervisor Dee Cox
were:
Franc~ Johruiton o{ TuaUn
tooit "Best in Show" painting
with her oil still life in the
art compeUUon at the 1970
Orange County Fair.
Other wiMers are:
OU Laodatape -Geor1e
Cook, Santa Ana, 1st and Bett
in Class ; Claire Jones, Corona
del Mar, 2nd : and Phyllis
McCarty, Newport Beach, 3rd.
Oii Marine -Nerlna
Barnes, Garden Grove, l1t;
Phyllis McCarthy, Newport
Beach, 2nd; Frances Johnston,
TusUn, 3rd.
1111> Crowning Glory
beauty salons
Stretdl pttt bMtity ..... -e+f e ......... ...,,.,
, Mlll..-T-...W... Utt( WMlk
SHAMl'OO·SET ........................ $2.H $J.45
HAIRCUT .................................. $1.IO $2.00
"'' ... "" tlllMIY """"' OlllOHT HIM WITH YOUlt IXCltlN• ND LOOKI
$20 M .. lc C•rl $12.50 $15 W-Coot $9.H
Al'f'OINTMl!llfTS
W•L.COM•
IUT "°' AlWAYI N•C•SSAl.Y .....
6Jc.;no,,,;
BUDGET PERM D
CROWNING GLORY
ffW11W!Y CllM'll:• Clfli.f'ftl
2'7 I. 17tfl ST., COSTA MIS.I. SOUTH COAST PL..UA
PHONE 141·ffl t ltwtl ltwl -Nut It hln PHONI 54,·7116
Op111 E•1nin9• & Surwl1'1' Op111 E .. 111in91
)
Back B•I Bu'll
'
Opposers' Auction
A Mii')' Corlla K e n I
wt&r•pb will be a"""11 art
objects to be auctioned at an
Informal benefit cockt,aU Pl{IY
slated for July 31 11 a fund
raising event to support oP-
poneots for the Upper Bay
land swap.
"l1111 ii the lint opporlunlty
the Poblk ..ut hive to support
. the people who have beet> ~
· posir'I the land exchange, '.
said Mn. Judy Rosmer,
chairman or the event.
The party, which Is to be
beld at 6:30 p.m. at the home
ol Mr. and Mn. Robert
Mallnolf, 14311 SanUqo Drive,
will be open to the public.
The donallons -IS for
adulls and 11 le< atudenll -
UDICO
PORTABLE
ELECTRIC
CLOTHES
DRYER
Pint·siltd 1ppli111tt (JO'ii
Ii»-, Ii' hilh) don I i!lnl·
siztd job (up lo 2 lbs. Wit)
will co lo the Oranp Counly
FoundaUon ror the Praerva.
lion ol Public Property, Mn!
&aei.aald.
Orpnlled lo educate the
public lo 'llllm publlc lond!
are j<>cated In <>ran&• Counly,
lhe uld the roundaUon w11 <l'hlrtiered u a llx aempt
or~tl<ln Jn 11111.
A,djDlnlltr&Uoo ol the 101111-
datlOD 'Is hondled by Allan
Beel< ol Mewport Beach,
~ Hall ol Tuatln ·anc1
Charles Greerunc o1 Fullerton.
AIJ.three are 1ero1p1ce
en1lneer1 with North
Alnerlcan Rockwell's
Aptoneticl d I v i s 1 on In
Allahel.m.
'Currently, foundaUon funds
are beiJ11 uled lo d<fray legal
·-tncurred by sill beck bay area resldenla In their
C<lOrt bat~e againlt tbe·land
IWlp.
-"Mr. and Mn. Frank
Robinson, Mr. and Mrs.
Wesley Marx and Mr. and
Mn. Harold Coverdale have
been flshtlng the excliange
with their own money, so
now's the Ume for the public
· to help," Mrs. Rosener said.
Tlckell for the party, dub-
bed "Back Bay Buh," wlll
be sold at the door. Area
residents who would like to
contribute may mail donaUons
in care or the foundaUon at
488 E. 17th St., Suite 229,
Qma Men, 92667, llhe said.
Ol•H·WASHING Hf!LP :
Qllct as a wint, SllJ Squttn dispenser lends a •
hnd, makes tltit daily dlore so much flster and • • lllier. JlilSt 1 litlk dtttlltflt 1nd .. ter In th• h1n· •
dlt, a qakk 111111n-1n4 th• touih nylon b11stles •
do a thorN&tl waallln1 Job on dlstm:, pots., p1ns, •
1vcl')'ltlin&I Good acrubbtr for woodm ind •
upllobttry, too. 1in· hi1h. •
"L-,:'~~~29c ~
ON A
RNE .
The TINDER BOX'S own Tobacco Blench have liven 1moklng pleasure to pipe lov·
ell 1 In c,e 1928 .
Hand·blended from
finest qu&lit,y tobac-,.,,.
2 01. pack .70 I oi. tln 2.90
4 01. tin 1.60 16 'L tin 5.35
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
LOWER LEVEL NEAR THE MAY CO.
PHONE: 540-8262
THEBOXISTHl!PUZZLI!
Thtrt's sometlllnJ imide ltl QuatlN 11-~or did It
111th1r11111 t!IW·do ,ou 1•1 it out? TantaltzlnrwoM
·1rain finish t11bt rattles wfltn it's ahaken, •wt tbn
sums to bt no war lo bkt It 1p1rt Em muttmrittdl
lose the ir cool tryln1 to undo the stutt of the mys.
terlous M11lc Bot Anr1ne who an outwit It In lels ttlll
10 minutes rates as 1enius. Bafllt your brainy tritnfll
21\'''1QiC'·aox Now 39c 1£8.1.00 JUST
on 111 h1nd-.. ah1bles. Dries
nylons In Im thin 10 mln· 1
\lt11 ..• 0r1tn s""t111, wool
socks, baby clothes ind
b1thin1 su its, 1c1rn1,
1loves, H1111ri1, too ... rrtrJ· ·
thin& that's too dtllcltt tor
SMOKELESS ELECTRIC HIBACHI
blc·drytr41)'in1 dries uftJJ 1t 1 aatroll.. ~ ~
tempmlvll. Gtntl• llmbk~~ _,,... NOW JUST ~
dryitL •ilmiz11 >riolltl. llfP iofl<I llJ-.,,,'~ iM!CdMibildc;;.ii.; s1495 .~,
18.21.15
························~··
....
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. NOW ONLY
I
-
SUNSET /1\ HOUSE
COSTA MESA • SOUTH COAST PWA
OPEN Mon. tllru Sat 10·9:30 • SUnday12·5
I
'
"Outdoor' CDP11111ll re•r-indoors! Surs in I flnh, tockiJl1 l11 •llt
Julen and 11\'or. Infrared br1illn1 rivu JOU de tectable dllRoll laltl
with ne •U, atam. spett1r, or chlrt:Ol1 mess. Smlll MOICb tt 111 oa
,..r coc111n tibk for hot hon d'"""'-111 ~"' """''" 1111!
atub er dlops tor tit. Drip p1n 1nd pill a1 be pwt hi dlstlU~
R-bl111uunc 1l1mmt b lllf<l1Uioi 4" 1 llr IJillll.,.ij.
fllCll'ICHllJIClll•IEI.•.• s399
NOW ONLY ,
UNIOUI! KENNEDY
COIN WATCH
111e Hirttofl of th• f1!111 .•• 1lepnt1, llJftd for1 llf1tlmt of pniud wrictl
Tiiis fiat MlnptOI Watdl In nftr·
thin Clll dbplfys 1 PM1ln1 United
States hlf.foltar bthlnd th• tlm•
kttplnr kinda ••• ttl• hfttOJical -m ..
mori1l lau1 honorlnr Pruld1nt
Kennedy. Shock·rwbtlnt J7·Jml
rnow1mt11~ prttlslo1fc11fttdwllh un·
bre1bblt malnsprlna. Genuine •1tct
1lllptor stnp. F11ll·}'llr nrnnty.
Tnilr 1 cotr1Clor'1 ltltnl
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• ti ..... C-'!."" 5-lemont to The DAILY PILOT, Tues.:JJuly 21, 1970
DDT Scare Analyzed
Official ·Cites Emotion as .Alarm Raiser •
11J ALlll!llT W. BATES
:.. Of .. ..., .... Melt •
,_Public alarm over el[Jets
GI, the environmeit and Wild-
uil human IJfe of strong
_.lOSl!cldea, _.;ally DDT, Is
MMd more on emotlon than on rt:1 pooslbly~stabllshed
ftclo. .
Thill ts tbe View of Frank
Parter, Orqe County deputy
agriculture commissioner, as
be expressed it to members
ad guests cf the Huntington
l(IOoclt Rotary Club Friday.
: Parter sald public concerns ta'll ~1 into t h r e e
areas:
measures. It does no research,
Instead relies on st.ate and
federal aar lcu ltural
departments for standards
they enforce.
-How toxic and dangerous
ts DDT and the general
pesticide complex lo the en-
vironment? Are we ,getting
further help lhe balan«.
"We are also concerned with
bacteria and viruses that at-
tack pests but not humans/'
he added. ";I'heSe clobber
some lnsecta which damage
crops."
Agricultural scientists sre
general rontamiMUon? To ----------1
these quesUons, P a r 1 on "iiiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiO;;;;iiiOiiiO'"il
answered that I5DT b .not •
highly toxic, that thS't have
been no deaths attributable
to It . 'nle problem lier in
its persistence and magnillca·
tion. It doesn't break down.
As an example. the speaker
cited plankton, eaten by the
millions by small fish . ·One
unit of DDT in a plankton
Ls multiplied in the small fish,
multiplied more Jn larger fish
which eat the smaller ones.
When a brown pelican eats
these fish, lta: eggs become
PUT WH IN
YOUR POCKET
Sell unwanted Items
with a D.AJLY PnDr
Clauified Ad.
l'HONE
642~5678
alsG developing new pest.
resisting strain! in crops,
Parsoo reported. lie cited
alfalfa as a crop brought
under control by this means. ·
Jnsect se1I has come , into
the picture. too. When the
oriental fruit fly Wi:6 found
-f.,rf. there any controls
over pesticide sales and use?
TM annrtr: They must be
regiltered with the U. S.
Department of Agriculture
alter the manufacturer has
shown no ldverse erfecta on
animals jn Food aod Drug
AdmfUstraUon tests. Highly
toxic or persistent, slow-
breakdown pesticides must be
brought under control, and
then used ooly by goverrunent
species is endangered. But too fragile to hatch and the ~~~~~~~~~~~I
while pelicans are uiiaflecLed, ""''"'-"
permlL _
Parker said DDT w a s
brought under control In
Orange County aix years ago.
Its use W"5 restricted tn and
around dlI1'n, especially, so
that there has been no serious
r~ problem in the coun-
t.y'a .milk supply or in fruits
and _vegetables, the deputy
commissioner reported.
He added that 10
for unknowr. reasons, he said.
Parso11 said trace quantities
of DDT are found in many
fonns of life -eight to 12
parts per million in the human
system, for example. But past
tests have come Into doubt
with the discovery that an
industrial e h e m i c a t con-
taminant gives the same test
reading as DDT.
BOOKS
BOOKS
BOOKS
BOOKS
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In 1 trap '1n the Anaheim
area, the whole domesUc
citl'U!i industry, worlh hun-
dredJ: ol millions of dollars,
came under grave ttireat. Thie
frul~ fly was <er~l~ted by
mell'tls of Intensive trapping
which employed. a se~ at-
trac!anl
Insect al<rililllloo la abo
being used, Par10nsald, in the
case•of Insects \!>'I ""!< only
once. Sterilized ma m pro-
.duced In laboraloril!f, Uitn 111-
ed to saturate ail infested
area. Thus, no reproducUon
ean occur, he said.
Panon t.okl lhe Rotarians
that the overall coocluJion
about DDT and 1111>Vet lo pro-
hibit lb" use nationwide ls that,
al this point In time, OM
does not present an l~nl
danser to ,ither wildllfe or
l ,_ ' Th ~!,11 Mc~n j~
having a fa,m1ly
s·hoe clearance
sale;
-Are there alternate, nm-
chemical means or pest con-
trol? Yes, Parson answered.
The first Is use of paruites
and predalors. emtMa.YUCSTDCI: •fwtilllt"Ulll :~c:~~'J<p~ -s-;:;+;:~· now. Come early. Many style. end sizes naUable. Savings up to 30°/ ••
humans.
"We need mort baslo
researth and more bal1ac1
bet ..... cbemkal and -cbemlcol methods of pest ....
.Ito! In aarJ<ulture," he con-
cluded. "Laws should be hued
oo IOUlld oclrntific dala, DOI
on~1alone." ·
agricultural districts in the
county have law enforcement
officers who monitor fallout m DDT and phosphate
materials. The •gency, be ex-
plained, is charged with en-
forcing laws covering air
pal)otion, agricultural prac-
tices and weights a n d
"Orange Co u n t y has
historically relied on a balance
ot 'good bugs' and 'bad bugs'
(the pests)," he Wd. "And
we have been searching for
more parasites to introduce
into California agriculture to
:::.~-·-.;;. f{ SOUTH COAST PLA~A e HARBOR CENTER ·the family man
i ~zr:"·1,. t~·~t ·~
'« ··~., .
17a lflllJWtoit ""· UPl'll LEVE(.. COSTA MISA HAllOI ILVD., COSTA M1SA ~~IDMlll , , "I' , ,
• -· -.....
t~~. : 'fi'w;f,:r~;,:
f ---..--.:.....
:= ·, Sears
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New Treads*
Tubeless Blackwall
SIZE f r.T. SIZE ""' 'Retreads
on sound-7.35x14 41c 8.25xl4
lire 7.i5xl4 · 44c 8.15xl5
bodies \Vhitewalts Only !2 i\fore Pf"r Tire
A .-n • ...,., , LO ... llACN HI S .. 111
CRUSADER
BRAND NEW
F'ull 4-Ply Nylon
• New conlour,broadohoulder for greater
oafety e Newlnad design foraJl.weatherlraclion
•New. 6/10.inch white oidewall to match
the width of'1he while oidewall of many
new can
Tu.be I-e1.~1i. .... 11.
s' F,S.'r.
SACH•
6.95xl4 1.94
7.J5xl4 2.04
7.15x l4 2.11
8.25xl4 :?.33
7.75xl5 2.19
Plu1 F.E.T~ Each And 2 Old Tire1
Whitewalls Only '3
More Per Tire
POMCMIA NA 9·S1t1
CAllDeA PAK a40 oet1 oa.aeA&I QI J•1IM, G 4-W11 O&.YMPtC .. & IOTO,o~ ... 121t PKO WIMMt
COWi064 NI ..Ult, • :147tl HOU1'W009 MO 9 .. M1 OUW ~7•1100
COVMA ...... 11 • tNIUWOOli CJl.-a..Jlll PASAMNA tll•Jll1, JJl-4111
... ...... -.-1111. t aao A.M. t• t1ao •.Mi._,. u. -1e 1 P.M. "latllhtctlon.-..ftfHd er Y-_,lee~"
\ ----------
IANfA AMA IO 7-JJ71
IANTA fl ........ Mol·IOl t
IANTA MONICA IX 44711
IOUnl COMT 111A1A Mt-Ull 10aua Mt-1111
UflAll9 "'"'"' VAUIY JO 1 .... 1, .... ftll
VllMONT " .. ,,,,
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BE~CH S[~ENE ARR -IVES
If hitclihiking's th e
''in'' way to t rav el,
the young lady
(above) is in styfe.
A pretty miss proves
beachwear can be
femini.ne es well es
functional (·right),
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,.,...,,, J111Y 11, 1'1'1 , ... 11
Designs Transform Milady.
Into 'Madame Butterfly'
By MARIAN CHRISTY
ROME -Now ls the time to
take a fast boat to Japan. Princess
Irene Galiliine, a star in the world
of Italian couture, has just showed
her winter 1970--71 collection here,
and the geisha girls in vaded the
fashion world.
The Russian-born princess, smart
enough to follow one strong theme
without confusing the issue, has
cut all her wool suits and coall
like wrap-on kimonos. You didn't
worry about the midi hemlines
because the total Oriental look
comes off as chic.
The coat of the year Is cut
like a classic kimono with aide
slits, mandarin collar and a
buttery-soft leather belt h\qj:gln1
the midriff Jn the best of obl-ush
tradition. The whole collection
tumbled out one version after
another or the Orient.al theme.
Fashion, no longer an isolated
Issue, ill related to world hap-
penings as tourists are rlockina:
t.o Osa ka tor the Wotld's Fair.
Designer• such as Pierre Cardin
and Bill Blass are planning new
boutique• In Tokyo. And even the
United States Is watch.Ing with ua-
dlsgulaed Interest the aophlstication
and advancement made by
Japanese Industry.
COATS ARE BRIGHTER
Winter coats -In new color•
like rust, eggplant or a bright
navy -·were kimono ln concept,
someUmes buttoned to the aide,
and alway1 Yrith a coordlnaUil1
midi. BIOUMle were of ahiny prlnL
fabrics,
lf you havt unlimited means,
lnvest In a kimono cost 1n brown
beaver. Galitzine has 'Ill.Ch goodies
1n her salon and all the top store
buyers from lhe United St.ates were
th .... buy.
If you 're advanced ln your
fa.abion thinking and don't want
fur, the next' most luiurlous thlag
is a kimono coat mlde rrom heavy
·wool printed in ablb'1ct geometric
·dealps thlt only the J1panese
teem to have mastered.
Aleiandre created the upswept
geflha girl hairdos -but you can
have one, too. Simply tear ~ page
6!Jl of a recent Voaue m1gazlae
featuring alory and pictures on
1eilha1 and like It to your favorite
halrdreuer for a facsimile.
Black is the cok>r of the )'t.ar.
But It's far from drab at GaUtzlne.
Geisha girls are thoroughly
modern Millies with e v e n I n I
• kimonos made from cU111tn1 Jf:rsey.
with slitl: on each 1ide to lhow
legs.
SHOES GET BOOT
lnatead of 1hoel, the 1970
footwear It~ \mid·lea black ulln
bootl:. When a wom11 float.I into
a room in a kimono gown, nude
butterflied 1leeve1 winging beside
her, she will be the cent.er of
attention. And, with the boots, ...
she'll march in, rather than take
mincing steps.
Traditional Japanese costumes
were handled untraditionally by the
prillCi!ss who ls talkil& Oriental
without saying a word.
Classic Japanese native C01tume1
were done in lrideJ1Cent moire tbat
changed from yellow to red, blue
to pink , as mannequins sashayed
through the salon.
And other kimonos, with black
velvet top1 and wing sleeves, had
print &klrts appllqued with bit•
and pieces of brightly colored
leather. Galltzine did not use stiff
fabrlca. Just floaty material that
1ticb to a womaa and shows her "
off. "
It was a cast of ancient Eaat
meeting modern West.
JusL to underline her paint,
the prince1s made kimonos in belte
cocktail fur. An accompanyin&
stole w11 lilled in aable. At this
point the obi 11"1 became t«toiM
1hell and rhino-. •
Everyone apprecilted 1 • e I n I
wome1 come back on the fashion
actne -women who want to pltue
men and don't 11ve a hoot 1bout
1<>-<alled emancipation.
I •
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F~)shion ·Cuts Varied • Figure
If flabk>n be a fickle woman, men
are woolna: the elusive, miss.
As tourists and 8Wl!lhine pour into
coastal ret0rts, beachwear for men a~
pears to lean to the effeminate, while " women's below-~hip cut bikinis have
rlaen to more modest heights.
Ti•ancHiye fabrics reminiscent of . ' spc;;bleadted blU<jelllll _., in tee-
sh.lrta: and trunks lending an air ol the
20s to· the !Qs. Meo· gub\g admiringly
11 1 lhopely ,,. .. with loog hair .trolling
down the beachfront in a· lace shift
are alartled by a mllStache on closer
insi*uon.
Modest one-piece suits fol\ women onct
aa:aln mUe ~ acene, while the younger
geneptjon goes a1q In Its more normal
manner: With standard weai-!ng apparel. H~, ,,; ,ltw1y1, ~me ~ ~ va~y
ol aijapeis, styles and f1brics desia:ned
to fit~ _...rer. The over-SO generation
leam to atriW, decorated or plain, with
th~ mpre jaunty topped bY Panam1s.
sineiwea~ ia another matt e r.
Mintlkirted misses stroll along with
friends clad in muu muus; bermudas
still remain number one attire for
toorills, highlighted by the USl.l•I number
of knobby-kneed men in Jong socks and
tennis shoes.
In short (or loog if you prefer)
suruiline fashions ha ven't changed much,
they're 1Ull 1 matter of individual fancy.
Da ily Pilot
Photos by
Grog Schneider
STRAW VOTE'S GOT IT FOR KEEPING COOL
,,
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A little terry cloth coverup 11
jui t the thing for overcast
mornings on the 'beach. Couple
that with a ~arllfully-placed
terry towel, and 1ht young set
is ready and waltlnt for the sun
to ahlne •
> •
Tht lon1 end short· el It It
min'• fashions ar.1 9attlng ~
er. Mexican lnapired coverupa
a re an ey~1tchlng v•rl1tlon to
bright, print shirts ind ,..,.
shirts; or the more recent Ntik
print.
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J
JI DolllV PILOT T-• .Ju~ 2~ 1970
Hairbrush Technique Backfires
D,EAR ANN LANDERS: 'l1!e letter
from the nut who wanted her huaband
lo spank her (OI my Ire up. Every
now llld t\><!f one of lheN lkt women
wrllet lo you llld II ~ "1' that
you 111 them llrlllht And -may l have Iha lut wmd lo lhe bride w1-
falher -Ud hi• p-Uve ....in.
Jaw with a hairbrulh u a wtdcUnr
preeent!
My dad ,wu an old-luhk:IMd Indlan.
In foci, he .wu In \lie Cherot11 Jlun
in Old1horn1. He hid never hunl of
Slpund Freud, but l .. member !Ill
roply lo my mother when she ul:«I
hlm to peddle my older allter. 11You
rnUlt piddle the sJrll yourielf H you
feel lhey .-1 II. II fem1le chlldrtn
are struck by their falber they will
want their ~band• to hit them." · .
My ll>ree ~.,, IJld l 1rt all h1pplly
mani1'!t None ol. us have ever been
strueli by dur hliotlancll llld I feel ctr!lln
our ft.thet~1 treatment ol UI wu an
tmporill)t factor bt our llve1. We all
eei.cted flOlllle men who _,Id not drwn
of _ 1trl'k\iic a woma11. Show me a wife
wi..,. ru,,b1nc1 betll her llld I will
"""" you • _,,.. -lither openked her well Into adult Ufe -CONTENT ,
D~R CONTENT• y,.,. llery pnvaa
once more duit common Hale 11 better
thu all tM bee* Jania' ii tbt werW.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: l ..-1 Ille
letter from the writer who referred to
rnal• who look at glrb' Jep on the .
bus u "dirty old men." Tbere ~
more dlrty young womta. around ttu
ANN Ll\NOERS ~
dJrly ,admeo.
DOti ~' wrltor -how -femllu •l'!Wkllw lll1f noked In blr1
-d ! II Ian~ ll!e lll)'lllOnl 19< a famlly man to stop for , 1 qlllck ~
on 1111 way borne. Lui Sttunlty I loQll
our 21-year~ld aon for a beer wblle
1111 mother WU lllzoppiq_ '!he ~
med to be ftlpedlbJe. [ WU RodlM
when 1 cocktail wallr• QPllf'ld wear-•
lnl notbinc from the w·a11t up. except
1 ltrlllf ~ betels. '!he tld'1 eye1 nurly
fell out of !Ill head. J l[OI him nut.
of there u fut 1.i I could.
What'a thla coqntry oqmJne: to when
a man · an't ret a beer· at four o'clock
In the altemooo without l'lttnc tm·
blrrllled like that! Wiii! CID the
aver1p cllhen do! -SAN FllANCISCO SIIAMll ' • DEAR SHAME: Tiie ,..,... ,._
cu rtM. Ban tat feat.re UH ulled
wlltrtlM1 uy IO 01 U.. •tlWe. Y11'11
"' llappy .. -11111 -of -cUp Jollll •••e 1,.. ool ol bat-.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Sl1 months
.,. 1 boulht • pec11sr10c1 Chin ... pu1
dol wtth m,y own money. I w~ cruy
lboul him.
Ytlterday when I came home from
1 -11. my -lnfGnntd me that
dtd hid stven ow~ m~ do(, I· blew
my lop. No;; l un not ~ lo
-ol my porenll llld r thty are Jn•U., me like I have ...,. iollhlome
dileue. Wu my did rllht lo do lhll!
lloea my I~ IOUlld blued! PI ....
1111Wer in· the p1per 10 my folk• can
... tt. -PRAIRIE VILLAGE FAMILY
FIGHT •
DEAR FIQBTIR: YIW lelltr -·t
10111111 lllued. 11 -taeemplele. Y•
Iller • cloa 11 . to WRY -did
l llVe ••• , ,.., ... Did "' llilo
-.llMy! Did " blrk 11 ..... ! Did
)'OU atcJed ... wtlk film Ir fOM film
" belbe film! I euaot llelleve 11111
oat ti a ckar bloe My year d.t 11ve
i••Y 1•ipt1. l!Qply"' m-. -aad I'll t11 .. u tplalGa.
How far ahould a teena,.e couple to?
Can net:kln& be safe? When does lt
become too hot to handle? Send fl'r
Ann Landen:' booklet, "Neckln1 and Pet.
ting -What Are the LlmJta?" Mall
your request to AM Lander& ln care
or yoor newspaper encloain1 50 cents
in coin. and a long, at.amped, sdf·ad-
rlrt!'Sed. envelope 1n care of the DAILY
PILOT.
' ' DYING PRQCl~RES -Leeming UW.~r · restaurant, Huntington Beach. Brushing up on their
looay to speak miGcoililuct meetings will be lleW.ot' .: procedure are. (~t to right) the l\llnea. Dougl11
11~ of Las Oles Toastmistress Clpb, who w!D·•be Woodburn, president, ·and Velma Boflli. and Zoli..,
lnatalltd during a meeting tomorrow In Frapcois ' Smith, vice prtsideni,.. · ..
Nuptials •
P'erformed
Zonta Club Toasts
Returning Delegate
Fall Date
Revealed
Horoscope Las Olas Leadership For Pair
Cancer: Seek
In Own Area . '
Changed in Ceremony
MARTIN FURNITURE
il!PM
SAVE
From
I
. NOW DUfllNG OUR ANNUAL ANNIV.RS.RY $ALE
H.,e Dl~nts On . New Groupln91 From Tllo-vllle, .S.nfor4, lroyhlll, Royal
Coach, La.Z·loy, lerldlne, California F11mltuTJ Shops, Sealy, SlmlllOlls, and a
Host Of Othen EqHlly Fa111ous.
MIDITllRANEAN -TRANSITIONAL' -EAllLY A..,ElllCAN
0... Low Over~ead Means • • • Lowest Prices On Natlonc1ly Advertised Fumlturo
• • • Fne Dlllvery • • • lest Terms • • • lest Service Records.
~•UI llfll•I!'• Oldllst
•-0 ....... 11 f'11r11lt11rl! Storl!
Downtown Costa MtSO
1161 HAR80R ILVD. Phone: 548·5131
CMl'M ACCMll In¥!._,
Amtrktt1 i •P•n•
l•~Al'IMlrk•nl • MtS!tr Clllrlf, Tet
SLAVI C K 'S
Jtwt1et1 Slnc1 1t17
II FASH ION ISLAN D
NEWPORT BEACH -6••·138 0
o,.. Mo..t., ud Frl4tlf 1tt1tll t :JD
)
l•
l.
l
l
l
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DICK TUC;t
TUMBLEWEEDS
MUn AND JEFF
JUDGE PARK~R
A.LEX, I WA S
WORRIED A.604T
YOllJ Ate YOU
ALL.. R16MT?
I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by R • POWER
1 ACRO SS
l Pitch
'1 Tragedy .
e.g.
9 Command to dog:
2 words 14 Sp. vlcto1y
"' 15 Weight
unit
lb Ballery
term Ina I
17 Politician's
1esponse:
2 words
19 Surprising
sports
result
20 Insects
21 ••• degre e
22 Piece of
real estate
21 Cale111\ar 11bbrev1alion
1 24 Made out
26 Rodents
29 Associaticri of
1 Prolessiooal
Engineers·
Abbr. Jl Broke last
32 Voyage
33 Gave oil
Ii hi
% ,i.:,: of
conceit
)8 Afrlca11
native 39 En tertained
41 Maintained
law and
order 43 Con]u11ction
44 Administer
'19 Miss
Gard ner
50 Female
animal
51 Equine
52 ApPlied an
11\r\el layer
54 Aardvark's
roeal
58 Marine
1nsignia
liO Decaliter.
Abbr.
bl Well·kno\1<11
g1eetin9
bl From head -· ---:
'( esterday's ·Puzzle Solved:
' .
1121170
z words 7 Sot1rce of 3S US city:
1>4 Conceited potential 2 words
bD Noveli st da11ger 37 Kil led
John---·-8 Where there's 40 Kind of
!>7 Neighbor lots of room: bonus
ol lndi;i 3 wOfds 42 Standards ol b8 Business 9 Fl1st king perfection
abbteviati<11 of Israe l "45 Business
D9 Pale 10 Not at sea: VIP
70 Leasl 2 words 48 Clly of
desirable part 11 Central Amer-Ind la
71 Recent: ican nation: 53 Marry on
Prefix 2 words the QT 12 Nether-55 Awa y
lands from home :
community 2 words DOWN
l lc:em;an '$ 13 Convened 50 Archaic
implement 18 N. Amer. city pronOIJ!l
2 Off by 24 Kind of 57 Nicola
onesl!tl governmtnl ·----: It.
J Summarr: ZS Put out anarchist
IQJorma of ofrice In \ht US 4 Olsting-27 Neighbor 59 Irishman 's
uished of Nepal name
Conduct 28 Famed DI Ttoublts
Medals· English 02 "·· •
Abbr. potter Skylark":
5 Ual e 30 SVlke 2 words
animal repealedly 63 Eicc larna •
a bealin! lo
4b Oispass ona.te
-47 Restrain
Ii Boston Jl Und"stand lions of
Garden, 34 U11sical Sl.ll'ptlst
for one direction 65 Follow -T.,""'iF.-,-.,:-ir:,~ ., 10 n 11 11 I 2 l
.. ..
( /
°Tl'\IS L.OOKS LIKE
YOU SWEPT UP THE
KITCHEN/ YOU EXPECT
ME TO EAT "lMIS?
~ .. ~ OllT' • -
By Al Smlllt
WEU..,NO,YOU
DON'1' f!AVE TqauT
!'ORCE YOURllELF!
MAYB& YbU'u.. 'FJl-JD
SOMEl'HJNGYOU
L.IKE!
i'. '
By H-'d Le Dou
I "'::::-==;;;--;;;;::;:;--;;;o;;;-;;-;;;"<1 POES QI: Wlrn~ HAVE
PERKINS
"' "' ll I
\I I
\11 lt'
MISS PEACH
I
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l ! •
STEVE ROPER
'"
l'I
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IEL.\TIVB MERE Uil lOWN -··"""'· """ ..,._._.,. WOll..P Ha.P MEI.? MO •••
"'*""'·
"' "'
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"' \I I
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Ll'I: UNll
GOR~
MOON MUWNS
ANIMAL. CRACKERS
"' "' Ill
"' 11'
"' '" '" \"
(;EE, HOMEY/ Wf··J-
MEAH THERl'S Flll>I~'
,. Pl./.Cf ''"'il•AIJ'
•• ·-st:;-
C::1L~~liDil'l
PEANUTS
By Jolln Miies
By Mel
Tuesday, JulJ 21, 1970
' MR,M .M
By Al c.,.,
.<f~~
~
By GllS ~
By Ferd Johnson
""··~) ~l•j
By Roger Bole•
HE'S t.l~ITINQ F~
.lo>O,RJ> Flt.Ot-.1lll; Ii
'SILEIJf" IM'3'olU'fY.
DENNIS THE MENACE
I ~ • • • )
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JI DAii. Y 'ILDT '-· July 21, 1•10
Dodge r s' Musi.c Mall Sings Along to No-hitter
Football
Stalemate
Continues
NEW YORK (41') -'l1>e pro football
ltaltmate continued todly 11 the Na-
uOoal Foolball Lequo club owotrs med
hi special session aod the bi& money
Illar• lined up behind their player _ ......
: ~ to John Mackey o f
J14Hi ..... , preald<ot ol the NrL P1"yet1
Aoodation, the iN\le boill down to one
thlnc -bow much the owners are gotnc"'
to Plll Joto the r«irement fund "'"
fhenullouryur1.
. Alu Mlller, general counsel for ~
NFLPA, claims I.he player• want aa
increase of Q.6-mllllon-pu-year for the
pension plan and the owners are offerlnc
on !ncreuo ol $1.7 mlllioo.
• He ukl Monday it WU not possibJ8
... --. tbe pr_.,i penaioa It this tinwinto dollar aad cent benefita.
M Uie owaen pthend there were
.uM IOIDf: were of the opinion tbeit
'ftelOti.lilng ccmmiUt:e already had been
·~r-geoerous in the dispute.
The players called 1 oewli conference
Monday afternoon to clarify their stand.
ruYEJtS BACK STAND
.SUch bi& names as qua~backs
Boman Gabriel d 1.91 Angeles, Fran
rarkmloo of the New York Glanll, John
llrodle. ol Son Franeilco ud John 11ac11·
of San Diego backed the auociation.
So did Gele Sayers, the great running
back of ~ pucago Be.Ira and
Jklebackers Jim Houet.oo of Cleveland
and Larry Grantham of the New York
Jets.
F..rnie Wright, Cincirmali tackle, Kermit
Alexander, delmsive -ack from I..os
Angeles, and John WU bur, DaUas guard,
also were present to at.and up and be
Counted.
• Mackey reAd a wlre from Jim Tyrer,
player representative.of the wocld cham-
Poo Kan.us City Ctief1 who uid the
team bad wt.cl not to roport to camp,
".!Yeo U ·the owners opm tbe doors, unUl
"the m.pOt. Is ..uled.
'Ibe Chiefs' etand is exb'a impotlant
becatee they are due to Jlay the College
A11-&ar1 in Odcago July 31. The All·
-Stars are hard al work.
Grantham reported the Jels also had
·voted unanimously not to hold any formal
·workouts until the matter ls resolved.
·He said about 25 veterans held an unof-
ficial session Monday and, e~ , to
continue them. · '
M.Ckey said the news conference bad,
been called to clarify the player,s' JJO:Si·
tioo. He said the players never prop:ised
any tncre1se in tickd price.a as P.Brl
of their proposal and never suggested
that pension benefitJ for coaches,
trainers or front office help be discon-
tinued or curtailed.
'.UNREALJSTIC REPORTS
He also said some printed repo rts of
p o s s i b I e pension benefits we r e
"unrealistic.'' Mackev poin~d out that
It was the NFL, not tht players associa·
· tion. which was trying to renegotiate
a Pro Bowl All.Star game contract with
a Los Angele! newspaper.
Tarkenton read from a tw~page
. typewritten statement but moll of the
qther players spoke briefly.
"OUr request bi simple and basic ."
'Tarkenton said in part. "We have a.,ked
the owners to Improve the level (If
benefits and the structure ot the National
Football League player pension fund.
llO as to bring it into parity with plans
· available ta athletes in other sports."
• 111 .clolin.1, he said, l'We do not wish
this to be the shortest season in pro
·football . We want It to be the hest,
: and we will do everythint: that we can
: to realize that goal."
: According to Miller the average cost
: of the proposed Increase would be
: fl70.000-a-year for four years by each
: of the 26 clubs. Hr claimed the owners
: offered an annual Increase of $60,000
~per club, leavin1 diffsence of fllO,eot
'wclllb
~ In the mean~ime, the date for the ! All.star same in Chk:aro J1 only 10
days off.
} 'J1)t play1r1 say they recret the aamt
j 11 endan1er~ and claim they are doin1
; eve~lhln1 . possible to speed up negoUa·
~ tions, but the owners had not IM'f'&red
~ Uteir lut four proposals.
f ; Angels Stumble • :1n New York I ' . I ~ ~Lllfl!I·· ._ .... YOll•
• --r ·~ •rlln.I • . a I"" t I I Ct.rt 1, 1'> t I I I (~• 4111 IC1M9¥,Jll Jll l
1" I. .. I I I I MllKM, d , t I I
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\
,. . .
Singer's Mo14nd Classic
' ls Happy Tune for LA
LOS ANGELES .., Rilhllllnder BUI
Singer IOC<Pted • $GOO bont11 for pltdling
a no-bitter IM the la Angeles Dodgers,
but apologized for taJdn1 the money.
''I'm not worth ll," aakl SJn1er of
the bonua, llllloqh hll lOlmmlteo unt
him 1 note ur&lnl him to hold out for
more.
Singer, 21, handcuffed the Pbllld<lplll1
Phillies Monday, $-0, for hit first no.hit·
ter in seven aealOnl q a Dodaer. 'lbe
l50tl bonus la a Dodger tradJtk>n daUn1
back lo Cart Enklne'1 no-hitter 1n 1162.
Singer'• teammates cite inflatlon.
"I have a real nice 11lary," he aid.
''I haveo't justUied my aalary by betn1
out for two monthl."
Sina:er was 1idelined April 18 with
infectious hepatitis. He spent three week1
in a hospital and didn't return to the
team until June I~.
"Quite rtmarkab!el" 11ld Dr. Robert
Woods, who treated the Dodgers' 2()..game
winner. "I expected he'd be plttiting
but I did not upect· hlm to do this
well. It's fantastic!
lint inning and Don Money wbea Slrl&er'1
erring throw puUed Wes Parker off first
base in the sevepth,
Maury Wills, inaerted at thlrd base
In a defena1ve move by manacer Walt
Alltoo, ..... to hiJ left for Llrry Hiiie'•
119t srouncler Ind lhrew him out in q,. eilhth.
But Sin&;er saved his own ~hitter
In the ffflh when Hille hit a liner up
the nllddle, "Self-delrme," 11kl Bill. ''It
hit my glove and I Kot him ouL 11
In I.he ninth, pinch-!Ulitr Terry Hmnon
wu out on a hi&b bounCff and Denny
Deylr lined out to Willie Davia in center.
On a Z.2 pttdl, Byron Brqwn lqfled
a foul that wu ccrnin1 down near the
Phillies' dugout. Torborg cau1ht It.
"I tripped over a bat or sometblnt
-maybe it was my shadow," aald
Torborg. "But I'll tell you whit: That
thing wasn 't goin1 to bit ihe iround·
"On ncrhltter1 the pitcher 11 1uppoaed
to strike out the last batter and oot
give his catcher a heart atteck, '' he
said.
IT WAS A HJ,PPY TUNE POUNDED OUT .. BY PDQ.YilR Bil l SINl;ER
Actually, Singer already had shown
he coukl sWJ be one of the National
League's top pitchers, and statistics bear
him out when ,he says he has gotten
"progressively llronger."
Torborg caught the perfect same pitch-
ed by Sandy Koufax in 196$. "~h
one is exciting as the other," be llkl.
Alston, whose team brGke a threo-11me
Joalng streak, said :
Australian
Dedication
Paying Off
EDJNBYRGH, Sootland 141')
AUllnlia bu shown 1t I.he Com·
moowtalth Games here that it ii 1lill
a force to be reckoned with -al~r
nearly 20 Y"'1s in the top · flight ' oi
intet1atfonal IWimming competition.
Two world record holders, Mike
Wtoden ~ ~rm Moras, have scooped
up' fiVe gOld d.edab: between them .aad
Australian coach Don Talbot bu plenty . ' . ol fresh talent to back up hil ·~· .
"It's just d rd i cation , application,
training and more training," T.albof '1a1d
in u interview. '''lb.al'• how we ally
at the tep." '
Pool watchen have tpeCUl.ated here
that Talbot was developinc a new swim·
ming technique which Involved · fewer
ieg kicks than is usual for freestylers.
But Talbot said, "There is no secret
technique, that'• just people trying to
find a reuon for our success."
Who are the new Aus\ralian swim
kida to watch for? . .
_,H.tlen Gray and Debbie Caln' are · the
lS.year-olct babies oC 'the aquaa.
Hl:len finished secoad -· a Ion& way
behind -in the fiaals of the IOO-meltr
freeslyle. But her perfonnarice w1s in-
credible when related against 11-year~ld
Miss Moras' record shattering time.
Miss Moras knocked seven leCOl)d.s
olf the old world mark to collect. her
second gold medal. Her time Wai 1:02.45.
Debbie Cain is the Australian
backstroke champion at 100 and 200
meters.
"She's so keen that by Muaich ahe
could be right 1t the top," Talbot said.
Af~r her performances here Miss
Moras must be a favorite for one or
more golds ia the 1972 Olympia in
Munich.
"Of course there will be a tremendous
challenge from the United States in all
evenls," said Talbot. 'And dle Canadians ·
ha ve been poshin'g us hard here."
Talbot didn't sound too wooied.
Wende• has indicated he will retire
before Munich. Bul the cont in uo u 1
stream· of top tale11l coming through
aince the tra ot multiple world record
holder Dawn Fraser looks likely to cOn-
tlnue.
Mantle Tells
Urge to Return
MIAMI CAP) -Mickey Manlle'1 1ot
the baseball itch again.
Siateen months after retirin1 11 a
player, the New York Yankee alu .. er
lJ serloualy considering 1 new c1reer as a manager.
"I think I could be a good manager,"
Mantle uld Monda y. "I know 1 always
sakl that t didn't thlnk I'd ever want
to be a manager.
"But I've btto w1tchin1 mana1er1
In All-Stir garpes and otbet ball games
for a teason abd a halt aiid I'm Rettlng
to the point where I think I could
manage as eood 11 anybody ."
Prev!OOaly, Mantle had said the only
place he'd even rive a Oeetin1 thought
to m1na1in1 would be ln Dallu, hls
hometown.
While Oallu is still No. I In hi1
mind , Mantle sakl it's ool the only
pl1et he1d manage .
•fWbat I'd like most would be if they
ever brou(lbt 1 Jtlajor leaaue tu.m lo
0.11 .. ')><I Worth lib ~·re llJllnl
to do wobld be to in1ha11 that ll11R1
"Besides the f1ct thlt I couldo 't play
the game any more, the touiheat part
for me u 1 manager had aot J to be
all lhe traveling aod being aW1y from
my family to much. But it I managed
Dallis-Fort Worth, I'd be 11 home half
the Um1."
Azcue'sAnalysls ..
Messersmith , Tatum
Best Cherub Hurlers
By HOWARD L. HANDY
01 ""' 0.WJ l"!Mt ll•lf ~
BOOTON -Clyde Wright 1eada the
Angel road show i1lo Fenway Park
torigbt f9r a four-game series with the
Red Sox. after the Angels lell ~fore
the magic or southpaw pitcher Fritz
Peter80fl ol the New York Yankffa Mon-
day nijh~ 6-1.
Petersen is now 11 -2 lifetime ag1 inst
· the Angela and J1 at a lols lo explain
·the maaic as much aS anyone else,
"For IOme odd reason I .b1ve a lot
ol oollfldenoe when I 10 'to the IJlOUlld
a&a11l!I them ," be said. .
'Ibe five-year veteran IOOlhpiW uaed
A,,.el sr.te
AN -• KMPC 111f)
July JI Antel1 •1 ll111lon ~;U .. m • . !!!llJ Af!!h • llOllDn 4:15 e_.m.
moetly fastballs but added he was iei'ting
his change-up over the pla.ll! wjth con-
sistency. He didn't use a ~li~er in setting
the Angels dqwn wi th thrte hits.
. ,Meanw~ile, catcher Joe Azcue was
a1ked to 'analyze the Arigel pilchin1 staff
11 the club tries lo close i'n Ofl Minnesota
la the Western Divi!:ion or the American
League.
He took tonight's starter first.
"He moves the ball around well and
hita the corners better than. any 'pitcher
on . the staff. He knows how lo pitch
and makes up for any lack of speed
with deception, ~ilferent speeds ani:I the
krlowledge of the game aJld oppoeina
hitters."
if Wright isn 't the best Angel hurler,
the man who should know was asked
the obvious question .... wh() is the
Jas~st?
"Al)dy Messersmith a,mong the
reKUlars and Ken Tatum in the bullpen.
Andy has all the stuff needed to be
1 great pitcher, a live fastball, a good
slider, a curve, changeup and a
screwball.''
Me~ramlth appears to be ailing after
hia performance Monday alght, and
manager Lefty PhllliPI ls conceraed.
"I am far more concerned ovtr Andy
than I am the lo!s tcxllght. He seems
to have something wrong wilh his Jell
side and he hasn't told me what it
Is. I will find out tomorrow and if
he gets Into trouble Friday night, Tom
Bradley will take his place in the rota-
tion .
"He didn't throw any overhaad curve
balls and that's (Ille of his btst pitches.
If we lose him It will be a tough
hill to climb."
What 1bout Azcue-'s thoughts on the
other two 1tarter1 -~m Murphy and
Rudy May?
"Tom 's sinker ball is the belt on
the staff. J call his slkler 1 fast curve
but he has to keep hJa pitches down
to be effective.
"Rudy can reach back and throw hard
but he sometime! forgets to bend down
when he's pitching. He has a good fast
ball, a curve and a change-up."
Turnl11g to young Bradley, who awaits,
"He will be a real pitcher. He has
lots of confidence in his curve and he
isn't wild . He is a real comer and
should be around for a long time."
Tatum's fast ball rises, according to
J oe when he is pitching effectively.
From lhe left side, Da ve LaRochr
is perhaps the best at the presenl time
in the bullpen. He Ms confidence and
can throw hard.
"Greg Garrell '• fast ball is alive but
he is a little wild. Paul Doyle has
the besl curve and the best move to
firs~ base.
"Ed (Fisher) i$ great for a change
of tempo and has been real effective
this year ."
Time ran out . on Azcue, as il did
on the Angels Monday nighl . Lead off
walks in the second and fourth inni11
artd a two-run homer by Danny Cater
put the Yankees ahead Lo slay.
He pitched a n<t-hllter for 7 2/3 innings
June 23 at Atlanta, when he wun't
expected to IO INre than Ill innings .
He came back to throw a two-hit shutout
11 the San Francisco Giants July 5.
Singer is S-1 since his return and
7-3 for the season.
"I had much better stuff today," Singer
said. "My breakin& ball was nut to
nothing in the last two Innings 1t Atlan-
ta."
Dodger catcher Jeff Torbor1 1akl he
told Sin&"er, "Don't be afraid ta throw
your breaking ball." After the seventh,
Torborg Aid be told h~ pitdler, "Only
six outs W the no-bitter."
Totborg said Singer was throwing so
hard he thought he might suffer 1 brulled
catching hand.
"He was over.powering with his change
of speeds," Torbora: said, "then. he threw
th! ball past 'em."
Sin1er was In C001mand all the w1y,
striking out 10 and walkina nont. Only
two Phillies reached base, Oscar Gamble
when he was hit by a pitch in the
Charger•' Camp
''1'tlis kind of thing pici:s up the whole
club wflen we need it. l'm not only
happy for Bill, I'm happy for the whole
club."
The no-hitter was the. Vlinl in the
major leagues this season, and au hive
occurred in Southern California. Dock
Ellis of Pittsburgh ~hit the San Diego
Padres June 12 and Clyde Wright of
the Angels did it against Oakland July
3 at Anaheim.
l"HIU.011..PHIA LOS Afll•ILll .., , ""'' .. ,II,_. Doyle, 2b 4 0 0 0 Gr•Mrk'"tll.1& 4 I O
GMnlll1, rf 1 I t I Slttm0r1, If • 1 I arown1. rf 2 o I o WJlll, Jb t t o "'-V, ato J I I 0 W.Dtwlt, cl J 1 I
0.JllllnlOll, lb J 0 O 0 W.P•rk•r. Uo 4 2 I lrlegf, II J I I 0 Ltltbvre, 211 • I 1
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..... , .. 3011.JolhlHl,lf. 00 M.Jtw1n, c J I 0 I lh11aell, rf • 2 2 f ryrMn, p I I 0 0 Torboro, c 4 I t
Pll/MI", II I 0 0 0 SlllCltr, It 4 I I H••,,_, pl! 1 o o I
Tol•I$ :II 0 0 0 Tol•I• :u 11 • E -$ln91r 1. Sow•, M011•~. LOa -l'hll4o·
d•IPlll 1, LDol Angtlft 7, JI -W. P11rk1r, Jtw.•11.
Sa -w. O•wta, w. l'•rt::@~ 51' -w O.vk.
l•H ll lll ll lO l"rym.n (M l •l /J 10 J J I J
P•lrner l-1/J I I I I J Slngtr fW,1.JI t O I I t 11
HI" -by S1119tr tG4ornt1i.l. TllM -2:10. Atter!Nl>Ct -J:l.-tU.
Kaboom! Old Pals Collide
·In Grid Combat Renewal
By PIUL ROSS
Of Ille O.+I' P!Mt l ltff
The 1etne was at the San Ditgo
Charge.r1 rookie camp at UC Irvine.
The hulking offensive tight end stared
the deftnsive left tackle squarely in
the eye and then, "kaboom!!", the pair
lunged into each other with 1 resounding
crash.
It's not the first time the two have
been involved in such a one-on-one tussle.
Howard Gravelle (6-41,4,., 235), the tight
end, and Tom Williams (6-4, 250), the
tackle, have been nourished on such
head-to-head combat for the past three
years as teammates at UC Davis, located
just west of Sacramento.
The second (Williams) and 12th
(Gravel le ) draft choices of the
Char1ers have been standouts in team
drills thus far, with only rookies
participatin1. The veteran1 are 1Ull hunJ
up in the National Football Leaaue'1
player-owner pension squabble.
If everything progresses as the San
Diego coaching staff eipects, Williams
could be a rookie starter in the Char1ers
defensive front alignment while Gravelle
will be giving seasoned pro Willie Fruitr
a run at the tight receiving spot.
A chance to hit It big with a pr()
football outfit did not come e1sily for
either player.
Williams relatu, "In hilh school I
wasn't much of anything. I went to
college al Davis because at that timt
college was the thing to do and anyway
it was close to home ia 45-m.inute
drive)."
Williams was just an average hi11l
school gridder at Rancho Cordova Hi&h
in Sacramento, where current Costa
Mesa head grid mentor Max Miller wis
a football assistant and head baseball
coach.
'Mle ~pounder admits he didn't have
many lon1 range plans about football
when he enrolled at Davis.
Although it took him awtlile to aet
accllmaled to · college football and to
mature physically, Willliams ended up
winning every honor from Far Wtslern
Con!'trence defensive player of the year
to third team Little All -America at Davi1.
Chargers jileneral manager Sid Gillman
says of Williams. "If he had pl1yed ror Notre Dame or USC. he would hive
been the first college lineman taken
In the pro draft."
"The main thin&," Williams insists,
"is getting to the quarte.rbaci: and drop-
pln1 him, or at least milin1 him up
a little."
Gravelle. a bridegroom of two week.,,
was born in the East Bay area ind
attended high school in Concord, ju11
over the hills from Oakland.
He didn't receive any collegl1te offers
Ind enrolled .. at Davis for 1 different
rea90n than that of Williams.
"My folks wanted me to go to 1
UC campus but with all the tunnoil
Ind crowded conditions at Berkeley and
UCLA, I finally chose Davis."
Both playtrs performed under ex-Cal
Ro.st Bowler ( 1 9 4 I • 5 O ) Herb
Schmalenberger 1t Davis and were part
of one of the finest groups of receivers
and defensive linemen on the colle1!111
"""· Mike Clark 1260) Ind Jerry Del.olch
(250) were the other behemoths who
)Dined Williams up front deftnslv9 y.
Clark llad an offer from the Oiar1u1
but spumed it to finish his educ1tl!Mt
while the latter was drafted by tht
Oakland Raiders.
HE'S OUTI -N"ew ''ork111 Thu~man f.1unson la
Lagged out by An&els pilcbar Andy Messersmith
while Sandy Alomar and Joe Azcue
The Yankee• won, bowever1 ~1. (2) look on .
Gravelle, who cauihl 111 pa11e1 In
three years under the UC Dav la banner,
agrees with Williams about the benefits
of playing at a smaller school.
"Ntither of us would 've made mucl\
progress at 1 larae &ehool," he conclude a,
• ~-~------~' -
i
•
"
'
•
•
•
•
'
I
Sports In Brief
Andretti to Use
Gurney Engine
Don't look now, bul Dan
Gurney and Andy Granatelll
are racing buddies,
I Gurriey connrn'led Mondpy
that be has qretd to supply
the l:t'TP racing team wlth
320 cubic inch stock block
Ford engines for .fi.1 a r I o
An<tretti's McNamara car that
will race this Sunday in the
1SO.mile USAC championship
road race at lodlanapolls
, , Raceway Park. It wUI be the
first time the Gurney Ford
engine has been used on the
USAC championship trail by
anybody but a Gurnty team
driver. He will be represented
in the same race by his pr~
tege, Swede Savage, driving
an All-American Racer Eagle.
Reached at his home in
FV Posts
Easy Wi11;
Mesa Falls
Orange took ftver the un-
disputed lead in the Orange
summer ba sketball I e a g u e
~1onday night with a 63-~
.. victory over Costa Mesa on
the winners' court.
1
In another contest, Fountain
• Valley ripped the Orange No.
2 team, 61-28.
The loss by Costa !\iesa
dropped the Mustangs into a
second place tie with Follntain
Valley. Both have 8-3 marks,
one game behind Orange.
Costa ~iesa and Fountain
Valley meet Wednesday night
at 5:45.
Costa ~fesa started out like
a house afire. scoring the first
eighl points of the game. but
then Orange played catch·up,
taking a 31-29 haltfime lead.
Scott Friested led t h e
Mesans 'A'ith 18 points with
most or his field goals coming
from long range. C h u c k
Bridges followed Friested in
the scoring column wilh 13.
A cold third quarter when
the Mustangs could only score
seven points gave Orange the
lead for good.
In the Fountain Valley vic-
tory Dave Lynch led all
scorers with 13 points with
teammate Ed Pitts getting 12
In a ·reserve role. L.vnch hit
most or his six field J!Oals
on jumpers from the base
line.
Frltstff
~~mosen
'"' l rldntS
Moo"
Hors!
De1md
5wtt11.nd
.t.l!tn
WolP
Tol1l1
(U) ,. fl • • ' ' . ' ' ' ' . ' . • • ' ' ' . ' . lt lS
UJI " " ' . • • • • • • ' • • ' ' '
Smith
J1e~to~
M1cPh1r1on
S1lv1do
Gl1sgoW a.,.,crw1
l lv!nV•IOfle
Tot1l1 " ' It•• •t Gwlrltn
c..,.11 Mtst II U 1
Or1nv1 It 15 U
'""nltlft Vllltt !tll " . lvn'~
PDWI' kr!stlntl
5hiJ>.tl~
G. Gtrbt'•
P. Guber
Pillt
Wtlktf
Carrlt rt ,.,,.,.,11;
Tol1ll
a .... iow l lvl.,.110llt
Smll~
8trntl .,_
• ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' "
' ' • 0 • • • • ' • ' 1111 ,, ,, ' . ' . • • ' '
• • • • $lmPWlll
To1111 " . ,, .... .., ..... ,.,.
,Ololnltht Vtlito.. H II 11
Clra1!9t f 2 12 t •
,, •• , " • • • ' ' " ' ' ' ,
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11 -tJ
" .. • " ' ' ' • 0 • • ' ' • • " • • • ' • ' ' " " .. • • • ' • ' • • • ' • ' • " 11 -il •-u
C01t1 Mesa, Gurney. ~ his
AAR crew wUI malnlaln the
engine for A:ndrettl's car. .........
PHILADELPHIA -George
Foreman must have bad bet -
ter workouts in the gym than
he had here Monday nigh l
against Roget Russell.
Foreman knocked o u t
RusseU in 2:29 of the fir31
round of a scbeWied 10 round
bout. bul be may have won
the fight before it began.
It was the 21st victory for
Fore.man of Hayward, wh'l
turned pro after winning the
Olympic heavyweight ·boring
cP.mpionship. Russell o f
Philadelphia was Foreman''J
18tb. knockout vic tim. .........
ATLANTA -Atlanta second
baseman Felix Millan was
hospitalized for observation
Monday night after he was
struck on the left side of his
batting helmet during the se·
cond game of a doubleheader
with Chicago.
The Braves said Xrays were
negative and it wu believeJ
Millan would rejoin the team
for a road ·trip to Pittsburgh
Wednesday.
The pitch by Joe Decll;~r
of the Cubs popped Millan's
bat~ing helmet in the third
inning. .........
NEW YORK The New
Yorlc. Yankees acquired Mike
t-.1cCormick from San Fran-
cisco Monday night and senl
John Cumberland to l h e
Giants in an in terleague
waiver deal of lefthandcr
pitchers.
McCormick, in his 15lh ma·
jor league season at the age
of 31 had a 3-4. record and
6.23 ~arned run average in
Z2 games with the GiantJ.
Cumberland, 23, was 3-4 witlt
a 3.94 e.r.a. in 15 appearances
with the. Yankees. .........
S T 0 K E MANDEVtLL~.
England -The United state.s
wheelchair basketball team
defeated Holland 64-23 Monday
in its fint game of lbe l!!~
Wheelchair Olympics. ..........
SAO PAUW, Brasil ....,
Brazil advanced to l h e
qJarterflnals of the Davis Cup
tennis tournament, eliminating
Canada 3-2 M~y· In ~ th•
American Zone finals.
Jose Edson Mandarino of
Brazil defeated John Sl\arpe
6-1, 6-0, 6-2 in the deciding
match.
Area Pair
Bags Crowi1
A pair of area residents,
Eddie Austin and fi.t a r t
Fulton, captured the fiflh an-
nual Corona del Alar A
volleyball tournament Sunday
at Newport Beach.
Austin , of Newport Beach
and Fulton, a Corona del Mar
resident, lost their second
match in the double elimina-
tion tourney Saturday, then
bounced back to win 10
matches in a row, nine of them
coming on Sunday .
The twosome defeated John
Lee and Terry Armstrong of
Santa Barbara in the finals
Sunday, 11-7. 6-11, 11-5, to
force a sudden death playoff.
The area duo woo that one
by a IS.8 score.
The event, sponsored by the
Ne'A-port Beach Recreation
Department, featured 12 teams.
Charit y Throws Ear11
Mater Dei 72-55 Win
' I •
•
~later Dei hit 28 points fro1n
the free throw line to hand
Newport Harbor a 72-~ set·
back to highlight action in
the fl.its.a-Newport Recreation
Department summer basket·
ball league at Estancia tllgh
Monday night.
111 the companion game,
Pacifica dereated Los Amigos.
ti7·5t
Rick Kniffen led lhe Miler
Dei attack. hitting eight rie ld
aoals and 17 of ~ free throw
atttmpU for 33 PQlnts. Team-
mate Pete Roberts tossed in
11.
Newport's Taras Young led
his team In scorlng with 20
while the Tars' John Kazmer
hit 10.
The two teams played on
even tenns lhroughout !he
aame with Mater Oei holdina
a slJm advt1ntage: throu!h
most o( lhe actlnn befare pu i.
~.,, away to 1 bla maraln
111ldway through the final
quarter.
The winners held a 32-25
halftlme lead.
The lo3s was Newport 's se-
cond against seven wins in
the league. Mat er Oe.i is now
6-3. Estancia , Is In second
plaet with a 6-2 mark.
Vount
i.:11"'*1° ..... ,
lKlllt!I St"""-• ....
N-tl 1411 .. t IU! • • ' . . ' • • ' . ' ' ' ' • • ' . • • ' ' ' ' . "
""' Cll11t
OtllllllllHft He1¥1t ,_,
Tor111 ....... , Del 1111 " . ICnltft11 t 11 C..cJlt l •
Gofflltll • 2 ll'rt~Jt•l•I S> 0 1C~1 •
ICtmHr f • ll:GMrl1 I 1
"~' le•• IW Ow•~•-11
"'"' 1 H1r"°' 1t • lJ M•lll" ail It II
.. .. • • ' " • • • ' ' • ' • ' • ' ' ' • • ' I ' n " .. ..
' " • • • I ' • I I ' ' • " " n
IS -SI ·-·
Mesa Duo
Continues
In Top 10
Costa Mtsa's duo of Tony
Grincefl and Larry Schotn-
felder cont1nue to hold firm.
l11 the top lo ttst o1. the lt'10
West Coast Match Game
Eliminations at Costa Mm'•
Kona Lanes foUowing the flnt
four-game block ol t b e
sernlllnats Monday night.
Nick Sti&ailo moved up a
notch from !Qt week to
seventb with a '197 efb't, put-
ting him only 31 plns out or
fifth place.
And Schoenfelder had a 788
block, dropping him to ninth
from seventh after 32 games.
Next Monday's four-game
set wUI narrow the field ol
60 to 16. Schoenfelder cur·
rently holds a 55-pin margin
over the cutoff marlc..
Doug Johnson of Long Beach
continues in first place, but
his once commandtng lead has
been pared to only 14 pins
by Carson's Walt Block, wbo
fashioned a nifty 844 Monday·
to catapult over Anahe.im''
Don Nordstrom lnto second
place.
Nordstrom dropped to third
-104 pins behind thE: leader.
Gary fl.fadisoo of S a n
Bernardino made some noise
Monday as he moved ,from
13th to fifth on the strength
of an 890 set.
It remained for Gene Grim-
mett of Newbury Park to roll
the highest four-game block ,
however, as ht turned in a
912 (228 average) to barge
intc> the top 16 (13th) from
25th place.
T• II
1. Do111 JOl'ln:.on, lorlt •••ell t,Stl
'· Will tlodl. C1rson t .J.1.4
J. Don Nor!11lrom, Anllttlm '·"'' •. Jtt llobl11son. Stnl• S1111111 '-UG
J. Glr¥ Mlclli,on, Sin 8trn1r<1lno ,,.,,,
6. "•rr1tl Hin-It, Los An11lt1 t ,Jl6
1. Nick SllN11o. COiii M.,_. ,,Ml
1. Tottv Grlnc:t!"I. °"ltrlo •.U1
'· l1rrv Schl>snfekHr, CM •.MJ lG. Frtcl Btr111I, Tustin ,,m
Olhllrt: !111 c1,11e Lac.her. 0.111
Polnt t.nri (XII Bob Probert, H11n1ln•
Ion 811ch 6.U.1 U•l J•rv l r.n111n,
W111mln1t1r ,,I.Seri 071 F•ltd llkc1111.
W11tmln111r t,Ut; t'>l l<•n O.lti!len,
Fount1ln V1U.., 6.HT; (4!) Frtd
Oouel'lttfY, Cotlt Mt•• 1.1111 t.al Ok-
lr1111;1\, Wnlmln1ler t ,lC111 (Sll l ull
Rott. Hunlln91<>n •••<h t.cMt1 U'l J~
0.111¥. Co.111 Mtlt J,tU.
Tar Poloists,
Sea King.s
Notch Wi11s
Cocona deJ t-.1ar a n d
Newport Harbor remained
undefeated in the Costa Mesi
Recreation Dept. s u m me r
water polo AAA league as
both posted wins in action
at Orange Coast Colle&e Mon-
day.
Both teams have t.-O
records •
Corona bounced Estancia,
tlM:, behind Garth Bergeson's
four goals while Newport trip-
ped Garden Grove. M .
Dan Kent tossed in three
goals for Estancia while Bruce
Krumpbolz had a pair for
Corona de] fl.far. Newport
Harbor was paced by Steve
Batchellor and Bruce C'barles,
each with a pair c>l scores.
In other action, Costa Mesa
handed SuMy Hills a 10-5 se.t·
back and Lakewood beat
Wl\son 8-3. Ron Misiolek led
O:>sta 'Mesa with four goals
while Mike Beal had three
and J ohn Carpenter tallied
t\1-'0.
In AA action, Buena Park
shaded Corona del Mar, 10-8,
Santiago nipped Weslm.inste.r,
6-3, and Marina turned back
Fountain VaUey, 1-3, in actioll
at Estancia High.
PLACE HANDS fOllWAllO OH CH" SHOTS
It is important th1t the hands la d lht clubhtad
into the ball durin& normal shots from tht fairway.
Howt vtr, this principle is t specially vilal on short
shots from around tht l rM n,
Address lh.t ball with your hands, sli&h,ly forward
(illustration #1). This h91ps assure that thty will
ltad tM clubhflad into tht bill. You will•bt' mort
lik9'y ~ 1:trikt the ball crisply ff you set up to the
stiot in this m1nnt r.
If you ~ddre5$ the bill with )'ou.r hands back
.(illllstration #2), you run the risk of 1llowinc you r
ri&ht hand to take control' of the club. The result
is us ually a scuffed or topped shot. Tbia can be
•specii lly costly around tht arten whtn you art
tryin& to c•t up and doWn in two shots to 11ve •par.
: ... 1,.,.¥1\. .......... -'
LOW scoRESi tuG H POWDll Ott ,1et1~ of IOlfl"I Miii! in Arnold
P1lm•r"1 bookltt:, "'TM Sl'ift •rwi Jalrw11"Woodt," i'.rttttft u-
c;lusN.ly for read.n of th it ·cohunn. A Clll'Y 11 youra f!M. 2 0t••nd
• •limped, Mlf.odr-...cl ~ Mnt lo ArM!d Pslm•r, ti•
this MWIPIP'f"•
Los Alanaitos
Racing Ent1·ies
LOS Al,UUTOI •lllTlll•I
"Oil W•DN•IOA'Y, J ULY I). "" -14tll O•t Clief & , .. I. "Int .... , J;U '""" Dtlh' o.u•i. .. 111 & Jiit t l CU. aum •• tMr •au.
TH laD It.ACE. 3SO ¥1111$. old m11.s.ns. 1ur~ suao. Fleet Wln iW L$0n) our Covlf Glrl 1CrmbY I Oh D9dd1 (MoJTlson.I Slrod (llDhfml Bold Allve~l\lrt (Karil
lhr MOM J1inl~(Ad1lrl
""'' f.tlnc:e ( •nttl SPlofdb rd fl1n I Tu avx iSmhhl
Hf "' "1 ·~ "' "' '" "' "'
lnclntrt11( {C,...b~I
Hllltllnt lo"f Ull(rl1r!I•)
13 Go.
•a "'
DAIL v PILOT I z
T1iton s Trip L~a, 79-39~
Diablos in 58-48 Setback
By BOB ROTH la!ll week.
" ot ""' Dl4lt 1111..e 111N Monday's 11me w1s never
Featuring a balanced scor. close, as roUr of the Cive
lt11 attack, the San Clemente Triton starters had broken in-
Tritons smothered Laguna to the scoring column before
Beach, 79-39, eliminating the David Myers put the Artists
ArU8t.'J from the championship on the .scqreboard.
playoffs or the Foothill High Brad McCaslln and Craig
School s u m m e r basketball Anderso" ~ the early San
league. Cle1nente ' cbar1e that left
Monday night's other con· LljUJll~fj_eacb behind at 21·10
test saw the Dlablos of aftl!:r the fll'1i. eight minutes.
Miaston Viejo fall before San-Chris Ellinor and Andy Cope
tiagc>, 58-48, a loss whk:h also picked up where their mates
ou&ted coach Pat &berts' left c>U In the second period.
crew from the post-season never allowing the Artists to
!estivitiea. , get cloSer than 12 poin3.
Laguna Beach and Mission While Elinor was at his best
Vieja will meet In a con-creshing the boards, Cope got
solation aame at 1:15 p.m .. ' ·a bot hand from the outside.
Wednetdey, to offidalfy close Cope'1 streak cont t nu e ti
out the icbedWe. after the intermission, a3 did
San Clemente's win means the Artists' demise. At c>ne
that it will meet regular· po1nl -the Triton guard run
season champ FoothlU In the off a string of six ,traisht
semifinals Wednesday at 7:30 points.
p.m. During moet of the second
The Tritons of ·coach John half, Bater was able to Ba~· weN ~ onJ>'. team unlealh hi.I reserv~s, w~
to defeat Foothill dtlfmg the responded by out..scor1ng their
campaign. ind they dropped Laguna ~nterpatts at a two
their second dCOUnter with to one rate.
the Krli&bt.a In a double Anderaon Hnlshed with the
overtime. top scoring honors a: 17
The other ~mi.final 1ame pc>ints. His running mat~.
will pit sanUago against Cope, added 14', as did
Tustin. the league runner·up. McCaslin. Center Steve Kalot.a
"Both Tustin and Foothill drew chipped in with 13 and Ellinor
first round byes as a result finished with 12.
o( seasonal marks. Laguna's center J o h 11
Foothill will be meeting l Harbold was the lone Artis:
potent force in San Clemente. to score in double figures,
The Tritons had oo trouble netting 11.
dispc>Sing of Laguna Beach, During the regular schedule
a team which they topped Mission Viejo won just one
by just 10 points in a contest of ten. Despite the fact lhaL
Monday's entry was lilera1ly
., •• a different team. Lbe fiord
1 u result was the same. McC1sU11
A.ll1vi1 •m-s111r111
1(1!ol1
it•,......,,,_ ll'H " . • • , ' • ! 1; The Diablos had a new look.
, ' a.s Roberts employed for the ~: first time a number •lf his
1 1 regulars who had nc>t yet c.-on1·
' " ' .
pc~ In the Foothill lcac:ue
action.. •
And1 for a while It appeared
as thobgh they would makt
the dUference, but SantJago
was eventually able to adjust
lo the change and overwhelm
il8 opponent.
The: Olablos' biggest lead
was IM, wltti Frank Mort
lead in& the way. Dul SanlttRo
bounced back to lead by oqe
at the quarter.
Mission Vlejo's last lea6 was
early in the second period
when It forged ahead, lil-1 7.
At that juncture SanUago, ran
off 10 straight points, with
(orward Dave Diaz 1arnerinil
six of them.
Each time it appeared a"
lhough the Dlablo1 would
make a serious run 2t the
Cavaliers, Diaz or teammate
Rocky Baio would hit a bucket
that ruined the Mission VicJO
momentum.
The Diablos closed lhe
margin to 45-42 on ~te-,,e
Brown's t w o consecuUve
buckets, but then Diaz and
Baio combined for six 11tcalght
aDd Santiago was n e v. e r
threatened again.
Diaz has been the mcst pro-
lific scorer of the league In
his last two outings. In }!is
previous st.art. ht talllerl 29
against Tustin. for a two--garpe
tota1 or 48 poinb.
One c>ddity of the Cavaliers'
triumph is that there were
just 13 fouls calle6 In lhe
32 minutes of action. Santiago
cc>nverted six free throws and
the Diablos hit but two.
Joe Evans was the top point-
getter for Mission Vieju, KOr·
ing 11. Richie Price, Jeff
Masterson , and Brown Ced for
the runner-up spot, both 11;d-
ding 10 points to the losing
cause. Allde•IOn
Co<nlorlh
<~• l11111
TOl.t.l•
' . ' ' ' ' ' . ' . • • u " ltllWI ·1..,_11 Utl
MY•-.
kd•ll
Whh111h
Nfiswtn!llr
Hlfbol~
'"' ,_;,,
Cll!t $P1t
" . ' . . ' . ' ' ' • ' ' . ' . 14 II
" tt •• •• • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' , " • • ' • ' •
Time, Attendance Marks
Jeopardized at ocm
Tot1I• ltlf't 1W Cllit rtvf
~tn C~tn1• '1 10 11
l 1•u111 11.t.<.h lf IS 6
O••
"'" ... ·-Fltfl••
St!,;.,
T•l1l1
EVlf\I
""' ,.1c,
••awn , ....
Mvnch'
M1sl•t10"
Tolt ls
S111!11M IMl • • . ' • ' • • . ' ' . " . Mtulotll Vklt Ull • • . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ~
• • • • • ' SGlr.• •1 •wtrl.,, n 1t n
10 1• n ~·~tl110
Mltaltl'I Viti•
" • ,._.
10-" .. " ' " ' • ' " , • • " • ' • • .. ..
' " ' ' ' " • " • ' • ' ' " ' •
lS -51
U --4&
Elapsed lime marks and
aUendance marks .a r e in
jeopardy when a 32-car field
(16 funny cars and 16 combc>
eliminators) competes tn tbe
United States pro dragster
championships Saturday at
O<ango County !nternallol>al
Raceway.
A guaranteed purse o!
119,721 along with 116.000 in
manufacturer's awards ba'
betn established. Last year'.s
aUendance totaled over 16,000
al lhe El Toro strip.
QuaUlylng begins at 9 a.m.
with the eliminaUon.s at 6 p.m.
was led by San Jose's Tom
Cbambliss, "A-ho drove \he
Mallicoat Twins' Barracuda to
first. pl.ace with an elap8td
Ume of 3.78 seconds, defeating
Rick Soussen.f Corvette in U\e-
Hnal round.
San Anselino's Miil:t ~1itcbfJI
picked up the best Ume of
the meet with a IC.t.5 mph
effort.
Gar:i Burgjn ol Garden
Grove was upset by ~-'
in lhe second round de:tplte
turnln1 In an 8.79 second mark
to Soussens' t.16 clocking.
111rllt l1rs IC•ri:loltl 10 Go. Deep Sea Fish Re-port
John Wiebe (Newton,
Kansas) leads the tc>p fuel
·~ "' >M
cntri•• after being •elecf<d Rustlers Rip out.st.anding driver or the year
... w,o•t lAl'h u -...t -,. uo 111u. n ,..ubul. recently by lhe natiOn's Ucens·
•ntltn: 12'1 lllrrK\IOI, 15 1111nao. M•RM«H• l lAC.14 -' •"91t 1'J ed top fuel ~1 D c
"' "' '" >M
"' "' "' :n
:m bl"-JI , ... eot •• UJanr't '-'Cltlfl ,, bu.. 3 m1dltt•I, 1 hlllb\11. ,,. VetS. on agers
_ 1n 1n11en1 n 1lblco,., 114 bl•· SAW "'•Dao <tJM 11. L•Ml .. 1 other contenders include na·
f t tlldl, n bOftfM, IM bin, S rl<k -oil 1n111fl1 i N rrtcucl&. 1$1 C•llt• <11<1, 2 11111111.ri, blu, ' 'Onlto. 1s blue 111ru. 210 Uc>nal ch a m p I o n Don 1 ..,.., blu . """"'' t.Mlltfl -111 Prudhom (G da H"ll I Wilb four p1~vers ln doub • s•Al SIACll -131 .... 11 •• i 5 tntoleru 1 YlllOW1tll, 1, bltrtCW!ll, me rana I s • -..
N rr1t11C11. sscr i..u. r h1llbvl. , bottita, 514 c•lko bin. 11 1111111 WinternaUonals I e a d l n g figures. Golden West College
SAM c.ltM•NT• -111 •n1kn 1 11111, 111111bl/T, J(IO b1111 H••· L D. lied to ·" fi"fth stralghl Ric> Oii blrrlClldl, U6 u u. 1 w11111 SAllTA s.t.••••• _ " '"'"'"' eliminator arry 11 on ro I
u 1 M11o 111 bonll•, " !MU•el· ''° fOdt cod. '' 1111t cod. • u11c.a \Reseda) and N 0 rt h we s l Hondo College sum mt r
1 h1llbtll. lltss ' h1llllut. b •-••U !e '~-M DC ... NUDll -1'2 1n1le111 ,1) M01t10 ....... fVlrt'I l t MIJltl -chlmpioo Jerry Ruth, (Seal· as ... t.... ague Vn;...,ry Olr
,..,TM aACI . lSO •••ds. 1 .,.,., lll•rteu!lt. • '°n11a. 2" ''u. Y .a • .,.1lr1; :tt ur. UICI. I 111mo11. tie). day night, trouncing Santa Pldt. AJIOW•ncts. P~r&I $20GO. lltllllul. 41111 rotk UICI. (Ill llrrltll'll -7' ho
DV11•1111 Gee \"d••n 1•1 DCI AN1101 -SI' '"'''"' n ,,11. '"'''"; u 11n1 toc1. tJr 1ox11 <Od. The Funny car races will Ana College, lOUI. in a • l·
P•llN"• air ornre•I 1~ • 11111'"''· 111" _ 1 •n11tr11 10 ,01T 11u1N11M• -.a .... 1.n : ~s.~1 · all · th R' Hon-~1·; t~m, ~~c~~ul H~ ""· 2 mldr..,tt. 460 u tko 1:1111. J Nrr•elJClt, u 111111w.i1. be highlighted by Oregon's Ed ;o.i...-IDg all' on e 10
.. ~.~ .... ~\' lsmllhl 111 OJI.MAIO -ltt 111911r11 11 h1t11Wt. *rock toll, ••cCu!loch w•--Ply~•th do coll.rt. A'1l;;;11~ 'S'.11 , Ct•Go.it l 11' llt Nu. 45' rod; cocl. 12t bklt MAlllU -n 1n11tr1r IO ctlko iu • 1'VIK' .. ...,..
1<1nt A!ICL Th•t<: 1e•nk1) uo N n . 11 11119 '°"· '"~'· 2 h•llbut. :J«r •odt coo1. • Duster recently set a NHRA Chris Thompson paced
Triple c TrulY tS [•11Hl 120 SAN DllOG '"""''" ••• ,,, -LO NI) ••ACM iPl\fH ltll l.11141111111 Got..Lo. WtSt with 18 nnlnts Get Gol'lll Naw (l llfrtm) lU # 1n•ler11 " O.r11~, 105 llorlllo. -lM 1"9191"11 1• Nrr1cud1, Ill natk>rJll record of 7.19 seconds ""'n 1'w
soi Jlloht tP•,el 12C1 1Mii11k"'•I Ptarl -02 1n1ltr11 1.01 c111u b•n. 2 11o1111a, no roc-tod. 21 t i•-ph) The OCIR • i.. while Brian Ambroz.lcb tossed 10 Go. tibteort. ' htrlDut, 212 "u• wu. ''''Ilk ( • uu• . ,rac ..
llXTN •At:E.-VO r1rd1. i rt•r ••ODNDO -,~, •ntleru I wMlt IHf"ltltlllfttl) -100 1n111rs1 " recGrd ls 7.20 (205.U mph).. in 15. Jim Anderson bit IS -·• "' •· c•·•••·• ,,, •• •"' • • ''' "'' •• •--1-''' •••··-••· ' ... ,,, "' "''· , • .,,,.,.,,, · -"J If P followed with ~~{~1~~i:.~~ .. · -1~ ~1~r1111~~ ::~::,.~ 4~ Et;~~.' :·~.-;,, ,,, .. ~h:~~l. 1~ •• ::r1~1ic1;i Saturday's rurchu!artsgedol ~'! ~ e owers . ., ~~~:.~f~~:~n<ht\A/.11r) lH _ _..'.'~'~'-'~O~l~Sl~<~O~"~-::...:·~•'_'.'"~"~"~' ~'~"~'~:'~'~''..' ~"~'~" ______ _:•:•:r_g~as=-:'":peC::.=::::.::__.::_.:: ___________ _ llul•ttl Clll'Mm IU '"ln $1r~s (WtllOlll 1,1' Ptc lie 51al"m CH•rft > Mr. Lont Sl'IO~ tl<tt> sl 117
Hurn' John <:..t~.I t !i.M r:zo
Mln W•m11YmT••ri•••I 111 POllSllH ClllCl llnbl Ill
Major League Standings DEAN LEWIS
ANNIYIUAIY IA.LI
Race Results
NATIONAL LEAGUE
E11t Dlvt1k11
W L Pct. GB
Pittsburah 51 42 .SS3
AAIERICAN LEA GUE
Elst lMvblo•
W L P<' GB
Baltimore 57 36 .613
l.11 Allmll• ••wh Me"'''· J•IY :it. UH
CINr ..... "''t
,I.ST RAC• -llO r t •Ot, Two
""'' old mel!ltn1. CltlmlJlt. 'w'" 11"/liO. Clllmln1 11rk.1 ~.
Ot eP t an1o \Or1rfl"I J • .O 1 . .01 . .0 Wtt Woo Clllklll•Clll J • .O •• ,~
Trut Grit CPl<"ntrl !1...0
Tinl• -lHllO.
.t.lt.0 ••11 -vn•·• .son Ir~•· Tint
11r t11e11r1, •to Jtw11I, Admlr11
W11d't. Truly FllTIA\11, 1110'!'•1 l •ch'llllO.
Doll'I Lf!I Ttt.
llCDND I.AC• -UO ¥1<!1l. Thrftt
r••r 111111 111<1 111. Cl1lmln1-P11r11
11100. Cl1lmln1 Pflt• t2GDO..
,,,. For Lid. 1••nk11 '·" s.ao i.xr 1-M't A 11:._11 IOrlnl J,«t ~.60 ,.r111tr Htwll jCt rdoi•I ~.60 tt .... -,., 1t.
AIM r•n -hldl•n kl. l.llCltr .. ,,
.k.1, C.l1tntme1r, Gtt .1tn1. 0111i.r I•• hr. l lr l lHdlrtll. Tru HqN,
NttllY DOUI LI -l•Gett T.,.19 11'1411 •••• ,. ,. Ulck. ,.w ., .....
TMllD U.C.• -U. Ylloh. t..o r.-•
1111 fl\1~1'11. '"r" tlUA. c-1r F1lllOl'll IC1t6oul
1J •• i.1111 ),00
lo,)f J.)f ,, .
•OUITM IACI -J.09 rtrll1. TIW" 'I'.,. •Illa •l'ICI u•. lt1rlt<' 1llowlne•.
ll'ur .. SlfOO.
0111 Go 'Mn IW!hOnl .... J.«r '·.O
$OcNo Sim 81r {Adtltl 1.10 1.AO
Slltnl Of'Olmd tC.1rolOlll J.tt
Tlmt -'1·1111,
At.1 1111 -"' 0.YICI, l t!.sot, Tllf Wei . ~f'#tr411 ltfllrv. lnlt r Too.
~o Kr11c.h11,
Pl"T" •A<I -UO r1rd1. 1wo ,,.,
•llll. ,A,"°"'"•ntt. l'IW .. tlM
GI 1111 Go Cllkl'llral) 11.60 1.111 J.«r
1tceket It• kr cc ... i:1o111 1.IO Ml ,lo\llttlk Moon (Ptrnerl l,to
Tlmt -11-lJIO.
Ali.o r1n -Jtl lkl, SNMlr S!IMI,
l llt11 $11n, W.t.ldl l otktt.
NO Kr11C1111,
tlXftl I AC.I -.00 r11cQ. Th•M
Yfff olds "'" Jn C1llfollll1. AUOWlllU.
'",. )1900. t i, 81b1 1cir<1011 >
mrr Mtrv (imll!ll
A1r1 Vltw (AllO!llull
TllN -20-1110.
JI.Ito r1n -Doll, Lu Ed , Go SM>P••
f'<, MoOltll Glr l, SUttrt ktnt. lov1
To Win. Go Pitt! Go.
l lVIMTH a.t.CI -17' , •••• Thr ..
1ttr Pldl tnd \IP. (ltlmll"fll, ,llflO ~ Cltlmlll9 trl<t ~.
l1r'k/\tltd (.f.dllrl '·'° i.oo ),CO
lrn'9 Account {l l•h•ml • . .O J.60
C.11 Colleoel (t.ll'llftl) '·"° Tlmt -4'-2J10.
Ali.o 11111 -CM•tkt<t Cocl't, certt ln
Soim•Tll'. Prieto. Too EMlt. k •nlwl
LOO.•I•
•llitlTM aACI -~«I 'ltd~ "'Th•M
•Nr ... tnd uP. AlltWt~. TM
M>ttMlm. ,Uflt 52.a
ltodtl Vttr lo.lwn !Smlllll
OrlH{~I
12.CICI 7.CIO t .H
1t .:IO 11.llO , .. Wlltt•'• ""° !llOlllll'I) TllM -22-tl 10, ...... r•n -•or•I "flH<ll, lwl119
YOio!, l lr. PVW· '''"" ar. le!lll" ,, ...... U:n.'"\.ICIY •61r.
NINTM U.C.• -SJe Ylfdl. Ttlrt•
¥c•r •Ills .t.nd .... Clllrnl11t. Pur.•
lllOD. Clllll'llnt prkl l2000.
Chic 1.-UUI {llrt ""I kAO llM J.AO ~· ll'lll!a J .. lll't!",,.r) S.IO ...
Mr, '''' l•r !H•rll 14.• TIMI -11>1,'ICI.
.t.lto 14n -l" Vtrl1l, Ltrttl• LAr~.
"1"' Jlcr1~ \tift" l\IU;, l•ld' ltocllt!.
Ofl!Ult Mitt,. Wl!IOw Oolll.
» l~CTA -1.Clllc ... , ... '"
..... '"'' , ...... ,. 1641 .... .
New York 49 43 .533 %
Chlcaeo 4S 46 .4a5 5 \~
Phlladelphi• 41 so .m 911
St. Louis 4l 51 .446 10
fl.fontreal 39 54 .419 12\.l
\\'e1t DlvltlOll
Clnclnnatl 66 II .702
Dod1er1 SI 33 .517 II
Atlanta II 41 .500 19
S&n Francilco II 41 .519 20
Houston 10 S3 • •30 2511 .
San Diego 33 51 .396 211
~,., ._,,.
Alllnll 1-S, C.ftktto l.f, '"" '''"' t \it lnrtlfl9$o r1111
S.11 Dlr9e J. Montrttl 1 °"""' .s. ,1111111•1"'1• • Hautlln J. p1111111/"h •, 12 l"n11191
c111,.111111u M.. 11. lolit• M 1111 ,,1nc:l1Ce r. NM Ytrt t , ... ,., .. _
Clftclnn111 (tlf!WllM 11-!J 11 St. l"111 (Clrl!Oft
S·1'1 Ntw 'l'••k llN:Mllffw •·fl ti St11 01'91 !l<lf•
DY S.11), n1tllt
MltttrMI (~tliort II .. ) 11 OlifttA (~ ""1. 111ttrt
(hlc.ffo fJlllkltll 1•111 " *'"'"" l.141nill 1• 71. nlllrt
'l'IRtdtllfrl1 IWl11 '·11 ti 5111 f'r1nc.1tat CMI~ dttl ,..,
ll'ltlltlllrth (,,_ 14 1tt Ntllell UI It ..... 1111 (Wlbtn Ml, ftltbl
Dttrolt S2 39 .$71 4
New York so 42 .$43 6\1:
Boston 47 43 .$22 $\l
Washington 43 so .462 14
Cleveland 42 49 .4'2 14
'''est Dlvl1lon
MiMtSOta 57 30
Aq elt 5.1 37
Oakland 49 44
KonMI City :11 57
fl.tllwaukee 33 61
Chicago 32 63
~, ....... 1t1
1•11\lnott l4o Chit-I Mlnnbetll 4, Clfvtllnll t K•n .. , Cll\' t, Dtft'll!I f Ntw YMll 6. A111.it 1
(hkltnd :a. lo1ton ' W11hll'ltll)ll I. MllWt lllln I
TMlr'I Gt mtl
.65.1
.518 4~'i
.527 It
.374 25
.351 27%
.337 2'I
ltlllll'IOr• IMtr.in '·H 11 K1n1t • Cltr tJOllft-
...., 1-tl. ftltht ChlctH f.iotllt 1·1fl 11 Cllvtltncl 1Httr4 1-1!.
n!1ht Prl~ !MCLl ln t-2! 11 MlnntJotl l (?NI t-0),
nl1ht
A .... (Wtllllt IS..1 11 fllt!Oll IN"' ).11, 111tllt
Otll,1•11411 10.btofl 1-111 I t Wn ftlllllOll ('°9mln t-1), nklhl
MlhrflVl(ff (~........:! 141 11 N1w Y•r\: 1111111-
Mll , .. ,. """'
DEAN L ·EWIS
1966 HARIOR ILVD., COSTA MESA
Servi ce 1n4 1'1rh ff< All l"'l"'rtM Ciro
Mldern ....., lhoft t.r All Ciro
Ounge County's LlrfeSl and Most llodern Toyota and Volvo Dealer
)
SPICtAL
1970 TOYOTA WAGON
:!!'~ $1817
VOLVO
tfll DEMO
$2699
14? l ilr .. r1c'1•, h••••r, 4-SIHatil• IS.r.
••1401
' I
By .'Coco,''· New
OOILYWOOD !AP) aiJo disaloud lhll lhe plans
Gloria Swaman ll)Oke httted-to abandon ' life in New York
ly, ud not mmly becou,oe Cily, which baa beep her boi>i•
·..,. wu c1W1W Jrom iio. lot IO years. 'l11e _,(few
J etree Plhn Spclnp. York ha• boc<lme Unlivable.
. .,lt'1 a dry heat -don't First, "f:;oco"i" , '
•• mind it at all,'' Jhe remarked . Broadt'af' 'had J>µzJJd wllh
4t :!: •1'biJ daert cllmlte ii; reporµ that MW ·Swanaon
t ~;:.-.,wen. AD tbo1t inlnerals in w11 coin& to be ill~ Hep. ~."Ibo 19Cb• )OU CID Uel lhem . , burn's r.,,._,et11111J11r Deltl ~;.,.Alilf GD 'imoe. Ob;· a ·little :rnoath. 'lben -111 « a..uklen
•• ; in the other day. But DanieUe Darritus wu an-
othenrise the ah'-bu been nounced as the new <:eco.~
cldti." . a number of columns hinted
The JoqtliDe star, who is thet MW SWINOD'I demand'
an ad'8Ctite ol. cleln llr, food were too rich for Procklctr
• ·IOd mlndl, telopboned because Freddie BriMM Nd 1ulhor
•• 5he wes JIJ*l about what she Alan Jay Lefmr.
• Jaid were false feportl CQn-"Ablo1Utf1y U ft t f \It t I t
· cernina her pUUout as replace-remarked Mlsa: Swanaon. 111
ment for Kllharine H<pburn only ,. .. led wbal Kolle had
~in the New York musical rqved. N~ more. ~Coco!' noth1n& Jess. That wasn 't too
Owing the convenation, she ·mueh to ask, wujtJ''
B I RMJNGHAM, Encland
(AP) -Melindl Hertel, n1eel
~., • .;IC 11111.~ •"""""1 ~"'! .. ':Jo< -~ pulled bor hat
·on over her k>Qa: brunette hair,
~tf'ftd w1lked out ol. sc:bool on
~1-rike.
•••• The reason: .
~! Melinda doem't wanl boys
i:!-'Sh•rini h« lessons.
"Sixteen-year-old boys have
one alm in lite," she say s.
"Thl\la '9 ae~ a girl Jn the
back "'JI' ol the pictures, with ,..,,.l!>ern. . ' z.;,.~. "We 111 know what they l :j,ant. 'l'htY will be trying to
~ptlat me up, di stracting me
;tram teuons, and trying to · •:Jive me 1 babf," uy1 Melin-
.._111, who has SW1lm ofr boys
•• ·until she Is at least 21.
Mellncla made her ·prolest
Thursday when lhe heard that
she and three others girls
would have to, share 1 •
classroom with C boy'i\ under
plans to reorganlr.e' her SC!hool
in September.' Jn the past,
the sues have b e e n
·~~separated. "I came to school to study
. for my exams and l'm not
Interested in boy1 f;'hLIUing
.....
:··New Grandad
. ', WASHINGTON (UJ'I)
~ Sen. Edmwtd S. MUskie, D-
.. Malne, has a new title
"Granda<!."
Hia dauther Ellen, 20, wife
ol Ernest Allen ol Arlln&too,
Va., gave birth to a six pound
IO ounce blby boy Tuesday
a t Georret.own University
• HOll)ilal, The boy, named
~. £thml Michlel, is the ~~·· flrll 1rlllddlild.
I::· 1••1Fii](aouTHCoaaT ' -': · alll PLAZA TttlEATllli
I : ~ aMUJ81 """'=··• .... •'1548~2711 1 ... ~ El<CLUSIVE OIANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT l·i ·. . .
... .r
"
•
mNIN•I OMLY1 7: ........ :4~11:JI
HEY KIDS LOOK -SPECL\L MA~EE
STARTING AT 12 NOON EVERY DAY
2 GREAT FEATURES IN COLOR
"ICE STATION ZIBRA"
"CAPTAIN NIMO & THI UNPIRWATER CITY"
•
f
.f
DAILY SC:HIDULI:
M.._ *• Titttr. 6:JI, ,141
Ftl, • s.t-7:41, ,.t 1JI
Ju.-11. J11l. l :JI, t :41
4 ACADIMT AWAUI
"OL'.IVIR"
' WLll CAION "WLI"
IOTH IN COLOI .; IATID •
e Stuts 'Wednead1y e
' UCLUMYI HAllOf,A~ SHOWIN6
a wodleigh·mourice, hd. production
1echnicolor" from warner bros.
N• _._._. ..... _., 11 •.t.u wttti ,_..,..,
.......... -P'fff •f ... Ntl•lrff.
MID·~UTHIRN CALIF. EXCLUSIVE!
THRll DAY FESTIV~L-PEACE, LOVE MUSI~
. '
"
4'\
McArthur
Weds Actress
LIHUE, Kauai, HawaU (AP)
-Actor James MacArthur ,
co-it.Br of telexJsoo's "HawaU
Five-0," bas married actress
Melanie Patterson.
The · weekend ceremony at .
the Fem Grotto was aUerJllecl
by MacArthur's rpother, 'ac-
trllSs Helen Hayes, and about
25 members of the cast and
production staff o( the TV
series. lt was the second mar-
riage fO!' MacArthur, :11, apd •·
the first for his 21-year.-old
bride.
"THE HOOKED
GENERATION"
The Deadliest·Man Alive
... Takes on a Whole Anily !
• CUNT EASI'WOOD
SHIRLEYMACIAINE
• --....c.ol .. --~ ·nm M.UUs' FOR SISl'ER SAM
cmrr EASl'WOOD SllIRLEYMM:IAllii
'JM) lllUUS FOR
SISTER IWIA' ~ A l.INIYEll'So\L PICTURE •
Hl l fftCI
trllJ.P&
NIOWATDlll
CAIDKI llllUI Fiil
1111M •11tM1u ~ " 11 --i;;;J ..
Ol'EH-T7P,M:
SHOW STAl!i
• ,AT O\Jilt
PETER IELLBIS
IN
--ai·iGI -:.,.n.1;,; "I LOVE YOU,
ALICE I .
TO KUS"
stereo103FM
'
the sounds of the harbor
marine weather reports - 7 times daily
~L I
I
'Cobbler'
Uses Steel
For Shoes
SORRY, EVERYBODY!
"AIRPORT" HAS TO GO -
IT WILL BE SHOWN FOR THE
LAST TIMIS WEONISOAY, JULY 2211
Al'TIR I SUPER, GLORIOUS
l!NTIRTAINMINT WEEKS, "AIRPORT"
HAS TO MAKI WAY POR: ••<' ...... ctl ...... ............. WINORE (AP) -Lloyd "PAINT YOUR WAGON"
Brown Is a-., -for STARTING THURSDAY -JlJtY 23rd
·--(C) (30) I'll
TUf~DhY
........ 1 ... ·---........... -............ -----1 He ope""' port o1 the yelll" HOWi LAST TIMliS WEDNESOAY, JULY 22 ...... ! ... ..........
MT 21 e !l!llll• ... -" .. tnasboplnthenearbybamlet ---MATINEES OAILY --------(IQ ( ..... )'10-........... ............... ,,_ __ ,__lll(tOl .lony-. --·-·-
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t• ~ .... It .,... ii ,..... .... "" YWll, lkhil
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... _(30) -~--·· .. •"' n,, •• fC> (311.) tQ l3Dfll'f Wllltr (ftMitt 1111-_ .... .,........_. _.
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tilt Hull .............. .., l:Jt e W I a • IC> (60) DMs •~ l lllf ,.,..._, s.-. Joo
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Your Martini
Could Hurt
Memories
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UPI)
-You can't depend on a
drunk mouse. He '1 ab5ent.
minded,
And the man who starts
downing martinis at lunchtime
may be washing away bis
ability to learn -and to
remember -even after be
hes sobertd up, DO matter
how much be eats.
'Illat's the opinion ol Dr.
Gernar<f Freund, • medical
researdter at the University
ol Florida College ol Mediciae
a n d the Vetera n1
Administration hospital a t
Gaineaville.
Using a bunch ol booiecklp
white mice for h i s ex~
perimenls, Dr •. Freund set oul
to find out if the chronic con-.
stunplion of akohol has any
effeot on a penon'1 ability
to learn after aleohol is no
longer consumed.
He concluded ihal tt does.
1be researcher found that
mice which had been con-
ountintl alcdlol r.r lll4Dhli ex·
perienced a general deteri«a-
tioo m the brain functk>n.. The
mowte brain, Dr. Freund said.
''is wrt similar to man'• -
the basic biochemistry ii the
same."
nie ·-also dispelled a commoo notion that the
malnutrition ol'ten seen in
6'Skid Row'' akxiholics is the
Uf'IT ........
Magic in Miniature
Everyone knows Disneyland Is the happiest king·
dom on earth. Dale Varner, 22, of Gladstone, Ore .•
figures the next best thing to being there ls to bring
it home-in miniature. Dale built the models on a
scale of 1 inch to 6 feet . He's shown above with the
"Enchanted Tiki Room." The detail of the display
is evident (below) by the parrot at the doorway of
the Adventureland attraction.
cause o£ the damage to brain tuncitom. Even well-fed mice t.;t;w >
indicated lo.u: m memory after
~ alcohol over a
period.1 oi time,
••1 believe the damage was
due to altdd itself and not
malnutrition as has been said
ol Sedco shaping li1e steel,
then takes bia: wares to
cantomia tracb where he
nalls lllem to 1lle hoova ol
t r ot t ers , pacers and
~ .
''I UH for&i. steel." be
tefb an interviewer. "I pound
the mold out uncle< .........
mer, punch boles out with
Ille-~ ... then ......
bender. No one ebe mes cold
pwidl1ng ol .............. I do
it with dies I made my8tlf.'"
Shoes tor trotters a o d
pacers averace 4 to I ouncee.
For -..igllbreds they"re ..,.
1y I ounces. For a saddle
bcne it's 14 to 18 OUDCt:9
and for a bl( draft bone
they"' T or·I pounds.
Gloomy Gus Is
Your Klnd1 Guy
LOOK TO
EDWARDS
LUXURIOUS
CINEMAS
FOR THE IEST
SHOWS TONIGHT
.-.....,. ,.... , ~•+t•V T<+'>'f,
-NEWPORT ··, <·"'·-" .·· ~ ,1 ~ t>Jc-·I> _ ..........
"AIRl'ORT' ..:::..
a!!!Jltll CIJB Cll.., !Cl
... _ "1'oM-." for many years," Dr. Freund -------------------m
said.
m11111. ~t••••••-•n CQ (30)
..... -(IO)
1111 no TOf "" ,,.. IJ IOI) II)
•if11nci111 lllothm." C11r1 low
(1127).
r...w t..,.., ltt .... ....... . -" .......... ,,..
,,.... ..... 111 ... Nt •·
-.. tht .. -..:tiw " .,.. ...., ......
lft}(J)aa.. II l 11 I .,._
Qilliii " ...,.... ..
Temple Imposes Taboo
No Women Allowed
Dr. Freund sakl many uex-
ecuUve drinkers" consume up
to 40 percent or their calories
in the form ol alcohol. That
was the same pereentage
given to test mice who later
ahowed a permanent im-
pairment in learning.
"By 'ex"""Uve drinker,' I HONOLULU \AP) -Some too, bee"""' ol tho dry pill
mean a person who starts old and new taboos will be. crus," Apple said.
early in the day, who may imposed when Kaneaki, Honolu1u'1 Bishop Museum
take customers or salesmen largest of Oahu's ancient and the National Park Service •a 11ct c.... (C) .ltM FOfth, out to lundl-.a_~ starts ledrlnk· Hawaiian temples, is opened are rt·stortng the four-century-~,:e .=,thl• Miller tlwl !:rs::· or:'h = ore~ to the public this summer. old temple, in which Hawaii'•
t of th · al 1· Women's liberation a.side, mo.'lt powerful k.1111 is believed a ni.. 1: .,.. Liii Miki'" pereen OI' ao e1r c or es
((t11M) '5.......,ict9' ... ,.,. o. in the form of alcohol every ladies will be banned from to hav~ 10Ught blusin1 for
"Rtll" ltny. day." the temple's upper plalfonn his fleet of longboats. ••""""" ..:::,:--w.t
Ill MIN: ..,.,liil'" (lllJ&ttry) Dr. Freund believes that the -lest Lono, the god o! peace. Apple taid all the work lJ ....._ .. ,.,.. •-a
111.-• -(30)
7:9 ti)~ • ......,. '!6--clakt Trwor, FM MtcMum:t-pennanent damage aloohol be upset. belQi done by hand, using,.., __ .. _ •• """-·'...,.. __ _.,
l:tDl>~f !B.:'11!~ ut•lltlllilt: fC) "ell-. 11111" causes in the brain could be "We didn't want to offend only the ancient Hawaiiau.1•
RMM 6tt Nillil ...,. thtlr iii ..._.. (ttiw101) '57 -Jo1111 the effect of acetaldehyde, a Hawaiians who revere the housebuilding a r L 1 and
,11111611111 whlll • ._ , ililJ lnWilW. IMrtr ~.. 00.emical byproduct of alcohol traditions of their ancestors,'' materials.
-.,., Clllu•. e D ._ CCI that "is seven I times as toxic says RusseU Apple, a historian
Ctlllf • .........
"I MULD fOI SISTO SAUM ..
Pltll Sltlr19t" MMLllM
''SWUT CNAIITT" ·-c..t CCI (301 • .-. ..., ,.,. (mysttm as alcohol" in it! effect on for the NatiOllal Park Strvk:e. ''There bn't a s1ng1e nail,"
IDT• 111 .. 1,... fC> (XI) 'll-IWMrt l.M, l'llJ'llil Diuy. i.::b:.:r•:::ln:._«:=111::. _______ smokin __ · .::g_wil_·_1 _be_for_bi~dcfe-n,_he_n_i_d. _______ ,.c
., _ -(C) (30) "'' ... .. - -(C)
•·• m Mil .. ..-. 1..,, 1:11• ..._ .-. "'f"Mll " 1 .. • ,..., • .,,...... .. (C) .... ,... .. u rM , .... (C) (30) (I) -.. -·· ~ , lty """""' ......... --_,,_, ltJl·-·--(C)
Y'r lQ',f\ 'i
For Top Sports Coverage
Read the DAILY PIWT
I ------------
. ................................................................. .
"111~ MIND
BLOWER Of All TIME!" e··-·
t •DW&RDa !'Ill ~-!,,~
w..Ol •""""""' CCU4Mtl4, l'HOI« ,.. .. JlOI ---·---·---
.. 11i, Ha1111r
!" tl1(/111.~
POSITIVELY ENOS TUESDAY, JULY 21 __ fClm:s,._
~Sl?WART lf/llY~
. ....
i'MCHMMe SOOALCWBJ
Hllff xrifS
UMtlNGXlll
STARTS WEDNESDAY JULY 22
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT IN
TWO EDWARDS CINEMAS
Plml)N!
~.,.. ....... ........
ITAllt ~t'r.a::. ••o••• c. scon w-w .. IAILMALl4ll .... ..,_. IA.TD •r .... v.-r-.
STARTS IXCLUSIVELY •I BOTH THEATIRS
THI ALL NIW
LUXURIOUS
GOLDEN WEST
AN IDWAIDI CINIMA W•tmlMtw Md ...._ w.r _.....,l_ ..._ .. ,...,..... ... .... Dlllto ,,_,.
,•lllMHW,
im• morill'l'MOWIM ft 1"
PllMllll IUN --;/INGRID. ~~ -QlllNN!fl~ -intbo Lil~ . . .
COMlN . .
2 0.1 ... EDWARDS CINEMAS
SAME LOCATION-SAME ENTltANCl
WESTMINSTER AT GOLDEN WEST
892·4493
CINIMA a1 CINIMA •z
EDWAROS.--i
CINEMA
WEST
... IMIMfitl' ........... w... _.......,,_ . .,..,_ .............
s... ~ '""' ~r;Ml~I OIJiEI llE£D "TWO MUUI IW
IJncNNICOl.Olt-SD"ID&\M
1MI •UNt HIT TlCHNIOOLOlt' e ~ • ............. ID ... __ ..,
,..,...,. .. MKI'
ar , .. ._.. I OH1Rf1.Y :,1
·--M•·--~.J
JTAm wn .. JILT U
J1MMSNw1rt e
Henry , .....
"THE CHEYENNE
SOCIAL Cl.!111"
I
--.........
ITAm ~MY II
•
(
.-
,
:·
CUSTOM f TO 7 BEDROOM HQMES
PROM $1?5,1111 TO $jGO,OOO
PRJME 'WllDING 'i.oi:s •
FROM UQ.000 TO $175,000
For infdrmation on
All loh & homu, call:
Bill GRUNDY, .REAL TOR
l3a Devor Dr .. Suiho 3, N.B. 642-4'20
-----·-··-----~-.. --------------·---------------·---·--·· ---... .,... .. .,, -
1111 Cooto Mooe 1100 . r Huntington Bo..,, 1400 ;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Un iversity P•rk 1237 --=""-----NEWPORT LEASE WITH SPANISH HACIENDA ~HA Ronlo' 4 BEDROOMS 3 lledrm. 3 ha!~ 3 car pr. HEIGHTS OPTION Awtttractl.Ye Sand family rm, Plus family nn, 21.i Bailul. 2 age> l'.'Xi.sti1"' S%'i~ assun1.
"MOUNTAIN 4 IDRM th boat '"""""· -' >'rptoa, (ono in mm. BR.); •bl; loon, '""''"""' q•1all. 5114 % FHA Joan t'O uaume, cloeet Ir, stOfage space ga. lies, J.arie Spau.i6h lirt• .
, 1000 Gonoral . 1000 Gonoral 1000 Gonoral
-• •. -i ----...,..----
JUST LISTED -~~aj~o!::' .
.. ·· , . plus;"famlly room
1800 SQ. FT.
MESA
VERDE
In Costa. Idea. This home
woh't 1181, with 3 bedroom1
•"'Ii a · seP1rate proteulon·
ally added family room,
large lot, ireat neighbor·
~· for ch1ldren. <>wner
askinr;. $24.500 per govem-
nl~nt .appraisal. At that
price, you'd better htlrry!
.: 'aus;nc;·· DR ,, FAM. walk to •fOre•. scboola, Onb lore! Choioel COl'ner location place, biz family nn, up.
Just llated arid OUl'!I excllll-IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! $25,950 or otter. : w/grcenbelt in rear. Defin. graded <'.1'1)ts, drt*. 12x50
lvely! 3 . Bedroom/21a. bath UTI'LE MONEY NEEOED Open Ewrungs itcly one Of the BES't BUYS patio, xlnt neighborhood.
.... ,!lnedl·built ~!h"j tu~etuny0 ae. TO P.fOVE JN, Stunplnc .. , ~ 5.C&·$UO in the area a.t $32,950 "'i ~h If s,,. Wl P !!. -G ED huge bedroonui. Double fire. (,_.cilln "*"9l good terms ava!I. Or, \\'ill
IURDWOOO floor$, OPEN-place. BuUt in deak FOR,. Ol.LEGEREALTV constd~ lease/option.
BEAM ceUlnc•. and lots of MAL DINING. Family •l!i:iOMll.et...,..iCM 808 f:'IEtTtT, ~ealtor 961-4471 ( :=.J 546·llOJ
~ of NATURAL WOODS. 1'00Jl\. Gourmet Kitcheh with "SINCE l!WG" GI NO DOWN
STAINED GLASS door, TWO built ina, Move in for option FOR SALE BY OWNER Days 83).0101 Ni.ghts \VALK TO BEACH, 4 Bedrrn ,
Seldom Mmes 'available in wonderful fireplaces, separ. to b!J¥ money a.od n"ason-3 Bedroom hous.: Ve'ty large l~ BA, sep family rm, ell'C
·this &R!a, located cloae to ate dining room and a able rent, JUST LISTED. f~)'al'd,pertectforchU. BRING YOUR kit .. approx 2000 sq, It. J:le'.
park, achoqls & library. ''J¥>WN • HOME'' CQUN. Call 645.0303, dreh and pets, 'Paneled uv. PAINT B~USH • , • signed for family entertain.
1000 Horne has near new carpet, TRY lOTCHEN complete FOREST E. OLSON jng .!1¥lm. House Just fresh-and let the sunshine in! Let 'inG.
-huge master brdroom. le 262:9, HA:,a.~0 B.LVD. with brealdut nook, loads me. REALTORS ly painted~ Will, aeU VA or your creative abilities l'Un 847.8507 Eves: 968-11 78
,.
Hen it is.
3 bedrooms •
$22,950.
tfiibelievable but true. For
S22.~ )IOI.I get beautilll
Jllall t.o wall deluxe ahag
CarpeUn& throughout, neW
tued kitchen and bath. 3
bedrooma, large lot, lowelY
ti.ck )'ard .and patio. Low
down ntA. See this' one
1NOW!
4 Bedroom
2 a·ath
$25,958
beaUtifuf larie living room ~'" . of cupboards! PATIOS to HARBOR FllA, $21,500: rampant ln this 3 bdrm 2 ~
-Wll<n "",..the back OPEN EVEST·lll.:30 •uil Y<>wc mood. one brlghJ . LIGHTS . CALL E.VE.NINGS bath home. '"Fix" up.Or·· "l"iljfl!iJ'·
yart!, Ple trees ")\111 _malce • IJ,inny...:. one shady and Plua these.re~ view of .sail OR WEEKENDS price. i28,::ioo, • :lt?:J••••"'31111'
ycu \hlnkyou'rtinthe.Rl!d-,,.~JJ.,_ -.!p cooled by Pacific· breezes. boats sailing in and out of 67).6568 ......... ruut
,vood,s, Own~ wlU 'help fin. 111•-. -.,., \VALKING DISTANCE TO c~lorful Newport Bay, Cozy •, R~ Hill Rtalt_y
a""" only io~·down. Oon'I ALL SCHOOLS. $36,500. Living Rm., fonna1 dining COZY 1C01Tnd AG,.E. Needs Uncaw.11Park Center, Trvuic 3 UNITS ·--• ~ c I h mi. large Fam.-Bllliard rm some e er, ving care. An)'tlme 833-0820 mi~ seeing this home ....:·yt•s , 0 e·swort y, with wet bar. Beautiful efi ~ 2 &drm i.vith heavy 4 Blcks from ocean &: let
pro.b&bly yours at $34.~. "OPPORTUNITY Kl!. overlooking protected shilke root and large .loL SALE OR LEA~ your tenants make Lhe
J-ocated on secludfl;I cul-de· N'IChOfS Real· [Sta.le PtthaPs you will never have brick patio with fish pond Asking $23,500 pr submit. 3 BR's, 21,1 Ba's. Separate pymnts, Call 847-8531 sac stre<'t IN N 0 RT H a.noth<'r cha~ to purchue & C and loads ot tropical flow. FHA • V..A ter,ns available. dinJng rm family rn1 2 fr. Only $42,500.
COSTA MESA. $16,100 loan a'4 Bedrrn Pacesetter in the 0 . ers. 'l'hree Bdrm., 2\li bath Calf 545-8424 South Coaat plcs, \\'et bar. \Valk to' pools
at 5%~ tor anyone. Pay. 546-9.521 M~Sl\ V~r$ ai-ea. for $34.scio REALTOR • huge muter Bdrm suite Realtors ~ shop(g, Vacant $373 per
ments n36 mo. 1or ever)'. ff •·• · t Ne\\·port Beach Office -o ROBIN Hood • -4 b "" ~· Ofllf r-expensive crp s, comple!e with Roman tub "'' · """'· r mo, U'Q"'U<.:>J.
thing: -water !<enet, auto sprink-1028 Bayside> Drive Garage oft alley + addl: & den. $31,000. $22,ooo,1=========-REAL ESTATE
MART
(0p.n Eves. 'tll 1:30) lers and a pa! location! 6754930 tional boat oL trailer storage assumable loan at 5~% an-Eastbluff 12421,1--:B"°LK"'-..,.t--,_=,-::n-::l-;;B::-,.-2
' ' "•
1t '°' "••-••• Into-• * TA 0 To nual rate. fi45..1294 o ...,._-.; . . Newport . """"!!~!""""!!!!!!!"""!"'!!!! tl::i. , .... ~ ...... ,. ... _. YL R space. p nel~hborhood • . sty Condominium. Frplc,
•, '-'-HA"IOR BLVD. . 1 • Coll""'e Park top qu4Jity. l<>p value. Ollly ~ "IlR, 1,; ba, eloc. bl'"' BY OWNER eleo bit"' 2 '" gar p ; ~ " a _.., $72,l!OO. trpk, tam. nn, patio. crpts, 5 BR, family rm, Lusk Balla p tio Spac ~nds
o 5461640 cai"itw Bal'ftl!lin M. M. La Borde. Rltr. drps. $27,500. 545-2316 homes on lrg lot. 3 full ·nd~ ·bld · 2 1 ,Qti!NEVESTILLI 30 "' ·-,.-GeMrous Rtductlon 646.Q555 Re 673-6 6 · ba'1 $49950 ~ surrou ing gs. poo s
I : 646-81111 4 bedrooms Distinctive deslrn. 4 BR. 3 -...,,:-.==="=--'u 4 BR. l"6 BA hxer-upper. · ' · -rec. area. $21.300. By ~T0TALPAYMENY: 8 bet w tcru NO GIMMICKS Assu~able 5\4 % loan.BLUFFS: Condo 3 be!. 21.~ 0,vner. Call for ap p t.
•,:*,'27.00 PER MONTH (onytlmt) Locatrd in one of Costa i-'=="'"=-""°'o~=--' a.; 1 es 1 ~a. $2 500 TOTAL FORTIN CO 642-500> ha Split level choicest -"·" ~=-FABUL US New low price, $49,950. , · • ~ 494-0086 eves & wknds. 1.lftJ sharp 3 bedroom home, Mesa• mot!: de s t r able Puts )'OU Into this 4 bedroom ·---· -· greenbelt. $38,500. By 1 ~~~-c--o-..---
)uxwioua bath, Freshly =========I areas, tills exceptionally oc;EAN~ VIEW ROMANTIC 2 bath cottage and let! ~ "M••• Dtl M•r. 1105 owntr. s.Jt-4906 Near New 4 Bedroom
'
painted in and Out. FHA 'OCEANFRONT nice 4 · bedroom, 2 balh ~675 1 •. ~ 1 IN ass b' 1 1 7,,.% -··----•· Built-ins. dishwllllhcr, car. , 1 ... 01 115,400 at 5 .. r, • .,, home bas it alJ -aU-electrlc ~. aq. t. ........ er roo • Court.yard entrance, 3 bdmi, G 1~:._~ Jyec · 0 a 7• BIG Beautiful home • hu Corona del Mar 1250 pet~. dra{>C's. 2 ba!M, hlg ...... ""' ... 1,0T CLUOING a romantic 24 x 1·-a.rd A deil .. btful .• ....,_., ou can move !hi _ .. 1.· ---4 G 1 . nil.Ill intereat rate. You can'I .; dream kltcben with brtak· 34 POOL with 1 tro lcal. -•~ Y · '6 • ht immed· 1 1 nd every ng, nr eve,,. .. ,.1ng. C HI hi d vard $29,!lriO Take over ..
: beat Jt! separate eervi~ 60 FT. of while sand beach fast bar, beautifully land· ly Controlled :.,e: ~n. every inch livable ~~~ LESS ~ ~fN~, $241:; Quick po.s!. Easy terms. ,meO g an 5 ioan. $3000 dn. will handle.
: .,ea. Dbl, prage. Forced Prinic P<'ninsula location scaped, bacJo'ard aqd. patio. Dramatic archl~tw'e com· FULL PRICE. . ' ~:S Agt. Pat O'Too!e. POOL HOME Courtesy Really 962-7751
) cir beat. Completely fenc.. $90000 0w1*'!' very anxious. This l1 bines the ultimate enter. BOATING SCENE w lk & 'l "'========I Inquire about th~ outstand. 3 Bdrn1 h.&e 101· sale or lease . '.ea. Defp."'n. c·-· w1th ' • • really' the pride 'of t.be I ltl a er ee -I ti Ne\v 51.n.. rug ~ -~-·~·-• ho <!.o... tainment acll es with the ..... 1,.,,. a~ ........ 6.1,,_ .. 1m-.... u---Vordo 1110 ing 3 bedroom family room \\"op on.. ,..,. · ...• .-:....i ..-..i..pe•. New ~A ... 0.. neighUl.IOIUIM me • ...,., Jl. ri y wtU ~ao.: .. ,.. J' ...... 'l.U'lli<U _........ '"9M R-" t • -mend val ""'"",. w. " utmo&t p . vacy. OU lg A new lpl.Cious home home with well landscaped .:uecora t .. g. ''" --~rme: avallabie. CALLI ,.o11'1J.,loye it r .1 ~gree. the VIEW ALONE ready for your decorator. 5 ReaUors BY OWNER front yard; lowly, large ue. at $19,500, SJ6.4331 or
Walker & le'e 1s worth the price of Bdrm + md'• rm 5 bu 7682 EdiJ'l&er Custom built, 4 bedrm. fam. perfect for entertaining, side (21 31 2.14-1761
JJ,eal~rs
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
?'f5-M91 Open 'tiJ 9 PM
Harbor View Hills
Stiarp! Sharp! Shlu'J)! Beau.
tiful Spanish Style home I snows like a model. Only 1
;yea.r old, 3 Bcdrma. YOU
OWN 'IllE LAND only
142.int.
COATS & .
. WALLACE
REAL·TORS
-S4Ml41-·
(Opon Evenings) -
;r.-ramlc View
... Ocean, Catalina,:
City lights
\\'ILL SELL FHA -
' ?t11NIMUM DOWN
\tefy delicht:f\11 4 bedrlx>m &
FkmaJ dining room. Beau.
tilul easy care yard: ,You
own the la.nd. Fasl posses.
.ion.
Realtors
"'Our 25th Y tar
. ' . $150,0001 fam. rm a RR ' 'i •5'0-5lii;!ll40~'m.~iiii;;ii;;l!42-4~iil~55i I ily room, 2 big fireplaces. yii.rd. An exceptionally large
W lk & l U Llttd !al nu.· beautiful home over-completely fenced rear pool Fountain Valley 1410 a er ee Open da > 80 . ' ' LIDO WATERFRONT 1 ,_ •-T A · t
In th• ·HarbG r Area''
673-4400
TREES GALORE!
Safe & easy walk to all
schools !rom this dclightiul
home In the c6LLEGE
PARK area. AU the eXtru,
& it is vacant, ready for
l"MMEDIATE OCCU.
PANCY! ;29,200 full prlce.
New fillllli:ing available, or
assume a 51,4 % .LOA?jl Phone 646-nn. ·
O THC REAL
\"""-ESTATERS
262, H~~:~~ Bl VD.
OPEN EVES Till 1:30
2043 We1tcUU Dr. '~Our 25th Year"
64&7711 , WISLEY N.
, o.,n 'tit 9:00 PM TAYLOR CO. $69,500 _TREES • TREES Roollon NEWPORT CENfER
SpectaC\!Jaf ,2_ ~IOI)' ... wi~ Safe " easy walk to alJ 2111 San Joaquin Hilb Road
\Vhile "-*r \iteW • walk to· _acboob from thil dellghUuJ 644-4910
sarxty beach, 2 MQlive fire. hOJ?le In the COLI.EGE ••lilliiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiii_,
placH arld :1700,oq. !t: of PARK area. AU the extra>, • EASTSIDE immaculate livtg area. Call & it ii vaeant. ready for ~5-8424 . lMMEOlATE oCClJPANCYI
• • 1t * ·-$29,~ full price. New On-sp1rc1AL We have 1wo openings for ancll'!8 available, or assume ~
an experienced jll'Ofe.Pional a !>-%% LOAN! Phone 3 Bed!Tn. 2 )>a.th ,home with
man or ·woman. ~ceptional · (HG.7171. beam ceilings&: modern ex. benefits!!~ C&U fi45.8424.. terior, Huge play yard and
owner will sell no down to
Veterans!
. $26,850 •
(Opon Evos. 'Ill 1:30) '"Sf'fUNOH·
A • Opon Thi• WNkond H f ·SPRUNG &\T/SUN FRO•.r 1:00
et this pretty two bedroom $16,500 FULL PRICE 219t Baker St.
hOme. It ~U identified with Sharp home with new aex;y OutttancUng 3 & lam nn +
towerln1 trect1 ahro"bs, ~; c;rui>ets and m a t c hi n I den, dlnlng rm or 4th Bedrm.
Acre Of~~ iueSf roOm, drapes. California RanCbo in lovely "l\.1esa Verde Cam.
besides. make1 this ·ah ex-· .~ar the beach. 10% down, brid&e Home." Huge cover.
ceptlonal value. Horsesr()K, and payments anyone can oo patio. Quick possession,
so bang it goes-for $33,950. ailord at this price. Double Priced right, too .
Newport
••
Fairview
646-8811
(anytime)
. 001\a t,.., l th fairway of yard, l'J excephonal o ft>r-5 Bed 13 C G APTS.-320 LIOO NORD Mesa Verde Golt Cou™'. Ing at S58 500 Call 673-8550 rm ar ar. NOW REDUCED TO 6% assumable loan: 3036 ' · Se parate clubhOuse & pool
$160,000--Xlnt Ttrms Java Rd. 541}.4()QJ. $62,900. for adults & children. In1.
6 Beautiful unit!'. 6 Car ga· mac 2 story w/hvy shake
rages I: utility room, with Newport Beach 1200 roof. Low int. loan! Nr park
80 fl. fronti.a1 on excellent . B/B & golf course.
swimming beach. Units An! Jn~e1tor1 Attent ion I IRVINE TERRACE HAFFDAL REAL TY
newly .furnished. Here s a ri;aJ illeal. near the LuxU{ious 2 Bdrm. & din. rnl. 842-4405
Biii Grundy, Rtaltcir Cannery in Old Newport. home, Owners spent $60.000 BY Ownt•r: It's · a Beauty.
833 Dover Dr., N..8, 642-462(1 C~ Lot ~(good l-Br. plus • now transferred • price 3 Br. 2~-i bu, lrg fam. rm,
TWO FOR ONE
Buy this new J bdnn, 2 bath
dining nn, and fam, room
bome y,•Jth new e~l.I and
drapes thru-out, and \Ve will
throw in a lovely One bdrm,
BIN kitchen, and dinett@ a-
partment. Separate garages
& yards, Excttrent AalUJn •
able financing, Hun')'!!!
M. M. laBordo, Rltr •
646-05.\5 Eves. 642-7438
o ce. rnced at $24,000, $49 500, ·ufil, rm., frplc, crpts, drps,
. ~r nttds ca"Sh of $7,500, ' · full landscpng, Very clost
thus will sacritiee at a price to schls. {714) 839-1839.
"'hic'h is at least $6.000 un-Princpa1s Only
der market value. Aat. ' 675-4747· 673-9060 OWNER: Lg, 4 bd. 2 ba, ' · 1st: $22,()00.$228 mo tollll.
EXEC's dream. Sale by $29,8;i0
owner. Being translrd. 4 CHINA COVE \\1111 take 2nd. 96&-145~
BR, 31> BA. fa!>) rm. '°"19 MILLION$ VIEW pool. One rm detached con-. . S t A H9tS 1630 talnin& 600 sq, ft. Beaut Overlok1ng .Harbor, Jelly & _a~_!_~ •
.brick wall encl ·patio, 'W/W mue ~aclfic'.. A p~easant &
crptg, drps, ideal loc. exchaive comm?ruty, 3 BR., POOL HOME
$67 000. Open 10 Ai\1 Dally large Uv, nn., View balcoey, 3 "·' , h J n 16 34 • • 3 on.inn, \\u oors, x . Near M11'or S:hopplnn 1724 Port Sheilield Pl., NB. garages. Anthony pool, all on large
Assumable loan, Near So. 644-5489 65' x 135' lot. Priced at lhc
Coast Plaza. 4 &. Fam/din * DUPLEX * GI appraisal $25,500, Vets no
rm .. wtth 5~ s;, FHA Joan Perfect for your home + dn: FlIA lo dn.
to take over. Shows like a l·l BR. apt, to help pay the BRING $$ & SAVE $$
model. way. Xlnt cond. Qulck'poe. FULLER REALTY
.ll'O INSPECT . Ji46.n7!
0 THI.: REAL
"'-I.:STATERS
~· •sarogto. lotS of frtlit trtts, Open Even>ngs pAIJL! WBJTl all-electric kitchen with dilh-CAtlNJ.'ifA.N 'Wasber, "''asher-a.nd dryer -~ 546·5110
<Open Evenings) sess, Asking $39,950. UNEXCELLED VIEW 546-0814
MORGAN REALTY ot Harbor le ocean. Attr.: ... ~~'"""""'""~""'"'I Mir=~ 67J.;6642 67S,.645f split ll!lvel home on R·3, 5100 $2;,o -UTIL pd~J BR, RIO
aa&'LTT co. inclllded by seller. WOW! Cnllr"*"'u.tftl ·cau1 -• OllEGE REALTY LEGE. R"EALTY· * WANT TO BUY * sq. ft. lot. Ideal for 4 Apt. firpl. wlw. Avail !10\\', ;;ca • ~ units. S225.000. 2501 Ocean Broker 534-69SO FHA~• VA AdlfMltMlrbof, 5 BR ho1ne. f15-$125,000. B1.1y, Blvd. CdM By appt only.I:;======='=
:Cc;;:::;czC:CZI 01· lease w/option to buy. Biii ·0 d R 1 ~ $29, 950 No down pa.yment VA or $550 Principals only or Brokers run y, ta tor Laguna Beach 1705
•• With 6~ La.n Breathteking View ~ · RtalJprt . ai I u down FHA. Very nice 2 bath FHA LOAN w/~nalidc new listing. Full 833 Dover Dr .. NB 6424620 CHRIS ABEL
1093
Baker. c.M. ·-Wilker & lee 1cmisoo=-='1=-=·=CM
BeautitUl tamily home, entry From' highest point in Corona 2190 Harbor BIW.~ at Adams ~N:ij ~? home ln Costa lilesn, 2 3 Bednn home, 1% bath.s, details 1st letter, P.O. Box MUST SELL!! DESIGN
hall, 4 bdrms., huge family Highland~ set'n from panel-54>94M\Open 'tll 9· PJ\I • ..... GU blocks to ::;chool. With the hrd\\'d firs. crpts, drps, 3165, FuUcrton, Cal. 926.12. 2 Bedroom hOme. \VeJl.buiH
room. dinina: room, pbul~h ·~edh-•~nb'1'1'',·. /k,·1~1·,·vr,.::'g· S I A H I ht G.I. galreatest increthuels hoinmhowmille ~~l~ Jo=n1a~~~ ~~~ U e dBedY blow,, NEndoR •,BR ~~~~t 2 & B~m~ o~::· \\'ith lath & plaster & knotry fllll:& ca~ting, quality Ut· ... ,_._ J -" "'"""1 " an a na e g I v ues ever, e ' · pgra u co · ''" · pillt' eC'ilinR.s \\'llh beams. lA$. Park·llke yard, sprink· rn18r.Ol'l(!Of2bedrm1. \Veil TRADE if you need 3 er·~. 2 Ba.'.? be a money maker, loan S18.200, (5,.~C int.l 2% BA Like new $42'fltJ' PriC'ereducedfor q\l lcksalr. Living roon1 hasflreplac('&
ma'."la•·-• ho--with I•-' car gar~<'. no dovm • con-payable $157. per mo. incl · ' ' · MORGAN REALTY Jlu. 6"% llJUIUal rate loan " , ... .,. ""' -"" Owner wUl sell Ff.IA or VA 3 N' h I R f [ ta! 644-1629. \'iC\\' dl'ck. flower [O\'Cn dc-aaumable. 540-1720 carefrtt yard, 'Ideal fot sft. '~ bath 20x2o liv ~ tact me at once! Small dn. IC 0 S. ea s e Prine, int, ta.'l(eS, in.<i. BACKBAY 4 BR hse plus 673.6642 675-6459 light in 2 patio:ii abounding
couple wlahlng·prtvacy, 1_ '•t·•••, 1o' ··~"-.. w 'bl. ti".', f11A. Price $?.l,!Klil. Walls·McCerdle, Rltrs. llARBOR y· 8 d •·-14., 9= ''We Mii a home '6" ....... "'""" :r .... 181 N Bl d C •1 pool, shake roof on culdi . Jew roa Hioor in .,._-auty, ~. ""· SS?.500 dblc garage. Or TR.ADE !or 546-9521 0 ewport v ·• "' · panoraml Owner 4 b evety 27 minutts" Ho1v about 10 nice UNITS, 54g.7729 Eves, 644-0684 Custom bit. $48,900. 646-9528 c vw. .,.. · r . T•RBELL 1955 Horbor PETE ·BARRffi RLJY large 4 ·sR hOme. 1 ,,.. old Eas1 c M Call Bkr lmmac. $15.000. 6·:1 10 T.o . V" '?t!atlon Pearce ~es: 642.:r,m J'' • • • ' • • 26]j Island Vie\\' Dr ., 1• J 11..NllltOI~ AO Ian
;: open till 9 PM anylime 5-18-3209. CAMEO SHORES 4 B•". pool. BaycreSl-likc &W-5649
new, Fte tiUe. Fam, rm. (A.tV!EO""""H~i&.,.hl~,-nd'"s--4~br :country Club Drive l:::;[Z:CC:=::=;=::1 WANT A . Large 3 BR. hon1e situt1tt'd gd loan. nr 1chls shop 2 •-dbl · d ' 1190 Glenneyre St.
REAL ESTAT E Lochen my er .A.._ "·'" o""I • ' . ~· e ga_r, crpt, .rps. 4944 973 549--0316 t1(1oot lanai added to this BAYOREST WORKSHOP? Costa Mesa on 1/3 of an acre. with hid . ..._........ d1n1ng rn1., hv rm, v1e1v.1 --...,-='"°"~-c---
3;p1111 family roum with 2~1 swin1mlng pooJ, in park-like DOVER Shores ~ °'''JX'r 5 $44,500. By owner. 675-6685 * $33,SOO * ~tbs mai;u an 1a=c~ve Ncwl,y listtd 3 ·bedroom 8 1860 Newport Blvd .. C.M. P~U:s:.:~,~~~.e,~n ;o~~ Charmer setting. Beaut. view o1 hills. br, bay~. imm. occ. reas, __ \Valk to beach. Xlnt terms
Realto1
... up or en e rung.' bath home. Larae 11ttp-CALL 646-3928 or 545-3t83 2 .. _,1 3 btdroom-2 bath in,500 &d terms. ln2 Antirua Way. Lido Isle 1351 * $35,900 * •'....... •· f · J l l ·1 , ma., .,...,.11.s on an exlra ,......,,., .. om a airv.'ily 0 dov>'n iving roon1 & am1 Y Open Evenings NO DOWN VA r.~11!1!1''11'!1111 .. .,•.. 548-2063 ---··-4 BR. -Buy OR lease l'l~sa Verde Country Chm. room. lovcly master suite, I!!!!!!!!!!""'""'.!!'!""!!!!!!!!• ~:.lo!~~ Ki~~~~·a=~~ At this prtee )'Oll can't RO Py"@~ ELEGANT Home, 2650 sq LARGE HOME '* $31,500 *
oWncr getting anx1oU£ for All overiooking lan::c heat. A MOST only i25,~Pbo'ne 646-nn wrong. Jt bu a double P· 1!1lr!l!J'.=tll__ tt. in prestige area. 3 hr, 5 Bednn., family rm., xlnt Nf'ar Beach _ Low doi,·n
deal . Vacant. eG &: filter¢ P<ll?l . $.'J.<l,rllO. " " •· rage, ttrrlhc cowrt'd patio.' 644-2431 '33-0700 by owntr. $78.500. 642-5583. street to st.rcc l '15 It. lo! PLACE R1'~ALTY 49.1.970,1
(Open Evl'ninw;) Satisfylnp: family , home yards are beautiful. 3 bed-!!!!J~i!'!!'""'!!'!!!!lt'~'!'!'~ I BAL Pen\n 3 Br Large By app't. only. 2!169 So. Cous1 Miil'~Y
'41·5110 ~~~iedco:r:9 ~a~R~~ rooms, 2 baths. Best yet, all STEPS TO OCEAN patio, W.950.' Frank • Owner 111111 $~~:down for 3 e HA NDYMAN SPECIAL e
(llWtiMfNtt'llltrlt H.co.lty Company terms available-. VA·FHA. 3 BR. 2 baths. Ab.scluteb' Manha!! Realty 67:).4600 Bdnn 1i!m 10 T 4 UNIT apt .. octan S'ldr of -OUEGE REAl"'TY 642 -is 67•32!0 ha., Jge. Jam. rm., maid'• •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO I "OU CAN qu·'"·· '' ,,,., imm•"""'-le'. ~ .... r a•-. -=========cl . c rrra~s. h 1·~ I I · ~ .. J; #" 1·n1. or otntt, oU patio, l)e. ' ........,. ....... ""' '"" -Cdl\.I "'ith ()('tan vie"' 1•"Y· iippi~ix, ;,,, Yt s. roni
• 1500Adlmll ,QL ___ £& lighth.il kitchenw/blln.BBQ 5 BR & FAMILY this house . $2.1,500, DON'T ~siz,500 With 101)4 do N•WJ?!rf Hel9hts 1210 LIDO REALTY INC beach. Gro~i.'d Sfl.000 last
5 ~!~~Ot!tbv!~oor tor snumiet «>oks. $63~ Price Rffuced \VAJT! CAYWOOD REAL Tyn NEWPORT 33n via Lido 673-1:ioo ~;'·in~~~·P;~1~"~~~1~~iti: BLUE PACIFIC VIEW
Lge •• Blt J bL home ba$
everythlni for Uwo ''Good
Life". Priv. pool .t PQtio:
!gt. dl:n, ro1. I: fam .. r/IL
Entertll in 111 homl!l or pii v.
beach. $84,150-
Mtilt~~~.:
IU-0700 644.14'0
•• TERRIFIC auv
~. be.low mkt, ·3 DR, cust.
bit kit, Dbl pr, Pltlo, eor.
ral for pony, 2 sheds. Huie
lot • all fncd, Shade I trult
tret>J:. 892-9142 or 184-08'71.
.llAYFROHT APTS.
'VISTA DIL LIDO
Plor a Slip Avallalllo
••• $.12.500 AND UP ··~w1111a-~· REALTOR """° . '4s.1$6f'ewt.
home. Corona de! Mar limt!1' i!IDJ.P q for qvlck sal• 6.100 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. HEIGHTS 1 'B'"'A"Y"'F"'R""O"'N=T°"'T"'R"'l"'P~l~E~X TRADE.
Pr\ctd to~ at 161,500 .-:iTnttJll~, to $3~,500 • 541-12'0 • Lido lSle 3 Bdrm, J bd1Tn MISSION REALTY 494-0731
67S.1662 ---·-----Cotta Mesa. with all bit-ins .. Jutt one lot oH fashionable •. l•b<lrm. 3 car i;a:aee· * OPEN HOUSE *
133-0700 · ... ,.. li'lcJuctini water <."Ondilioner. 2629 HARBOR BLVD. l;C;•s;•;•;Mt;;;•;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;11;;;;00 I Clut Dr. -3 Bdrms, 2 batll.8 l\.i.aht on the beach. $11:1,000. 16-G Daily P taf 1 .... ....._,.,. QuI-·--.1640 and dlnina room -Covtred · Brochure on Requt':;t or •na ~una -· M ,.... . Assume t'X.itlting OPEN EVES Till l ·.30 ""'"° -S37 500 Easu •• fin. H d l J Homes & Building Site~ ...ONalN• AlmND DR'1 HIDEAWAY FHA bn, Only$3,000 down. ••Jl!l!ll -' . "" owar awson r. Up Nyes Pl. orr Coast H\1')'.
171·•11 ON SECLUDED-PRIVATE ""'!!!!P"!E!l'Rl!'R"!O!l'N!l'64~2-,.l.,77!!1'""' STARTER 11!!:!!1 . -·-· 646.7171 Rooltor '75-4562 LAVCktoRri• Bo0<h """ DRIVE, lk'aut. cuatom mod. ;: .:::::::J ...,.... · 45' lot-$52,500 P B EAL TY 494.97().1 $24,000 ranch horn•. 4 Biia, llm tm, fOR SALE BY OWNER BARGAIN SUPER SHARP $7500 tiown. 3 be. 1•; b.,. 2969 So, Co"'! lliwoy
4 Bdrm. 1 ba. 1~ b$1hs an appx J\( acres. 3 Bedrooni hou:te. Very large ONL y $ 17, 900 l\lesa Verde llilhJ•tlds, 3 675-2643 or 497-ll!W --.
0wnt>1· de11perote! Primt' Co np ,;. __ _.., •••••• ,.,.. It.need yard,.pcrfect for chll. lo ~· 2 ba'"· --I anuna Nlguol 1707
u1·cii D1>enm Ill! bullt·in ly '~i1v "c~:;u ~d;'perie1 d~n and pef$, PaneJNi liv. Own your bomC rot-less than spa.c us U<:'\lrmt, u11t, Balbo. Peninsula 1JOO • • --'-----
kl!rli.en, dln!Jla room, e.nll'y Incl, 22 Avocado trtti, i'.lO Ing 'room. House: JUJt rreah.. rent. Nice bedrooms. 16 fool Jars. family rm., ~red BEAU1'1FUL homP.: in Nwpt ------• VIEW HO.ME • Laguna
hall. First tinie on market. ft --·•-2 •·-· Ii"-& ly palnled. Will sell V.A or llvin1: roo1n. \Vasher dryer, patio .t: ~ play yard 1 lists .· 3 br. 2 bn. 1-Nigucl, J BR. 2 BA. Jen1.'C'l;l. .__,....., ...... ,,,, "'" sprinklers, fittplace, lhll: ..,., W Bay Waterf t 5.'J0.1120 tnck rm. Plfay trtidc, $69.500. t'HA. $21.500. fridgl'.', lilOVC i.ncluClcd, A Cllt»tlt. Priced IO sttl at ft.In nn \\'/big tr p I c . n. •tit I ron $32,850, Owner. 17141 49.>4<139
TARBELL 1955 Harbor •IAIN REALTY, REAL-CALL EVENINGS rcat b3rga.ln •nd i" M . 64U9T2 ~au "·newly ......_' BR RENTALS
TORS ~n. ANO WEEKENDS Call now 64.>0:m. onl,y $30.SIXI, Call twQ..USl. + bonus room Patio-deck-. •
MODEL HOME-'· 7u.ue FOREST E. OLSON Unlvorolty Park 1237 b<ach-pler & ,1,,. 1111.ini. ....!'~Hs Furnished Avail now . lbli ... clous 1 1 c.~'"E!!"'~,~ ... "'=T"!"pl!\""!!!!!!' Heritage Biii Grundy, Roaltor Go I 2000 sr, 3 Ba hom•. Fam rm. uts r~ ox UNBEUEVABL• Penl.,ula INC, REALTORS NllDS BUYER NOW 83.' ll<>Ver Dr .• N.8. 6"-IG<ll nor•. ____ ..;;.:.;.;;
lge din le Jiv area w/view. New carpe11; bltins, R•raats, Pt, Duplex. Only $45.000 .. L0;;:1d;.,-,)'Olt=-...,=:-:.thl-;:nk:;,-ot""' ...... = I ~~==;;;•;••;•~n;,•;•;;;;;; I 2 Bk. townhou!e, Low down! ~ _ $200 2 BR apt over 2nragr. 4:• atrlum, view Ith, comp! xlnt (and, ltJcomtt $425 mo. Jont1 Rea!ty 613-6210 fl'fl that White Elephant ln I: Lut call -f\ttJST SELL! DAILY PILOT WANT AD. Vii.lw, a vail 8/lj, cp~d. drpd, Wallpapettd, A~ume new VA loan Of Dl1 W. BAlbM, N.B. the attic tot eomtthltta )'O\I 3 BR-2-84-Mt,vy ..._ttr. Submit all oUtn, $25.TOO. Turn tf)Ose White Elephants Broker 5.14-6980 l"nd~ped. 1106,(0) Roy J, SJS,(Ql 7\i'fi,, Price $42•500• WANT HEW! Ad1r'f'rtiM'l in ct n use! Try the Thden cor. Joe W/bMl1 1: trlt. Call: Patrick WOOd M5-2300 lnto etsh thru • O&il)' PUot JUO UT I L r T r Es pd
\Vartf Rell1tor. 1~30 Oalaxy Prine, only, Owner 546-2759. O.ll;v Pilot Qass!fleds. Pandlte column 1n the Dal· 5patt. FHA or GI fin. ava.lL • 1111 Havtn, Rltr. Dime-a-tine arl! ! Bachelor apt, avail no"'· '
Dr. G46-1~· f~ Qally). TIRED of that old tumllurtT call~ for nesut1~. Jy Pilot \Vani Ads. By O\\'Tlf!r. $30,200. fi45..8776. 2111 E. CoA1t, Cd~t 673-3211 D\11.l 642-5618 for R$LTS Broker AAfJO
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:: ba·
\\'f'lef
Cost.
:! BR
drps,
Villa1
for
O\\·nl
S170.
Gene
SI -
\
-~ ---....----
Tuttday, Ju~ 21, 1970 DAILY I'll.OT 21
RE NTALS
HouHI Uidur nished -i!EN TALS
Hou1es Furnished
RE NTALS
Apts. Fumlohod
RENTALS PENTALS RI AL I STATE
_,_,...... __ F_um_lohod ___ :'.~!!:,;~~~!!..-~!!:...!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!...._..f __ , __ a_l ____
1
11t * * * '* *
Rentals to Sh•re _o._,.._,_•1______ N-port Hgh. 4110 ===:=..:==..:;;:=:.=:::::!i:::::..=:=::...;::::~1 11eM11t w.-
$119.50 NE\v 2 e? .. lrc patio. ROil f N c -----1 2005 Cos t• Mesa Sl~
1 ?t1Al..E or lcn1<1-lt•; ta silo.~
5 br. view hOme in l..aJ.>une
Beacl\. 49-1-1W
"'lLL share n1y ho n1 c
w/gentll"man, AU f a£ i I ,
6.f6-00!•I blwn 1pm ll 9t>m --
N•wport Beecfoi
OCEAN front-All flt'W 2 br.
bu1ll·in.'i, b8.r. de co rat or
fu rnisht.-d 714/646--1234.
Dana Point 2740
'IUOTi l.BRUSll ALL U NEED
10 1•nJOy n1y bcauiHut l\Ome.
2 Uri:! I.la + 111.'n. f"inl.'st
J'Qast vu fron1 priv. palio &
1iv, 1111. i\tlullll no pt'ls. l
yr lse. $.ll:1 1n10, <196-3234
Summer Rentals 2910
2910 OCEAN 1'~ront, Nl'\\'p(J l'L
Dix., comp, turn. 4 Or. :!
Ba. 2 Car gar. SUndet·k.
J)i;hwhr., \\'s hr/tlr yf'r.
Linens fum. Avail. 8129 to
9/12. S37a Pt-r w c e k.
675-116;"18. After 7/18 <.·all:
• 71.\-7377
L ido Ba yfront-1 Pool5
Kitchenetnl' su11es & rooms
by day, l•:ct'k or n1on1h.
LIDO SHORES HOTEL
617 Ltdo !'ark Or NB G'lJ-8800
SU~1i\.1ER Rl•ntal. 2 BR
&ul·h hou.sr . SI reps 6.
f urn. A\"11.dablr A~. l st
thru Sept 12 $Jj(j \\'etk.
5!0-09;)3
BEACO~N-Ba~y---:-t.4-b-,.-,-oc~I.
p.1tio, pvt UJ"ell, S30(}-$3:A)
\1'lc Also 2 br apt. lge
'undcck S225 \\'k. 2 l l :
8-l;,..3,127 or 714 : 61~
•BALBOA 2 Br, TV, nr
OC"E'an. bay & s hop'&·
S\00-S\~iO 11·kly. 1\vail nlO.
ti1.>-..'J810
JUST AV'"A~l'°L-&l~-l-'1-,-,-=BR
apt, 2 01· 3 "'k.~. J uly r>-Aue
J."•, $1)1) \\k, 1~asadena
:l\3/79S--IO(l~
\VI-:EKLY-R·-·,-,-,,71,-. -17·,~B~c.
From S\00. Nl'ar Beach .t
Bay~ 1 IJ 683-8247, "·knds
67~8077.
CORONA DEL ri!AR COT-
TAGE, 111ain beach. Sips
7. $150 "''k. 217 lleliotrope
67:..3539.
DIX furn Garden Collage,
4 blks froni bch. Pvt patio,
s1ro \\'kJy 11"/util. -199-1307
ron Rf'nt: Ocran view <."Ol·
tage. Crystal CO\'('. ~leeps
4. A\'ail. 1ttJ.:JO. $150
:>IS-71~
LioO-:-Lcl~NO~A~l~,,,-.-B~,-y-su7k
Dr. & Pcnin. 11·a1crfronts
off.11•atl'r Lido honic~
Bill Gnind)' RJ1r 612-16:ll
Lloo lslr Apls • s.Jps 6.
100' lro1n beach, $200 \\'k.
2 irk. "1Trin. 67~m8
SU~!~IER Rl'nlal apt. slef'p.~
4. On &yfront nr. Lido
i;hop"g . tiL1 36th St. b13--42t..Ki
/BALBOA ISLAND • Attr.
1 Br apt. spill ~. July
Au,t::. avail. 673-1503
RENTALS
Houses Unfurnished
RENTAL FINDERS
Free To landlords
645.() 11 1
-"]'; W.1 ttt., Co1'• Mna
S9.l I louse trailer, Ci\t
:! l\Nln n tots/pets OK $105
2 Ikc1rrn, Costa l\l<'AA s12;.
.! Bcd1•n1, Costa l\ll'sa SIJO
I J3t>drn1, tots/pets OK $185
6 Bt·rlr111. all k!tls/(lf'!s S225
STA R*LET 547-0063
:\'ORTll San Dirao Co. -
Bt>autilul c u~tom-bu i l t
lltlob e over -Jook in,i::
r :.il hmok Cou11try Club. 3
br. 3 ba. all appliRnCf'~.
$400 1110. on year ll'asc.
71~ 72S-!il21J or ,,-213--763-8839.
sj .-;-:-;, RR I + lam mt,
:; hnths. A\'all /IOI\', fam ily
wrh·on1c, Broker ::.3-1-6980
,,. I UR ITURE LEAN 1 ct : BR. Adulls WANTED • """' .. 1, .... rrpl. bNtm c""':'".. b W, ts t -1..: SI~ l'rpts, Qop,s.. AduHs enly, oo no pe · .... ., ... t. 150, TH£ Hlf'IM IMIVB R.e1J)Milllll" familll O:shw
pets. Rtls. 23M Santa Ana DIRECT TO YOU 2421 E. lGth Sc. NB &16.. 801. ~ Ml,MUQ\ C.S BR homt, CorolJl del
,\vr:, 5~72 or m.e395 2-1 lir, DeliYl'l'Y -'1Scottish Trt:al" :t.tar Sehl Dlsl. LI ll:e Lagun• Beach 4.105 '.Ea.ttbluU or Jlarbor V~w
4 er.. 2 BA. bl1-in ¥, 100~ PURC1-1ASE: OPTION 16161 P•rk1W. Ln. JUU.s. Pool J)ttf'd, funt'd
dilh'i'.·shr. Sehl, .-!~pin&, Complete 1 BR Apt., 2 SLEEPING ft.ms. Util pd.. Mtr. 142·1"' or u.11f\lrnlshed. Take thil
frw'/. $290 mo. ~·9S63 • Low U S22 per tnO. 1 wf Frff TV £: radio. lo"" awaited ,,_,18e while !Jl...QU :-. DI.)' Minim.um . .., ....... 2200 So. COUt Hl\y. \1;e un for your home,
% BR. ~. r-1 & dm.,..11. wt.DE VARIETY About "~ ,._., J··•·· ___ _. "':~ _,, .~G Cuttom Furnltvre 2 BR. turn or unf\u'n, San Dltro J"r\\'Y to _..,. ......... ~. Lg. f='"'-""' "'"· -. Oce6n ~w. Shag cpts ~ach Blvd, 4 blkll (tt4) 546o-9501 ~
Orange Aft. $115 mo. Rental """' ...... 18 •• W l9th CM 548-3'Sl -••.~ So to Hol~ W on UNf11RN 2 BR. howie w/ Wloaddya Want? Wloaddya Got?
E. Side 3 BR, 2 BA, crpts • .>., · • • I========= J . bl . garare I: encisd rtar yard, S"ECIAL CL••s1•1CATION POil drp_, blt·ins. Qulet at. $245 1568 w Llncoln, Anhm TI<I·~ Tripa.x. etc. 4900 l olt l k. Jor aml doc. Prefer City NATURAL iOaN SWAPPERS
1$<'. Ca11 831-6t1TJ548..S330. REMARKABLY 1-..;...-------Hall att9 CM 540.GI
UNBELIEVABLY ON ....... .,, ........ KB. LA Q'WTl HEIUllrl . . s,..1al Ra .. DUPLEX: \Ve!it Ci\f. 2 br.
bltlns. pvt. yd & garg. SJ30
n10. f>40-0178
EXTRAORDINARILY n>imn1lng, dock. frtt boat. Vlftl lllU.lA U mt by Sept 1• yearty, S Llftes -S tlrnes -5 bucks S·~ 67' ~2 "Modern Spanish" nr Khools, up to S450 mo. a\ll.u -•• MUST 11'1c1.uf1~ ~ BEAtrrlFUL ....;; wk. .......,,u, · Box M·1091 Daily Pilot 1 ... wt1M ""' ... " • ....,,... ~net yt111 ...., .. ,,..._
V I D,. G rd •·t RENTALS 16211 P•rkslcle Ln. s-l ovt ,... _,,., ......_ ...., "-., _. .. ...._ ---• 1sere a •n"'t"' s u.-WM'TED 3 BR. Costa Meu t-NOTtt1aNa s.u.t-T11u e10t1t.Y1
N_!!'port_ Beach 3200 Putt!"' green, wateria.11 J: ~ptt. Unfurnlsh.d •• ._r. MJ-544l -lli dist, by Alli. t. fa). T• Pl•ce Ywr Tr•dtr'• PericllM Ad ==--=:.:.: it•ieam, 00\\'&'ll eYf'l')""~l'fl, FURNISHED MODELS NOW OPEN mo Ro~lblo "" ~·1 ~1 ,.. "'71 e 1 YR old -3 Br, 2 Ba. 45• pool, rec. room, billiards. General 5000 Lush landscaping, cabana: covered court· · -r--· .HIJ'"\M.il r~ .... ~
ram rm. din 11n. crpts. BBQ's, Sauna, furn.-untum. -·-yards, sunken swim'g pools, BBQ's & foun· • LANDLORDS • BeautifW quarter hotM l.lAVE: Guild Starfirto clec.
tlrps. dbl J!:nt. p11 rk & pool 1 It 2 Br. also Singles from NE\V 1, 2. 3 Bedrms. AU tairts. FREE8~~ ~VICE stud, 3 yrs, wtth tack, pitar, dial pkk..up, Vlhrt-
11rivil. kid$ & I V('I ok. Sll5. See ii! 2000 Parsons bltn~ cpt/drp, gar, Nr So ''THE ULTIMATE IN APTS'' '"'"~ ~ Tf'Mle for car. boat or! to tall pl~, cue. Fender
$·100 n1o~r!'lY li:e. Avail Rd ., 642-&'iO. Between Har. ~~Plaui 5 <1 0-1973, 1 BR' Fro •150 2 BR' Fr •17n..,175 SJNGL.E Doctor needs tum 541-6639 reverb. amp. \VANT: .small
&>pt. &H-~ bor &: Ne"'P(lrl. 2 Blk N.19th s-m • s-om " v-apt or bse on bch by Aue. E\'es ~ tnDI car. S45.63ll ews. ** VACANT ** 2 BR., l h ba. studio apt. _!!' utll. incl. Fur n & Unfurn. 1~ Will pay to mo. M&-2925 22' Cedar inboard Dory HWl $IXX) eq\lity in l...qun& Nie·
Fr $38 50 Wk crpt, drapes & bltins, Close u s, ~-~ -•· E. Bluff. $325. 3 BR, Pool. ,,,.. Om • • to shp $ll5. 847_9308 co1t• Met• 5100 (o,.,.. ct.I M•r 51SC1 BL FF LUlo Bluff·Nlee 4 ·~ °"'wk. For cem~ot uti vff lot, ""ill trade for Cie\'lde~ Reallor, F'roin $165/mo. Luxury Sin.. °"'=~=====::= ---------br, unfumMhed apt Ol' mbotr, chainsa11·, building late model ~I~ 67~6044 gle Apts. Complete maid Cos ta Mesi 5100 1 BR. Unfum Apt. Gar. \Vtr i\fODERN 2 Br. bltn R/0, house. 644--5485 material 642·8'l3 981 \V. Ben: •
2 BR .. + gar J car. 1 blk.· imvi~, boule\\'atti, linens, pd. Adults only. $100 n\O g. disp, frpl, terrace. view. 19th St Cl\l. 546-5374
10 ocean & redct·. Yr rnd all util, beatf'd pool. FAIRWAY 511 llamllton Apt C, util $190 mo, 6f;>o{;T52, Reoms for Rlflt 5'95 2 bdrm Beach l'fouse 2,000 + Ac of Mapif, Ulah
le.:ise. 1 child o.K. Day VILLAGE INN ~-5-M).2266. *SlS PER W&e.k _ up $20,000 f!'q\llty land. Nr. Zion Nat, Pk.. ~1_9101 aft. 3:00. 6'12-8678 Laguna Beach <19-J.91::6 VILLA APTS. Gr•cious Adult Living SPACES 1 br. Adult11 Sl60 °"''/kltc~n. $35 per \\'eek-up toz: "-1r, trees. ro11d. nr. lake.
' BALBOA INN 2 BR. ,v/iv cplll. llrp.o;, bltn :3.-l~ernleat 67 5-0692 Apts. J\IOTEL. 518-gf:);) Incon1e~,.u~~propcrty. $.150,000 e<i:. For trades:
Unive rsity P•rk 3137 B:llboft. G7::i-8J40 R/O. i;pir stl'Cl';(', frplc. 14:> EMPLOYED 1, ••. or •tu--~,. Inc .. or '!!! Bkr. 5<17.&419.
2 Rdnns. 1-bath $180
l BR. 2 Bath! S325
3 BR. 2~ B&ths S325
3 BR. 2 ba. fan1. rrn sn;;
5 BR. 2~ ba. $340 e RED HILL REALTY
Univ. Park Center, Irvine
Call Anytimr 833-0SID
Corona del M•r -._:...:..;o.;..._.;;;o;..;
AVAIL . NOW!
Ta ke Your Pick
Desirable ShOttelift heme. 2
BR. + conv. den. Lg. llv.
area. $425 on yr's lse.
Sharp £piil·levcl l BR. 2 ba,
sf('pS to a beaut. cool pool.
Yca r·s le8SC' $32:i.
\\'ouid you believe a spac. 2
BR. 2 ba., den + din. rm.
Cd~! home . even a view -
$400 on yr's Lse!
BOYD REALTY
67S-S930
JRVlNE Terrace: 3 BR.
ne .... ·Jy redeoor. $400 mo, Incl
gardener. 9-10 mo lease.
eves. 673-6565, 83.'"i-O::iat. da)'S
CUTE 3 Br. 2 bu. house
on ocean side of h1vy. LeaSl'
$3.10 l'llonth.
Corbin-i\lart1n Rltr 67~Ui62
EXEC. 4 Br. 2~11 Ba dplx.
2200 sq ft. Bltns, n\\•\y pnld.
Gar. $~25/mo ls. 540-7573
2 BR. NE\\'LY CARPETED
SaK1 mo. 432 Femleaf.
Call 213: 7614 761 Collect
H~ntington Btach 3400 _,
LOVELY <I bd, 2 ba. formal
d in. rm. All modern oon·
11'.'nit'nces. Lg. lncd/yd,
\\'/patio. \\'alk lo besch &
~hools. No pets! 2 Chldm.
O.K. SJj() mo. 962-9700
Prl\•atc patio, pool • lndiv. .,. 18 h "~~ ,,,,,,.. ., ~ Cow hom J Jutt for Sinnle Adult1 laundry faC". .... 1 · ..ui-vuru;. SI · Huntington Beech 5400 tlt!nt, room In lovely home. itry e, .:i1 acre.. TraM-oommerclal shop saw
SOUTH B
.A .• Y CLUB Near 0rangr Co . .1.;--.rt & SPAC 2 Br, 1% Ba Studio. __ Avail Aug l . $&). s.t6-&1<10 Br, 2 Ba, lrc pool, horses foa· cement miUr. 1 1"t:ry ,_..., hildre OK N ok \VANT·Inco~ proper. gentle pOny trade foe pick.
APARTMENTS UC!, Adults only. ~ c n . o peb. R...\I pvt. ho~. w/11ame kit. ty: boat or '! Owner/Af:t. k
Newport Baich a:ll22 Santa Ana Ave. $150. T26 Joann St., M&-1584. ON BEACH! :!\', ita': = "\1.1:>-:;.e9417 cc 642-5000. up true .~
880 Irvine Ave. Mgr, Mrs. Joachim, Apt 3-A * SPAC. 2 & l BR's. Crpts, n. $80 • . SAil.BOAT 20', sleepa 2.
ftrvi.ne and 16th' Drps. Pool. 2214 Collete e 2 BR l~ BA FROM $225 *DELUXE Jum1shtd room . Fully equ.ipPed. $1800 val~.
(714) '4J.0550 Ave., Apt 2· ~ e 2 BR% BA FR.OJI.I $260 \Veeldy. 998 El Camino Dr., Tnde halt inte~t or all * LRG 2 le; 3 BR. 2 Baths. e 3 BR 2 BA FROM $360 C.M. ~, for Dune Bllft)' Station .1 MtRRIMl\C
.A_wocO" 4100 * SUNNY. * * ACRES * * Motel-Apts. * Studio & 1 Bedrooms
LOW RATES
Day, \Veek or t-.fon th e Color TV
• P ool & Phone Serv incl
• Afaid Sen•ice avail
l Signal So. of 0.C,
Fairground!!
2376 Ne\','POrl Blvd.
5'18-9755
$1.1 BAOf Apt . l\Jen only.
$90 & up. 1-2 BR trln:.
132 \V. \Vilson, CAI. 548-9577,
642-126.;
* SUS CASITAS
Furn, 1 BR. Apia. AduHs
only, no pets. ruo Newpon
Blvd., C.t.I. * 00..!1286.
2 BR f\lrn In fan1ily section.
Pool. Nassau Palms, in i:..
22nd St. 6-12-3&1."1
i\1ERRI~tAC \VOODS °'"'' lwcury 1·2 BR. air..cond . 42.;
i\lerrimac \Vay. 5ta-.6DI See
clas.<> j l(JO
**\VKLY-Lovcly apt. Bach.
or Cpl. Furn. Kitch. s:t:>
1\·k pays all. 998 El Camino
Or. 5.16--0451
2 BR $WO. 1 Br $125. Pool.
Adults. Spal'. Ideal !or
Bach. 548-9633. 1993 Church,
c"
Seaulifully furnished
bttchek>r "'/util. i\1alu~
adult. No pet!!. :i.4S-l098
Frple, bltns. cpts, drpa, eocI Carpets-drapes.dishwasher LGE furn room. pvt home. \Vaaon or !!'! ei.a5oe. ~:Wu~~·ai~d: f:iJ gar., patio. 546-1034 heated pool-sauna-t~nnis kilchen priv. Nr. s.hopptna: I-IA.VE: Antique bllllet or
clean oven, beam celling, 2 BR. Unfurn. $133. or part 1, f1'C room-ocean Yl.ews center!!. 549--l06l dftaer Tlcer Oak V&Jued
dshwr. prlv gar, elevators, furn No _pets Wtr pd patio8-ample parklJl:". ' • · · thera1iy + i.wtm pools, 891~ · · ' Security guards. Income PNMrty 6000 at $650. \V~';., Furniture,
BBQ's, saunas, clubhouse. FURt'l. al9o Avail. art obJec6t~o~ •
Adu1ts. From $140. J ust LGE 3 br, ulil, pd. $l9~1• HUNTINGTON c:usro~I 6 units • prime• ___ :c'~:.:c.;.:,. __ _
E .. 't Or 2600 Ha bo Jst k last mos. n>nt ......,.d. 1~ r r near ·~-. Joe. {}y,·~rs 4 Br. den, 3 Res. lot, Yucca Valley. un-
Nabers Cadillac at 425 &\G-:!j.14 or ~IS.S:W-::=·--~ PACIFIC • ~'<'•····m•• \Vai· ..... ::,_6300 ---·-Ba + 0> II"&" studios: (plcs. der1rnd util, a{)Prox ~~ ac. ' ... ....,... NEARLY ne"'· immac. :! BR · N t S198 SOD (). • C BAY MEADO\\.' APTS I d Ix X f·~ Uo 711 OCEAN AVE H.B paUOI. e , . \'Mt Take qwtl. Oriental rugs o
1vr P . tras. , ... .., pa • !Il<l ~-i~ · _61>Sml. ~ .. value. $3400. , els to ~chi!, f'e"· l'Xciling I BR. 140. Adul•· 1150 °00 1028 ..,._, ._, •n• """"' "'· '""" OJc. ru..n JO ..... ,.. ~"-* OCEANl'llONT * Prime location ......... ~ .. 2 BR, $165. Beam ceilings. l BR N I ·• ·~ -\Vood pan·~. shag crptg, · ew Y carpet.:'!;!, ?rlanapd by 5 Units, $125,000. XJ.nt ttrms Alt. Chalet, Cn!11tline -St.
. ti drape!!. eJec kitch. Chil~n \VI",. .. wu -• CO. PLACE R!;ALTY 494--9704 Moritz. Fabulous VIV Lake
priv. pa o, ~ W/'-lcs k C·" aft 6 •t• ~" ~~~;;;;-;.,;;.;-;;,•~;;;,;;.,1;:::;:::=';:;':;'=~~ Poo .. ., o . ..., , U' v-o~:... G~ .. ~. ... -. Trd -. I, sand volley ball en., ..::.::,,,.:==..;:..=-==-~ •z -.\1\111 .... rec bid&'., pool tables put. 2 BR apts, bhns, rpts, drps, BEAOI apt OceAn View, lutiMll lttntel IMo $201if for prop, NB., Cdl\1,
ting green. Adults, no' pets. Clean. Inquire ls.52 "A" Sundect. Ne\\'t.r spac db: ITI4) ~. $2;;.8886,
r, \V. Bay. Opc-n Housc Ccriander. 54&-5268. 2 Br, bltns, crpts, drpe, COSt'A N:esa: 600 1q. ft. 2 tn.f'llPOrtatlon CIU'B ~T
12-7 pm daily, 646-0073. --· lndr;;. Nr 11hops &: pier. $175 oU1ce, 600 sq. ft. atln, I('() ?llerc wagon ·ro Mere st·
VILLA MESA APTS.N __ •w_po_rt_a. __ a_c_h __ 52_to rr l'Ollnd. Adults, baby ok. :e..t& shop. * OTmer dan. Good ~nd. Trade t (Ir
2 BR. Prlv patio. Htd pool. PARK N~"PO 53G-2l3l both for guns, boots or ?
2 cu encl'd gar. Children c." RT • Catt N~AR llunlington Harbour SHOP, Stott, oUlccs -2340 ;.tl.-6639; e\•es ~. f~ livg ovrlkg thr v.'ater. Nt'iv 'l'riple~t'S. Qulf't area. Ne"·port B.lvd. 400 aq. ft. p 1 J SI ···' \\·e\oome, no pets pleas('~ 7 poola, 7 tennis els, STJO.cm 1 _ ; • ssa. 640-:za.M or~ r me ore c0mmerc.1tu,
$1 6.J n10. n9 \V, \\'ilson, s ,~ 11~ S·'"" ..... ._ 1 BR 1· Di:1h11o'asher. Ci\t Owner Oregon bound • &11)..1251 pa. · 1v lil IJ to ....... Sl.:.0. Pct ok. r2U) 592-2623 I •• land \llUI Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Al~ 2 sty t7l~l ~~ Office R .... tal 6070 tra e for vac-. car·
DELUXE l & 2 Br. Rltn Townhou.se1. Else-. kit, pri or r;; l!at TD, Call 54i>84Z4.
:1tv ,r,. dsh\\·hr. pool, <'ncl pnr. or bal. !fubtrn prkg, ATinAC. 2~BR. Sll5 or $149. OFFICE SPACE South Coll.st Real f.At•lf'
,i:aragr, all util pd. t,rom opt maid sc-r, cpls, t.lrps. All eslras, Pool. Kids/pets. ' $.WM equity 3 br, 2 ba Me
Sl»-$170, Childm \1-clcome. Just N. ol l"ashlon lsl at ok. 11131-C KeelMn Ln. in La&una 2-11 w. Wilaon.-oo, ~. J amborrc 1.r. San Joaquin 847--032:i, &41~74"6 HUNTINGTON ,. ~pvt bcb atta, So. • .. HARIOUR 'ii blk to heh, Tnule tor ....
f>IS-740Ci llllls JW. 644-1900 for leas. * 2 BR 1~~ ba, pa.tic, pool. . o: more units in01·anae Co IJ1E Info. SIG:> mo. Mora Kai Apts. 3 sweet9 ·available-· in llunt. 499-!282 ti ,.. . · . $170
J Br .. l 'i &. pa li(). bl!·i!U,
crpls, drps. Ask about our
1li8count plan. 880 Center
SI. &\2-83-ID.
HARBOR GREENS
GARDEN & STUDIO AP'I'S
Bach. 1, 2, 3 BR's. from WO.
2700 Peterson WI.}', CJ,!.
5-16-0370
(11 2 BR apt, pvt pat; Cl)
.....,...._ ..-. ..-.. -..=.. ,...., En1t of Beach Bl, 1,J blk ington Harbour, Bo&rdv.•alk , a · .1. * ~ off Garfield. cenler. 2TO 911. It., 500 aq. ft., 47 Twln diesel houseboat,
n1 AMIGOS WAY 2 BR Duplex -clOle tu beach 600 ICI. ft. call Ron Bartlett clnr, $36.tm vaJut. FOR
2 BR. 2 ba. unils, unlUrn. I. do\\'Tllo\\'n. Crpls, drps, 213/592-1361. e 714184&1361. howle. units or ! No out
nd t n4· ~ .. ~ ~~1 llunting1on Harbour Corp. o! stale property. Outalde living areb a 11 01·e. a mo. ~ <12<11 \Varner Ave., ll.B. Call n•: 613-3114
double a anlgcs. U'.iO to $300. *LOVELY NEW APTS . r. · * 644-1617 *-._ Neu Ocean 6 paric, 1 li: 2 Oclu.>cc l·Rm. 0U1ce 20 ac. a yr old ~vers~e,
............. ........._,....~ Bdrmi "25 13th St SiT-l95T Nr. Orange County Airport Qranae Grq.ve; man11e. CONDO~IINtu.\f • 3 BR, 21,. ' .• &. Irvine l n d us t r i a I ment tree. SJ.650 lJ:. $'76,000
BA. 11·/ pool priv. & trpl.c. $l4:>. 1 BR Pvt. gar ~ patio. Complex. Carpet, drapes, eq. }~: home, income,
$2115 mo. 673-9183 All dlx features, .f.urut bllJr. music, , a!r-concU1(o.tnc ~ land, Uf..2936..
2~:i1 Ac. e1tate lot, under-
KTI>Und ulil., Gavillan Hills,
nr. IUwnJde, Lake Matt.
he .. viev.'. Trade tor Ute.,
trades, etc • .Bkr. 547-6489.
4 iir, 2 Ba home lor amall
home or lot, C.M. Submit.
\V. E. Lacberunyer Rltr
&1&.3928 Call ev.1: &e-m'l
Trade clear lot w/beaut
view in L.aguna fot• small
homl" I lot 01 or submit.
\V, ~:. Lachenmyer. Rltr.
&46-3928 Call Eves: &l2-223f
ltave deluxe Costa. l\leu
triplrxes &: +Plexes? \Vant
20 or more units, Oranae
County. Fortin Co., lnl-C
~Ve1tcllff, NB. M2-5000.
Own·Your-0.1'11
Ocean-F'ront apt., 3 br., 2
ba., electric kitchf:n, pool,
deck, private beach, eleva·
tor -For units or land
494-2;l13
\\'ant home: }lave ll duplef
unil!I on 13,500 !l:J. fl. lot
zo~ AP; $24,SOO l:q. Plans
101· oHictos avail,
Boyt.I Realty 615'-59:11
1.6'1 acres Lake Co., Ore ..
$8000 free I.! clear • ex-
change for So. Calif. Roy J.
Arntson, 1000 N. Coa1t, Laa
Bch. 497-7260.
GIFT &r: COUNTRY STORE
TERRIFIC LOCATION!
$4,!XKI equity for
comparable or 11·hat h.avc
you'! (;46..5383
List lt her. -in 0ranp
What Oo yuu bave to "'9 T
County'• llrl'C!at ftad u.d-
ilw poll-ud -a dUI.
LEASE: Custon1 2 BR home.
li;r encl yards. ·~:asher/dry.
i;1ovl'. refrig &· soft "''ater.
Older child ok, no pets.
$223 \vater & trash paid .
968-2325, 20021 Afoontide :N.:a:;w::.po:::;rt~B:::;H::;<;:h.:__4;::200;;.: furn. £a.me, Very nltt 3 BR, 3 ba. F'l'Jllc, pool.
nelghborhood. 2200 ' b I k $285. Baytrnt 2 br, 2 ba,
Pomona Ave. lrom $150 mo 1300. Agt. &MH!Tll
!lGl-31%1 or Ml-<l08! jallllorlol oervlc:<, SW Mo. *. * * :...
! BIDltiiOM $fl0. BOB PETrlT, Roal.,,. 1,6ii!l!lm!!li*~!i!llM•~!i!i!!~!!lliil!i•1 ••'"I Gor., ,.. ochi, 116-2'111 • 133-0lOJ • I! l • Ch-.
sm 1\10. <I bcdroon1 jr. ex·
C"rul ivc homr. Sunken Jil'ing
room, dinin:; room. 6:?12
A1he11a
* QUICK POSSESSION
:, Br-pool-3ba-lear.c
81'1·~1 Bkr. 817~
JruNTJNGT6NH:ARBOUR
<I BR. l BA lease • or opt
811-85.il Bkr. 89J.4l52
A New W•y To live
in Newport 8e•ch
OAKWOOD GARDEN
APARTMENTS
On 16th Slrcet bll\'n
11vine and Dovrr Dr.
(7141 642 .. 170
BA YCLIFF MOTEL
* LO\\" WEEKLY RATES *
Kl!chcn, TV's. maid service.
llcated P ool.
64S.Jk';
l•guna 8.!!.Cchc_ __ lc.705'-' 1 oc=E~A~N"'F"R"O"NT=7A-pt---,= •• -.,~ly
LEASE or lra.!lf' option: 'l'op
of \Vorld 111'("11. 4 Br., 2
BR.. $295. 833-0192
-JBR~Nl'IV hon1r. Vit'\\~
SJOO ;\lonth
Pl.ACE REALTY <tSl-9704
R ENi ALS
Apts. Ft.1rni1hed
rental. 2 BR. Furn. TV,
f~t radio incl. 645--1756
e \VJNTER RE~.'\l.S e
!lent NOW for Sept.!
Abbey Realty 642-38.XI
2 BR UPPER·>A·;llk to bch..
sz;,o incl util . Yrly avail
9/1 TI4-67S.-"JO.l~, 2 13 •
411-9:143
+ see. dep. Phone for appt ;;;;:,=:."'='=='====
962-5721. IRVINE 5231 S•nte Ana 5620 DESK SPACE R~~.~~TATI 11~~~"J.'ti°A~
305 No. El C•mino Realll---------$169.50 NE\V 2 Br Duplex.
Lt1:. patio. frplc, beam ceil·
ing, crplli. t.lrps, bltns, sar.
Adull.!I only, no pets. Refs.
2354 S&nta. Ana Ave .
5-48-9472 or 6n..o39:i
2 BR, 1% Ba SlSO. Cpttdrp,
pRtlo, pool, bllns. Seacllff
1'.·:anor Apbi. 132.'.i Placentia
~ Alie abou.I OW' di>
oount.
*DELUXE 1 & 2 BR Garden
Apta. Blt·in&, pr\\'. patio,
h"attd pool, frplc. Adults.
Sl4j mo. 546-5163
JBR 2 Ba ch11d~n u
& up. 103·1 £i' Camino Dr.
NOW LEASING!
New. family and aduJt units
"'1th total recn!•tlon club
and pre-school. 1. 2 !: l
bdrma .from $1!i0. Nr, ~
pi ng, golf, acboolt:. Ju1t
south of San Dier<> f\\'Y. on
Culver Dr., Irvine, 8J3..3733.
PARK WEIT
APART MINTS
O\vned nnd Manapd by
The Irvine Company
EHi lluff
Go by & 1hcn call 5ota.3868 PRESTIGE LOCATION
or67~ =~-'--'-~---,.~ 1 For !cue, deluxt-UISS t<t rt ,
,, .. YILLA MARSEILLES Son Clomenl• Lota
BRAND NIW 492M>J -------SPACIOUS DESK SPACE · Ma9nlflcant OCEAN VIEW Land I & 2 Bdrm. Apia. Ii 7875 Beech Blvd. 102-Xl20' Lquna Beach ••/
Aclult l iving H . B h street lmprovemtnll under
Furn. & Unfurn. untington •~c "'&Y· Adj, 2S' 1ot1 aelllna
0 19:hwuher . color coordtnat. 642-4321, Ext 276 · above $8,IXK>, Asking $25,000.
od appll....., • pl.,h lhaa DESK SPACE ••bmlt dn pyml. B"'.
carpet • cltolee of 2 CG!or 491-1210, 497·1021 eves.
mcbeme1 • 2 baths • atall 222 Forest Avenu' * $5 ,_ * showers • mlnwed ward-~ 1'0be doors • tnt.llttet l!ght· Lag una Beoch Vicw-Level lots • EZ terms
ing in kilche:i • breakfa.11t 494-9466 PLACE REALTY . 494-9iM
bar • huge private fenced . 2969 So. Coast J.ll\\·ay
patio • plush ~'lrk13Caping • UPSTAIRS front·haht. 900 " • L.AGUNA VIE\\.' LOT •
brick Bar-8-Q's -llz1:e heat. ~t. 2 p\'l rc~tnns, pvt park· Quick Cash Sa.le $S8Jl «I pP)ll lo la 1 1ng lot. convenient to bank, 49-1-9743
3101 So. 8":1~tol St. l;'P0~·;•;0~1r~;"""'.:.:· ·~1~""'~""~--I======"'==== (~·Ml. N. of So. Coe ·t Plaza) OFFICE for lca11e, <I priv Airttt•:..----"62t0
lu1lnt11
OpPOrtunltie1 6*
*CANDY SU,PL Y
ROUTE*
(PART on FULL TJP.fEf
VERY HIGH INCOME
''F'REE BONUS ROUTE
PLAN"
Nov.. available In 0ra1'18t
County and many beach
tov.·ns. All locatioll!I an corn.
mercial or factory fu.rnl1h.
cd by u~. Qualified penon
11i ll bl!oome distributor for
our candy (Nel'lieJJ, Plan!.
ers. 1'001sic Rolls, htllk
Duds, etc.), You mu11t have
2 to 8 hrs. per week spare
time !days or eve1.),
$1150 to $.1~
Costa Mesa 3100 Gener al 4000 1 BR . duplex 1 blk. ocean.
$150 Yrty, $2.50 mo. aum-
2 BR. amona: pines on cul-de-4 BR, 2~' BA •Pt. Frplc,
sac. Crpts. drps, GE kltch. drapea, crpts, \\'et bar, pri
encl pr. nr bus. Uta. Mlconlet, dbl sar oft kitchen
S•nte AM offices, rec pt room, air ----PHON!, "J4200 oond. Ample prk'i· Xlnt Joe, ~IECK TillS 1'1>R PRIC~
• Lachenmyer Realtor 1i acres, Irontqe on m-CASH REQUIRED
mrr.
3711 \V. Balboa ~2-1272
1 BR. Gar. P11:t lo, crpt.s,
drps, slO\'l'., re.frig. Bamboo
V\llagr has priva1:y & quiel
for mnture adults only.
[)\1•nl\\'n c~r. From $150 •
$170. 548-713•1, 544-0152,
HOWOA \' PLAZA
DELUX'E spacious .1 Bdrm.
Furn apl. $13:i. Plus util.
Heated pool, .\mple park.
Ing. No children _ no pets.
196a Pomona, CJ\f.
2 BR-.$155. Yearly rental
Utllltte-s paid. Adult1. On
peninsula. 675-4533
G•neral 2000 General 1000Gener•I
$@R.t}}A-l.G£2rSs
Th e Puule with lhe !uill-ln Chuckle
O ~eariOrtg• leners of tn. ..-._
lour M;rombled words bt·
low 10 form four simple wofds. •
T H I K G N I
• I J • I I J
I' I i H E C 0 I
I I I
AMcHo It 1-~I ~, ~l~,~,--l i Sig" in o bo'loom, "Air
_ _ _ . . PcHutior\ Notke. If You't•
..-H-A_T_H_O_R __ ~I Polluted, -I~• -.· '7·•1
I • , • I I I ' e Complete tn. ch\l(l:l• qvokod by f!lllng In tfle 11111&1nQ W91"Ch
-. you d•~•io,, lt'OM ftp No. 3 belo¥f,
@ PR INT NUMN REO l(TTEIS
IN lMfSE SOUAltS
€i VN5CI AM8lE lETTflS I
'OR ANSWEt . I I I I I I
2000
SCRAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 8000
I
Adull.!I i\.tgr. at 124 E. 2Jth dshwhr, dbl oven. Pool. Conv
2 BR, un!. ne"'l,y dee, Crpt, lo shop'g sch111 l recreation,
drp1. Encl p&tloe. Spac. From $325 mo/up
grnds. Adult1 only. Sl40 mo. ~ AmlJOI Way, l"l8
2283 Fountain \Vay E. ?ltgr, next door 865 Amigos,
(Harbor. turn \V. on Wllsonl P.fanaged by
LGE, 3 Br. l~ Ba. Crpts. \VJLLIAM \\.'ALTERS CO.
drp s , d i1h1v a s h ~r. e NEW DELUX'E e
do1vnstal111, no pets, 2 child. 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for Jea.\lt',
ok. fl('&r 'chools. SIGCI. Incl !l""C. n1a.stcr 11uilc, din 5'1j...J2t:; ,,,. .--~~~~ rn1 " dbl go.race. auto door
AL.\1051' ntw 2 Bedrm. 2 opcntt avail. Pool l Rec.
BA apt '"'/lrfllc, SI~ mo. area.
Adults mjy. No pelt:. lm· e FROAi ~ e
medie.te po911CNIOn. A,itnl ll6J Amigos Way, NB
S4M141 Managed by
NEWLY DECORATED \\1tLLIAM \VAL1'ERS CO.
2 br .t. gar. v.·tr pd 6.16-(120
2176 Placenlio.·D $125
~ Oranc:e • D $11;1
1 BR Cond. New carpet&,
pool, wuher & dryer ~130.
A\'U 8116. MG-4130 alt ;;
2 RR, Crpts, drps, ponl, Kid~
ok. Sl40 + d~p. 1008 Maple,
Apl I. a~R-o~
2 BDR~1 . Crpt1, drpa. Pool.
Childrt'n ok. Scc at 126
Alonte Vista, CM.
NR. New 2 Br, 111 Ba. ct!)ll,
dri-. 1tovt, dllflwhr, p;.
798 \V. Wilton. 642-7958
1 BR. 1tove It re.trig.
UllUtlt'!I 'pe.ld, SllO. No pc!a.
~26SS
1 BR lg dose~. new crpta.
pool, utll pd. $140. 1884
l\lonrovla. 548--0336.
Your local Super.~larke1 , ,
Dally Pilot Oasslrled
Corona IHI Mer
ON TEN ACRES
J Is 2 BR. Furn 6 Unrunt FlrepJacet I prtv, patk:s I
Pool&. Tennis • CoMnr l 8k1ft.
llOtl Ilea Lane, Olll "'-"11
fMICA.rth\P' n:r, CINt Hw,l
N&W i I fBi Apt.t ...,J;l'
AU bWlt.Jnt. 2 bib from
Octan ...A.\-e, Rik from
shop'r. Yearly leue avail.
2 BR • $250 per mp. 3
BR ·SlSO pt.r n10. Q'A'nf!r-
Ago~I. 6#-0266
Di'A1. direct &42--M'78. Ch1.Ji;
yoor ad, then 11!t Ni ck anc:
listen to the pr.one rln&!
fl50 _ LRGl BR. Studio ~3928 call ew.1: fi7l-1489 tema.te 15, 10 min from
Apt. (Triplex), Family size NEAR Newport Pott Ofc, Victorville, $391 per •c.
k'! h /bltn " d ,. Greyhound depot Ottict Sl4,000 · total. Term.a. Bkr. I C • W 9, crp , rps, ' · 644-461'0
frplc .• encl gtr. I or 2 16Xl9. $1()().$123 Mo., lease •• -'-"--'-------
chll<lttn ok. (Nr schla) No GrRham Realty fi46...2;U<I. .1 AC, undevt1oped. Lake
pe!a. 2230 S. Center St .. DESK space $35. 474 E. 17th uauret appn!c. Hunt. llsh.
S.A. Nr \Varner. jjl-6501 St., C:.01 suite 2028. nt Take over lo dn $20 mo.
---music, alr cond. 6U-311U o89'1:o_:4::1.::lll'.:.. ------
Le9une lle1ch .~70$ DELUXE suite • music, air, NORTHEA~ Ante Io p e
* NORTH END * furn. Only $7:1 on a urUqllf' va:fey. 2 ,~ ac1-es. , $l99ii.
time shattl. 642-38.ll 10 ,o dOwn. A:ent. ~.
One or 1bDr1e f'ltt lo"2y · oo ON'!'ll Coa H -
1 BR apts, l bk>ck ahopplaa'. 'La~~ BHJ.~ It \\')',, iiJllN1s~ ....
beachn, prlv.,., encloood Utlll!~a hldud..i 494-9111 l'INAHCIAL ~Uo. $1'B. . . ' '
U!M23'1 or GMUS NEWPORT Beach del~ of.. •utlfttle
1.EISUJ\E \Vorid -N~. 2 ~~~IHH~.Prtv. C)pportUftititl 6JOI
br, crpt, drps. 6 n»-1 Y1' ---COIN LAUNI>Rlts 1••,. No .. t.t. "15 mo. Commercial 60I$ PRIOIDAlllE
830-tlTl -·-· · J!:T-ACTJON
_$UJ !-fO. • Bachlillr A.pl. COSTA MESA STRIP Choice Costa Me._, ICC" $1000
SlT5 t.fO .• 2 Bedrooms CEN'I'ER . 19~ Return & per mo net ?lfln i1o 000
PLACE REAL T"( 494.970 I spendable Income on $38,000 dn Alpha sefa cenicr San--down • •
2 BR . coean view. l
1
b.!.k f'~ lnform11.ll0n C.ll: ta AIV' • Volume laundry
to bch.. iha.i crpts. S s:;. Realonomics COl'p S39.000 • ttlJ.5. lf!m\$,
-194-8188 Commerlcal R.E. Brok~r. & 32 \Vasheni/8 dry~n. aood s;-,~,;;nte 5710 Property Manaaers 675-6'100 loc. $8~N~iATIC
I Slont. IU0,000. -W, EQlllPMENT INC
2 8dl'm with """° 1ltb .. BttMl 1'9W"m .... 5.2l-1833 •
JIU "'°' C.1'1J -· 51W1'1 Alt • u IS or att lPM."..., • a10R
It L A fl•lulfrlel *tntal , .... IOOO' Hout of Lanc:uttr. Lot ------'---1 78 x 111. i atoreroom• A
._,,, l'Olt ._..: 5300 111 ft Pfim• ?.1 eat Market lncludint
Rent1ft W•nted UH. wanhouJe ff*e-&ll or equipment. Corntr Ave. I A: -.,,,,, pa.rt. lrvlne tndustrl&L C&ll dlvtaMn. Acrot1 from Fair\
SNGl. tern need~ fUnl(y WI-Mr. B\!11&1'd 54&-«151 l""Jl'dl. Ddilltnt 1riw1t.
turn lBr Me nr N"'l>rt Beach 00!•1' JUST \VISll for nlenl!
lo Sl20. \V/flx up. poN. IUmllhinp: for yuur home, $55,000
pet PER.\t. no 1ie11t11. rtls, find cttat bl.t)'ll In Wday's h1n, Ril ty after I,
EV<t. 96S-lll1< Claullled M t. 1 __ ..,2TI~ .. ~I«>'~~~! --
For more inlonnation •Titr:
''ROUTE DEPARTMENT #
23," P.O. Box 1739, Covina,
C&Jll. 9172'J, Include phone
110. or call collect 1:113)
339-5433.
Franchlat.
SUNRISE
FUll.N. MFG., INC.
$10,000 lnv11tment
Secured by lnventery
f"'inanci~ Available
:
Gmd nr opportunity
UnU1ually hi protltM\ll.
$3500 per mo. e Complete Factot)I trtiD-
1ng .......,. e Co, backed adw:rtW.
4 Ora ... County l~atloll1 lmmodlatoly
,1v1ll•lli.
Colla ~Iesa • On.i\ac _ \Vest.
miNlcr • I.A J-labra • Whit.
tlr.r.
tlJ: 921·G79G, 114; 523-9181'.1
OUM!r k>c11tlons avail. tn Ven.
tura • Rl\.'trtkio -L., A.. •
San lkmardi.no Count~.
• DMNC SERVICE •
N..iwp0rt Hll'bOr ahallow
wat•r. Opente t\iU or part
um,. 4 yrs ln area. DlvifW
tug1*t, e41ulp., cu11tomer
rue. H\rh rate ol rt~
min. lrwttt.mtnt u n d e r
$l000. Owner movirc oul
or 1tat•. ~fO ----NO mltt<'r whal ll \a, you
can lfll II With a OAU.Y
PILOT WANT ADI ~
' -
-
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. --' -. ............., --~---.......--·· ............ _~~-~~-------~--~.,.-·-------------
•
SO YOUR LITTLE RED WAGON
IS REALLY DRAGGIN'
•
-
ADD HORSEPOWER TO THE FAMILY BUDGET
You can handle those bills. All you need are the dol·
lars you'll get for all the still-good, but " nobody· uses.
them items you'll find all over the house. Make a list
of them today and decide to turn those unwanted ar·
ticles into extra cash. It won't cost you . . . it'll pay
you. And you'll be surprised at how fast you can sell .
iust about anything with a DAILY PILOT classified ad.
Try it today. Every day is a good day to use
DAILY PILOT WANT ADS
.,..
) .. ~---:..•.
(And You Can Charge Them)
E 642-567
. ~ -\ •
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H ~; IAYR :• ~ ~ASH!
•• • t .
r NOW'S THE
: TIME FOR
/,QUICK CASH
j: THROUGH A f D~ILY PILOT
. WANT AD
: ~64~5618.
• ' l
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· ~llVICI ·DIRI :f.NNOONCIMIMTS
•!Id NOTICES
ANNOUNCIMINTS
and NOTICIS
6410
R""°""ll!ll fl lolll ~~ W-710o J1•1 Mon, w-n•
_ lt!Jl.!lr '?40 .\OC:OUNTS CLERX
When You 1lfY WAY, quality '11ome ~· lloqulred. Type
-,.pair, Wails, ceUU., t1oon !IO _. .. JO F .. l>old (Also . -
Wont
'
·t done '"" No job .,. ....it "" Jol>O> eiiu 1ara1ne, • 51S-l49j . -MWMO, w...:l!U -Ch--L u .. -" right • • • FIBEjlGLASS 111owe1s " 0rne1 N,....a"""' IOl3 w-.ii -.;ll ""'111'
WANTED
ro?!f~!~!~H!~.~~D!~b!~
statistics for rapid permanent weigh t loss,
«>nducted by qualified f hyslcal culturl.!ts.
Must ~ a minimum o 20. pol¥1'!1 over•,
welght,f have transwr~tion '••ctl ~t cur· renUy under doctor's care. All •Inquiries com·
pletely «>nlidential. ·
-535-1915 uk "" .::::·c.:::::·:....-----1 .Colloneof ~ ~~
the expert·~ GEN L 1'modeltne I< main< ml Dtpt, -Hoopl1al .> No job too •mal l. NB. '
IJc'd/lnaured. ~133. . listed be/owlf -* ASST. ACCT.* !i::::~::i~::==~~~:::~~~~~~~~ S.Wlnt .,.. • 1--=------I · ·I-Im
SERVICE DIRECTORY SlllVICI DIRICTdltY QUAl,JTY you've a I way • Porsonn.I Sorvlco
with the .
Job' Kings!
-· .• .~loonl"!I •735 Willied, -.i<b>g -'4'$ £. 1T1h SlJ C.M •
Accounting 6500 Carpet Cl .. nlnt 6625 alterotlono. Key Say. 11'3 ~SU • ,
I !~~~~~!!'!!!!!'!!!~~~~~~~~~ Hou11<IHnl:'I? 0...,... Ave., C.M. 6'5-tm. ASSl5'l'ANT lltlpor, n " *°"' 2 Ofll ... Cow"*
ASK FOR MISS POWILL -537-5412
I BUSINESS and F'ouncl (F-''•> ,._ ·~ .c;;:;,kkeepcr O'" Q· ~i::R~~I ~;1,.~TI110N..:.._ ~ ~.j,d~~ 'All Of Or•"fO C.ny
FINANCIAL ·----w•• ,, "' ,. ~ ~ :~;:-·_· •• ,,,._ 9$#l0Mr. AllAn ' . ' , DUTCH Maint serv. crpt ...._ ~
lluslnall 4 KEYS " pocket watch. llibyslttlng 6550 CARPET ctnr, fir waxing, window . BANK' TELL Ell Opportunltlas 6300 Vic. OraiW9 " '16"' PL, :;.:.=;.:.....;::_ __ ~ STEAM CLEANED wuhing. HarTy van Beynen Tallorlnt 6970 WLExper .. ,Prrtme. Good
-----·----CM. 54ll-llllO YOUNG SET REASONABLE RATES 537·1.508 u no ans call alt 3. '' SaJ4r>, Xh!t ,..,..... oopd. i) HRS per week + ~ /Lllo carpet Jnstallatloo RE SIDE NT JAL, com· ALTERATIONS wanted 1 • Apply in peTICW'l 1'1: Wettem
_,_ ·~·" LHt 6COJ , ....... P10RE-SCH7 , •• ~L6 ,.7 .. ,5971 mercla1,r•--&p-rly 25 yn experience. Ltrdief B&nk.16932Go l d enweat m-.es __ ..., per mo. "6"'' ..-""°'J'" :-:30 ...,.. --~ ·-..-or mena cl~. Work Dr, H.B.
Woman ok~ Write Dally SIAMESE cat Ccrou blue-hour, day or week. F\111 OWNERS SPECIAL clean-m> guaranteed Call ·,anytime 1..;;.~.;:;:,=~==~-I
Pilot Box M-1005. point 6 &ea1 point) male. & pt/time. 50c per hr. 1 5m aq. tt. $20. Diamond 89Ml.03 548-1947 • , BEAwltn'Y ... ~~~TOR
AAA Lost in the vte, near Shan. child. '15c for 2, $1.00 for . carpet Cleaners. 187 21.st Mesa Cleaning Strvtee th ,. .......... u..,
CANDY SUPPL y non & College C .M. 3 in the same family. St., eo.._ta Mesa. 6'5-1317. • Carpel.II, Windows, floors, etc. A1LTE~1TIONS A.1dre~~~· CM area. 540-893f
Olrl l'rldAy
to $400 mo.
-..i.. .. -'P.tl. ·-·
'typlat, " .. -· ROUTE Reward! Day 547-9507 e~ Special Summer Program REMARC se~. s rooms RH & Commc'l. 548-4111 nc.""" ~~~ requu~. ARE YOU
INO SELLING INVOLVED) 546-3708. :'· ~::d ~:· !.".:~~ $21.50. J"ul4· ruaraalffd. TROJAN MAINT. CO. BEAUTIFUl:77 Controct Olrl
"Plan one ........ $975.00 L.f.B retriever, blk, answ to qualified teachers. 1525 San-Credit cards OK. 847~. Compl housecleaning, otc. & Tiie Cer•mlc 6974 • ·
Plan two •••••••• $1625.00 .. Tar," leather collar ta~ Ave, C.M. 646-921.0. S'l'EAl4 ~t carpet cleaning, a pts, Bonded. (213) 797-S212, ~ ' · Jt'bs'~ tn ..... ~k~·olTVtbe be-+. $500 mo
Plan thtee •••••• 13250.00 win.ail heSids. disappeared 646-3706 By ctarKare, natio~wlde JOE'S CLEAN SERV. WE'RE only a •mal l oi.uer. ~ ..... com-. '
Cuh Required, Exctllent in. 7-lS.70. Vic! Huntingt on service, Free est. 64.M055 ·b\u1neu ·we try harder. ml. )'OU watch~ If' you E:irper. •utomotlve co&ttrletl
come fur a few hours week. .l;larbot, Rwd, 846-4942 MOTHER & teen daughters We do EvU)'thin&·Res & Quality ceramic tile work. feel )'OU'n •• pretty u It D.M.V •
Jy work. (Days A Evenina:s), will babY11it sm children our Electrical 6640 Comm. Free Est. 642-1403 Free estimates. 537--39«8 some or·thoN people, call u•.
Refi.lllnrandcollectingtrom 2 BLK. It WHT. cats, lg home. Hot lunch, blg yd., BAY &: Beach Janltorla1 Uc. A ins. CALIF. CASTING CO.
coln.Joperated dispensers in ma.lei ,.k..,im.f~!;·~~ward ."'°',•tot , pt., ""'1151
1Pk& en-ELECTRICIAN. Small jobs, Clatpets, windows, floors, *Verne, The Tile Man * Is coalln·"-tt'• ,..-• ~
Newport Beach and sur-or 0 m,..,...... •• ..,. ·tr an, w Of maintenance & repairs. etc.Res&Commc'J.64&1401 ......, a1ui. ,..,.-rounding' .,.,, We esta" 53&-2112 $3.50/da)'. 968-58n "Lou Cuat. work. Inatall A repaln. evtt)'day people who ha~• ~ An, n" 54S-5Jl3 HO!Jledea.ritng. No Job too sml, 'Plaster pa. a desire to work on TV or
J11h route. (Handles name LOST: 4 mo kitten, blk, Good references. tio. Leaking shower repair. model,ina jobl $15 to $12S MUlt bi.w: bulc tQiilr,
brand candy and snacks. w/wbt. . b~ on cbest, YOl!NG, manied girt will Floors 6665 847-9070 between s.u AM 847·1957/846-02!6 per diy, No~ tu you ever.
For personal Interview in t>/Siameae. Vk. Gatuy Dr. babysit in own home for
Newport Beach area, send '(Park). 64).2469 1 or .2 children, any age, CARPET VINYL TILE Ironing ,755 Topaoll 6m *FOR QN CAMERA
name address and phone durlng weekdays. Front It UC CON'I'R. FREE ESI'. AUJ>mON *
NCR Proof Opr
FrOM $3'0 mo
Public llol. Olrl
• WHITE female whi ppet bac1r.--i p1 v· ini * 540-7262 CALL <n4> 835-8282 $700 t •·rt number to .MULTI-STATE lookalike small Greyhound, ..,,...... ay area. tc • *~ Ironing $1.DO hr ~PSOIL, Nltroaen fortit:ied 10 AM to 6 PM mo o '"'
DISTRIBtrrING, INC, 1681 Vic Balboa. Blvd 1J 21th ty of Irvine & 171h. CM. My home 646-5&13 ~nwood added 837-7000 or ikdp
Broadway, Anaheim., Calif, St. 5'M308 alter 3PM. 646-7302 Furnl~,.. shRtatoi'fht * .IRONING * 495-4632, ' BARMAID -Nights. Apply Sales ~1~!-ttdtab' .. Ki~
92802 <n4> 778-5000. Heartbroken! I.JCf2!SED Child ~· my _&. R • .,n.-1 Ing ·6'75 before 6 p.m. Maverick, or m.,......_ ~ ========o I LADY Elgta wa•·•, So, Bay home, Mon thru Fri. 2 to ?i.ty Home, n Hr. TrM Service "'° 1728 Newport mw •• C,M. X-Ray l•nninolOI)', Attn.ct. "'" 4 """'· Fenced 'Vard &: FURNIT\1RE Stripping 1: Pick Up &: Dellv. 545-7641 BOOKKEEP~• • ~ ... -. CiJ1 to work u llailOn be--Bu1ine11 Wanted 6305 b Co •. .. ..... .r·-.r 11 .. 1.i.1..... £r. ~ ... ;, ._ ,_ .. Fr. twn raJ "' .nmeu11st playroom. So. Q>ast Plaza n ............ '6. Jinltorlel ,790 BOB'$ TREE SUR.GERY Sh. 1.00, good tyt>l.nc. ~ tween docltlrs • au.
'1'113. Keepsake Reward. &Na. 54MQ38. * 642-9575 * . la back ottering the same Trial Balanct. Call Loraine,
673-4766 OCCASIONAL babyslttirlg in --WORKERS ~v~ble: AllY fine Quality Tree Service. 64~2770 Weetdill Personnel
LOST, vie: NB or Garden yourbome.Afternoons, Gardening '680 kind of ..wrk. anytime, * M0-3798 * Apncy, ~ WeetcllU Dr.
Grove, Blk b r i e f ca 1 e , evenings or week e n d s. Cleaning, lawn' work, etc. DON'S TREE SERVICE All N .B.
Stono Soc'y
BUY or Lease small
businwl. ?l-1otel, mob i I e
home park, retail franchise,
Couple will invest lQ.60 M •
Box No. Pton, Dally Pilot Papeni, Reward. 530-4960, 64 •• 238 AL'S GARDENING Ettlclent, reliable. s2.!b hr. ........, • •·-•-~M-,..___ * * BUY R $433 mo
644--0661 eves. -.. for Gardening I: small land-Ask for John or Nlcbolu Estta;,~ ~~· 11:,'C:'( Type: SS. SH 90, 1 yr eutr. Money to LOln 6320 BABYSITfING -my home, SQ!;ping se!'Vlcei C&ll 54()..5198 64&-0075. _......;;...._.;.... __ _;.; SM wht meAe pOOdie, Vic: pre-schooler. Near Bay Serving Newport, CdM, Cos. · TREES &: ihrubl!I: pruned, HIQH SCHOOL craduate, Work for ,lllel·m&r • ...._
1 TD L 1Ja1 Isle rr Ferry land 'g, \'lew & Orchard. 549-0898 ta Mesa, Dover Shores, L nd I .,;10 •haped, remove ar replant. 1upplemented with college Park area,• st oan Owner anxious, Rwd I CHILD Care days, eves I: Westcliff. I leap ng -..,i 25 yra Joe. 838-2528 aft 6. level counes in purchul,og,
6&2398 wknds. Near Paularino & MOBILE HOME OWNERS TREES H""-of b.islness manQement, 2 8~ IN-~-WE AIM TO P L EAS·E Jlond"··k will mo! , .,,,..,.1,trlm,cut, v.-of ,~bl ... -•-· 10 1~1 Female ~lamese Sealpoint Bristol. 546-5028 c pl _ __._ ·rwi; d your .tumP1 removed, bauled. 30 .r·-· re .,...,.., e ... ._,_
2 d TD L Vic: Black Knight. om ete garm:n service. gravel tiiht. For In-Full 1 ~" """" int otti~ experience 1!.'lclud • n oan Reward! 645-2444 BABYSI1TER-)'OW' home , :i::19 ie:~.~~uu formatkln 548-7265 or )'fl.exp. y ns._...._.,.. Ing re1fl0~~~ ... for .P,""
Tetms based on equHy. BLUE Boy'1 Schwinn to has car Call 673-5089 "FearlesslFttd'' 962-4914 543-S240 Alk for Butch Oel?o!1tery 69'0 .~:~t:iio~...,ib;'' w~~= Arc Wtldtr
MALE
~2171 545-0611 s~. Vic: H.B. High 6555 NEW Lawns, re-teeding. Palntl-, F•ft••c 8.,E materials and eqWpmenl to $2.75 hr
Servin .. Harbo 21 School. Reward. 962·3978 Boat Maintenanc• Co 1 t 1 Cl •• ., ~ ""' ... r area yn:, -------~ __ mpee awn care. ean Paperh•nging 6850 2500 Blue Chip stam p s common to sdlooldistricta. Ornamental '1.ron e xper.
Sattler Mortgege Co. StChristophermedal&chain YACHT DETAILER$ up by job or month. Free FREE. Jo.pc divan&: chair SALARY begin& at $561. per So /-tloil 6 336 E, 17th Street silver, on Little Isl, Balboa. Cleaninf, minor gelcoat estimates. Far info call PROFESSIONAL Painting, $69. includes fabric A labor. month, Apply before July d n:ieor: lw
LOANS $50,000 a: up. Any Reward. 6754784 & glass repairs, minor 897-2417 or 846--0932. Neat work. Fine paints. AU \\'Ork done in 5 dayl. 24th, at NEWPROT·MESA eme earn.
real ettate or btaineS&. Mr. engine work. All glass LAWN , & Garden Care, Roller. brush, air· I e 1 s Free estimate. 821~4. UNIFlEO SCHOOL DJS.
Dollum 303:922--2305..no col-P'4~onal1 6405 work guaranteed f<*"life-beautificationt weeding cl spraying, accoua. ceillna:a. ~S 1'lm I: ~ti Truer, 1601 Hth St., New.
lect clllls. ti ....... of yach• Eitimate cleanup by college students. Local ref's, Low prices! '"'-·-r e ·,. .. , ••. cl .... port Beach. Pbone: Ms::o&oo. • ,,..._ ATI'ENTIONdiabetics, """ .. n--"'""-"'·"-·Bro n-fie\.'\lvc ~ •o: ~· _..... • .->. ......... 5· rwY 847-1358. Beaut. wOrk. 642-8164. ATTRACl'IVE strt to model •• 45 hr
App'I Rop11lr
Real E1t1f1 loans a•-heart patients, high blood ~. · E ""°=......,,..,...,,..--,.,,..-1 ___ ~--~-• ... _ _ _., J>n!SSUtt. Been refused ma-* Ask for Jan at 6464665 * JAPANES Gardener Mo. HOUSE Paintine, ext/int. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT bllti!tll, etc. Gttat pay tor l:'w.... 1 __ .. ..._ ~ A
DESIRE to homrw $7,000. jot medical ·insurance? we ·Rate, Gen'l Oean-Up. Ex· paper h • n r in a , a t 1 attemootl a week Strictly -..... r. w ... _ ... , •• -~·
an a 2d mortgqe, A aecure, will iMue and cover you Carpt_~terlng 6590 per. Reu. Frff e s t . l'lasonable price. 2 Nprt Job Werlfecf, Mtn 7000 fl:rr 1un, nG exp ~t must dl1hwubtra, Good ~
good bti!iness oppll'tunity. for ~ur coOOitlon. No age 642-2239. teachers, summer bus, vut --have beautiful fil'ure I: benefits •
Beaut Midence w/ mkt. limit. Call 892-0786 or CARPENTRY LANDSCAPING, gan:lening, exper. 675-2894 CAPTAIN prefer over 18. Write .
value of $50,000. loan ha.I 892-1291 or write Box 1008, MINOR REPAJRS. No Job pruning, trimming and 1 STORY Stucco &: overl!.ang Licensed • Radar • Lonn, deaerlbe younelf, 1 e n d
on 1st S26,SOO. Bal on 2d Westminster, Ca. Medical Too SnWl. Cabinet la &al'-renovating, Call after 5 p.m. $99. J story 1 t ucc 0 &: 30 Yeats exp. salJ or power, photo If poqlble to Box
$3,800. San Clemente, at Issue Dept. aae• A o t b • r caolneta. 548-5209. overhang U49. Acat. cellinc Proteuional Sport Flshin1 1047, Daily Pllot.
Ratoll Slsm
$500 mo
Shorecllfl Country Club on *FULLY LICENSED* 545-8175, U no a.nswer leave GA R D E N I N G : La n d $13. per rm. Min. 3 rma:. Guide Mexican & Central CHAIRSIDE dental uai1-
fairway. Owner. < 714 > Renowned Hindu Spiritualist =e,;,~ &ls-2372. H. O. cle~ups, Sprnkr 8)'!1, roto-64&--05n A 637-6119. American waters • a110 tant, 18-25, moeUy chair 5 Yrs e>e;per. in luinMr l
, 642-9410 _, , Advice an aU matters. ~ cement . work. Yance y THE JOB You Want 1.t Tlie lit!ellled nsultMng, commer-with l!lme· desk & . ~. brdwe,
ANNOU.NCEMENTS Love,.Mania.g8,Busiiic:M CARPENTER: Remodel , 646-5860 · PriC!e You'tt .Willing To' 1 clal Pilot, lend I:: tea. ·Alt· Newport 15e&ct1:: 644--0922
•nd NOTICES Readings gi~n 7 days a Patio work & Cement work AL'S Land . . T Pe,f. Special prices-ron. apti. ntlftittrative experience, CLERK typist tor aenera1
. -. week,.9AM-9PM213N.El & Paimng. No job too &capinr. ~ee Ste_ve,543-*t9 · Be:1t ot referencai. Write t n 1urance arenoy .
F nd ( F Ad ) all Free t . at removal. Yard remodehng. .._ M JM• Dail Ptlot OU r.. I 6400 Camino Real, San llr1' · e 1 1 m e • Trash hauling, lot cleanup, TWO UCLA students need -uw, 1 · Knowled&e at fire 4
Muhl Opr
to $3.15 hr
rouND on Andros St. short ae~nte, 492-9136, 942--0076 ~1944 Repalr sprnldn. 67l-ll66 money. Exp'd hou se cuualty ltne1 nectSNJ'Y.
haired mixed terrier type S1ngle-Wklowed-Dlvorced QUAI.JTY Woodcraft, aml Lawn maint, Lite haul'g, palnten Free eat. · Ken Job Wented, 7020 call M8-15U. Ml.n. 6 mo'• exptr. en m.
dog, Dk. brown, white on * MEN· WOMEN gen'l canstr. & carpentry. Trees removed. Comm'l 544-3074. Wom•n .. CO NS TJt UCTION ac-.WO •
face. Leather collar & Oea Everyone's looking for the Free consultation & quote. & reel~entlal. 546-0l16 METICULOUS PAINT. m:cEPT.-Sec-offlce exper., cou.ntal)t, exper. Comm'!
collar. Taken to animal right one. We have a wa)'-so ~ :~,,·. b
11
,.· ~·· JAPANESE Gar-den i n g BLUE OllP STAMPS. INS. m•tutt. "You name It"-medical, ~· q:e open .
shelter call us & begin to LIVE! Service. Neat work. Oeanup crew col 1tudents Int-ext perm-rel'•, Box M-1065 Dai-N.8.
GERMAN Shepherd ( '!) , 547-6667 Cali Gordon, yd. malnt. 968-2303 boules. Exp, Docks: 67>5812 ly PH.ot * S67·T300 * Dlo Sinker
$5.50 hr
male1 med. size, ta~. white ~4 Hr, Recor:ding 846-G545 CLEAN·VP SPECIALIST No Wuting Two women will clean. COCKTAIL A Steak Hollft!
ring artlllnd muu.le, Thalia ACTIVE elderly lady desires REPAIR§* ALTERATIONS ~towing, edg:ina, odd jobi. *WALLPAPER * SU le $20 Ws.itftNN Wanted tor New MUlt hold~-cud
& Wilson, Laauna Beach, middle age working lady * CABINE:l'S. Any si'ze job Reaaonable. 543-6955 Whtn )'OU call "Mac" 836-6468 • 546-2260 'Vlllap Inn in Lquna " be exper • 494-3436 in . 25 yn: expet'. 5'i8-67l3 ., ...... .,,. Beach. Only ~. healthy to share my ho e m ~X· E XPERIEN'CEO Japanese 548"1444 ~ EXP. houaeketper .ar 11t. lookt'* Pis need aWly .
LITTLE kitty, grey w/wht change for companionship GEN. Repair, add, cab. Gardener. Complete HOUSES, dockl, boats, tendant care fl:rr elderly. Evttfrom6'til 8,f94.4986
stripes, 4. wht paws, ti.ea at night. R e fet'ences . Formica. paneling marlite .... _ · .,;'\_..e l ~"~' t ht th! Own trans 64J..nrr · collar. Vic: Pomona •-.•~.,;'loc.,.2393~==----""'rvice.r ~.., ei; .................. any ng-every 111 ' COOKW.nteciforretirement ,.. 7' Anything! Dick, 673-4459 , GEN'L Clean Up, tree !le'l'V, reuonably painted. For tree HOUSEWORK home Le &n.Ch. Full
·"W"'>"'lidn"-=64:..;.&-598""'2:...., __ -' ALCOHOLICS Anonymow; -weed kill, roto-tHI, sprlnkln estimate G4G-8752. $2.25 hr. 646-7809 time,' 40 hn. wk. C&ll KEYS Found on beach vie. Phone SU-7217 or write to Cement, Concrete 6600 .... 1-A ,,..,, r.o~o • .,,.,TING Ex re_..., .... ~ PIU.l, -t.·lnt. 18 49'-4M5I !fandtron~ =~. 16!1u~ P.O. Box 1233 Costa Mesa. CONCRETE. All type1. Free EXPERT Japane1e/ iarden-)'f'I. exper. Ins. Lie. Frte ~o~, Wom. 71001.=C::OO..:=K:..-Sll=O~l\~T-Orl!.D~~~
Pilot. 2211 Balboa. N .B. Announcements 6410 est. Sawirg, breaking, ha~I-ing. Free eat. Complete eat. Accou.at. Ce i 11 n 11, PART 'I1Mt 4~ hrs.
ing & sklploadlng. Sel'Vlce yard service. 646--0SXI 548-5325. SAN 'cl..ptENTE e:.ms
MALE/
HMAL~
Equal Oppirtunlty
FOUND • '°·""" lomal• ""' RESUMES • Scrijlts • & .,.a111y. ~Bob. GARDENER • S!IRUBS PROFESSIONAL. 30 y" abilities **COOK. Gts..,anl shift.
w/d8J'k. stripes, brown & Reports Editing • Writi~ CEMENT WORK no job too MOW & EDGE exp. paperhanging• paint l "' .. >ii. PPl in ODIES Supervisor
black vie. of Genoa Beach. • Rewriting Fast Accul'llle Small, reallOna'.b!e. Free Fm Estimates a39-9195 irg. from En1land, 968-7461. CJD Jnltteu ~Es?AuR.Af:.r°nl.400 w. $lOO •wk
fue::e~~7:"1: dag ·=' Rea son ab.le. Eltim. IL Stu.flick 54J...8615 Complete.Yard Carel TltADE. Painting by llcen1-ageDC'N <:out Hwy. N.B. Working supervf*t w/artls.
vie. Mesa Dr. &: Tustin _£!£££!!EE-.. DECORATIVE CONCRETE JIM 540-4337 ::rn ~~t~~~OI' truck, *COOK* Experienced, full tic inclllllitiotle to saptrvile
Cometary Lots , 6411 DRIVES-WALKS;PATIO · · TRISH HOPKINS lime. Put Lldo Con-1111111 mfr -Ave., ~.M. 642-4152 _ . . __ CALL DON, ~14 General Services '6612 YOU Supply The Paint. 3 va.lnctnt HO!!Pital. 642--8044
FOUND, mam; watch vK: ot 4 C'EMETERY lots in B1u; CUSI'OM CONCRETE Br, Liv Rm I: Kitchen 488 E. 17th, Suite 224 C.M. COUPLE to mane.ae lB unit
Santa Marlane &: Nighten-Spruce .section, Harbor Rest PATl~DRIVE"ETC. APT Q.EANING • Painting Painted, $50. Call 557-8638 '42~1470 motel. $200. mo plu.1 1 BR '! ·a1 p k. <"--'"' v.,-.,. • Rug Shampooing & Lile gale, F.V, 962-5888, .. emon ar .-... ..... eel Free estimate, 675.5516. Repairs. REMARC INT. & Ext, Painting, Local turni1bed•pt,546.f119
GRAY & white male cat, 548-3075 * CONCRETE work: patios. SERVICES. 847-6688 ref'i, Uc'd, Im., free etl. COASTAL AGINCY
vie. Thalia, Le.guna Beach, 4 PACIFIC View Memorial drvwafl, etc. License d. Ed'.s Cleaning Service cau Chuck, 645-0809· The A member of
Thurs. night. 494-5Q;S Park cemetery Jots $200 Phillips Cement. 5'&-6380 Carpets • Uphol!ltery • w~ RETIRED Painter: 26 yn Snelllnc A: Snellinc Inc •
MALE bee.P 1% )'tats old. each. 642-132.1 or 642-4-084 MORE Concrete patio fO!' dow1 -Floor Care. 545-0487 exper. Neat a: hone•l Non The W•rl4's Larna1t
fleil & Newluld ..-ea, H.B. . . drinker. Call 536-6801. .., • •-
8'1-0990 Tutoring 64!0 ~.'::Ji:!"~'"'.'"·':'..::~~·~~;'* P~PERH~~G I Alli 1,.p.;'.:.~h~lco D~ dlttct-~8. Chute I WILL tutor .eJ.emqtarj '&tS-1809 or; ,&l&-9900 ~1; P~G. • * llOIS-2425 ~ 2790 I~ Bl CM MO.a>55
YoUr ad, then sit back &nd aki.11.s, reading, arlthliietie, Contrectftt 6620 • · • , j , ~ Blvd: ~t 'Adam& .
lllt,.ID tbe'phoaerinr! 8'2-7320or53&-1825 • Haullnt ·inO. Pl•s!arlrtf, Patch,· . , * DELiVfl'i Dl!.IV E!t
CONTRACTORS T.N'T. Lawn Service . R~lr -Pl LOT ,,.,.. co, port lln>e. mar-G!NlllAL CO: 0vage ct ..... ps. haulmg * PATCH PLASTERING ried, dei>ml&ble. Are 19-33. Sma,11 Class11f1'ed ads AddllJoM.Rom°""lng k llst1t moving. i13-5813, A)l l;pes. Fro; eottmo... $3.55 to ltart. 956-2171l Mr .
ltesiden.lial.qonuno<lal 531 -. ~ can---~Brown~;.:;;·-;;:;;;;~~;;;; • 53),l1899 • ,..,_ • . . •' ii .
Bonded JlAULINt. SlO A toADI p ti DENTAL !'eCeptiOnift. exptr 'do a Licensed Clean up. Tree Serv. Gen. a o• "'° 0 E neoellld')', lllrt Sept 8.
ADDmONS And AJterationa Pruning 6f6-2S28. 543-8043 SEWING: Women·• A RANG ~A~~-cl Sec:ty,
bl• RA!t. -Comm. contractor TRASH Ir garage clean-up. ·Children'• Wear. RB ••• -
9 llet.l\led, bonded & insured Mon-Sun. $10 a load. Call 892-49" t;,tp., ' _., .... 9ao"'38 r.et.5712
free e1tbnale1, (financlnl') Free Ettimate. 548-5031 COAST'S, * btvms * Mtn at
se ll"ng 538-2810 548-3005 MOVING, Gana< cte...,.p Plumblnt -Women, to loam abalone
. , •!l'HE REM:ODELER$* .l Ute baullne. Reuo!\&ble.' , :a Hit PLU118Dt t divitC. g wkl tnltructlon,
Free e1ts • lOO"·iinandnc Free ~.st1ma~166-Ui02. '' ._ ft~-. .1!0 1 no .... 1 ....... lit , wtca.
BooltkHpor
$600 •mo .
CPA office exper. Financtal
atatementa A: tn1na a Qtlllt.
APEX
Employ!Mllt
ApllCy
•THE USY WAY
(&ak ua whJ)
1873 HAIBOll
BLVD. J·o· b.· ' --. ...,,,.... Y Altl> I Oar. ~...... 551~-A....;-~ IUO •
Complew 1temod•"••· _,.._. t....!~ '"'· ...... i\LilMBING· 1w ,.'•• + lea· "'In· g .sar. 'st11t -lnlm<d. Qua!JIJ' ~ eon--. et). Gnde, boqchoe, llll-r745. . • No job "° .,..U-" &fin' completton ol ... !nine. ( i. bloelc Be. ol lttlll
3l80 HAULING * . Fl!.EE EST e "2-IUI e · PROFESSIO!'IAL DIVEl\S,
ADDmONS. L. T. con-Ask fDr Butch INC. tntemewa 'J'U&.Frl
•lruetfon, ,, ..... o•' ... .,,. S48-72fli or 548-5240 Pool Sorvlc1 MIO Marketplace 10om-7pm. Sat 10om-6p.m. Plans, eatlm&tn &: layouts. HotMS&y 1M ~. 215«1
847-l5U Houteell&ftll\g 67JS ACID wuhet. repatrs, 10 Lakewood Blvd. L 0 rt I
Addlllon1 * Remodtlln& yra. tn Ora.nae Co. M)' Beuh, Clllt
Fred H. Ge.rwfck, L~. Janttorlal S.rvlct cu9'lomen aft my friendl. 'l'tUI I.I no achool
6J3.-604.1 * S.94170 Rea, .\ Oommc'l. fUUi24 -.ws Cla.uititd'1 actioll pi;iwer. DIAL dlrffl 80-$6'7t, Clmp
For an ad to atll al'OU.Dd 70Uf t4. U. stt .blc:k W
the eloct., dial ~-lltten ., 1he -rlr4!
'Try onel
· ...... 642·5678 . --------------------
COSTA MESA
548·3426
' I ' •
•
I
I
il_.f_ DAILV "1.0T
!RIB• v .. 'f-. ..1111 21, 1970 •
" JOBS & EMJILOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYMENT MERCHANOISI FOR M ERCHANOISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR PETS end LIVESTOCK
SALi AND TRADI SALi AND TllADI SALi AND TltADI FREE TO YOU J1~--n~,,~~-~~~-7~~~-nm -~ ~
'"'"'".,,. IOOO o.,_ s.i. aon M-u • ._, l600 --* D!NTAL ASSISTANT * LYN. f'!llkr week •• 1 RESTAL!R.AN'T .. NOW' t&k1,.-SAJ...mADY nnted. bptt • , ' GOOD home fctUd yard for A.KC v.'hite toy pooctJa. wUJ
hint desk only, Good hn. lo l:XI lhltt. Parle lJda CM-•pplicaho111 rot waitrtan. only, Liltl9n'a. So. Cout 20 PC. "MADRID'' * QU CK * * MOVING * wry •wert lova~ .m. bt very •mall. HWTY! Only
at open, DtntaJ ~Ph". ~. valNetnt CWtt p h · ~ • dllh\\'Uhttl, Ptua,. C.M I ROOM GROUP J SALE to 27t E 17th St bl'ffd terrlcr _ max q . 2 darllna: tMWH leI1. AllO & h C&J1 bet 8 A 6G--11M4 • Apply Colooy Jdtchtn, ml t PROM MODEL HOMES Olnl.tta" room table I:. i H II • • HOWlf' ~t. oldtr children 2 1eacup1 l party ftm~ ac am. am Hl:rbor-BlV'd,. Cotta Mesa. ~OMAN, exPCrlenctd lncludct· Qullled _. I: d;alh. China cablnet • I g ren Ctr., July 20th, preL 113&4493 days, 540-3477 ~ 1 male'. l.tl E. l?t:h SL,
9 pm. ~. 1f.n~. •·U/Coometlcspt< ••-..., we~· RECEPTIONIST far •auty ~ Sport!or -Nook. ~'~altp. chalr, i end tabla 6 eoftee mMY chnt-ol-drawen, TV Larrer flcll. for CUAtom de. not. 7/21 Costa Meaa. 646-Dlt2 DENTAL Aut, cha.iNldie, .,,, .,.,_.,. ,.....,.. --•--.. "'ST • ''"" .....-.._ .. ,_ •Jam ~---_, tel le; trttw-. Many more aJzn jewdry je11roetry IU9-------~--1 ~,:,,...,,;,"°"~===,-exp, pt·timt, 4-8:30 P?tf, 8!K-4097 or 897-19.U _.. ..... e ex· 1:20 PM, M&-l67! , • ._, ps. ~r. "11r· i~! Set to appttclate. J.iller Ir rockbound equip MOVING. MU5l Hnd xood BASSET PUPPIES ~ion·Frl + alttma1o S.I A!.a !!L: ~: o,..-:.~L,!_;, SnK-""'R'"""ECE. P63S-<TIOIOSNIST SARAH Covenb'y f\ee d s :t. ~· quDi.d5 boor M9-4082. -• ""'Complete! tint ot ~ home-for 10 mo. ol.d dog. AKC Rea:. 3 ·\ttks old. Pick .AM, 9Q.301t ........,""' ..... ..,. •1 ~...... women tor part-time "'wk. dlninr room~~ 4 :t auppllea, llr Collie. Hou.&1tbroken, all early Ior but or tiller. \\'c
ql\fmf. THE NEWPOMER f'ull time. Z-3$, •ttracUvt, Jtnriy; 547-34~ back dl&ir1. Appliance• 1100 '*' SPEClAL * lfhoU. HM dog ho u s c . v.'1ll hold until 6-f Wl!Ckl old. ~'d~t~r ~~~'. INN, Ph: (TI4) ~1700. ' aharp, Minimum l year e11:-SECRETARY for Fuhkln Isl OOAIPARE AT $749.95 AU stock rlnp reduced 20% 833-2626 1123 -========= •• ,.. '962-SOrio pertencr:. 'l')lpe 60 'Wpm, Stock ~ Gd akills $399 FRIGIDAIRE wuhcr l Open Tues thru SUn HOW about adoptlnQ: an ~
Pk>A·Pet. MACHINE OPERATOR Sbrthnd not nee: Beautlful. tor faBt-paoed ~n~. SaJ No down Pmts. Only $lG mo Pertrll'ftst elee dryer, Both Cloeed Mon orpha.1;' kitten?, They need *I'* * ENGINEER Lath<, •nu, 'Drill PnH. bay front om..,. 642-S?3>. $1\IO+ mo. 644-2442 WELK'S WAREHOUSE late mod•b. Xlnt cond 190, 5 M DIMS gU horn" w/\ot• or l~vo.
Hortes 8130
CRUEt.:;LO ~ldinr, 12 Yl"I·
Engl OL' Western. Safe for
child. Cail alt. 8:00 p.m.
M~'nwrs., 557...fiTTl
Oranp County Divlllon or Exp Nee. RECl!PTIONIST SEC'I"Y, Briehl. S/H + 600 W, 4th St, Santa Ana Wfl deUvcr. 1 47 .. 1115, PttstJ&l addreu: S49-1M6 •123
NYSE firm has en lmmed-Appl)' In pcreo~. 9 til 4. $463.4563. Mo. Sal•r y Xlnt typlnc akills, Salary 546-8612 27"';1() HAtbor ffivd., ll·A AMERICAN _Pit Bull Ter-
late need for• nttchanlca.I 158 Produdlon P l, open. Call AMERICAN OVER STOCKED WHIRLPOOL "'asher It pa COllill. Mesa * ~g.2039 rier, 2 )'t'il, loves kid!!, i:QOC\
en,inett with e!llperlence In Newport Beacft OCEAN VIEW LEARNING CORP. 842.-0606 MUST SELL dryer. Xlnt cond. $90, will Rear of CoUege Cen'" watch doc. M2-6698 all rRANSPORTATION =~s.. and~rlcat!'! ~fAJOS. Pf'rm. full time, 25 SCHOOL DISTRICT S.C'y-Personne·I Twins S49.9fi, Fulls $59.95, deliver. 84l-Bll5, 546--8612 SHOP CLO~ JULY l9tb/ T6~ 0 •mall Terr~~~
background ln time study or over. Good salary fOC' Ptfta'n I !li PAIDC $000. Excellent opportW'lity, Queens $89.95, JUnp $119.95, USED appllances &-TVs Chihuahua puppif's 5 \lo'ttkJS
Boats & Yedlts -
ll trxd . 1 depepd:able \\'Oman. Apply; nt _o ct re. national nrm. l..ovtly ot-Twin Size Htadboanh $1.95, All guarant~. Dunlap's, ,...,..., ol.d. 970 Go~ni;)r St ,
and be \\'t v m too . 3151 Harbor Blvd. CM. lltf. RoutiJlf' clerlc&J v.'Orit. fices, top benefit., Call Misis Trundle Sets $89.95. Sleep. 1815 Nev.-prt. CM :>48-7788 • in&. Dtlrtf: prei'd .• Not MAN To assist mar of local Type 40 WPM, J yr respon. Betty 557-6122 Abigail Ab.-er Soru $179.95 &: Up, Studio WASHER • dryer combo 'G9 C.M. 7123 Licensed • Radar ~ Lonn,
CAPTAIN
mandati>tY. E:ilcell. benefits. appJlaoce atore. Neat &~ alble cletk:a1 exp, H.S. and bot Pel'90f1ntl' AJenc)' 2.10 Couches $89.95. Corner Kenmore, \\'Clih $490. ask· FREE Calko long haired ~ear:' ~p. ;ail or /':s"'·.er .. P~a.w gend ~:u~to ~ pcan.nce. 49&-2383 Mr. or equivalc!nl. Appliations W Warner Suite 211 Santa Groups $169.!LS. Ing $2'75. Call 646--9528 spi.yed ftmait cat to ;:ood GU.:s~~ port Ce~
M-10i4Thl!Daiy ,N. U'rlght~10amonly. filtdhrtonne!Comml.uion A~ • ' SIESTA SLEEP SHOP home. bad sbo l s. e can'= n .
&.'\"P'D oouplto • chaulfer/ Ole, '7'972 Warner, Hunt · 1927 Harbor Blvd., CM 14 Cu ft Whirlpool croaa 10p 548-"811 7123 American watr:rg • alao
houseman. cook/housekeeper $650 Bch.. by 4 o'dock July 90th. Stt Be"" BNce at 66-2760 _refrlr-treezer $75. 56-4750 LOVING playful 7 mo. blk, licensed multi-eng-. comm.er.
Sal M I T ·-•v lxtd 1 _,_ cial pilot, land Ir. sea., Ad· references. &f')I open. •natem9n r•i .... e * Receptionist * 34155 Cst. H"'1', Dana Pt. • I m • em-. pup, mW!ll 673-7649 Draft-exempt_ Expanding Oro -m fl 49&-4552 Sewing Machin•• 1120 0 I have Childn!n & lots Of Jove, min.istrative (!X:perie~ .
.:F=:A-:T=-=:&-:-;U'"G'"L"Y .. 7"'7:;;;7-1 .... County. Call Ann, """ Um.. = i.6A C xec ---. 99•2312 !)GS.;1138 7111 Be•t of """""" Write
64;J7TO • Wffiolltt Penon-i--" h . " SCRAM-LETS 1970 Singor tooch-o-matic, .. FREE •·-1 Box M 1000. Dally Pllot. ha"'" ,1 a .. -.. ~. t arp, mm. zig·z.ar, beaut. walnut con. • -..5 e a1t>0rt. o cute lf )-'OU are, we pro "V can nel Agency, 2M3 Westclitt 1 yr, exp, type fiO ace A&tncy for Career Girls kittens '= cats to choo6e '67 PACEMAJ<ER...25' Alglas use you. Or NB !IOle, makea button holes, fro Gd ho d sports.fisher. Xlnt cond.
CALIF CASTINto. CO ·• · · SH not nee. Beaut 410 W. Coast Hwy., N.8. ANSWERS overcasts scams, b lind Baby crib and mattress, 15; m. mes \\'ante.
• 'T" • MECHANICAL Bay front ofe. &ti.:;735 By appoint. 646-39311 hems, designs &: etc. Guar. hi cha.ir, $10: 11troller, $.10: 537-2836 or 892-8881 Dual controls. 250 h.p. V-3. , ~~~~to!t~ :e~~ ~~ Experienced with hand & Rec.•pt/TyP.l•t. to $525 SERVICE Stat~ A~-. $44 cash or small pymts. car seat, S7.50; Jnlant·seat, \Vlll deliver anywt\ete 11Z3 120 Eng, hrs, 10 ial. slp.<i · ", .. .,.., po\.\'Cr toota. Capable of Be 1 1 ruu ......... ,., K .. 1.;ht _ Chide _ Mocbl'I. _ 56-112l8, $3: dinette with two exten-KITTENS • black bob-tail 4, head & radio. D.F., cock· '
........ s, for ,•.-ork in mag. mo-··--'· "'•"UlT auu ul push offices, New . .,... ... .,1_ local exp, ··-. ·~ . 6 h •· ·1 /full h d .,,,.... accurate wvi-... J<1'7" • Be b Pre u ti """"•" .... ~•-co Ma.nnot _TAKE the AIR s1ofl! & c airs, $85; ..... r &: te.male, aUecUona1e, & very pi cover, w ea
dellng, 1V comml's. & Ind. TOPATRON INC port ac • • ge rm. shltL --·. time •-a M I ' tool ~ bo 11 ball . t ··•1t & ·'d •· -m >lany mo•< x•-,. , • T .. ___ ..,,_ ,.,_,,Ml Be ~"" ........, "' Sign in a barroom·. "A•'• u1ico s s. "f'M'; w ng , qU1e w11 e &uo ma.... "''" · · ull . film1. Great pay, pt time. ~.,,C.-C-',,-~='---~ op '-"''"'-LI""· ~ . s& t. half. App. 8.J pm daily. fln · -........., 19 ooo •-u 6 ' we ·IU'e cUent paid, no fee. Medical Secy/Recept. Rt· ty, S57.al22, A~irall Abbot SHEU. STATION l9tb & Pollution Notice, ll You're Instruments 1125 ., ..... ; w'i & case, $15; poJ'la. 6'fO'"'lllUJ 7/23 · or "41 ° er. 7.r-JJ8j
Not a achool sponslble iirl for very bllS)' Penonnel Aj:ency. 230 W. Placentia, C.M. Polluted, TAKE the AIR."' hie heater, $5; strobe light, OLD English Sheep' dog. 8 _o_r_64_4-~17~33~-~---I
FREE trontofflce,Age2S-40.Muat ~~r, Sulte 211, Santa.SERVICE Station At-•-i, HAVE expensive con-SLINGERLAND 5 -p ieee $35. And other items, 005 yrs,· 5PQ.Yed fem. tree to ''BY OWNER"
TV SCREEN TEST have exp, with aJl med. fl$. ,........ ... ..... , temporary dining rm table drum set complete W/8£.. Park Ave., l...apna Beach, 1ood home ONLY . SELL. lease or lease
11111'8......_ & b""-. Hrs ~ Experienced for full ti.me. + 6 -··-·,·~ uphol••A-... ceuorles '= s Zildjian cym. 494-9822. 675-89'34 1123 'purchase. 40 r t .. T , s . PH: (714) &15--8282 ·--co ..,..,,. RESUME only, Production ~op -· for good man. 990 ,._...,., ... ~..,.. baJ • ~lock XIn
l' AM to s PM PM daily, Wed 9-1, Sat 9-1. ..-...... b 11 .-o1 chairs • will trade for or • "' :z,.... cases. t TO GOOD home. 11.fale collie \Vheeler. Sun-lounger 11o1th ' Su~.....,-ndent, mo e· ~-Cout Hwy, N.B., SheU nd Mak u "~" 11211 Salary tlexlble and allowan-modular homes. Exper only, Sta. buy Duncan-Phyfe or Vk> co · e 0 er. ~ , · · "Izaak'" 1 yr o.ld. SUper ny-bridgt. S., 0 .F., elect
FINISHED Carpenter, exp in cea will be made for an ex. torlan set. &&S-2a52 FENDER BASS AMPIJFlER , . tritndly. 302 Victor~. Ci\1. refrig. New paint. 2-390
display wort< helpful. Zap ceptionally skilled -rson.. minim~ 1
all5 ...i.~'!As Min SERVICE Sta.. Attendant. Ill K!NrSJZE ~ 3 me•·• DELUXE RICKENBA~ A&k for Vi cki. 7/.23 cubic interceptors &:. recent EnvironmenW J n t trio r ,..... supetv1ikln vi......,s. a-..,.,.. time f k. ends u-UCYo -o...nc.n. · · x~ • 0 PLUS • ·
Oesigl., 830-5282. 49&-422& Ref's ttqd. Ph: 64&-3962 jestie Homes, 18060 Euclid 35.li N-·~ BJ:d., N.B·. bed frames, 2 matching BASS GUITAR Part Schnauztr, part terrier maJ(lr. ··~ ! · !
ruu. or PART TIME. MOTEL MAIDS St. F .V. ~"c;;fla,evron. 1tuffed-b2ue fknl chain,'/. *6'1>M04 * ,. : It part'!''!' A1a.le dog abt 4 ='ill~u;~ ~:a)'s ~•nu UP TO •• PER HR. wanted tor new l33 untt R.N. 3. PM to 11!30 pr.-1. STOCK ROOM CLERK pc. liv'"&" rm. cutvm M!C-mo's old. Very lovable and ~~ ~ ""'-'·, ~ m· ~-l 00 Pi & 0 1130 1964 22' LYMAN. 178 HP ruU.ER BRUSH c 0 , motel in Costa Mesa. Apply SUpetv1sor. Wk. ends ott. ,...,,""" """"" ~ u •nos rgans ienlle. &36-4498 SJ0..1536 ~745. In 1 writing 1 tat in g ex-Park Lido Convalescent H.S. KJ"&.d, I Y?. experience Jong. 637~ * AUCTION * AN Affectionate 2 yr blk V8 Cray. SIS radio, bait
per;e_nce. phone: number & Hosp. 1445 superior Ave., in electronic components de-KING Sz. Bed Complete . .$60. SAVE NOW line Furniture fem. Coc:lcaP'JO w 1 rt d tank, head, navy lop, full
Frnt. Ofc. Medlci1I addn!Bs. Interviews will be N.B. PH: 642-2410. Call only sired. Good penma11Ship, JO'' Kemnott gu stow, $30. DURING SUMMER "-Appliances mustache. All 1 hot 1 , cover. Top Condition . '
Be busy doc:tora [ight arm. held in o:ma ~tesa July 8 AM to s PM GATES LEARJET Twin boxspmg & matt. $5. CLEARANCE SALE Auctions Friday 7:30 pm 64.2-4589 7123 6T;r5882 e~s. 642-0010 days.·
Accur. typing A exper, will 30. Applkia.nts will be ad-RN for ICU, all shifts. Xlf'lt 18651 Von Karman, Irvine· 962-2094. 10061 CUtty Sark \Ve have: trade-Ins, repos, Windy's Auction Barn GOLD Pug oose femaJe ter-Priced Reasonably.
land you this plU&h oHice, vised where to come for working cond'lll & benefits Or, H.B. rent returns &: floor model111 24• CABIN Cruiser. New nl~ people. Start $350. Call inlerview. Work \\11.1 -........ • COURTESY Realty ill a eood of eve"" model Hammond 207511.i Newport CM 646-8686 rh!r 18 mo. old adorable, ""'°~'" Contact Director of NURS-pta-to .. ~ -·•· Bob 8' SOFA. never used, quilted •J • 1 · ___ _. paint. In water. ready to Geni While 540-6055 about Aug. 4. Write Box ,_, H '"" ...,,," a:u. Orgon, Boy now &: receive Behind '.Tony's Bldg. Mat'!. ovnig, •l<XLIS a mama,
COASTAL, AG EN.CY ING, C.M. Memor... Olp, Filwards 9&Z...TI51 Specia.llz.. Ooral, scotchguarded ;125; 9208 7121 go fishing. $2300. Perfect Ml032 Dally Pilot * 642-2T.W * · Matching lovestat $75. extra discount. Also, Bald. REFRIGERATOR, Co!:dspot 64~ shape! If Interested, call
2790 Harbor Bl, CM MOTEL MAIDS. over 20 )'r8 Ing In H.B .. F.V, area 530-a337 win Console Ora-an.. almost cross top freezer, UJor YOUNG female & ·male 4~996
Other ftt/lree jobs avail. (No phone calls) Apply 1967 ~es are a struga:llng new STEN?"CLERK ~f time, SPANISH. Carved w ood, new, save owr 40%, storage, rufl8 good $."..O. neutered cats • all colors 10• FIBERGLASS Dinghy
GENERAL office work, part Newport Blvd., C.M. comp&.ny with an lmpor1ant fuU time clerk...f:ypVrt., offset wall lamps 8, tionJ sofa. HAhfAfOND Dinette 5et 35" round table, • short It Jong hair. Aies $1'75, Sno11.·bird e"cessorif:s.
lime ad-with tipl'e5, NEWSBOYS message about pollution. We ~achine operator, 4 cu.s~ 616-6400 In CORONA DEL ?ifAR one leaf extends lo 47". 1·5 yrs. 836-4493 7/71 r.tast, book, tiller, rudder,
sbm1.hand & typing nq'd. for produce non-pollutant de~ die.ns, 4 iroundsmen, 3 2854 E. CoMt Hwy. 67l-8930 4 Vinyl uphol, pede111..1l 3 F&\lALE kittens (l mo.) sail. $73. 673-2326
2f hr "llo'k. Perm. 675--5333 DAILY PILOT i1* products and have a rn •In I en an cc mt n , ' 17 PC. KING SIZE Open Mon '= Fri ews, chair$ {beige/gold1. S73. &: mothci·. Blk w/ivht
GENERAL OFFICE "nl.o. m'thod 01 carpenter. Apply Perso.nne. l BEDROOM Sunday12.f 5.l7-T181 m--k• ........ Desperate! Good 11' GULF-Stream 1966, Need. New Carriers for , .,_ 9 dra dresser Ir = -... ~ !ibergiass, LlO hp, /\[ere.
National 1eadtt in the enter. FOUNTAIN VALLEY marketing. No door to door. Dept., CaipL!trano Uf\it~ .__.... wer • m • PIANOS le ORGANS MOVING: 2 yr old refr, 16 w/1m child~n. 548-76121/23 · ·-__ ..._,....: '"'""" •·•· 1 School Dis....,,. 26126 Vto. ror 2 bedaide atand• Ki"" K'-'-crwser, 1i ........... -,ve. ,,......., tainmtnt industry, located in Ages 10-14 Call for interview: ......... or ...... ., ' -. ... NEW'= USED e.t., uuy Sweeper, m~pl.e KITTENS -Pt. Siamese & new. ~1ake offer. 84&-32Zl the lrvif\e lndustrla.I. Com-642-4321 Mr. Gularte at 546-1052 or toria Blvd., Capo Bch. al:z.e headboard, frame, quilt. • Yamaha Pianos Organs end: cofltt .tables, capbun a domestic. Long ii short =· ===~====
J)JeX if' ~e Co., bu 2 * NURSES. -"el ... :1. Tl2-7621, room 700 SUPERVISOR, LVN .or RN, ed mattresa, sheets, blank.. e Thomas Organs cllairs '= dm tab.le, divan, hair AU color1 7 wks • 21CuSURF1NbGilOUTRb IGGPERh · 1·
immediate. cpenilvJ;. ~ ....... DEAD END? 3 to 11:30 zhift. Park Udo eta. etc. e Kimball Pianos men's clothing, 36, good · 83&-449.l · 1j21 t stom u t Y 1 ., h d' . Cl k *' RN'1 for days Convalelcent Center Ph· Ololce of Spanish e Kohler " Campbell cond, Luggage rack, iile 3 mo. . I Edwards. UXJ, Needs work.
mere en 111n9 et tt LVN's, ew &: nights MONEY TOO LOW? • . or Modem Style COAST MUSIC weight lugg air cond 2 GUINEA Pl.ii w/cage, 1 Call after 6:00 pm. 61>04);)
2 yn ctfioe experience-type Apply in per&0n BORED? 642-3144 ALL FOR $249 494--5801 • ' bJk &; yellow, 1 ginger-col. CATA.t\IARAN, 12' Cal Cat,
50 wpm phu-1eU starter • Lagurm. Beach Nlll'Sillg Thtn step up to the &t"Owth TELEPHONE OPERATOR No down pmts. only S9 rno. NEWPORT A: HARBOR ored male It fem a I e . .. ol.d good nd. bl •,~!~toton•. u-k with little sup. Home, Ph: <n41 4M-8075 C'Ollfltr)' where the money ~11 pm Sat &: Sun WELK1S WAREHOUSE n-Coat~" ~esaFri 1*0.9642-8
285
1
1.,., 11.~ ~Pi~~~~· ~:;~ 64;H1l77 '7121 ~v~. ~. (;alf' aft 6~
, • ..., NURSE AIDES l-3:30 shift. l'Oll.d and excitement never 228 Forest, Laguna Beach 600. W. 4th Sl, Santa Ana v~n ........., un """ Fruit'NOOd. with KANTWET 2 ADORABLE calico kittens 644-2988
l S;:r:::::·!:!:.p~i=t60 Experienced. 3-11:30, tx· end, You set your own pace TEL An6\\-wil'C Serv. Exp. Dally 9-9 Sat 9-6 Sun lUi two-timer mattress, hardly 20n Ft de r a I, C.lit. l~ .. ~.~,F~G~R~o-na-bo~o-t -40~=HP
perienced. Park l..ido Con--)'OUt' own p.ls, Thia l"I!. pl"l!f'd. Will train qualified lo"'lJRNlTURE returned from HAMMOND, Steinway, Yam-used. Cost $12:) complete, 646-4237 'l/21 Evinrude, trlr. gas tank,
wpm plus-d~taphone tranis-va.lescent Cenltr. 642-8044 Apected land coiix>ration will &lri o~r 30 540-2052 display studie11, model horn-aha. New & used pianos oI A real bargain at $75. MATURE Burmese cat fem. batt, Like new, S925 968-6215
ocrlption exper. is a must ·, ~====~~~~ h m°'t ma"-• n-t boy• In 1 : show how Yoll may reae Tel-hone Solicitors. es, dcrorators cancellation. ""' • UC'" 549-0674 Wonderful di5pos. lo good ;•, HP Homel•'te o.b. e-. able to lake on responslbll-NURSE AIDES -All shifts, · u u·~ ·• So ca1,·1 at Schmidt Mu•I< -··• them with as lit e e .... , all Charity appeal. Paid weekly. Spanish & Mediterranean · home 64.'>--0391 7123 lr ::t!d':~ with minimum ~::~-n:.~ri~~g possible. ApP1,v: 325 N. Broadway, RD FURNITURE Co.l 007N.liWn,Santa Jna ~~!r~iri. 's~~:tercl~:~;· DRA~D . Electronic and ::·o;6~ff~~~31&: tr'
U qualified, please call Mr. HOlpitaI,.N.S. t Step up no~l: 1 Rm. 410, sut&Ana. 1844 Newport BJ., C.M. Women's bowling ~ &: TV parU, cablnets. 304 16• Sabrccraft ti berg la•,
Adams for an appointment OCEAN 'VIEW Mr. Churchill fn4• 83S-32l3 WAITRESS£$. exip'd. Apply, every nite 'tli 9 ORGANS bag; 1-luman hair wit fall, Flower St. C.l\1. 7/n runabout. Good cond, Sl25.
71<1546-"46. SCHOOL Dl<TRICT SALESPERSON 1262 l>a!lsadn Rd., S.A. Wed., Sal & Son, 'lil 6 al dk brwn. 675-1019 • TERRIER """"' 8 wk•. 962-SOlG
GENERAL Help: $3.9;;; hr. I ' ' r . * THE DERBY * 9' COUCH & lovesetlt-blue Discount! WASHER & dryer, 11tereo old. Great kid's dog. 1·'1c.· "'FB=R~G~LS-,-~G~l,..-por-°'OO.-{
Le expandin&: chain needs BOOKKEEPER Attractive girl, 18-13, with a EXPER'D. Lw1dl Wailresl!I, velvet.-newr used & Statue \VARD'S BALD\VIN SnJDJO cocktail table_&: othe:r misc. 84~2146 7/21 w/18 hp Johnson motor.
ft &: pt time help lemp good head. Apply Wed. only l0-3pm, 5 days a wk. Ph: lamp. Kil) cash. 96S-5375 house. hol. d items. Must 4 CUTE '"tte"' •-•-ID S22i 673-81111
or perm. Age 19-31 ~28n Computer Input between J!).1 pm at London &39-6885 bef 10 am. ll.10BJLE HOME 1819 Newport, C.M. 642.-84.84 sacnftee! 968-3787 alt S. a.m. &. ""aft. 5..,~~ m. '=========
Jim Ryon SALARY "'76 1706 '!O BCnM·tche&, 2137 Harbor Blvd., WARD SECRETARY -MODEL FURNITURE BALDWIN 0 ......... model 47. 2 AM/FM Kenwood stereo 67~ 7/23 Si1ilbo•ts 9010
G• 'VEYARD • -•'"--'"" .,., • • ' " ' · · 0 -Uonist In nu rat n g Sol tov di · ',,_, · B nd 170 ---------....., ...... ,....-~ ... ts ·~"'t' as, e seats, nmg sel!i, lllre new, Fr. Provincial. receivers. ra new. 3 GREAT kitties, 1 orange, •-"
• Telephone ()pera1or T Sales arN. Lile typif'V. 3-11 sbi~ beds etc cherry ~"OOd. $1995. 644-f277 watt-$275. lJQ watt·$ 2 2 5. 2 ,.,·,-. ~· -0 r * New Cauu.ina 22' trailer. ** 4SJ..0'7J1 ;;;:i~t~ ~!=~c:.ra~ THIS WORLD IS A Penonnel Dept. Ho •i 'MUST SELL PRIVATE PARTY Prv. party, 644-1.568 537-8800..... ...,......,..,u 7121 able \\'/retractable keel
other computer input equip. FILTHY MESSI HospiW, N.B. JO~!TCRA INC, 19261 Beach ts to b . 4 8 REGUUTION pool from S259:i. HOMEWORKERS \VANTED
(EnveJoipl' Addressers).
Rmh stamped, ~ e 11 ·a d·
dres1td envelope,
LANGDON \VORL O
TRADERS. P.O. Box 1111·
A21. Redondo Beach, Ca.Iii.
90278
HOUSEKEEPER • Jive in,
Lag. Bch. Widower,
children 3 & 5. 6 day week,
$250. M9-ll07 days, 49f...6297
wkn<k.
HOTEL CASHIER, female.
NCR 43)1) exper esaentW.
THE NEWPORTER. INN,
PH: cn4) 644-1100.
*HOSTESS*
Eve1., full or pt tim•.
Aae ll-35. Apply bet.
2:}0.S P.M.
Reuben'• Coco's
Cost• Mesa
1555 \V. Adams.
'mt. General clerical & ac. Learn how you ca.n improve WANTED: Part timt', lieens-Blvd., }1.8. 536-6511 ,:r,~ 213';>' .ft~'.:°23 ta~Je complete with all ae 1 ~-pool. fe1na.let goodand lho\Va1. * N~,li~ Kolralle 12'. fa~~lby our sick environment. by ed R.E. aa.lts people, Eves • 1ut Ma e wan me11 11a1 ng s oop, main & JI , counting, 3 yrs clerieaJ ex. ,. 1 Rl YNG cpl nds I urn, ctssolies. Xlnt rond. $Jj(l. Ph': 494-9sss Sall away pri~ only $514
per., including 2 yrs recent "'"Or ing or a ne.w company '= wknda. Lachenmyer tr. Span/Medll. Reas. Will pay Television 1205 646-3629 befo~ 4 Ph1. expt'r in operation ol com. \\ith p~uive ideas. We 6f6..3928, eves: 673-4577 h Prvt Pty 842-8473 PART Siamese, fema.le, 3 complete.
puter Input equip, Applica. produ<'t!' non-pollutant house-WELDERS (2) exper in cu , . . NEW A: USED TV1 FENDE& Bass amplifier mo' l! 3 9-2 2 6 7 or * Balboa 20, 26' Aquarius 23
. 11 p C hold and institutional cle. an. plant '-·-·• m··~ ~ _, BEAUTIFUL 8' Karpen BOia For $ale/re.nL ~~~~~ Ri.ckenbaeher bass .,." .. 787 7122 * Hobie cats colors, Imm.
hons I ed ersonne! om. d ha a very unique ....,,....., """ ......, ~-.-with 8 fiufly plllowz. 2 mo Dunla ' 181" N........... ...... •-""' "'"'""' Del. miMion Ofe, 7972 \Varner, cf'! an vc only ln mob~ homes. Ap-old. Pa.id S473, lst S:lSO takes P s, :i .... ....,.. " .... t. * 675-6404 * PART Collie, J yr old. rna:e, CAP'N EDS
Hunt. Sch., by 4 o'clock method ot markeUng -. no plication to M & jest i c ,.L 6'" "!)6 548-7788 GARRARD Turnt•bl• 3 wott bu had !ihClls. Gd \Vilh """" v July 29th. door lo door? For interview Homes, 18060 Euclid st, ,....~ 1 1 ? ~ \ • C$t. Hwy, NB 645-2244 .
call 675-~33 or 772-7621, F.V. MODERN dining table &. 6 21" RCA Coor TV. Large amp. 2·8" apeakeno. Ex-children. 893--0867 '~3 SAILBOAT OWNERS
OFFERING "Int accommo-Room 200, Mk for J\1r. Lund. WOMEN for shipping & chairs. Antique green. S·ID. cherry \\'ood cabinet. ;t51l. ccllent condition $00. Call 2 £~. Blk dogs. Mixtur. Launefting " dry storage,
datlons le small salary to SALES Ews. 549--0293 548--4323 · 548-4987 • Karen-Terrier & Poodle. 2602 Newport Blvd., NB
college student in exchange \Ve are a struggling new aSm"""mbfglY-_ Ag' 1;11~ orpt:;:'. Cimeris & KING-SIZE ma·ltress & box Need children. 546-5941 7/23 673-6606
for light household duties, """' " .,... Offi F ft 8010 · Good nclif •:o11 f ma! k"
67>03JO or 541J-TI!l7 company with an Important Sl.65 hr to start. Apply ce urn ure Equipment l300 spn~s. co ion .,.,.,. PURE white ' c 1Uen, BALBOA 20 ft., fixed keel;
PART TIME
EVENING WORK
New fadot')' branch opening
In Onnge County. No exp,
nee. Work 6-10 pm.
CALL MONDAY l
TUESDAY
}'QR lNTERVU."\V
me~ about poH11Hon. \Ve morningll ~U. G 0 I den• s 54!Hl674 blue eyes has shots, .:arly oulbo./lrd, 1 year old. ;JlOO.
produce non-pollutant clean-Magic: Wand, 946 W. 17th Refln'd l4x60 \Vood desks, BOLEX 3 mm .. S65. GIRL'S delux hvin, S speed, A.M. 548-5379 7123 543-(fj.32 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
il'lf; products and have a. St., CM. $69.50 • Refin'd wood arm Enll'l.J'i't'I' lens SlO. ~tV.C. tandom bicycle. Xlnt cond, AOORABL.E kittens, box· or after S p.m.
uniqu_e method of YOUNG lWme.Jl. part time rotary chalnr, $29.50 •We Oa&h equp. da.ys 67~7460 $75. ~39. trained to good home. Only HOBIE Cat&:. trailer 1 yr
marketing. No door to door. I ....__ order desk in have the largest selection -":::"'=:::6#-=2339====== I KING-SIZE BED l left ! 833-1734 7/23 lllOO • • Call for inte~w: Ask for or P11""'" • n -·• of used ef:fice turn in this _ 1-!r. Gularte at !i46-l052 or new S.0, 0U1ce, $• hr. -.... area. 1500 Complt~. Good condition CALICO mother cat and :? 646-Qi07
712-7621, Room 200 492--4242 fife 1i1ahan Ot>sk Sportl~. Goods • 642-6716 • weaned klttet11. ~7.Slla 7/2.l Kite 611 with trailer.
1800 Newport mvd. LANGE ski boots, size ~~~ ANSAF'ONE, Best I: latnt 5.J7-9U:i 7123 Xlnt cond. $790
6t2-8450 $50. 100 SL Head skis $60. non-n!~e model, Tax g \VK old cocktt-mix J>UP-67":>-ll46
PRIVATE party aelling 1 ex-t:~t deductible. OUer. 494-7132 ~i:i61 Sm !: med ;% Fiber&J,a.ls I: Gclcoat
7900
* HOSTESS • Age 3M:>. n4-7253
Attractive, personablf', lo =o.-,,~~~'----
Dead End?
Money Too Low?
ecutiw desk '= 1 aecmary M. I 11 1600 Misc. W•nted 1610 * * Repairs * * Do you want to be a tun time desk. Beau!. Ii k e new see eneous 3 ADORABLE 6 wks old F'n!e Estimates 543-1752
AC11NG
meet public. M a r i n e PBX ()pera.lor for an$'A'('ring
Res taurant. THE ~. Full time, Costa l\Jeu. artL ·~ Nf..WPORTER INN, 1107
Jamboree Road N.B. Appl)' PROJo~ESSlON AL Sales
in penon only ll Al\i to Career-Searthin$t for man
2 ptif to learn our business and
HOUSECLEANING & Child handle aales executive posl-
care. $50 wk plus nn. & tion. Tnlnlng Income pro· vldtd. College, sales or t>o.rd. Sl,S days. Rers. PH: buslnc111 exp. Married
worklnr profesah>l\al'!' Do \.\'alnut. S145 each. Plus 2 JtifPACT \\Tench 1-1 ln. dr. \Vanted: Used portable TV fiuUy blk & wht kitfe!lS. Spinnaker ror Coronado 23
you hl'l.ve the self dlsciplint chain:. $30 '= $49. 6~, New. $6().$92 va.lue. Ski!· sea. \Wl'lring OR not r>48--08ll 7123 Xinl cond. Sl20
to subject )'OW'Self ro a rig. 67:>-19Jl •her sa1•, new $42 value Call: S57·9U3 * \~ SIAl'ltESE kitteru;, :> w!<s. 833-3772
id British trahtine course Ir PVT pty has l secretarial $30. 3 dra\v, dble., liusp. \VISH to buy used uprighl 54.)..6978 i/23 13' r.tetcalf No. 82
the artistic huml.Uty to ac-de'k & t exec. desk. Beaut locking lile cab $25. New frtt7.tr in good rond. Call BOSTON Bull tcnier. l yi'9r Xlnt cond. 2 sails
Then ~tcp up to the growth (.'(IJ>t minor roles until the like new wa1nut, $145 ea Norton door closel'll Si9 st5-21U old. 548-1627 7/23 No traikr $5SO. 646-811)
country where !ht money training period ii c:ompleteT + 2 ch'1 S30 & $49, 675-86.JO value $U. Eltet. printinz _ --PUPPIES 2 mos. aid i;mall SABOT * $IO I
rood ar.I. excitement never If ao THE LONDON LA-or 6T~l91l calc. $150. 962-0740 FREE TO YOU breed. 548-29l4 1121 Lido Pk FrT:mon~:r.PN;t•
end. You set your own pace GUNA ACT., RS \VORK. Movl-, Make Offer
-YQur own goal~. This re.. SHOP might be able to help Office Equipment I011 ··• FREE· G~ kitten to good KITE ~647
Bored?
s~ctcd land corporation you. No p~vSou11 experience Maple dinette ffl, 6 chn!.: FREE to li:(IO(I home, 3% home. 642-4279 Till Best offer. 575-6912
PIT gn~ard-ll:OO pm-will lihow ho\v )'OU may necesnry, no &it barrier, ELECTRIC IBM Executi~ Kenf1'!0r!o 2.~pd, ironer & yr old. tri-color co ll ie KITTENS &nd mothf'1". =========I
6:00 am. Lotin1 An."O, rc11ch lhem \\ith u: little Membel's ot this exclusive &: Unde!'Wood forum, $l50. chr.; Ro-Rldtr excrcycle: 15 \\'/papers, male, trained. 540-.SSll 7121 Power Crulsert 9020
5«M)212 542-5623 Ex.t. "'
HSKPRS Emplyr Pl)"I lee Geor-ae Allen B,y*1d Agen-
cy 106-8 E. 16th, S.A. Harbor at San Diego Fr.>.')'. cffol1 as PoS&lble. ll'OUP wtU only be accepted Desks. 2 A 4 drav.-er lilts. \Van RCA amplilier: BBQ & 1\-1oving "No Pets.•' .:::::::;:.. _____ = "-'=::-..;.;.;,;,:;:,;,;,_~=I
547-Gl915.
Jr'llUrante C"1lally Agtncy,
O>rcN de\ 11.!ar, part Urne.
EXPERIENCED a.II llnea.
RtsUl'nf':, P .0 . Box No. 8. c.ru.
L"l•I S.C:'y
$5G0-$550 Mo
t Girt ore. rcr Attornty.
Lowly Newport Bffch oU.
foe. Gd -.l SH. Lostl
"""'· pet!.
I ... ,_N ...... ..,IA .. ,"~-y
W O.er Dr., HI ..,_,.,.
551-1585 To start, you will rea!lve ex. upon• aatlllfactory peraonal 1882 \Vhltrlf'r. Unit V, 01. misc. Sl19 Coolld1e. CM. 846-.1678. 40:l2 Mistral Dr .. rngoodEE t!n~k. 84~tten;,~ 1967 LUHRS 211' C.C. ~'ly
RECEl'TI ttn•ive Mlc:11 tralnine. And intervtew with the d.trector, 64l--34D8 M0.3812. H,B. 7/21 · bridge, radio. b31t tank. -ONIST you'll be backed b)' a p()\''t.r-Call C(M..C40C for a.pp!. NORELCO mock-I 82 cu:sette RUMMAGE SALE BEAUTI:ruL blk f I u f ry • Darling Klll,ns Bl 11. ck • Sailing dlnQ:hy, Lo hours, ~ 1~~~":1::wrti&-ITS YOUR MOVE ~~~-s~~~~ete. 1%' .. a1::~1~~~. ~~t2j r:::: ~L~~m~aJc~;°:d ;:"·~ be:;.~-34:!,. ~:~-~=.~:· 69&-7971; Good t.ypi31, 110mf' accoun1lng
,,.wk. Growing com~y in
Jrvint Complex. All h'inge
bt:nefltr, $300, per mo. AppJ.v
In penon •
C•liforni•
Injection Molding
:a:ll Br\iP Ave,. C.M.
Clrvine Industrial Complex}
+ Ors.w Pla.n Available -Warren Atagnavox Ce:nter bo~. lenced yd. 9D-970S 9Ei2.44 1/2l 28' Q\\-ens '64 • $4.99:'1
+ v:orl< a.., to"°""' INDUSTRY CAREERS Gorege Sal• I022 U1e •!do'"'"""' parklna Jot or 963-23111 7123 Bogan!"' Yoohl Sal~• + Yr Plan Avalla~ -· 9:30 to 5:30. 8 AOORABU: & wk okl Id!· Dogs U2S 5f3..2.19l; eves 49'-2611 + n. -··-•-t f II W GARAGE Sale -!:lectronlc I 2 -...::.-------m: an--......... e O -. · LADIES diamood dinner te:M mus! be !COM n CHEAP IMMEDI.ATE SALE!_ Dwi~hL re1ptcted Calli. AIRLJN£ & TRAYR equipment I. Olhtr ml.Jc. rtnc. .et W'ltb l~ karat Y.'ttks. ~ on vacauon. 2 LOVABLE male Toy 29' fantail Mont~ d"ttl
R.E. Broll.er. items. m P&ul&rino. C.O.ta centB d1amond. 2 dltmonds 220 7. A. stet t: Ave. poodles. AKc. 8 wks. pup rood dive boat. ~ '
.+ Group Health lnsurt.na1 Mesa -~ karat on tacb side. ~ 1122 shots. need aood home. 2!' n..YBRIDGE PotkGil
-$25,<mml.JOrmmlcal, e OPERATIONSAGENT TIME FOR ~tcutSacrlftc:elRep-3 MO .• mixed-male ~ewr. dlet1el '68. Xlnt t'Ond Al
1111' a.nd accident, • TICKET SALt3 lJ to Bex P360, Dally Pilot. Shcpbr_rd. Good natured. OLt> ~!sh ~P dog, 18 i\us 'After 6 pm ~ll
RESVME only ProducUon + Unllml!ed Company FiD-e RESERVATIONS ~UICK CASH * FOR Rent • Qi.bin-lo-t•m-\V t1. n 11 g d. heme . mo. fem, Alovfng • No Ptls, · '
F'ottman, mobile-modular .;iBoncini:
1
00 A11
1
SatPlca, e AlR FREIGHT-CARCO ..,.. -rnolh Lakes, slpg 7. tum .. p;....4,929 1"/21 Sell SlJO, paid $-JOO. 615-8994 SpMd-Ski 8fftt fOJt
ho m ta. Ex-peT only, + nus Dl.'C.nl ve en • CO~ffitUNlCATJONS tripe. 5 nlta S7S. 5.11-3.174 f'OTRON ce.mera .t portable ST. Bernard Puprties • AKC ~--------1
LOT BOY, PICKUP, DEi.JV. m inimum S m tn mobile Step up now-Call: e TRAVEL AGENT THROUGH A or ~7 eve1, air CC)ndlnoner. Btw. 4·7:00 $125. Also ma.le at stud.
ERY AND CLEANUP. home tltld. all phues. ~fa· MR. CHURCHILL SURFBOARD: 'l''xl" Soul. p.m. 548-8289 438 l\Iagnolla. C.~f. 642--45.w,
14' GLASSPAR &kl bo«t. 3j
HP 1.Vlnrutle-t-IP.'c ~lllJ't('_r,
6 trailer. $:i75. 962-4001 HutcPJrlO«I ~ "°"" 111 ksOc 1-Jomes. l80GO Euclkl (7141 13S-l23l Airline Schools P•cific DAILY PILOT :·'nt tor Caltf btat h b~a.k. HAVE 4 t:ickeia f'estlval of MIN. Poodlt!I, f\KC. black
Jndumi&J w.,. C.Af. St. P'.V. ' TifE QUlCKER YOO CAU.. 610 E. )7th, S•nt• An• WA.NT A.D Gd. Cond. S65 or btt ofr. Arlt 7/24. Ell:ehftngt ror niny, kl\~si,1.... :I rrm.. !'JLOT WAll'J' ADtS! -Na<tlnl born SWAPPER? THE QUICKElt YOU SELL !4USM MM023 ,.,,,. !11~114. OSS<l749 Chimp blood, 1:lil. ;11>-0M< L _· I ... _ -
TilE SUN Nli:VER SETS--;.
Pt.lot Claullled
!
•
Tl
BE
IO
To ...
IV
"" m
Bo
WD
NE
38'
Bo
Fib
Bo
I
olO ...
"" Mo
)!,, : ...
ti•
. al . "" • In
<al m ....
Avo. .... .. ,
. I :....
• inf
i .
11."" 'Sp
New :eer
:neq
; ter.
. & ' : Ciul : ...
'cllli ~ 'M
ALI
i N<
lll'
t:
p
1425 l' bl
Cosu
HES! ·m
·mo.
60'~
.Jake
Ber.
nm .,.,,
Chn
·HE~
2 BR ,,.,,.
·1146
at s
BAR ,.,.,,
1750
Mot
SCHC
""" & ' ....
Hot
Sllll
Min
TACC
""' 7 • .....
Bo>
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'69 (
;cb.
rut
" ""' nw
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TutW:t, July 21, 1970
T~PORT TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTt-Tlf>N • ~P!)RTATION 'T~flr.IS PORT;\T10!"1 , • ,.,.
lmoortod Autos HOO lmportod Autoo HOO lmportod Autos -llwM c.,.
AT f PN , TRANSPORTATION
S,11d Ski
•• ~
TOYOTA
!loots -'l;iC~•~m~po~"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9510;:;~c~.m~po~'"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·-~I ~-lluHl.~•:;;.•--'''"'5~
, 11 •a Mt;y'f;R·s Manx Dune JAGUAR · BEAtTI' •
• 100 hg Mtte,
T ... VWbuo ,-~.
Famula IT' Bua>. ""'°"' buut by -----'---OPEL
Make otJtr. "A COMPLETI SELECTIOtt M.,....,, , ... ..,. . not a kit JAGUAR 1-------'69'Tiiiiofa-ei.wn • dr
...... put OF CAMPERS . AT ~=!Inn. Cail HEAD"'UARTERS '69 Opel_ Ralley Coupe :;:; ::~: s~"" Cir Ill
,4.VON ln1latible ""c.t '"' TOTAL DISCOUNT PRICES" "" · • boot .. , ..
""'""· """' ""
""""' 35 HP ANG ELUS e TEAR DROP e HARlllST CORVAIJ< powered dune The only authorized JACUAR Bl( .... .,., 4 ....,.i H.,..y
-m-'693 KING OP THI ROAD e DJ's e DISCOVIRI R =· =.1'.!'°'hl.. ':ii ~; 111
the ••tire Hart>or ~'!..:"'~ ::•~ n:'~ __ TR_l_U_M_P_H __
P• MU e CHASSIS MOUNTS e HARVEST •VANS -$900. 646-1934 °"""'"' lent coro 1.0w mUet Take TRIUMPH '64 H""'kl .... Marine Equl e CAMP KING VANS & CAMPERS SALES older cor' u down or' ....u """· &:wt cond. 28 "'1'•
dlacounts on all e ANGILUS ·VANS . fmpor!M -· -SERVICI! down Pll'l"ent wt111111. Pvt, to pl. Owner eolllc Eut. LARGEST
marine equ! , cornp&Ne•, dap
-t. Radloo, • DLX. CAMPIR SHELLS AUSTIN PARTS Pty_ Dir l>till &ft, .1:00 PM $5il5. 89'7-3440 th eounden, New BAUER Sf0.3100 ar 49f.1029. '6f TRIUMPH, id cond, wife
patnta, etc. •
power and u.U.
....,...,,. fur Full Cob Ovtt Compen ,59 A ti W BUICK whls, rou bar, bokt ot1. $950.
""m . us n CMJOft IN . PORSCHE l.Jdo Pk >nmont 31, NB.
Marine .. Batt
2430 W'. Cout.H
ery Shoppe,
wy., N, Bch.
Cu Marine
s975 Grett tun transportadon. 6G4335
• . <QGX m> 1135. c2~T~t1o ~~A '65 PORSCHE 1,;;;;;;;===== BILL YATES 518-Tm eoope, New enctne. Muot VOLKSWAGEN BOAT cwnen,
G< ...... tor
Top condition.
Kobler 2% KW.
$470. Call
monstration. &t2-6876 for de
I MPlltE CAMP!R SALES
So. C1I. Discount C•nttr
101J H. H1rW, I.A. e &St-1772 '
VOLKSWAGEN 1965 J .. u .. 3.as "' '° .,.,...,,..,, roxm. CJLAe -.. vw
3285.2 Valle ,Rold sedan. A transm1P:lon, power $M99 89' vw s d
lloot Slip Moo -. . ---- -------·--s.n Juon c.pi.trano •"'r•na. """" brwo, .~. CHICK IVERSON ' e an
24' BOAT
rl"I 9036 --837-4800/493-ill11499·2261 AM FM radio, chrome \Vitt YW
-SLIP-'"--Motorcycles 9300 Trucks i ..... ~ffAJO MUST eel! • CoUW ovieneu wheela, radlal ti~, immac.. rl4~l Ext. 66 or 61 Radio. (ZBS32T'
LEASE rui.rt.rul 't'IS arM % T. -~ DCle ~d. Jottlp waeon: '65 ulat~. I.Jc. zxu 197, 1970 HARBOR BLVD, $1688 ... FOR
IN
H
wn.L ACCX>MM
TO
HUNTINGTON fH•M• Pvt J>ll!. e..t ,oth.r. ""'°"' -•b~ft, CHl"K$23991VERSON COSTA MESA ARBOUR '""' 5'1'"'639· eY9I ~ mech. umct, res. •rviced, ""
ODATE UP HONDA • ·111F<i;.,,.mutp.. i ttllable -!Ion car. YW ·~..,;.~011:-2· .. ~ Harbour v.w. .. . '** n100~'•* . $285 Ol' offer. 6fWJ.09 549-3031 Ext. 66 Or 61 tn.de. Call 613-t23T
BOAT. ''fRIElll 'HOER" &!7-175! or -AUSTIN HEALEY ,.,. f!AitBOR BLVD. -,-,6~2""'-=p""'o-'-nc-"O-he-S~ I lJ'lll l!EACH BL. WM35 A 30'
CALL
fllEW allps a
Sf6.2420 !;n.A '63 OlEVY " T. 11eet aide I.;.;..;.. _______ I COSTA MESA Coupe. Absolutely concourae HUNTINGTON BEAOf
vail for 32' IO ... _ ......... , auto. Pvt prty, S..t otr. AUSTIN AMERICA '67 Jagu" ar 420 Sedall condlllon. Lio. SBN021. NEW YW BUG 38' I; 70' poWtt •
BOAT &lips/side
-.. .!!'.""· HIW·USID-SDY. ,.,....,, .... 962-<98l $2699 ••~ ~ FORD v•u ,.... Sales, SHvJce, Parts $55.89 pr month ~--Ll"I n ft n r ~ ~·· ~·;r>. Immediate Delivery Foctoey olr '°""·· AM/FM/ CHICK IVERSON ' =-~ ...._. ._ • map, ta.pe deck, panellin&. AD U:odela: oomd. 30-32' p_,._ $950 or olfer. 644-0818 ahort\vave, wilf! wheel!!, YW $147.71 down Includes dlac brakes, Egp White w/
'60 FORD "AiT pick up. Pvt wine leather tntertor. Load-~1 Ext, M or 67 t•x I lie.
&Mt Services party. Best offer. 5'1~. ed! Excellent cond ition. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. VW LEASING
eves ~9Sl (\VAV 178) Take oldcr 1 ___ co=ST:cA.:.=MESA='--AT -Fiberglass A .... J""' ts10 """' or •mall do•m, wm '66 Porsche 912 CHICK IVERSON
-'------' 3lOOW;COutHwy.,N.B. fin. Pvt. Pty, Dir oall PhU 3TO CHOOSE FROM VW Frff E1t\ma.tes --JEEPSTER '70. Full pwr. W2-9«e SC0.1764 . aft, 10 AM 494-1029, P r iced from $34'9 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
9039 air, r/h, 4 wheel, 5,000 ml -::A=u=thorhed==·=M=G=Dealer==• I \VD~92S COSTA MESA !loot Charter
FOR Charter
•kl . Beaut.
---UKE new '69 Hed&ka Ace ~.,J'700· Sac. $4500. -MERCE1>ES BENZ CHICK IYERSON l68 vw S d
to qUl!illed 100 & Ka.....id 00. -l=======-1 DATSUN e an
pper 35 1t. diete1 ltr@et 1: dirt e q u 1 P • d • --------YW
aloop. $375 Per Wffk. $700 Hodak& S400. Kawuaki $300 1-C-•..,'"-""~--"---..---""· 549-3031 Ext, 66 or 87 sunroof. <WH-t!Ul
for 2 weeks. 6'IJ.0339 Call 673-2527 e 1'170 HARBOR BLVD. $1475 9200 1-"7.,7~D.CY'°'AMA~=H~A~1 25~-""' llAllVll --COSTA MESA . Mobile Hornu 1.-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. I EN DU RO '6 '> PO RSC HE 1• $400 or Make OUcr "Leader in Thi !Aa<".b Cities" "if v w THE MEADOWS * !148-6297 * ZIMMERMAN ·~,;~:t;: 1.Fo~ ~~~· r;nlsh Harbour • .
'41 KNUCKLE Cbopper 80
(I rvine) ob'Oke, nu ... & tram. OPEN ROAD 2845 H=: BLVD. 1962 19tl SL Coupe BILL YATES "i::i=TO~L.·8~35
. Molded !rune, clean. Stock Manulacturon of Amort"''' -==-====-11100. 675-2643 or 497-1265 VOLKSWAGEN
.....,...dons ,.,. now belna --S8<XI. 54&--4472 fineat Lwouy Recroatlon DOT DATSUN 1964 VW ,.,..,..... LIOOS
· ta.ken in Orange Counfyi 1970 350 cc Kawaaakl street VetUcles. OPEN. DAIL y MG 32852 Valle Road Runs IOO(!, $750 exhluat
finest&: lnOlt oomplete park scrambler. 1400 mi. $600. -e--AND San Juan Clplatram system. 54&-7"1
: at 14851 Jeffery Road (Sur. 6'13-629t e New Campers SUNDAYS 837-4800/493-45U/499-2261 '65 vw Sedan
: rounded by Orange Groves) 1970·=-=Bul-ctac-ao-""P.,,...==-,;MK: from 13835 Beach Blvd. -'66 PORSCHE 911, 5-sp,
ln Irvine, For information. JV New $925 cuti. ~ $9'5 Hu.rrtinrton Beach • THINI blk-blk, stereo, mas whls, sunroof. <IVU988) ~ -~-730, 531-8571 14'1-"'=5P::.::M::,. -----N! 1::'u~ltttlC::e'n 842-1181 or~ ''MG'' ~~co~: Muat sell thlsd' $989 ~·~ 1970 Kawuaki 350 "" -·-'66 1600 ROADSTER ;:;;:;., ~•aoune c 0 n . l"'"'"""'ls"!P"!A"!C"!i!l'!s'"'"'"'"""I sn.et Scrambt.r 1300 ml. OPEN ROAD sn
,Avail•ble in Huntiogton -='-$"":,c:-· '-673-<1.M'---c~--,. ..... ~."!~Ao, Rc·~~VDF.. SU•er fin"1> w/blaok vinyl ''FRIEDLANDER" RENAULT Harbour v w Beach & Costa Mesa 's nic.. 250 HONDA, aeml-chopped. """.. ""'" ........ interior 4 1peed. Dlr., IRUC NEW MIDGET $1995 Reb ilt ·n<! trans Xlnt (5 ml1e1 so. of Disneyland) • • •est parks. u engi • · 851) will take tradfl or lin· '63 RENAULT 2-top convt. · J : MOBILE HOMES cond. * 6~03 (llf ) ISI""50 e 5.11.SlSO ance private party caJJ 1111111ACM {llW'I'.,,, w/new Corvatr eng. Good 18711 BEAcn 81.., :fcit435
.Amertc&'s finest, available New '70 Datsun 546-4052 or 49UTI3. NIW•USID-SERV. tires. $400 or best offer by HUNTING'OON B
: iii every size&: price range, Auto Service ------------'-Jul -... ·-'67 VW S d I JOMICRA. INC . .. P•rl• 9400 l!OOOHC,PiclrupwUhcanip. ENGLISH FORD ~ "=='=~-=-===e_ .. _. __ =I e an
--------tt. Sale price $2099 dlr. MG 19261 Beach Blvd. (# 67798) Will take car 1n -;:;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; TOYOTA VDK709) Jluntington Bea<:h 5J&<SU • VW pano, """' ul.,, & • Soleo, "'""'"• Part. Rftdlo, (
); body partJ trade. Will flnanc:e private ALL NEW ENGLISH . lmm~ateMod~'~very, .$1195 S,.ce ... Spac1s--Space1 Mz_ol43 party:-Call M~ or FORDS NOW IN STOCK AM .,..
Now 5 olar Adult Puk • 494-9773. DRASTICALLY ITIOIYIOITIAJ
:eentrally located in quiet 1962~ ·PORSCHE 1600-S =-=-----REDUCED ·~
:neighborhood ol w .. tm1no. ....... low mileage. 1515-'69 Chevy 'fl-Ton TO CLEAR ANNIVERSARY Harbour v.w . . ter. CJ05e' to shopping area * ~2734 With camper, low mileage. LARGE SELECTION
: k freeway. A beautiful new WANTED -Fmw:r &I.Ide Automatic, powtt IJtee.tinr, TO CHOOSE FROM SALE
: clubhouse, I..ce swtmmina: tra,.;mjgsion, a 1 u ro 1 nu m air cond. Dlr. Will take Theodore 3100 W. Cout HW)' , N.E. 1970 TOY07 A WAGON 1B7U BEAOI BL., 8U"'"35
: pool, J""m & .n othor fa. ""'for '62 Chevy. """"78 ""' In U.de or 1111.,,.. p<i-ROBINS FORD 642-!MOO $4().17" 6372 Demo $1117 ~GTON BEACH
'dlltiea. 530-2930, 531..&m. ...-vate ·party. Call 54&-4052 or Authortttd MG Dealer T M k II $2149 '66 vw s d : 5!1-8105. Troller, ,Tr.vol · ,9425 "''-!c"~'r'73e:·~~=~-c--l060 Harbor Blw. oyoto or e an -~ eo.ta M"' 64Ul010 '59 t/ilGA ~le. ZPB516 · , BAY HARBOR ''8 NIMROD DelW<•, slpa ':.. ~~r El(};;;,"°' ~~~~~!!!!!~~I DEAN LEWIS --Rad io. <TFZ0751
ALL NEW '70 MOOE LS 's<&--056 " -' Sleepen. Slock "' FERRARI cleon car. (0XY819) WW 1966 Hartiot. C .-• 6'6-'303 , Mobile Home Sales 6.·stv, Icebox. din tbl. SQXI.· ros. ven ~ Convertlble, 3 sJJC('d, dlr, Jr $1115
; NOW ON DISPLAY l<fillbm. 1260 Logan, C.¥. toke car in tnde or ""••"e '68 TOYOTA ~· Wides u low u $5995 Trucks 9500 --=~,....,-~---,=-FERRARI private party, Cail S46-40S2 12' Wides to 34' rlldn I'--------1969 Fiesta camper S200 d. or 494-9773. Auto. R.H., whlte walls, Al Newport Importl J..t Or--'o=='""""~~=-1 IV1fH379l $1495.
Puk Spa"" AnUabfo "' ange County'• """' author-1950 MG TC CLASSIC BILL YATES .1425 Baker St., CDlta Mesa • 3 Motorcycle trailer $125 Jud dealer. * VERY SHARP ** .
)I block East of Harbor Bl•d. IH 546-6906 SAi.ES-SERViCE-PARTS 1995 494-9748 VOLKSWAGEN ·,:o.ta Mesa C714) 540-9470 '64 vw b111 ca.mptt·New ena:. 3100 W. Coast HW)'. .
HESPERIA MOBILE HOME tirft:, battery. Xlnt cond. 642·~ewport Beac~1764 MGB 32S52 Valle Road
'ESTATES. Low down -Rea. • 644-2388, ~9892 Mr. Authori~ Ferrari Dealer --------San Juan C.pistrano
·mo. pymts, Min. 1 tz e 1970 Gamble 837-4800/.f.93-45111499-2261 · .'°'"""' 10 ,.; 1rom new -.~68~FO=RD=-""'. ,~.250~-w..,.1=10· FIAT '65 MGB Roadster
.l,k•. Hwy 15 from San TRUCKS '°"'per. SI" 6. DR, ---Like New t Owned by UtUe BIJL MAXEY
Bernardioo to Hesperia oU camper Only. 545-4664 • ----ol.d school teacher from i...
romp. 8 mi EaaL See or TRAVELALLS l.l'liftl'l,l'I guna ...... ""'k '""" ITIOIYIOITIA. I write -Broker. Bonnie Dune Bug,_;gc..1•_• __ 9_525_ 8 "fTHIAINjK interior. Tonneau cover, • _ -· ~
ChapmM. P.O. Box 542, SCOUTS -witt wbee1', .xoeUent '°"" IUll BEACH BLVD,
HESPERIA, C.1". 92345 . DUNE BUGGY di!ion. Tok• """" down Hunt. Buch 1474 555
2 BR. unfuro l"66 dbl., ,.. AVAILABLE NOW CHASSIES Id will fln. Pvt, Pty_ Coll Jtm 1 ml K. ofOout Rwy. on Bdl.
pend<>. $6950 • Sp No. 86, IMMEDIATE DEi.IVERY "FRIEDLANDER~' aft 10 AM 494-7503 or 540-3100
Harbour V.W.
18711 BEACH BL. 842..f~
HUNTINGTON BEACH
'67 VVi
Squareback
Sunroof
AM/FM radio, tape deck, air
cond. 10,000 miles on new
factx>ry enitne. Uc. UEP46.f.
11695.
9 otftt r square beck•
to choose from.
CHICK IYERSON
YW '21462 cout Hwy, HB. Kty Test Drive One Today At Years 1955 thru 1968 avail. 1969 MGB-GT. 8 . R. G. '67 Corona
at Sp. 32.f. aft. 3:00 pm. Kustom able, tJ7SDIU.CH IHwy. Jfl AM/FM, wire wheclll, Im· ... _ .. Full la 1---' 549-3031Ext.e6or11 '68 Futback 1000 fuel Inject. n.= • Y ctory equ .. ~. BARGAIN: Excl. Lido Park NEW-USID·SEIY. macuJate. $2000 or best Of· <VLK9~) Will •·•e ••• Ill 1970 HARBOR BLVD. ed engine (WQD300l S698 f ,..-ou "'t 7 '' ....... .,._ MES
T<'ailtt .,... ' hr.. din.. Motors ES - - - - -"· ·~ ~" pm _ trade or finance prt,.te -· __ ::::CO::ST=A==A--
17500. rn=I BILL YA T .-.. - - -• OPEL ty, Call for •ppolllbneu~ '85 VW Sqbk ISOOSndlo, ww
-15 Hubor Aroa's only outhor\L VOLKSWAGEN SIS-4052 or <94-9773. ...,, cle,.,, runs Coed. 1995. Motor Hom•s 7" ,69 TOYOTA "·roUa Wag. 83()..4788 aft 5.
---------· ~ Intematlonal Harvester ~ Valle Road llJDBfl '67 OPEL station wag, gd """ SCHOOL bus converted into Dealer. San Juan Capis.trano A body Prtt mech. Red extr low mi., gre11t con:!. $1400. '63 VW.. Xlnt cond. Tape
motor home. Butane refg. 845 Baker, C.M. 540·591S 837_.800149345111499-2261 &: blk lntr . .f.4,!XK)mi. $lOOO, Please call ~1097 aft 5 deck, Porsche exhaust.
& stove. Thermo heater, (Next to 4-Mos:t Liquors) 64&-8298 PM. I Good tl:re1. $675. 549--08«
llhowtr & toilet fa cilltte1. BRAND NEW 1969 VW Camper: Pop Top, gt t, Jtd
H1,'!!.,,&_ .~~~nlMin• water. l9JO G.M.C. 'I. TON !':6,,i"ooo miles. l32'<0. • O •por TIME FOR Imported ••IOI 96001mportod AulH
-~•w 74 :.,,;wee Gro\'e :_~ _QUICK CASH 8' alum. shell. paneled, bed,
"!lnl_.Blko! 9275 CAMPER TRUCK -SlOO~ •••UWWMI THROUGH A
TACO 100 SHP. H""' duty · -Phone 64l-5678 -DAILY PILOT
tires, hand brake, shocks, 350 VS, 4 speed, power steer. Dullness Opportunities NEED HELP? Look for tt WANT AD
7 mo old, $lSSJbest otter. tng, custom mouldings, he11..t -=='n=.,,,,.,=='•=W=ant=A=d='·=:,.Sa:;:::turd::::="'!..:.-:;:D:;:IME-::::;;:A-;:LIN::;.:ES:::;_! ~-:.:.;.=..;~.:...:;:__
64&-7M5 er, H.O. shocks, H.D.
Bone.Na 5 HP Mini bike
Xlnl """'· 1125 * 5"8-S9T9 *
Motorcycles 9300
'69 CHERRY HodaJ<a. Dirt.
,Chambe r , Mavrlcks,
Fillron, $325. ~
gprings, dual mirror., step
bum .. r. 750xl6 oplit rim s T' "'R G "'"E"D"j< ¥""'\ tube type tires. •<64315. .L'1 rA.IU ~ ·~ 1
$2499 P:~.fl,,.~;:.....-.,.cu.r:a.l'OlJ.AN """
<with purchase ot Trock & A 11~ i ~ !:~~ t.";:! ~ Jf. wroc; 'u' ri'i
K!ngof Road camper. Serlal I ~»fl 1J · forW.di-'-' r. {ii}~
•S3IS). 4-1'-1;.21 To develop m11110g1 di to~ 's.tO.l
UNIVERSITY ......,,. ....r_..i.aou-"' ,...,,
• of )OU' ZodHJo blot.~""
DSMOBILE 1 YWll a1 INe 41 ... t
'67 :ll5 Hondo Scrambler. OL ""' ,...., "''
Excellent condition $400 2850 Harbor Blvd. !~~=! :!i!.
646-4629 Costa Meu. 540-96'0 so-r 3SSortod 65Somllhltw '"..:!~o!! 6 h 36 WO<dl 66 lotl• ~
TR.ADE 360cc Bultaco El '57 FORD Pickup \i ton. 7 If 37 Mir/ 61 VN"f t You 38 falralll• 611 COii Bandldo for Chevy auto. for 8' Flfftslde, 1pUt rtma, VI, , "'1 39 Maw 111 To
sale alto, s+l--0878 O.D., JWf, new pa.int, eeats }f~ior+ :f~ r.i'f!m
125 PENTON..tllc'e new. Sell & carpetl. Excell cond. l:lNm A2A 72~
or trade for cu. ~&95. C.U Must see. $175 M offer. Call 1a5uromld "3 SI-73~ .... 1•Mol.t 4'1~ 7 • .,.... ,att.6,MS-JMO AndyBrown.646-6942 IS'Wt'OI 4-5~ 751.ot«
750 HONDA '68 OlEVY ~ Ton Pick Up. '1' I~ !~ ~:_. ~ ~ly
Like new, must .ttf1 V-8, &uto, air, cab h\ih •tau .U°""" 7ll'mortcll
$1Xl\\, 613-5141 camper 1htll. $2450. ~~:' ~t,'-lntl :~··
iii CC Matcblell dirt bike, 537.5660. ~ ~.ol ~~ ~=~lnl ~ ::t,,~
ntedl minor ft'palr $150. or \i T. '56 F'ORD ·mo. Needl 2lVw SJO..'t ll~
Best OUtt! 646-tm grill. headlight. r IJhl lAW+" 54~lih U(),ooOf'lldd
fender. 673-4144 Cdlil 2!,.!°" ~ .. ~1111 u= "'..:!"1!,~"I '67 Sl.mlld 150 " .._, ...
Good cond. tood price DATSVN truck, 11m&11:-i'ii, ~~ ~:.,.. g~~
67>26<M 4 cyl, Sl;iG. 64~:20S2 or 2' Dirt "Doy '' S«vritY' =-==,,;,.;"=--,.-.1 •·g..-7 31lQ,l;9C1tian .eos.cr.-. '°"°,.,. '64 YAMAHA 125 cc dirt "" ~ .. ;) ..... 11n..
blkt. $165 M 0 NEY JN Y 0 UR ~!~~ · ~~=Good==®=A=l•=""==.,;=N='""':::::::===~--$40-24& P<l<j!<ET! --~==!!=
\
·~.w COSTA MESA
HONDA s:. . '
• 40 MILES
Pia GALLON
• front Disc lrlkn
e Full C1rpttlnt
• .75 MPH
• 4 Spffd lron1.
$1·395
UNIVERSITY
O_LDIMOllU
2150 HAAIOA BLVD. COSTA M!SA Si Q.1640
.. •I
Johnson & Son
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
MARK Ill e MERCURY 9 oOU<iAR
Biii .SELECTION . .
BIG SAVINGS ON
STATION· WAGONS
l' • • •
NEW MONTEGO STATION· WAGON · ·
MONTEGO MX VILLAGI R
Jl\-4V V0t •n9lile, E••por•ff.,.• E"'h•lel' C.1h-•I, S~
l••t .Shift Tt•n1l'llf11lo11, Co11rte1•/ Ot ht tk•11p, vi$w
&·711114 Tir•.•, P•••r ll••r WiMl•w.,Litt•t • c.,,.
rl•r -W/Alr D•fltr, Thircl S••t, ll••t f •cl119, Pew·
•' St11rJn9, Air Conllition1r, AM ll.1llle, TintM Slet•
-Campl1l1, DI ... .S••f I:· Fill Shnllior l1M1, II.it-'.
"'ofe CTL lift H1nli Miner, D"1IU11 Wh••I Cci;_n,
Tr•iltt Tow/119 P•ck•v•· •OHllMl11427 '
Save$$$
•
1970' MERCURY
MONTE GO
2 DR. HARDTOP
FULL FACTORY EQUIPMENT
INCLUDING: ,
AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION,· POWER
STEERING, TINTED GLASS,· AM RADIO•
#OHDILS915M.
'67 Cou9ar
Auto.· frt flt,, f1ct.ry 1lr 1onditionint , ,owor 1fHfr
Inf , pow•r lirt k•t, r~lilo, h11tor. JUtK,7121
'65 T·Bitd
t..odM. F11ll Pe"I"''• f1ctory air, IOSE"45) ' '66 . Mustan9 G.T~ $1475 .
C•upo. Autel ffaM.J·f •t••rv ,JI cedltlo11lnt, ,_,,
1tMrlnf;''P'"'-..!!f°!n i, P.dla, lrttter. 1$TV4A7)
'64 -~oli1inental · $~75
f•cfary air oon41ti0Aln9, fr.111 P~w•r, r1iit~ h•ot,y-;'
•tttption•llv cl••n. IOLT6161 , '
'67 Mercury
Cyclon• GT 2 Dr. H.T. LoadM.
'66 Ford Cntry Sdn $1815
t Pa,1., 111fo. tr1n1., 11.I H, 1lr co114., ,o'.f ral11. CTDE
1171 ' '
'68 Continental
Cot.tp•. F1o1t.rv 1lr colldltl1nl119, f11ll 11ow1r, h ·ollfl·
fwl con4it1111. llEK7911
'67 Cortina
1 Door. IVTPOlll
'70 Ford Maverick $2l75 ·
A.T., 14,000 m!ltt. A14l1 I h1at1r,
'66 Me't'cury Pkln
4 Deir H•t11top. FacflfY 1!r cenclltl1111l"9, fr.111 p•w•
,,, r1dl8, h••l•r. l1•1o1tiful canditl•ft. IS£M06fl
'67 Ford Cntry Sdn $227~
A11te. tr1111., AlH, P.S., P.I., olr &etMI., rNf r-'Jf.
IV6T4'4fl
'67 Opel Rallye
, IWPlDIJl
'67 .Cougar
STE 70 Lltro. Auto, tr1111., pow1r •+•orl11t, p•••~
~r1 k1t, r1cllo, M1t1r. No. 2•t4A. .
'67 P.ont. Cat. Cpe. $1~75-
v.1. 111t.. h •n1., pow1r •k•rln.f , r141o1 ho1t1r. !UMP
1021
'66 Buick Skylark $1595
2 Do1r H1r1ilt111. A11t1. tr1119,, 11.IH, pow•r tfMtlllf.
'68 VW Squarebk $1575
1Wlll 21J
N• It tM ... n .... 10 y_..,,. Irr• u...e.. Mtirurf ,,.._ •.
Johnson .&· Son
LIN¢oLN CONTINENTAL •
MARK Ill e MERCURY e COU<iAR
UU MAllOI IOULIVAIO, COSTA MDA
s40.suo
1 Mii• h.eti 1f ., ... 01 ... ,,_._, •
)
I
I
·--------------------------------
-I ~" ~ r"""1. Jtlit 21, 1970 , i -l·
:ftDillaitl1'ION fllNSPOJfflTl&i TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTJI TION TRANSlllORTATION TRANSiiORTATloN • SPOltTATION -· TUNSPOltTA,,ON
f • •
• • • •
TRA NSPORTATION i -I ; 1 '1M -,. -Im,.. tld Cori -. ~~rs '900 Ulld Con . tM0 UMd Con "" U .... Con I " -U ttia :U::ald~~C=ara7:=-::-=_:_9900:::j~U;Nd;;;;;;C;o;ra;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;~
YOLKSWACNN VOLVO CREDIT. A CHMOLET FORD groy ,;u, .. ,,. PONTIAC rlOBLEM7 -• wt blk "'°"· va 351. -----''----.ii
I 1rp Selldlon ~ NEED A CAR? A ·~ .. N~~A <oLB '66 COIVEI IE 1 · ·~-fQrd lWi<a'-!'" 4:."~w. 'j,~,J oowar ... 1ow1. ""T~m,.,,!!. • ... s,,,ta.' Of YW ,. a ...... , . l'HlHl 1.110.. ..... • _.ttr, Cocwertible, -4 •Pffd, air ,, ~ • .._ new! dlr. Mut ~· •• D7m. 197-STtl I • • ·~· ' .. . . ..,. •. • Ol ' ~' 183> SOOS cond., power alftrinr whl1, ..U. •Full )ll'lco 1398, wm lull r.;,· taot. ~· Rf~. YU!. lombls, . 'V
11
¥
1
0 BILL YATES w/bl""'"">iP• ee.utifllll "11"'-l."I•••·~ <PLG-'65 MUSTANG Futbaek E><oo oot condltioo m;. ..... New&Uud andout?M1.1•t .tlet!!·Lo.,d~·1251e.J1~&r&c.m3. ~.~+mqwhed.1. Ot.Y• ~61-1.f.IS, eve•
1 ........ lotw. DollWry "fRWNDER" BUICK VO~KSWAGEN wlill all tho 1•0<11•" (zbu; '61 FORD LTD 2 cir HT, ~;Alt."'"' 64<-0236 ' ' ~E"'·~~--
CHncK IYERSON ,,., . BUICK .• ~,~ 00,.. ,,.,, valle Roa• """ · •" . ....i • 3!lO '"'· $1575. ' OLDSMOll' • '' Le Mans _,_. San Juao Cap~trano • BILL YATES ~· .... • wk....._ - . w; VW 1 dr. D•mo. vertible. Xlnt c:ond. $425.· &3'7-4800/493-4Sll/_C9!J~236l i . , @Mi/~ other time, ,~ , -Bucket seab automatic, pow • . * $17.IO * -· · VOLKSWAGEN '83 ro"". c.u.ow: soo '66 Cutlass " ·•-·•· air "'"d. Dir. 549-3031 EKt. fi6 or 6'7 '68 ELECTRA 225 4-dr HT. '67 Malibu ., .. "u\cti air bl! Xlnt C•28M'19l will take trade or: lS?O HARBOR BLVD. 'tsnt ••ACM fMWT. •• Air, all pM', new tiru, like 32852 Valle Roid ' m • ' eond. Full powtt' plua ail" cond.. finance private party call
COSTA MEM NIW-USID·SllY. · new. $2950. 615-39911 , Jlucket .eat1autornatic, Dir., , San Juan Capl1tri~ • ~~o-tl.n,,aac:~.-Pat vinyl top, Dir. fTRF 306) MMOS2 or 494-9773
WA.,_D -----...-.....& '6l RlVlERA. ) 0 ad e d . power at~ng; al.r cond. ~837-4fm/493-4ID/499-2261 Wilt take car in trade or fin-C . ·
n ·~ ~ One owner (TPF 681) will '63 CORVETTE. 32'T Fuel e •• MACH r. ~. air, 'ance private party, 546-4052 '61" TO Convertible
ru pay top doll&-for )'OW' -w/xtras, air cond, fl pwr, take: d tln«nce pri auto. S51 ~ .• Xlnt• COl'ld. or .fiM.9713. ~~t' wu/black top
VOLKS\VAGEN todaY ' Call Autos W•nt.d · 9700 etc. $USO. 543--0S76 tra 8 nr • 11\j. 4. speed, headen, new $1190 Mt-• · , ...,,...,.. lTI ts
Ullf u:k for Ron Pi~hot. '64. BUICK Sll;ylark 2-dr ·HT, vate party. C&ll M64052 or paint, orieinal owhe'r $1'r,i0, · ' ' ' ''1 M'LASS SUp, full pwr, PfB,. PI S. Air. New tires · WE PAY· TOP ~·9713. 548-4213 att ~ • )act. air .. v.ety aood· amc!. Bt'st otler!
DUNTON -FORD
2240 S. Mala
SANTA ANA
546-7076
'S6 f ORD
Sl,tio" W19011. V•I, 1111•·
11'11fie lr111trnh1lo11, r1dio,
h11l1r. l ie. l l'UT0211
$319
-E><t. '"'7 . .,._, . H . VI ....... $52S ' • 'UNCOLN ~ --"-·---••
'61 YW Sunroof ~ -'·a/I,,......,., ~==--'='-'--~~-11 (As 831).!014' . '·65 Impala SS . ., CORVE'ITE ••• hp, •· ---··~ .. -,_ '""'739 •fl.r'
V.S Auto. R.H., Pwr, St., spd. AM/FM ltr:reo, clt>an. ·~ f:;ONTf!ofE.NTAL .1wOLDS 118 F'-,_1_.., __ '68 GTO, ~ean. Air, stereo, '61 lnt.rn•tion•I
Lie NUF 3.15 CADILLAC budi:et ~atl. CNGF 6'11) $950 nr bt"at offer. SfS-((117 OMWr, moYlnl' eut. xtnt todil _, .. .:i_.._ u.., u• ~d' auto, R.lrH, Jd. cond.. Pvt JEEP
. $599 :i~forca~&e=~t *For lmm•li•tt BILL IYI045ATES COUGAR cond,atr.fullpwr.491-1627 ~ .. ~!c;JoO'. ~r t&b. tttt1. u100 ~X~;C;,~,·h11l dri~•· lie.
CHICK IVERSON hi• * uncu·1y '" PONTTAC Le M ..... ~. $2293 GROTH CHEVROLET I""'. !61 'hata w...... Roomi-YW 195'CADILLAC PARTS VOLKSWAGEN 1967, air cond, Mw W.o, -h trana-tioo ·~-~ PS. PB, BS, auto, '!'!°"'·11--------ll 54~1 Ext. 66 or 6'7 Air oond\UoMr . 32852 Valle Road ~:xint oond. S1995 A RIAL llAUTY ..,...... . --= .te~. flawleu. $1-.. or '62 FQR~
.,. "" Sal .. """"" 'l>'aNn\wK>n * ..,_,.,. * rARKLANE ott>r • ....,.,,, "''' 0""'· -..rn 1970 HARBOR BLVD. IB2U 841acb 81\'d. San Juan Capistrano I =·=·=======:::i '61 OLDS .:::::,;c::.::,c,=~,,o,=--11 G1l111i1 4 do1r. v.1, 11110· • COSTA MESA Br&kes 837 ·-t<~ "U/'""',....... . ' • convert. Very 19$9-BONNEVJLLE . . Huntinaton Beach Druma: ........., ...,_. ...,.,..,....L DODGE' 1964 , M~audtt 2 dr H.T. ;;tilu'p. You mUJt .ee to ap.: X1nt cond. $900. 11111tie tr1"""'it1 io11, '" co11·
'64 VW XLNT oond. some "7.fi08'7 KI g..3331 1968 Chevelle SS396-Cona. ·.Black vutYl-tOp, 390 entri,.., "Pi.ttiate. Sfs..6503 """ _.... ~;tionil\9, powir •1•••ill9, Radiator -B'--" ·~--1-;:,;::· ======= .,.,.,.....,_ ,,dio, 111,t,r. !OUH7l41 new eQg . .parts, rear chrome -TOP' DOLLAR Front and Rear Bumpt>MI brkl, pwr. 1tr. vyn, 4op., , _ . . ...'""" ~l.stef)'J powu,1, 5695 whttls. Be:a:t offer. Call for 'Radio bkt str. Top Condition $1995 .• 69 DODGE Charirer. Air-alt. Cbe!Ty Clean! Must be PLYMOUTH '64 CATALINA 4 Dr. Sedan.'
tnc'ft-inlo. 832-5191 Dashboard Equipment Daya 968-&&85. Eve1 cond. Pwr. 11teer., brakes. aeen to appreciate. S.tur·J-"-'.::...:.c:..;.cc.=._c:;_c:..:..:.._ 1A1to. P/1, P/b. Good cond.11·--------
tor * M"KE OFFER* 646-ll88. Vinyl top. 6U-58'13 Aft. 5 day; Sunday & even.lop alt 1915 PLYMOUTH Bar· ·'$600. m-4945
.'63 YW B119 ' CLEAN USED CARS 1212 South ""-St. '66 EL CAMINO, P .M. •PM. 144-11'1. 'niouda, ...,. """'· ;.;iilti 1168-~IREB!RD <Oil. Xl•t
MECHANIC SPECIAL ""' Goora• Ray S.ota Aoa . FALC'oN '67 ·M t I i wi red Int. Buo .. I .. au, coo<f. Prv •• -$2000. u-. OK"~· THEODORE 396 \ii, ....... R.H., P.S.. ..ft c a r . ~~ ••• 1 ••• -11 " ...... .u 542·3120 Aft.er 5 p.m. · . ~ CONIOle, auto trana. V41, ~· -. $299 ROBINS FO D _.;;;:.:;;c,:..,;.""=-~C.-. Alr cond .. bucket seats. Full -1 ... _ ... cond • -R '65 CAO!LLAC eoo,.. Gmn <\1295!01 11'195. • '65 FALCON rui.h. --· -~ " lmmula s . $925. 962-<1897 ... GTO. 1.ow"''· low mi CHl~K IVERSON ,.,., ilarl><r Blvd. / bl k · I to eru· BILL YATES good D1'., vieyl '°" cloar\" you '65 VALIANT w 2111· A Xlnl 0000·· lllSll. Call
YW 'II' ac vmy P· 1ae--cond. V8, R/H, p.s., p.b._, wUJ Jind (V0D049). Will take . _ &I'· aft. s~~ 646-0365
Costa Mesa control. Factory auto. air. euto tn.rw. 846-4741 car in trade or finance pri. M:riea, V41, J\/H. Runs 1d.
""'1031 E>t. !6 or 61 """'" AU powor. E><eoptio,.Uy VOLKSWAGEN FO.D vato party, ~ or 'Gd cond. 1750. Alt 3.
mi. HARJ!9R BLVO. WE PAY CASH d<ao! Low mil•ll'· Priood 321!52 Vall< Road K ""9'f13. , 56.oo<l
<X>STA ~ for quick aale! 842-1962 -San Juan -Capistrano 1988 COLONY Parle: Station l'LYM. '61 Satellite .2 ·ctr •57 T-Bird,· sood co nd,
'60 BUG .. Cu.sli::lm irit, nu FOR YOUR CAR '68 COUPE de VWt>. AU 8J7.(800/4!U-4.511/499-2261 FORD VAN, mt"Cha.nks de-Wqon. 9 pus. Low bud tDp. 8 cy:I , Automatic .. $1150/beit otter. 526-2514 or
pa.int, brks, r'blt eng. Like · JIO""t"r, stereo, air cond, El .61 Chiv Spl. Van 90, wbite, U1ht. $250. milea1e. P/b, P/s, air. (Pow .• b~Ice~. F.act. air. 1 ,..._~:;:"'~";·~~~--:-cc
nu $695. Pr/pty S4S-087S.. Dorado Interior, low milea:, 3S,OOO ·mi. One nwn. new Call John 5J6.304.2 $2950. 644-4071 owner. Ex. oond. 644-1048. '.61 T·BIRD Landau Fully
1966 VW Sedan. Sunroof. Am· CONNELL l owner. $3750 or best otter. tires, Clean. $2095. 644-6460. 1962 GALAXIE 500 XL . r/h, 19116 PLYMOlml-Wqoo $75. loaded, 20,000 mi. A·l cond. --= Inotu"'-•1 "" CHEVROLET ,,._.,,. •67 CHEVY p&tpb, a1r. ·buck" -"· MUSTANG ·Good transportat;or. ll500. Alt''" 141--0312
T-BIRD
'63 GALAXIE
4 Door. v.1. 1uto,..,1tie
tr1n1mlttic11, 1ir r.ondilicn·
1119, pow11" 1t11ri119, ••di11,
h11ter. l HCN141 )
$749
'69 CAMARO
2 Door ~.,dtop. v.1, •1111·
m1tie tr1111min io11, f1etorv
;;, eonditio11i"9, pOw1t
1l11ri119, ,,lllio, h1•l11,
whi1tow1ll ti111, ¥i11vl roof,
tint•d 91111, wh11I eo"'"·
IYUPSOS l
$2783
Iris Ave., CdM. '59 CADiu.AC convt.. Beaut $400. 543--6947 -::::--':-:::::::;:::-::--\ __ _.:539-8ttl~~~--1956 T·BIRD '68 VW rickirp 1828 ~81vd'· eooo. ~. ""'°mi. 4 door aodan. Auio, RR .. '---,..,=~r~ont~E~ ...... ---I '65 .MUsTANG ~,BELVEDERE.9,......,_ 112111orbo&1otlor. '66 PONTIAC .
H.... Costa Mesa 54&121n Private $5200. 613-5655 Pwr a:teering, !ZSC 43TI Runs good. $160. VI, automatic, P.S,, air. ·~ Sia.Hon Wqon, XInt. --~==""="=''.:.-'.:.-'"-pm~·-c,t1f;~, 2 ~oor h1nito,. ~v. to find m8~! VUH 12i; \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR * '61 Wht C•clill•c • SUMS 543.7441 tTDR 045) $995. , -cond. 2278 Avalon St., CM. NO matter what it i.5, you v.1, •11t11P111fie tr1111 ., f,,.
$1 ..,.., u ~~ ~ ~~-~--S350 •• ,.,...., BILL' YATES * ""FORD * JILL YATES , 'l'r>1n'"""Puot"".'.:_~. " ''" "'" " wtill • DAILY ,,.., .;, ,.,,,.;.,;,,, •••·
CHICK IVERSON ol"-,_,... ,. ~u• uau., ~•ucu ANT AD' 6'U-(i61g 1r tl1•rift9, r1dio, h11t1•,
,.. u• tint , VOLKSWAGEN CUotom 4'<lr. Make ott.., PILOT W . whilo w•ll "'"• *''"'
YW BAUER BUICK CAMARO 00.14511 or'""'321! . VOLKMAGEN -u ..... C•r • .... •'"" '""'"
234 E. l1t.h St 32852 Valle Road ' .U•ecl Cars. ,_ ~ $1387
• $19-3031 Ext. 66 or 15T • San Juan Capistrano '66 FORD 500-eutotnatic, ne,.,. 32852 Valle Road ~iiiii;;i~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii~iiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilll 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Ooata Mea:a M8-T76S '61 CAMARO SS 350. Disk 8.174800/493...f.511/G-2261 tires, brakes; needl paint. San Juan Capistrano II
COSTA MESA WE 'AY brka:, itereo, new pnt. $550. 847-astl 837-4800/493-45U/499-2261 pol yg l1 tire1. S1 500 '53 CHEVY, Runs like new * '59 VW BUS* TOP DOLLAR DESPERATE! 4!M-42'll h•t $100 takes! 'fili Van-x1nt cond. Mu1t sell '69 MACH I ex. cond. $450
'62 enr. Xlnt cond. }'or cle&n used can •6?3-4646 alt 8pm* imm:k~~?S. w:.;itice &: T.O.P. at S78 mo or
, 1851J, Alt.''"' $34-2930! J....:.NsoN &. SON '69 Camaro 350-0nns<, _65__:CH:::~::..::,::1:...,.::.,::.1a.=••°'vs::.,.-4. ========:.:_,:pe:Yofl==S20=79=543.-0253==·== "" w/blk top-stripea, Spec, L•· ""' .• -'68 YW BUS LINCOLN i'ERCURY Ir<>"''""· $231Xl. 549-01'2. &pd . Fae. air, 11200 °' best Uaod Cars 9900· Uaeol Coro
1 pus. Just 1lJae brand new '62e u.rbot Blvd., C.M. offer. 64J-4.f,01 or 646-41801,;;;;;:;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
• ..,.. 12SO<;. _ ~ :0 · · CHmOLET a11 '· 396 xtn
CHICK IVERSON TOP I BUYER •67 Mellbu SS 396 ~~!6 ;;.,.. '
1
VW BD.L MAXEY roYOTA VS, 4 •--' bucket 1eata, 347.7479 lJBSl Beadt7Blvd. ~ ... 54"331 'Ext...r.6 or '7 R. 8'.ch. Pit. 3CT..s555 Oirome wheet.. tWJB 586)
lJ'10 HARBOR. BLVD. $1645.
~ST:W~ Now C•ro -BILL YATES
Partialeam,., Attintion G.l.'s VOLKSWAGEN 3f,mo miln, Rebuilt e.....i-..-.: .. va1•-•--d '"'...,.. ""'1~1.;-of ,.; ...... , an auto-.uo.M "' """' still warranty. New tires. .,...._..,. ~-San J Ca · trano St.P. eau 548-7949 mobile aftrr retuniing from uan pis
oveneut We at Barwick 837-4SXl/493-4SU/09;mt
'65 VW. Sq. Bk. 1500 S lmporta would like to extend 'fi6 CHEVELLE SS • 427 hi·
CHRYSLER
'65 CHRYSLER. New Yorker.
One owner. No reuoo1.ble
otter refuMd. 901 W. BaJboa
al.Yd . Apt Ne. a ...
CONTINENTAL
. Xlnt mnd. New tirtt. our heartiest cona:ratulatlons performance eng. Ht>adet'I,
S899 * 66-2'l9S for a job well do.ne. Let us Hays clutch, mags, SHI of· ** '64 CON11N_ENTAL. full
LARGE help .elect your new car or fer. 673-4281 pwr, air cond. AM/FMI
..... bU Call ..::::_::::..;::::~,..:...~~ radio only SUOO. Cal
SELECTION -automo •. for... '61 CORVAIR Moma 2. dr. 963-1087 pointm~t. 546-4052 or suto. SDI or best otter. ,:;:;;:,:::=::=====
of vw 494-9773, Ph; 548--1440 "'AIR CAMPERS -----1=,.,-°"~.~0--COR• -Avie Lu1lng 9110 · · Harbour ·v.w. '-'.""'"'.-1 ;;,;;LE=A"-s-E-.-'-.11'-" 1m':.~o!,!i.'· ~~r;;.,.-'64 coRvA1R .....-.,... Std. trans., R.H. C8fl9.001)
'"'' AtmlORIZED '10 Chev, V8, Custom El CL '65 CHf;VELLE
SALES 6: SERVICE miDo Picltu.p. Radio, turbo. Air cond, l owner
HUNTING'ION BEACH hydro, pv.T steer, DK! ml'1. * 962-0396 * BILL YATES
. lB'lll BEACH BL., M2"'"3S $89-pet' mo.., p, dillC brakt>s. "''""'"' Stl-" ~-
OU H Co'ST '62 '-n.L• J., '-""• '-'uviue VOLKSWA~EN
VW ... is;~u~Nck S CATR LEMING ~s·s.J_~l4 or best oile r. 32852 Valle Road
San Juan CaplstranO
837-4800/4934511/4~2'l&l
-;66 Ox'vair 500.
Call 644-UlC 300 W. Cat Hwy, NB. "5-n.82 ,_ vw, Good cond ••is or --"""-'".:.-..:&.:.-w ____ ........ _.:.-_ CHEVELLE 'r.6 SS 396. Xlnt
°"" ~ Condition. Private .Party.
* 833-<1646 """ * TIME FOR ,.,.,.,.
MOVING! Must a:eJ.l '62
Chevy Biscayne 1 1 a t i o n
wagon. $400. 548-d
2 dr. 3 spd, 110 eng.
342:1543
'6.1 VW, front end damaJM,
Make offer.
9fiZ.1'184l or 545-6.719
'64 YW
Convertible
On.nae with brand qew p&is-
ley top Ir; brand new e~.
Lie. OYJ798.
$11"
CHICK IVERSON
YW
549-l'.131 Ext. fi6 or 61
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
'OOSTA ME.SA • ·•-~.~:--:=:-,--,"""~-63 ·VW BUG
Red beauty, Exctflent condl.
tion. New valve job fll!lall
dowm wlU tin. put. p(y, Dir.
Call Phil art 10 AM 540-JlOO
or 4.94-1029.
RARE '64 VW double cab
pickup. X'lnt cond, Extru.
'16-24<9
'68 VW Sedan, Ille blue,
23,000 ml, radio, 1urnoof.
$1.395. * 546-1095
1967 vw .. Good cond.
$1100 or ht"st oUu.
MW21T
1J87 VW Sedan, blue, lood
c:ond. $975.
548-5168
1963 vw --
New pa.int I dean $600.
54&-1671
Q VW. f;Jccellt>nt cond ition. mw PAINT. 646-4756 aft
l:!O.
VOLVO
VOLVO .
ANN~Y
SAU
1'11 Da MO
''142"' •...•• •4 ••• $2'91
t ..,.eed. njfto ll hH.ter. •
(TIO. 1800 E Cpc_ tor dell•· ecy. O\.irWu de! SpedaillL
DEAN LIWIS
U. HarbJr, C.M. ...._
IC
Cj)UICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT ADS
''4 CORVAIR MONZA
Reasonable * 64.Z-3826
'6.1 IMPALA. 4-dT auto. A/C,
clean, Asking $100. CORVETTE 008-7003,
DAILY Pn.oT DIME • A
-LINES cost you. just pen-
nle5 a day.
·~ VE.Tl'E • N~ 327, 4
epd. AM/FM. Michelini,
mag11, 2 tops. $1500. 494.-6863
U .... Cera 9'00Ustcl C•rs
• 1600'1
0 2002
• 2500
WE HAVE THE
BEST SELECTION OF
BMW's • 2800
IN ORANGE COUNTY • 2800 cs
0 ALL COLORS
e ALL MODELS
W• ha•• • financ1ng plan to fit
your ~udfet. Come lh ond talk
with one of our experienced
counselors. e IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
'62 FIAT c ...... rtilll •. ,,,f.ct
ft•11tport1ti•11 c•r.
M1eh111le1lly tiptl
IG.FN-1641,
'69 vw
• p ...... 9., .... ,."· r... SAVE "''' 111w r1dil) tlre1. ™• ),111 it f1tlorv '""
'64 vw
-.1tli•. ht•l•r. Frtthly
p1i11td, A· I fft1eh•l'l fr.•I
c•Mliti•11. JtltM Je lew .-11 -·1 Nii..-. ffl
............ T&M MOTORS -.. 114Ll l OPIN SUNDAY)
IHI fOAIDI N· ••on ILVll.
Y, I lk. I. el IMch I fft.
U 4·2214 lfZ·555 I
I·
'
A• .... ilM
"' •
•
19ff CONTINENTAL MK Ill
0111., 6,0()0. tl'lil11 e11 fhi1 pt11,ti9• I I/lo•
,..,o\il1. f,.,,.,. ee11,.1i¥1bl1 e.tt1. A aoh1
Royc1 tt1lllt·i11 IXXS-1001,
$6995
.1961: fOltD Ml/ST ANG
l 1llli•.-,II••*•'• 111+1,..,1tic ft•1u111iuie1t
feo"e111i1•1 6°1.yl. '"'i111. l •111tlf11I litht ,,...11, IWZX·llJI.
$1895
1969 OPIL ltALLYI COU~I
Sport1 j. •co11otl'llt•I lltht f~'" witft
b11r.k i"f1rl1r. l 1dlt, h1•llr & folll'.llM•tl
tr1111 . 14.000 tl'li .. 1xxv.011J 1.
$1995
1969 MERCU~Y MONTEGO MX
R1i lo, h11l1t, 111tom1lr., p•••r 1l11rin t
& ,.;11yl +op. Li9ht lil11t . IYEW.t2S) .
$2495
.1967 IUICK RIVIERA
ll11ht 9&1111 111t•rior '"' 1triki119 P•reli,..,1111
l11i•riot, Full p•W••· 1611.K-4161,
$2995
· 1969 CH EVROLET VAN
Th• 'op11l•r Sporhm1" •P•tl•I with liit
1i11 •vli11d1r •"9'"' l thr11 1p1•i tr1111•
1t1it1io11 !<11616Cl.
$2195
1961 PONT IAC VENTU.ltA
2 io1r h•~to•. F•r.t. ,;, c111lllitio111i &
(DO••• wi11lllow1 pl111. A ao.y c., ... , •••CV•
ti~• e1r. 1104·)171.
$2795
1968 PONTIAC' BONNEVILLE
T,-o llloltl' li1~t1p with f1et.rv •ir r.011lllif.
l i1ht t•llll with t•1i i11t1tl•r I WX4r621 I.
$2795
1969 flRf llltD CONVERT.
5p•rlrli11t r•lll. e111t.m hl1elr 111.lt ri•t &
lo(D. Fief, 1ir, po-r 1t11r.· i hr1k11, A ·
h1,d 11 fi11i m•d1I llMl·OlJ ).
$2995
1970 MUSTANG MACH I
F1el, t !P co11lll., pow•r tte1rint,--ilt v.1,
1t1t10 t,,,, A ll.0U1 Roni tr1it. 4,000
1t1I. l•c:1pt. 11vf"t· { 071 ·ACNI .
1965 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER
2 .leor h1rdl1p. F•.lt. el.-& 011ly. 51 ,000
ml. eR 0th l11•11ri•111 "'""ctr h1tl 1. (ll'l'M·
1101.
$1595
1970 GRAND PRIX
S+tre• FM.J.M, f1tf•'l' 1ir e111dit., powtr
wift41ow•, "i11yl tep. 1011·1101,
$4795
•
/!?j ROY CAR VER
~RO LLS -ROYCE -2925 HARllOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA
5•6-44-4'4
"SPECULIZING
IN
, QlJl\Ll'fY''
'70· RIVIERA
MANUFACTU~EaS• CAl !USED!
PLUS I MORI TO CHOOSI •l OM
AT SIMILAl SAYINGS
PRESTIGE CARS
AT
SE NSIBLE PRICES
1969 CONTINENTAL
2 Dt. M.T. Vi11vl top, 111th1r l"l1rior, 11111 po•••· fie·
+ory 1ir, tilt wh1al, power door lor.k1 , low, low r11!1119,.
19411Al6076l).
.$4995 • 1968 CHRYSLER
JOO 1 Dt. H.T. F11ll pow1r,.f1ctory 1ir, 1l1r•o J.M.FM ,
'1plit hench •~•t. "l11yl roof, e111lom chrom1 whe•h, rt ·
cli11 i111 ,,,1, •ft. (YRYOl 1 ).
$2995 • 1968 CHARGER
2 CN. M.T. I 1.w111r, loc•I t•'· F1r.lorv 1lr, VI, •1110·
tl'l•ti<. r1die, li11ter, pow1t 1te1ri119, pow•t br1k•1. "i11vl
roof. IX0A4.1 I.
• $2395 • 1968 CHRYSLER
TOWN &. COUNTRY
W190R. VI, •11f11,..,1tic, r1lllio, h1•t•r, powtr 1lteii"<J·
powar lir•kt•, f•r.tory 1lr cemfitieni119, roof ti ck, 1lc;,
$3195 •
I
' 1968 BUICK .
I . ' WILDCAT
' Lic1Uy o-•i cir. Full pow•t, f1 cto.., 1lr co"i llio11h1g,
1'¥1 to,, c1i11fo"" .. 1 .. ..,1 iRlttior, Jwtl go,,1ou1 . fllllEJl,
(
$2695 ••
UICK In . C STA
..... l_ME~
'64 PLYMOUTH
4 dt. 1•d•11. V.I , l\llOJl'll tiC.
tr•111mi11io", t1dio, he•ltr,
11 i1 sp1ej1I. IS MM29l)
$493
'6'4 FORD
2 Door h•rilOJI. v.1, 111!0.
lr1111., 1lr cortelitlo11i119,
JIOWI• 1t11ri119, r1lllio '""
h1•l•r. !OSK•50 l
$899
'67 CHRYSLER
I 1/.1, pow1r 1t11ri119, r1dio,
h••••r, wh11l co,.1r1. (UIM
11))
$999
'63 1/J TON
Ch1wrot1t Pick iip. 6 cvlr"·
d1r. J •P••' .,.,.,., ,.~uo
l h•••••· !R79641l
$679
'68 SQUIRE
.v.1, 1uto. tr•"'·· f1clory ·
1ir Col'ldltio11i119,' JIOWlr
1ft1ri119, ••clio, h11t1,.,
whitew1U lir11, tinl1d 9l111,
wh11I r.o"•"· IYPTOl 11
$2699
'68 TORINO
1 Door H1rdtop. v.1. 1ulo.
tr1111 .. f1r.torv 1it r.o..di·
lio11i119, pow1r 1!11ri11"1.
pow•• fdi1c) br1\11, r•cl io.
h11t•r, Yi,.,yl •oof, li"t1d
911,1, "!h,,I cow•n. !XNIC ,
lSll
$2293
'6S T·BIRD
1 Door H1 rdlop, v.1 . 11110.
"•"'" f1 clorv 1ir eonili· ·
tio11in9, po••• 1t11ri119 , ••·
dio, ~••i•r. whit1w1ll tir•t, ·
tinl1d 91111, wh11I r.o"''._
! PlZli&I J
$1789
'6S MUSTANG
Co11p1, 6 eyl .. 1tielc 1hift,
t1dio, ~t1t1r. INPUS•OI I 5983
I 1970 Demonstrator
SALE
All 1t7t D.men1tr aten
a..-r.mft'M frem .. rv.
Ice et appru . 6 I t O
mil•L Th ... 1t 70 '•l'd1
ha ve he4 t h•lr 6000
mile ch•k·up ar1d a re
reMy for Immediate , ...
llwwy.
All Model o Te
ChooM From
Mett Cara Pully
l 11ulppM
• T·l lnls' • TerlftM
e Muat•"I•
e G1laa:l•1
e '•Ml LTD'S
DUNTON
FORD
2240 S. Main
SANTA ANA
546-7076 : I
'!. ,
(
I
•
I
I '
l
I u. •• w• •• pe
lal
•b
po
(
(
m
4&
ho
W> ..
26
<& .. ..
•• 31
B
M
~
"
-.
. (;oueentration
' '
DAILY ~ILOT· ...... llr 01'91 Sdl......-
'Robby Miller, 13 (lop), studies the si!IJl!tion {rom 1iis bike. while
James Smith;8 (center) and Scott McKeruie, 13-(Tigbt). devote their
attention to a game .of Stctdium Clieckers. The ,adiofl1 took. place
Tuesday at <losta Mesa PaIX, indicating, perhaps. tbat not' all o!1he ~wers of. concentration are <level.oped in_ tile .schoolroom, . .. .r,..,:.:_r.r ....... c...: ~!'. ·. ··i···~:i' -:-r: ,·:"tP.!·.\:~;':"!'-.... ·-"I· ...
SJ\ MAn,Gets Ltf e -i ~ •
ln-·~lJild:.Be~ti'.tlg ·
.iJ Santa, Ana man wbo la~ · lell .the
cprtrilom to dea:rihe bow be repeatedly
. t his flve•year-old step&on over a
r period, was sentenced Ti1es4ay
t '1 if e im~ment for t..b e .boy's
ennelh· tloyd. Walkins, .23,. pleaded
ty: tiefore Superior Court Judge> Ken-n~·'Yrllliams after. weeka Jn ·which ,~
wajted in vain for a better deal 111
refurn for such a plea. . ,
•Diarict -Attorney's -prooecuton-·have-·
been-adamant in insii:ting that Watkins
take his chances in triaI. He ended
negotiatiOOB Tuesday by deciding to plead
lll!llly to first degree murder ii the
dc'ath sentence were eliminated 'fr:om
the verdict.
' ' ' w-..... ~·!all Feb. 9 -
'tha· beotltt llOOy ol Cftristo;her J.-
Clarke Was found ton a blood-soaked
bed in a '.'Santa Ana motel. .
' Christoplrs two brothetsttestlliec[ in
mwDcipal <OUrt that Watkins .boeame
anary With ttlie boy Jar splabing water
-Imm the both tub oolo· tlle -floor and
beat him .for what they estimated was
more than. an hour. 1
Watkins ·himseH ·admitted tllat he had
eariier-beaten the ywngster at regular
lnt~als throughout the day.
Judge, Williams ordered Watkios.com-
mitted to. €hino State prison where be
will undergo psychiatric tests. It.ls likely,
court 'officials stated, that he will be
later placed in San •Quentin prison.
Busy Schedule Precedes
Nixon's Friday Arriva·l
By JOHN V ALTERZA
ot .. 0.-.. '"" .,.,,
President Richard Nlioo's arriYal at
the Western White House helicopter 'pad
early Friday night promises to be a·
weary day rfar the ·Chief Ezecutlve after
a day d whirlwind conferences and ap-
pearances 1n the Plains and'Rocky Moun-
tain states.
The President, scheduled to arrive at
about 8 p.m. at the White House com-
pound with his . wife, Pat, and elder
.
Colliiion-Puts
Countian in Coma
Frm'1 Wtre Serv;ice1
BUJOMINGToN, Ind. -A,Santa,Ana
man was gradually emer&ing from a
48-hour coma· here today ,--fo&wmg·~a
headon· car-truck collision that kUled two
women and Injured a male relaUve.
Thomas Baker, 27. was listed in
satisfactory condition, while Hugh Baker,
26. ol lndianaPolls, the driver of th<
car involved, was in critical condition
according to hospital spotesmen.
Judy Simmons, 211 and Carol McKen-
ney, 26, both or Indianapolis, were klUed
instantly in the crash on Indiana Highw~
37 north ol Bloomington. ·
Ttaflic ICCkfent invest1gator11 aaid
B;iker pulled out to pass another vehicle
MonQay and sm,a$1ed headon Into !he
oncomtn1 truck.
dau'ghter, ·Tricla., Is ~ to "'°8fer
with five governon, the be9d Cit ·the
·Mormon Church and drOp io1M •rodeo
throoghout the dayj
But as a respite .ner fns anival
on. 'the Soutb Coast, White House aides
said today the Nlioos plan a jaunt
up to Ange! Stadiwn SUnday' to watch
!he Angels·Washinglon Senaton llueball
game.
Friday's zig.zag bop -the natiOn
will start with conferencta ln Fargo,
N.D., with1he govemon: from.ft•e.plains
states -Norlh and Soolh Dallllta, Min-
nesota, Iowa and Nebraska.
Secretary of !he hlterior Waller· J.
Hickel has ,been added to the lilt of
top aides and cabinet members in the
meeting with the governors.
Alier the talks in hrs•, N-will
board Air Force One again for a hOp
to Salt LU:e Cliy, Utah, where he will
l1IOlt wilh Joseph F. Smilh, the ~I
onJie '(]jijri:h " Jm' Chtilt o1'1Atltt
Day Sainb. The Mormon church will
be l'elebrating .its aJDJaj Pioneer' Day
Friday. The arrival will be at t :45
p.m. lltah time.
The holiday Is the JJlrd anniversary
of the discovery of \he Soll Left ~Y
by Brigham Young. 1t i§ ., state
observance.
From that conference Nixon will join
his iffJllily for a• «rop-in viait to the
Pioneer Day '51ampede ,.0000. bot they
""'' no( atay for ~ e<il'< affair, apotesmen said. ,
Once !he party )lciards tilt Presidential
(Se\.Jllli:ON P ... '>
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WEONESDA Y ·AFT£RNOON, :JULY 22. ·1970
"'°'· .. "'""'. ~............ .. l .
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.L.h:~ ft!#.~
SB-ize 1e . ...
• ATIIENS'(UPJ.) -Sli Arab IM"Il•
today seized an Olympiq Airw• jeWner
wilh 58. penoos aboard and. liirul<ned
to blow, it up 1f teveJt At&bf perrlllas
were not released frun Athens jail$.
Hoors later thiy beian ~ the
pasSengers, some of their deJJ.1aiwb a~
paroiKly-.
A:ristctle, ·Onassis, oWner of Olympic
Airways, oUer«l himself .aa a hostage
for the paaengers at one point but
the guerrillas refused and demanded in-
stead that a high official <i the Greek
governffiezit accompany them back to
Beirut where the flight originated.
Deputy Premier Stylianos. Pattakos
personally negotiated with the guerrillas
by radio from the Athens control tower
and was reported to have persuaded
them to reduce their demand s. Shortly
arterwards the guerrillas began releasing
the passengers two by two.
Onassis sped to the airport i" the
morning shortly after the hi]acking and
talked with the guerrillaa over the airport
control .. radio. He, retumecl in the af~
ternoon for a 9eCon4 cmwmation,
lhorlly belore'the•litu""'" began easing.
The guerrillas were armed with
macbineium and hand grenades and
tbreMed&I to blow up ~ &1:: with
au on board <Unleu GreeCe their
comrades, jailed· for terrorlatk: llCtivities
agalmMarael.
., -,
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By UaU.d Pna .. ..,.._,
Egyj,t flu ....,n<d p>lill,.\y, to , the
· U'.S, Middle E•t peace·-'8,,Ualted
Arab ' Ro:pubfie. <i!k:)!ile iaJd 'today in
Cairo: lsrel,' reported reoi!y· to 'nject
the plill, .... t Its -·-·against
Egyplion Suez •CaniJ posiliJM for !he
62rx11comecutive day ~ay.
ESYPt said one l!raeu Skyhowt w"!l
"hit." Israel said all ita planea returned
safely, .
Egypijan foreign minister Mahmood
Riad met briefly during the aflemoon
with Donald Bergm, dlief of the U.S.
mission in Cairo, to hand him Egypt's
formal reply to the U.S. plan that calls
for a three-month cease-fire along the
canal. Israel lhlnb this will pemllt an
Egyptian buildup for an attack across
the canal.
Government officials said the reply
was "JJOSWve" and explained.that meant
Egypt indicated Jt was ready to diSCU$
the American prq>oeal further aod not
reject it out . of hand. A U.S. peace
plan late ·last year was turned down
' ..
They llnl demanded that Greece
releue t,ro Arabi tcbeduled to go on
trial FridaJ' for a bomb ezpkJlion at
the \araeli El Al airiinol Glllce last
November. Then the)'! demanded the
reJeaae of two Arab -~ sent Spedal to 1lle DAILY PILOT camped·,~e\iqi1,ht.:nfilill! much .of'tt.l
to ~ In Moreb If' an .attack on. 5A\1 LUIS OBISPO -st.t;mly warned a-<•Wlll>whlch !he ataJ:le<!. • an~~ ~:..,...;11., by police about the perils or pedallq The' perky pedaler who plan> 1 a
all'f!td to reduce thdr demands but in an orange bikini, unicyclist Jacquie •magazine artiC:Je Uout lier ex~
did not aay· whal c:oncessJons they had Dougla1, 21, continued her journey to ·lefl • or .•·~'. bac~pac~'11t!h
made, An olllclal said the guerrlllaa San Jl'r-900 toward !ht. pictumque Jrlendo in Sa1ia .Bari>ora -~hiding
fmally aped ID ...cm.. lo Beirut with volr,onic walley today. . hen 1hiclt diary, '
1 Red ~ and the five-Mi.fir Douglas,,. of 1518 Rivenide 'Plect. . She'sijuat.ecribbfing'Clll scrape•ot paper
man ere# -.i as ~· ·eo.ta; -., · wu• atoppell, by ; iawlDeD ·
The ......... -.. '127, WU refueled1 Mondl!y -she arr!Vi!d, ia•,S..la JlOW, ' I ', I~~ tO JlOlrut whet>e" offldata;, '.M>til; '""8&g•tlfe dloelin&'-~ ,Mlia• Dooglaa Ieft·Orange County elil!• ~1 -'---Similar 1t ·days• ago. t>labni, ng ,a1 slx-~~k :~;{~ --·-• .... ,~ ' · , · s.n ~ and r .. ~v.,. i1bo • were -r<d Io" She spent rTIOll .of 1""'aday tDutinC 'A•I•~ ta«to' tttum 'to~wOrtt dri;i,.;.' ..-Dllnalcd• and Amman airport>, and. lhe:,&onla -a, Coonly Fair at-!he -.... pri~l\Jl'TUabty,·Cairo. la"1P:ounds u,, Santa Maria, wb«e :the • delivery truck. for a N~rt rh, ~1 ofticlrls said the guerrillas ~ autq parts firm.
would Oy bick fo Beirut to await word , trnlm .she ·~ ~he'r ~a Urrie
on ·the Gr!i!I< government'• decision on .n...: · · ' d B .,_ --flghi.et!Jog, hllwever, t!ie lr!J> may lake ~-~ vversexe 3D0008 leaa 'lhari her alloj''"' 't•~ and tnve' the release of \)le seveni impa.._JC\I com-1 ..-:u UlJ'C '
1Jlandos. In the meantbne the s.1< • 1 rate o( ~ "'·•:~1 IJlf~dQr":· Y !.l1··::
passengers '""' being released. .Sent . lo Denmark • S0me . seoiions , '#" P.,:llic Co 1 a·t Government IOW'CtS said they later\ , Jfli:hway are Po«1ed as freew.aY• -bar·
reduced their demands to Immediate. , ·OSLO tAPl -~KriJUan&en Zoo fn ,rinlt'. ~trt¥ and cycll.!ltl allke ..,
freedo ror three commandoa and the ""'therp Norway rouild r...r baboon.,_ ao 'he has Ileen ~ to reaort lo 1
re1eue d the rest within 30 days! lr\1 ,Gl'\e :!¥le .and .three remale--lOo.derboP--·aome hltcb-'hfking'."
tho •-they 1reicl an lr"'!~ '.a\ro•ve,..exuani',anci si11J11*1 theni, lo • She i> 11,..l!own 1•·1311 In l'raveler's '
womaa! :, .Who/ -· m.: linil he<' •Den;;\.r~, 'Wherlo UM; lllit"!I' tn oQch checu and plans In eat only every
huabanlf: She .. ,.ruslied.,tA th< ai,,;odl m•ttdrs Is more i'<laxed, fllli·-IPIJ!Or 'otlx!f day, lhua c:Ootribuling to her &<>al
first....W....talila .,.,, • • 1 ,• Verdem Gina ·~-1 ' c:lk>Jfua a·Ie'w•podilds, •
. • • ~ J ~ ' .. ~ ~'" / •• ,. ~t '~ t" '/ -'• • I •
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;~~~~~~~~~~~-... ~6~~~~--~·-·•--·•·-·~·~\llilll&•~,~~:_"~~·~··"-·~·-~""""~''-·~·~•~·~i.1~'-:J._._"~··~·~~4;_ .. ·_'_,~~~~·s...:'-'..1'-·~~~~~~~~~.....:i:~~---~~--~~.:!...
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Z ~llY PflOT s
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Expwion
, ~ r
Of.Airport
. nier·S~dy -.
By 'l'llM BAJa..iW
Of .. ~ ..... stttf •
UIUrnale expansion of Orqe County
;~h>oit _jet lrafflc to three times Ill
~ ~ .Js one of a aer~1 of
iillo!W' ,pJa~ recommeiidaliO.s being • lltudled today by Airport Manager Robert
,. Bftllnahan and the county Airport Com-~· Jnlaslon. ' ~ But that expansion, indica
1
tes a rn-
P'IP report prepai<d by Ille Ralph M.
.,._ Co: of Loo AD&e1u,.-cbUi&o
on the creation or a suppletneJ1tary
l!ld.. whl~ .would handle overflow
-1&e eztslU., llcllity. -·•
'"f evtnt, SUpentiwl wire !lmed
• -1'our .1"11! preoentatlaia Tiladay
of the ''1-I0,000 atudy o! ~ 111Nlet
plan's -pbue, flllllt aervlce at -o.._ 'i:oun1y .Airport should ho llmlted
uitll addlllol>ll) "abort haul" jet lalldi111
lleJda are In operation In Orange~·
Su~s. obviously boggled by the
a mass of technical data and complicated
recommendations contained In the bulky
brochure called for a 30-day •tudY ol
the Paraons plan.
'Ibey will set dat.es for public htariap
on the airport is.!ue sometim& next week.
Tbe board must decide by ·Aua.' 21
whether. it will exp8.ld or cut back
~!• OI' ·maintain jet triffic at Orange County
""Airport Dr P"1 the •pl& • day' perialty
·tri set for delay in implementation of the
,~-Pmons proposals.
•!•,: 'If the. ~arsons plan is adopted and
"' ffi&hts from Orange Cowlty Airport ex-
pud from the ~t 20 dally
-m• depor!lns to 61 by 19'17, some 1511 homes .rl>.~•the airport ud Upper Newport
~ !"1 ~ of the nm...,. may be bulldo>-
10· M~ ol, the way.
x<•· 'Ille board -"' have to find the
v:UCO\!lldDble fllndl for lilcb -condenmatloa ;.i,.., woijJd ' olio hive lo 1111 the COlfa
1n,lri,.lved In the' prOpoaed l!OlllldprooUng
of another · 385 homes in tbe vicinity
.m.of the airport.
rl1u Paaoll§ repreaentati.ves, Hid land ac-
n• quisltloa a~ IOUnd proofing are the
only methods by whidl tile county could
..:=~ply with the state law wbidl becomes I efloctlyj ,Jn J-y. ~
The ncommandatioos -t a 11,IOll
fine for pllola "1lo ex<:eed lhe iiolae
L hlJPICt level above residential areas,
based on decibel ratinp of am:raft,
:. Ult mnn11er.o1 cpUy fllchtJJ and lllo
•
lln!e of ·da( When "'• Tlolajioo '"""' pl • . .,. • ~ ace.,. '
Jt was estimated In tbe Parsons plan
!hot 18.% million would be needed for
acqui3ill<ll tl land and sound p<Oofing
of Newport lm>es that ""°"' be affecled
by tncr-d oolJJe levels. It auggested
the! fede<al funda mlcl>t be available
for the county, ' I : , 1
Other 1pendiJli,..~endaU<lllS Iii
Ille Parsoos brocliuie ~~ the .ouU.Y
of IU mHlloo Tu explonil lite termlnlJ
from its pre..nt, 1eve1 of m.ooo -en to t.'r';'liilllion by lllllO. II Is also ~ that the county
apend 18.115 mlJllOo )o double the prlyale
aircraft runwaY.1 ~ t!Je air ca.rrfef
runway, .move· ,the OX!trol . tower 'ana
make additional improvement. which
W'OUld eUmiuate air ' traffiC" .delay and
open Orange County Alrp\lit )o larger
J«s ' " Pians sub11\i1:1<d by •the. Panona
organlution ~Id umtt a1fPO"t ...
pamioo to an dgbt pOr<opt Mioual ,In·
crease ln the • number di ~enger.1
handled at the faclll/; unlll, li\t mubnum
of three and I 'haif (million .pesaengen
a year is reached. ,
Orange County . Abpott c 1l r r e n t 1 y
handles one m• ~ a yfllT.
It bn been ~-Ii..,~ rau of
12 to 14 percent each year.
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DAILY PILOT
NewJMrt le•lri H•lltl ....... _.
IAltne .. ,, ......,. Yel!-r
C"" Ml'WI S. Ch•••••
~MIO€ COAST 'I.I''-""'"° C'OMf'ANY
.~ Ro'o1rt N. W114
'"'•"'"'' ..... p~ J•ck lit. C111l1v
Vi(I Prc•\o9111 ..... Gocr>tt1I M•~.-;Jl'f
'' Tt..111111 ic,,..;1
EdlW Tl.o••• A. ,..,,11;~, • ......,..ec111tr
lltlc).1'4 '· Ntll ...,. °""" °"""'' ldltW
Offlao
( ... MtM; Jld W.11 .., ...... ,......,., .,,,~: nn wnt a1111ott ~ UolllN twcll< m ,., .. , ,,_
"""''lllCI""' llffd\! 11',J l•Kfl •• ...,."' SH ei-M: al lrl..-11'1 El CtlflN R•I
I
Wtdnnday, Jiffy 21, 1970
i\'ewport Fire Scene
DAn.Y 'II.Of llell Plttle
·County to· Vote.
·()µ~id Transit
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Orange .C.Ouaty ' ftten· .. will .l!a~e the
last word on the propoHd creation of
a r'pid lrua1Ldlab1cl. '
County aupervlsora ""'*' ~sly 14 that effect Tuesday alttr · llitenlni
IQ!' more. than two houra to 1dtlmol\Y
in which .a number d wlbleuu'urged
iaelulloo of the mua tranaporlallon bsue
ob tbe Nov'ember baUol ·
'lbat wlll ollly be poalble II the Local
Apncy Formation "'9inmluion approved
creaUon of such an agency at ita Aug.
JI meeting. Bµt It WU noled by the
board Tu<aday that nJe<UoG at that
level seems highly unlikely.
If voters decide in November to en-
dorae an Oranp eounty Rapid Truait
Oil~ it wOl!id be ~ by five
dlreoforl repruenut>g; the C0111ty, lhe
ciUes and the l!llbllc. Its bouodarles
woullf exa<llj coindd6 'W I t h '!"°'< of
Orange County.
team and repre.wentatives or several
chamber1 of comrnerct.
Supervisors were urged by represen·
latlVH of Orange County's Stamp Out
Smog committee to qulckJy endorae rapid
transit proposals and bnmedialely cut
the number of 1 m o g producln& auto-
mobiles on county hi&h••ys.
Supervbor Robert Baltln joined them
with the comment that be considered
mus transpartatioo to be the county's
grealest problem.
"Half of our reaidents do JtOt drive
because they are too young, too oJd,
too poor or too dJsabled," he said. "They
desperately need llOme kind or
transportation systan."
But Robert Jaffe, a Newport Beach
city traffic ugbteer, suggested that the
comfy watt for two years to gather
data on whether tbe diatrict wu the
belt answer to transportalioG needa.
"I fear the begn!Ung slolpllcity of
lhe tranalt dialrict propoeal," Jaffe said.
Firemen mOp' up ·after ·explosion oi fumes and re-
sulting fire damaged two Newport Beach homes
Tuesday. No injuries were reported as a result of
the blaze, which caused an estimat~ $15,500 in
damage to th~ garage and the apartment over the
g.rage at the home of N~rt library employe
El6lse Luther. 1730 E. Ocean Blvd. Roof of apart-
ment across the alley also was-dlimaged. The fire
burned through a major telephone cable, cutting
service to the Ba1boa Peninsula and Laguna Beach.
Tbe 0CRTD 'fOU)d have IDthority to
levy up to a flve«nt tu on county
residents and place bond iasuea on the
balloL It would also have the right
to eminent domain and be able to
coordlnale ill planning with other
regional systems in Southern Callfor.i'a.
Much of Its planning hu been earrled
oijt by 0\0 Orange County R9lcf Trualt
Committee which WU formal in 1968
to study implementation of legislation ·
enacted thai year.
Newport Dunes'
Operator Keeps
50-year Contract
• • •
Angry llf esaParents Seek
Return to 'Traditional~
By JOANNE REYNOWS
01 !flt Dlllt ,.Ult S!tll
Members of the Newport-Mesa board
of education Tuesday night asked district
8"jterlnt<ndent William CuMlng!Wn to
meet with COru Mua High Sdlooi
pwents after an angry groupr of them
ll>owed up IO proleSt the use of modlllar ·
scbeduling at ~ school.
Boaro president Bud Franklin asked
Cunningham and !'lalslant superinlendent
Norman Loa\.' to meet with any in-
terested parents of Costa Mesa students
when if became apparent the protesting
parents were not aware some of their
demands had been met.
Harold Marsha1l ·led off the parade
of protesters when he, presented a peti4
tlOn ilflled by 431 parents of hl«h ""1ool
and junior hlgh school students in lbe
Costa Mesa area. ,
'!be ee«Uon, asked -.i memller1
to return lhe school 'lo .. ttaditlonal !dted~llrull' by ll!e end .'!f 1970. lr.<ltfled tn 1 thJa -demand wu • return to use
of lllte appro•ed tut books, regularly
asstc,ned homework, regularly issued
gradts, a closed campus, reguJar testing,
a conventional dress code and the aboli-
Uon Of any pass-fail courses.
ButJonDer Mesa High Principal Frank
Lopes· bad i:"l!Ofted in June that· plans
iwere beb;lg-made to 'mike changel. in
.:tbe con!Wenial program. .
.lt that -Um<; he Indicated Costa Mesa wWld ~te '.as a cloeed campus, w4)t
.the . wi!!tiulty ~ pfiyil~es !or' sepior,s
that ~ ·lh<m. IJ•, ,bo said Ola\ U>e · ffelhmen ' and sophomores would' llave
• 1att increase oi scheduled time.
• 1 ~ Problems in the: computerized
.1~ ·system were being worked out
;and.~~ would be issued more oJ:ten -~_under the ttaditinna\ system, he .aa!d. ; Cwmingbam pOinted out to ~ gr00p
Tuesday night that the state does not
appro,ve text books for bi&h schools and
that the district has • review board
to approve texts foc use in the hl&h
schools.
Mrs. Fran Newman, uaistant principal
at Me'8 High, said today only the begin-
ning. art course and th:@•dri.ver ~ucat.lon ·
coune were offered on I pass.-fall basis.'
The art class is elective but driver ·
education is required by the state, she
said. .
Board memers listened Tuesday night
as half a dozen parents stood at the
podium to express their dilpleasurt with
the system that baa been med ;for two
years at the llChooL ' •
Robert Lindquist; one of the: J>f#eaJers,
said he wu not sure that "L<lpes' ~m·
mendatlona are .Olna to be aC(:tptible,"
but did not enJarge on hil comment,l
't'hen the fiOIJ speabr, ,Mr,. 1Jloria Slail~ GI CAmaliUo betllll a dloculsion
or a fonn of modular 'lcft"'ol.ing, used
in Ventura, Franklin cut lier short.
"You're not talking about a school
In our district," he aald. "If you're
interested in seeing how our modular
system· ii ·set up, that's fine, but con-
sid~lngtbat.~ don't Jive in this district
,or. pa;y , ~~·~re, .~re's not much
p11\'P<>se \a ibis di!IC\l!l!M>n." : Mrs.,' '11.na Sltnlkis, a regular critic
··of board JJQMciea,; also drew fire from
board members when she .spoke of her
:~t ·with what she described as their
fa,ilui~ fio act on any complaint.; made
by parents. ,
Franklin pqintedoout that he and Loats
,had .tak.a;i ac,tlon on her complaints about
the social studies packets which had
been wed at Costa Mesa. Board member
Mrs. M;irian Bergeson also noted that
she Was unable to find any evidence
·of Mrs. Simakis' wt~tten complaints.
From Pa9e l
GAG RULE IMPOSED ...
earlier portrayed him in press con-
fmncea aa a sell-etylecJ Devil worahiper 0derang~ by damaging doses 0 r
barbll)Jr~I& drop.
The UJree.dQy Grand Jury hearings
led lo Indictment of Hurd, plus Her~an
H. Taylor., 17, another tran s i en l,
Christopher C. "Gypsy'' Gibboney, 17,
or Portland, Ore., and Arthur C. Hulse,
16, of 11461 Dolan St., Garden Grove .
All are held without bail for their
alleged connection wlth the murder and
mutilation of Mrs. Brnwn on June 3
and the fatal beating of Je1Ty W. Carlin,
21, the night before.
Hurd, Taylor and Gibboney have been
linked by investigators to the slaying
of Mrs. Brown, whose body was found
In a shallow grave off the Ortega
Highway two weeks later, minus heart,
lungs and 1ef,t arm .
Hurd, Taylor and Hulse are. charged
with 'Clrlln's murder in a robbery -
the victim's third within a month -
that brought them less than $100, ac-
cording to initial police reports.
A· chunky brunette waitress, Melanie
M. Denlels, 30, of Santa Ana, was in~
dieted by the Grand Jury aa an acceasory
to both m11rders and a $25,000 ball wa:;
aet. Authorities expect to have h e r
available fcrr a Ume, however, since
ft ls eerving a 91)..day Orange COunty
Jail aeN.enct fOr a narcollcs violation.
Hurd wu onitrtd broughl back before
Judge Judie Nov. t for a sanity hearing
and Jury lrlal, for bis alleged role U,
the Brown and carlln kllllngs,
ProsecuUon antf' defense atb:lmt,vs
agreed to Aue. 1 ~s the arralgnment
date for Hulse, Taylor and, Mrs. Daniels,
alJowlng them to conltt:r in days ahead.
A bench warrarrt was lssutcl for Uie
arrest ol GlbbonOy, who ls-flghUng e1-
tr1dltion from Portland , where
authorities have bttn urged by Dislrict
\
Attorney Cecil Hicks to speed thinp:
up.
The gag rule prepared by Deputy
District Attorney Martin J. Htne1han
will prevent reporting of any further
infonnati on which woold come from any
source other than courtroom procedures.
The rules do oot affect what, up until
Tuesday, bas been published or inserted
into the public record.
Deputy District Attorney Heneghan
submitted the gag rµJe to Judge Judge
after presenting facts or tbt case to
the Grand Jury and reported)' cilllng
about 15 witnesses.
The lengthy roster of principals, at~
torneys and other authoriUe1 was sup-
plemented by inclusion of Santa Ana
Police and Orange and JUverside county
sheriff's depuUes .
Deputy Public Defender James Goff,
who represents Taylor, and Mrs. Brown,
had objected to the fact they were
left out. possibly indicating a loophole
in the order.
Wordin& of the gag warns anyone
mming under its juriadlctlon tb1t
statements made ouUide the court could
sway the proper, eventual finding ot
guilty or innocence.
Contempt of court citaUoDJ can be
imposed for any violation. '
The order itself states:
"This court ls aware of the necessity
to assure the defendants of a fair trial
and or the constitutional. guarantee of
a free press and believe I.hat they are
both compatible with reasonable restrk:·
Uons Imposed on prelrlal publicity."
"It further appttrs to the court that'
the diasemlnaUon by any means ol public
comrnunJcaUon of any o u t -et f • c o u r t
i;tatement.a relathtg to this case may
interfere with the cons:Ututional right
of th e defendants lo a fair trial and
disrupt the proper admtnlslratlon of
justice."
I
... ,_ ..
f'ro111 Pa9e l
NIXON .••
Jetline< in Ullb, the next stop will be
the ~ Corps Air Sta.llon at El
Toro where the President's helicopters
will be waiting for the last hop to
San Clemente.
On this latest visit to the seaside Span-is!l villa the President Will fqcus on talks
WJth a newly . created domestic council
headed by John D. Erllchman. Council
members will attempt to set 'federal
goals on a priority basis and will involve
several top-level advisen -Agriculture
Secretaf}' Clifford M. Hardin, Commerce ~tary Maurice Stans, George Rom· ney, IOCl)!lary of houaJni and urban de-
v'elopment, and offtclalJ oC tbe Office of
Economic opportunity.
Next Monday Defense Secretary Melvin
Laird will fly to San Clemente for a
day of discussioons with the President
on the fiscal 1972 defense budget. Deputy
Defense Secretary David Packard also
tTbe committee's aims have been. ei~ Preued at the creaUon of a d.lltriCt.
which would coordlaate the elilUng
fragmeOta of a public tran.sportaU01
system.
Commltlaa chairman Hubert C. Ferry
told the board that the district would
give the COW\ty a voice in development
of regional transit programs and enable
the group to sollcit funds from federal,
state, local and private sources for
development of tranait programs.
Backing creation of the district at
Tuesday's pubUC healing were represen-
tatives of several Orange County cities;
the ~ague Of Women Voters, the
American AlaociatlOn of University
Women groupe, a UCI·Project 21 study
From Page l
MIDEAST ...
will participate. William P. Rogers. Israeli premier Golda
secretary O~ State William Rogers Will Meir said June 29 Israel would not
'an-Ive ·Jaw1 next week for a meeti11g ' aeceii a limited cease-fire because UJat
on unspecified subjects, would permit an Egyptian buildup for
The Nixons will pack their bags on crossiDI
Aug. 3 for the trip back to Washington, a The ~~ circulation Tel Av Iv "
The trip will include a stopover in newspaper Maariv reported flatly today
Denver, Colo. Israel will reject the American initiative ~re, the President will 11.confer with although it has not yet formally replied
off1c1als of the state plapnlitg agencies to th~ American: i)rdpQsal. DlplOmattc
which coatrol flUICls for the feCler~I Crime sources had rePort~· a pOsstble rejecUon. ~ntrol and Safe Streets Act w~h pro-_ -:;q_·e ~aariv report came as Washington . ~ides federal grants. for local j~;~ited Egypt's reply and as diplomatic
lions to .upgrade their law\ ~nforcement sources in Tel Aviv 8 a Id the United
capabWtie.s. States and the Soviet Union .appeared
Atomic Commission
Records Red Blast
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Atomic
Energy Commission has r e c o r d e d
seismic ilignals from the Soviet Union,
presumably from an underground nuclear
blast.
1be agency said the signals originated
in the SemipalaUruik Nuclear Test Area
and were the equivalent of what woold
result from a blast in the 20 to 200
kiloton range.
A sinfully
practical glf t1
to be moving closer to agreement on
a limited cease-lire aloog the Suez Canal
front. ,
Israel has been trying desperately to
knock out Soviet.IJuUt SAM2 and SAM3
mi&!ile sites along the-canal and a
spokesman Monday said the nonstop at·
tacks had not been able to prevent
the Egyptians and Russlana from replac-
ing destroyed sites. 1'1.erefore, Israeli
sources said, anything short of a
permanent cease-fire ls unthinkable.
Political sources said Israel wall recall-
ing Washington Amball~dor Yltzhak
Rabin and U.N. Amba.uador Jooeph
Tekoah for consultatlorui,
It's an
Omega
watch.
Col Harry Byrd of Dallas .-.talned
bla SO.year contract to operate Newport
Dunes AquaUc Park in Upper Newport
Bay on a Ugbt 3 to l ~ TueldaY. by
the Orange Cowlty Board of SUpervtsors.
. SUpervlJJor David Baka', long a critic
of the pork operatiom, offered the ,._
jected mot1on which wou1d have cancel-
led the contract and thrown tbe ~a
tions open for new bidding.
In another followlnJ action. however,
the county board removed adminia'tra-
tlon of the lease from the county Depart·
ment of. Hatbon, Beaches and Parks
and placed It under jurisdiction of . the
Department of Real Property Services.
Baker fired the ope-rune salvo ln DUnes
arguments by declaring, "There is tre-
mendous potential in thi! lease and it
'is not being utili7.ed. This Dunes opera.
tion could be one of the finest of its lind
on the West Coast but all we have fro1n
I.he present concern is a 12-year hiStory
of non-performance."
The 50-year lease for the 89-acre facill·
ly was signed Feb. 5, 1958 and runs untU
the year 2008.
Baker repeatedly tangled wtth Byrd's
attorney Walter B. atafree u the~ ~or pointed to a record of Jil•ac-
tions against the lease holders In the
Jest 12 .year a and what he said were !'re-
peated adiustmenb of the lease m· the
favor of Newport Dunes."
Chaffee pointed out to Baker that:hi~
clients had complied with every demand
made by the county since the Ieue was
signed and remjnded the supervisor that
the concern had put $4 million into an
enterprise "from which he cotild have
walked away king ago." .
Chaff~ said there had been lltUe or
no profit in ruMing the Dunes col'lCt!·
sion and the operators had spent $131.;000
corTecting the deficiencies as first Point-
ed out "by a bunch of nitpickers who
submitted a list a mile long."
Current problems, Chaffee said, In-
clude the company's awaiting of the out-
come of a, ioning decision by the City
of Newport Beach. He predicted to :the
board that the ruling on July 28 will ~
in the Dunes' favor. ·
"It disturbs me that we don't hav,: a
better relationship," Chaffee to fd the
supervisors.
I
A beautiful gold bracelet Is a sinfully
luxurious gift. But a watch is certainly
practical. Particularly when it's an
Omega. In the world nf really fine watch·
es, the nam~d reputation of Omega
stand out. When Omega arUully conceals
one or their superb timepieces in an ex-
quisite bracelet, it becomes a sinfully
practical • gill. See our complete Omeaa
coijectlnn, 'trom $65.
CONVENIENT
T&RMS
' IANKAMERICARD
MASTER CHARGE
-c
_J. C. .JJ.Lf1np~rie6 Jeweler&
IUl NEWPORT AVE.
COSTA MESA
I
PHONE
541-340 I
24 YEARS
IN
SAME LOCATION
I
"
I,
'
'
Rantingion Deaeh
'
O<AIL.Y Pl\.OT ............
MEADOWLARK WARBL ES ALONG, WHILE ANONYMOUS NEIGHBORS SING THE BLUES
Meadowlark's
Night Flyers
Raisillg Ire
,.New rpnny ,pavemebt and tights for
~·"1\or ilfMeadow~rk Airport have
~ed an okl conflict between north
· llw>Unctoo Beach ' homeownen and
airport ~ators.
·'The anti-airport effort. was renewed
tills week with the circulation oC a peti·
tfun complaining about an alleged
JllB.foot extension of the runWay and
die Installation ol night IJihls. It wa.
1igned only by "lnt.erested homeowners"
md c:im1Jat<d al<q Hell Avenue behind
the airport,
'"Ir cbes look like an Wesal extension
l'Jl the airport to me," .Jack Cleveland, '"'kliJI' 'dirOC:lor lo< ~~ ~.
"id Ihm momJnl. ' ·
'John Tume,r, who opera t 11
Meildowlark. laid lodlr Ibo illqed .. ..,.
tension" was no mort than ''the pave-
rneiit of a iedlon ol the, old nmway.''
al\d lifhls were installed, "for ·aafety
resaons."
Turner added that there had been
night fiying at tht airport for JODJ.•
time.
Cleveland explained that when
Meadowlark was annexed to the city
a.bout l!MI it w.aa .UOWld II' a non-con--
forming use, thus requiring city 1pproval
for ll1'/ cblol!"'·
"I lllinl; 1he ·Meadowlarlc people will
have to llO w.r. the city Planoin«
Commission to oolve this Jilhtlnl · and
extel'llioo problem," develand added.
He said his depltWml is checking
the cunplaints of some residents in
ltle area about alleged problems from
the new work on the runway.
"It's someUring new to me when lhe
buildine department steps in and tells
a man he c1n'l put any asphalt on
his property,'". Turner replied.
Turner said both improvement.s wer1
made to make the aifl)Ort safer for
lb• flying public. "ntis is the only airporl in Orange
Counly that's completely sell-sufficient.
Not ooe peony in tu mC11ey ot subsidies
IOIB to JUPPOfl Meadowlark,.. Turner
uid logrily. "People who are worried
ibout tues elM>ukl trunk of that."
.. Not me of these complaininl
-... -·groups has appr'OIClted me about ll1'/ problem,"
Turner aaid, admitting be !mew of the
petitim. "I don't know who is cc:m-
pllining IJl' sending thil petition around."
'I1le petition. tells about the runway
pa.vine and nighl lights., then claims
both items cauae airplanes to fly lower
fWer Heil Avenue, greater interference
with television sels, more noise, dirt
and dust. and create a greater hazard
t<H"" surrouoding ~es.
Votronlcs Seleeted
Coast Cities May Get
New Voting Machines
By TOM BARI.EV
CH ftM DtillY 'lief 119ff
A sharply divided Orange County Board
of Supervilors today agreed to use the
Cubic Votronlcs vote counting system
in the Nov. 3 General Election.
It was indicated that communities
along the Orange Coast may be voting
on the new machines in November.
The boml voted 3 lo 2 to hire ""
Cubic Company on a one time trial
basis f@f a $60,000 fee. Supervisors will
then have llO days in wbicl! to .pun:hase
or rejec( the $1.7 million voting system.
Supmi>on Dovtd Bater, '.Alton E.
Allen w · -Hintem bacbd the
proposal submitted by Coway Clerk
.William E, St Jobn~Su n Robert
•••• and William · "" pe: no. St .John's recommendation was the
one adopted In the majority report of
an Orqe COunly Volln( Systems Task
Foret which took two years to tumint
a wide range of voting equipment.
Long-standing divisions in the board·
apPointed task force became apparent
when a number of ltJ members drafted
a minority report calling far the county's
adoption of equipment manufactured by
the Automatic Voting Machine Company.
It was evident from board diacussion
today that AMV's falllll'e to provide
a recount of any county vote was a
prime lactor. in tbe rejeclioa ol tbe
COIJ!p&ny's offer.
91 John explained today that be will
now use the Cubic equipment for about
haU of the Orange County vote In the
November election.
Backing the 20-leased machines wi11
be restored and renovated Coleman Elec-
tronic counting syste!ll5 which will take
over vote counting chores .in the cential
portion of the county. CUblc eqqjpment
will be used to tally . votes ln outlying
COWJty areas, among them the coutal
communities.
Supervisor Baku led the move to
accept. the CUbic 0tf8' of a Nov. J
trial run with the . comment tl1'L tM
firm's abwty lo ...vlda an im~lt
rmJtJftt WU uVitaf fn-0, Oran&e eeQn{y
election. ·
"We art . bebinil tbt times heft 'in Orange-COUnty,-J;e slit!. ,.Wt mU!t
let these people show us what they
can do and then mate oUr final decision
in the Upt ol their perfornlance."
But Battiil bnlnded the board decision
as "shockinc and lnc;omprthenslble when
you bear In mind that we have an
offer to use competitiye equipment
absolutely free of charge."
Battin'• reference was to the offer
by the Shoup Voting Machine Compa~y
to provide 200 machines for use in the
November election at no 6J)ell9e to
lhe COWJty.
I! bn>ucbt tbe COJllDlOllt Imm Bater:
"It bas been my lq experr...,. In
many ,..,. .. tl1it board lhlt you
never get anything free."
Judge Slaps Gag Rule
On 'Devil' Murder Trial
By ARTHUR IL VINSEL
Of rite IMillY ,lltl Stiff
A court.ordered gag rule which ls
almost a carbon copy of that imposed
on the Sharon Tate-Maruion Famlly
murder case was clamped onto Orange
COunly'1 alleged "devil cult" ldU!ng.
Tueld&y.
Judge James F. Jud&• eoncluded pro-
ceedings for four ~ five penam
indided by the ~ County Grand
Jury by lignlng the tldct document at
hill Superior Court bench.
His order ls bellnad to be tbe flnt
in Orange Co<mty b!M«y.
The judicial order specifically !orbids
any and all principals -from pro-
secution and defense attorneys· to police
and clerical aides -from discussing
the case outside court with the press. '
Gruesome disc!osures about the alleged
sacrUice to Satan of J11111 ol the
mutilated corpse ot Mission VJejo
schoolteacher Mrs. Florence N. Brown,
31, """ amoaa poteatla1!1 damagln1
-moolloned eatlJer. Stopben c. ilurd, ~ i. long·halrod
defendaal named In -wllh both
Mn. Brown'• 1'utcher murder aed the
Clea GAG ~ ..... I)'
L.
• Ill
' ..
N.Y. Stoeb
Seize '
Jet •,
•, .. •
Guerrillas Demand Prisoner .Rel,ease •
I
ATHENS CUP!) -Six Arab ...... Wu morning shoi'.111 af1or the bijactJng and
today -an Olympic Alrwm !et1!nv talked with the guerrlllu CMil' the allJ>ort
with Ill perlOlll aboard and thrUtened control radio. He returned Iii the af.
to. blow it up if aeven Arab IUtl'?Qlas temoon for a second converuUon.
were not re1eaeed from Athens jail&. shortly berore the sltuaUon began eulng.
Houn lotar Ibey 1>e1an relealng the The guerrtllaa wer< armed wllh
paseerp1, aome Of their denlanda: ~ machlneguns and hand grenades and
parentlJ' met:: .., ~· threatened to blow up the plane wllh
Aristotle onauia, ow•? of Olympic all on board unless Greece freed their
Airways, offered lllmself 81 a 1*tap comrades, jailed for terroristic acU~itles
ror the paslengerl at one .,.. but , against Israel
the perrlllu r<lulecl and --In-Tiley first demanded that Greece
1fuii tblt I hiCh olfSclal of the Greek releaae two Arabs IChldule6 to IO on
govtmment accompany them baci:" to , trial lfriday for a bom b erplosion at
Belrut where the f1i&ht originated. the Israeli El Al airlines office last
Deputy Premier 8tyliano$_ Pattatoe November. Then they demanded the
peraonally negotiated with the guerrillas · release of two Arab commandos sent
by radio from the Athens cOlllrol toftt to prlsoo In March for an attact oo
and was reported to have persuaded an El Al plane In December, 196t.
them to reduce their dema_nds, Shortly Government IOUl'ces llid the guerrillu
an.nru<Ia the guerrtllas tiecan rei...in, agreed to reduce their demands but
the pusengen· two by two. did not uy what COllCMliOOs they had
Ooaaoia aped to the ali'port hi the made. An olficlal aaid Ole guerrtUu
• "
finally qreed le relUrn lo Beirut !.flll:
a Red crnaa r<prwntatlve and Iba -
man ettw aboard u holtaaes. t
nie plane, a Boeing 727, wai .rtfullecl
for the return to Beirut where ~ began taking secUrity meuurea. Simll
meallUl'es also were ordered f or
Damascus and Amman ' airports, aiidi
presumably Cairo. " ':
AJrport officials said the guerrtllW
would fly back to Beirut to awa!t wmt,'
on the Greek government's deciilon oa
the releue of the seven tmprisanid ~
mando!. In the nfeantlme tbl1 ISl
passengers were being releued=..=1
Government eources said tbeJ .
noduced their demandl to
freedom for three commandoa ml ~
reloase Cl tbe rest within :It cla1t. II(
the mcanllme they freed ID lnql;
woman, 22, who became W. and ~
husband, Sbe WU J1llbed lit 11»-lllrpiirt;
tint' aid ·-
Seal Beach
Staff May
Face Purge
Spor1s111an Killed
By RUDI NIEDZIEUiKI
CH 1119 D11tr '"" llllfr ,,...e ....,_, of tl>e new Seal Beach
City Council appear bent on a
houaecleariing of the city llaff -a
pu11e whk:h may well air 30IDI dirty
la~ before it'a eier. . Cl~ln1111, ......... a11'111 ~
ol dly -and 'comln!oaiom; \f>o
city's IU million budget aed -nUy
Lee iu-,ellJ manqer l'(a.., -rhort lbr the peat JOUHnc>lHlall.yean.
Jn a suJ1>riJe move at Monday. night's
oession ol the dty counci~ veleran COW>
cilman Cenwq E. Fulrman, an · ef ..
fidency expert by profession, called for
the man reslpition of board members,
a budiet freeze and a cloeed-door ex-
ecutive session on a personnel matter.
Fuhrman. who was supported in hi1
request by Mayor Mortoo Bawn and
Councilman Thomas Hogard, aaid his
Intent is to re-evaluate tbe entire city
government.al .structw'e.
Thole~ were COWICilmM Lloyd
Gummere and Harokl Holden.
"The planning commlallon and the
other boa.rde in my opinion could have
been more attentive to what our laws
are," aaid Fuhrman. "This bas not
always been the cue. '1bere. have been
too many variances which lhouldn't have
been granted."
One of these, according to Fuhrman
has been a controversial 500-unit 1win&-
ing singles apartment complex, the
R&B development, for which the·ordina°"
ces were allegedly bent so that it Could
bt constructed.
"The development was a violation bf
our own ord.lnancet, but the plaMing
commission went for it JOO percent,"
The budget freeze, Fuhnnan claimed,
Is needed so that the newly elected
councilmen will have a chance to review
all the expenditures appnJYed b)I the
old council
"We feel that before we can 1ilY
the budget ts ccmcrete we Jhould bavt
a JiFt to go. through it,"' said FufH'I!!an,
who cJaima the budget WU paaed by
a "lame duck" oouncil.
Tho Inquisition into city -·tions -
an unneocessary and fooliah task, IC>-
fke SEAL BEACH, P ... 11
Windup
'
Life Ends for Glider Enthusiast
Richard Merrls, 32, of Huntington
Beach pursued. an acUve life. He loved
sporb and was a proficient surfer and
skier.
A couple or years ago he took up
a new bobby -slidln&. lie wu tbr~
b)I tl>e lredom ol soarin1 ~lenUy tbroo&)l
'the a1r,
NOW' !bat lreojlom ii eodod. ·Alter ..,..
pl.U. • fllP!s. i-. Jl!lol -~
in • lnat acdl1ent last --wt-i ,the ·loll Wini ,af hill ~ lt!I el! near
Pmta a!l'I, he plununetal 1,000 feet 1o bii dulh~· f • ' •
• Services were held for Mr. Minis
at Dilday Brea. Mortuary, HuntiQston
Beach, Tuesday, Cremalfon lollO,toad.•
Mr. Mmll, • uleaman, fl tu"'Yl<I
by hll wife, Susan; daui!Mr, IClmbarly,
J; father, Bruce, and brother. Brue&
and lister, Susan. ,
The accident happened near Perrla ·
Valley AirJiort. Wline1,.. lald lie trletl
lo ball out but the poracbule Idell
to open anll be wu bit' b)I tho lall1nl
craft.
The ' lllder landed In • "'°' 11114
two mlllo inu-ol lho alrparl.
'No a~U.. llaa -.... 1111'
tho wlnl. ~,,,. -fl"-
lnvelllpted by Gle ,_' ·-AclntlnlatraUon.
Mn. Mmta aaid lhat her husband
Wen\ aIJdlng II oil.. U JIOlllble wttb
the Orange Coast Soorilll Aalnclatlon·
"It p vt him a very peaceful feelia&i''
the uld.
"Hi Hted ill IJIOl'!I, but lh!i *"
ha4 becolne hill iavwt!O."
Valley Attorney's Jibes
' ,' '
Don't Aid Harbor Cause
By TERRY COVILLE
4" "" CMlllY .........
11 HunUnston Beach iool<lnl lnr a
aavy?
Foiatain Valley City Attoruey Thomas
Woodruff suggested wilh a lau1h Tuelday
night that such might be one reason
for the current controversy over the
Orange County Harbor District,
WoOdruff, a former aasiatant city at-
torney for Newport Beach. a strong
supporter of the harb:lr dlatrict, was
explaining A1Bemblyman John Brlu:s'
proposal to briag the alatus of the harbor
district too a vote ol tbe people.
Despite Wondrufl'I llcht.ltarlod acep.
Ucilm, the Fountain Vallay City Coutil
voted 4-1 to support tbe F'l!llerton
Republican'• plm for • refsendum.
Brlqa' harbor bill would allow Oranfe
County .. ten to -ti the h-diltrlct abould stand u a 1epilate tuing
.,.,,., or lie combined with the county
parb and rwcreaUon depertmenl
Keaeth Slmpe:on is currenUy chief
of both the parb department and the
harbor diltrict, but the first is a county
department, whJle the harbor district
b a aeporat. taxing agency.
"We are on record 11 recommending
d-Uon of tl1it district. County
Supervilors have refused , so this bill
ii "OQI' only choice," Fountain Valley
Mayor Edward Just said.
explain the bill ad "" aald JokltilY,
''Hunfinltm Belch wants Its own Mf1."
The beach dty hu been Ille ......
vocal opponent of the harbor diltrlct.
claiming It's a separate tu:lria authority . ' and Newport Beach ii the only .clti
btnefitting from it.
Mollday •ight, Huntington Beach Coon,
cilman Jack Green.,refenina: to Brigl'
bill, said he felt, "there are a Jot. ol
indications that the county ill tryiql
to bottle this thing up.,.
Primary responsibility of the harbor . ' ' district is to construct and cue fOf
barbora and beaches along the °'"""
Coasl Tba diatrlcl built Newpol'\ hartlGr
and is currenUy bulldlllg ad lm"""'1ie
S.-1 AquaUc' Patl:· and Dana Polnl
Harbor. It Ia a!lo -Ible for ~
and .. -hall miles ol beaoh along the ..,_
inciudlng, Sunael, Allao, c-t Royal ....
Dana Cove beachea. '
Brilf!I' harbor ..,. bill is .. t for
a hearing at 9:30 a.m., Aug. a, before
the state Senate Committee • •
Govermnental Org~tions.
• The anonymous Petition suggests .other
homeowner• call the county and write
t,ten to the M.ate Bureau ol Aeronautics
. ccmplain~
When Meadowlark came into. the city
It WU --by bem field& and
juot a i.,, -Now tracts have
_, buiK thera-In tbO plllt few JNl'I
and the c~ tMrve inc:ie11ed.
180 Top Players From 10 Circuits • in Play offs Albert Hollinden, the OJ1ly oppo11ent
of Briggs' blD, said he didn't feel a
C0W1ty argument should be taken to
lhe stale. weaaer
Countian Killed
·In NM Accident
From Wtre ' 8trvlct1
GALLUP, N.M. -A W..un!Mter man wu iilled ·Tuesday on I n t e r 1 ta t e
•'Highway 40 just easl of the Arizona
ate line when his car overturned in
the median divider.
He was identified as Henry N~ak,
17, of 11112 Palos Verdes A••., accordb>a
to the New'M•Jdco iupw., Palnll.
• Hm Wife ml two chll<lr<n _. tatu
lo a hoopltal In Gallup for treatment,.
Out the e1tent or their JI.Juries was
not lmnlodtately '°10""·
Now lhat the majo< 1easlie llll Illar• They'll play on·lhe diamond complelod
~ve finilhed their •11J11Cial pme" lt'1 tbll umner by tbt ·Poantain Valley
time for Iba 11Wt "'Y' In ~ . Beacb and Foontaln Valley to 11111'• . L1lt1e Lequt wllh. help l'IDm the U.S.
-..i·111e -limelfshl. NflY'/ -at Loa A1lmltoa Navll
About 180 ol tllom -Ille boot llDm AlT Station.
10 diUerent UWe loea&ue& -.,. meet· This yW" -ly 2;01111 boys played
' iii In all Ital' OClllPitidm this -" Ill littla ,_ ___ -u In H·-·'-~-Be-h Fcuntaln Valley. ,..._ V ~-· ·r :
The Fountain Valley Liltle ~ fs and Ii'-alley •-· The bOat
hosting tl1it year'• Dfairtd S6 alHlar o1 U-boys .will match their 1k!D1
tournament. All weekday l81'l'N:• start at on the field against other league all star
5 p.m. on the Founlain Valley field o(f te;z:· following bov listed b 1a Ward Street, south oL Talbert Avenue . ,,s, oy ri:ague.
Saturday games start at IO a.m. age •nd .team ~ere lelected for all
Ten teams are reatured ln the single star play ~n the five leagues repr~.
elimination tournament wltll the w' ner Ing Hunllngton Beach and Fountain . ' m Valley: movmg to tougher compeUUOn ln county-,.., AllftrMtl 1,, t\t111•~ aoeiw ~ui. n, wide actlon and perhaps on to state •1'1'9~11 v1ra •'-k. "· Gl""91 Aldlr ...,..._,
·Ind national competition. ::• ,::,1r~1 h loalloM. II, C•1 Lfr,., (1rr9H,
Teams from the Fountain V1Uey, :ii:~~~ TN..,~"'111~~\~ lJ: Ocean Vtew Nation1I and American, '\..i~J.n •"°"· 1t, p'lt'M•1 o... Gn.. ..
Robin-wood. RunUncton Valle71 Sea View, c.~~~"t.A 'w.-U~ '71~. Westminltet NatJonal and American 12.~1 MkkW ~~ •11tt1
Bolsa and Stanton Utlla !us-will ~~1~1#/'v•<Ln }..... •
compete. ~~!r:=. 'Jg~~:.1r t!ft
~ '
''I pr,efer to keep local rule over this
matter;• he commented.
Clow>cl1man John Harper replled ·lhlt, ••u.e harbor d1ltrict 11 a creauon Cif
the atata, that's why 1lle stat. b involve<!
tn it now." ~
At tllla point Woodruff was uked to ' '
' ·Alamitos Voter s . '
" Nix Bond Iss ue
Voters In lhe Loi Alamitos Elementary
SChool Df1trlcl Tuesday .turned down
· 1 7kent tax override bj 2,548 to 2,181 mar(ln. . ,
In acld!lloll, the dlltrict, Wied In Us
rblcf to nlae the mel.imwn alloweble t-rates on achoo! l>ondl from nv.
to -parceot. Lut. Mardi, votu1 turned down I
-Ill llille pr-1 by. -
J
Local ioc 'Ind IQw c~ad• a,.
n~ a1nni. the Oraap Coui Jn the aar))< mornlnt
noun -wit~· buy ilmihlne-Y61-
lowlng. But · tho temperaturea
will remain Jn tho 8llL
INSmE TODAY
A talklog cAll!lpr Y" -&ut
her lraiMr odll'f4 th• !\l<IU be
.bfiglUcr tMn tile ot>tr,agc cht,. ,
· pa;mff. Nttif1'tht&e11, this mon-
keii does commvnioate. Story
Page-J 4. ... ,..... " CtlH9nllt 1·1
Ct rwt ~ IS
, ........ "' 1 ·-... -. CIM¢41' II . ........, ,.... . ............. ~
·-H -n A• UMlft M ... ..,.,... "
-" =-'""' ... ~; --" .,....,.... .F -" .. IW. IMll:ti_, a --.. ·-. -.... -. --··· --..
>~
' '
~ . -! DAILY PILDT H WedMsdiY; Ju~ It, lt10
i~{;iiA<::i ..
....UO. to O>uncllmen Lloyd Gummuo .a Harold Holden -will apparenUy
--OD ll>o.clll',mllll&et'I olf1ce.
-haw 'tienlolod for ..,,.. llmt
tti.at Risner would be asked to 1tve
up his $27,000.a·year job and many, in·
""~dlng the city fllllllager, feel that Mo~·
!;,~'s erccutive sessJon dealt with his
~ f\lture.1 ..
Neither Fuhrman nor MayC1r Rt.um ..n,.-ouid 34y what went on in the closed
·J(_~ion, but they made it clear ~hat
~1s ppsilion was definitely subject
to review.
"The city manager a\l'IO serves under
th e pleasure of the c i t y council and
that makes him subject to review,"
Baum said.
Baum added that the mass resig-'atioll.!I
does not mean that all board members
\\'Ul be dropped but tbeJ mllst ruubmit
their applicatJons for teVlew by the COllD-
cU.
The city lll;piager, who says he has
heard rwuors. ever since. the June council
electton· tllal smn• lactlons ar5 out lo
get his job·, feels the execuUve session
did oot dlreclly deal with his firing
.~~ adml~. "I have . str1Jr!g feell.~gs .~l u\Ofe may be a move foe Jenniha·
Uon of tny. contracL"
. lie Jays no Qfficlal charges have been ~eveled against him, but that there are
~s he is hard to approach, arrogant
Md that doesh'l inform people of whal
.rut> ••lnl ""· -.tn; .~"Dle. generation ot' all these rumors
•
"11 .the, wont tht.g thal's hawened lo
{xthis city-in the last 15 years,"· Risner
., ..... _ltd.
Others, however, view tne houseclean-
.iml'C 'Wltludellght.-They have considered
18RU'ntt mr overly persuasive man w b o
Tied lip for Sutntner
was a ble to taik tbe former 'city council
·rdtito' · rUbbeNt.amping h i s ftCOm·
•fri6ndatlons.
.\!! 'Mi!s ..Julie Dorr, a .member of the
~I ior Environmental Concern, said
Annette Shipp {on ladder) and Kathy Heintz, •tudents at Spring
Vjew School in Huntington Beach, are learning the art of stnng scuJp.-
ture in a summer crafts class taught by Mrs. Barbara Beasley. The
Ocean View School District class will offer a special show of art work
and {>~jects for parents Friday.
"the cl'ty manager ts not dishonest but
he ii leUing In all these high density
devtlopment.s."
She claims' there are plans to brtng:
high density developments into the city
under the Rive rfront Redevelopment
.ft'\.gency, a city . coµncll administered """1!8~1zallon which benefits by collectlng
improvement and appreciation taxes and
HB Council Goes South
placing them into a special fund .
In Talbert A venue Dispute
_t;,•. Many resklenta have adamapUy foughl The Huntington Beach council finally ~ ptarB for. these compl~xes ,into their has decided the way to go on Talbert
c dty; the mOflt recent .one being the Avenue -south.
.wPiclflC Electric Right of Way, a narrow The council ended months or wrangling
ltrilf of land planned for 1partment Monday night by adopting a compromise
rti~· alignment of the east-west arterial ~;the land now temalns unr.oned. because through the city's 147-acrt Central Park.
-."'1'-;a plarmiri& ccrnmi.m decWon. . Instead .of · extendin& the highway 1'.ro!~ver. MUI Dorr clafn¥, ~city Flr~ through t~ park and ·~ting
mMil1({f' bu refused toi listen to cltiim the recreation area, the road will
"'Mlemarids that 10tne of the redevelopment "meander". in a southerly curve behind
!Qunds be aPf?.lled toward a park. Huntington Lake returning to a East-
!'' Harokt Holden, a new council member, wesl line just beyond Edwards 1Street. sa~s ~ has done "a beautlful job" The approval brought smiles 11.ll around
lH•ricf "'&aS brought progress to the cily the~council chamt>er as architects, traffic
•I hlJifrholdlng dorlvn tlie. tates. , , engipeut ~ity planners and ~reaUon tdSf:,'111& r~aljOft' I 'fan far of6oe was interests reacted favorably to the aoluUon tJ;iit-· l t. Was ver,; hlippy with whit ' he lo 'the drawn-out problem.
-as do1ilg. I heard rumoni thlt certlin The solution w~s e compromise
people would want to get rid o! him," between Public Works Director James
<
said the fonner realtor. Wfteeler and the park architects, Ackbo,
'1ie•s Installed new lights, widened Dean,~ . Austin and Williams ol' Los
the streets and he's got a plan for Angeles.
bringing high rise apartments , into the W?!"ler. a!S? proposed sending Talbert
city which would provide a good tar traff1d.~Ui Jn a se ries or alternatives
base. Nobody could do any better.'' he preteii!e\1-lo the countjl.
Likewise, he cOu~s the ,...tnass .. ~ areu~ amen~ed Whetle:r'a ~
resignaUon demand 1s' .tmjustlflcil. "Our ·.~ pu~;'lt curve .10 £be .alllnment
commission and boird mcmtJeiS.. are. ... SO It '\¥dlld run beh ind 3 hill inf WOUJd
dedicated and good people. I've been be concealed £tom most of the park.
satisfied with them~ never entirely, but Wheeler.-sa.id the change was ''e.x·
we can't get aioljg'~thout them." ~lle.nt'' 'l¢.d: ~orsed ,U. architect's
"I think he 'jusf'has some screwy ~l
Ideas," he sakt otFuhTman's plans. · ~n tlle plan Talbert Avenue will start
Lloyd Gummert, a'former mayor, said
he thoughl the ldea or the resignations
and the budget freei.e are "ridiculous
and unheard of."
Oversexed Baboons
Sent to Denmark
• OSLO (AP) -The Kristiansen 7.oo in
southern Norway. fOlind four .. baboons--
one male and three female-too· demon·
atraUve sexuallj ana shipped 'them to
Denmark, where· the attitude in such
matters Is more ~laxed, the newspaper
Venlens Gang ('ported.
DAILY PILOT
ORANGJ; COAST PUILlitllNG COMP•N'I'
lloti1;t N. W11d
f'Tftldlfl\ tNI P11&1'"MI"
. J1clt II. CYrl1y
• Vkl ,,_ldtflt ...a ....,.,, M~ntJtr
1:11111~
lhom11 A. Murp~iftt
.M""'lnt EolOr
Al111 Olr~ift
W•I 0.•llP C-ly (d;tor
· Jilbort W. 11111
....t.cr.11 lidMor
HM .. l .. to• lff(.• Offk1
17.75 l11ch let11l1~1•d
M1iti119 Acld11o t ,,0 . 101 790, 92•41
Ottltr Offlc.et a....-11n111 m ,..,,,, ,._,
t•t1 MfU: J)O Wu! a.1 llr'l!I
HtwJl"l lt11C111 m1 WM! ltlboJ 1111111.._ .. J111 C:"'-!tt; M ffV!tl (I C1...ir. •ttl
JOINS oCEAN VI EW STAF F
Bu1in•11 Atd• R•jcic
Rajcic Named
To Beach P ost
.John M. &jcic has been appoinltd
aMiistant superintendent for busines.•
tte:rv:ices in Huntington Beach's Ocean
View School District.
llajcM: joins Ocean View after five
years as adminlac.rator in the business
department ol Ul6 Orange Unified School
District. Prior to that. he was 8 business
assistant for the Newport Beach Elemtn·
llry Dlstrtct.
RAjcic is enrolled In a doctoral pro-
gram tit Clartmont Graduate School.
lie bolds 1 bacbelor'a degrte from the
University of Minnesota and a master·•
degree front USC.
A former teacher at elementary and
1econ<l1ry levels. the new 1utmJnl!trator
Is married and &he rather of rout
Clhlldrtn.
to tum south from Gothard Street, run
down a depressed area belween a parking
structure for the library and the police
heliport and pistol range, cross Golden
West Street and then curve behind 1
hill, running just north of a propo5ed
three-par la.bole golf course.
The architects said the road would
be concealed !rom most of the ptrk,
noise and vllual poRutlon would be .,pt
to a minimum. 'nle road would alao
provlde better accus from the south
and would Ue in with the golf course
layoot.
Development coordiutor Tom Severns
s~d proqiects were "brt•bl" for ob-
taining •1.5 million In fedt nl funds to
offaet the additional right of way coats
·involved with the new alignment.
Library architect Dion Neutr1 aaid
he liked the new route, slating It provided
east-west ,access to the park. He noted
that traffic wou1d "meander" through
the JOuttierly porllon of the park because
of the cufve 1n the route.
. Tl;le rOad will also provide 1 traffic
' Timi' Ii> thO ~sil Chica properties. Hope ' . l'"·''~ at ljJ!! meetiJlg that Signal !>ii.& a~·Oom!"10'. own<r of u.. pro-
: perty, mli!it de.tlcale land lo U.. cl~
: for \jle. highway.
· Wheeler estimated that such dedlc1UOn
might ,:lie'..~ th $200,000. ·
COOftcttman Nonna Gibbs coinruenled ,
''I don'.t 'feel we have to put in a
·road just' fof the Bolsa Chica develop-
. ment 1n nve or 10 years. II $200,000
is wlult it would cost, that's what wt
would be giving them.''
Huntington GI
Wins Silver Star
For Braver y
Warrant of:fictr Robert L. Parker, 21,
of Huntington Beach, has been awarded
the Army's Si)ver Star medal for br1vtry
.&hown In the killing of 43 North Viet.
namese soldiers.
Parker, a helicopter pilot attached to
the Vinh Long air base, risked h e a ~ Y
groundfire during the assault and receiv·
ed minor wounds .
f'lring 111"' on hit helicopter. p.,.,,
showered the enemy with bullets and
killed the soldiers, believed to be North
Vietnamese regulars. according to the
Army.
Since !hen he was wounded again in
a similar • operation during which three
enemy soldiers scattered from a bunker
and fired' their automatic rifles, piercin&
Parker's right th igh.
Fully rec~lftd. Parker ill now on
leave at his home on 8392 Saru Circle.
lit and his wife Kathy have two chiklrtn.
1,e is a 1967 graduate of Marini Hiah
School.
In addition to the newest decoration,
he holds two Distinguished Flying
CroMeS, 23 aJr medals, the Anny Com·
mendatlon ?.fedal for Valor, two Purple
He.,.i.. the Vietnam er... of Gallontty,
and a Bronze Star.
11lt Army has recommended him for
another Silver Star and another com-
mendation medal.
Beir ut Seeks Bandits
BEIRUT (AP) -Beirut newspipers
reported a aang of maaked highwaymen
Is llmbush.lng and robbing car1 on rc11dl
near mountain reso rts in central Le·
banon. The gang look 1$,000 In loot ,,_,,
ieven can In ont weekend. the reparts
1ald.
•
,.Weary Nix0u Expected
• ' 1 • '
President Plans Busy"'·Cross~country Trip
,. • • •• j • -' .. • '
17~ VAi.TERZA After tbe talks lD Fargo, Ni1on will lect'tla,.Y Maurice Stans. George Rom·
6t -. Nb;..,'"" board Air Force One' again for a hop ney, secretfry of housing and urban de·
~Nlident• Rlcblrd Nixon'• arrival at to Salt Lake City' U.tah. where he will velopme.nt ·and ·o!fJciala of the OfClce of
'tho Weittrb'Whlle H..,. helicopter' pad :r•~w~u~ct:t:.~ ~;!:;1~,.i'.:,~~; Econoni1c'0pportwlliy. .
Mr j""' Frldlf · rilght~ promises to be a Day Saints. Tbe .Marmon dwrcb will Next Monday Defense Secretary Melvin
~ day fot the Chief Executive afttr be celehraUng its aaiUal Pioneer Day Laird will flY to San Clemente for a
• dl1 Gl 'wlllrlwlnd coolerencea and •P' Friday. The arrtval will be at 1:1.1 day of-· wllb the Praldenl l:":t:."' lhe.Plalnl ud Rocky MOW> p.m. Ulab Ume. 00 the natal 1m delente btidcet. Depuly
The holiday Is the Wrd annlnrury !Jeleue ~ Dovld J'ackatd •lso
, Tiit Pruldent, acl>eduled lo arrive at of the discovery ol the SaH Lake Valley \!Ill parUClj>ale. · • .. 'Jui .... at lhe Wbtll H-..... by Brigham Youn1. It ls a •Ille s.m1ary ol sta'!a Wllllam ROgen will
::,-ilNir, ~. ~'::i .= ob~m~I conferooce Nlxoo will join :i~":~\!:· 1" a ~
Wit.II a.. ......... the -ol lhe biJ llll1lly !or a !ln>f-ln vlllt lo the The N\Jonl will pack their bap on =~Ila~ drop In ot a' rodeo Plooeer Doy Stampede rodeo, but they Aug. 1 for the fi1p baclt lo faa!dnlJon .
But U • _,.. a•-... ·-Iva! may not SllJ for lhe entire allalr, Tbe trip . will Include a ·ltoPivV in ·-.-w •-•~ -· apoWmol1 uld. Deaver, Coln. • " .., the· llouUI Cout.. Wblle Hooie oldes Once the party_boards the PmldenUal l'll«<, the Pnlident will confer with
:ldto ~ ~~J~ t! .?:: JeWner In Ulab, the nm lllop will be olficlalll of the' Nie plannini acencies
1111 .__, •. ,, ....... ~-Smaton 1iaHl>all th• Marine Corps Air StaUoo at El which coallol fonds for the roc1er41 crtme
-"':"---. Toro where the Pnsl~'• hellCoplen Conllol aDd Sale Slleet. Act which pro-11\1doy'•'rc ,_ -••· na••• wlll be waltlni foT the last bop lo !'Idea federal grants for local jurladic·
...,. --•• -San Clemente. u lo ·'· lbeir 1 ··•·--nt will 1Wt --In F= On tills latest vlsll lo the oeaslde Spa,,. co':!blliu~:"-aw •m~-·
N.D., wllh the ,._,. from ftve pl bh villa lhe President will fOClll "' talks Jncre....i local oecurtl~ tiy San !~Io~%=. Dalrola, Mia. wlthdeda newb ly creatoclEr~c ~Councl. clll Clemente police this aummer durtnf lhe
--. hea Y Jnhn D. ~••~. · ··•ts ad \bl thro h Secretary or the i;!n~lor Walter J. members will attempt to aet federal Nixon vii)!. was !fl ~ poss e ug
Inckel bu ·t>oen aoaea to the list of goals on ·a,pr1ority·bas:ia·~ w!U ·tnvolve I.be same act which yielded more .than
top aides and' e1bmet members in the aeveral-to~lev•l·advlael'I ._Agriculture $140,000 to the local force this fiscal
meeting with the governoNI. Secretary Clifford M. Hardin, Commerce year.
From Page 1
GAG RULE ••.
beaUng of a Santa Ana service station
1ttendant, pleaded innocent by reason
of insanity. · ~ ·
He bu been indicted for biJ alleged
role in the killings on subsequent warm
June nlghll.
HJo aUom<y, William Gamble, bad
ewller portrayed him In press con-
ference! 11 a self-styled Devil worshiper
deranged by dama&lng doses o f
barbllurale drugs.
The th~y Grand Jury hearings
led to lodlctment of Hurd, plus Herman
H. Taylor, 17, another trans i en t,
Christopher C. "Gypsy" Gibboney. 17,
of Portland, Ore., and Arthur C. Hulse,
11, of 11461 Dolan St., Garden Grove .
All are held without ball for their
llleged connection with the murder and
mutill.Uon of Mn. Brown on June 3
incl the fatal beating of Jerry W. Carlin,
21, the night before.
Hurd, Taylor and Gibboney have been
Dnked by lim!atlgatora lo the slaying
of Mrs. Brown, whose body was found
Jn a shallow grave off the Ortega
Highway two weeks later, minus heart,
lungs and left ann.
H~. T.,Ior and Hulse are charged
wlljl Carlla'a munfer In a robbery -
ttie victim'• thJrd within a month -
thlt brought them less than $100, ac·
cording to initial police reports.
A chunky brunette waitress, Melanie
M. Daniels, 30, rX Santa Ana, was in·
dieted by the Grand Jury as an accessory
to both murder• and 1 $25,000 bail was
oet.
Authorities expect lo have h e r
aval.l1ble for a 'time, however, since
she is aervlng a 90-da.y Orange County
Jail tentence for a narcolics violation.
Hurd wu ordered brought back before
Judge Judge Nov. I for a sanity hearing
and jury trial, for: his alleged role in
the Brown and Carlin killings.
Prosecution and defense attorneys
agreed to Aug:. 7 as the arraignment
date for Hulse, Taylor and Mrs. Daniels,
all<l'W'ing lbcm to confer in days ahud.
A bench warrant was Wued for the
arrest of Gibboney, who is fighting ex-
tradition from Portland, where
authoriUes have been urged by District
Attorney Cecil Hicks to speed things
up.
AalrituJTy
practical gift
Fountain Valley Facing
Boost in Cleanup Costs
'I'h.e cost of collecting truh In Fountain
Valley is rising -but no one knows
how much.
City councilmen were unable to
determine an accurate price Tuesday
night to charge for trash tGUecUon so
they asked for more details to detetmine
a fair price.
Rainbow Disposal Company a.!Jked for
a 50-cent increase in ita trash collection
Huntington Seeks
More Free Labor
Huntington Beach needs a man (or
a woman) to help build a city of more
than 300,000 residents.
He'll need the skill of an archilec~
patience of a priest, and the common
sense and desires of a man who lives
in the cit,. 1r aelected by lbe city• council;~ lhe
new man will fill an empty spot on
the city'a planning Commission.
The planning commission is now short
a man with the resignaUon of Michael
Bokor·, an electronics designer, who is
going to work overseas. '
AppllcaUons for the post are avaJlable
in the city administrator's office. They
should be retumed by Aug. 3.
The only requlremtnU are that the
applicant be a registered voter and a
resident. of the city for the past two
yeani.
The city council will interview all ap-
plicants at 7 p.m., Aug. 7, i'11 the city's
administrative annex.
India Arrests 8,000
SAMASTIPUR. India (AP ) -Eight
thousand persons were arrested for
tra\'elin g without tickets on the North
Eastern Railway during a three-day
religious festival. the railroad manage-
ment announced.
It's III
Omega
watch.
re... Ralllbow trucks prowl the city's
alleys collecting trash.once a week.
City Finance Directqr HQ'Nard Step~ens
suggeSted a 25-cent increase would bt
sufficient But he alJO wanted to tack
on another 20 cents for the city to
defray the cost of \rash billing, handled
by the city.
When pressed for ansv.·ers by city
<:ounCllmen, Stephens agreed he had no
figures to support the proposed increases.
The total fee woUld have been $3.20
·~very two-m<>nths for each homeowner.
"There's a riJ.ing cost in paper, office
help and other factors. Both increasea
seemed fair," Stephens said.
Stepherui said Rainbow hal sought th~
50-cent increase the past two years.
"In DM cities they make piclrup1
twice-a-wHk. Our trash pickup per rui·
dent is more than the average though.
uh, because o! larger lots l guegs.'"
&tepPens sald. bringing a laugh from
the council.
, Stephens qreed to study the coslll
I pf ,blllin~1 aisd lr ... h pickup aaj report
back· to tne council in late Aueu•t. No
action was taken on the Rainbow request
for a rate increase.
By ron Marshall
Dies in Mesa
Byron Marshall, a yacht captain and
long-time resident of Huntington Beach,
died -f'riday at Beverly Maoor Con·
valescent Home. He was 75. / Private Services and interment were
he[d:for Mr. ~farshilll on ~onday.
Mt. Marshall, who Ii v e d at tl3el
Brookhunt St., is survived by his wife,
Nellie; two sons : Byron and Jule ; A
daughter, Eloise Gogerty and aevtn
grandchildren.
Mr. Marshall came to Huntmgton
Beach froth Los Angeles 50 years ago.
For the past 40 years, he skippered
a number of yacht.I in the area.
~l
A beautiful gold bncelet I! a sinfully
luxurious gift. But 1 watch is certainly
practica1. Particularly when it's an
Omega. In the worJd of really f~e watch·
es, the name and repu'tation of Omega
stand out. When Omega arUully conceals
one of their superb lirnepiEi<:es in an e1·
qulsite bracelet, it becomes ~ sinfully
practical gift. See our complete Omega
collection, from $65.
CONVENIENT
TERMS
IANICAMERICARD
MASTER CH,t.R6E
J. C. .J.lu1nphrie~ Jewele~ PHONE
'41·l4DI
24 YEARS
IN 1121 NEWPOU it.VE.
COSTA MESA SAME LOCATION
•
I ·i co~tjans
To Decide
On Transit ., ..
Orange County voters wUJ have the
last word on the proposed creation of ,, a. rapid tranalt district.
• ' · Q>unty supervisors voted unanimously
' lo that effect Tue8day after )J.ateqine
r: for more than two houri to testlmooy
•:1 in which a number ol. wltHalts ur1ed
C<. iiK:lusion of the mass transportation ISsue
on the November ballot.
1, ·That will only be possible ii the Local
~" Agency FormaUon C:Ommissloo appr"t!'Ved
creation of such' an ageocy at ill Au,.
'• 12 meeting. But it wu 'noted by the
.. board Tuesday that rejecUon at that
. level seems highly ualltely.
If voters decide in November to en-
'· · dorse an Orange O>unty Rapid Trusit
• ~ Di!trict it would be governed by five
•.~ directors representing the county, the
,. ciUes and the public. Ill boundariH
~.1 would exactly aiincide w i t b tt-.e of
•·, Orange County. ··~
The OCRTD would have aulbority to
1 levy Up to a• five-cent tax oft COUJity
'·;; residents and place OOJd issues on the
I'S. ballot. It would also have the right
' . to eminent domain and be able to
:~ coordinate Its planning with olber
regional systems in Southern Califontia.
DAILY (lltLCl'.f ,._._ .,. ~ kll!Mlftr
Wedl'ltsdaJ', July 22, 1970 H DAILY PILOT •
Egypt OJ(·s Peace Pact
But Israel Lik"ley to Rejet;.t U.S. Plan
By Ualtod ,.,.,. bimlaUooal •
Ell)'PI has rep11..i posiUvely to the
U.S. Middle Eut peace proposals, United
,Aral> Republic .WCiala said today In
(!aJro .. Israel, reported ready to reject
the plln, 9tl!.t its attack bombers against
Egyptian Suei Canal posit.Ions for tbe
and conseaitJve day today.
Egypt. said ooe Israeli Skyhawk was
''bit." Israel said all ils planes returned
safely.
Egyptian foreign minister Mahmoud
Riad met briefly during the aftemoo11
with Donald Bergus, chief of the U.S.
mission ln Cairo, to haod him Egypt's
fonnal U!>IY to tile U.S. plan tbat calls
for a three-month ceaS&flre along the
canal. Israel thinks this will permit an
Egypltan buildup f<>< an attack across
the canal.
Government officials said the reply
was "positive" and explained that meant
Egypt lndlcaled it ·was ready to·dlscuss
the American proPosal furUier and not
reject it out of hand. A U.S. peace
plan late last year was turned down
flatly.
lo be moving closer to agreement on
a limited cease-fire alone the Suei Canal
front.
Israel has been U'ylfll desperately to
knock oot Soviet-built SAM1 and1SAM3
missUe sites along the canal , and a
spokesman Monday aa1d the nonstop at-
tacks ha(j not betn able to prevent
the Egyptians and Runlans lmn ""°"
ing deatroyed sites. 1berefcn, braelt
aoQrees said, anythlnl lbort Of a
permanent cease-fire ii unthlobblll!! •
PoliUcal aources said Israel wM ncaU.
ing Washlngtoo Ambuuclor Yltahok
Rabin arid U.N. -JooaP>
Tekoah for consult8ttono.
Watkins Gets Life
Murderer of Child, 5,
Recounts Beating Boy
A Santa Ana man who later left the
courtroom to deJCribe bow he repeatedly
beat his five-year-old stepson over a
24-hour period was sentenced Tuesday
to Ii f e imprisonment foe the boy 's
murder.
Kenneth Lloyd Walkirui , 23, pleaded
guilty before Superior Court Judge Ken-
neth Williams after weeks in which he
waited in vain for a better deal 1n
return for such a plea,
guilty to first degree murder If h
death sentence were eliminated from
the verdict.
Watkins was arrested Jut Feb. t *
the beaten body of Chrlstopller Jomes
Clarke was found on a bJood.eoUed
beet in a Santa Ana motel.
Much of its pl&Ming has bee• carried
out by the Orange County Rapid Transit
Committee which was lormed In 1161
to study implem.oialion of legislafton
enacted that year. Llofl COUNTRY CUB SNOOZES THROUGH RUSSIAN VISIT
After the 30-minule meeting with
Bergus, Hlad received Soviet
Ambassador Sergei Vinogradov and
Fmicb Ambassador Francois Puaux in
separate meetings to brief them on the
reply. He was to call in Arab am-
bassadors on Thursday.
.District. Attorney's prosecutors have
been adamant in insisting that Watkins
lake his chances in trial. He ended
negotiations Tuesday by deciding to plead
Christopher's two brothers teattned tn
municipal court that Walklnl became:
angry with the boy for splublnC water
from the bath tub onto the Door and
beat him for what they estbnlled WU
more than an hour.
The committee's ajms have been e1-
pres.9ed .u the creation of a district
which wowld coordiute the eJ:iJting
fragmellU of a public lroniportatloll
system.
Visitors From Soviet Union Not Exactly Lionized ~ Watkins. himself admitted that be had
earlier beaten the younptet It rtplar'
Intervals throughout !he day. Russ OD Safari The semiofficial newspaper Al-Ahram
said the Egyptian reply conformed to
establisl1ed Egyptian policy that any set-v1·etnam Veteran tlement should be based on Israeli
Judge Wllltama ordered Walldnl ...,,.
mitt.<! to Chino State priloo wbln he
will undergo psychtabic testa. It II Ubly,
court olficlsls otated, tbal he wtJ1 be
later placed In Sao Qumin ..-' Committee chairman Hubert C. Ferry
told the boanl thal tbe district would
give the county a voice in devdopment
of. regional transit programs and enable
Red Sea1nen Tour Lion Country withdrawal from all occupied Arab ter·
ritory arid the safegu~ of the From Anaherm·. Palestinian people's legitimate rights.
By RICHARD P. NALL
' or t1111 Dally "IM1 Staff ' ' the group to solicit funds from federal,
' ' state, local and private aourcea for
'. 'development of transit programs. Visiting Russian seamen and scientisls ~ Backing creation of the district at had an eyeball·to-eyebalJ confronUition
Tuesday's public beariag were ~prtse• Tuesday at Lion Country Fafari.
tatives of eeveral Orange County cities, But it wasn't a crisis. 'lbe touring Rus-
' the League of Women Voters, the sians la\18¥ excitedly as lions pounced
( ' American Association of University on their station wagon. One p e e r e d
Womeo groups, a UCI-Project 21 study through the windshield at Capt. Mikhail
team and representatives of sevrral \'olik. Volik peeRd back. Observers
chambers of commerce. didn't notice if either side blinked.
, Supervisors were urged by represen-Volik. commander of the 265-fool ocean·
tatives of Orange County's Stamp Out ographic exploration ship "Raduga"
l , Sinog committee to quickly tndorse rapid (rainbow) docked · at Long Beach, and
" transit proposals and immediately cut his shipmates are en route to their home
, • the number of s m o g producing: auto-port Vladivostok after five months at
:~~obiles on CQ!JD.ty blgbwl)'I. aee. 1
Supervisor Robert Battill joined them 'Ibey asked to Stt some fun thlngs
· :with the comment that be eonsidered while ashore, :specifying HoUywood and
.. mass transportatioll to be the C01mtf1 '" wild animals.
greatest.problem. _omctals at Lion CiJuntrJ, a 500-acre
' "Half of our residents do JtOt drive bit of transplanted African veld. said
· because they art too YoUN' too old later the Ruulant' had in mind animals
' too poor or too d1sabled " hf aild. "Thef Indigenous to America.
desperately need ~me tind 0 f Arter the eight-mile tour among lions
transportation system." and other African an imals, Capt. Volik
But Robert Jaffe, a Newport Beach told H~ Shuster, president of the ~re-
city traffic e•p.ter" suggestf.d that the serve, I never thought tha t in my first
ccuity waJt for ~o yelrS' to pther day m America J wquld 3ee lions in the
data on whether the district was tbt streets." . .
best answer to traNJpC1rtation need.a. The . Russians ~.pictures and chat-
"] fear the beguiling stmpUcity of tered m glee 8:' off1ciaL! at the prese_rve
the transit district -.. 1 " Jaffe llid. ~act_ed the lions onjo the tour vefucle .,.v...,_,, with bits of meat
Jet plaDeS from nearby El Toro P.larine
Corps Air Station buzzed overhead In An Egyptian military spokesman said G
landings and take otfs as the ·Russians one lsraell Skyhawk was "hit" during ets Army Rap
took in the sights including the Zambezi a three-hour Israeli raid against the
River boat ride. ' northern and .southern sectors ol the From Wire Services
Capt. Volik, sun tanned, about five.foot-waterway but did not aay if missi.les · ri ve and solid as a fire plug, posed good were emp loyed. Israel has concenlra\ed FORT ORD -a 21-year-old Vietnam
Collision Puts
Countian in Coma
naUJredly with a lion cub at the request on artillery positions and missile sites. War veteran from Anaheim ls Imprisoned
1 ho'-gr ph in the 'stockade here, charged with ac-From Wire •-~ .. , 0 P w a ers. IndicaUons in Cairo were that Egypt ceptlng a $560 reenlistment bonus and o;n;l"••
The Russians seemed intrigued by would welcome a three-month cease-fire going home the day after his honorable BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -A ~nta Ana
Polaroid cameras. They were apparent- as proposed by U.S. Secretary of Stale discharge. man was gradually emerging_ txo1n a
ly unfamiliar with them and asked the William P. Rogers. Israeli premier Golda John Lapp was arrested al his home 48-hour coma here today, foUowtn& a
cost of the cameras as they were pre· Meir said June 29 Israel would not June 1 and husUed off to the base headon car-truck collision that tllled two
sented pictures of themselves. ac......v a limit~ -a•fire because ~-t M •-to I t . women and In;...-a male relative. Jn ll'epreter Joseph Ctvrtlik of L 0 n g ""'""t"-~ ...... \.no near 0111.o;,.ey aw a prosecution, , ... ~
Beach State College said the group had would pmnit an Egyptian buildup for but he claims the incident ii the result Thomas Baker, 27, was llaed tn
been searching for fish and doing other a crossing. of somebody's Army payroll error. saUsfaolory condition, while Hugh BUer,
oceanograpiµc research. Under an agree-The mass circulation Tel Av iv His attorney, Charles Robinaon, filed 2&, of lnclianapolil, ·the drlvtr of h
ment with t'.he U.S., he said, the infocma-aewapal* Muriv repmied fl.illy today a petiUOn Monday 1n U.S. District Court <:¥ 'inY9lved, wu la 1 crllJcal emdiUon
Uon will be shared. Israel will reject the American initiative In San Francisco requetling • writ nf atcordlng to hospital apokelmla.
The Raduga had spent time Off Peru although it has not yet formaJly replied habeu corpus and Sept. 4 was Jet for Judy Simmonl, Z'I, and Carol Mdt«t-
but had--• 1 th •--sal Dip the hearing dale. ney, 2:6, both of Indianapoll.a, were tilled
m11. come ~loser than 200 mi es, to e n.11ft:"rican propo . lomatic 11\e GI' _ or ex.CI _ depending upon instanUy in the crash on lnd1ana H.1Pwl1
one official, said. Ctvrtlik aaid the aroup sources bad repcrted a possible rejection. who is correct, allegedly re-enl!Med for 37 north of Bloomlqton.
had repcrted fillh schols l!ODlewbat !!:...,. The Mwho ,.,..... came a. Wasb'~·n tho bo J 1 1-••-,_ ~··--·~ In I id
in their exi>lor~llan. The R.lss...., 11/o~ on awaited EIY!il'r;;ply arid as dlpi.:;:.;;Jc after': OO.::.b1e"':.ch..i:i;:" ~ _, u.'t~n!i'';ii; ~-:= V..:1e
provi!lons at _Long Beach and will leave sources in Tel Aviv said the Unitfd He was arr9ted on the leCOnd an-Monday and ll!lUbed heldaa tni:o the
Thursday. They put lo sea on this ~-States and lhe Soviet Union appeartd nivenary. oocom'·• truc:t.
age March 13. ' l>;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;i;;;;;i;;;;;;;;o.i;;;;;;i;;i;iiiii;i;ii;..;iiii;iii;iiiii;i;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,.i~~"~•~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;i The Russi.in visitors are to be taken II
lo Knotts Berry Farm today. They lunch-
ed in Hollywood Tuesday before the llon
tour. '
Observers noted that three baby ele-
phants, perhaps the animals most sym..
boli~ or consen;ative 'Orange County,
dldn t eaxctly llOol.ie the visitors. 'Ibey
turned their backs on them.
·•:Bikini Prompts
"Police Warning
'·
To Unicyclist
lgnew Issues New Swipe
At Television Newsmen •••• ···-[~·
Special to the DAILY PILOI'
SAN LUIS OBISPO -Sternly nmed
.by polk:eo. about the perlh of pedaliq
in an orange blklnl, mkycliJt Jacquie
Doujlas, 21, continued her journey to
San Francisco toward this picturaque
. volcanic valley today.
· Miss Douglas, of 1588 Riverside Place,
i' Q>Sta Mesa, was slopped by lawmen ~ Monday when she arrived ia Santa
1 Maria, wearinc the abocking-hued bathing
j ••it.
" She spent most of Tuesday touring i the Santa Barbara County Fair at the
... fairgrounds in Santa Mari1, where she j camped overnight, minus much of the
1 gear with which she started.
< The perky pedaler who plans a
~·magazine article about her aperieocts
'l<lelt most of • ~powld bockpock with ! . friends in Sa" ta Barbara -lncludint ! her thick diary.
~ She's just 8Cl'ibblina: on scraps or paper
I now.
Miss Dooglu left Orange County ellht
, day1 ago, planning a lix-wetk ride to
San Francisco and must be back by
Aug. 28 to return to work drivilc a
1 delivery truck for 1 Newport Beach
' auto parts firm.
'. Unless she !pends her utra Ume i slghlleeiag, however, the trip may take
I• than her allotted time and travel
rate of 20 to 25 mUes per day.
Some leOtions of Pacific C o a 1 t
[ Highway are po8ted as freewayt -bar·
~ rine pedestrians and cyclists alike -
: .. she has been forced to ....rt 1o
~ IOme hitch-hiking.
I She ii al'° clow!t to '311 In tnmer'1 \ check5 and plans to e•t only every I olilU day. thus cootribulill( to her pol
~ of losing • few pounds.
! Sen. Margaret Smith
• 1 To Leave Hospital
' : WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Morpttt a.a .. Smith (!!,Maine), who ~
! aurge:ry for a total tdp replacement two
-kl ago, Is l'l!>Orll!d up and waU<lnc ! and may leave her Htw Y •t bolpttal
\ ntrt Wett.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Vice Pmi-
dent Spiro T. Agnew, billed as the
"outspoken champion of the silent ma·
jority," Tuesday night discussed topics
ranging from the need for prison reform
throughout the world to acid rock music.
During a taping session for a 91l-minute
television talk show which will be aired
regionally next Saturday. Agnew said
~ "tiger. cages" at the Con Son prison
111 South Vietnam were "a bad situation."
"But," be ldded, "~e ll!lt Installation
of any government to get proper at·
tention are ita prisons.
"You can go right back here In the ·
United states and. • .find terrifying
prison coridttions arid tenifying con-
ditioos ·tn institutions for the mentaUv in<oinpetent. • •
"President 11rieu (of South Vietnam)
is no more able to know what goes
on in every )lrUon in Vietnam than
Pmidmt Niioo ~ know '!hat'• going
on today In a state where ' prison con-
ditions may not be ~ to per ...
During mudl of tlte llO-mlnut. lnlervlew
with boat Robert K. Dorman, the vice
Nixon Watch
Makes Debut
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Now
there.'1 the "Dick NI.Ion Watch."
Plan! to market the timepiece
by maU order were annomw:ed
Monday by Fredertct L. Saxe, who
road!Jy -Ila the venture Is "•n
ottempt to ri<le the buidwogoo
1tartl!d by the Spiro Apw wa~
tiles."
The foce of tbe Mickey-Mou.
type watch c.nes t caricature
ol the Pmldont Wtaring • red
•Ill white otrlped 1111t • n d blue
shots. Rb arms tell tbt Ume.
"1 just felt that tomeooe was
bound to bring out a NIJ:cn watch,
to whJ not me?" Sue asked.
president restated his previous attacks
on the news media.
"I think television has a very importan t
mission in these (talk) shows," lhe vice
president said. "The mission being to
present subject matter in a way that
it can be explored fully rather than
lhe condensed, edited evening news type
of approach that we get every night
and which .•• sometimes leaves misim-
pressions among the people of the coun-
try, mainly because it bas to be so
condensed •rid tt has to be dependent
QJX111 a sma 11 group of men to decide
what's Important to be lllown thal
particular evening."
Agnew rejected a suggestion that com·
mentaton ·on television. be· identified by
sum '"labels 81 ... ~ldeuttfled""Communist"
or other such 1ali!I saying "it would
be very dangerous ."
He-crttkized tbe media for foeustng
on what tbe Ullited' states and tts allies
do wrong, but not "nailing" the other
iiide by showing ~ltioM as they are
in North Vietnam , China, the Soviet
Union and Communist CUba.
The vice president criticized "acid
rock" musk: as "disturbing" becau!e
of Its thrust and the message he .aakl
ll conveys, of approving of penniulve
sex aod the uee of narcotlct.
School Paddling
Phase-out Set .
Pl1'1'SBURGR (AP) -The cl!y Board
of EducaUon has ordered corpor•I
punlshmenl, including poddlill(, to bl
phas<d out in the clty t<hools In the
next three years.
Paddling in kindergarten throulh
fourtll grade will be aboUBl>ed tn Set>'
tember. The ban will be exl<nded In
...,,. unUI 11 includes all grad.. by
s.,it.tmbor 19'13.
Supporters of Iha motion oald they
believed peddling WU Ineffective II a
means ()( maintaitltng <: J a 1 • r o o m
dlaclpline.
TO FURTHER REDUCE
OUR SALE SMOES
LIFE STRIDE ...... '""" "'" -""" ". REG, JO $20,00 NOW $9.90
LADY FLORSHEIM .................... REG, TO $25.00 NOW $11.90
FLATS ond CASUALS .................. REG. TO $16.00 NOW $1.90 TO $7,90
ALSO: GREAT SELECTION OF MENS' SALE SHOES
Pl•••• ••• An
Sales Final.
No Exchen91s
or R•funds.
•
1052 IRVINE e WESTCLIP:F PL.All
NEWPORT BEACH e 541 1114
r•
Shop Eorly
6ood Si111
I Stylos
Still A••lloble
'
f DAILY Pll.OT
j'.
Wedritsday, July 22, 1970 -
Nixon .Vows 5,000 S. Viets Arrive .
. ----·T,.~------
'
••
Welfare Reds Cut Road ·to Phnoni<Pelu,;i,
•. A(.9'r ...... ~ ...... n.;',.· P.~ens pu~lis}tlng house
01 Mllail, Italy. sent a blurb for,,th•
hook "Love in the Sexual Life to
Frencetco Novello. Novello . the
local public prosecutor, f?und t~e book obscene and ordered 1t confts·
cated nationwide. ' . A.~ Salm0n, Idaho woman
liked .&4r\llnR in the NavY so much
that site bas enlisted !or a second hitch·;~ jn the Anny. ,Mari.no A.
Bowen; !IZ, "l'rved three year1 as
Navt WAVE and has just complet-
ed lfer basic trainfng with the w=':"' ·Arn!y Corps, at Ft. M.c-Cl · " "JJa· M.i~s Bowen sa\d 1he
want;;? lo try' the Army becaui"'
she'OQjQYed serving in the Navy 10
much .. Woa:iian's illogic? Not really,
said J.1iss' Bowen. Two of her brolllers are 'servinJ In the Army,
and •Ides, sbe wanted a li!Ue
chan19, of scene, she srud.
• • •
lVould -~Ou believe that this is a
tcene OJ 1ummer fun. SnowbaU fights
on the 1l0per Of l)lt. .Rainier, Wash ..
pro~· a great mean.t of eKapt from
citJfhfq' for ')(a11 Anne Kniest of Ed-
mandt.arid /i11,1 RoriUini .of Seattle ..
This.b'cittle WO, fo~ht at 7,000 feet.
' •.
Support
WASHINGTON (AP) -Preoident Na-
on has told Republican oongre~l ·
leaden be -to -behind hlJ revised weUare progrmn despite opo
posHlon from mmiben of hill own party.
· "It II part ol hill program and ht
wanls to aee it passed," Sen. Gordon
Allott of Colorado, chaimuui. of the
Senate Republican Policy Committee,
told ..... men Tueaday.
Nixon's comments to GOP cOn-
gressional leaden came u a still-hosUle
Senate Flnmce C:Ommttt.ee resumed
hearings into sweeping reforms to
fe9l.ace current weUare programa with
a minbnwn,111aranteect Income.
• The hearlnp were' brolGen off almoet
three months ago when-(he Finance
Committee told former Secretary of
Hdlth, EdUcaUon and Welfare Robi!rt
H. Finch to rewort the JilO&I mu.
But Finlnc:< Chairman n ... n B. Long
(J>.La.). told ..,. HEW ~ Elliot
L. llichmloon TUetday that "in' llghlll'
cant rupect.t th~ new plan is a worse
bill -'and· a nwn costly blll which
pa59ed the House."
"In terms of money.'' aald Long, 'ithe
revised family auistance plan's cost to'
the federaJ government 11 a rtaggerlng
St.I billion_ -ttOq mtlijon more thaq
the adminlttratlon's estimates of the
cost of the bW as pasaed by the HOUie
and more than f.t billion over the federal
cost of the existing system.''
The administration plan calls for l
guara.-annual Income ol fl,100 lo<
a family of four\ plus food stamp, howling
and medical care benefits.
The fl,IOO payment would be gradually
r educed foi working recipients until earn-
ings reached $3,920 a ye1r.
Loni aald the reviled program cuts
payments t.o some 450,000 persons In
familie! where tht· father ia unemployed.
In 22 other states, he idded, welfare
teclpk!:nts would get Jess.
Besides, the tenator said, the welfare
proposals leave too much dllcretlon to
the HEW ...,,.tary to set pollcy.
Long said, however, he· hopes and
ezpects the Senate to vote this year
on welfare re;form.
Brea Man Killed
In ' Yietn~ Co~at A j)r811kller with .a macabre
sense of humor !Ills erected a neat-
ly 1etWed 1ign ,fn an area of w ...
ren County, Ky., ·where the bodies A Brei GI haa befn· killOd In Vlltnlm
of thiee separate alaylng victillla combat, the u.s., Def-De(lartmellt
have lieert fonnd In receiit montlls. amiowiced 'l'lleidai' wi1h publkatlon of
It readJ:, "Positively No Dumpfug a 1111 of IS cuualtlel, only two ffc\m Bodl,I .ID 'l'lll•' Art,l! -ol ,B)'i<Qill•~. catllotnta.' •
of !lie Eitabli11i!Dent.'" The •s)gn lie WU Anrl7 Spec/I MlchHl P. Vullo .
stand! 9 :reei· from the spot where; W..... Wife Kitltleen lives 11 139 Sequoia
the body of Albert E. Henderson, Ave., accordlnr to the list releuecl in
SO, df Bowlin~ Green; was found · Wulitnrton.
last Friday. Henderson bad been
PJINOM Pl!!IH ,(UPI) -Communist
troopa cut PhOm Ptnh's !Heline to the
sea this morning and renewed their
driv~ against an Army training center.
The govemment got new belp from SOuth
Vlelnam in the fonn of 5,000 .10ldler1.
Mllltary spokesmea in Salgoo uid two
wk fo<ces of SOuth Vletnamne lroopa
and tanks pushed into Cambodia eut
ol Phnom Penh this mornl"I to clear
Highway 1 between the two capitals
and to wipe out guerrilla 1tore1 in tbe
Parrot's Beak region.
It brought to 17,500 the number of
Saigon troopl in CambOdia.
Cambodian units meantime w er e
reported battling to clear Phnom Penh's
only road link to· the port at K~pong
Som and were said to have regained
control of the training center at Romeas,
northwest of the capHat.
Official reporta on the figbt1ng came
from C8mbodl111 spokesmen as .the na-
tloo's i:remler. Gen. Loo Nol, .flew to
B1111kok to Mk the Thal govenunenl
GI Tries Hijack
)
Of Viet Plane;
Gives Up to MPs
SAIGON (UPI) -An American GI
tonight attempted at knifepolnt to hijack
an Air Vietnam plane at Tan Son Nhut
Airport and force lhe pilot to fly to
ijong Kong, auttiorltles said. He later
surrender<d to U.S. Mllltary Police.
· Airport security polk:e sakt the unldeo-
tlfled American, a Negro 1n ,civilian
clothes, attempted the hijacking afler
the propeller-driven DCI aircraft· landed •
at Salitoo on a mght flllm Pieiku in
the central highlands about 5:!0 p.m.
The police said the American, whom
mllitary !OW'ces Identified as a U.S.
serviceman, waited until the plane reach-
ed the tannac outside the · terminal,
then walked up and placed a kn.lie at
the back of the pilot. ,
Authoritle5 said the other passengers
waited In their seal.! while the GI told
the pilot he wanted to be flown to
Hong Kong. VJetnamese atuthoriUes aaid
the man was talked out Of the hijacking
by "an0ther American," presumably a
companion on the J30.mlle mght from
Plolku.
Police sources said tht would-be hi-
jacker was aboard the plane on the
growtd for more than two hours. Officer•
made no attempt to enter the aircraft.
Finally, police aald, the GI walked
off .Ill< airliner with hill bands in the
air and gave hbneeU up to Vlt!tnamell
and American Mllltary Police.
U.S. Mllllfry Police declined to Identify
the man or even say whether be was
arr American wvlceman.
"He 11 in our custody," an MP
spokesman aaid.
Tighter Secrecy Imposed
I
fatally shot.
IJ'll .... """' .... """' .... """'.,.. When two Univerrit11 of Ar·
kamas students 111,..Ud gviltv
to unlawful pos$ftU07' Of drug•
Monday, a circuit court judge
sentenced them both to cerv_# a
one.day term at the Cummim
Prison Farm. 'i'ht' judge gave
the youths hoo-~r probated
sentences, buC withheld officWl I pronouncemetit unUl they got a
brief taste of prison life.,
• • Dumpy the kitten of Fairbanks,
Ala6ka. Jost some of his nitle lives
Tue'sday. First he .was · threatened
by fire at the city dump. Firemen
used 41,000 gallons of water to
quench the· blaie. Then, the box In
which Dumpy was caged was aJ..
most crushed by a bulldozer before
the operator heard the kitten'•
cries and rescued him. Apparent·
ly someone wanted to get rid of
!Jumpy by dumplnR him. but he's
safe now at the home of fireman
Chuck Price.
.
In U.S. Hearings on Laos
WASHINGTON (UPI) -1be State
Department Tuesday i m po s e d un-
preoedemed standards of secrecy on the
leltlmooy of the U.S. Ambalaldor to
LaOI before a Senate Foreip RelaUons
Subcommittee. .
Chairman J. Wlillam Fulbrilht. (!).
Ark.), accuaed the Naon Adinlniitr1Uon
of attempting to· undercut the com-
Jnlttee's effect!-by'. \IOllll"I up tho
witneu. ·
Prior to permitting the appearance
of Amba ssador G. McMurlhrie Godley
before the Subcommittee On Interna-
tional Commitments, the State Depart-
ment lnsllled on 10le po!!lsession of the
transcript ol the hearina:. Committee
member& baited, finllly decldinl that
no traucrlpt would be made.
Fulbrlaht said the administration
displayed 11A determination to put us
in <Kl!' place '° to speak."
Godley'• te11Umony was a follow.up
to hearlnct conducted by the sub-
committee last year. A c e n so r e d
tl'anlcrlpt of those hearings produced
evidence that the U.S. Embassy in Vien-
tiane, under Godley's direction, had been
turned Into a virtual military head-
(luarters, with Godley directing U.S. Air
strikes against communist positions in
Laos.
Sen. Stuart ~ .. mington (D-Mo.), who
heads the sut mlttee, told newsmen
following Tuest. . .-·s session that "There
has been no change" M the situation
11JJce the earlier hearings .
Heavy Rains on Gulf Coast
Hurricane Becky Demoted to . Tropical Storm Rating
PfllYllW Ol lSSA wtATHE• IMIEMfFOllllCAST TO 7:10A .M. lST 1 ·JI•"'
,,,,,t';"it-c ooL .,
Cout.i
Htrv lllfllhlt\t Tod», Lltl'll Ytrltblt
wlflllt nlollt tlld motnlltll '*"' ~
I~ -tllwffl lo Mii I ft 11 ltMlh ti'! tf!~ IOllly tlld Tllur .... Hit/I
lodl'I' n.
CMlttl ftlnM"'ftl"" rMH lr9ll\ 61 te ''· lfll1fld ,_,....,,hi,.. r•-trol'l'I '4 IO ... W111f Jtmlltrlt\11'8 6l
S1111, Moo11, TWe.
WIDMllNY
l«ond l!lltfl .......... 11 154 1.m, M
5ICOlllil low ............ 1:00Jldl'I. 1,1
THUa&o.t.'f
.,,,.., lllf'I ' ......... ' ... 11• JI.fl'!, ••• .-rnt IOw .............. f :t111.1t1, .o,I •
SIWlld low ............ 1:1111.m. 1.1
'
... , .. '· <!' •-.-.i.Mlll ••••ttlt
fJ.S. Sum_.,,
HHVY r1IM ~ I W\09 lt'tl
,,..,. Tn11 .. , ... Ctl'llillll tooev II
t~J<tl llorm hell'!' trlnM IOWll'd
"" •ult C..tt ·~ 1 ctN ftlnl cmt
In f"fl'I the norl!I.
ni. w .. lflt, hl"lh '"'111111.-1n.
*""'lilturt It I ctmbll'llller! ot 1111 two
t.<tort -,,. ...... ...,.. 11111k;1t
•IOl'lll tl'ld t cool t lr ll'llh 11111 llld d,_.., 1f!l'IHtll1.lrtt .. l'ICOfl Jiii'!'
""" II\ llt m~I. T-.11'11:11 r11M _, tOm"*' In 1«•
11111'11 of Tftlio MIMIHIHI lllCI Tiit
C1111l111M.
Albu111.1t111ut " ..
Anchor••• " " At11n11 " ..
llktnflt!d '" n l!lbm1rct .. " &lllM " " tM ... .. " O!lctto .. " Clnc!n~tl ,. " Clfteltlld n .. ... _
" " O.!rolt " " .,_ .. " FortWortll .. " ·~M '" ~ HttlN " " ........ " ~ klftMI CllY " " Lit V .. 11 "' II Lot A,,..,111 .. .. Ml1m!IHdl .. " Mllwt uk" ,. ..
M lnn11POll1 " " NtwOr1ten1 " " Ntw Vl>rli: " " O.lrlll'lll .. SS ..... " " l'IM .-:olllft " " Phllfft!!lll'llt " .. Photftll " " Pt111~rtl'I " " PortltN ,, " fled l lllff .. .. ·-" .. S..:r11,1tnlt " .. $1, Loult " .. Si tt Lt lrt City M " S1n Dltote " .. Stn ,.,na.ce .. " S.nt1 .. T'tlllr• " ..
Sfflllt .. " SIOll:t iw " " T'*'""tl '" ..
for. military aNlllllDCO qalnlt wbat ht GqorrWa troopa attaclled a government
termed "barbaroul aumatoa" by 11\1 1arr110o on the roamra, 11 Ste Kblong,
Conununista. 44 mllel above the -from llilhwllY
Gen Wllllam c W-land !ht 4 to Kirirom, the mounfain ,_ rocaP:
• · " IUnd "" ~--after '"'' U.S. army cblel ol 1taff, rotumed ,_ ., r·---•-.-
dly to Wublnpon from a tour ct lilJI ol c.aununilt ocCWpotloo IUt -k.
SOu~ Alia and uid Cambodia oould Tbe c,,,.ooci111 command Aid ruer-
SW'Vive with moral and material oupport nlta .........ioa had b-up three
from Ill alllea. brid&<I aiaoia the 'K1rti:om cutoff rnad
'Highway 1, link with Cambodta'i only to "pre""1t 1ovenunen1 relnforcomtnts dtepwater port, Kompc1r11 Som, wu cut , . there from reacinr·sr< Khloag.
belOR dawn, military spokesmen uid. ' Tht cultiog ol Highway I, the only
route over which oil and other it.at"
suppllea cao !'~ Phnom PFnll f"1
the ..., coincided with renewell lllhtilii ;
at the army training center at Romees, ;
40 mUe4 qortbwest of the capital. .. ,
• vi,t Coor iriil' Noith v1e1name .. units
·flrtl attacked the . ~~ Tuesday .. d '•
the defenders were reported to have'~
·held them off. The govenurient com-
munique · thb morning said Cambodian '°
troope again had "r,..stabllsbed control"
in the lalest attack.
I . . . ..
Death -Cause S~cret {n Kid ·tiap 'Case
' LANSING, Mlch. (UPI) -Pollce refua-l""llh " .lime" and iald idenWicalloo
ed TUeaday to · dlaclole the cauae of ~ by dental X-rays. Her white bl011Se,
death and aulopll)'· resulta for Laurio :. ":·&:...blue ~.w'I! fOWld inches
Mumlqhan. 'Ibey sald •tbe lnformali<Jn "A ~al' a.,..;, iov..Ugallng team
should be known only to the killer and . -~ormed to.jDOt lalo herldeath llllfttog
poltce. • ........... fRllll the mwlv• seard! that
Mlss lofllrniJWwl, the dall(bl« o1 follinred her di-.
former Lwtntl Mayor Mn E. M-A cleqymln oak! the 'MurnillChan
tnahan. WU kidblpedJuly,t by. gunman family, althougb pieving, 1WU ablio•t
who..beid up Gallaper'1;GUt Shop here, rolleved the ordeal• :WU pver.
piltol·whtpped the '0wnar and took llO. "I halo to· say it, but when I vlalted
Laurie's ~poeed bOdy was fOuud them there was a sense of relief that
in a swampy, rural area aouth of here at least the tension and waiting iJ over
Monday. She will be buried Thursday. • .• the torturing doubls of \1(hether Lau.
Police QUef Deroid Husby said her rie was being harmed," said Ra bbl Philip
body had been there a "considerable Frankel, one ,of three clergymen who
LADIES'
·put together ·a $1615®. feward fund for ;
. 4qrie'.s aafi µtun\. /'
"I lmqlne_ !bit· no one now is eljgjble
(for the. reward),'' Ftankel aaid. "Ma"
wag. Ver)'. ~ "tn Providing ibat
it lhould be pOid !Or the retum of 1,
Laurie alive.'' ·
Services ·were scheduled for t p.m.
1bund~y at th~ · Central Methodist
Cburch. Frankel 9a!d l\lurninghan told
him he would ask the officiating -
clergyman, the Rev. Howard Lyman,
to quote during the eulogy from the
,Simon and Garfunkel~song, "Bridge Ov_er
Troubled Water." If wai a favorite of
Laurie's, the fl4~1 said.
,Q .,
FURTHER REDUCTIONS
STARTING WEDNESDAY,
JULY 22nd
We're continuing our sale and
cutting prices even more ••• to a
fraction of what these famou1
brand •hoet should sell for •••
you just can't afford to ml1S it!
" ..
casual shoes '
aeeorted
h~ndbage
5 .03
off
and more
VALUES TO 121.H
me· m~ m4 .. ~ ..
VALUES FROM $9.91 TO $14.99
LADIES'
dress shoes
m4 •• me
•• ma
VALUH FROM $13.H TO $32.19
men1s shae,s
m4.~ms . ••• ma
VALUH fllOM $14.N tO SU.ff Men'.1 tale shoes at all slore!I
ex:cept 180 s: La Brea Los Angeles
OPEN D~ILV 9:30 TO 9:00·SUNDAV 10 TO 6
ORANGE
464 S. MAIN ST.
COST~ MESA
333 E. 17th ST.
e NO. HOUYWOOD e SHllMAN OAkS e CANO.A PAll e U.MCASRl
e LOS ANMUS e llVULY HIW e CllNSllAW e WUTCHUtll
• SANtA MONICA. YINICI•. YINTUllA. wHmlll
• '
S1111 Ill.., Stl7 1.m. llh l ;tl 1.m.
MIOft ftlMt lf:.W 1.m, Ntl K:U I.II'\.
Itek'!' ~ ftM tl'MMl'ftd dlorl11t "'9 1111~1 tM w11 ciowntr1ttd ,,..,,
1 11,1rrtuo• tt-.. tNJttcal tlOl'lll "'Iv tM.,. TM '"""'' lfl....,!llH <t11t.r wtl IDIYt • fl'llltf Mllltl If ,1'*'11 WIWllntltl\ • .. ....
'
•
U,.ITI..,._.
.......... ~ 2l, 1970 DAil v PllOT IS
Tornado .Hits, One Home Ruined
-
<I PANACEA: Flo. (AP). -A , "It~ ewrt bit ol '$d ;.J,. in Ibo ma w• tat-'J'he.~oUsbed '1 t ta 1 e J
tornado sj>aw'ned" by irop\Oa! ·out of n\y -wben U C"'1!f .tered by flying debris. ·rebuilt Jut yw .at a coll
si«m Becl:Y d1umed aohore by," ~·= M:;f · "It w.. a wa1erspoul to 'OI 1.i,ooo, alls on land oo1y
oo Levy Bay today and :t'\r,...neort>y. ' begin wllh," said W. J. Red-two feel above the sawgrui'
destroyed one home and A new house belnc built 100 forif, who said he saw II lined Levy Bay, a producliv<r
damaged at leul five O(bera ard to the llOUth thfougb the 6 a.m. darknfSB viuUet preserve for com· before winding dcwtn in a pine Y "· was pum-ftf>m bis home 400 yards to ' · forest a mJle and • half in-meled by a large pine b'ft the north. m~l. flsbermen.
land. whJclt was uprooted and sent • ••1t picked up and became The window curtaiM fl'1lm
The 21-year-old frame co¥ Cl"81!1h!ng Into the side of the a tornado and 1 heard It when the k Itch en hung in trees
Lage owned by L. E. Maxwell, structure, . it. hit.'" 200 ·feet ·away.' A bedr°"1t
an Albany, Ga ., machine shop Metcalf sakt h.ls home lost Mrs.. C. A. Cobrin said she closet. opened onto the )ave.
owner, was lifted from its a few shingles as did aeveral was .. 1ltUng on a couch ment o( Levy Bty rc»d, with
foundation and shoved 75 feet others In the lowlying area holdina hands with my bus-~ pair of trousers stlll hanging
inland before crashing to a sootbeast ol the center of band and shaking" when the Intact. Wall insulaUon f&r
stop against a plne tree. Panacea. Maxwell home. was scattered like confetti
No injuries were reported. The porch ol a home acl'O!s 'I11e demol ished c o t l a g e , through the trees lnl1nd. lo
Maxwell and his family, who the street from the M1nrell "It sounded like 'boom! -The tornado twisted the tops li.l<I
use tilt cottage on weekends, house was unroofed and. just like a freight train," ahe off ol pines in i. 200-foot swath 98 , and dissipating a short:,-1";f
were at Albany at tile lime. screel'ling in a half dozen said. cut before mming Highwa1 distance farther on. .10 :
,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-"~"--'-~~~~~~~~-
GOOil/YEAll
SURF 'BOARD SHOP OWNER BATTENS DOWN HATCHES
John Ha rper Ready for Becky -lut Storm Dying Down INTRDDU RY
Youths Die;
Mainlining
Party Told
PITI'SBURGH (UPI)
Two youths were killed and
ttne others hospitalized today
by an apparent overdose of
drugs which they "mainlined"
into their veins at a party,
police said.
Police said one or the youths
was found dead in a n
automobile and another was
prooounced dead on arrival
at a hospital where he was
taken by friends who were
unable to revive him. •
1'>e two victims, both 18,
were identified as Garry Reis
and Joseph Vertullo of Mt.
Washington, a ITTliddle income
aection « Pittsburgh.
Listed in critical condition
at Merey Hospital here was
Keith Sherlock, 20. Police said
he had not regained con-
sciousness. Also hospitalized
were John Dixon, 20, and
Cathy .. Augustlne, JI "; 1 Polle< said all of the )'ouths
were believed to h a v e
"mainlined" a drug known as
~ into ttieir veins.
Offi<e's said the tngedy un-
!olded at 8 a.m. today Vr'hen
Rell was. fpund dead in th~
frmt seat of a parked
automobile. He was observed
slumped in a car by a
passerby.
About three hours later
friends or Vertullo brought
him to Southside Hospital,
reporting that they were
unable to awaken him. niC office of Allegheny
County Coroner Cyril Wecht
said the friends reported they
hJd been using drugs at a
Southside apartment and that
VeriuUo had passed out.
Tbe friends took the youth
by ~ar to a nearby park hop.
in« the fresh a1r would revive
him. When that failed be was
brought to the hospital, Ille
coroner's office said.
Fa rmer Reports
Stock Missing
MILAN, Tenn. (AP)-Some-
one has rustled 75 head of L.
D. Holt's stock.
Holt said he checked an
i:Jolated area ol his farm
recently and discovered some-
ooe hid run off with all
the caU"LSb he Blocked in •
pond two years •&o·
Policeman Places
Collins IJVear ·Jlictirn
ANN ARBOR, Mi<h. (UPI)
-A university policeman
placed John Norman Collins
near his alleged victim the
day she disappeared but con-
tradicted a report he flied
about Collins' delcrlpUon.
Larry Matthewson, a
policeman at E a s t e r n
Michigan Univenily, where
Collins was a senior, Tuesday
became the first person to
testify he saw Collins -riding
a "very shiey: t;nototcycle" -
near downtown Ypsilanti at
the time Karen Sue Beineman
was walking to a nearby wig
shop.
As the trial moved into its
third day today, Washtenaw
County Prosecutor William F.
Delbey was expected to pr~
duce other witnesses who say
they saw eorun,, in tbe area.
curly and the side burn s
shorter?" Louisell asked, his
voice rising.
"No, I don't believe I did,
sir," MatthewJCn said.
Louisell snatched a paper
from the podium and broua:ht
it to Matthewson, who iden-
tified it as a report he had
filed. The report quOted Mrs.
G6stle as saying that Collins,
as shown in the photograph,
"could possibly be the same
man on the motorcycle if the
hair was curly and the
Sideburns shorter."
.
Britain ,Now
Feeling
Strike Pinch
LONDON (UPI) -Food
pfi<:<s.&llmtiod st.eply in Br\·
tiin !O!&y with the dock s~µte ~
entering Its second · week.
"Orange, bananas ahd imported
apples began disappearlr.g
from grocery shelvel!I and
Collins, 23, is chargtii:I with
first-degree murder in/ the
torture.i slayiDg of MJss
~l)einem t.tJ e 11-yea;.-o1'
!'Mtl' ,, hman frun Gran4t
Rapids, Mich., whooe ~
was found JuJy 28, 1969. She
was the seventh and last
young woman slain under
slmllar circumstances within newspapers started cutUnt:
two years around Ann Arbor down on the number of pages.
and neighboring YpsilanU No , ·With these and <J:lher signs
h . · ol shortages growing, there one as been charged Jn the was still 00 solution in sight other deaths. .
Matth SOii ho 'd be. for the strike that began last
ew • w 581 Wed·nesday when dock ~ew ColliJWi casually, told the workers walked out in a de·
Jury of seven women and )!land for higher pay shutting ~ven men he passed Collins Clown the nation's se;ports far
on Lowell Street about 12:30 the.first time Jn •4 years.
p.m., July ~· 1~9. ''He stop-A government-appointed
~and a &J\1 with Jong brown court of Inquiry, YfhJcb heard
hair ·came across tihe street prelimlnary statements Tues·
and talked to hlm," Mat· day by representatives of
thewson said. 47.000 strtthig Longshoremen
Under Cf'O.%-examinaUoo by and port employes, w a s
Chief Defense Attorney Joseph meetlne both sides privately
Loulsell, Matthewson said he today.
did not actually see the girl Union leaders said they are
-Unda Campbell -talk ready for a showdown if the
to Collins. "I assumed they employers ~ant it. T h e
were going to talk" he said. employers said union demands
1fblle the hand~e. dark· would inaease their wage
haired Collins alternately look· payments ~ percent. or more
ed intently at hlm and and mean very senous con· ~sell, Matthewson said he sequen~s" for the economy .
had shown a photograph of The biggest worry of the
Colllhs to Mrs. Diane Goshe, government and the public
owne f the · .,........ was the steadily climbing food r 0 wig ·~""l'· prices as stocks dwindled. ln
Mrs. G~he, a key . pr~ addition to the shortag~ of s~Uon ~1tness, has 1~~ imported frulta and newsptint1 bfled Collins as the dnver the meat supply wu affected .
or the motorcycle the 5-foot· In London's Smithfidd Cen·
tall girl · hopped onto when tral Meat Market. wbOlesale
she left the wig shop. beef and Jamb prices· moved
"Is that the phologr8ph that steadily upwards. Dealen said
Mrs. Goshe said could posslt>ly the higher prices Would affect
~ the same man oo the the hou5ewives' pocketbooks
motorcycle if the hair wu by the end of the week.
Calm Shattered
Blast Rips Kanqs 1U Confrontat~on J rea
The incKlent marred a "let' a ·The confrontation marked
cool it" under 1 tan ding the fourth stralgbt night qi
regularly *23.50::
E-7'-14 Tubeles
Blackwll Pka $225
Fed. Ex. Ta No tr.de
needed.
. . ' • New from Bead to Bead • 1B teri.n • Low Rrolile
• 7 rib tread pattem • 'iange of aliel · • Loo~ g:n:iatl Low proflle for 1tabilib\ new 7 rib tread pattern for
mileage and traction. lligh priced look in shoulder
and sidewall 1tyling. A.,.uable bl blackwall and extra
nenow whitewall desip.
WI ... 1111 nlCI PIOllAll .._.. tf t11 _...,.11MJ ...... fir ~ tit-., .. .., .... lllt If ... al• --......... "" .. """ bl ......,. • dlf,..... Ma Ute II IN tchlnltM Jlriel _, ._,.. 1 fllll
tl>tct tor ftl!WA Hllwl'J' flf ~ MfdllltltlM.
•·
YOU SAVE *675
...
650-13 $21AO
ElS.14 $23.50
F7S.14 $24.90
G7S.14 $27.30
H78-14 $29.90
J7S.14 $33.90
560-15 $22.00
F78-15 $24.90
G7S.15 $21.30
t--;iH.ci7S.'f15>-t-$29.90
900-15 5.90
WAS
Nylon Cord ·Tires
for PANEl.:s,
PICK-UPS) VANS
9f1il CAMPERS. •3970
*2595
"hitfire" ... ,:t' BATTERY ...... _,_ .. , =.,.,.;, .
.Liberal Budget Terms--·
Low Monthly Payments
Or Use Your
.. ,
v:
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) -
A brlel calm in this university
city' -scene of two gunfire
deaths In less than a week
-was shaUered early today
by an eiplosion near an area
where there have b e e n
re p e a t e d confront&Uons
between police and a croup
between tan... HI 1 b way .,_. J.~--1s lro ,._ •--·--pl~• SuJil' -m-·~-·t w,~, aome ~· m ·~ • --·~-~-r • ~ ~ w;va • ...-i.u.m IUuul ; wd.....lfv, eome forme• '' _, _..,. ,,.._La11dw.Dollottc.w ... ~-.
ol-,.uehl.
The blast knocked a two-foot
hole in a wall of lhe Credit
~au building and shattered
windows in residenca more
tl\an 100 yards: away. Thert
"""' no Injuries. Robert Wofte ol the Kanan
lin marshal's· ofllce aa\d,
"We'Ve found !rarments of
a I08p detergent box. We feel
certain it wu packed wllb
blict powder though (he stuff
will ... 111111*·.
George Kimball, lNder of a ·--.r '" f E"~~::!:to~~!~~ ~r;:~h~7l~!·: ....... ~~.C?R!~~!!::!?!~ .. C?!!~Y..':4!~.~!~.~f.!!~~!~~~!·.!~~~! .... :.:
as "Lhe street people," and police and firemen by setuoa • ' .
~:i: ~~rpu~~ru;u~ =~~ c re. t l D a I ••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••• \ ................................ !
~~~=~~~::: ~]u~liZ:~: YOUNG L LANE TIR·E CO. 'INC. :; ot the .Campus WIS the lei!ne Donald Rick Dowdell, 11 D. -.. • •
or a confrontation Monday Negro; last Thul'lday nl(ht In • ·• • •
night In whicll Harry (ilcholas \he black community. <"ouce a COSTA MESA LAGUNA BEACH 8 '
A.Jee:, 18, wa• struck arid tilled aald be w11 fleeing frOm ot~ • • , • ; by a buUet while running wilh !icen and wu ahot •hen be 1596 NIWPORT BLVD. e Phono 541-9313 4'2 OCIAN AVr. e Phone 4\14 6166 a •
a 1roup of the "atftet people" lte~ from a car with a • 1"'~!'1~1 ... omc1a1 in-gu8..:~~iloctinc mact•: . ALSO THEODORE ROBINS FORD-2060 Harbor Blvd.. Costa Mesa 642..0010 ::
dlcalloo where lbe li>ol came a surprise visit to \he troybl<ll '• 11 lo 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 • 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 ,8 8 8 it 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 a 8 a 8 ii a Ii a a a a a ·a a• l from._ ..... ll'Ueadq.
" I
• ,
•
t
... ..
t:
-:
•
-
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DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
•
·Talbert A venue · Solution •
At lut conlllcUnf forces In HunUngton Beach have
-ed the vexing problem of how or even whether to
erten4 Talbert Avenue through tM 147-<1cre Cenlral
Pm7 · ~
The debate bas gone on !or months , matching eco-
logl.ats qain•t engineers. The issue was simple enough.
Tbe'10iulion was not.
. If Talbert Ave11ue were ·~tended from Golden
West Street, where it presenUy terminates, through
· the part to Edwards Street, as called for in the cqunty
master plan of highways, the park would be biseCted.
Traftlc •needs would be se.rved but the usefulness and
attractiveness of the park would be seriously reduced.
Running Talbert through a tunnel or putting it on
overhead· stilts were considered as alternatives. The
discussion was ended Monday night by the council's
adoption of a new alignment for the highway.
Essentially the new route will wind through the
ooutherly porUon o{,the puk. behind a hill_'°hich will conceal the road from almost all of the recreation area.
Everyone agreed· the alignment a combinati.on of
alternatives devised by traffic engineers and the park
architects, w•s a happy compromise. The road ahead is now clear for further develop-
mmt of the park.
Helping Mentally ~etarded
Mental retardation lo an ~gly·word tba't can hanlly
be circumscribed by euphemism.
Whether you Jilte It or not that <»ndltlon ha s afflict-
ed many cblldren In tbe West Orange County area who
need to be taught what some o! us take for granted.
The Ocean View Scbool District baa somehow found
room.for these .~10 ~· an4. ~sts teach them how to keep themselves clean, mak~ )>eds, coOk foods
-even to speak simple sentences.
· Teaching tn a school where progress is alow, re-
' quires-extra deYOllon and· many man houra In order
to make It .pay ofL Wotkilli on a daily basis with cJill.
dren who have mongoli1m, braiA damage, and birth
abnormallUes, Ocean View's Instructors have found
lhe way through human kindness ' and special training.
Although presumably no amount of educatlon can
make these Children "nonnal," It can provide them with
the t90ls to find a place in the world where they may
enjoy ·!ife, be understood and accepted, and bring un·
derstanding to others. · •
Police for Mile Square
Fountain Valley won an important concession last
week from Orange County supervisors when the super·
visors agreed to help with police protection oI M'tle
Square Regional Park, and to pay for road improve-
ments there.
City officials were afraid they would have to pay
the tab for extra city services which would be needed
when the big park is fu1ly opened in the next few years.
They righUy felt county taxpayers should help pay the
cost of protecting a county facility, even though it is
entireiy in Fountain Valley. ; .' ·
County officials also agreed to $353,000 Jn road im-
provements for streets surrounding the park - a cost
city officials said they could not absorb. Fountain Val-
ley Mayor Edward Just argued the city's case before
lhe Boerd of Supervisors, poln)ing to projections wliich
showe(I two million visitors pouring into tbe park annual~
ly when it is completed.
The victor}' is not all one way. The two governing
bodies showed they can work together for the mutual
benefit of Orange County and Fountain Valley residents.
While the county will supply extra police protection -
about one patrol car and two officers -the city will
handle all fire pro!eclioii for Mlle Square. Ana Fountain
Valley waived $680,000 in water-,and sewer fees.
The agreement i~ a big victory for this. young city. H
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E~ag9erated Vision of · the Future?
Orange County's Polities
.
..,,. -aoll the l'MI black.
Vacation: Do
·Things Never
Done Before
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'' l'D SAY A 5.A.M. ~It> rr."
Sir R.onald Fac·es
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The Rat Pack Or1n&e C.ountY,1 California, ls u
Amerlan as berry jile and blg,leaguo
baaeball and DisD.yland and the U.S.
Marine Corps, all of which ii contains
fn apectacµlar manifestations: Knott's
Beny Fan'.n, the California Angels, the
Marine aJr base at El Toro: ~nd of
cour;ae Disneyland, the one and only.
Oranp County, In &hort, Is rather
like a magnified auborb -aomethlng
similar to though vastJy greater than
the sutubs that have been fonninC
around cities acroa the country. U is
made up of people whose interests center
on their homes and their jobs, people
who like what they have, worry about
paying for it, and are hostile to anythlne
they think might change it.
··":"'r;:'l~""r#1~~'f'~~l~'.}. Well. children, as you remefnber, Sir ~ Ronald of Holy Rood and his faithful
'"'~"Ir··· _,, ... T"'!~" ~~
~ .. Ar!·HoRpe · !
OraJlge County, soulh or 1.A>s ,,.\ngeles,
,also is a home of u1trapolitical con-
verv&Usm. It conftrmed lhat a·gain when
the >*rs of the lilh District, mid<
up larply. ol a pm ol Orange County
with a piece ol Sin Diego County Um>wn
draw millionl, are not limited to Knott 's
and rn-y1anc1. Tbey range from !'ftli-
dent Nixon's summer White Ho• at
San Ckmeote to San Juan Capistrano
Mission to whidl the swallows return
and Laguna Bead!, -. artisb ia· d-, ._ ol Ille lll09ie. larielJ, hive
been known to ~·
In, elected a member ol the Jolm_ Bi,reh NOl\.18 m POPULATION old and
5oclety, Slate Sen. Jolin Sc!mllta, In lllid and 1lapaJit the lqenda itiue
.lhe •. U.S. .. lloule .ol. 11'1!.-,tal!Y,, .. -t•oJd·,,_ -·~·ht·-'=-...
to llJo IUl'Jl'lae ol no one. II Is ,_ and It Is tpOWlnc tw111J1,
NOR 18 OIUNGJI C 0 UN T Y ' S Its HIO JIOP'tlallM -blrely 7'0,olll, ""*"'-ordinary, nm«-U...UU a 111 percent -..,,,, lllO. II -.atism. The publlllier of Ill ? Is esUmated that more than U mllUon
dpal paper has ssld "!hero lln~ .any now Hve In the eoupty. Nor are they
such thins: u • juJt or fair tu." For poor Jnd ill-educated. To a great ei:tent
nearly two decade!,• untU be died, it ,thete are famJUes tJ. skilled craltmien
kept sending to• Congress a man who and techniciam, and their income is
telt that the d~gooders tn Washington above both the DjUonaJ aDd state
were depraved as well u dangerous: average . 'Ibey~ are homeownera. The
"'The federal iovermnent ts like the ... qounty has mUe after mile of housing
child moletter who o(fers candy before developments, dotted with shopping
bis evil act.11 Schmitz, the man who centers and a score or mote of cities
was jult eJecl.ed, alJo hu. a !Ulpk;i,ous which ti ave names but fa rely have
eye. He once· 11ki: "Americanilm ii peraonall~ies. The people ·come from the
not trust.ing your leaden'." Midwest, the South, and Southwest -
Why should Orqe County be whit and a great many come from Los
II ts polilicallyT It ts not j>olated, cut An&eles, Oeeinl the city. Tbey are nearly
off fMm the maJnstream ol American -an white ••Anglos," about 93 percent,
activity. I~ tourist attractiom, wb.ich with some S percent American• of Mei:-
THE QUF.SJ'ION we ask ourselves,
the only reason for gOing into all thi&.
is whether, as Newsweek once suuested,
"Orange County may just possibly be
the.,pattem ef the far4Jt future." Or,
as a piece in Fortune remarked a colJl)l.e
of·yean -•p,-·· .... •····.!be? bameowraer
11ytdcmw 'that WO~ te cOlt-
.... aUve behavior U! 0,.. County Is
coming ,to be a pervasive polltlcal force
in many auburban areas. "'lbere uaed to be ..i.. in prvmlsing In mate thinp
happen, a prominent New YOrk politician
observed not long ago. 'Now there art
votes in promising to keep things from
happening.' "
The nation's suburbs art be<x>ming
an increasingly powerfUl politlcal force.
perhaps more powerful than either o(
the old antagonists, .the ciUes and the
rural areas. Ir It is true that Orange
·County Js In any way a tdsioh -albei't
an exaggerated vision -o( the future,
what we now think of as dangerous
"polariiatkm wilt seem in relro&pect. to
have been brotherly comradeship.
-LouJIVllle Times
The Vietnam Tiger Cages
WASHING TON -The latest shocker
from South Vietnam, confinement of
political prisoners in crowded "tiger
cages," bas now been lamented at length
by war critics who see it as new, sub-
human evidence of the inhumanity of our South Vietnamese ally.
Now that those recriminaUoris have
predictably been uttered, it js time to
say tome very different things. Without
in any way cmdoning the use of . the
ell" (or the acqu1......,. of U.S. of·
ficials), the malteT -Id be put In
a Vietnamese contexl
It should be understood, in the first
place, that animal-like cages and zoo-like
enclosures have been used on both sides
Jn lhe present Indochina war and before
it. The inhumanity is not new or localized
In th• South.
The Viel Cong and North Vietnamese
ara known to confine U.S. prisoners
or war tn a wt of bamboo "monkey
cage." Thete are latticed structures 1
litUe more than five feet long, about
-~W-
Wednaday, Jib II, ll'ro
TM ..utorlal -of tM p.uy
1'Uol "'"' lo i•forwt and ·-ol4U reockn bu ,,,..,.,.tint w.
.. tDSJ>OPfl"• °"'~ and com-lllftlla1!/ on ,.,,..,. of lnl<r<•I i ond •/gnlfiamce, by prooitJlng o
( forum for tM •:rproulon of ; our 1'"4tr1' oplntoni, and bj
I pre1ntmg th.I . diotr1e ai.tz.o.
I points of lnfo""'d obi.,,,.,,
) ond rpok•.mn on topjcl of 111•
d4y,
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
I
three feet wide, with -of
perhaps four -
AS IN .111E TIGEll caaes, pri1ooen
are unable to stand in the nlll bmnboo
cages. As in the tiger cqres, the
prisoners are usually 1ocUd In leg~rons
at nil)!~ and only a thin lhatd>ed roof
ofren protection from the weather ••
Moreover, these bamb9o cages are
not punishment cells, used for unruly
prisoners or to confine rec.alcitrants for
short periods. They are a way of POW
life and believed to be such for many
ol the 1,500 Americans held by the
Viet Cong and North Vietnamese.
The Communists are also reported to
confine POW1 in unprotected ope.1 pits
-bear pits -where prisoners are
forced to live on short rations in their
own excrement just as in the tiger
cages. There is, ln short, no justification
for the recent expressions of outrage
from the Communist side of the Parla
peace talb.
ON·TllE OTllEll hanct, Ille Sooth Viet-namese use a !Ol"t « barbed wtr. ''fol
run" for disciplinary IJUTPG* tn aome
ol their POW compounds -and op.
parenUy with •eml-Olflclal International
sancUon.
Newsmen "It» vi.sited South Viet·
namese camps tn April, with Tex.as
multimillionaire Rosa Perot, questioned
authorities closely about a barbed w1re
encl05W'e in one or the compounds at
the prison camp on Phu Quoc. That
island, like Con Son, Is off tht southern
COlst ot Vietnam. It is the ihe ot
the larg .. 1 South Vietnamese POW
amp.
The enclosure •n Chere is about eiJht
feel long, four feet wide, •nd Joor feet
•i,ti. II ii entl"1,y r.nc.i and rooled
vdLh woven barbed wire so that a
prisoner can do litUe but lie « crouch
in it, unsheltered from the weather.
SOU111 VIETNAMESE authorities said
the &mall fox run was used to discipline
troublHnaken In the POW compound.
It was clean and empty at the Ume of
the weU--publiclzed Perot visitation.
AillhoriUes reported that olllciala ol
the lnll!maUoaal Red Cross had finl
questioned the Ule nf the barbed WSre
enclosure. However, 'Ibe Red er.. in-
spectors, who monitored the SouUI Viet-
namese camps, made no formal protest,.
camp authoriUea said, when they {OWKI
that aimllar disciplinary fociiiUes had
been in general use in mll.ltary prtsoM
in lndoclrlna dating back to the days
of French occupation.
All of these enclosure• are olfentivt
by our standards, even though coiiditions
in many prisons here in the United States
have come under sharp critlcism. It
is important to understand, howt!ver.
that our standards are not always usefuJ
Jn making judgments about Vietnam .
By-8.Alfeo
aad Jolla >.. r-·"'
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
'
U the Police helicopters would
!pend les1 time buulng 'backyard
sunbathers they would ut more
non-voyeur work done!
-Mn. C. L.
'* ..... ,._.. .............. 1111 MCWf'I" ...... "" _,.,., ..... ,.., "' """ ~ . ...., ... .,.., .....
Are you bored with rouUne vacations?
Don't. you · get tired of sweating all
day in a hot rowboat trying to catch
a wary wall~ed pike or trout, and
then .sitting all night in a resort
hotel's frigid cocktail lounge in hopes or
snaring an unwary glusy-eyed blonde?
Man, you're in a circul~ ru( that ·-~~J'~~~.w:.~-~~
Wlinr lies around the water cooler.
What YoU need is a vacatJon that
will snap you out of it, a vacation
tPeDt-in doinl dllnp you've never done
be!Or<.
Li~e wbr.t? Well, the choice is endless.
For example, you_ might-
COUNT THE GOOSE bumps on a
friglrtened wart bog.
Cross-breed ·crabgra55 with four-leaf
clovers '''° that ' when a patch or it
grows "in four lawn you'll feel downright
lucky.
Tract down the guy w~ opens cans
of wanna lmtead of clo6ing them.
Organlzie a marathon Oagpolwitting
contest for politicians who've bored you
by their fen<Hlttlng tactics.
Take Dean M~in to a marshmallow toasting orgy.
Give Milton Berle a new old chestnut
to tell.
Send )'OU1' hem a box or a doze n
aswrted molehills and see how many
mountains he can make of them.
BUILD A LOVE nest in that unused corner of your attic.
Borrow a new trouble and return an
old one.
See.if you can find a bank that will
let you open 1 savings accotmt without
havinl lo lug borne an eleclrlc touter
or piece o( Juuage.
MU• a collection ol prize box i.,,.
which J'Oll can't mail lo the manufactater
and ~ anything ~k. Create a ,._ commercial that
will ..-.itcall1 llir-deltruct -· afll!r tt hu been shown once.
Train 1 couple ol gar!ennates to keep
your socks up.
OONSTRucr A private trough for
government employes who are weary
of ~ating out of the pubUC trough.
No one yet has thou.gli. up a sure
fire way to cook spalhettl backwards.
Can you! .j
Bake some fret custard pies for
etatesmen who say It 1J against their princlplts to throw mud.
Invent a wnip-around, s 1 e t v e I e s s
~ wide enough , to be used also ii a dl'Hling gown.
Ill there any lalid In Ille W<>'ld where
Che natfftl aren't restltal1 Bow about IOilll there ..and h1ildlng a rat home
for thole who want to get away from
lt all
PtJT A BEAN UP a IA!en·ager'a nooe.
Seard\ the "'°' for an elephant with '° much adf-control he can atop after .. uor onlY one peanut.
Launch · 1 campaign to mini mite the
ma1ilkirt and maximize the miniskirt.
Get American Indian tribes to sign
a new peace pact under which they 'll
agree to quit sending up smoke signal s.
Attt"I'" all, if we are ever to lick the
problem of air pollullon, we've got to
m11ke a nnn ttart aomew~.
Yes, why lllould anyone be bored on
his vacaUOnT Just look •round _)'OU. There
are a million wortllwhlle Ul6np ju.st
Waitinc for )'OU to do Jbam,
squirt, Sancho Reinecke, had plunged
deep into The Tangled Thicket in quest
of that frum.inous crea_ture who dwelt
somewhere in the murky gloom -The
Dread Unruh.
Sir Ronald Was
keeping in fighting
trim by hacking
away with his fam-
ed Swinging Sword
al a nearly-expired
Welfare Budgt"t,
when suddenly he
paused. "lfark, San.
cho," he said, "what
melodious sound is
that?" . ·-..: ..
Through the thicket came a golden
Voice. "When I was 52," sang, The
Voice In the most beautiful of tones,
"il was a very good year ... ·•
THE BRANC~ parted and out step.:
ped The Voice., itself, a thin dark-haired,
nervous-looking creature with a cigarette
dangling from its lips.
"Beware, Sin!" whi.ipered Sancho in
a state of great alarm. "'Tis that most
evil of beasts, The Voice. He is the
leader or the sinful Rat Pack and the
boon companion of all your most dire
enemies, including the Mafia -both
Irish and Italian."
"He fights. then for The Dread
Unruh?" asked Sir Ronald.
"Verily, he must. Sire," replied Sancho
firmly. "For he has supJ>Orled I.he causes
of wickedoess for, Jo, these three decades
past and more."
AT THIS, A thoughtful expre~ion
crossed Sir Ronald 'r noble mien. He
sheathed his Swinging Sword and.
nashing his famed Grinning Grin, ap--
proached The Voice.
"Greetings, fair knight," he said,
•'peact be with )'OU ...
, ' . ' .
"Hi, there, Ronnie, baby," said Tht
Voice, lighting another cigarette without
much interest. "What gives, dad ?"
"l go forth to do batUe with The
Dread Unruh. Wilt thou support me
in my fight for Decency. for Purity
and for Just Plain Goodness?"
"Not exactly tnY bag, dad. I fjgure
\ 'to opt for '111.e UnrUh. Itve. alway11 been
the life of his party. Gotta think of
my fans. Any reason I 'shouldn't?"
"None,~ ~aid Sir Ronald guileleaaly •
"If you adinire a creature that's only
47 and doesn't approve of dyed hair."
"ts that so?" said The Voice frown.in&.
"NEVER. TRUST anyone under 50,
l say. Particularly if he comes not
from Holy Rood . Ah, these interlopen
who wish to take over our beloved Golden
State."
"11\ere's that, too," conceded The
Voice. •tau t look, dad, I been loyal
to my fans for 30 years. And they'd
never dig me coming out for you. There'•
nothing·we got in common."
"After 30 years, that's exactly what
we've got in common," said Sir Ronald
with a smile. "Your fans."
"Okay, dad, you' win, I'm your boy,"
said The Vok:e with a sigh. "But Could
you cool tha t decency stllff a little?
It curdles my Scotch." ~
AT TIIlS A roar of outr1ge
reverberated through The Thicket. " 'Tis
The Unruh, Sire," cried Sancho gleefully.
"You're winning over The Voice has
wounded him grievously."' '
"l have captured the Italian vote,"
shouted Sir Ronald into The Thicket.
"Do you yield, Dread Unruh?"
Afer a moment's pause, the cry came
back: "Not while I still have Sammy
Davis Jr."
A Tr.eacherous Phr.a.se ·
' 'l'llonpb 1! Larp:
One of the most treacherous pllrases
ln the lexicon of argument ls '"the public"
-ror there is in fact no such thing,
only a congeries o{ different publics,
forever shUting and reforming their con·
sUtuency. • • •
tt's strange how the people who regard
It as an infringe-
ment of person1l
liberties ir •society
should decide to
limit lhe number or
chUdren we might
have, don't at all
consider it a 1o88 of
freedom that we are
permitted only one
husband or wife at
• time: but jf th•
~· ~(
•
otate has the aclnowleged right to en-
force monogamy, why not the number
ol P"'llCllY! (And p1 .... donl quote the
BibJe at me. in defen1e or "multiply·
ing"; all the Old Testament patriarchs
had numerous wives, but that didn't stop
eccle.slaatical authorities from eventlllllY
banning polygamy.) • • •
Speaking of children, any parent, at
any Ume durinc •n •flUJn'Tlt with a
teen-ager. who remarks "When I was
your age . . • " duerva uactJy the
acorn be or she get&. • • • •
The ne.it bardeol lhlni lo liviJll 'up
smoking Is lo avoid sub1tltut tnr
romething for it, like smugness .
• • •
\Vhy is " il called a "30ft" job when
it's the hardest of all to gel ? • • •
For a shrewd understandinc o r
feminine psychology, it's hard to be.at
J. B. Priestley's observation: "She was
not ptttty, but She might have -
hanctsmne ii 30mebody had kept feliinJ
her that she was pretty.''
•---B1r Geo1"9e·----
0ear George:
I'm engaged to a columnist on
my local paper who writes a funny
column. But everywhere I go I*>"
pie keep warning me against mar-
rying a humorist -jg It true
that humorists Are essentially
gtoomy, grouchy aod Ill-tempered?
• RUTll
Dear Rulh :
That'll the most stupid thing I
evtr beard of! Humorists ha~
swtet dispositions and ne\ltt Joae
their lemp<rl And don't you lorffll
It.
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