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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-07-23 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• ' r Below . ·I0,000 a Tragedy · of Errors :May Have Caused Veterail~s Arrest Draft Calls Going Down Says Lall·d , ' •I ~.... "'f W ASH!NGTON I AP) -Secretary of Dereme Melvin R. Laird said today draft calls fOr the rest of 1970 will average below 10,000 a month, a return to pre-Vietnam levels. l..&ird made this forecasl in a 1peech for &bout 550 studenl'I working u sum- mer lnttms with the government. "In the remaining months ()( thil!: year," Laird said, "I anticipate that draft calls will average beW l0,000 th " ' per mon . . In the past, he has predicted that tot.al draft calls this year will fall between 150,000 and 170,000 young Oien compared with the 290,000 drafted in 1969. Aide!I said Laird still lticks to that forecast. Through August, draft calls this year have totaled 124,500. Jn his talk, Laird assured the ltudtnls that "We are doing all we can to plan and implement a program that will reduce draft calls to uro and enable us to establiCl an all-volunteer force." But he cautioned that, in order to, make the shift, Coogress must provlde a major increase in the defense budget. Laird offered no forecast as to wl}en this might happen. However, the trend ls toward smaller defense budgets. and stronger pressure from Coogreu to cut defense spendin(I . Lower drafl calls are tied to the U.S. withdrawal from South Vietnam and a concurrent reduction of total U.S. mllkary manpower. The secretary stressed once again that by next aspring U.S. forces will be down to 284,000 troops or fewer -about half the U.S. garrison in Vietnam when the Nixon administration took power in J anuary 1969. Briefly mentioning the controversial Incursion in Cambodia, which touched orr wide!pf'fad campus deinOnstrat.ions in May, Laird said : "Evidence mulllplies that the President's strategy and his doctrine are producing the desired result.s." The Pentagon chief did not say what that evidence is, bul he indicated he lSee LAIRD, Page l l PUBLIC ACCESS BILL REJECTED SACRAMENTO !UPI ) -A bill requiring cities and countlea to reject bulkling p e rm I t 1 , sub- divi sions or zoning changes which would cut off public acce..q to the ocean or other large water 11.reas was defeated Wednesday by the Assembly. The bill by Assemblyman John Dunh1p (.D-Napa ), was rejected on 11 35 lo 27 vote, with 41 votes needed for passage. -.-..ras NIL'¥ ..... Tlttff"""" OF.f.l~llt lltlC' IHl!t~THIRS Cit.UH ITATISTICS In ~· Mew, A lit ltllfNI 1 h1illllr County Assessor Cites Possibility. of Tax Cut By T()M BARLEY 01 ""' 01lt¥ Piie! fll'ff • A nine--ctnt lax cul seeml'I certain today for Orange County taxpayers as county officials took. a cloSer look at lhe statewide survey t.hal made lhe ~dnction possible. County Asres.wr Andrew J. Hinshaw today confirmed that if State oBard of• Equalization a~essmenu are accurate it would not be nectSll&ry to le vy a special , countywide school tax this year. Th al tax amounted in 1969-70 to slighUy more than nine cent! on each SIOO of assessed value, lhe a.!sessor Said. Tile tax reduction became Inevitable whep t~ stat.e agenicy ,dl.sclosed that Orange County's llSUSsment ratio for 1~71 was 13.1 percent• This compares wilh a statewide average of 23J percent. "Let's u y you own a $24,000 home,• Hinshaw said. "We try to achieve a ZS percent raUo of assessed value to lair mark·et value and this would give you Finland Chief .Here To Talk With Nixon WASHINGTON (U PI ) -Fresh from 1 trip to Moscow, Finland'• longtime president. Urho Kekknnen, made his firs l v\sil to the Whitt House in ntne year• today l.O confer with Prt&ldent Nixon. 'I' I an assessed value on your property of $6,000. ' "This would; mean a savings ol about SS.50 on your tax bill. the a:isessor uid. But he pointed out that tht ove~all county tax for 1970-71 still remains to be set: · Hih!fliW 'fectr.11.Y ·Increased assetsed v&Juh for 1'70-71 by 17.1 percent over laS. yel'l''s figures . 1 ' tile •tate bolri1'1 fijufes were cqm. piled .aft.er . 8 , series o{. random ch~s on Orange CdUnty proJ)eJ'ty. Thev we.rt then compared with data cn111piled hv Hinshaw'• offtce bt(ore bcln& made public. O,:.nieJCounty'a rino haa betft below ~stale 1vuage ror the 1'•tthhe ye1r1. And thet f1ctor hi1 :midi: thit. cou11ty eligible 'fOr • 81 comJIUlaUon known •~ the "Collier f1u:tor" -an adjustment m3rte in all Califomit cOunU11 where loc81 r-aUos are below the $le 1ver1ge.. A local tax I! levied lo provide tchool districts with tne .fundl they woulil hive rtceived from "the •lite Uthe ratio equal· ed or was in e.cea of. lht a,veraee.' Or11nke County's higher radn& me.an• lhat fund! which would have ~ toUght from local aources will naw be provided by the State Oepar~t ·or Education. Only 14 ot California'• sa counties hlld assessmtnt ratios higher than Orange County'1, ttie stale conipUaUon reveals. • . . Month Predicted ~ i . Hinshaw S ·ays County Tax , Cut Looks Possible . • I s DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * en ~· • n;mi. ~-. llll.-.i .• VO\.. U.. NO. lfl, I SIC:TIONS, fl PAGIS -- • . This Seal Taken 3rd Victin1 Sneaky Snake Found in Toilet I• Without · VENTURA, Calif. '(UPI) -lt:'s a ln~ky &p&ke, Louis Chacon told I sheriff's deputies last Week. . , , · . Chacon sakt he fotlnd the make. in the.toilet of the. houae. into which he ~ad !u.!t moVe<f. Tht' sriake, he.· sald1 sttick ita , head out, oi .OM; bott<>:m ,ol ~e comn\ode ~ut {C:llU.ppeartd do~nwara If Pt~ tollet .was Oushed . • , . . t . . S~fety ·Hat ..,_ to. tbe beach lor a tnllrlM bloloa lab cl.a5s, a teenaged Costa Mesa summer Jchool student was killed this T morning when hurled headDrlt into 1 brick wall after his motorcycle went out or control. George L. Hancock , IB, ot 2138 Wallace Ave ., wu dead on arrival at nearby Hoag Memorial Hospital following the I :~ a.m. accident. The Estancia High School student was wearing no protective helmet and was tllrown about JOO feet when his cycle .!truck a curb at Placentia Avenue and Jlkh street. Cause of the tragid accident was still under Jnvest11atlon, but police said Han· cock may have swerved to avoid a car driven by William A. Farwell, 49, or 1828 Placentia Ave., C05ta Mesll . Patrolman Pal Rodgers said the vlcUm wu riding south on Placentia ·Avenue toward Newport Beach, where his clalls was having• marine biology field trip. He was the son oC Mrs. Mary Hancock. "Here It is again -no helmet," said C08ta Mesa Police Lt. Avery Smith, who heads the department's traffic bureau. "He'd be alive if he 'd been wear- ing one." LL Smith added lhlll Hancock's death today Wu the third in two months involving a young motorcyclist riding without a prottetive crash helmet. 1be others a1IO died of bead injuries. Hero's Family Gets Medals A Co&ta Me!fl 1ervictmao kil)ed on New Year's Day, 1989 while leading a ie·am ol Vleuiamese Jrreaula.r com- batant.. bas been awarded two military decoratiom by the Republic of Vietnam. Green Beret Spec. S Roger Y(, Brown, m of Mr. and Mrs. Gr•nt Brown, of 353 Broadway, was' i;lled with the Military Merit Medal and Galllntry Crosa with Palm. He died in an al tack and . fight with a larser force on NW Coto' Mountain, but hls counter-action saved a number of his own men. _ 1be )'owt( aer1eanl won several U.S. mlllt.iry medals, including the Bromt Star with ·-Oak: Leaf duster and the ArmY 'Coinmendatkn M<dal. French lutellecrual • ·Charged With ArsQn DRAUGUIGNAN, France (APl -Em~ Bolo. the Parisian teacher charg- ed W'Mh starting forest fires on the Riviera last week was freed from jail Wednesday on provlsklnal liberty. the French eiquivalenl of ball. Doto claims he is be.Ing framed bccauw he la· a !ell-wing lnltllectull. J At tJrpes It would ~tJck Jti he.ad oUt of anbUler to'ilet in ~e home, Cha.cop said. •' 1 • • • •• • •• , ' · Deputies, ,;kepticiil about the. whole UU,... U:iorouahly inveatJaated both tollell and foUnd ·nothing. They lefL. ' · W-ay ·Cbo<GQ called the therill Qlln.·Tb!'-II•>< he WI the-· Mad becoml! bolder, rilinl out of the bow( to MW·at .bim. , · .. , Deputiu went to the home again. There Wu a fivi.rOOtioni ~- peuing out of the. bowJ. , · , Before they could grab the rept11! it retreated do\,¥n the fl:ole In "the bottom. Animal contro• officer.! were called in but the Anaconda kept duckina: out of sight. . . . · Finally the toilet was. removed from its moorings and they cauaht lbt snake with a noose and -took it Ott to 'a sJielter. Ex-GI Held at Fort Ord On Charges of Desertio11 Copies o{ honorable di!Charge pllper~ have been pre!ented to a U.S.· District Court in San Franciaco by the attorney for a Vietnam veteran from Anaheim Who may be the vk:tiin o( a tragedy of errors. · The situation in which John Lapp, 21, finds himself today is hardly .a comedy of errors. He i.! under arrut at Ford Ord, where he wa.9 taken after FBI agents urged him to come along to Santa Ana June I and clear up a misunderstanding abouf his military status. . The U.S. Army says lhe Anaheim Union Hiah School District maintenanc-:- inan recieved a '711 re-enlistment bonus June 11, 1918, then deserted instead of reporting to a -Minnesota artillery ba'se. Lapp and hit attorney, Charles Robins:on , of Santa Ana, say he was hooorab}y dllcharged, ~ever re.enlisted, .and cam~ home m his native Ofaoge County, '\there the former Speciati~t 41(( picked \Jp life ·again like many ex· servicemen. · · · He 11>t a job. . . . He µnder:wtnt .trr,ai,nen~ for .shrapnel wounds . suffered in Vietnam infantry combat. vlsitlnit Long Beach Veterlns' Admlni~tratlon ):{oipilal. He 'married' Peggy B'artholomew.' He took out a GI loan appliclltion" nn a home the yoong couple then d~ided again!t buyini. · And he answl!red ·(he door Mllf 22 when a pair of FBI · agents announctd they wanted to !ilk to ~irri arid taki; a look al his ·military separaOon papers. Life hasn't been the same since. 111though he Is not now confined to the Fort Ord stoc'kade, but asSigned to the Special Processing Department, unable to leave baile on his own . Lapp has been granted passes on three occasion.! fOr visll! home , pemlmf:! his Sept. 4 hearing In U.S." District Court in San Francl.!al, at which tlme the Army must pro ve its case. . "John's nerves were worse the last lime he came back from Fort Ord than they were when he Cfime back from Vietnam," sa ys his astepfather, John Harouff. Armp authorities bave produced re- . . enlistment papers signed with Lapp's name, but he arid hi! attorney aay theY. were forged, after fir.!t believing the ca.se to be a monumental paperwork mi:rup. . ','I th"ink the Army bungled," says Robin.900, his civilian lawyer, f!'ho lJ a former.c8ptain in tbl Marine ~s. "I thipk this Ls the st.rangeSt. case J have run into in my whole life,'' added the man who hOpes to prove the Army bungled Sept. 4 when he goe.s to federal court with Lapp. One of Lapp's feUow seml·prisoners In the SPD area at Ford Ord i.! Thomas D. Harvey, 23, of. Vallejo, who was taken into custody last Friday by fede ral authorities. Harvey; whose attorney -like Lipp's -has filed a petition for a• writ of habeas corpus In the same court, ffiurn. ed home Aljg. 31, 1969, after beln&: glveft • (See .BlZA,llJIE. P.ale !) . Oruge ' Cout· Weather Overnight lows along the Orange ' Coast are expected to be 57 to 65 1 degrees. The high are forecast at 75 to 15. Low clouds and Joe.al fog night and early morning remain. INSIDE TODA. 'Y ' Republican State Senator1 are optlmia:tic that Gou. Redgan'i 11 bUUoit tax reform plan toiti pass .. But Democrats a+e jiut o.t optimistic that they will amend it. See atory Page a. 1 l I DAILY PILOT S Hickel OK s Oil Lease, Drill Cuts WAlllllNGTON (AP) -Secretary ol tnUrior WaJter J. Hlcktl has endorsed the ClllceltaUon ol 20 federal oil lwes aod continued drilling under strict recuJation to prevent future blowouta llld polllllloo In the Santa Barbara chan- IOI off the Calllornla coast. Hicte1 urged a Senate Jnlerlor 1Ub- -mlttee Wednetday to act promptly • a bUI lpon!Ored by Sen. George llurpby (ft.Cnlif.) The measure would cancel 20 of lhe ft federal oil leues in the Santa Barbara "'-1 and P., the holders from a ipeCia.l acc<lUnt buUt by oil sales from Naval Petroleum Reserve No. l in ~omia.. The blll. one of 11.I before the aul>- bommittee, also would create a national mergy resttve ol. 111,000 aaa seaward a( the California state Santa Barbara Oil Sanctuary. Some of the other bllla call for can· ' cellltion. Of all 70 Jeaaet. Hickel SI.id oU producUon should con- lbae OD --. a lllt blowout cau80d oplllo ln «dtr to.relieve - llld roduce the da!llft cl f~ ,.ep.,. and polluU... "We have increased our lnspeclklt f.,_ to enoure compliance and early. -ol any mlebaps," ·-1 ........ Wllllam T. P--. U.8. Geoloslcal sm.., -· aald lbal ........ pballw ..... bad -clt!1tad, bat rw WM ln ~. cm U. IO leases ....,._,... ,,_atloo. Hieb! and Murphy were the only wlllleaes among 25 beard at the tW<><lay heorini to jive uoqualllied aupport to the Murphy bUI. Mmy other witnesses said more than 20 leateS should be C8.llceled. Sen. Alan Cramtoo and . Rep. John V. Tunney, califomla Democrat.a:, recom- mended their bU!s which would cancel .D10lt of the ·leaaes and create a federat.. state sanctuary program along the California coast. The federal tanctuaries would estend IN.ward from existing state sanctuaries. Tunney said the Murphy bill "coold well have been written in the oo.rd room ol a large oil company" because It would .shut down unproducUve wells and permit all other olft!hono drilling to cmtinue. Twmey Is ,..king Murphy'• 5enateaeal Cranston wd the Murphy bill Is a .. step tn the right dlrection" but Jt ''falls far lhor1 of what is needed and "it la not an adequate safeguard' !J11nst . Ila tbreat o1 fulura Santa Jllirtiora C9i:utmpbel ... Rep. Chari,. M. Teague (R.C.lll.), IAllll'!ed in aupport cl Santa Barbara 1q1a1at1on he 1s sponaormg. A ~ for. a group of 11 oil 'c<>raponiel bOldJnil Santa Barbara cban- ilel leases urged that the Murphy bill be..n pandfd to include paymentr for tbeir unproductive leases. John Ohl aald the Pauley Petroleum Co., and IO _, f1nna bid $73 milllon far theirleueo. 1be small operaton were ahut do1"l by the Interior Departmeril'1 new regula- Uao which make tbeir leases unecooomic, Obi added. 1llNlll lower batilefield casualtiea.ln the Vietnam war and forward movement ta t.be troop withdrawal program. , "Ccincem for the lives cl. our 181'tice:nen and Jor their safe return lo the Ullited BUtes was the by deciding factor to caUJe the Prelident to conduct the limltecf operation in Cambodia," Laird aald. DAILY PILOT " ............... ....... ,..., S..Cl1 .... O'IAMOI COAIT P'UaLISl'llNG COMPANY l•'Mrt to!. w.N '""'ileftf -,....,.., J•~• I. C.rl1y Vin ,.,.,,!MM -0-.01 MIMl'fl'.: 1t. ..... , 11e ••• a f.11,.,. Tlio"''' A. Muttl'hi111 M ..... lota IECllW ltlch1rtf '· N•ll sw.11 ~ twt4r l!fl11t -· c.• Ma9: m Wtd .. , ,,, .. , N..,....1 MIQlo nn wn1 •11111 ......,,,,. ..__ a.Kii: ,. ,,_, ... _ ........ .,.._ -.ell; 11111 .. '°" ·~,.. SM ~I a.s ..... 11111 C~iM *•I Thlindq, Ju~ 23, 1970 DAILY ,II.OT Ill" "'-"' I lit 'l'plk Bre•k VC Make Appeal • For Coalition PARIS (UPI) -'l1le Viet Coq, with tho Commuoilis bad appealed for U,S. Hanoi's approval appealed today for U.S. backing for a coalition goverrunent and backing of a new coalition government said in private the issue was negotiable. in Saigon. And in a formal statement At the same time, Hanoi accused the the Viet Cong sakl any other problem United States of bombing and shelling in the Vietnamese War can be setOed North Vietnam for three days and said If Washington withdraws Jta auppon of WalhlnJton must "assume all the con· the present Saigon regime. '~ sequences." This could include a new It was the m>et optimistic ~vtlopmtnt • ,.b>)ieott of the peace talk.s if the attacks in the deadlocked ta1b since tbey bqan coatlnue-, oblerven sakl on Jan. 19, · lMI. Diploma Uc obsenen said it appeared the C om m u n i a t negotiators had assigned over-au priority to negotiating with the United Stalet on the pcsslbility of forming • coalition from an factions. Cause of Blaze At Cal Sta w Now Under Probe CAR PLANTED IN IVY AS DRIVER FAILS TO NEGOTIATE TEMPLE HILLS TURN President Nguyen van nueu o1 South Vietnam has always ruled out B!lY posslbilities of cooperating with the Viet Cong. Diplomatic obsrcvers said Saigon haa had the upper band oo allied nqotiating decilions conc«nina: poUUCal ' matters :sina! the talks titian. Offlcia).! at Southern California Edison today are. still trying to. determine the cause cf a transformer fire at Cal State Fullerton Wednesday. Michigan Leads Traced In Clemente Murder c~e 2 Laguna Teens Hurt in Crash; Auto 'Planted' Mme. Nguyen Thi Binh, Viet Cong Foreign Minister and chief negotiator in Paris, said in New Delhi Wednesday her 'movement "Would agree to a c:oal.IUon that would include some members of the current Saigon govemmlnt - specifically excluding Thieu, Vice Presi· dent Nguyen Cao Ky, and Premier Tran 'I'hien Khlem. · Emerging from today's 76th Vietnam peact talks session, Viet Cong delegate Dinh Ba Thi said in a fonnal statement: The electrical transformer caught fire at 10:51 a.m., blacking out sections of Fullerton, Placentia and Yorba Linda. Although power was restored to the residential and commercial area sur· rooming the college within five mlnut&, the outage colitln'ued on the campus until 7~ p.m. • ~ A police Investigator from a n Qemente is In Micblgan this week In .111 attempt lo lift ·•Y<ll the remolest Jeacfa oo the vlcicMla beatlo( apd atal\hl•g mtrder of Mn. Comlie L)'lll Jobilson earlier thia tummer.' ~ DetecUve Leonafd Goodwin ta• been ln the mldwest state for the past several days delving into the victim 's past in tier home slate. · But offic.ers here said Goodwin haa not yet elaborated on hi s filtdings. Mrs. Johnson, eight-weeks-pregnant whe11 she was beaten then repeatedly stabbed on a mid.June morning was the wile of a yoong Marine who told officers he found her nude aid bloody body sprawled on the couple's Md as he returned from guard duty Jn Santa Ana. Slnce then exhaustive efforts by detec- tives Jed to the arrest of a l!J-year-old Marine coolrt from Camp PeJtdleton, but the youth was subsequenUy released and deemed not arrested. The man, Frankie Way11e Mcllino. spent a weekend in custody, but was freed after the District Attorney 's office declined to issue a complaint. Since that aspect of the cue -oc- curring over the July 4 weekend - officers awaited the retunt of the vic- tim's husband, Mark Johnson, who flew bacll: to San Clemente from Michiga11 where he buried his high achool aweetheart. But subaequent lntef'Views with !he Vietnam combat veteran apparenUy shed little new ligbt on Uie baffling case. The major missing links in the evideace chain oC the murder are thrre in number -the large knife used to Inflict repeated stab wounds (ltt 1he woman's neck, chest and abdomen, a tennis &hoe which made a distinguishable foptprint in ' the kitchen sink o[ the JohuoR studio apartment and the dead woman's wallet, missing from Ute crime ICene when police arTived. Another important '[actor which may never be cleared up is the exact time of death or the brunette expectant mother. · O:luntless hours o[ probing in the ne.lgbborhood failed to yield any soild indication of the exact time of the brutal murder. One couple living nearby came closest by reporting to police that both the Orphaned Se al Set Loose Toda y The apparently orphaned baby seal recovering from pneumonia at San Clemente lifeguard headquarters will go for a permanent swlm thi.s afternoon after making a swift recovery, his hosts aaid today. In fact, lifeguards reported, the finned waif ls getting just too active to handle in bis temparary quarters ln the station's large garage. ''He would have been set loose Wed- nesday but the vet said he should stay around one more day to make sure he'a strong enough to swim again," said one guard. The brown pup, found coughing and weak on Linda Lane Beach Mooday night by Lifeguard Ed Marsh, has had antibiotic treatments and a steady ration cJC i{'eah anchovies and mackerel during bis conval~nce. San Clement.e veterinarian Dr. C. C. Marsh treated the sad-eyed visitor free of charge. , The transition from lifeguard head- quarters to ''Marineland" wa!i a rare one for tbe guards, who said they took this seal In because it had a definite chance to recover. Many othtt less fortunate .tick seals are handled by Orange County Ani mal Control officers and humanely dispa tched lf treatment seems fuUJe, guards said. "We just hope we don't get fiooded by request.s to take ln every animal we find on the beach,'' a guard aupervleor •aid. "This one wa.s eoough to last us for a while." ' ,, j husband and wife awoke .at S a.m. on the morning cf the killing, but they could not remember what caused them to awaken. "That's just not enough to go with,'' a detective said later. Nixon Def ends 'Super-agency ' On Environment , A pair of. Laguna Bffcb teenagers escaped se rious injury Wednesday af. lemoon when the ir car went out of control on Temple Hills Drive and laid down 149 feet of skid marks before coming to rest in a front yard, police report. Driver Christopher T h o m a s Cun· ningham, 17. of 11163 Temple Hills Drive, told police he was descending Temple Hills Drive at 3:25 p.m. when he lost cOnlrol cf the vehlcle. lt skidded across the roadway, clipped a car parked in the driveway at 1&45 Temple Hills Drive "The urgent question presently i.s the cne which demands that the United states give up its support for the dic- tatoria1 and warlike .administration of Tbeiu-Ky-Khiem in order to aUow the South Vietnamese population to decide itsell its own destiny wilhout outside interference, and that it (the United States) puts an end to the inhuman penitentiary regime and to the iwbartan acb of the American puppets in South Vietnam. "'l'tlese urg!nl and basic problem! h•v- lng been re50Jved, any other problem relating to the stoppage of war in SOuth Vietnam can be settled." The power failure stranded several person! in campus elevators, according to Jei'ry Keating, college public affair! director, and they had to be rescu~d by maintenance personnel. . No injuries were reported. Campus business came to a standstill as the college administratiQn conducted business an n i n e battery-powered telephone lines. Robert L. Whlte, Edison nianager for the Fullerton district, said the company wa.s lli.11 attemptiog to pinpoint the cause of, the transformer fire. Tbe damaged 12,000.volt transformer was taken to the Edison repair shop for testing. He had no estimate of the coet.of the damage. WASHINGTON (AP) _The Nixon Id· and came to a halt alongside it. ministration, attemptin( to squelch The wild ride also damaged a tree Before Thi read the formal statement Music-loving Mes an Finds Guitar Stolen criticism of its proposed environmental and the front lawn on lhe property, superagency, says coordinating a 11 police said. From PGfe J BIZARRE .. -. federal pollution-fighting efforts under one roof will help eliminate vested in-Qinningham's brother, Anthony, 13• a A C05ta Mesa man fond of making terests cf existing cabi n e t-J eve I passenger in the car, was taken to music told police Wednesday that so me-- departments. a private physician for treatment cf an honorable dilcbarae at Fort cne had broken into his garage and President Nixon's decision to create minor injuries. Wain~ Alaska. stolen a $200 guitar and amplifier set. 11 new Environmental Protection Agency Police aald the young driver productd The Army claims be too ls a deserter. Ronnie Lahr, ol 301 Avocado St., couJd -EPA -was based in part "on the drl His: honorable dilcharg~ pipers have name no auspects but said he had recelv- need to avoid the institutional biases only • vJng instruction permit wbtn been file4-with tbe U.S. Dlstrict Court ed complaints in the: past about his of exist.inc agencies,'' Dwight A. Ink, -;:'=sk=ed==for=hl=s=U=ce='=nse=·========ln=San==Franc=','==laco=::;loo=.========vo::;l::;um=e.==========::. .assistant director of the Office i of I I Management and Budget, said Wed· neS<lay, Ink's tesUmony to a House sUb- commit~e appeared to be a reply to congressional backers of I n t er i o r Secretary Walter J, Hk kel's hope to concentrate government 'J)Ollutlon-LigbUng acUvlties in his departmeai. lnk told a House government .opera· lions .subcommittee stu.dying lhe plan that existing agencies have their own m!Mions which affect their views of environmental matters. "To vest all the EPA programs in me of those departments is apt to result in a particular slant to those activities and queslions as to its objectivity in dealing with rnaltets affecting and con- troHing other departments," Ink aaid. The government is not downgrading antipollution efforts by placing them in a non-Cabinet level ageacy, he added. "At present, these programs are placed in such a way that various levels of supervisors exist between them and the Cabinet members, and they must com- pete for attention with a host of. ether important departmental activities," li1k tald. Nlxon'.s reorganization plan, signed two weeks ago, pulls most of the an4pollution enforcement efforts into the EPA from major government depart.meats. In .ad- dlUon Nixon created a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration dealing primarily with environmental research. Unless Congress acts within 60 days to void the plan, it will become effective. Rep. John A. Blatnik (0-M'mn.), sub- committee chainnan, said he expect.1 a resolution to set aside the proposal to be introduced. Democrats on the panel labeled the plan lopsided and too limited to do the job. Blatnik told Russell Train, Nixon's chief adviser on lhe environment, the plan leaves a number o( environment· related functions spread out in several agenCies. Train said the plan is not the la.st word but "It's a start and a very im- portant start." "It Is a st.art but a lopsided start;• Blatnik said, noting that most of the $1.t billion for the agency will go for fighting water pollution. More Bodies F'ound In Train Wreckage R EGG I 0 CALABRIA. Italy (AP) -The death toll from lhe derailment of an eq>ress traln Wednesday increased to seven today,· with fears it would go higher. The seventh body was pulled from the wreckage by workers searching for victims. The train, called lhe Arrow of the South ,was bound from Palermo, Sicily, to Rome and Turin. It jwnped the track as It was coming out of a curvf! at high speed an hour after Cl'O$Slng the Strait ol Messina. PoUet said 148 persoru ·J.I. J. (Jarrell~ 16th Semi Annual Sale - lk -~ • ••. :• 1 ~-'-:..~ ~ HERITAGE "TRANC AS SHOWN Shown : 72" rectangular table w/three 22'' leaves. WAS MOW (seals 12) ........................... 469.00 375.00 Arm Chair ............••............ 169.00 135.00 Sub1t1nti11 1•vln91 on Madrigal bedroom, dining rpom furniture and occ11ion1I tablet. Htritag1 -lat Edition and Ch1mbr1y 1Mdroom1 dining room fu rniture and occasional t1blt• u to 1/J off W'5 Matchlng side chair .............. , .149.00 China 58" .•.•..............•....... 909.00 78" Buffet .......................... &19.00 ' ••• 119.00 72'.00 499.00 All H1rlt1 .. upholt ttred furni ture can be ordered ' at 15°/o off 1000. of l•brla to chMM from. Htrit• lron1inl occasional tables up to 1/2 off Your favorite inttriof ·designer will be h4f'W to as1ist ~ou ••• H.J.GARl\ETT fURNITtJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS o,_ M .... Thws. & Prl. l wn. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA , CALIF. 646-0275 were Injured, 1ome of them iravely. ''---------------------------------------- . l --· I I . --- I I I ( • f ' ) d p ~ b c l f• ~ ti • r' u n • tl 11 " 0 ., .. " b: " I> a '" ~, " In ol ii tl do " tl ,,. v is r ,, ( m Cl IL f• or te d< • n• or •• M "' cc "' s. « at tit th m er or In ar d• tr .. • In SU C1 I" i• .. W• en m di1 ., p~ lo <O • to Huntington Beaeh Today'• Fl•al VOL 63 , NO. 175, 3 SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1970 rEN CENTS D1·aft Calls Going Down Says Lai1·d WASHINGTON (AP ) -Secretary or Defense· Melvin Jl Laird said today dralt calls for the rest or 1970 will average below 10,000 a month , a return to pre-Vietnam levels. Laird made this forecast in a speectt for about MO students working u sum- mer inl.tms with the government "In the remaining months of this ~ear," Laird said, ''I anticipate that draft calls will average below 10,000 per month ." In the past, he has predicted that total draft calls this year will fall between 150,000 and 170,000 young , men compared with the 290,000 drafted in 1!189. Aides said Laird still sticks to that forecast. Through August, draft calls this year have totaled 124,500. In his talk, Laird assured the 1tuden~ that "We are doing all we can to plan and implement a program that will reduce draft calls to zero and enable us to establish an all-volunteer force." -But he cautioned that., in order to make the shift, Congress must provide a major increase in the defense budget. Laird otrered no forecast as to when this might happen . However, the trend ii toward smaller defense budgets and stronger pressure from Congress to cut defense spending . Lower draft calls are tied lo the U.S. withdrawal from South Vietnam and a concurrent reduction of total U.S. military manpower. The seeretary stressed once again that hy ne1t 1pring U.S. forces will be down to 234,000 troops or fewer -.about ball the U.S. garrisoo in Vietnam when the Nixon administration took power in J,m.iary ltlt. Briefly mentioning the ~1 Incursion in Cambodla, which tou<:hed off widespread · campus demonstrations In May, Laird said : "Evidence multiplies that tht President's strategy and his doctrine are producing the desired resullll." The Pentagon chief did not say what that evidence is, but he indicated he meant lower battlefield casualties in the Vietnam wat and forward movement ill the troop withdrawal program. Nixon Def ends 'Super-agency' On Environment WASHINGTON CAP) -The Nizoo ad ministration, attempting to squelch criticism ()( its proposed environmental superagency, says coordinating a 11 federal pollution-fijl\Ung efforts under one roof will help eliminate vested in- terests of eiistina: cabinet-level department.s. Pruident Nixon's decision to create a new Environmental Protection Agency -EPA -was based in part "on the need to avoid the Institutional-biases of existing agencies," Dwight A. Ink, assistant director of the Office o( Management and Budget, said Wed- n@3Clay. lnk's testimony to a House sul> committee appeared to be a reply to congressional backers of I n t e r i o r Secretary Walter J. Hickers hope to concentrate government pollution-fighting activities in hi s department. Ink told a House government opera· tions subcommittee studying the plan that existing agencies have their own missions which affect their views of environment.al matters. ''To vest all the EPA programs in one Oc those departments is apt to result in a particular slant to those activitle!i and questions as to its objectivity in dea ling with matters affecting and con- trolling other departments," Ink said. The government is not downgrading antipollution efforts by placinc them in a non-Cabinet level agency, he added. "At present , these programs are placed Jn such a >A'ay that various levels of SU"pervlsors exist bet.ween them and the Cabinet members, and they must com· pete for attention with a host of other Important departmental acti vities," Ink uid. Nixon's reorganilatkm plan, signed two weeks ago, pulls me>st of the antipollution enforeement efforts into thf: EPA from major government department&. ln ad- dition Nixon created a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Adm lnlstraUon de•lln& primaril y with environment.al research. Unless CoogreM acts within 60 ~ays to void thf! plan, it will become effective . Rep. John A. Blatnik ID-Minn.), sub- committee chairman. said he eitpecLt 1 resolution to 11tt aside the pttiposal to be Introduced. ' ' 3% Tax Likely Utility Levy Would Hit Everyone DAILY PILOT Sl•fl ....... WAYNE OSBORNE STUDIES COMPUTER-MADE MAP Mechlne M•Y Repl•c• Dreftsm•n in Fount•in V•ll•v Maps by :tlagi~ Computer Takes Ove r Job in Valley By TERRY COVILLE 01 tlM DallJ ,llel lt•fl The little old map maker is being replaced by a computer in Fountai!l Valley, The machine is ta.kin& over 'lrt old drudgery once handled by • man with pencil and rule, and Fountain \;alley wUI be the first city ln Orarrge Couaty Lo test the concepL "We·re Mt fully convinced yet, but it loe>k_, like McDonnell Auto.maUon in Long Beacl\ has developed a computer capable of drawing a map twenty times fa ster tl'lan a draftsman," \\'ayne Osborne. public works director for Jo'oun- tain Valley, explained. City officials are dickering with the Long Beach company over price and what functions tht computer will handle. A full street map of the city would take a draftsman a week to draw. The computer can do it in two hours, Osborne aaid . McDonnell Automation, a subsidiary of McDonnell • D o u g I a s Astronautics Corporation, has linked a11 IBM compute r with a mechanical device capable of drawing maps. The process starts with city off tcials collecting all the data desired for maps or the city. This data hi recorded on a base tape . The tape feeds Int:> the drawing machine which moves vertically, horiwntally or at angles and makes marks according to coordinate! fed it by the computer. It's all a matter of measuring dis tances and reduci11Jg them to scale size. Osborne said the base tape -wh!ch. would cost $10,000 to make ...., would probably be an ordinary street map of the city. "Additional tapes can be made to add special maps to the street map," Osborne said. He is currenUy studying each c:ly department to determine what m<1:ps each uses. Public workJ coonta the most maps -using different overlays lo \ocate sewer lines, water lines, streets, and lights. The parks departmmt needs a map to locate and identify all the street trees in Fountain Valley. City pla.nnen uae aparate zonln1, precise p\aft and tract maps. Tbt lire department aeeds uother map to 10c•te fire hydrants. "Besides the overall city map, the computer can blow up in detail MY portion of the city, even to one stree:t corner," Osborne sajd. "This is the pi1rt we want to be sure or. because we use a lot of blow-ups." The $10,000 cost for the original tape would just about equal the salary of a draftsman for the city. "We 're asking for another drafumu JtOW and ,ve·re behind in our map making," satd Osborne. Once the tape is completed, the cost for drawing mapti would be $15 an hour. A draftsman 'Costs about M an hour. Considering the difference in time, however, the savings could be tremen- dous. By these figurta a city slrttt map computer drawn would cost $30 (See COMPUTER. Pa .. %) PUBLIC ACCESS BILL REJECTED SACRAMENTO (UPI ) - A bill requiring cilies and countiet to reject buildillg p e rm i t • , sub-- divisioos or zoning changes which would cut off pubUc access ll) the ocean or other large water areas was defeated Wednesday by I.ht A.Membly. Tbe blll by Assemblyman John Dunlap CD-Napa), was rejected on a 35 to 27 vote, with 4.1 votes needed for pasu.je. By ALAN DllUUN Of ... Dell¥ PllM Sa.If A S pucenl tu on all , utilities, purported to hit businessmen homeowners and apartment residents equally, today seemed the most likely levy HunUng1on Beach will use to finance its new facilities. Apartments owners and residents may be dealt another bJow because the council is a\llO considering .slapping a flat $6 annual tax on all units in the city. This would replace the present scale fee which averages at $1 per unit for the 10,000 apartments in the city. This wu part of the new formula Cong Appeals For Backing Of Coalition PARIS (UPI) -Tbe Viet Cong, with Hanoi's approval appealed today for U.S. backing of a new coalition government in Saigon. And in a formal statement Uie Viet Cane said any other problem ln the Vietnamese War can be settled il Wa.ahington withdraws if! support ol the present Saigon regime. 1t w11 the most Jptimlstic development in the deadlocked talks since. they began en Jan. IP; 1969. Diplomatic observers said it appeared the Communist neawato<s ,had Uliped qjtl'..U ]ll'lorit' to neeoU•ling with the United St.ate1 on the pouibilily cf f"Orminl a coalition from all factions. President Nruyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam has always ruled out 1J1Y possibilities of cooperating wllh the Viet Cong. DiplomaUe observers said Saigon has had the upper hand. on .allied negotiating decisions concerning poUUcal matters since the I.Ilks began. Mme. Nguyen Thi Binh, Vlet COng Foreign Minister and chief negotiator in Paris, said In New Delhi Wednesday her movement would agree to a coaJilian that would include s0rne members of the current Saigon government - specifically excluding Thieu, Vice Presi- dent Nguyen Cao Ky, .and Premier Tran Thien Khiem. Emerging from today's 76t.h Vietnam peace talks seasion, Viet Coog delegate Dinh Ba 'Mli said In a formal statement: "The urgent question presently ~ lhe one which demands that the United States give up its support for lhe dic- tatorial and warlike administration of Thelu-Ky-Khiem In order to allow the South Vielname!e population to decide itself Its own destiny without outside interference, ind that it (tl\e UnJted States) puts an end to the inl'luman penitentiary regime and to the barbarian acts or the American puppets in South Vietnam. "These urgent and basic problems hav. ing been resolved , poy other problem relating to the stoppage or war in South Vietnam can be setUed." Before Thi read the formal statement the Communists had appealed for U.S. t>acking for a coaUUon government and said in private the issue was ne&otiable. Nixon Facing Protesters President Headed West; Trouble Brewing in Utah By RICHARD P. NALL Of t11e O•llY 1"1111 lt•fl As officials in Orange County prepare for a routine arrival by President Nixon Friday night , a different type reeeplion was being hatched by dissident elements in Sall Lake City. Leaflets have spewed forth call i'ng for " Yippie nude-in and denouncing I.he President. Decorated with underground drawings, the pamphlet! dedare that S,000 .toned Salt Lake freaks will "strip and 11.rut" during Mr. Nixon's visit. The Weatherman, .a violent faction ol Students for a Democr1tlc Society <SOS), claims It will hold 1 !Utake daooe through the grounds of the Mormoo Temple in the heart of the city. This, they state. is to show support of the Black Panthers and 111 UUrd world liberation stNggles. The Presidenl Is to land Friday evening :.t the S11lt Lake lnternRliontil AlrporL He has planned 1 brief visit with leader• ( of the Church or Jesus Christ ol Laller- day Saints and is to attend a rodeo at downtown Salt Palace. Paul Taylor, sp<ikesman for a coalition of groups. said they would demonstrate al the Hotel l!tah across from tile Mormon Temple Square where the Pre!i. dent plans the conlerence with Mormon leaders. Taylor said the group w1s made up of the United Front to End the War', Mormoris Again.st the War, and Young Republicaru Agairuit · Vietnam O>m- mltm!nt. There has been little anti-war violence In Salt Lake City In the past and t.here was no assessment of tbe f.ffectlYeness of the pl.ans to dtsrupt the Presidtnt'• visit. The Young Republican Federation his announced plans for a rally In support of the Prtsident. It 111 1ponsoring In "Honor America Rally" about an hour after Mr. Nixon's scheduled arrival. Th~ rodeo tnd other festivitie1 art an 1.Mual celebra:.ion marklng the .et- tlement of Salt Lake Valley ln 1847 by the Mormon pioneers. Mr. Nixon will board Air Force Ont afler the rodeo and fly <m to El Toro f.iarlne Corps Air Station Friday to begin a !!),.day work tessk>n at San Clemente with top advisers. Police Chlel CIUford Murray of San Clemente said there are no known plaos, as yet1 for demon1LraUonJ near the We!lern White House. Mr. Nixon may return for • Jecood tlklay aess.ion in mid-August. · A huge anU-war demonstraUon was held out,Jde the' Westtm ·White Hou1e last August. Murray said hi.l!l depart.meat tries where poulble to wort out ground rules In advance with groups that an- nounce pltns lo protest. ThJJ helps OX'I· trol the 1itu1tlon. "So far we've 1lw1y3 had pretty good luck." he n.ld, Mr. Nlxon's visit, with wile and daughter, Tricia , la to ineludt meetings "llh top advlson and • heavy work load. Th~ Presldtnt plans Sunday. (S<t NIXON, Pa .. I) that emerged at a study session Thur1- doy nlgbl between the chamber of com· merce and the city council. At the aeaion the chamber made an apparently soccessful lobby to steer the council away from tbe gross receipts bu.siness tax, which the chamber it.self had earlier endorsed in principle. in.stead ol changing to a gross receipts charae, calculated to bring in an extra $92.000 a year, the chamber proposed a 50 percent increase in the present fet which. officials said , would bring in the same amount. The.re was also onJy fleeting mention of aa oil tu which the chamber also opposet. It came wt.en Councilman Al Coto smiled a wamina to tht chamber members, stating "An oll tu llill is possible, gentl~en." The session concluded with Cliy Administrator Dayle Miller staling lhlt the staff could work on .a new tuinl formula put forward by CouncUman George MCCracken which .appeared to have the support of both the chamber and councilmen. With about $1,500,000 needed annually to pay for the civic center complex. library, fire 1tations and corporation yard. this ill how McCracken's plan would work : - 3 percent tax on all utilities would (See FINANCING, Paae I ) This Seat Taken Sneaky Snake Found in Toilet VENTURA, Calif. <UPI) -It"& a 1neaky make, Louis Charon told sherUf't deputies last week. Chacon said he found the 1nake in the toilet of the house into which ti. had just moved. The snake. he said,, &tuck if! head out of the bottom ol the commode but diu.ppeared downward if the toilet was flushed. At times it would slick its bead out ol another t.oilel in the. borne, Chacon sajd. Deputies, skeptical about the whol.e thing, thoroughly investigated both toilets and found nolhing. They left. Wednesday Chacon called the &heriff again. Thia lime he said•the 1nai1 bJd become bolder, rising out of the bowl to leer at him . Deputies went to the home again. Then w1s a five-foot ton.a: Anaccnda peerini out of the bowl. Before they could arab the reptile it retreated down the hole in the bot.tom. Animal control 0Uicer1 were called in but lhe Anaconda kept duckinc out of light. • Finally th! toilet wu ,_.ed lrom !ta moorlnp and they caqht the Mitt wldi a nOOle and~ it OU lo a 11\elter. Ex-GI Held at Forl Ord On Charges of Desertion Coples of honorable discharge papers have been presented to a U.S. District. Court in San Francisco by the attorney for a Vletriam veteran fnxn Anaheim who may be the victim of a tr11edy of ernrs. The altuation in which John t..app, 21 , finds blmseU today 111 hardly a comedy of errors. He is under arrest at Ford Ord, where he was taken after FBI agents urged him to come along to Santa Ana June I and clear up a misunderstanding about his military status. The U.S. Anny says the Anaheim Union High School District maintenance man recieved a $711 re-enli!f:ment bonus June tt, 1963, then deserted instead ol. reporting to a Minnesota artillery base. Lapp and his attorney, Charles Robin50n. of Santa Ana, say he was honorably discharged, never re-enlisted, and came home to his native Orange Count)', where the former Specialist 4/C picked up life aga in like many er· servicemen. He got a job. He underwent treatrntnt tM ahrapnel wounds suffered ln Vietnam Infantry combat, vlsltin( Long Beach Veterans' Admin~tratioo Ho1p\tal. He married Peggy Bartholomew. He took out a GI loan application on a home the young couple then decided against buying. And he answered t h e door Ma y %2 when a pair of FBI agents announced they wanted to talk to him and take .a look at his military separation papers. We hasn't been the same since, although he Is not now confined to the "Port Ord stockade. bul assigned to the Special Processing Department, unable PILOT AD WORKS · 'SEW' PERFEC1'LY Nothing ''so-so" about this ad to find someone to sew: Seamstres.!I -Exp'd to do piece 'fork at hdme. cau · )O(JC.XXX. 'l'hat bard-working little ad In the cll'911l<d ~on of the DAILY Pilot. ln Only two appear1nces, pick.<! up ~ •PPllCants. "I never expected thit kind or action," 1aid the advutlser. Action Is just waitin1 for )'OU, too. Call ~. the direct 11.ne to rt1u1ts. A DAILY. PILOT ad-visor will help you write 1uU that ar@ any- thhig but H'°"'\0.11 to leAve base on his own. Lapp has been granted puses on thret occasions for visits borne; pending hit Sept. I hearing In U.S. Diltrict Court in San Franci.sco, at which time tbe Army must prove its case. "John's nerves were worse the last time he came back from Fort Ord than they were wben he came back from Vietnam," says his stepfather, John Harouff. Armp authorities have produced rt- enlistment pa~s signed with Lapp's name, but he and IUs attorney Say they. were forged , after first believina: the case to be a monumental paperwork mixup. "I think the Army bungled," 1 a y 1 Robinson , his civilian lawyer, who b a former captain In the ~1arine Co~. "r think this ~ the strangest case J have run into In my whole lite," added the man who hopes to prove the Army bungled Sept. 4. when he goes to federal e-0urt with Lapp. One of Lapp's fellow semi-prtsoner1 In the SPD area at Ford Ord is Thomas D. Harvey, 2.1, of Vallejo, who was taken into custody last Friday by federal authorities. Harvey, whose attorney -like Lapp'1 -has filed a petition for a. writ ot habeas corpus In the same court, return· ed home Aug. 31, 1969. after being gjven (See. BIZARRE, Pap 2) Orange "'eatlaer Overnight lows along the Orange: Coast are expected to be 57 to 65 degrees. The high are forecast at 75 to 85. Low eloud1 and local fog night and early mornJng rem1ln. INSIDE TODA\' Republican State Senatorr art optimistic that Gov. Rtagan'1 11 bilUon klZ reform plan will pa&s. Bui Otmocra.t1 are ;tu& cu optimi!ilc &hot .Uttt1 will amend it. Sec !to1"!1 Pagt 1. C.tlfltntlll e Clltdl!M U• J Cl-..llltf 11 ... C-\c:t 14 c_..i u OHttl MetltM 11 ••11"'1111 ,.,. • l•lwt•~I tt.>t Pl-1•1t .....,_" tt A•ll UlliMn I.I ( • .I l1A1l. v l'ILOT R FINANCING. •• lwing ........................... llOD,000. -A II poroolll hike In the bullne11 tn ............. , ............. 1······ 113,000. lner1-.1!11 1bl: ta1 qn apll'tlnlldl .. ·~ ...................... . -Income from tbt fl.SO trash lee ............................. ISOQ,000. -'ll>lal ................... $1,IU,000. At ,f pm:ient 1 utill ty tu would mun an i!lertase of tO oeots to the u.ser who Pl)'I ao • }11onlh in utility bWs. McCracken commented, "The utility tax comes down to the uaer. It would be tbe moBt equitable. lt would hit the businessman, in addition to the business tu, liomeowners and apertment resident.s." In a letl.tr to the council, chlmbtr president Peter Hortbn 1aid the business community had ''strong" objections to the implementatlon of the gross receipts ta1, and a 6ep&rate oil production tax. Questioned by councilmen Coen and Jack Green for an explanation on wtiy the chamber wq (tVtnBlg it.I previous tndorsemmt of the gross receipts tu, Horton said the earlier support was 1 qualified one. Th.It qualillcat1on, he said, was one of reoognitlon or the comple1.ltle1 of r~truct.uring the fee from a charge hued on the numbtr of employet to one bued on lfOSI receipt&. 0 n e of the problems, Horton said, W®ld be ll1e 1ncr.... In boollkffping colU to the bulinesln'lan "out of proportion to the aiR of the tlx receipta." William Foster, a chamber director aod ..-11 mana,... ol tbe Hunlhlston Booch Compu>y, lfUrjeded, "There ii a feelillJ that there are inequiUes in bolh 1yst.ms, bul the unanimoul opinion ii that we would gladly trade the in- eQ\Ptles of the present &ystem for the stnipllcUy ci it. 'Ille il)eq.ulties are.n 't 1uch that we can't live with them." Finance Direcfor Ben Arguello uid thlit the gross receipts method would 1enuate more ln the 10111 run, if there b an incre.se ln bu.slneu _.ctlvity, -JI -Id be tJed to the ecooomU: trend. City manager Miller commented, "We don't want anyone to get the impressio" that we are Mllfded to a gross receipt!! tu. We feel additional revenue should ·come from the business community - we lt&ve no lnleotion ol diclalinf which way it should be "lf you feel expansion or tfle )>relent l!lyftem la all rigtit, we are happy. We lfmply felt that we ahoold recommend a system thlt iJ equitable." Q,mtion.s were alto alked whether lncreqes in the city's assessed valuation ·would not 1enerate more money. Arguello replied that the valuation was •t2 million more thari he had anticipated and Utls would mean an extra f198,000. Miller then w1rned, "'Let's not 1pend that money until we get through our ·meet and confer aetsiom: with clty , lllTlplo)'ft," refenift1 to annual 11Jary rev~ Thi tneet.l'ng,' conducted 11 •n In- 1terchange of ideas between the chamber repreaientatives and couricilnm, wound up with Miller promising lo try to .et copies of McCracken'• formul& !'Udy !or the Aul· 3 COllllclJ IDMlinl· • Heat Wave in Jap.~q; M~ettry J:T p to 98.6 · .. 'OOKYO (AP) -A humid .ummtr i.\ wave hi~ Hon1tiµ, J•pan:1 Jarae•~ main island, today ind· weathenneft l'IPlllf«I .the mucury -t up· to Ibis ;,ii.•1 .-.hilh of .... In Ful<Ulbima, ™ miJOI -.. t »b 'l'qj!Jo, !{II ONk•, J:xpo "IO offlciall uld more than 217,000 -"' vloited the -Id fall-~y. 1 p.m., despite the hifli<•l ~IWre, lll>ce the fair opepod Jul Marati . -11:1,. In Tokyo, t b 1 ~atun , ... 1o 11.1 .. J)Unes ,Wienie Roast se~ for Be~ch Ki\ls A wienie roast and swim at Newport ~ ii pl......i !or Huntlnllofl Beach youth&.-aae• 7·17 frort\ 10 a.m. to • p.m., Frklty. 'Ibe eo&l ol tr1n11potlation, adm ls1ion and h.inch· ii f2. Buse& will le1 ve from the city gym and from Marina Hi1h School. DAILY PILOT OltANGI COA•T ~UILti.ttLNG C0Mil'ANY 'lo"•ft N. w.,. ....... '"" ..... il'voo<1- J.,1r l. Curl1v Vkf ''*'""' Mii "9~«•' M•,..au 1h•lfl•t K••~ll etllW Th•"''' A, Mvrphint Mtf\111111 Eaoror Alt~ Dir~i~ W•I Ol•""' C-IT Efl!W AIDtrt W. l•t•~ AMICl"t lfi1.,. Hllfltllf"" ..... Office l 7175 ••• ,~ l t11J1 y11d M 1i1l111 Adilr111 1 ,,0, 111 790, t 2•41 OtMt OHIMt l•tuftf lNdtr m ...,. •• £vfl'UI , c .. 11 ""'': )II Wut ltT Sl•(ti ilffWlllll'I ikJU' •11 W.,I .... 1 ..... '-"lrf t•11 Ci.-i.1 Jll Hwn1 I I ~"'._ ltwl Cool Spot --------- DAI'\. ... Pl\.eT '"" il'lltte uttle Park I Has to .Do in Valleri "Where oh wh'!'• bu my cettll'll puk 1one?" wil the lament this week of two Fountain Valley city councilmen. The first to aak Ute questlOA was John Horper, who WU ,.orried that aPl'f"val of a IWHCl'I neJlh!>orbood pai"k 11e1t lo Fountalll Vllley Elementory Sd1001 would cruoh any chance of a Iar1er, central park acroa Bushard Slreet. '4l'm dluppolnted to tlnd the city to 11cqulelefltt in the pursuit al thla central part Ide•," Harper oommented, after inlpectlng pl1111 for the two-1ort nel&h· bortiood park. Councilman Ron Shenkma1, a 1trong central park 1upporter, uld • Jack of funds waa the reaaon dreama of a central fW"k hadn't materiallud. "J pushed hard for a central park next to the hla: school," Shenkman 11ld, "but slnce the money doesn't appear available, 1 don't think we ahoukl dtprive the ruldenta of the sm~ller park they were promllld yeara a10. '' 1'l'm Juet afraid If thi1 park eoea. Iha centr1l park wUJ be ellmlnatod,'' Harper Nplled, --------- Llmltefl Dr:IUinf · Hickel : Endorses Oil Lease Cuts WASHINGTON (AP) -Socoluy ol Interior Walter J. Hickel ha• endorsed the cancellation of 20 federal oil leases and continued drllllna under 1lrict reiul•Uon to prevent future blowoot.s and pollution In the Senta Barbara chan- nel off the California cout. Hickel ur11d a. Senate Interior 1ub- commlttee Wed~Jday to act promptly on a bill IPQl'lsoted by Sen. Geor1e Murphy (fl.C11U.) Th~ measure would canctl 20· of the 70 federal OU leaau In the Santa Barbara channel and pay the holder• from a 1peclal aceount bullt by oil salu from f'ro111 Pqe J NIXON ... Naval Petroleum Reserve Net. 1 h1 California. The bill, one of six before the su~ committee, also would create a naUonll energy raerve of 198,000 ~re• saaward of the Ca11fornla atate Santa Barbara Oil Sanctuary. Some· of the OOler bills call for can· cellJUon o( au 70 Jease11. Hickel said oil production should con- tinue on leases where a 1969 blowout caused .spills io order to relieve pressure and reduce the danger of further seepage and pollution. "We have lncrused our l~pectlon forces to ensure compliance and early detection of any mishaps," Hickel testified. William T. Pecora, U.S. Gr.oloeical Survey director, said that seven ex. ploratlon wells had been drilled, but however, to take a breather and attend none was in production, on the 20 leuea • baseball a:ame between the An1els proposed for cancellation. and Wuhln1ton Senator• at Angel Hick.el and Murphy were the only Stadtum in Anaheim. witnesses amona: 25 heard at the two-day heJrlng to 1tve unqualified 1upport to Flnt Lady Pit Nixon said locl1y lhat tbe Murphy bill. aht and her b~band will live In CaU!or· Many other wltntsSell said more than nla after they leave die White House ~ leases should be.canceled. b t c!Jd t If he ~ lh Sen. Alan CranstOn and Rep. John Casile Coder, 3, Fountain Valley, discovered the joy11 'oJ crawli ng through the large play pipes at Wardlow Pork in HunUnaton Beach Wednesday. One of the joys is that inside one of the pipes is a cool place to be on a hot day. Facility at Magnolia and Pioneer Streets is one of city's neighborhood park1. , llhenltm10 •ll'aed wllh Harper lo let the perU and recruUon a>mmJAion make a final report on the central park before approval would be atven fi)I' the Hlpborhoocf park, J'ro111 Pete J u no 1pec Y w t, ... r •t moans V. Tunney, California Oemocrata, recom- San Clemente. mended their bills w~ich would cancel It h11 been assumed by many locally most of the leases and create a federal· th1t the President's purchase last year atate sanctuary program 1Joo1 lhe of Ute old Cotton estate, in which he Califomia ·coast. obvioutly takes pride, me111t that he The federal lianctu aries would e:w:tend would remain a resident In the . post. seaward from existing state sanctuaries. Whlte House year1, probably establish· Tunney said the Murphy bill "could Inc a library nearby for his memoirs well have been written in the board COMPUTER. • • Old Oil~ Yalley Records Slide Out of City Hall while the dralt1man'1 Ume would tqual and mementos. room of a large oil company" because fifO. Mrs. Nlron'1 reference to future came it would shut down unproductive wells _ "We uae about eilhl large maps and In reply to questiOM from a visiting and permit all olhtr offahore drillln1 31 different blow-upa. 'J'heu need to "'-ITOUP of 35 school teachers from Ireland. to continue. Twmey ls seekina Murphv 'i " vg The lint lady'1 ~andlather was Pat. s ' redone and updated quarterly or semi-an-k enate seat. nua!Ju," Cbborne saJd. tic Ryan, an Ml ve of Mayo County• Cranston said the MurM" bill 11 a " Ireland. ..,.., The initial year milht not see much "step In the right dlrecUon" but it "falls savings beeause of the cost of malting far short of what is needed and '1it the tape. but thereafter Jt'1 a simple T T B is not an adequate safeauard a1alnat Old r.one chan1e1 never die, they Jw:t bect:ime burled In musty files -except in Fountain Valley where the council cleared the book• of thtm thl1 week. Councilmen turned down five zone chan&es Tue1day nifht which had been 1iven partial approval, but were never complllU!d. The oldest change was commercial ionJn1 ori&inally approved for the northeul comer of M11noUa Street and Helm Avenue on June 18, JMB. Another zone change, tniUaltd June 20, 1918, for commercial zoning on the north aide of Talbert Avenue, 250 east of Brookhur1t Street, was also turned -·· " compal'loon of mu ver1u1 m1chine. WO eenage oy~ lhe tb"al of future Santa Bar~ara other old zone reqyeatl finally turned FouJ1taln Valley was selected by catastrppties." down were: McDonnell lo• a pilot program. The Held in LA Slaying Rep. Charleo M. Teogue (R.Colif .), Co · 1 · 1 .. ed Long Beach company wants .. to prove testified in support ot Santa Barbara -mmerc1a zoning ruUat Sept. he legislation he is sponsori'ng. 3, 11188, for property on the norUi aide t 1y1tem will work for a city. LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -Two J7.year. A spokesman for a group of 11 01.1 of Talbert Avenue, MO feet east ol "A former engineering aide for us, flkf boy1 were booked on murder charges companies holding Santa Barbara chan· Brookhurst Street. ruck Young, suggested Fountain Valley. early _ toq:ay for the fatal beating and 1 ' He works with McDonnell 0111 this com· st bb f Id 1 "d nel eases urged that the Murphy blll -Apartment zonin1 initiated June a ing 0 an e er Y WI ow during be expanded to include payments for 3, 1~. for land south of Edin1er Avenue, puter mapping ," Osborne explaiaed. an apparent burg lary !1st Saturday. their \.lnproductive leases. 500 feet east of Euclid Street. "They have shown us wha t they can Police ideqtified the su.spects as John Ohl said the Pauley Petroleum -Commercial zonin1 iniUated Junt do. We're talkin1 with them now 10 Douglas J . WiRston and Billy R. Drun1· Co., arid 10 other firms bid $73 million s, 19119, for property south of Edinger iron 011t details of what we actually mer, both of Los Angeles. The \'lctim, for their le,ses. Avenue, eut of Euclid sue.et. want on maps, and the final price." ~\or.enc~ ~urc~, 7,, wy d}scovered nude The small operators were ahut down Fountain Valley olficl·'· ex-t to •• In '"e ti1 tub a• he• ••me wh h b All of the denials were rouUne actions .,. _... ui l 11<1 en er .Y the Interior Oeparlment'1 new n11uJa. Intended to clean up old r-d• ...... _ nounce a decisio a on the project in aon, Robert Church, atopped by 1·or a hon which make their leases uneoonomic, '"" the ne xt few weeks. vla1·1 hi zonp changes had betn atarttd, but ·~==========::;:::::=::·::::::::::::::;::::::::;:::::::O:::•:dd:ed:::. ::::::::::;:;:;;:::::;;;--never completed for varlou1 reuom. I Helmetless Bike Riner .JJ. J. Qarr~ll ~ 18th Semi Annual Sale ! Killed in Costa Mesa l R!dinl to Ibo be1~h !or • m"lne biolollY 1111> elas1, a leenased Co_lli' Me,. summer school student was kilftcl th!• morning when burled headfirst Into a brick wall after his motorcyclC. went out of control. ~r1e L. Hancock, 18, of 2138 Wallace Manila Woman Exposes Plan MANILA (AP) ...... A woma.n •rmY corporal • who 11y1 she Jnfiltrated 1 radical youth organizalk>n t e s t,l f I ed Wednesday that tne aroup planned to sabotage American property in t h e Philippines and wage an armed 1truqle a1ainst the Philippine government. Elnora "Babette" Estrada, 23, 1aid ghe infiltrated the Kabat.a an Makabayan -KM -and became one of Its national leaders. Manlla newspapers have dubbed her the army'a Mata Hari. She testified in Tarlec Province at a bail bear in& ·for KM Jelder Nilo Taya1, who Is charged with lncillna: farmers in the central ~JOn 'province to take up 1rm1 agall\lt the 1ovemment. Mis~ Estrada told the court the iroup planned to destroy U.S. government bulldin11 a1 "symbol• of imperialirm." She claim· ed the KM was linked to the Maoi&t New People'• Army of the Huk'1, but .said it wu too weak to topple the government. , J'ro111 P•te J BIZARRE .•• an honorable diacharge at P' o r L Wainwright, Alaska. The Army claims he too ft 1 dewter. Hl1 honorable dl1Char1e p1per1 have been filed with the U.S. Dlatrlct Court in San Francin too. Youth Dauce Slated In Fountain Valley All sixth through el1hth arade 1tudent1 In Fountain Valley are tnvltld to 1tance to the aounds of the "801 " at 7 p.111., Friday In Fountain Valley Hiah School. Admlsslon 11 25 cents. The dance la 0>-a:ponlOJWI by tfle parks 111d recreation department •nd the South Coast Junior Women'• Club. ( AYe., wa1 dead on arrival at near'by Coata Me1a Hoapit.al followihJ: th• 8:15 a.m. accldentm. Tha Ellancla High School atudent wa1 wearlna no protective helmet and was thrown about JOO feet when hi1 cycle atruck a curb ••t Placentia Avtfiue and 11th street. Cau1e of the trifle accident wa& •till under inve1ti11Jtion, but police 11ld H•n· cock may have 1werved to avoid a car driven by Willlam A. Farwell, 49, of LUI Placentia Ave., COlta Mea;. Patrolman Pat Rod1er1 12id the victim wa1 ridin1 eouth on Placentia Avenue toward Newport Beach, where hJ1 class was havin1 a rnartne biolo1y.field trip. He was the son of Mrs . Mary Hancock. "Here It is 11ain -no helmet," said Cotta Mesa Police LL Avery Smith, who heads the department's traffic bureau. "He'd be alive if he'd been wear· ing one." Lt. Smith added that Hancock'• death today was the third In two months involving a young motorcyclist ridin& without a proteotive crash helmet. 'J1Je others 1Jao died of head lnjurie1. FV, Residents Get N ewiletter Thousands ol Fountain Valley residen ts will receive a small surprise In the mail Frlday or soon thereafter. It's in the form of greetings and a newsletter from city hall. City officials are now mailin1 the first edition of their new quarterly new1letter, 1n .I\~ by 11 inch, six-page ptmphlet packed with 1tortes and photOI centered on city hall activUlea. 11lt new1l1tter was desl1ned to "regularly Inform rfltldenta and tax· payert about 1cUviUts aM projecia of the city of Fountain Valley." C..t of the project la 11,100 for offset printing of t ,!00 cople1. The MWlletter .will be mailed at bulk rat.a. "We plan lo mill about 7,000 coplu aod keep the ....i lo hind ICl'Oll tbe counter at city hlll,'1 Jtrn Hollywood, aul1t1nt to the city man11er, uplalntd. "We're 1olnl to watch the flrn two f11ut1 cloaely, to determine how 1ffecUve W1 ia," he added. "In the future It milht be milled with water bills ln1tud of separately." Thi fir11t edition features a front paa:e pioture of city councilmen at a study atalon and several insld• stories and activities completed by various c It Y depal'lmentL Shown : 72" rectaneular table w/lhree 22" leaves. WAS NOW (1eats 12), .......................... 469.00 375.00 Arm Choi• .......................... 119.00 Ill.Oii Su.,1ta"tl1I 1awln1• on M1drl9al bedroom, cU nln9 rHm furniture '"" oc111iet'lal taltlaa. Ho•lt• .. -hi &~Ilion •"" Chomb••Y llH•oom~ dln lnt room fvrn ltur• and occa1IM1I taltl•• u to 1;, off M t h. "d h . WAS a c mg s1 e c air ................ 149.00 China 58" ....................... , .. 909.00 78" Buffet .......................... &Ji.00 ... 111.00 721.00 49'.00 All Herit19• upholstered fu rniture c1n be erdertcl at 15°/o aff 1000. ef fabrics to chOOM frem. Htrlta~ l rtn1lnl occ11lon1I tabl11 up to .1/2 off H.J.GARl\ETf fURNl"fURE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR OISIGN!RS o,.. M .... '"""'-• "'· l yao. ,. 11 ii HARIOR ILVO. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646.0275 , I Not tor Chan ... ions Breakf~st 'Foods Lack Nutrition? From Wlre Services. WASHINGTON, D.C. -The Breakfast of Champ~ons -among other popular hrand cereals -contalns about as much nutrjtion u 1 shot of whiskey. it was assert~ today by Robert B. Choate, a nutril.iona l specialist who testified -{':{ * * Here's How Your F avori.te Stacks Up! WASHINGTON (AP ) -Hert Ls 1 nutritional ri&nking of 60 major breakfas~ cereals as presented lo the Stnate con- sumer subcommittee today by a food specialist who said O'lllY the lop nine are nutritionally meritorioua;. I. Kello11'• Product 11 2. Getttrat l\lllls Kaboom 3. General Miiis Total 4. Nabisco 100 per cent Bran 5. Quaker Oat1 Life 6. General l<,oods Fortified Oat Flall.e1 '7. Kellogg's Special K a. General Foods Super Su1ar Crisp t. Kellogg's Sugar Smacks JO. Kellogg's 40 percent Bran Flakes 11. Quaker Oats Quake 12. Quaker Oats Quisp 13. Kellogg's Raisin Bran 14. General Foods Bran Flakes 15. General Foods Raisin Bran 16. General Foods Bran and Prune l"lakes 17. Ral ston Puri na Wheal Chex 18. Ralston Purina Raisi n Bran Chex 19. Kellogg's All Bran 20. Kellogg's Bran Buds 21. Kellogg's Froot Loop~ 22. Kellogg's Apple Jacks 23. Quaker Oats Puffed Wheal 24. General Mills Clackers 25. General f\.1ills Cheerios 26. Nabisco Team Flmakes 27. Nabisco Wh eat Hooeys 28. Gener al Foods Grape Nuts F'lake11 29. General Mills \Vheaties :ltl . (',eneral Millstucky Charms :u. Kellogg's Stars 32. General 1'1ills Twinkles :tl General Mills Sugar Jet~ 34 . General 1'1ills Frosty O's 35. Nabisco Rice Honeys Ml. General Foodt Grape Nul.s 37. Kellogg's Sugar Pops 38. JSellogg's Corn Flake.~ 39. Kellogg's Rice Krispies 40, Ralston Puriha Rice Chex 41. Kellogg's Cocoa Krispies 42. General ll1 !Jls Kix 43. General Mills Cocoa Puffs 44. Gener al Mills Trix· 45. Ge.1eral Corn Burs~ 46. Quaker Oats Puffed Rice 47. Quaker Oa ts Cap'n Crunch 48. Quaker Oats Crunchberries 49. Kellogg's Puffa Puffa Rice 50, General Foods Alpha Bill 51. General Foods Crispy Critters 52. Kellogg's Shredded Wheat 53. General Foods Krinkles 54. General Foods Post Toasties Mi. Ralston Purina Corn Chex 56. Ralston Purina Sugar Fl'06ted Che1 57. General Foods Honeycomb 58. Kellogg's Sugar Frosted Flakes 59. Quaker Oats Shredded Wheal fiO. Nabisco Shredded Whea t before a Senate conswner subcommittee probing tht breakfast food industry. He also mentioned Cheerios and othe r top brands of shredded wheat and corn Oakes. "They fatten up but do little to prevent malnutrition,'' Ch>ate charged, saying lo offset dismay among cereal addicts that some among 60 brands e\•aluated are beneficial. "Bui it is apparent," he emphasized. "ln this first of several food lndustry analyses, that we humans art viewed not as beings to be nourished but as sucken to be sold ." Choate made an indictment of the cereal Industry itself -already subject of a .Federal Trade Commission probe -and ccilled for a Congressional invesUgation. Cereal makers will be given a chance lo respond later. subcommittee aides said. Choate said I frequent defense of the dry.cereal industry takes the form of describing a cereal's nutrient value in combination with sugar and milk. But. Cho.ate said, his studies showrd "the average cereal~those outside of the top 2{) -fail as a complete mf'a\ even wilh milk added . Even if the amount of cereal were doubled while the milk remained constant. the nutrient value of these meals "'ould still be inadequate." Choate, a citizen-lobbyist who run:r; a small consulting firm, has studied the nation's food pohcies for the past three years. He !old the subcommittee that he had worked during that period with the DepaMment of Health, Educa- tion and Welfare, with the Senate Select Committee oo Hwnan Needs and on last year's White House nutrition con· ference. "A study of 60 read y-to-eat cereal!'i reveals that they are primarily calorie sources, the nutrient content of 40 of the 60 being so low as to remind this observer of the term .'empty calories.· a term thus far applied to alcohol and sugar," Choate said. Victi1n's Note Leads to Arrest In /Murder, Rape HAUPPAUGE, N.Y. (UPl) -Adele Kohr, who tr I e d to elude her killrr by driving to a state park loll booth. v.·rote a note describing her assailant and his car whet'\, she found the booth unmanned . · Police said the note led to the arrest \Vednesday of Robert Hans ti.1eyer, 23, an unemployed laborer, on murder and rape charges. He was ordered held without bail after arraignment. His bride of four months, Linda, 19, sobbed during the preliminary hearing. Mias Kohr, 20, was driving along the Sagtikos State PIJkway late f\.tonday night from her job as a nursing assistant at Suffolk State School of the Mentally Retarded when she realized she was being followed. Instead of taking the exit leading to her home, the pretty blonde turned onio a spur leading to the Heckscher Statr. Park hoping to find 51fety at lhe to!! booth at the park entrance. . . • DAILY .. ILOT Sleff ..... t. , ' BLIND HOUSEWIFE DEALS FROM BRAILLE DECK Mrs. Kogut (left) Plays Hand With Institute'• Mary Meredith Do11't Tr11st Blind Pe1~son To Give Hone st Card Deal By ALAN DIRK.IN Of 1111 ~Uy .. lilt Stitt Poker players, tak e note. Don't trust 11 blind person to give you an honest d('al. They play with marked cards. An Orange housewife, Mrs. Marylin Kogut. who lost her sight front glaucom;1 two years ago, discovered this to her delight Thursda y when she visited the Braille lnslitute's mobile van at Hu n- tington Center , Huntington Beach. "Oh, I see but you don 't.'' she smiled knowingly as she dealt out the card rlevices designed to aid the blind from Miss Mary Meredith, coon:linator for community relations with the Braille Institute. They practiced dealing a few hands to each other. "The cards hav e the Braille dots on the face., saying JS for Jack or IP.Ides for e''.'l:an1ple.'' Miss Meredith lexpia\ned. "The result is that a blind person can finger the undersides as he deal~ an<t tell what card he is giving you. "The way thi s is overcome is 10 have left·handed and right-handed deck"s so that the dealer can 't feel the dots. When blind persons play together, they usually like a sighted participant in the game to make sure that the dealer is using the right deck. "A sighted person keeps an eye on them and keeps them honest ," fl1iss ll1eredith laughed. The marke<' deck" was just one of many devl«s that Mrs. Kogut. who lives at 20691 Santiago Canyon Road, Orange, learned Thursday. The van was a-t the center from noon to I p.01. The · 40-foot van, which also will visit Fashion !sand , Newport Beach, on Friday contains displays of Braille clocks all':! watches, canes. special cooking devices and other aida. The clocks had raised Braill!" rlrlf:i;; instead of numbers. The clocks do nol have slass faces so the blind can fefl the specially strc11gthened hands to lllll the time . "f alwa)'s have trouble writing a cht!(k," Mrs. Kogu t said. P.1iss Meredith t h e n showed her a signature guide, a light rec ta11gular piece of metal in which a blind person can write confidently . She wa s given lips on how to hand le currency . "The secret is memory, to know 1he order of the bills you put in your wallet :· fl.1iss ~leredith explai1ted. "Keep SI bi ll.I{ f\al , fold S5 bills the short way and $10 notes the long way and so on." Mrs. Kogut says she still does all !he domestic chores around the hous!". "My family makes me," she said. "They won't let me be laiy." Her famil y consists of two bQy,, Robert, 23, Ray, t6, one daughter Lyn. 11. and husband , Ra y. "Now that I have learned all \hcS<' new trlckl. they 'U make m&. work l\arUer tha n ever," Mrs. Kogul said. "But rH get even with them when we play poker." ·--......... . . . H DAILY PILDT .t Negotiation• Opett Medical Center • Facelift Near? Orange County bulkllng aervice of- ficials today opened neaotMUons l)lat will lead to a $26 mJllioo revamping of the 58-year-OJd Orartie CO\llty Medical Ce1ter. They d-workillg drawings r.,, Che project with 1 team of architects "°" than 24 hours after ~ty ~uperviaors approved a vast remodeling of the 38-acrt Manches&.er A venue com- plei. The board earmarked $258,000 for the cost of · the first plam and approved dbcus,,ions wtth Welton Beckett and A!sociates and Donald Fears -the architects who Wi>rked on the first rough expansion ~ls. Supervisors took~he tioA ln tbt wake ot a warnfuc by lcal Center 1d- mioistr1tor Robe White that con- structlo'n ~ts art: JO&riog due to in- creased "bor and material cosls. "Every month we shorten Ult limt. for a final decision on this project saves us tl\at amount of money," White sa id. Final plans will call for rtplacement of nearly 700,000 square feet of building3. It is proposed to ada more than 100.fiOO square feet in mental health facilitil•s and provide parking for 1,630 vehic~.:>. SwepL away in the remodeling will be many of tht. building and Army huts which have been in continuous use at the hospita l since. 1914. There will be no additions to 1he 541 medical beds and 93 mental health beds with the plans emphasis oeing on replacement of such facilities rathc.>r 1ha11 their expansion. The only dJ~ent to the board at.'liiin came from Supervisor Robert B<illin who express,d concem that Or on"e C0Li11ty resi~ts will SOon haVe to sup· port two hospitals In Orange Coun1v -OCMC and the proposed Universi~y HOl!pital on the UCI campus. Battin told the board that he w:n1:d prefer to see 00,,pll\11 (acilitie., bnllt "by !he private sector under ' the free enter'prise system." The board took Its acOon shortly after rettipt of an Orange Cou11ly Grand Jury resolution which urged supervisor:1 to immediately approve the 0 C fl.I C modernization plan. Auss ie Bee1· Drinker Downs l 7V1 Quarts fltE\.BciUJ\NE t AP) -Tom MChler· ney .. a 303-pound trij(kdriver, cl limed a new Australian beertdrlnking record by downlog 17~1 quarts of beer in 10 hours -beating the former clalmanl'1 con- swnption by aboul four quarts. The 11anc1 jury abo aalled !he - lo • .....,... CGUltucllon ol lhe pcopioed' unlvwti!Y boopllal anij ....... lhe ..... --ol bat1' focilllioo-Tbat recommendation wu not dixusf. ed by the board Wed .. sday. Orange eoonty Medical ASsi>cl1tion of· Ucia.ls also remillded. supervilan tUt mOdemizaUOn "19ukl bt ca~ oo! hu· mediately lo prevent further dlttiiofa- lion into what wa,, de!!Cribtd as "~'Ond clas,, medical tacillty." County Tax Cuts Seen By , Hinshat'' · By TQM BAllLEY ot tlll liMllY ......... A nine-cent ta1 ·cut sefma certain today for Orange County hlxpi~• l 'i county officials took a closer ... , at the stat,wide Survty that maBe the reduction possible. · County Assessor Aodr~ J, H,inshaw today confirmed that if state oBard of Equalization asseuments are accura~ It would not be necessary to )evy 1 special countywide school tax pip year. That tax amounted in 1919-70 to, sliJhtly more than nine cents on each $180 • o! assessed value, ij'le assessor said.' The tax reduction 'became inevitable when the state agency disclo&ed ·that Orange County's asstssment ratio for l97G-71 was. 23.1 percent This com~.:i with a statewide average of 23.1 pertt!nt. "Let's say you own a '14.-000 borne," llin.Yla~ said. "We try to · actiJevt a 2~ percent ratio 0£ asse~ va\ue to rair market value and this woukl Jive you an assessed value on your property tr $0,000, "This would mean .a savings qf about SS.SO ·on your tax bill , !the asstuor said. But he pointed out that the overall county tax for 1970-71 still remains \o be set. Hinshaw recently Increased assessed value's £or 1970-71 by 17.1 percent over last year's figures . The state board's figures wm com- piled after a series of random chd'I on Orange County property. Thty. were then compared with data compiled by Hin.shaw's office befOrt bein& made public. , A. .local tax is levied to provide acl>ool dist(fd.s with' lhe funds they wouht !\ave received from ~ 1tate it the ratio equaJ. ed or was in excess of lhe avera1c. Badh~-m Bill Foes Uniti_ng wguna Meeting Prepares Freeivay Re-routing Fi g ht By BARBARA KREIB!CH OI Ille DellY .. ii.t ti.ff ' Unified opposillon to Asaemblyman Robert Badham 's bill lo remove the Newport Beach segment of the Pacific Coast Freeway adopted route was plan- ned Tuesday ab a meeting called by Laguna Beach Mayor Richard Goldberg. Representatives of coastal communities And chambers or commerce and county officials~ accepted Goldberg's lnvitatk>n to meet in the Art Colony and qreed to cooperate in presentati<rll of ' their positions when the bill homes •P for A hearing before Scnalor Randolph Collier's Transportation Committee al 2 p.m. Monday In Sacramento. Having learned of 'lhe acheduled bear· Ing <111\y thal morning, t~ 9fficials decid - ed to seek a'postponement of the h.earlng lo permit better preparation ol their CaS('. i\1ayor Robtrt WiliM 'QI Collta Mesa phoned Badham rrom the meeting to make this request, bot reported back. ''He said 'no way' -the hearing is next fl.1onday at 2 o'clock." On recommendaUon of Huntinglon Ueach Director of Public Worka James Wheeler. just back from ,a week In Sacramento with Orange County Road Commissioner Al Koch , the group agreed to 30Jicit the services of Ttod CraJg, legislative advocate for the cou nty In Sacramenlo, lo prepare and pre~ent their case. Others attending lhe Lag\l•UI parley , In addition lo the two mayn1i., werf' Huntington Beach C."ity Aclrn lnl stratcr floy le lltiller. County Road Oep101rr1enl Oivision Enginttr M•1rray Storm , Costa ~1ua City Councilm1n Willlam St. Clair. \Vlllh1m Beck of the Ligu11a Nigur.I Corpo ration, Oarrtl 1'ruby, dlrecwr Cl( the San Juan Car1strano l'l\a 1"1)Cr 1.f CommerC't. l.ag~na Chambe1· of Con1- mer~ president eBrnard Syfan. Rod Lewis of tl:e Custa "fesa Business f.1en·s Associa!! ·11, rhesicr Briuei: and AlbPrt Blais of the Sad1;:eback Valley Chamber of Comn1erre, (l\rynn Kirkpiurick of the CitiU\'l's Town Plannin~ Association. Laguna Beach Dlrector·or Public Works Joseph $.\.l'!lf'IV -'iilnd 10:.nl'!~ Lai1u1J Beach hlay"r Glenn 't'eddl-1'. The conferees agreed unanimou sly that' the entitles they represent are interested In construction of the coaslal freewa y In the shortest possible time and feel that the entl~ route is placed in jeopardy by the posiUon of Newport Beach and the Badham bill , AB1701. "lt should be obvious," said Goldberg. "that deletion of any segment could severely damage the integrit y or the enllre route and coold bring about a complett re.study, witfl possible restora- tion ol the original roule along lhe coast, bisecling all communities." Goldberg asked for suggestions u lo the best melhod of presenting the in· \crested entities' positions in Sacramento. "Time Is of the essence," he said. "tn ~ absence of protest the JUghway Commisajon coukl m i s t a k e n I y miscon~rue our silence f o r ac- quiescence." Noling that he l!i expected to host many important visitors for Cos111 ti.·lesa's anniversary celebration an the date set for lhe hearing, and that time "'0\1ld be required In prepare a solid case , ~1ayor \Vilson made the un l\I«> cessful 111ten1pt In have tht. hearing po!lpontd. Storm AW U. cOunty R0»d Depart· rnerll and Board or Sopervisor1 art on record as opposed to the bi ll and said the Road Department is ready to "lake any action necessary to defeat the bill." Wheeler, who regularly a t lend 1 Sacramenl3 hearings, said he and Koch had talked to nine members of the Transportation Commit.tee last wtck and fe lt they had "fi ve votes and three probables.'' "It ·appears our position will be given ravorable consideration," Wheeler told lhe group, ''and that they will go our way, but the other side is very well organized and we can't be too confident ." Rather than sending a large delegation lo Sacramento. Wheeler recommended "not more than six or eight people" lo sit in on the hearing, with the presen· talion being made by Olle or two of these. To Sy!an's suggestion lhat A large group "just sitting in the at1dience" might be effective, he noted that there is almost no space for an audience in the committee's hearing room. Wheeler .!aid that legislative advocate Craig who "has the respecl and con- fidence or , the members of th t. legislature" would b.eller be able to reach the cars or the committee member1 than an elective official a.nd also would 'be qualllled to pursue the matter if the blll should clear the com· millet and reach the Senate noor. Wheeler was designated to coordinate the eflort to ammble n1aterlal !or Crala's presentation and those prtunt agreed to prov ide him wi th copies of resolullon.~ and ether sh~tements op- posing the bill that have been i. sued by cily cauncils, chan1bers of commercr, ma.jor landholders and other lnlere5ted entities. EVERY FRIDAY EVENING-All SUMMER 9 P.M.-ON THE MALL AT FASHION ISLAND FRIDAY, JULY 24: Disney-"Toot, Whistle, l'lunk & Boom" "P'l9eon That Worked a Miracle" FRIDAY , JULY 31: Dlsney-"Nlok" and "Red Balloon" FREE 1· ho.W "FILM·O·RA~A" sponsored by Fadllon Island In co- operation with the Audio-Visual Deportment of the Newport leach Ubrary and the Santla90 Fiim Circuit. ' ' Free Bend Concert. -Every Monday Night -9:00 P .M •. 58 Fine SIG{•• ind S~rvic•a • Open Frld1y 1nd Mond1y night• FASHION J ISLA·ND NEWPORT CENTER P1clllc Co11t Hlghw1y-Between Jemboree 1nd M1cArthur /, • I • 4 DAILY ,JLOT cc...i1111 w .. Olflr ...... , .... , Cl•ude ltMin of Orleans, France, wlth 315 square inches of gleamlng scalp, has won the tiUe ·of the Moat Handsome Bald Head ol France. The Brotherhood ol Bald Heads, assisted by colleagues from Switzerland ·and Belgium, met in Villecb·auve for their annual elec- tion and wine-sampling feast. Villechauve in English means "city of bald heads." • One of t.ht educational ex· hibits at "Man and hil World,'" the ptrrtnial aucceuor of Expo 67 in Montreal. ii a drug exhibit featuring dilplaus of real drugs. SomcoM 1toie (he jive LSD·laud l1tQOf' cubt8 recentl~. The sugar cubft were replacement&, vut there oftlr thitves took the origi"nal anti lo.st uear. • • • • ' . .,. " ..... Too Many Lo11e1 U.S.-Withdraws • From Fire Base ~ SAIGON (AP) -Heovy Norlb Viol· namese fire that killed et Americans and wou1ded 34S ii• the area Jn lt.e past three weeks forced the United States today to abandon a pat.rol base In the northwestern sector of South Vietnam . The U.S. troops hasUly pulled out or Fire Base Ripcord near the Laotian border, spiking some of their o\\·n artillery, less than 24 hours after a patrol operating a mile away suffered Hi jackers Get Hero W elcorne Fro1n Eg ypt t.he heaviest causaltles in • 1ln1le •ctlo11 iA 2in months. The U.S. Command, revJ.stnc Its casualty figures, 1ald 11 Amr:rican.s wrrt killed and 51 wounded 1n a mortar ind ground attack Wednesday on a petrol operatina: a mile from the base. Enemy losses were unktown . The commaud earlier had listed six wounded. A command spokesman said CH41 Chinook helicopter was shot down durin1 the evacuation but there wtre no casualties. The base was ev11cualed wider enemy fire, and at least three mc>re American .. were killed and 20 wounded in 1he withdrawal. The base, on a 1,000..foot rki1e aorth of the A Shau Valley and 13 milts from Laos had /been in operaliO• ror the past 31 months and had been under mortar siege since July I. Troops pf the 101st Airborne Divisit1n operating in and around the base screen- ed enemy infiltration corridors Jeadi1g from Laos aod North Vietnam toward South Vietnam's northern coast. · !Hord, England police have warn· q:I busineGsmen to beware of a png o' putty girl thieves. A spokesman uljl one of the mini· s%irted iirls us ually engages a uleaman in coaversation while the ~en steal the 'oods. VIET CONG PRISONER BROUGHT JN FOR QUESTIONING C•pturecl at Srang, Wounded EMmy Blindfolded for Trip to He•dquart1r$ CAIRO (UPI) -Guerrilla officials said today the Egyptian government was treating as guests six Arab commandos who won the pror.1ised release of seven colleagues by seizing and threatening tc> blow up a Greek airliner and all aboard at Athens Airport. The guerrilla officials said the si:r commandos, who included a leggy blonde girl, received a hero's welcome from a high official of the Arab Socialist Union, Egypt's only pc>liUcp.I party, on their arrival Wednesday night aboard their hijacked Olympic Airways B<>einr 717. As one officer put it, the paratroJper1 were to •·keep track of wh11t's 1otng on and to prevent the North Vle .namue from moving into the lowlands whue all the population is." It was the first time since Nov. t that U.S. for~ had abandGlled a patrol base under enemy preasure a n d des troyed the guns lo keep them ou\ of enemy hands. FBI Study Says Guard Shootings 'U 11necessary' Slain St11dents Honored On \Vednesday the enemy sprun1 an ambush as the patrol was oper.itini a mile east of the base. Australian Cl.rot Ryan, 22, has wt herself on the Briwb marri•§• market along with •120 and a year s ·~J'PIY of beer. She say• her per-1\Ut to stay in Britain has run out and she must find a British bus· b&nd ii she wants to remain here. In l\.ansas Town Funeral Qu~stioning of the six by Egyptian secu ri ty men at a secrcr. destination prc>bably will be short, the guerrilla officials said. The decision tc> pull out of Ripcord apparently was a lop-level oae aimed at avoiding criticism in the United Slate!I ()f a prolonged siege such as the. 77-day one at the old Marine base at Khe Sanh farther to the north in 1968. • • · Le&iiJation aiened into law re· canUy by President Nixo n will per-mit 205 Japanese people to immi· ~rate to the United Stales fl"O!I) µie llOnin Islands, located about 600 llliles southeast of Tokyo. The Japanese national, who trace their aocestry to American sailors, Jived from llla to U88 under U.S. Navy auperviaion . •• • AKRON, Ohio (AP) -An f"SI report on the May 4 shooting deaths of four atudents at Kent State UnJverslty has concluded that the shootlnp were "not nea!ssary and not in order," the Akron Beacon Journal said today. The newspaper said in a copyright story that FBI agents have concluded that Ohio National Guardsmen were not surrounded by demonstrators, had not run out of tear 1aa and could have controlled the aiµiaticri without lhooting. . A 4%·pound bou was born in WinatO'n-l!lltm, ,,JJ.C, TeCeftil • with 0 billld 1\0!4>1 •is foot -a day o.fter ~mot t was 1J1ot in the 1tomac!' in on araumtnt tpith; a man. Botfl. Vu lnfa~~ bom a mo'lith premature· ly, 11"4 ~ inother; ~~r• Tepon~ td tn aatiafactoru condition. More than 1'0 FBI 14on11 lt1'estlpled the May~ 4 shooting, which c11me as !!1fdsrntn movm to, break up a crowd «1-•. t..-.i ~e Beacoti Joomal said the. "8111 7 ,SOO.page report wu summarized in a 1&-ptgt report which said: · • ! Wban Jthn Smith, 39, of Notting-Jiam, England, wont on his honey· ipoon wijh his flance, Carol $i..p. ferd, 23, Jut week, he took +i,ong her parenta. "!get on so well l'ith Carol'• parents that I a1reed fight away the~ should come on ,ur ·•ymoon, • he said. ' . · The Lipperta of Buffalo, N.Y. now !If• in their 5181 yea r of mar- h od lil-11 four of them. MlcltHI G. u,,.rt m a r r I o d M•rtorlt kf.IT)l<lt and hi• brother, Loul1 F., ~ed her sister, Emma Schmlcft, in jjullalo July 14, 1920. The brothero f re ro\lred contractors. • .. Sta nningley, England post office bfficials have th reatened to fine garage qwner Fred Matth1w1 be· Cause he painted a telephone pol e outside his garage to improve its appearance. Post officials .said the paint job makes it impossible to check for rot. -AbMlt JOO demolllltr1tor1 who were heck.line 1uardamen could have been turned 'beck if arrest.s had been made or mofe tear 1as fired. -"mat no guardlme.n were hurt by f1yin1 rocks or projectHea. and none 'wu iD dancer of Jo.sing hia Ufe and there was no hail of rocks before the allootinp. -'Ibat one guardsmen fired al 1 ltudent makin& an obscene 11sture and another fired at a student prepertn1 to throw a rock. National Guard officials contended aft.rthe lhootllli!S lhal their nwn had been surrounded on three sid!lll, that each of some 100 men in the force involved had been hit by throwi.1 objects and that the men fired because they felt their lives were endangerd. The newspaper said the report w11s signed by Jerri.I Leonard, chief or the Justice Department civil rights division . ll said it had learned that the report listed names, ranks, and addre,s.,es of six guardsmen in connection wilh the shootings. The Beacon Journal says the report raises the questloo of whether or not t h e 1tudent..guardsmen conlrontation could be considered a riot. It said that report asserted that guardsmen could be charged onJ y if riot conditions did not exist. LAWRENCE, Kan . (UPI) -Students and townspeople today honored twD university or Kansas students -one black and the other white -slain during . a week Df violence in the small c1>1lege community. FWleral pr~ions were set for Rick Donald Dowdell, a Negro &hot to death by a policeman a week ago, and Harry Nick Rice, killed ~1onday night during a confrontation be1ween youths and police. A county coroner's jury Wednesday ,.qht:ex:onerated patrolman William Gar· ~ ln the death of Dowdell. n h15 Gas Bombs Empty Parliament LONDON (AP) -An unidenlilied man lhrew two gaa bombs into the House of Commong today, driving members from the ancient chamber am.id clouds m smoke. Coughing and with eyes streaming, the members of the mother o f parliament. ran into the cOrridors. The acrid smote billowed upward, lore· tni visitors and newsmen from their galleries and temporarily shutting down the house. The bomb-thrower tossed the canisters of aas from the vl~itor5' gallery shoutln11 : "1'elfast. See how you like it." Ht apparently referred to the gas British troops have been using to quell rioters in Belfast, the Northern Ireland capital, during Roman Catholic·Protes- lant retiding. . 'M1e Hoose or Commons had been scheduled to dr:bate the case of the imprisoned member or the House of Commons from Northern Ireland. 1'.liss Bernadette Devlin, a leader of Catholic civ il rights movements. Becky Spawns Rain, Wind Wet Weather, Unseasonable Cold lnuades Natwn California Mornl"' cloo.lds •nd "-lY tlttrlMNln a11nll'llM tonUnul'd lllrOV.hlul Soul~t•n r.1Ufornlt todtl' 11 tem..,r1lurwt wt•• llttdl' ar onlJ tlltMlr lll1t.er In me11 ret!on1. Lu Antele• "W11 t1lr wit~ •n ••• Pt>tlf'll hit h ol 1$. Ju1I onr dfftPI r..n lhln Wtdlll'ldl,, 11111 I 1rtdlcltt IVflnltthl In f/fl f.I, Tht Air ltoUy!lon Control Dlslrlcl t (Porftid lithl tl'I lrr111tloi\, prlmt "IY In ~ lnl•nd Yl llt rs, wltll 1 rrilnlmum "''-llllHIY " two ID llDllr mil• ...... of -lllflt l111t .... '"""°"' Pit••· Metflr l1lr wt:1~r II tfeclllcltd for 111 ftffl ll'lrMll tM Wfftt!'ld, bu1 fM U.S. Wffllltr l lll'Mll lnc:l!Jdn 11\t dlM(f of I ltw Kl lltrK lfliindtr.,._,. 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Cltv•l•nd 01nv1r Ot!,.11 1'11•-"'• !'art W1l'lh F'r11n~ H11"'11 Hcnel11!• liOUiren tCtnitt (11)1 l11 V"11 L01 A~otl11 M11ml 81Kll Mltw1uk1t Mlnn•uioliJ H1wOrltl1U ,.;1w Yori;; """" OtMlll ,.,,. •o11l1• 1tnllt0tt1hlt P'~0tnl1 P'!lhltiurtll Porll1nd ""''"'' "~ S1c•1me~te ~I. l!IU" $111 l l-1 (•I~ Stn O!teo 51n ''1nc11c1 Jt MI ltr~r• 5t1Ult SPotl!tnt t~-tl WuhlntfClfl \ HI•~ ltw P'rt c. 01 ,. " •• lJ I> II lit 101 I\ JI ., .. ., " ~ It ,0 18 (4 11 '' jt Ir •t M d •• il t1 •S It JS .0. . " •s '' u .. lDJ •1 ., '' 16 7J .ID ,, !• .. u •• 13 .11 u .. " u . " II Jl ... 101 IO IJ .U 11 JI lOt •I ... .. u It Jl ., ., ... " .. ~I J' II .II 1l JI I • II I~~ It U I S ,II not been determined whn fi red the shot that kJl!ed Rice. Dowdell's funeral procession was pal· terned after that of Martin Luther King. An old farm wagon, draped in black and drawn by two black farm horses in black harness, was brought to town lo carry Dowdell's body. A memorial march along with the Rice fwieral procession ""'as arranged by ruce's father and approved by city officials. Aoother ma!cp, organized by a group of youths callmg themselves the "Street People," was planned at the same time as Dowdell's funeral procession. The "Slree~ People 'a" march did not have the sanction of police. George Kimball, the self·proclaimed leader of the "Street Peop le," Wednesday called the two deaths "cold blooded murders." City officials blamed Kim· ball's group for the di sturbance in which Rice was killed. Dowdell was killed in a Negro section of Lawrence, across town from the university. Ri ce died just off campus. Egyptian officials felt lhe commandos ''had a cause" -the release of seven commandos under arrest in Greece - the Arab guerrilla ofifcials said, The plane was hijacked on a flight from Beirut to Athens with a tota l of 66 persons aboard, including lour Americans. All of the other passengr:rs and ooe crew n1ember were alJO\\'ed to leave the plane before H took off from Athens for the Middle East. As a hostage, the guerrillas took alone Andre Ro:chal, head of the Red Cross lor the Middle East. Although the plane's destination was given as Beirut, it merely circled over the airport and then flew ()n to Damascus, Syria. It did not land at Damascus either, flying around the airport while lhe hijackers spoke to the control lower and praised S)lria 's support for !he Palestinian revolutionary moven1ent , according to an airport of- ficial. The plane lhen flew on to Cairo where it landed about three hours after leaving Athens. 1'he Khe Sanh base was abandoned, but American commanders drew sharp critici sm from some quarters for allow- ing U.S. troops to become bogged dotNn iu a defensive position. * ·tr * U.S. War Deaths Reach 43 ,000 SAIGON (UPI) -The number of Americans killed in almost 10 yearw of fighting in · Southeast A&ia paued the 431000 mark ,Jast Week with the dr:aths of 66 Gls , the U.S. command said today. Another 619 servicemen were wounded as the casualty toll declined from the previous week's 72 dead and 729 wounded. marlin~ Th e only other full week of 1970 wh1n An1crican losses were lower was in fue seven days ending July 4 when 61 men died in action and ~ were wounded -the lowesl !or American forces in n1ore than three and a half years. iiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiii S~Ml-ANNUAL FACTORY AUTHORIZED Ntw dim •n1 lont Jn comfort ar1 your1 for years to com• with tht m a n y •p•cielly pric •d l a·Z·loy R•cl ine-Roc.k•rs. This i1 • onc1-•-Y••r opportunity to put comfort a nd bt1uty into your hom• et substenti11 ''"in91. Wialc1 up your room dtcor with th e cheir thet responds to your •v•ry wish .. , rocking , TV "iewing, loun9 · ing, •ven full b•d, r1clinin9. During this fectory euthori1•d s•le , the femou5 Le.Z.Boy R•clin•- Rock•t1 •re •II on 1iale •t 1tvin9s from $10.00 to $70 .00. Hurry dur ing ou r Stor•.Wide 1•1• for b•1t ••lection. !ityl• 83.J C'o1ln 1lll!1a '1 Ollle1t ffonte•Ow11e l F11r11l111re "Store! PHONE · 541·5131 1165 HARBOR ILVD. • DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA • I VJ I ( ,., ye dr pe I Jo( l!e .. JJI IOI thi I lh• an ·~ us I m1 .. I !hi i• st) cl<> I wi "' mi by In ha tht Ja I Inc oil in th; do re: lh: m• Vii in ,, • c mi cri ·~ Jee on I.er de I . ' ne ol •• M• .. I co: "" Se "' ac I tia th• ml en M In an •• '" .. " Jn '" Ca r., .. I WI en m' nil '" nr I ,, M • lo I I I ( Founiain Valley Today's Flllal N.Y. Steeb VOL 63, NO. 175, l SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1970 rEN CENTS Draft Gall s Goii1 g Down Says Laii·d WASHINGTON (AP) -Ser.relary nl Defense Melvin R. Laird said tod1y drt1ft calls for the rest of 1970 will Average below 10,000 a month, a return to pre-Vietnam levels. Laird made this forecast in a speech for about S50 students working as sum- mer int.erns with the government. "In the remaining months or this year," Laird said, "l anticipate that drBft calls will average below 10,000 per month." In the past , he has predicled lhat l(ltal draft calls this year will fall between 150,000 and 170,000 young men compared with the :?90,000 drafted in 1)169. Aides said l.aird still sticks to that forecast. 'Through August, draft calls this year have tblaled 124,SOO. In his talk, Laird aiSUred the students that •'We are doing all we can to plan and implemenl a program that will rtdl..lce drart calls tG z.erG and enable us IG establish an all-VGlunteer force." Sul he cautioned that, in order In make lhe shift, Congress must provide a majGr increase in the defense budget. Laird offered no forecast as tn when this might happen. However, the trend is toward smaller defense budgets and st.ronger pressure from Congress to cut defense epending. Lower draft calls are lied to lhe U.S. withdrawal from Sciuth Vietnam and a concurrent reduction of total U.S. military manpower. The sec rela ry stressed once again that by ne1t spring U.S. forces will be down lo 284,000 troops or fewer -about half the U.S. garrison in Vietnam when the Nixon administration took power in January 1969, Briefly mentioning lhe cootroversial Incursion in Cambodia, which touched off widespread campus demonstrations in May, Laird said: "Evidence multiplies that the President's strategy and his doctrine are producing the de1lred resull.'l." The Pentagon chief did not say what that evidence is, but he indicated he meant lower battlefield casualties in the Vietnam war and forward movement in the ltoop withdrawal program. Nixon Def ends 'Supe r-a gen cy' On Environmen t WASHINGTON (AP) -The Niron arl ministration, attempting l.o squelch criticism ol ltl proposed environmental superagency, says coordinating a 11 federal pollution-fighting efforts under one roof will help eliminate vested in· terests of existing cabin e t -1 eve1 departmenls. President Nixon's decision to create a new Environmental Protection Agency -EPA -wa1 based in part "on the need to avoid the institutional biases of existing agencies," Dwight A. Ink . assistant director of the Office of Management and Budget, said Wed- nesday. Ink's lestimony to a House sul> committee appeared t-0 be a reply tn congressional backers of I n t e r i o r Secretary Waller .J. Hickel's hope tn concentrate govemn1ent pollution-fighting aclivilies In his departmenl. Ink tnld a House governmenl opera· tions 11ubrommittee studying the plan that existing agencies have their own missions which af!ecl their views or environmenlal m11ttcrs. "To vest all the EPA program!! 10 nne of those departments is apt !(l result in a particular s!an1 10 lhose aclivitie!I and questions as 10 its objectivity in dealing with mailers affcrting and con- trolling other dcpartn1cnls,'' Ink said. The government is nnt downgraclin,1t anlipollul ioo efforts b)' placing them in a non.Cabinet level agency, he added. "Al prcsenl , these programs are placerl In such a ~·ay lhat various le\•els nf &iperv\so rs exist between them and the Cabinet members. and they mwl com· pele for attenllon with a hosl ol other lmportAnt rleparttnental 11ctivhies," Ink 'aid. Nixon's rcnrg;inizalion plan , !ligned two weeks Ago, pulls most of the anllpollulion enforcemenl efforts into the EPA from major gnvemment depattmtnls. In ,116- cll!Jon Nixon created a National Oceanic anrl Atmo.,pherk: Administration dealing primArily with f!n vlrnnmental research. Unle~ Congreu acll within r.o dA}'S I() vnlrl the plan, II wlll become effer.live. Rep. John A. Blat,nik !0-Minn.), suh- commiltee r.h11irman. !!;Aid he expects a resolution In set aside the pmposal M:> be Introduced. I 3% Tax Likely Utility Levy Would Hit Ever yone DAll.'r f'll.Ot SlllH "'-t. WAYNE OSBORNE STUD IES COMPUTER MADE MAP M•chin1 M•Y R1pl1c1 Dr1ff1m1n In Fountain V•ll•v Maps by Magi~ Computer T ak es Over Job in Valley By TERRY COVILLE Ol !ht Ot lW ,lltl 1!11! The little old map maker is being replaced by a computer in. fountain Valley, The machine is taking over 'In 'old drudgery once hand led by a man with pencil and rule, and Fountain . \'alley will be the first city in Orange County lo lest lhe concept. "We're 110t fully canvinC~ ~-yet but it looks like McConnell Automation in Long B~ch bas developed a oomi)ut.e:r capable of drawing a map twenty times faster than a drall!!man," Y.111yne Osborne, publ ic works director for fo'oun· lain Valley, explained. City officials are dickering with the Long Beach colnpany over price aid what functions the computer will handle. A full street map of the city would take a draftsman a week l.o draw. 1he computer can do it in two hours, Osborne 1aid . McDonnell Automation, a subsidiary of t.1cDonnell -Do u g I a 11 Astronautics Corporation . has linked an IBM campi.:ler with a mechanical device capal.lle of drawing maps. The process starts with city ofl ic1a\5 collecting all lhe data desired fnr 111aps of the city. This data is recorclcri on a base tape. The tape feeds inb the drawing machine which moves vertically, horizonlally or at angles and makes marks according tn coordinates red it by the computer. It's all a matter of measuring distances al'\d reducing tl1em to scale size. Osborne said lht. base tape -y,·hlch would cost $10.000 lo make -would probably be an ordinary street map of the cily. "Additional tapes can be made 10 add special maps to the street map," Osborne said . He is currently studying each c:ty department to determine what IT'l "'-flS each uses. Public works counts tt1e most maps -using different overlays to kx:ate .o;ewer lines, water U.es, streelS, and ligh~. The park~ departm~nt needs I map 1n locate and identify all the street trees In Fountain Valley. Cily planners use• ~arale mning. pi:ecise plan 1nd1 trfl(:t' maps. 1bt tire department 11eedJ ~tthe:c rtnap l.o \ocat,,e ,._ ltvc:tr•R'"· "t'1 -: 't!'t ""'. t: .. .,. ............ "Besides the ovenll C'ily map, the computer can blow ue, in detail any portion of the city' even la ~ alreel corner," Osborne aid, "Thi• i5 tne Jlclrl we want to be 1ure ol, because we use a Jot nl blow-ups." The $10,000 cost for the original Lape would just about equal the salary of a draftsman for the city. "We're asking for another draflsma11 JIOW and lve're be.hind in our map making,'' said Osborne. Once the tape is completed. the cost for drawing maps would be tl5 an hour. A draftsman costs about 16 an hour. Qmsidering the difference In time, however, the J;avings could be tremen- dous. By lhe&e figures a city street map computer drawn would cost $30 (See COMPUTER, Page I) PUBLIC ACCESS BIL L REJECTED SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A bill requiring cities and co1:1nties to reject building perm l t 1, sub- divisions or zoning changes whlch would cut off public access 10 the ocean or other large water areas was defeated Wednesday by the Assembly. The bill by Assemblyman John Uunlap (0.Napa), was rejected on R 35 to 27 vote, with 41 votes ~eel for passage. Bv Al.AN Dll\.KIN OI ti. ~11¥ """' Sttlt A J percent lu on all utilities, purported to hlt businessmen homeowner1 and apartment ?e$idents 'equally, today seemed th.e most likely levy Huntington Beach will use to financt its new facilities. Apartments owners and resklents may be dealt aoother blow because the council is a.Jso considering slapping a flat $6 annual tu on all units in the city. This would replace the present scale ree which averages al SI per unit for the 10,000 apartments In the city. This was part of the new formula Cong Appeals For Backing Of Coalition PARIS (UPI) -The Viet· Cong, wit.h Hanoi's approval appealed today for U.S. backing of 1 new coajition .&overrunt{ll in Saigon. And in a formal slatement the Viet Coog said a,ny other problem in the Vietnar:pese War can be settled if Washington withd,raW'I its support ol the present Saigon regime. It was the mOst optimistic de velopment in the deadlocked talks since they began on Jan. 19,' 1969. Diplomatic ob.servers said it a_PPeared the C om m u n i s t negolialors had ag.signed ovt.~·•ll Priority to negotiahng with the Un~~ ·States on the pogsibility• oC formin& 1• ooatiUon· fr~·tall ¥!-in¥;,. 't ~_'' '.\";l . ·~I Pr~siclent 'Wgu~ Vall Thieu ol' SOutll Vietnam hu alw1y1 ruled out any possibilities of cooperating with the Viel Cong. Diplomatic observers said Saigon has had the· tipper hand on allied negotiating decisions concerning poUtica.1 matters since the talk& bepn. ~tme. Nguyen Thi Blnh, Viet Cong Foreign Minister and chief negotiator in Paris, said in New Delhi Wednesday her movement would agree to 1 coalition tbat wo1.1ld include same members of the current Saigon government - specifically excludinR Thieu, Vice Presi- dent Nguyen Cao Ky, and Premier Tran Thien Khiem. Emerging from today's 76th Vietnam peace talks session, Viet Cong delegate Dinh Ba Thi said in a formal statement : "The urgent queition presently is the one which demands that the United State.s give up its support for the die· tatorial and warlike administration. of Theiu-Ky-Khiem in order to allow the South Vietnamese population to decide itself its own destiny without outside interference, and that it (the United States) puts an end tn the inhuman penitentiary re1ime and tn the barbarian acts of the American puppets in South Vietnam. "These urgent and basic problems hav- ing been resolved, any other problem relating lo the stoppage of war in South Vietnam can be settled." Before Thi read the formal statement the Communist.! had appealed for U.S. backing fr.r a coalition 1ovemment and said in privale the issue was negotiable. Nixon Facing Protesters Preside1it Headed West; Trouble Brewing in Uta h By RICHARO P. NALi. ot ttot ~u., ,11tt '"" As nHicials in OrRnge Counly prepare for a rootine arrival by President Nixon F'riday night, a different type receptinn was bei!li hatched by dissidml elements 10 Salt Lake City. Leaflets have spewed forth calllng for a Yippie nudt'-ln alld denouncing the President. Decoralt.d with undergmuncl ctrawlng!I, lhe pamphle!J declare that 5,000 slnnecl Sall 1..ake freaks will "strip and 1trul'' during Mr, Nixon'1 visit . The Weatherman, a violent faction o( Slul'lent.s for 1 Democratic Society (SOS), claims It will hold a snake dance 1hrou1h the groonds o( lhe Mormon Temple In the heart o( the city. Thl!i, lhf'y stale, la to !!hnw support of lhe Bl1tc:k Panthf:r11 and 111 third world liber•tion &lruggles. The Pre~iclt.nl 11 to land rrlriay evening at lhe. SAit l..ake lnternal.ional Airport He has planned 1 brld visit whh leader• ' ,, nf lhe Church of Jesus Christ G! Latler- cla y Saints and is Lo attend a rodeo al downtown Salt Pall\ce. . P11ul Taylor, spokesman for a coalilin,n nf groups. said they would demonstrate at t~e Hotel Utah across from the Mormon Temple Square where the Preli· dent plans the conferenct with Mormon leader.$. Taylor said the group w11s madt. up of the United l''ront to End lhe W1'r, Mormons Against the War, and You(lg Republicans Against Vietnam Com· mitmenl. There ha11 been Jlttlr. anti-war violence in Sall Lake City Jn the past and there was no asRssment of the effectiveness of the plans to disrupt the President's visit . The Young Republi can t'edera.1\on haa Announced plans for a rally in IUppGrt nl the President. It is 1ponaorlng an "Hflnor America Rally '' about an hour after Mr. Nixon 's scheduled arrival. The rorteo and olher feslivllies ire an IMual celebr1Uon marking the tel· llement of Sall Laie Valley ln 1847 by the MQrmon pl oneers. Mr. Ni1on will board Air Jo'orce One Afler tht. rodet'I and ny on .&o El Toro Marine Corps Air Station Friday to begin a JG.day work 5ession at San Clement! with top advisers. Police Chiel Clifford Murray of San Clemente aaid there are no known plans, as yeti (or demonstrati(tns near the western Wh 11: !louse. Mr. Nii.on may return f« a 1econd 11).day session in mid-August. A huge anti-wllr demonstration was held outside tbe Western .Wh,lte House Jul AugU1t. Murray said his departmeril tries where possible to work out around rules in advance with group11 that an- nounce plans to protest. This helps con· trol the 1ituation. "Sr. far we've alw•ys had pretty good lu ck." he aald. . Mr. Nixon's visit, with wUe and daughter, Tricia, Is to include meetlngs with top advi&or1 and a heavy work load. The President plans Sund1y, ISec NIXON, P11• Ii . tt\at emeried at a study &eSSlon Thurs- day nicht between the cbambet' of com- merce and the .city council. At the session the chamber made an apparently successful lobby to steer the council away from the gross receipts business tax, which the cbamber itself had earlier endorsed in principle. Instead of changing to a groas rectlpls charae. calculated to bring in an extra $92.000 a year, the chamber proposed a 50 percent increase in Lhe pre.sent fee which, officials said, would brlna: in the same amount. There wa,s also only fleeting mention of an Oil ta1 which the chamber al'iO oppo.lell. It came when Councilman Al Coen smiled a waming to the chamber members, st.a Ung "An oll tax atilt ii pos.siblt, genOemen." The session concluded wilh City Administrator Doyle Miller stating' that the staff could work on 1 new taxina formula put , forward by Couoci).man. George McCracken which appeared to have the support of both lhe chamber and councilmen. With about 11,500,000 needed annually to pay for the civic center complei:, library, fire stations and corporation yard, thi! is how McCracken's plan would work: -3 pertenl tax on all uUlitiea would (Sefl FINANCING, Pqe 1) This Seat Taken Sneaky Snake Found in Toilet VENTURA, Calif. (UPI) ~ It's a sneaky make, Louis Chacon told sheriff's deputies last week. Chacon said he found the snake in the toilet of the: house into which he had just moved. The snake, he slid, stuck its head out of the boltom of lhe commode but disappeared dow_nward U the toilet wu flushed. At times it would sUck its head out o{ another toilet in the home, Chacon said. Deputies, skeptical about the whole thing , thoroughly invtsliaated both toilets and found nothing. They left. Wednesday ChacOG called tbe lberiff again. This ti.me be sald lhe snake· had become bolder, riling oul of the bowl to leer at him. Deputies' went to the horbe. qaJn. There wu a tiv•foot loni Anaconda peering out of the bo~l. , Before they could &rib the re.ptile it, retreated down the ho.le in the bottom. Animal control offic~• we.re called in but the ~cond'-keP.f. duckinl out of sight. 1 Jt'iilal\Y 'the toi}et w·as . removed' fro}l\··its moorings and ~ey. caucht lbe sflif.e with .a ·~ ind ,too~ it oi;r ~ ~ shelter. ' ' ' ' On Charges of· Desertion Copies of honorable di.!Charae papers have been presented to a U.S. Dislrict Court in San Franc~ by the attorney for a Vietnam veteran ftom Anaheim who may be the victim of 1 tragedy of errors. The situation In which John Lapp, 21 , finds himself today is hardly a comedy of errors. He i1 under arrest at Ford Ord, where he was taken after FBI agents ur1ed him to come ak>ng to Santa Ana June I and clear up a misunderstand.in& about hls military status. The U.S. Anny S8)'S the Anaheim Union High School. District maintenance man recieved a $711 re-enlistment bonus June I I, 1968, then deaerted instead of reporting tO a Minnesota artillery base . Lapp and his attorney, Charles Robinson, of Sanla Ana, say he was honorably discharged, never re-enlisted, and came home to his native Orange County, wher2 the former Specialist 4/C picked up life again like many ex. servicemen. He gol a job. Ht underwe(ll treatment for shrapnel wounds 1uffered in Vietnam infantry combal, visltint Long Beach Veterans' Admini1tration Hospital. · He married Peggy Bartholomew. He took out a GI loan application on a home thg young couple then decided against buying. And he answered t h e door May' 22 when a pair of FBI agents announced I hey . wanted tn Lalk to him and take a look at his military separation papors. Life hasn't been the same since, although he is not now confined la the Fort Orel stockade, but assilJled to the Special Processing Dtpal'tment, t1nable PILO T AD WORK.$ 'SEW' PERFEC1 'LY Nothing "30-so'' about thll ad to find someone tO sew : Seamstress -Esp'd tn do piece work at home. Call lc.XX-X:XX. That hard-working little ad In the clauified secUon of the DAILY Pilot, in only two appearances, picked up 7S applicants. "f never expected \hat kind of acillon," said. the advertlaer. Actjori is just walUnR fo~ 1you, too. Call &4~71, the direct llqe lo. results. A DAILY Pllm' 1d.vl30r will h1:lp you wrlte ads that are any- thinl blit '1ao-ao." to leave ~e on bis own. Lapp has been granted paues oa three occasions for vii.its home, pending biJ Sept. ; hearing in U.S. District Court in San Francisco, at which time the Anny must prove its cue. "John's nerves were worse the last Ume he came back from Fort Ord than they were when he came back from Vietnam," says his stepfather, Joha Harouff. Armp authorities have produced r• enlistment papers 1igned with Lapp'a name, but he and his attorney say tbeY, were forged, after first believing the case to be a monumental paperwork mixup. "I think the Army bu.ogled," say 1 Robinson, his civilian J.a,wyer, who lt a former captain in the Marine Corps. "I think th.is is the slra.ngesi caiifl I have run into in TQY whole life,'' added the man who bope.1 to prove the Army bungled Sept. 4 wht!n be goes to federal court with Lapp. One of Lapp's feUow semi-prisooer1 in the SPD area at Ford Ord is Thomas D. Harvey, 23, of Vallejo, who was taken into custody last Friday by federal authorities. Harvey, whose attorney -like Lapp's -has filed a pet.illon for a writ ol habeas corpua in lhe same court, return· ed home Aug. 31, 1969, after being given (See BIZARRE, P11e 2) Oraage C.a1t Weatker Overnight lowa along the Oran1e Coast are expected to be 57, to 65 de1rees. The high are foreca.st at 75 lo 85. Low clouds and local foa nlght and early momini remain. INSIDE TODA\' Republican Stot. Senatort arc opttmi&tic that Gov. Reagan'• 11 billion t<U reform plan will pa11. Bvt Democrata art just Cl.f optimUtic ehai they wiU a1t1ttld it. Set 1toru PQfle 1. r I DAILY l'ILOT H ,,_ ..... J FINANCING. • • 1:irlac . :" ••••••••••.••••••..•...• .JI00,000. -A II !*"*.bib la the~ tu ·············~·-· .. ········~······ •.ooo. -laere11ln1 a. tu oa i!pllfc ' 0 ...._, •' 0 0 o' • 0 o OJ 0 • o o ' o ...... -!ocome !rom the II.SO trash lee .............................. ,000. -Total ................... 1uu.ooo. Al 3 ptl"'ent a utility tu would [Jlean an · incrtue of tO cents to ~ user .wbl> pt)ll t30 a month in utllKy bills. McCracken commented. ''The uUlity tax comes down to the user. lt wOUld be the most e()uitable. It would hit the bus.ine.ssman, la · addition to the bualness tu, homeowners and apartmenl residents." Ia a letter .to the council, cha!nbtt president Peter Hortoo aaid the bl»:1DPM COQUD.wlity had "strong" objections to the implementation d the grou rectipls tu, and a separate oil production tai:. Questioaed by councilmen Coen and Jack Green for an explanation on why the dwntler. w• revenllJ tt.s previous ...torsemont of the I""' rec<ipts tu, Horton said the earlier support was a qualified one. 'niat quallflcatioo, he said, was OM ot recognition or the compleitties or restructuring the fee from a charge -on the number of employ" to o a a J:aued on gross recelpta. One of tbe problems, Horton aaid, would be tile lncreue ill bookkeepin« coats to the bullnasman "out of ,proportion to the •lad. the tu recelplo." Wllllam Foster, a chamber director and· cueral ma.aapr « the Huntington BMdJ Compmiy, iaterjected, "There is a feelinc that Uiete are lnequitiel in bath 1yW..S, bul the IBWlimoul opiaion ii that we would gladly trade the in-eq-d. the preNllt II)'...,. for the simpijcity d. ff. '!be laequlties aren't such that we can't live with them." Finance Di.rector Ben Arguello said that the gr.., receipts method would ieoerate more in the lon, run, if there ii an increase ta bulineu activity, becouN II would be tied to the econoffiic tttacl. City manager Miller commented, "We don't want anyone Co get the impression 1hi:t we are wedded to a gross receipts tax. We feel addiUooal revenue should cxame from tbe bu5ines.s cmununity - "'' baVe no intentloo of dictating which way it should be "if you feel expansion of ~ pre1ent 11yst.em ts all rtsbt, we are happy. We aimpfy felt that we should recommend a system tbat is equitable." QueltiGns were atto asked whether increues in the city's assessed valuation would not generate more money. Arguello replied that the valuation was $12 million more th111 he had anticipated and this would mean an extra flta,000. MUler then warned, "Let'• not spend that money until we get through our meet and Corter sessions wkh city employes," relening to lllllllW uW}' r<vislool. Tbe meeting, conducted .. .. In- terchange of ideas between the chamber represematives and councilnm, wOUDd up with Miller promlsiag to try to get copies of McCncbn'1 lonnut. rHdy tor the Aue. a COW>Cil meotin(. IJeat Wave in Jap,!Jn; Mercury Up to 98,6 TOKYO (AP) - A humid summer hea~ wave hit Honshu, Japan'• Jar~st main island, tOOay and weatpermen J'!'PfJl"led the mercury went up to tbiJ yur'1 record hlgh of tf.I in Fulruahlma, IZf mlJeo norilleut of Tokyo. la Olaka, EllJ>C> '10 olficlal1 Aid more thaa rn,ooo -le villl<d the world -fair by 7 p.m., d"Jlile the hip.st temperaUn """" the· fair optaed ·!alt Mud> rl.7. Ia Tokyo, the Wl>epralUrt rOle to 12.L Dunes Wienie Roast Set for Beach Kids A wienie roast and swim &l NewJ)(rl Dunel Ui plaoned for Huntington Beach youdw ages 7-17 from 10 a.m. to t p.m .• Friday. 'lbe COit d. trwportatioo, admiilion and bJncb 11 fl. Buses will leave from tile city gym and from Marina High 5diool. DAILY PILOT O•AN~I COAIT PUILltHING COM,ANY lo\11rt N. W11d "r"ld.,1 •W ,... .. ,,'*' J1ck l . Curl1y T\1m11 K11vll ElilW Tho11111 A. Murph;n, loi-glnv !ED- W•I o ..... (Olu>ly IE.tllor AID1rt W. 11111 Al.Ntllt. .... .. HMtl .......... Offlt1 17115 l11_ch l1wl1w1rd M1ill11' Add1110! P.O. low 7f0, 91641 OftNor Offk" lei~ lt»e:fl: m F°'"' Av-. Cit/I M .... l• WCI 11'1 S!r4'1 llf..,...1 l•W'I: m1 west 11lbe1 111111c~1rf 11• Clt!nWlll: JN Notlll II C1m .... •Ml DAIL., PILOT Iliff l'lleft Cool Spot fittle Park Has to Do In Valleri "Whtre oh •liar~ llu my -•I par~ gone!'' w11 •the lament thll week of two Fountain V11loy dty caUncijmeo. The flr1t to uk. the questloa was John •Harper, who wu worried that IJllll'OVal of a !1"0-lCl't nelllJbor-park 11est to Fountain V1Uey l:lementary SChool woWd Cl'Ulh any chance of a lar1er, central park acrou Buahard Sfr@tL . "l'm diuppolnted to.find the citv IO acquteacent in the purlUit of this ctntra1 park ide1," Harper commented, after iMpectinl plau f0r the two-acre neJ.ib. -perk. c.ouncilman Ren Sbenbnu, 1 strong central park" supporter, sald a lack of fund• wu the reuon dreama of a ceolral pwk hadn't materlaliled. "I pushed hard for a central park next to the hlg 1cbool," Shenkman said, "but since the money doem't appear available, I don't think we should deprive the re1idenfl of the 1maller,park they were promlltd YWJ ago." "l'm just afraid if thia J)afk goes, the central park will be eliminated," Harper replied. , Umltefl Drilling Hickel Endorses Oil Lease Cuts • • WASHINGTON (AP) -Secrelary of Interior Walter J. Hickel has endor1ed the canceliatlon ol 2tl federal oU leases and continued drilling under strict repl1Uon ta prevent future blowoull and pollution In the Slnta Barbara chan-- nel off the Californ11 cout. Hickel urged a senate 1nttrlor sub- commill .. Wedne.ldey to llCI promptly on a bill 1ponaared by Sen. Goof&• Murphy (R-C1iil.) · The meaSure would cancel 30 of the 70 federal oil leases in the Slnta Barblra channel and Pl)' the holders from a special account built by oil 11les from From p .. ., J NIXON ... Naval Petroleum Reserve No. 1 hl Calllornia. The bill, one of six before the sub- committ@t, alio would create a nation1J energy reeervt d. 118,000 acres 1eawird of the California ltate Santa Barbara Oil Sanctuary. Some of the other bills call for can· cellaUon of all 70 leases. Hickel said oll production should con. tinue on leaieJ whert a 1• blowout caused spills in order to relieve pressure and reduce the danger of further seepage and pollution. "We have increued our inspecUon forees to ensure compUance and e1rly deteclion of any mishaps," Hickel testified. · WUllam T. Pecora, U.S. Geoloaical Survey director, said that seven er. ploratlon walls had . been drilled , but however, to 1-.ke a breather and attend nont was in production, on the 20 leases a basebalt 1ame bet~·een the Angels proposed for cancellation. and W1a:hln1ton Senator• at Angel Hickel ar)d Murphy )¥ere the only Stadium 1n Anaheim. witneS21es among 25 heard at the two-day hearinJ: to give unqualified 1upport to First Lady Pat Nixon said today that the Murphy bill. she and her huaband will live in Calilor-Mllily other witnesses ~aid more than nia after they leave the Whlte Hou.se 2t1 leases sbould be canceled. but did not ipeclly whether that lllMns Sen. Alan CranSton Ind Rep. John Cassie Coder, 3, Fountain Valley, discovered the joys of crawling through the large flay pipes at Wardlow Parle in Huntington Beach Wednesday. One o the joys is that inside one of the pipes is a cool place to be on a hot day. Facility at Magnolia and Pioneer Streets is one of city's neighborhood parks. ~ Shenkman agreed with Harper to Jet the pub and recreaUon commiaion make a final rePort on the c.-itral park before approval would be afven for tbe .. Ichbtxlk\Od park, From P .. fl 1 v. ·Tunney, California Democrat1, rec<>m· San Clen)ente. mended their bills which Vr'OOld cancel It hu been assumed by many locaDy. moat ef the leases and create a feder1l- that the President"a purchase l1at )'ear stale sanctuary program along the of the old Cotton estate, in which he California coast. obvioualy taku pride, meant that he The feder1J unctuarles woold extend would nmaip I resident in the post-seaward from el.isling state sanctuaries. White House. year1, probably e.tabli.sh-Tunney aaid the Murpby bill "could ing a library nearby for hil memoirs well have been written in the board COMPUTER. •• Old Oil)J Yalley Records Slide Out of City Hall while the draftsman'• lime would tqual and mementos. room of a large ell company" because f248. Mrs. Ni.Ion's reference to future came it would shut down unproductive wells "We use about eight large maps and ln reply to que.tloru from a visiting and permit all other offshore drilling 36 dlifer91Jt blow-upe. They need 1'1 be group cf 35 school teachers from 1reland. to continue. Tuooey ia seeking Murphy'• The flnt lady'• -and.lither was Pat· s redone and, updated quarterly or semi·an-.,.. enate seat. nually," Osborne said. rick Ryan, an native of Mayo County, Cranston said the Murphy bill ts a Ireland. The initial year might not see much "step in the right direction" but It "falls savings because of the cost of making far short of what is needed and "it the tape, but thereafter it's a simple T T B is not an adequate safeguard against Old zone chances never dJe, lfley just become 6uried jn musty files -except in Fountain Valley where the council cleared tbe boob of. them this week. c.ounctlmen turned down five wne changes Tuesday night which had been given partial approvil, but were never C001Pleted. The ol~ d!ange was 'Commercial mning orisinally approved for lhe northeast corner of Magnolia Slreet and Helm Avenue. oo June 18, 1981. Another Qle change, Initiated June 20, ltee, ror ccmmercial icning on the DOrtb aide ol. Talbert Avenue, 250 e1st of Brookb.un;L Street, WU alJO turned -.. comparison of ma1 versus machin~. WO eenage oys the threat of future Slnta Barbara Other old zone request.! finally turned Fouatain Valley was selected by cataslrophes," dawn were: Mcllannell for a pilot program. The H eld in LA Slay ing Rep. Chart .. M. Teague IR-Callf.), _ Commercial zoning initiated Sept. U>og Beach company wants to prove testified in support of Santa Barbara 3 J968 f rt th --~• 'd the 1ystem will work for a city. LOS ANGELES (UPI) _ Two 17.year-legislation he is sponsoring. · • or prope Y on e, .,..,, "" SI e A spokesman for a groop of l I oil of Talbert Avenue, 680 feet eut o( "A former engineering aide ror us · aid boys were booked on murder charges Brookhurst Street. Rick Young, suggested Fountain Valley'. early today for the fatal beating and companies holding Santa Barbara chan· A rtm-• . I . _.. He works with McDonnell o11 this com-stabbing of an elderly widow dur1'11g nel leases urged that the Murphy bjll -pa g~ zomng n1tiat1E:U June be ei.:panded to include payments for :i. 1969, for land south of Edinier Avenue, put.fr mapping," Osborne explaiwed. an apparent burglary last Saturday. their unproductive leases. 500 feet east d. Euclid Sir .. ! "They have shown us what they can Police identifi·• t•· sus-•-,, Joh • ~ •IC" ,... ... ~ n Ohl said the Pauley ~lroleum Com . do. We're talking with them now lo ~·gJas J Wi'••to• end e ·11 R. Dr -merc1al zoi:Ung Initiated June . uuu · 1 Y uin-Co., and 10 other firms bid •73 million 3. 1969, for property south of Edinger iron out details of what we actually mer, both or Los Angeles. The victim, for their leases. Avenue, east ol Euclid Street. want on maps, and the final price." Florence-Church, 75, was discovered nude The •mall operators we.re shut doMi All cf the denials were routine actiona Fountain V11ley officials expect lo a• in the bathtub at her home when her by the Interior Department's new regula- intended to clean llft old records. "'--nounce a decisioa on the project in son, Robert Church, slopped by for a tion which make their leases uneconomic, -·-~-~wee-. vr·s·t -1 zone changes had been 1Larted, but 'r======~=========='=·=============~~::·•:d:d~ed~·========::;-­never completed for various rea.soos. l Helmetless Bike Rider _jJ. J. (Jarrell~ 16th Semi Annual Sale Killed in Costa Mesa Riding to the beach fat I marine biology lab clas,, a t,eJllged Cotta Meaa. summer school student was killed thia morning when hurled beadfJrit into a brick wall after his motorcyc)e went . out of contra!. George L. Hanoock, 18, of 2138 Wallace Manila Woman Exposes Plan MANILA (AP) -A woman army corporal who U)IS 1he: lnflltrat.ed a radical youth organization Le a tJ f i ed Wednesday that the group plamed to sabotage Ainencan property · in th e Philippines and Wll(le an armed 1tru111t. against the Philippine government. Elnora "Babetle" Estrada, 23, 11id she infiltrated the Kabat.aan Makabayan -KM -and became one of Ila national leaders. Manila newspapen have dubbed her the armY 's Mata Kari. Sht testified in Tarlac Province at a bail bearing f<r KM Jeader Nilo T1y11, who is charged wlt.h lncttlng tanners in the central Luzon province ta take up arms against the government. Miss Eitrada told the court the poop planned in destroy U.S. govern.-bulldinc1 as "symbols o( irnperialilm." She claim· ed the KM was linked to the Maoi.t New People's Anny of the Huka, but said it wu too weak to topple tht gcvemment. F ......... fl J BIZARRE .•. an honorible di11Cl\lrg1 at F 0 r t Wainwright, Alaska. The Army cl1im1 be too it a dnertlr. His honorable discharge papen b•ve been filed with the U.S. Dlalrk:t COUrt in San rrancl1CO too. Youth Dance Slated In Fountain Valley All si11h through elchlh l'•de ltudtnll in Foqnt.ain Valley are invited to rtanc• to the sounds of the "IOI " at 7 p.n1., Friday In Founlain Valley High School. Admiuion 11 25 cents. The dance 11 co-sponsored by the pa.rU and recr1atlcn department and Ule South Coan Junlcr Women's Club. Ave., was dead on arrival at nearby Costa Mua Hoepiltl following the 1:25 a.m. accldeatm. The Eatancla High School student w1a wearing no protective helmet and was thrown about 100 feet when hll cycle 1tnlck a curb at PlacenUa Avenue arxl 191h Street. Cause of the tragic accldent wu still under jnvestlgation, but police uid Han· cock may have swerved to avoid a car driven by William A. Farwell, 49, of 1128 Placentia Ave., Costa Mesa. Patrohnan Pat Rodgers said the victim wu rtdlng south on Placentia Avenue toward Newport Beach, where his clasa was hiving a marine bioloay field trip. Hi! was the son of Mrs. Mary Hancock. "Here it Is again -no helmet," said COit.a Me,a PoUce LL Averf Smilh, who heads the department's traffic bureau. "He'd be alive if he'd been wear- ing one ." Lt. Smith added that Hancock's death today was the third in two months involving 1 young motorcyclist riding wjthoul a protectJve crash t)elmet. The olbera also lied of head injuriea. FV Residents Get Newsletter· Thousands of Fountain Valley residents will receive a 6rnall surprise in the mail Friday or soon thereafter. Jt's in the form of greetings and a newsletter from city hall. City orllcials are now mailina the first edition of their new quarterly newsletter, an 81\ by II in<h, slx-pege pempltlet packed with stories and photos centered en city hill ac,iivities. The newsletter was dnigned lo "regularly. inform residents and tax- payers about activities and projects of the city of Fountain Valley." Celt of the project is •1 ,100 fer offset printing of t,500 copies. The newsletter .wUI be mailed at bulk rates. "We plan to mail about 7,000 ccples and keep tht rdt to hand acrou the counter al city hall," Jim Hollywood, 1u1Jtant lo the city manager, explained. "Y(e're going to wal.cb the flf'st two lllUel CIOllelf to determine how effective. thl• 11," he added. "ln the futtlrt It mlgtit be malled wtlh wattr blll1 Instead or separately ... The first edi~on features 1 front page picture of cltt councilmen at a atudy te81lon and ae\ler1I inside storlc1 aod activities o:>mpleted by various cl Ly deparimenta. r Shown : 72" rectangular table w/three 22" leaves. WAS HOW (&eals 12\, .......................... 469.00 375.00 Arm Cheir .......................... 169.00 13$.00 Substantia l 11vln91 on M1drl91I bedroom, dining room furnltura ind oc"c11lon1I t1bl11. Htrlt•gt -lit Etlltlon incl Ch1mbr1y btdroom1 dlnint room furnitura 11ncf occa1ion1I t1bl1s u to l/J aff M l h, 'd h . WA I a c mg s1 e c air ................ 149.00 China 58" .......................••. 909.00 78" Buffet .......................... 619.00 ... 111.00 721.00 4n.oo All H1rlta1• upho l1ter1.t fu rniture can bt ordered at 15°/o aff 1000. •f f1brlc1 tt choott from . Herltlfl l ron1inl occ11lon1l t1blaa up to 1/J off Yo ur favorite Interior designer wfll b1 hapJtr to cusbi ~ou • , • H.J.GARRETf fURNITtJRE ,ROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Of'" Moo., T1ttors. • l'<I. l•os. J 2215 HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646-0l75 • ' ' c 0 A 7 c • ~ c c e e Jl c a a ft d h s p • p • h· u 21 v rr rr st c ( ~ " • New·pori Beaeh Teday'• Fbual VOL. 63 , NO. 175, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFOllNIA THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1970 TEN CINTS Nixon Clemente-hound, Faces Ut.ah Protests By RICHARD P. NALL 04 tllf 0.llY l"~I llaff As officials in Orange County prepal'f: ror a routine arrival by President Nixon Jo'riday night, a dU(erent type reception was being halchtd by dissident elements in Salt Lake City. Leaflet! ha ve spewed forth calling for a Ylppie nude-in and denouncing the Pre1ident. Decorated with underground drawinas, Hickel Ol(s Oil Lease, Drill Cuts WASHINGTON (AP) -Secrelary of Interior Walter J . Hickel ha1 endorsed lhe cancellation ol 20 federal oil leases and continued drilling under strict regul ation to prevent future blowoul.s and pollution in the Santa Barbara cha~ nel off the California coast. Hickel urged a Senate Interior sub- committee Wednesday to act promptly on a bill sponsored by Sen. George J..1urphy lR·Calif. J The measure would cancel 2{) ol Lhe 70 federal oil leases in the Santa Barbara chaMel and pa y the holder11 from a special aceount buill by o.il sales from Naval Petroleum Reserve No. 1 in California. The bill, one of six before the sub- commitl.ee , also would create a national eoer1y reserve of 198,000 acres se1ward of the California 1tate Santa Barbara Ou Slnctuary. Some of the other bills call for can- cellation of all 70 leases. Hickel said oil production should con- tinue on leases where a 1969 blowout caused spills in order to relieve pressure and reduce the danger of further seepage and pollution. "We ha ve increased our inspection forces lo ensure compliance and early detection of any mishaps," Hickel testified. William T. Pecora , U.S. Geo logical Survey director, said tha t seven ex- ploration we lls had been drilled, bol none was in production, on the 2{) leases proposed for cancellation. Hic ke l and Murph y were the. only "'itnesses among 25 he.ard at the two-day he.aring lo gi ve unqualifie.d support to th e. Murphy bill. Many other witnesses said more than 20 leases should be canceled. · Sen. Alan Cranston and Rep . John V. Tunne.y, California Democrats, recom- mended their bills which would cancel most of the. leases and create. a federal· state sanctuary prograin along the California coast. Coast 'Y' Hits $90,000 Mark The Orange C'.oa11t family YMCA hag raised $90,000 so far in iU fund-ra ising campaign to pay for their existing facilities. The goal of th e drive is $.'i97,000, $387,000 of wh ich will pay for ils Newport Beach building and ·the remaining $210,000 will go into its building prqgram for new facilities. "We have. over -4,000 membe rs," says YMCA president Joseph Metcalf. "We're getting so crowded that we must burn I.he mortga ge and build a new building for our members." The Orange Coast YMCA al 1100 Uni versily Drive. serves both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach , providing recrea- tional acth•ilies for both children and adull s. f'ILOT AD WORKS 'SEW' PERFEC1'LY Nolhing "so-so" about this ad to find 90meone to sew: Seamslress -Ex p'd to dl'l piece work al home. ·Va ll XXX-XXX . That hard·v•or king litt le ad In the classified section of the DAIL V Pilot. in only twl) 1ppearance1, picked up 75 applicants. "I never expected that kind of action," 51\d tilt Advertiser. Action i11 just waiti ng for you, too . Call 641-)871, the dlrec:l li ne to result~. A DAILY PILOT lrl·Yil'lr will help ynu wrhe •di lh•I are 11 ny· Thing but "110-50." Lhe pamphlets &icl1re th.at 5,000 stoned Sall Lake freili will "lltlp and strut" during Mr. Ni.Ion's visit. The Weatherman. a vlol~t faction of Students for a Democratic Society (SOS ), claims it will hold • snake dance through the around! of the Mormon Temple in the heart of the city. This, they stale, is lo show support of the Black Panthers and all third world li beration strugle.!1, The President ill to land !'~riday evening at the Salt We lntern.atiooal Airport. He. has planned a brief vilit with !Uder1 of the Church of Jesus Chrjst ol Latter- day Saints and .is to attend a rodeo at downtown Salt Palace. Paul Taylor, spokesman for a coalition of groups, said they would demonstrate at lhe Hotel utah acrou from the Mormon TemplJ·Square where the Presi- denl plam 1be conference with Monnon leaders. Taylor said the group was made up of the United !'root to P)ld the War, Mormons Against the War, and Young Republicans AJ;ainst Vietnam Com- mitment. There has been litlle anti-war violence ln Sall Lake City in the. past and there wu no assessment of the. effectiveness of lhe plans to disrupt lhe President's visit. The Young Republican Jo'ederation has t1:nnounced plans for a rally in support of the President. lt ls sponsoring an "Honot America Rally" aPout an hour Uter ?.tr. Nixon's scheduled arrival. The rodeo and other festivities are an armual ctlebration ma.rklng tbe set. llemeiit ol Salt Liike Valley in 1347 by the Mormon pioneers. Mr. Nixon will board Air }o'orct Ooe after lhe rodeo and fly on to El Toro P.1arine Corpe Air Station Friday to begin 1 10-day worl sesaion at San Clementa with top advisers. Police Cbiel Clifford Murray ol San Clemente said tbere are no known plans, u ye~ f« demonl&rationa near the WeJtern White House. Mr. Ni%m may return lot" a MCOIJd, l~y aeta'im In mld-Augwt. A huge an ti-war demonstraUOll w~ held outside the Weltern White li9UM Wt August. Murray Wclhl1 deparlmepl tries where possible lo wort out around rules in advance wilb Jrot.IP.I that y,. DO!Jll« pill!.! to prol<sl. Tbls belpo CCNI- • (!lee NIXON, Pll' IJ l • •I l l -~ I Draft Call Dips ' ~-..! -.:::-..; l Laird Predicts Pre-war Level f ~~ I • ' .. , I • I D•ll Y ,ILOT ,._ .. "° •kH/11 ICMfller WASHINGTON (AP ) -Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird said today draft calls klr lhe rest or 1970 wHI average below 10,000 a month, a return to pre-Vietnam levels. Laird made this fore.cast in a .iipeech for abou t ~ students working as sum- mer interns with the government. "In the remaining months of this year," Laird said, "I anticipate that drafl calls will average below 10,000 per month." In the past, he ha s predicted that total draft calls this year will fall between 150,000 and 170,000 young me.n compared with the 290,000 drafted in Assembly Seeks Quiz o_. UCI ! ' i;l ' ' Irvine Links - " From Win Service• Vague charges of impropriety involving UC Regents and the Irvine Compaey were among fa cklrs which led the Assembly to call for an investigation of regents and UC President Charles Hitch. High Steel in Newport A resolution by As.semblyman John R. SluU (R-San Diego ) was approved by voice vote Wednesday, wi th only a scattering of "no'' votes. The resolution directs the state. auditor general to conduct the investigation. Construction workers fi t beam in place as work progresses on new high·rise building at Newport Center. The 18-&tory $13.8 million building is being built by the Irvine Company next door to 16-stor.v Avco building. T he Irvine building is scheduled for completion in 1972. Regent Norton Simon last week hinted broadly that unnamed regents ~tood to gain from dealings between the Universi · ty and the Irvine Comvany . He said "we're ducking an i~u1 (the size of the proposed city of Irvine) because people have been ceught with their hands tn the cookie jar." Simon did not clarify his statement. Ex-GI Held at Fo1·t 01·d 011 Charges of Desertion William French Smith , newly elected chairman of the boa rd of regents readily admitted his law firm of Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher represents the Irvine Com· pany and that he is the pr incipal contact for that purpose. . Copies of honorable discharge papers ha ve been presented to a U.S. Di5trict Court in San Francisco by the attorney for a Vietnam veteran from Anaheim who may be the victim of a traged y of errors. The situation in which John Lapp, 21 , find s himself today it h11rdly a comedy of errors. He is under arrest at Ford Ord, where he was 1aken aft er FB I agents urged him to come: along lo Santa Ana June I and cle.ar up a misunderstanding about his military stalus. The U.S. Army says the Anaheim Union High School District maintenance mail recieved a $711 re-enlistment OOnus .lurie II. 1968, then deserted instead ' of reporting lo a Minnesota artillery base. Lapp and his attorne.y. Cha rles Robinson, of Sant a Ana, say he was honorably diM:h arged, never re-enlisled, ~nd came hom e to his na tive Orange County, where the form er Specialist 4/C picked up life again like many ex· servicemen. He got a job. ,. He1 underwent treatment for Wapnel wounds suffered in Vietnam infantry combat. visiling l.ong Beach Veterans' Adm iniatraUon Hospital. He married Peggy Blrtholomew. He took out a GI loan application nn a home the youn1 couple then decided 1g1lnat buyin1. And he an1we.red I he doOr M,y 22 when a pair o( FBI 1g~nta aonounced they wanted lo talk to him and take. a look at hla mUi tary separation papers. Life ha sn't been the stime since, 111thouah he is not now confined to the Port Ord stock1de, but assl&ned to lhe Special Processing Department , unable lo le•ve base on his own. Lapp baa been 1ranttd pa&sea on thret • occ11.sions for visits home , pending his SepL. 4 hearing in U.S. Dislrlct Court in San Francisco, al which time the Arm y must prove il! case. ''John's nerves were warse the last time he came back from Fort Ord than they were when he came back from Vietnam," say, his stepfather, John Harouff. Armp authorities have produced re· enlistment papers signed with Lapp 'ii name, but he and his attorney say they were. rorged , after firsl believing th~ case to be a monumental paperwork mii up. However, Smith added tha t he always abstains rrom di scussion and votes on matters involv ing the development com· pany. . Smi th said regent Edward Carter 1s a member of the board of directors af the Irvine Foundation which own.s the majority of stock in the Irvine Co. During Wednesday'a Assembly debate nn the Stull resoluUon. Assemblyman •William T. Bagley (ft.San Anselmo). ask· ed Stull if Simon was joining Stull iii the reQuest for an investigation. "Norton Simon and I are trying ID root out evil wherever It exists," dead· panned Stull. Another factor prompting the resolu- tion were. reports of a nonprofit cor· 18" UCI QUIZ, Pa1e II This Seat Taken . . . Sneaky S1tllke Found in Toilet VENTURA, Cab!. (UPI) -It's a sneaky Bnake, Louis Chacon told 1hcriff 's deputies lut week. Cha con said he found lhe sna ke in the toilet of the houi;e Into which he hart just moved. The &nake, he. sai d, atuck its head out of lhe bottom of the commode but disappeared' downward If the toilet was flu shed. Ai limes it would sUck its head out of another toilet in thl! home, Chacon said. Deputies, ~keptical about jhr. whole thing. thoroughly lnvest11ated both toilets and found nothing. They lefL Wedneiday Chacon called the sheriff agai n. This lime he 11ld the make had become bolder, rising out of the bowl to leer al him . Deputies went to lh1 home a11ln. The.re wa5 a five-foot Joni Anaconda peering out·or tne. bowl. Before lhey could 1rab the reptile It rctrealed down the hole ln tbe bollom. Animal control officers were c1lled in but the Anaconda kept duckln1 out or sight. . Finally the 1ollc.t was removed frQm Its moorings aod they cau1ht t.he snake with a n00&e and took It off to 1 ahelter. . ' -. 1969. Aides said Laird still stick& to th.at forecast. Through Augusl, draft calls this year have totaled 124,500. In his talk, Lai rd assured lhe students tha t "We are domg all we 'C4ll to plan and Implement a program that wiU reduce draft calls to zero and enable us to establish an all-volunteer force ." But he cautioned that, in order to make the shift, Coogress must' provide a major increase in the defense budaet. Laird offered no forecast as to when this mijht happen. However, the trend is toward smalle.r defense budjeta; and stronaer pressure from Congress to cut Who•~ Side? defe~e spe.od,inJ. Lower draft calls are lied to the U.S. withdrawal fl'Ml Sout.b Vieto.am and a concurrent i-ectuction ol. total U.S. military manpo:wer. The 1e<retary alremd ooce apin that by Deit 1prin1 U.S. forces will be down lo 284,000 troops Cl' fewer -.tlout hall the U.S. garrison in Vieloam when the Nixon adrni.nistrat.loa took -,oww ill January 11189. Briefly i,:ientioning the contnw«sial incur3ion in Cambodia, whicb touc.hed oU wid!:spread campus Oetnonmataona in May, Laird said: "Evldence muWpllu (See LAlRD, , ... I> ~JJ:pe~~st!rs Che~k Residen.t's Claim A Newport .Beach resident'• claim I.bat op~nts of the propo~ Pacif\c O>ast Freeway no longer have. official courity support Is being investigated today by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. "We thought you were on oor side," complained Marsha)l Dulfield, 34 Linda Isle. as the Newport Freeway Fi&h~s: executive officer squee.z.d his petition into top gpot on the board's crowded agenda Tuesday. * * * Harbor View Owners Miffed On Freeway Issue Some residents of Harbor View Homes in Newport Buch apparently are miffed because they were not consulted when the United Homf:{)wners Association took 11 stand against the Pacific Coast Free- way. They don'l want the free.way either, but it'~ wh~re they don't want it that's imoortant. The Bren development homeowners association · -the largest in Newport Beach accQrding to their newsletter - is not a member of the United AsSO{:ia· tion. The assoelatinn '1 committee stJgfeaied that the freewav could be routed inland, north of the Bren homes · throu~h the "Irvine agricultural and j!razing Jandl." The Bren people decided t.hat route "coo.kl be the north side ol Ford Road," which skirts one edge of the development. With the Corona de! Mar Free.way planned for the MacArthur Boulevard side of the tract. communit.v aasociaUon leaders indicajed, thev don't want 11n· Dther one running by !hem on the nortll Resldentii of Ha rbor View Homes have been ur11ed to write letters or prote"t to Assemblyman Robert Bad ham I R·NllW· port Beach) ~nd to Senator Randolpij Ct1llier (0-Yreka ). Badham Is spoosarin~ the anti·free\f•ll' lt!glslatinn and Collier i! ch~irman nf the Senate Committee which Will hold a hear! in~ on the bllJ Mondav. In the tract's newsletter resident.I are encouraged to e1pre11 the ir concern that "all Ne.wport Beach interesta are not belnl considered." They also ask "that lull conalderatlon be 1ivcn to the Pffect upon the t.opo fam· Illes In Harbor View Homes who .have not bet n consulted." · · · Homeowners are even provide,d with 1 form letter addressed to Coll lbr and hi• commlltee which stiles: , "As 1 reside nt of Newport Stach t wtah tn put on record that th e Harbor View Communltv Auociation -l1rcut In Ntw- oort Beach -is rt{lt a member of tht Unh@d Associations' Freeway CommitlM1 nei ther was It conaultl!d nn th11 1ubjtct (See FREEWAY, P11e I) .\ Dulfield'1 obj~tion& atenuned fftm. what he said was an "about face" ~Y Roads Commls.sio1w Al Koch and reported statements :by the county Of. fictal which reflect, Duffield llid, an apparent change of he•rt by a county government which is on record 11 ~ pottlna a reroutlna of the diJputed freeway. · 'Duffiekt caUed for a joint meeting between coonty and Newport Buch of· ficials in which the apparent loss ol county support could be dilcuued and steps taken which might ensure a united stance. In oppo&ition to the state's freeway plans. Duffield reminded Uie board that his group has collected 21.000 1i&Daturu in petitions oppoain1 the freeway and th.It ''80 to 90 percent of the people of Newport Beach and 10 bomtownen' a.ssociatiora .iiuppart us in this fiaht/1 He told supervisors that Newpprt'1 tax base was twice. the avera1e Orange C<!unty figure. Construction ol the fre.eway. he ~aid would destroy property valued at more than f46 million "and kJll a aolden goor;e." . The City of Newi:ion Beach Monday night supPQrted 1 move. by Assemblyman Robert Badham to delete the freeway from the city limits. He 11 the~ aulhor of a bill which will, ii passed, delete the section of the propo1ed freeway hf.twem Beach Boulevard in Huntlna:tqn Beach and the N,wP:Ort City limitl ft the south end of Corona. del Mar. Supervisora declined to comment an Duffield's request for clarlflcaUon of the county's posltfon. But board chairman Alton E. All~ promised -" immediate. investigation of the issue. 1 Oru1e C.u&. Weadaer · Ov~night lows ~Jone Pie Or~ Coast art expected lo bt $7 to 6$ degree.s . The hlab are forecast 11 75 to as. Low clouds Ind local 101 ni1ht and early morntne remain. INSIDE TODA 'l' Rt publicon State Senatora Gr• optimis tic that Gov. Reagan'• 11 billion tctt reform pli:zn wiU paas. But Dt"'ocra&a art ;ui& cu Optimtitic 'tlla& theu will amend it. St• •tor, Pao• •· H ltleac Prote•t • . Parents Get.Meet ' I . Over Scheduling A -u.i between 10 pare•ll ol Costa Jim lll&b lkhool atudent.s and Newport· M .. llCboo1 diltrtct adminlstrators has ·beta aet for Aug. lt to plan details of a public meeting on the modul'r IChedulin& system uled ,1t Costa Mesa ffiCb. Dlolrict -· lllked auperint.ndenl William ·CUinlnliwJI lo aet up the meelJJlg TUelday n1ght after a group of parentl showed up to protest the l)'ltem used at the achoo! for the past two yur1. Harold Marthall led off the parade d ~ wbtn he preaented a petl- llon ol,...i by 411 parent. ol lll&b achoo! Nixon Defends 'Super·agency' On Environment WASHINGTON (AP) -The Nll<lll Id· mlnlalrllloo, aU..,ptinc lo -Jch crltidam ol It. pr_.i envlronmonlal ouperqenq, NJa coordin•llnc a 11 federal pollutlon-fl&htlng eff<rts under one root will help elbnfn1te vested in- teratl of eliltin1 cabinet.level deponm..iu. Preold<nt Nixon's -lo crute a new Environmental Protection Agency -EPA -w11 based in part "on the need to 1void the institutional biases of ewq ag<Ocles," Dwtpt A. Ink, .-dlroctor of the Olfloe ol M_.....i and BUdget, llid Wed- lie.day, Ink'• te1Umony to a House 1ul> committee appeared to be a reply to ~· backer1 of Interior SocTIWy Walth J. Hlckel'1 hope to -at. '°"enunent pollution-fllhlin( -la lib doportment. Ink told a House government opera- llonl -.UU.. atud)<tng the pl an tblt allUnt qtncl• have their own mlilklu: which affect their viewa of ..mraDmental matters. "To v~ all the EPA programs in one c:A those departments is apt to re.suit in a pertlcular slant to ilW»e activities end questions as to 1ta objectivity ln de:allnl with matters affectlng and con. lrolillll other departmenta," Ink said. · nie government ii not downgrading aotlpolluUon efforti by placing them la a non.cabinet level qency, he added. "At present, these prorrams are placed In aucb a way Utat various levels of 11Upervilor1 exist between them and the Cabinet ·members, .,and they mu.at epm- pete for attentk>n with a host ol other important departmental actJvities," Ink llld. . . !ilaao'a reorcaa~ plan, ilpod two ,..u ago, pulll miJlt ol 1he anUpolluUon eo!•'°"""'t elloru Into the EPA from maJor ·IOvenimenl departmenll, In ad-dUlaii Niian created a NaUonal Oceanic 8114, Almoapherlc ,\dmlnlatraUon daailnl primarily with 11\vlronmental research. Unlea Congress tell within Ill daya to v.oid the plan, it will become effective. ltep. John A. llliotnik (().Minn.), auJ>. eammlttee chairman. 1ald he expect.I a raohldon to tet aside the proposal to be lnlroduced. p,._ P .. e I UCI QUlZ •.• and Junior hllh school •¥eni.> In lht Coata Mesa area. The petl)lon uked board membora to return lhe school lo "lradltional achedulin1" by the elCI of 1170. Included bi thiJ demand was a return to use ot a t ate approved te1tboob, re~ly aalrned homtwork, reru1at11 illued arades, • ciOltd campua, rtlUlar t.eltln1, a convenUonal dress code and the aboli .. tion of any pass-fail courses. But former Mesa High Prlnclpal Frank Lopea hid rePorted tn June that plau were belng made to mike chances in the 0011troverllal protrim. At that time, he lndlcaled CO.la Mell would operate as a ck>sed campus, with t he Ponlbillty of prjvileltl for aenlon that e a r n thtm. He also llkl that the frelhmen and sophomores would havt an lnCreue of scheduled time. nie problems in th e computerized grading system were beln& worked out ud grldtl would be issued more often than under the traditlonal system, he old. Cunalngham pointed out to the group Tuesdaiy ntaht that the state does not approve tut boob for high achools sM that the di.strict baa .a review board to approve texts for use in the hi&h schools. Mn. Fran Newman, assistant principal at Mesi Hl&h, said Wednesday oaly the bqtnning art course and the driver educatioo cour1t. were offered o• a p1u- fall bul•. The art c 11 11 la elective but driver education is required by the state, she said. NFL Players Charge Stalling BALTIMORE (AP)-A planned fedenl mediation lnvolvlng the owners and pt.yen ol the Nallonal Football League was called off today and a repretentaUve ol the NFL Playen Association char1ed that the owners were stalling. 4'Jt'1 hard to understand theft desire to stall," aakl BUI Curry, player representative of the Baltimore ColU. ;'Firtt, the owners u.id they would meet with us any place but Washm,ton, '' said Curry. ''Then, when we 11et up a meeUnc in Baltimore. they now aey they'll meet any place but W1shin1ton or Bali!JJK>re." The owners of the JS NrL teams prelliously had aaJd they wanted media- 1.icn talk.I to be held in the New York area. The Federal Mediation and Cooclllalion Service, which hid called today's meeting tn the continuing contract dlapute, slid lt would is.sue a statement on . behllf of both parties ahortly in Waal!lnllon . 'fbe Owntr'S hr.cl dllcriblcf their ala~ ne1ot11Uons with the ployera u 11days ,'1Jd pouibly weeks 1part.'' FNM P .. e I FREEWAY ... (of Badham's bill). "Furthermore, some or the ala:naturn referenced ln the recent lettar from the UAFC wµe obtained from Harbor View resl4enta who signed a petition to delete the Pacific Coast Frteway not ruOute IL "l respectfully request, therefore that the Pacific Coast Freeway not be re- n>uled without full conalderaUon belnf given to the effect upon the l,IJOO.famlly community of Harbor View Homea," the form leUer concludes. lst Talk Break VC Make Appeal For Coalition O•IL., l'ILOT Sl•tl l'IMt. PARIS (UPI) -The Viet Cong, with l{1noi'1 approval appealed today for U.S. backinl of a new coallUon. 10Yemment in Saigon. And In a formal 1tatement the Viet Cong said any other problem in lhe Vietnameae Wer ·can be 1ettled If WashlnJton wllhdraWI tts 1upport ol the prtlHllt Saigon regime. It was the most opy_mistlc development In the deadJocked tallis since they began on Jan. 19, 196~. Diplomatic observers said lt appeared the C om m u n l 11 t negotlatoi:1 had ass\1ned over-all priority to nea:otiating wllh the United States on the possibility of fonnlng a coalition from all factions. President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam has always ruled out any posalbillUes of cooperatlna: with the Viet Collf. Diplomatic observers said -6algon has had the upper hand on allied ne1ot1ating ~ecisions concernin& political matters since the talks began. OFFICER HARRY EHRL ICH GATH ERS CRASH STATISTICS In CMt• Mt••· A Motorc:yc:llat B1com11 1 Number Mme. Nguyen Thi Binh, Viet Conl!1 Foreign Minister and chier negotiator In Pari5, said in New Delhi Wednesday her movement would agree to a coalition that would include some members of the current Saiaon government - apecJflcaUy ucluding Thieu, Vice Presi· dent Nguyen Clo Ky, and Premier Tran Thlen Khlem. H elmetless Bike Rider Killed in Costa Mesa Emergina from today'• 76th Vietnam peace talks aeasion, Viet Con1 delegate Dinh Ba,Tbl said In a fonnal statement : "1'le UJ'lent question presently Is the one which dem1nds that the United St1te1 1ive up Its support for the die· tatorla1 and warlike administration of The.lu-Ky.KhJem ln order to allow the South Vietnamese population to decide Hulf Its own destiny without outside lntttfereoce, and that it (the Un1ted Statea) pola an end to the inhuman Riding to the beach for a marine bioloiY lab class, a teenaged Costa Mesa 1ummer school stu dent was killed this morning when hurled headlirst into a brick wall after his motorcycle went out of control. George L. Hancock, 18, of 2138 Wallace Ave., was dead on arrival at nearby Cotta Mesa Hospital following the 6:25 a.m. accident. The E•tancia HJgb School student was From Page J NIXON ... wearing no proledive helmet and was thrown about 100 feet when his cycle struc k a curb at Placentia Avenue and 19th Street, . Cause of the tragic accident was still under investigation, but police said Han- cock may have swerved to avoid a car driven by William A. Farwell, 4i9, of 1828 Placentia Ave., Costa Mesa. Patrolman Pat Rodgers 1alct the victim was riding south on Placentia Avenue PUBLIC ACCESS BILL REJECTED toward Newport Beach, where hla clw SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A bil l was having a marine biology field trip. raquiring citle1 and counties to He was the son of Mrs. Mary Hancock. reject building p e rm I t • , sub- ''Here lt is again -no helmet,'' said divisions or zonirif changes which COlta Mesa Police LL Avery Smith, would cut off public acceu to who heads the d1pa.rtment'1 traffic the ocean or oUler large water burea~ "He'd be alive it he'd been wear~ areas wu defeat«t Wednesday by ing one." trol the situation. ''So-far we've always Lt. Smith addtd that Hancock's death the Assembly. had pretty good luck;' he said. today was the tltlrd in two months The blll by Assemblyman John Dunlap <D-Napa ), was rejected on penitentiary realme and to the barbarian acta of the American puppets In South Vietnam. "'These urgent and basic problems hav· Ing been resolved, any other problem relating to tbe stoppage of war ln South Vletnam tan be settled." Before TIU read the formal statement the Cmununista had appealed for U.S. backing for a coalition' government and said In private the issue wu negotiable. OCWD Ge ts Fu1ids for Plan t More than $9 million in federal funds will be made available ·to ihe Orange County Water District for construction of a desflinizaUon plant on the Pacific Coast Highway near the Santa Ana River. OCWD officials have learned thitt $-1 .'4 milllot1 for plant construction will be supplied by the Department of the Interior's Office of Saline W1ter: A fuMher ~ million will be made :iva•lable to offset operating C-Osts during the fir~t four-year period. OC'WD costs at this point amOunt to $2.5 million. It is e:rpected that con- struclioA of the desalting plant will begm. in June. 1971. CompleUon of the plant will he1p lo insure a firm water supplf, for the Orange County Coastal Barr er at th e lowest possible cost without damage to ecology or envlroilment, OC'WD officials said. From P a ge J LAIRD ... that the doctrine results." President's strategy and his are producing the desired The Pentagon chief did not say what that evidence is, but he indicated he meant lower battlefield ca11ualties in the Vietnam war and forward movement in the troop withdrawal program. "Concern for the lives ol our servicemen and for tQeir safe return to the Unlled States was the key deciding factor to caust the Prtsident to conduct operation in Cambodla,•• Mr. Nixon's visit, wtth wife and involving a youn1 motorcycu.t ridinl 1 35 to 27 vote, with 41 votes daughter, Tricia, is to include meetlnas without a protecllve crash helmet. needed for pauage. Ole limited with top advisors and a heavy work l _:Th~•:o:the:r:•:•:l'°=dl=ed=af=he=ld=ln=jurl=•=•·==:::==~==========La=l=rd:•:•:;d:. ========::::; load. n-ie President plans Sunday, however, tq take a breather and attend a baseball game be tween the Angels and Washington Senator1 at Angel .JJ. !}. (Jarrell ; 16th Semi Annual Sale Stadium In Anaheim. Fint Lady Pat Nixon said today that ahe and ~r husband will live In Califor- nia after tbey leave the White House but did not specify whether that means San Clementt:. It has been asaumed by many locally that the Pr•ident's purchase la1t year of the old Cotton estate, in which he obvioUsly t1kea pride, meant that he would remain a resident in the post- White House years, probably eatablish- ing · a llbr.ary nearby for his memoirs and mementos. · Mn. Nis:on's reference to future came In reply to quettions from a visiting group of 3.5 acbool'teacher1 from lreland. 'The first lady's grandfather was Pat- rick Ryan, an native of Mtyo CoWlty, Ireland. -· ·-· -- • .. porallon faur\dOd. for the unlvertlly by lf1tcli• The corporation uae~ly acled u a mkldle man in a ~.8 mUllon loan frun the Finl NaUonal Bank of ChlcaSo to the oil company owned by Re(lnl Edmund W. Pauley. "We're nQt maklng 1ny char1ea in this rt10lut1on," Stull 1 aid, "but we ..,.Id Hke to have this relationship look· ed into." Consultants Back Major ~oaquin School Changes DAILY PILOT OIANN: COAST f'UIUIHiNG COMl'AH'I' l•"'* N. w.,~ J 1cl I, C•tlty Vici ,,.."-' t !llll o.n.r11 M.l~w Th111111 A. Mu''"i"' M-.lnl £t!ltr Tt.1•11 Forh1~t Ntwplltf lff(ll Cttr Elllor N...,.... .._. Offt&• JI 11 W•tt 1.1 .... l oul•vtt4 M•lll111 AiiMtMtS P.O. I•• 1175, tJ~•l Olfw ....... C.u "'-l :ut W•I lty SITltt ...,..,_ &lldll ttl ,..,..., ·-........... ._.,: OWJ lltcll • .,-...,. liM C:~ • Hlt111 l!J C.mlfte lltlf \ By PAMELA HALLAN Ot 1111t oecw Plllt ltd A major reorganJzation of the San Jooquln Elementary School Dl11ric\ ad· ministration WU propoeed Wednuday to the Board of. Trust.et. by a consultant firm The reorganization plan woukl spread the district's work k>ad more evenly between tbe aupertntenctent and two assistant superinlepdenl.o, giving the superintendent a more dlrect hand ln runnlnc bis acl>ool~ The proposals were made by Les Glaspey, representlng the firm of Davis, McConnell and Ralston. The firm was hired by the board to prepare a five.year orcanilllUoo plan for the diattlct, which will reach 20,000 pupila enrolled at tbt end of that lime. Amoni recommendatlone for the lt70- '1l ICbool yu.r wat the creation of a department ol faclllUes pl1nnln1 lo be under Rez: Nerhon, the a 11 I 1 t t n ~ auperintendent for butlnus tervlces. Also under Neriaon w o u I d be ~ department ol lond serilctt and the department of maintenance and opera· Ilona lo whidl wnuld be added con- 1truct.lon supervision. Matlus ot facilities plaMin& and con- strucUon are now beln& aupervlltd by Supt. Ralph Oates. 'Ibe report Indicates that by removin& the$e dut!Q which CX'Cupy about $0 percent ol t h e 1uperintendtnl's time, he woukt ha'lle more llme t.o directly !nwlve hlmaeU with prlMlp11l1 and acool adminlatratlon. School princlpala currently rtport la Dr. William Stocki, the a11i1t&nt 1Uperlntendent for educaUonal services. Dr. Stock! also oversees the• departments al apeclal serlvces, cur- riculum services and peraonnel, Tht report lndlc.tel that the peraonnel services department should be removed to the direct supervision of the superintendent and that more attention .should be given to non-te1ching cla1sifled employes in the perMmel department. other recommendations I n c I u d e creating more policies fot clearer direc- tions, directing the top administrators to designate 1JOmeone as in understudy to act in their place when they must be ab9eflt, evaluattng central office personnel and coordinating committee activities more cloaely. Future recommendatloris Include lhe addiUon of a depflrtmeot of research and development under the superln. tendent of educational services afld the addiUoo of a supervilor ol accounting and bucf&eU.ne under the assistant au p e r i ntendent for 1drnin11tratlve eervice.s. Whtn enrollment reaches tS,000 the district should add an a 11 o c i at e superintendent to serve as t h e SlfPUlntendtnt'• field repreaentaUve. The district also should add a purchasing and warehouae department. When enrollment reaches 17,000 11 depanment of data proceulng should be added . The bo8rd said It will study Ute report and make racommendallan• at a future meeting. . HERITAGE I TRANCEPT" Shown: 72" rectangular table w/lbree 22" leaves . WAS HOW (seats 121, .......................... 489.00 37!.00 Arm Chair .......................... 1159.00 1!5.00 M t h' 'd h ' WAS a c Jlli Iii e c a1r ................ 149.00 China 5'1" .......................... 009.00 78" Buflet .......................... 819.00 ... lit.GO 12t.oo 4H.OO Substantiel 11vlng1 on Madri1al bed room, dining All H1rit111 uphol1tar1d furniture can be ordartd room fur niture and occ:11lonal tablet. at 15°/o off Herit191 -Jat Edition and Ch1 mlilt ey btdroom1 dlnln9 room furnl tur1 •nd occ111IMtal 11111111 u to 113 off 1000. tf f1bric1 to choON from . Ht rita .. l ron1lni occa1lon1I t1lill11 up to 112 off Your favorite interior de1ion1r w'll bt Mm to as1ial 11ov ••• H.J.GARRETf fURNrflJRE PROFESSION.-,L INTERIOR OESIGNE~S o,.. 111 .... Ttlun. • "'· ..... 2111 HARBOR ILVO. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 641·0271 ' Costa Mesa Today'• Fl•al N.v. Stoeke · -• voe. ,3, NO. ·175, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 23, 19lo TEN CENTS Fair Directors to Discuss Sale Proposals A plan aimed at holding down the cost of falrgrounds land in Co11ta Mesa that may be needed for a county cou1 1hc 1se C<lmples has been formulated by fair officials. Directors of the 31nd D I s I r I c t Agricultural Association meet at 8 p.m. ln offices at the Orance County Falr,rounds to consider the county's renewed interest In buying fairground property for a coorthoose. Stanley Krause, director of the county'11 real ptllperty services division, aald in D1·aft Calls Goit1g Down Says Lait·d WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird said today draft calls for the rest GI 1970 wHI average below 10,000 a month, a return to pre-Vietnam levels. LaJrd made this forecast in a speech for about MO students working as 1um- mer interns with the government. "In the remaining months of this y1ar," Laird said, "I anticipate that draft calls will average below 10,000 per month ." In the past, he has predicted thal total draft call& this year will fall between 150,000 and 170,000 young men compared with the 290,000 drafted in Jiiii . .Aides said Laird slill slicks to that lorecut. Through August, draft calls tlUs year have totaled 124,500. in his talk, Wird assured ttie 1tl.ldfnll I ,;hat "We are doing all we can to plan ~d implement a pr08fam. that will ' hdlfe draft calls to zero and enable us to establish an all-volunteer force." But he cautioned that, in order to make lhe shift, Congress must provide a major increase in the defense budget. Laird offered no fo recast as to when lhia might happeii. However, the trend is toward smaller defense buda:ets and 1tronger pressure from Congress to cut defense spending. Lower draft calls are tied to the U.S. withdrawal from South Vietnam and a concurrent reductlon of total U.S. military manpower. The sec~tary stressed once again that by next spring U.S. forces will be down to 284,000 troops or fewer -about half the U.S. garrison in Vietnam when the Nixon adminlatration took power in January 1969. Briefly mentioning the controversial Incursion in Cambodia, which touched off widespread campus demonstrations In 1'1ay, Laird said: ''Evidence multiplies that the President's strategy and his doctrine are producing the desired results." The Pentagon chief did not 1ay what that evidence iJ, but he indicated he (See LAIRD. Pase I) Hero's Family Gets Medals A Costa Mesa serviceman killed on New Year's Day, 1969 while leading a team ol Vietnamese irregular com- batant., has been awarded two military decorations by the Republic of Vielnan1 . Green Beret Spec. 5 Roger W. Brown, 11011 of Mr. and Mrs. Grant Brown, of 353 Broadway, was cited with the Military Merit ~1edal and Gallantry (::ross will\ Palm. He died In an attack And fi ght w1th 1 larger force oo Nui Coto Mounta in, but llis counler·aclion saved a number of his own men. The you ng sc rgcan1 won several U.S. military medal s, inc lud ing the Bronze Siar with Oak Lral Cl11~ter and the Army Comm endation Medal. PILOT A D WORKS 'SE if!' PERFEC1 'L'l Notlling "so·so" about tllis ad to find someone to sew : Seamstress -Exp'd to do piece work at home. Call XXX-XXX. . That hard·working little ad In the r.lass.illed sectlon ot the DAILY Piiot, in only two -i>pearance.1, plrked up 75 applicant s. "I never expected that kind of 1cUon," r;akl the advertiser. Ar:Uon Is just waiting for you, loo. Call 842-!1178, ~ direct line lo resul ts. A DAILY PILOT ad-vi~r will help you write ads thal art 1ny· thing but "so-so." a letter to the Fair Board one week ago that ii.s plan ls encouraging. Alfred Luljt;Jl tui. fairgrounds manager and secretary to the board, said today he doubts the county's real estate men will be on hand for the talks. Krause himself is currently Of\ vaca- tioo. Negotiations have been under way for both a site at the fairgrounds, whictl is owned by the 1tate, and an Irvine Company-owned spot In the future Newport Beach Civic Center at Fashion Island. Rlslng costs ha~ e1u.sed county authorities to 1ive setond thoushtl to tile admittedly attracUve Newport Beach site. Costa Mesa, hoftver, lt eons.ldered more centrally located to lhe Harbor Judicial District which the court complu would serve. One eighl-acre fairgroondJ site was assessed at '89,696 per acre, or about ISSO,OOll, bolling down to 11.10 per square loo<. County olficiall '"-' u and 1.8 acre spots and expre.ued conctrn that If addiUonal land were required later for parking or e:x.panaion, they would be forced to pay much more, because the land values presumably would akyrocket with such a development theft. Lutjeans said today, however, that Fair Board d.it!don have agreed to limit any increase above $1.60 per 1quare foot solely to land value ri.Jes dictated by the Buruu ol Labor'• c:oat..C·llvlng inde¥. In esstnce, county officials would not be forced to pay more for land or Pat.king ,reas whose v,lue t.helr ~ vestment created . · Geor1e Cormack; ass.ista.nt director of the county real property 'lervices division, said today he knew oI no plant to attend tonight's Fair Board meetinf. Asked about likelihood of tbe county Board of Supervisars eventually choosing the Costa Mesa site over Newport BUch aod atso a third t'ntative spot in the fU. tun' city Of Irvine, be was ltOllCOritmlttaJ. ''It depend,, on what lhe Fair Board aays, whether they make a firm after or vacWate," said Cormack; The C!Ollnty bu already signed a thrff. year lease for the unoccupied fourth floor of tbe Costa Mesa Civic center all a branch weUare department facility. Directly across the. ltnet lies I.he pro-- perty suggested as a county l(i.. mhiistraUve center and court complex, which would include a weUare facWty and library. Student l(ill.ed Cycle Death Blamed on 'No Helmet' Do\ll Y PtLOT '"" ~ '4 Ridinl lo tbe beach for a marine biology lab class, a teena&ed Colt.I Mesa aummer school 1tudent was tilled this morning when burled headfirllt into a brick wall after his motorcycle went out of control. George L. Hancock, 11, of 2138 Wallace Ave., was dead on arrival at nearby Costa Mesa Hospital foJlowint the 8:25 a.m. accident. The Estancia Hl&h School student w 11 wearin& no protec."tive helmet and wu Assembly Seeks Quiz on UCI ' lrVine :Links "From WlN kr'Yke• OFFICER HARRY EHRLICH GATHERS CRASH STATISTICS In Costa Mesi, A Motorcycllst I.com•• 1 Number V1111t charges ol Impropriety Involving uc a.,..~ IDd the JrVtne company were &moflJ factors which Jed the Assembly to caJI ror an tnve1tia:ation ol rege nts and UC President Charles Hitch. Nixon to See ·'Nude-in' A resolution by Assemblyman John R. -Stull (R-San Die10) was approved ~y voice' vote Wednelday, with only a acattering of "no" votes. At Salt Lake Arrivar! The re1<>lulion directs the state aud;itor aeneral to conduct the inveatlcation. Reaent Norton Simon last week hinted broadly that uMamed reaents stood to gain from dealings between the Universi- ty and the Irvine COmvany. Ht said "we're dutklnl an Wue (the sir.e of the propoled city ot Irvlne) ~•uae people· have been caua;ht with their ha~ds in the cookie jar." Simon did not clarify his statement. By RICHARD P. NALL Ot l~t DlllY l'O" Steff As officials in Orange County prepare for a routine arrival by President Nixon Friday night , a different lype re~ption was being hatched by dissident elements in Salt Lake City. Leaflets have spewed forth calling for a Yippie nude-in and denouncing the President. Decorated with underground drawings, the pamphlets declare that 5,000 stoned Salt Lake freaks wlll ''8trlp and strut'' during Mr. Nixon's visit. The Weatherman, a violent faction of Sludenls for a Democratic Society 1SDS), claims it will hold a snake dance through the ground s of the Mormon Temple in the heart of the city. This, they slat e, is to show support of the Black Panthers and all lttlrd world libera1ion struggles. The President Is to ~d Friday evening ~t the Salt Lake International Airport. He has planned a brief visit with leaders or the Church or Jesus Christ ol Latter· day Saints and is to attend a rodeo at downtown Salt Palace. Paul Taylor, spokesman for a coalition nf groups, said they would demon strate at the Hotel Utah across from the Mormon Temple Square where the Presi- dent plans the conference with Monnon leaders. Taylor said the group was made up or the United Front to End the War, Mormons Against the War, and Young Republicans Against Vielnam Com- mit ment. There has been litll11 anll·war violence In Salt Lake City in the past and there 14'as no assessment of the ,uective:ness of the plan1 to disrupt the President's visit. The Young Republl~an ~·ederalion ha1 aMnunced plant for a rally In support of the President. It is sponsoring an "Honor Amerlr:a Rally" about an hour after Mr. Nhcon's acheduled arrival. The rodeo and Qlher festivities are an aMual celebration m,arldng the !iel· tlement ot Salt Lake Valley In 1847 by the Mormon pioneers. Mr. Nl1on will board Air Forrt One afltr Lhe rooeo and fly on to El Toro Ma rine Corps Air Station Friday to Mg\n a 10-day work 1e11lon •I S11n Clemente wllh top advisers. Police Chier currord Murray of San Clemente said· there are no known plans, as l~t for demonstrat.Jons near the Wertern1wq.ite House. Mtt. Nixon may return for a second llklay session in mid-A"gust. A huge anti·war demonstration was held outside the Western White House last August. Murray said his department tries where possible to work out lfOUnd rules in advance with grOUps that an- nounce plan! to protest. This helps con- trol the situation. "So far we've always had pretty good luck," he said. . Mr. Nixon 's visit, with wife and daughter, Tricia. it Lo Include meetings ~·itll top advisor8 and a' heavy work loa d. The President plans Sunday, however, to take a breather and attend a baseball game between the Angels and Washington Senators at Angel Stadium in Anaheim. First Lady Pat Nt100 said today that she and her husband will Uve in Califor- f!la after they leave the· White House but did' not speci£y whether that means San Clemente. It has been assumed by many locally that the President's purchase lasL year of the otd Cotton estate, in which he obviously lakes pride, meant that he would remain a reiiident in the post- ~See NIXON, Pace Z) William French Smith, newly elected chairman of the board of re1enta readily admitted hill law firm of Gibson, OUM and Crutcher represent.I the Irvine C-Om· pany and that he Is the principal contact for that purpose. However, Smith added that he always ab.stains from dlscus1kin and vote1 on matters involving the development com· pany . . Smith said regent Edward Carter 1s a member of the board of directors of the Irvine FOWldation which owns the majority of 1tock in tile Irvine Co. During Wednesday'• Assembly debate on the Stull resolution. Assemblyman William T. Bagley (ft..San Anselmo) aak - ed Stull if Simon was joining Stull ln the request for an lnverttlgation. . ''Norton Simon and I are trying tn root out evil wherever It exlst1," dead- panned Stull. 1 • Another fact.or prompUng the resolu· tion were reports of a nonprofit cor- poration founded for the university by Hitch. The corporation assertedly acted (See UCI QUIZ. P11e %) This Seat Taken Sneaky Snake Found in Toilet VENTURA , Calif. ( IJPJ ) -lt'1 a aneaty anake, Louil Olacon to!~ sherlff11 depuliet last week. Chacon said he found the snake in the tollet ol the hooae lnlo which ht had just moved. The anake, he 1ald, stuck its head out of the bottom of the commode but disappeared downward if the toilet wa1 Oushed. At times it would slick its head out of another toilet Jn the home, Chacoo said. Deputies, skeptical about ttie whole thing, thorouahly lnve1ti1ated both toileta and found nothing. They left. 1 Wednesday Chacon called t.tie sheriff 11~ Tl\lt time he said the snake had become bolder, rislnc out of lhe bowl to leer at tllm. Deputies went 10 the home· again. There was • ffve-foot Jons Anaconda pecrin~ out of the bowl. DeJore they could rrab lhe reptlle It retreated down the hole In the bottom. Animal control offlcer1 we.rt called in bltt the Anar:onda kept duckinl out of Kight. ' Finally the tollet wa1 removed from its moorlnp and they cauaht the anake with a noose and took It off to ti lhelter. 1 ' thrown about 100 feet when hia: cycle He was ~ son ol Mrs. Mary Hancock. struck a ctlrb at PlacenUa Avenue and "He~ tt is: 11ain -no htlmet," aaid I~a!~~-the tragic accident was still Coat.a Mesa Police Lt. Ave'! Sml~ under investigation. but police sa1d Han-who beads the deparlment 1 traffie cock may have swerved to avoid a bureau. "He'd be alive if he'd been wear· car driven by William A. Farwell, 49, ing one." of 1&28 Placentht Ave., Costa Mess.. Lt. Smith added that Hancock's death Patrolman Pat Rodaers said the vk:tim today was the third In two months was rldln1 aoutb on Placentia Avenue involving a young motorcyclist riding toward Newport Beach, where bis clau with®t a protective cra!h helmet. wu having a marine biology field trip. The others alao died of head lnjuria. i\ ,j,' Do\IL 'I: f llOl Ii.~ ~~ 7Y ~I HONORER AT ''Tir. , Mei•'• Art Mcl(..,111 Reservations Due for Mesa's 17th Birthday Reservation deadline for Costa Mesa's 17th anniversary luncheon celebration ,is Friday at 5 p.m., chamber of commerce officials reminded citizens today. State Controller Hou.ston I. Flournoy will be guest speaker at the birthday party Monday noon at the Coal.a Mesa Golf and Country Club. Art McKenzie, retiring Costa Mesa city manager, will be the honored guest as civic leaders recount his service beginning in 1953 at the city's flist police ctjief. , Flournoy ls expected to give a general talk, based on bis knowledge of Callfon\la affairs, 1lnce as controller, he serves on 27 varioua boards and comml1sion1 dealln1 will\ fiscal affairs. The fG.year-old Clarem(Jlt Republican wa1 also chairman of Gov. Ronald Reagan 's Advisory Commission on Tax Reform. McKenzie, who rose through the mlinlcipal ranks to become director · of public safety, act.Ing city mana1er and flnalJ.y gettln1 the manager5hip ·assign· rrient, announced recently he Wf)Uld qplt. He suffered a cerebraf hemorrhage last Maren •nd his doetor1 say foUqwlng a serle1 of tests and therapeutic treatments that he faces . a k>Oi con· valesceoce. ' ~1ayor RQbert M. Wilson 11 •Proaram 1 chalrm"n,fori the tornewhat.qelaytd 17th annlveriary celeQration · mar~lnf the clly'1 Junt 291 1113, iocorl>or•llon. · Bolivia Frees Ten ARlCA, Chll• !UPI) -Bolivia freed 10 1uerrllla dltc:lpltt of slaln Cuban revolutionary Ernesto "Che'' Guevara Wednesday and flew utem to Arica In -exchange for the' releaH Gf two k.klnaped Oerm•o mJnln& enatneera.· • Cong Appeal For Backing ' . ,Of Coalition PAl\15 (UPI) -Tilt Vlei Coq, with Haool'1 •Pl'l'Oval appealed today for U.S. backing of a new coallUM 10vtmmenl Jn 5aigon. And In a fonnal statement the Viet Cong said any other problem i n the Vietnamese: War can be settled lf Washington withdraws Its 1uppo.rt. ol the present Saigon re1ime. It was the most opUmJst.Jc development In the deadlocked talks since they· bepn on Jan. 19, 1969. Diplomatic ol>Mrvera said it appea.red the Commun I a t negotiators had assigned over-all priority to negotiating wlt.h tbe United States on the possibility of formlng a coalition. from all factionll. President Na:uyen Van Thltu of South Vietitam has aJway1 ru led out any possibilities of cooperating with the Viet Cong. Dip lomatic observers said Saigon has had the upper hand on allied negotiating decisions concernln1 political matters since the talb began. Mme. Nguyen Thi Dinh, Viet Cong Foreign Minister and chief riegotiator in Paris, said in New Delhi Wedneaday her movement would agree to a coalition tllat would include some membtr1 of the current Saigon government - specifically excluding Thieu, Vice Presi· dent Nguyen Cao Ky, and Premier Tran Thien Khiem. Emerging from today's 76lh Vietnam peace talks session , Viet Cong deleaate Dinh Ba Thi said In a lormal statement : '"Ille ur1ent quution presently b the one which demands that t.he United States give up Its 1upport for the d~ tatorial and warlike administration of Thelu-Ky·Khlem in order to allow the Solilh Vietnamese population to decide itself its own destiny without outaide Interference, and that it (the United Statu) puts an end to the Inhuman CSee TALKS, Pa1e I) Oraa1e Coast vernight lows along the Orange ast are expected to be 57 ,to 6S degrees. The hla:h are forecast at 75 lo as. Low clouds and local fot night and early morning remain. INSWE TODA l' Republican State Sena.tori ar~ optimistic that Gov: Reagan'1 ~1 billion ta.t reform plan wifl pG.t.t. B1't Democrat& are jmt•a.s optimbtfc that th1r will amen(i it. Stt 1~orv Page 1: ~=-..: u, """'"' c-1c• (,.....,,.,., Dtelll Metku lfltwltl , .. lettl'lelMnHI ,l~I --""" l•ftll•,. • ' ll·• " " " • ... ~ , .. " n " M.ellllle• ' _ ...... Htllf¥! Mewl +a °'"'" Cw.f1 ll -· .... '*' MtrMh 11 ,............ .. --...,. Wel lMt" 4 W-•'• H""' tl-M WWlll JINWI H T._, "'"1 U, ltlO lA•lted DriUlt19 • ) Hickel· Endorses Oil Lease Cuts ! WASiuNG'roN (AP) -Socutary of I-Waller J. Hlckel bu endoroed tM cancellaUon oC 20 federal oil leases and contimled drilling uoder strict r~ to prevent future blowout.! mt (lollutioq In the SOnta Barl>ara dlao- 1111 olUbt CalJlomla c:out. Hlctel urged a Senate Interior aub- cOmmittee Wednesday to act promptly on. a bill apomcred by Sen. George Murphy (J\.C.IUI.) 'lbe measure would cancel 20 of t1'e 70 federal oU leases tn the Santa Barbara cbmmel and pay tbe holders from a ·~ account built by oil sales from Frot11 P .. e l TALKS ••. penit<nUary regime Ind to the barbarion acta of the American puppets in South Vtetnir&. ' '"lbese urgent and basic problems bav~ lq be.m reoohod, any other problem ttJating to the lfo-Of WU' In South Vietnam can bl aettlld." Beltre 11tl rtl9d the formal atatemenl the Commuetsts bid appealed for U.S. backing. f9r a coalition govmunent and iald la private tbe lUue wu negotiable. WlaOse Slde1 . Naval PettOlfium Reserve Na. 1 ID C1lifornia. The bill, one of slx before the au~ committee, also would create a national energy ruene of 111,000 acres teaward of. the Caliloroia atate Sarita Barbara OU Sanctuary. Some of the other billl call for ...,. cellation of all 70 leases. Hickel said oil production ahould con· Unue on leases whtrt a 1969 blowout caused apiJ.la iD Cl'der to relieve prtsaure and reduce the danger of fw1htr aeepa,e &nd pallution. "We have increased our inspecUon forces to ensure compliance and early detection of any miahaps," lllckel t..tilled. William T. Pecora, U.S. Geological Survey director, 11ld that aeven U· ploration ... ns bid been drilled, but 1lOM was ln proWc.Uon. on the m leases propooed for cancellation. Hickel and Murphy • .,.. the only witnesses among 25 heard at the two-day hearing to give unqualilied 1upPort to the Murphy bill. Many other wltnesaes said more than 20 leases shoold be canceled. Sen. Alan Cran.ton Ind Rip. Jolln V. Tunney, California ,Democrata. recom- mended their bilb wblcb would canctl most of the leases and create a federal· state sanctuary prograJQ, along the California couL Supervisors Check C"laim on Freeway A Newport ~ reoldenl't claim Illa! ~.of the propo!ed Pacillc O>ast .Freeway no longer have orficial county -rt la being Investigated today by Ille Oronae Coanly Board of SUpervtson. · ''We thought you were on our side," · complained Manbllll Du!lield, 34 Linda 1a1e, as Ille Nowporl Freeway Filfilerl' encutlve officer aqueezed hb petition into top spot on the board's crowded -Tlladay. bu!lleld'1 Gbjectlors llemiiled from What he Aid was an ''.about face" by -CommiMiOll£r AI Koch and '""'W '.lllllemtnts by the county of- llcW . --. llll!field aald, .. •Pi*iilt ~ of• heart by · a county p• a DiUl!Dt wtUdt JI on record u 11JPo partloJ a ,.-.utlni of the dllputed frii!rfY· Dullleld taned for a joint ,,_ii)e bet••• ....ity mid NeWporl BeOch <il- flctala in whld! the lppamlt· Ioia ol. oouaty "IAll'iiort Could be dilct-and •liken which ml«bl emun a )lllited -In. opposition to lhe atate'• 1-J· plans. ' . ~ •tmlndec! the ' board that bia ·-baa collectod 21,000 llpatum In _petltiono .~ the freewiy Ind that ''ID to IO J'>eroent of the people of Nowport . Budt and JO bomeolmeri' Ff'Olll Page l LAIRD ... -~ lower balUelield c:Hualties in the Vll1Dlm ., war a.Def forward movement In tllo ~ withdrawal prvrram. 1 ~'Concern for the lives of our · ~tn .and for their safe return lo the Ulllc.d States was the key deciding factor to cau1e the President to conduct the limited operation in Cambodia,•• Laird aald. DAILY PILOT OlANQI COoUl l'U.Ll$HIHG COMl"AHY lolio•rt N. w .•• ~ Ja<k l. Curl1y ~ ,.,_ .......... ~Ii Mtlllff' l)i•1111s K•ewil Th•M•' A. Mur,t.1111 M-"'41 ldilll<'" c.... ,. ... Offk• lJO Wilt 1,., $tr11t M11li11t Allll,•u: ,,0, lor 1160, •1616 .Otlier OflkM ....... , a-ti1 :1111 W.1 ..... -i.~.,4 ~...,.:m~tA­ ~i!W* lftdl: Ul 7S ....,, .,.,....,. ... ltPI C...._,ftl as Nlf1ll ll Ctll'l1"1 11."I 8J90Cilt!ons SUPPM°t Ull in this flaht. n He told auponlsorl lhat Newport'• tax bue wu twice the average Orange County figure. Construction of the freeway. be said would destroy property valued at more than $41 million "and kill a golden gOOH. 11 'Ille City of Newport Bead! Monday n!gltt supported a move by ~ Robert Badbam 14> delete the freway from the city limlts. He la the 1uthor of a bill Wbk:h will, if )>Hied, delete the leCllon of the proposed frMwoy l>etw<tn Beach Boulevanl In HunUnaton ~lndmd ~ =elet:.,~imlta at llorl docllned to ....-on Dullteld'a reqa,tt for clarification of the county'• pOIWon. But : b o a r d dlalrman Alton E. Allen pmnlaed an llnnled!llAtn~altbelnue. • * * * • I · Harbor ' View. Owners Miffed On Freeway Issue Some residents of Harbor VJew Homes In Newport Beach ipparently are mlffed because they were not cooaulted when the United Homeowners· Assoclitlon took a stand against the Pacific Coilt Free- way. They don't want the freeway either. but it's where tMy don't want jt that's imPortant. 'Ille ·Bren development horn~wners association -the Jareest in Newport Beach according to their newsletter - is not a member ol the Unitetl Aaaocia· ti on. The association's committee suggested that the freeway could be routed inland, north of the Bren homes through the "Irvine agricultural and grazing lands." The Bren people decided that route ''could be the north aide of Ford Rold," which skirtJ one edge or the development. With the Corona del Mar Freeway planned for the MacArthur Boulevard side oi the tract. conununity usociatlon leaders indicated, they don't want an- other coe running by them on the oorth. Residents of Harbor View Homes have been urged to write lttten of protest to Assemblyman Robert Badham (Jt.New. port Beach) and to senator Randolph Collier (I>-Yreka). Badham is sponsoring the anU.fretway leglslation and Collier ia: chairman ti. the Senate Committee which will hold a hear· illR on the blll Monday. rn the tract's newsletter residents are encouraged to express their concern that "all Newport Btach interests are not being considertd." They also W "that full ct1nsideration be given to the effect upon the 1,000 fa.nr iliea in Harbor View Homea who have not been consulted." Homeowners are eve provided with a form letter addreued to Collier and his committee which atates: "As a resident of Newport B .. ch I wish to put on record that the Hamor View Community Association -largest Jn New. port Beach -is not a member of the United Auoclations' Frttway Committee, neither was it C0111Ulted on the sobjtc:t (of Badham'1 bill). "Furthermore, some of the alanatures referenced In the recent Jetter from the UAFC wen! obtained from Harbor View resldenta Who ai&ned a peULion to delete the Pacillc CoJst Freeway not re-route it. "I rttPtCtf'ully request, therefore that the Pacific Coast Freeway not be rt- routed without full conslderaUon being &iven to the eft@d. upon the 1,000-famlly community of Harbor View Homea,11 the form Jettu coocludea:. • Tragedf of Errors ·Ex-GI C·harged With Desertion C.oples of honorable discharge papers have been presented to a U.S. District Court in San Franci$oo by tbe attorney for a Vietnam veteran from Anabe.im who may be the victim of. a tragedy of errors. 'Ille altuatlon In -which John Lipp, JI, fmdt himaeli today b hardly a comedy of errors. He Js under arrest at Ford Ord, where he WIS taken after FBI agents llried him to come aiona: to ·Santa Ana June 1 and clear up a misunderstanding about his military status. The U.S. Army says the Anaheim Union High School District maintenance man recieved a $'111 re-enlisUnent bonus June 11, 1968, the-,,, deserted instead of reporting to a Minnesota artillery base. Lapp and his attorney, Charles Roblnsori, of Sanla Ana, say be was honorably di:tcharged, never re-enlisted, and came home .to his native Orange County, where the formtr Specialist 4/C picked up life again like many ex- servicemen. He got a job. He underwent treatment for ahrapnel time be wne hick from Fart Ord than they were when ·he came back . lrom Vleinlm," say a hia atepfatber Jolla Harouff. 1 Armp au~rities ha~ prOduced r .. enlistment papers aJcned with Lapp'• name, but be Ind hia attorney aay tblY. were forged , alter first. believing th6 case to be a monumental paperwork mil: up. Queen Mary Deal To Get Study Loriµ BEACH (AP) -Cily altomeys say they are l.qyeatij:ating the Diners• Club vacated lease on th& retired Ilner Queen Mary which is being converted into a botel~vention center Cily Atty. Leonll'd Puinam aa!d Wednesday Diners' Club "took advanta1e ol the legal wording of its agreement" with the city to pull oul of the prvject •• Plnata Cap.ers Dit.IL't•PILOT •tett ...... wounds suffered in Vietnam infantry combat, visiting Long Beadi Veterans' The lease allowed the firm to ci.ncel U the project were not ready for the public by July 1. Officials say it should be open in December. Shelley Mccaa, 7, takes a swipe at pinata during ~rty in a MeXican motif Wednesday at Corsica Park in Costa Mesa. Shelley. 31119 Gibral- tar Ave., and her friends took turns trying to break the elusive.,beg ot prizes. 1 ~ ft , f~ ., ' ,. Adminislralion Hospital. He married Peggy Bartholomew. He took out a GI Joan application on a home the yOWlg couple then decided against buying. And be .answered t h e . door May 22 wben a pair of FBI agents announced they wanted to talk to him and take The Diners' Club gave no specific reason for pulling out after invelting Sl.S mlllim. The city is considering transler of the lease to another finn. E J ~ 'S A ' a look at hii military aeparatloa papers. cowg' y· ' uper geneo/ al:!:ghiw:·:. ::"' -~~ ~ ':!-..... Fort Ord stockade, but auiped to the A city spokesman said the Los Angeles Jaw firm of Latham and Watson has been employed to aid in handling tht case for a muimum fM: of $150,000 . "Diners' conduct was not justified," said attorney Phillip Belleville of Uie law firm. "We will do what i1 neceuary to protect the city's interest." · ' ' , Speclli -..ing Department, unable Def ended by President ~ :i!u~::'.'~~:11':. 500 Said Drowned Sept. 4 bbrlng In U.S. Diltrkt Court "",'.), in San Francisco, at which time the WASHINGTON CAP) -'Ille Nil<>n ad· UnJo11 eon,re.. acb 'wttliln • dlJ• ·,t;rmy muat prove Its cue. In Indian Flooding mini!traUoo, attempting tQ JqUelch to void the plan, it "111 become effectite':' li'Joba..11 netves were wor1e the last criticism of it.II prq>ased environmental Rep. John _A. B}!bilk (D-Mlmi .. Jt·~·f,.. .~ ' NEW DELHI (UPI) -.U m1ny a1 --'I ~~1-.:.:-500 persoDS rr.ay have died la the floods super agency, says ,coordinating all ""Wuw..1 tee UJCUw~.u, .-id ~Ill.,~ F ..... P .. e J federal polluUon-fiJbting efforts under a raolutioo to 1et' ulde ~ propDll) , alld landslides which hit the Bardrinatb Ucl Qu1:'7, region of Uttar Pradesh state Monday one roof will htJp eliminate vest.ed in-to be introduced. , -. ~ ~ • • and Tuesday, the Press Truat of India terests of ·existing cabinet -I eve I Other Democratic members ' d&ecJ ,. (PTI) said today. departmatta. alrcrllt noise as a Jro6Jem nOt ~t as a middle man in a $5.1 million PTt quoted officials of the bus com· President Ni.Ion 's decisim to create Under the EPA. It Is a res~bllity loan from the First NaUonal BanJc or pany which was transporting Hindu a new Environmental Protedlon A&ency cl the Federal Aviation Amniniltiatim. Chicago to the oil company owned by pilgrims to Badrinath as aayi.ng more -EPA -was based In part "on the Traia·llid aetti~ noise standards is Rep:nt F.dtnund W. P1u1ey. than 200 persons drowned at the Jleed to avoid the institutional bi1tes ln an early atage 4>f deYelopment in 1 "We're not making any charges in Balakachi pilgrim rest camp 40 miles of elistlni agencies," Dwl&ht A. Ink. the federll government, promptine the this i-eaolutlon," stull said, "but we south o( Badrillath, when their vehicles assistant. director of the Office of decision to leave it within FAA for would like to have this relaUonabip look-were overwhelmed by • w I~ Jin I Managtmtnt and BQdget, aaid Wed· \~tbe=pr=....,='t:. =====:::::;::::::::ed:::l:nlD:·:"::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::fl:ood:::w:•:"':"::of:, p.e=:A:l•:k:•n:and:::•:Ri:'iv:"~· _ neoday. Ink's testimony to a House sub- committee appeared to be a rtply to congresaional backers of 1 n t er i or s.crttary Walter 3. Hickel'• hope to concentrate government po~utloo-fighting activiUes In his department. Inlc told a Houae government opera· Uoria subcoolm!U.. studyln( the plan that eida!lni qmclea have' their own missions Which affect . their views or environmectal matters. "To '°" aU the EPA programa in me of those ~epartments Is Apt to result In a particular slant to thoee activities and questions as to tta objectivity in detliD1 with matters affecting and con- trollihg ~ ,depekments," Ink aald. The· lovermn~ b not doWngf1ding antipolluUm efforta by placing them in 1 non.Cabinet level agency, he added. "At present, these programs are placed In IUCh a way that variou!, levels of supervi•• uist between \hem and the Cabinet members, and they . mwt com· pet6 fOf' attention with a host ol other important departmental act.lvities," Ink aald. Nllii'a reorgMlution plan, signed two weeks ago, pulls moe:t of. the anlipollulion enforcement efforta Into the EPA from major government departments. In ad· diUon NJ1on ei'eated a NaUonal Oceanic and Atmosphm-ic Administration dealing primarily with environmental resurcb. Coast 'Y' Hits $90,000 Mark Tiie Orange Coaat family YMCA has raised $t0,«io ID far in' its fund-r1lsing campelJlll to· pay for their nlating faciliUes. The goal of the drive ls $597 ,000, $!87,000 of which will pay for its Newport Bead! hutldin& Ind the remaining 1210,000 will go into Its bulldllig program for new faciUUes. "We have over 4,000 mtm&n," ·says YMCA president J111epli MetcaU. "Wt"re getting so. crowded thit ·we-must burn the mortcage and build a new building for our members." The 0rance Otlll YMCA at ml University Dr~ve, aerva both Costa Mesa aad NewpO(t .Belch, providing recrea-. tlonal actlvltiea for both ' cblldu• Ind - NIXON ... White House y.,n, probably eatabl~h­lnc a Ubrary nearby for hJs mem01r1 and mementos. Mn. Nixoo's reference to fUture eame In ,..pJ.y to questlona from a v!aCtlng group of 3.'i achool ttachera from Ireland. The f!rll tady 'a grandfather w11 Pa~ rlck Ryan, ID n•Uve or Mayo Count)'. Ireland. • .JJ. J. {}arrell; 16th Semi Annual Sale Shown : 72" rectangular table w/three 22" leaves. WAS HOW (seats 12). .......................... 469.00 375.00 Arm Chair •..............•.......... 169.00 135.00 Substantial savings on Madrlgal bedroom, dlnln1 room furniture and occa1lon1I tables.. Herlta11 -lit Edition and Chambray bMroorn1 dining room Nr"lturo •nd occ•1MMI '•blu u to 1/J off . w .. Matching side chair ..............•. 149.00 China 58" ....•............•........ 909.00 76" Bullet .......................... 619.00 HOW llt.00 72'.00 4tt.OO All Heritage upholstertd furniture can be ordertcl at 15°/o off I 000. of fabrics to choose from. H1rlta91 lronalni occa1Ton1I tablH up to Your favorite tntmor ~•iO"'' 10iU be hcP1'¥ to mrilt you ••• PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS I I • 221 I HAUOR IL VD. COSTA ~ESA, CALIF. 646-0275 ( ........................... ------------~~~~~~~- • I I In th ar re "' n• .. ori "I 70 ch •p NE Ca . co: er> " l l l A tod. cou lhe .. d c tod. Eql WOL ,. mor .... -n whe Ora 1910 will "I Hin: 2~ fair an 16.~ "1 IS.~ said COUI be ' J ' • Saddlehaek Today's Final N.Y. Stoek.8 VOL 63, NO. 175, 3 SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 23, '1970 TEN CENTS Nixon Clemente-bound,. Face·s U·tah Protests By RICHARD P. NALL 01 I~• 01llY "Utt Stiff As afficials in Orange Coonty prepare for a routine arrival by President Nixon Friday night, a different type reception was being halched by dissident element.! in Sall Lake City. Leaflets have spewed forth calling for a Yippie nude-in and denouncing the • President. Decorated with underground drawings, as Limited Drilling the pamphlets declare that S,000 stoned Salt Lake freaks will "strip &Dd strut" during Mr. Nis:on·a visit. The Weatherman, a violent faction of StudenL!i for i Democratic Society (SDSJ, clalms it will hold a snake dance through the grounds of the Mormon Temple in the heart ol the city. This, they stale, is to ahow support of the Black Panthers and all tbird world liberation struggles. • Ill Hickel Endorses Oil Lease Cuts WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary o( Interior Walter J. Hickel has endorsed the cancellation of 20 federal oil leases and continued drilling under strict regulation to prevent future blowoul"l and pollution in the Santa Barbara chan- nel off the California coast. Hickel urged a Senate Interior sub- committee Wednesday to act promptly on a bill spOnsored by Sen. George ~urphy (lt{;&Uf.) The measure would cancel 20 o( the 70 federal oil leases in the Santa Barbara channel and pay the holders from a special account built by oil sales from Naval Petroleum Reserve No. l in California. The bill, one of six before the sub- committ~, also would create a national energy re.serve of 198,000 acres seaward of the Caliiornia state Santa Barbara County Tax Cuts Seen By Hinshau' By T0rt1 BARLEY ot tfM 01Ur Plitt 11111 A nine-cent tax cut seems certain today for Orange County taxpayers as county officials took a closer look at the statewide survey that made the reduction possible. County Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw today confirmed that if St.ate oBard of Equalizati on assessments are accurate it would not be necessary to levy a special countywide school lax this year. Thal tax amounted in 1969·70 to slightly more than nine cents on each $100 of assessed value , the assessor sai~. . The tax reduction became 1nev1table when the state agency disclos~ thal Orange County's assessment ratio for 1970·71 was 23.8 percent. This compares with a statewide average of Z.1.1 percent. Oil Sanctuary. Some of the other bills call for can· cellation of all 70 leases . Hickel said oil production should ct1n· tinue on leases where a 1969 blowout caused spills in order to Te\ieve pressure and reduce the dana:er ol further seepage and pollution. "We have increased our Inspection forces to enaure compliance and early de~ion of any J'l\lshaps, ·• Hickel testified. William T. Pecora, U.S. Geologica l Survey director, said that. seven ex- ploration wells had been drilled, but none was in production, on the 20 leases proposed for callCellatlon. Hickel and Murphy were the only witnesses among 2S heard al the two-day hearing to give unqualified support to the Murphy bill. Many other witnesses said more than 20 leases should be canceJed. Sen. AJan Cranston and Rep. John V. Tunney, California Democrats, recom- mended their bill! which would cancel most of the leases and create a federal- 1late sanctuary program along the California coast. The federal sanctuaries would extend seaward from existing state sanctuaries. Tunney said the Murphy bill "could well have been written in the board room of a large oil company" because it would shut down unproductive wells and permit all other offshore drilling to continue. Tunney is seeking Murphy"s Senate seat. Cranston .said the Murphy blll is a "step in Uie right direction" but it "falls far shor1 of what is needed and "it is not an adequate safeguard against the threat ol future Sant.a Barbara catastrophes." Rep, Charles M. Teague (R-Calif.) testified in support o( Santa Barbar~ legislation he is sponsoring. A spokesman for a group of 11 oil companies holding Santa Barbara chan- nel leases urged that the Murphy bill be expanded to include payment.s for their unproductive lease1. John Ohl said the Pauley Petroleum Cn., and 10 other firms bid $73 million for their leases . The small operators were shut dowri by the Interior Department's new regula - tion which make their leases uneconomic, ·Ohl added. The President Is to land Friday evening at the Salt Lake Int.ematlonat Airport. He baa planned 1 brief visit with leaders oC the Church of Jesus Olrlst ol Litter- day Saints and 1s to altend a rodeo at downtown Salt Palace. Paul Taylor, spokesman ror a coalition or groups, said thej would demonstrate at the Hotel Utah across from the Mormon Temple Square where the Presi. dent plans the conferenc. with Mormon ra leaders. Taylor said the group wu made up ~ the United Front to End the War, Mommns Against the War, and Young Republicans Against Vietnam Com- mitment. There has been little anti-war violence In Salt Lake City in the past and there was no assessment of the effectiveness of the plans to disrupt the President's vii IL 'Ille Young Republican Federation has announced plans for a rally in support or the Presidenl. It ls sponsoring an "Honor America Rally" about an hour after Mr. Nixon's scheduled arrival. The rodeo and other festivities are an annual celebration marking the sel· tlement ol Salt Lake Valley in 1847 by the Mormon pioneers. Mr. Nixon will board Air Force One after tile rodeo and fly oo to El Toro s A Gathering. of· Turtles. Fire trucks lrom all over Orange County lumbered I . • . ' up the hill to Top .of the Wollld School. in Laguna ' Beach Wednesday in a colorful show of' force. It wa·s . all part. of a drill designed to familiiJ,rize rl:eighbor- lng fire "department personnel with ttie intracacie.s · of. fighting a possible brush fire in or near the city. Clementean Wins Delay Of 'Snobbish' Trailer Law Charging that a proposed code strictly regulating Lrailer, boat and camper ~r~­ lng on private land was communistic and snobbish. a San Clemente woman won a planning ct1mmission delay on the matter Wednesday. Mrs. Fem Dlck90n, the president of a local rockhound club and • camper owner. charf):ed that the city is becoming snobbish with the residence of President Nixon and assailed the code and said she was "ashamed of San Clemente.'' After hearing the spirited speech at the public hearing oon the ordinance commissioners agreed to continue the hearing for three weeks until the next ·meeting. Commissioners hope lo resolve some aspects of the rules setting up regulations on where and how the vehicles can be parked. "We moved to San Clemente because people were friendly, but with Nixon (Sef, DELAYt Page %) .. Girl Hitchhiker Leaps From Car; Driver ·Sought A 2l·year-old woman hitchhiker who leaped from a moving car near Crystal Cove. Wednesday aftetnoon, was given first aid by Laguna Beach firemen before being Laken to south Coast CommunHy Hospital, police report. Witnesses who brought the viclim lo Laguna Beach said they saw her jump from a moving vehicle after it ran into a fence on Coast Highway at ap- prnximately 2:30 p.m. "Let's say you own a $24,000 ~e.'' Hinshaw said. "We try to achieve a 2S percent ralio of assessed value to fair market value and this would give you an assessed value on your property of $6.000. "This would mean a savings of about SS.50 on you r tax bill, the assessor said. But he pointed out that lhe overall cmlnty tax for 1970-71 still remains to be set. Lagunans Push Greenbelt The male .driver got out and threalened the woman with a knife as they ap- proached, the witnesses said. Fire Chief Jim Latimer, who helped give the woman first aid for abruiona on bet back while the witnesses made their report to . police, said she told him she was from New York, but now Jives In Laguna Beach and had been , hitchhlkjng from the Newport area when the Incident occyrred. PILOT A D WORKS 'SEW' PERFEC1'L l' Nothing "so-so'' about this ad to find someone lo sew : Se amslress -Exp'd to do piece work at home. Call xxx.xxx . That hard·working Uttle ad in the classified section of the DAILY Pilot. in only two appeirances, picked up 75 1pPJicants. "I never expected th11t klnd or action."' said the advertiser. Action iii just w11itlng for you . too. Call 142-$78, the di~ Line to results. A 0A1LY PILOT ad.viscr will help you writa lid& that are an)'· thing but "1~." Dilley's Group Hopes for 520-Acre Preserve By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of 1119 D1I" Plltl Stiff Citizens for the Laguna Greenbell to. da y are hopeful that they may have 11 chance lo acquire the Sycamore Hills property. a triangular 520-acre plot in Laguna Can)'On,.•nd 1dd it to the group's planned open space around Laguna Beach. The property was marlced for develop- ment of Musing and a shopping center, but the owner of the land, Great Likes ?rQperly, Inc., hu agreed to put a 30-day hold on the l1nd, so !hat the Greenbelt commlttet: can eiplore the feJli sibilily of acquisition. Acrording to James Dilley, secretary to the Citizens for the Laguna Greenbelt, th< IVO"P has contacted Mayor Richard ' , Goldberg and requested hlm lo aulhoriu the city plaMlng department to seek federal funds ror 'the purchase of the Great Lakes property. The last price quoted on the land was $4..5 million in February of 1969. Dilley also said that the committee Is prepared to appeal lo Laguna citizens for funds. ii a rederal grant would only be made M i matching fund basl!, City planner Al Autry uld this morning that he had not betn authorized as yet by the Mayor to begin investlaating the acquisition of the land. He noted lhat any klnd of 1ppllcatlon for the acquisition of the properly would ha ve lo havt official l»cking of the CJty Council. "I would lii• to Kl up a meetina with the .agencies that are lnyolved," Autry said. lf he d0e1 receive authorizallon to begin an investigation Jnto acquisition of the proJ'.leTty, Autry said he would set up auch a meeting with the Depart~ ment of Housing and Urban Develop- ment, the,Southero Callfof!li& Association . of GOverTtmeni.., Great Lates Properties, Inc. and the Orange Count; Planning Department. Autry noted that acquisition ' nf the land wllh government funds would be c:onUngent upon planned developmtnl towards a ~reatlonal erea. "We would apply for one of the grants provided for open space lrom the federal government. The st~te l.s aoother pooslblllly. bul I underllland thot lh<lr lwids u• qul~l!mlled," Aull'}' aaid. .. She was released &Iler further ti-eat. ment at the hqsplt.al. PUBLIC ACCESS BILL REJECT'ED . . SACRAMENTO !UPI) -A" blil requiring cities and counties 1to reject "building p e r m l l s , tub-, divi.sions or wning changes 'Yhlch would cut off public acct.u to the ocean or other lara:e w4ter are•s was defeated W~nesday by lhe ASKmbly. The blll by A.,.mblyman John Dunlap (0.:Napa), was f(ljected on a 35 lo a7 vot8. with \ tJ votea n«<led for pam1 .. 1 Marine Corps Air Station Friday to beliD a lo.day work sessk>n at Su Clement. with top advisers. Pollce Chief CUfford Murray ol San Clemente said there m no known plans, as yet1 for demonstrations near the Western White House. Mr. Nixon may return for a second IO.day session in mid-August. A huge anti-war demonstration was (See NIXON, Paie ZJ 0 Laird Sees Pre-Vietnam Numbers WASHING TON (AP) -Secrelary ol DefeMC Melvin R. Laird said today draft calls fur ttie rest of 1970 will average below 10,000 a month, a return to pr~Vielllam levels. Laird made thia fii-eca&t in a apeech for about 550 atudents working as IUJ'I\· mer lntems with the governmeI'!t. ",In the remaining months of this year,'' Laird laid, "1 antlcipat. that draft calls will average below 10,IOO per month." In . the past,. he has predicted that total draft callJ Ibis year will fall bet~~n · 150,flOO and 170,000 young men compared with the 290,000 drafted in 19141. Aides said Laird still rticks to that foreca&t. Through August, draft callt this year have totaled 124,MKI. In his talk, Laird assured the student.. that "We are doing all we can to plan and implement a program that will reduce draft calls to zero and enable us to establlsh an all-volunteer force." But he cautioned that, in order to make the shift, Congress must provide a major increase in the defense budget. LaJrd offered no forec:ast aa to when this might happen. However, the trend is toward smaller defense budget! and strooger pressure from Congress to cut defense sipending. Lower draft calls are lied to the U.S. withdrawal from South Vietnam and a concurrent reduction of total U.S. military manpower. The secretary stressed once again that by next spring U.S. forces will be down to 284,000 troops or fewer -about half the U.S.' garrison in Vietnam when the Nixon administration took. power in January 1969. Briefly mentioning the controver!lial incursion In Cambodia, which touched ol.1 wl~espread campus demonstrations in May, Laird said: "Evidence multiplies that the President's strategy and hi! doctrine are producing the desJred results." The Pent.agon chief did not say what that evidence ls, but he indicated he meant lowe r battlefield ca.sualtie.! in the Vlelnam war and forward movement in the troop wfthdrawal program. "Concern for the lives oC our (See LAIRD, Page %) Oraage Cout Weather Overnight lows along the Orange Coast are expected to be 5 7 jo 6S degrtts. The high are forecut. at 75 to 85. Low clouds and local foa night and early morning remain. INSIDE TODAY Republican State Senators art optimistic that Gov. Reagan~, $1 billion ta.t: reform plan wili Jl(llll. Biit Dcmocrat$'are ju.st 41 optimflUc that they will amtM it. Stt story Poge B. C•UfWN I Clllclr"" u, r Cl•nlfltf JI ... C""Jc• U CNllW.r'il 14 Dettlll Mttlc• " lfftttNI ,.,. ' lfRft.rt•lltrfttllf tt-• l'll'l•nc• 1•1t ............ 12 ..... u.lln ti • J DAIL~ ~ILOT SC ,,,.,,.,,, .)<If IJ, ll'lu I 'Everybody' Arrested In Clemente A man wmited by police In Booton In a tbootifll incidtnt t1lln WU UTUted in San Clemente early today In 1 roundup wbJcb al5o netted aeveral runaway ~ and an aUeaed Marint -· 1'lcblrd lawrlDCe Beede, t'T, WU ar• rested by ddtdives at 1:30 a.m. along with the ott*r suspecls at an apartment lxMAll at 110 AvlOlda Eltrdla, occupied ,..U, by tmptoyea of a neasby car wash. ·. BMde, w~ now awaits exlradiUon .. proolldlnp to M8111Chuaetll1 was nam- od In a nrnnt llllled Jn Boolon aller I lbonlln( ol I DWI lllera earlier lhl& ......... Delalla ol the original locldeot In New Eog,.nd """ not clear thla morning, L>. ·Robert Muon said.' ' )faJOn and several o the r officers ar· -ftstlld the man and at the actne found -Koo> Mlcbffl Pl'O!ek, allo In Ibo apmtment, Wll an alleged Marine -from Clmp Pendleton. '!'be 2'-:iul'Old aaviceman who lied tan. wottiDc • the car waah wu •r· relted aklq with. two , 15-yeANld J'lllllW., ,iri. from ceulral Callfon>ia and a l5-year-<1ld boy, police said 1be youths were expected to be releas· · ed to their parents after bting charged with curfew violation. Jn all, 15 reaktents of the apartment -..... chocked by police In the momlnf l'lld. Beede will be returned lo Booton, wbtn he will face action for alleged -ull with a deadly 'O'Olpon, From Page 1 DELAY .•• here they're all becoming a bunch of snobl," she sakl'. In •nother mailer involving porklng WtllneodaJ ""1Ulllolnner1-yod l<lion an p&lftl to Id up special parldn1 zoninC cm land c11rn11tly Jn uaa for porkln& 1n the city's bu!inesl artas. 1be )lrOllOS81, lncludln1 leltcr1 aenl to more than a hundred bmlnl11men, _, lo be drlWinC lltlle !Ivor thus far. commiaalonll's have received seven ~ aplnel the 20111n& and cme In flYor, but 111d they would wllllhold a ~lion wiW more Jeltu1 and a conference wip! parklng comml.uklners "l"n:":.,. wnl beve tho chance to brln( the m•llor up nm WOdneod1y · nlalil _, 1llO)' IMld I Joint lludy -.. with the poJtin« ldvllerl and cily coin:ihnen at the Municipal Go~ Olunt cl\lbllouae. . In other ICllon Wedneod1y cem- milaloners· denied a CondtUoul u..e pemll appllcltloo for moioreycle aervlce llld ..... Ir al 1 convttled ps itllloft uied most rtC11Dtly as the beldquarters tJ the Nlxon'I Pollll DrUIWood COmpany whldi Wiii\ delllncl ael1lq ocnpo of f1otllm. ·'llw otlalnll appllclnt, sieven Konnldy, hid -for tho pennll, but 1111 ..... O\OffJll lo Ohpl. A new llJIPUcanl lllld tho·-piano for Iha 11&Uon 11'1 1trlctly ~ 11iel wlllcb clon'I raqulre l •pan!l11 11 all. 'Ibe conunil8ioners aleo approved a alP nceptloo IOUihl by Alphl Beta A:cme Mltkets for a nln~manth tern. porUJ llln bera1dlnC the conJtructlon of a shopping center at 400 Cimino de Eltrtlla near ShorteUffa. 1be usual pennilliblt time is JO day1 for such ..... A requ11t for a variance by m111ufae.- llnr ~· A. Hall lo use a paved lot for constnctfon of portable lt<r'qe tlnka • aieo wa1 sranted by the commillkmers. HID will bWld tho larae lanks Oii wbeols ai 1'4-llt Avtnida Navarro on land IOned for ll>lllUllduriq. DAILY PILOT .. ..,.,, .... " ....... .... .......... ~ ........ ,....., c...M... ...C'-"'9 Olt.utfl COASf "-ll!ILllHINCJ COM'ANV ••'otrt N. Wt.d Pru !MM Wiii '"'llllW Jtclc •• c....i., Vke. '"'*-'' tlld G.w•I MIMtlr 1\o11111 kt..t1 .. ,~ TliMH A. M1rphint ,..........Edl1or Rl1h1nl P. Ntll ""11'1 or.,... C-1r E•n~ Offl<0• C.lif ~I W ~I ilW lttwt ......... , IMCll: 1'11 W.I ,, .. , lflllt'Wt1" L..-...,., m ,.,.., •-M~ 1Md11 119'1 hid! ._,...,_,. .. OiilNl'llll • """111 II '-'-.... State Get• Fee Lagun~ Teacher Firings Costly While Jooldng over purchase orders Tueod17 night, the Board ol Tl'u>len of the Laguna Beach Unified School District noted that the state wa1 belng paid $1 ,1186 for services rend;ered during tho ftrllll! of high >Chool lllslruclors Jock Xretunc and Dolull Lynda. 'Ille figure covm the coat of <Curt hearings for the teachers held in Santa Ana, and the cost of a transcript ($680) Jn the Kreftin1 case, which L'1e board ordered before lltlDf the high )Choo! mu lie lnttructor: ~ Both Ml!s Lynde and KrlfUn1 appealed the hiJ;h school's deci1ion not to rehire them Ior the 1970-'11 school year. Attar tbe hearlna1 th• Board or Education upheld the high school's decialon nol lo rehire. lleld. Several teachers were called to testify In the heartn11s. The board will also have to pay the cost ot a court recorder hired to tlke. down the proceedines of the mttling when Krlftlna was fired . Colt per tran=lpt PAI• ii Ii.to. Orphaned Seal Set Loose Today D.t.11. Y l"M.(IT, tttfl ~ CAR PLANTID I".' IVY AS DRIVER FAILS TO NEGOTIATE TIMPLI HILLS TURN /.nOther coal lnrorred durlna the hetr- tnas, was '890 for 30 day1 ti 1Ubitltute ·teaching, while court proceedings were The 1pparonlly orphonod bahY 1u1 recovering from pneumonia at. San Clemente lifeguard headquarter• will 10 for a permanent 1wlm this afternoon after Rllkinl • swift recovery, bla bostl said today. In fact, lifeauards reported, the finned waif ls getting just too active to handle in his temporary quarters in the st<ition's large garage. Michigan Leads Traced In C"lement,e Murder Case A Police investigator from S a n Clemente is in Michigan this week in an attempt to sift even the remote.st leads on the vicious beatiJlg and stabbing murder of Mr1. Conaie Lynn Joh[l50n earUer tb1' awnmer. DolocUv1 LOonard Goodwin bu 1lffn In the rnldwul tlala for tho pall 11varal d&l'I dalVinC Jnlo Ibo vlcilm'I pall In her home lllfo. Bui offioer1 here 111d Goodwin hu not yet ,,.boralod on hla Ii.dine•. Mra. Jolmm, ai,h~wetka-pr11111nl wheJI 1he wa1 beaten then repeatedly stabbed on a mid.June mornlllc w11 the wife of a youne Marlll1 who told offlc111 ht found her nude aid bloody body 1prawled on the coupl•'• ~ 11 he relurnod from suant duly In Sonia An•. Sine. then elhlu1tl.ve dfortl by dettc. Uv11 led lo tho meat ol • 11-yaar-old Marino cook &om Camp Pndlo'.on, but the youth wu "'blequontly relused and deemed nol 1m111ed. The man, Frankie Way11 Melltno, sp1nt a weekend ln custody. but wu fr<ed alter the Dlltr!cl A1tomey•1 ofllca dacllnod lo luue a complllnt. Since that -t ol Iha CUI -oc. back to San Clemente from Mlchigaa where he buried his high school sweetheart. But subsequent interviews with the Vietnam combat veteran appartnUy tbed Utile naw liih! oo the baff1lnC CUI. The mojor milllnC llnb In the ovlcleact chlln ol tho murder an thr" tn number -th• lar11 Dlf• uaed to infUct repeated 1tab wounds Oil rbe woman'• neck, cheat and abdomen, a tlnn1I thoe which madt a dl1ttn1ul11hlhle foolprlnl .1n Ibo llltchen •Ink of the Joltuoa 1tudlo 1pll'lmont and th• dead woman '• wall•~ mlulnC from U11 crtma acene when police llTlvod. Another lmporlanl factor which moy never ·bl cleared up ii the aac:t time of de1th ol the bnuJoUe IJpecllnl mother. Coonlleu houri of prob1nf In tho nelihborhood fallod lo yla1d 1ny aolld lndk1Uon of the encl time ol Ibo brulll murder, Ono :iSle JIVinC nearby Clllll ciOlnl by r1 to police that both the hulband a wlfe awoke at S a.m. on the morntn1 of the ldllln1, bul they could not remember what clUlld them 2 Laguna Teens Hurt in Crash; Auto 'Planted' A pair oC Laguna Beach teenagers e!Caped serious ·injury Wednesday af· ternoon when their car went out of control on Temple Hill! Drive and laid down ltl feet of 11dd marD before comlnc to rtst 1n a front yard, police repoii. Drlvar Chl1llophar Thom aa CUn· nll\lham, 17, of 11111 Tampla Hllll Drive, !old police ha wu deacendlnC Tample HJ.Ila Drlv1 at 2:25 p.m. when· he lost control ol the vehicle. It 1kjdded ICl'OSs the roadway, clipped a car parked in the driveway at 1M5 Temple Hilla Drive and came to a halt 1long11de It. The wild ride alto dom•&ed 1 tree llld Iba ln>ol llwn on the properly, police uld. ~·1 brother, Anthony, 13, a puaencer ln tbl car, wu. taken t() a prlV1to pbyalc,.n for 1ra11111en1 of minor inJ1lrlu, ' POu• Hid th Y-· drlvar produced only a drlvlq lnllrucllon pannll when lllked for hla llceOM, From Pllfle 1 NIXON ••• held outSide the Western White Houae lost Auguat. Murray said his clepartmenl tri• •here poseJble to work 041 sround rules in advance with groups t~at an- nounce plans to protest. This heles con- trol the situation. "So far we've alwa ys had pretty good luck," he said. Mr. Nixon's vis.it, with wife and daughter, Tricia, is to include meetings with top advisors and a heavy work load. The President. plans Sunday, however, to take a breather and attend a buebllll 1ame between tht An&els and wu:hington Senators at An@;e.l Stadium in Anaheim. First Lady Pat Nixon said today that she and her husband will live in Califor- nia after they leave the White House but did not specify whether that mMnJ San Clemente. It has been assumed by many locally that the President's purchase last year of the old Cotton estate, in which ht obviou~ly takes pride, meant that he would remain a rt1ident in the post- White House years, probably establish· 'Ina a library nearby for his memoirs and memento•. Mrs. Nixon's reference. to tuture came In reply to questions from a vlslUng e:roup of 35 1chool teachtrs frQ\ll lreland. The first lady's lfa.ndflther WIS Pat- rick Ryan, an native of Ml.)'o c.ourity, lreland. "HP. would have been aet looee Wed- nesday but the vet said he ahould ttay arotUlCI one more day to make eure ht'1 strong ~noush to 1wlm .,.in, 11 II.id one l\W'd. The ~rowri pup, found coughing ahd weak on Lloda Lant Beach Monday night by Llfeguard Ed Marsh, has had antibiotic treatments and a steady ration of fresh anchovies and mackerel during his convalescence. Sa n Clemente veterinarian Or. C. c. Marsh treated the sad-eyed visitor free of charee. Thi tranaiUon from 1treiuard field· quarters to "Matlnelind" was a rare one for the guards, who said they took this aeal in because it had a definite chance to recover. Many otbtr lus fortunate sick seal! are handled by Orange County Animal Control officers and humanely dispatched if trea tment seems futile , guards said. "We just hope we don't set flooded by requests to take in every animal Wt find on the beach," a guard 1upetvi10r sa.ld. "This one was enough to last us for a while." From Pagel LAIRD ... servicemen and for their 11re return to the United St.ates w11 the key deciding factor' to cause the Pruident to conduct the limited operation in 'Cambodia," Laird said. • i ClllT1nl nvtt the July 4 wlllbnd - lllflcon awallld tho retin ol Ibo vlc- llm'~ lllllbad, Mork Jolmlon, who flew to 1w&Un. "Thll'• jual not enouch lo p with," J-;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=======================~ a detective aid later. Consultants Back Major Joaquin School Changes By PAMELA HALLAN OI IM D1l1J l"ll1t Stitt A major reoraanii.ation of the· San Joaquin Elementary School District ~d· mlnlatraUon was proposed Wedll<ldaY to the Board of Truatees by a consultmt firm · The reorganization plan would spread the district's work load more evenly between the auperintendent and two assistant superintendents, giving the superintendent a more direct hand in running bis IChoola. The propasals were made by Les Glaspey, representing the firm ol Davis, M((:OMell and Raltlon. 'l1le !Inn was hired by the board to prepare a five-year orgatmatloo plan for the diltrict, which will reach 20,000 puplla enrolled •I the end of lhal time. Among recommendaUom for lhe 1971). 71 1ehool yfBr was the crutioo of a deportment ol faclllU• planning lo be under Rex Neri110r1, the a 1 s I • t a n t superintendent IOI' bullneae servicu. Also under Nerlson w o u I d be the departmem ol food aervlces 1nd the department of mainttnance and opera· Uons to whidt would be added con- 1tructian supervi1k:ln. Mailers ol l•clllUes plannlnJ and coo- struction are DOW' betnC "*'"illd by Supl. Rllph Giies. '!be report indlcatts I.hat by removlna: thtM duties wbleh occupy about SO percent of t h e 8Uperlntende"nt.'1 time. he would hive more time to directly involve hhrueU with principals Ind 11Cool adminillraUon. llcbool prloclpal• <11rrenlly report lo Dr. William Stocks, the aael!tut !UJ)erlnlendenl for edUC!llonal oervlces • Dr. Stocks a!IO oversees t h·e departments of special serivces. cur· riculum services and personnel. The report Jodicatea thlt tbt personnel servlces department ahOuld be. removed to the direct aupervision o( the fiuperlntendent. and that more attention 1hoold be given to non-teaching classified employes in tbt peraonnel department. Other recommendaUtin1 1 n c J u d e ereatinc more policies for clearer dirtc- Uont, dirt<Un& the lop ldmlnlllralors to dellgnate IOmtme as an undtrstudy to act ln their place when they must be •b!leDt, evaJu1Una central of(kle per90nnel and coordlnatln, committee actiYities more CIOH:ly. Futllf'e recommendtUOf\I Include tl\e •ddlt1on of a departmtnt of research and development 1:1r.ter the 1upcrin- tmient of educaUorial sen\cM and the addition or a supervisor oE ao:x1W1ting and budgeting undt:r the auistant 1 up er i ntendent for administrative aervices, · When enrollment reaches 15,000 the dlstrlct should add an a 1.s o ~I ate auper1ntendent to aerve •• th e superintendent's lield representative. The district also should add a purchasing and warehouse department. When enrollment reaches , 17,000 a dop-of data pt<l<Ollliq shoold be added. The board said It will study the report and make recornmendalioos at a future meeting. Capo Bay Vrges Billboards Ban A campaign to ban billboard• and a publicity brochure for the C1platr1no Bay area may be first project.a of a new alliance of Chamber& of Commerce or11n1ted Wedntsdly. Lead.,, of the Sin Juan Capiltrano, Capistrano Beach, Dana Point and san Clemente c.hambers of Commerce met Wedneaday to work on structure of the new llliton 1roup and to ouUine projects of common conctrn. The antl·blllboard effort was sugguted by Capistrano Beach Chamber whlCh is seeking county bans o! }lillboards on scenic EJ · Cfrnlno Rtal and county sections of Pacific c.oast Highway. In the .meeting chaired by Bob 01kley of San Cltmenla Chamber, pro-I• for the alliance ol the Chambers, bl· monthly ~Ung11 'two repreHnl8llves plut alternattt from tlCh Chamber, and ltaderablp rotatlnl between th• chambers each al.1 monthl, wtr& adopted for recommendlllon lo the parUclpallng· Chamblrt. RlprnenlallvH will brln& to Iha nut m..un1 ...., .. uon& of I n d I v I d u a I chamber project.. whJch may be broad-.. ed Into arta efforts, and 1Ul&ffted names for !hi Ualaon groop. Altandln& tho or&anllln& ..,., .. W"• Dr. Robert Beaslay, William Wlb!J and Robert. Oaktls' ol San C 1 e m 1 n t e Chamber; Jam., Elliot! •nd Lyn Harris Hlclca of Caplslr8no S.ach Chamber; Bruce Winton and Claude John of San JUln CoplltrlmO and Hoyi Posl of Dina Point Chamb>r. 18th $emi Annual Sale Shown: 72" rectangular table w/three 22" leaves. WAS NOW (seats 12), .......................... 469.00 375.00 Arm Chair ....................... ,. .169.00 115.00 Substantial ••vln91 on Madrigal bedroom, dlnln~ room fur"lture tnd occt1ltn1I tabln. Herll191 -ht ldltlOft ind Cham~r•y ba4roem~ dining roem furniture and occ.1len11I t1ltlt1 u to 1/3 off Matching ,iide chair •.... , ........•. 149~00 China 58" •......•.•... , ............ 909.00 78" Buffet ......................... 619.00 HOW 119.00 729.00 499.00 All Heritage upholttarad fu rniture can be ordartd at 15°/o off 1000s of fabrlct te chooM from. H1rlt1.. lronilni occ:a1ional tablu up to V2 off Yowr favoritt f1lttrlor dtrigfttr wfU b• happy to oarilt iiou .•• H.J.GARRETf fURNlllJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DISIGNERS o,.. II:-· ,.._ • "'· ..... 2211 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MISA , CAL IF. 646·G27S I V< A for rrl wai in ~ L a Pre D Lf WI lnter the c and regul and I nel o Hie comn on a Murp Th• ,. '"' chanr spec!; Nava· Califc The comn energ of lh· • A n today county the sl reducti Coun today Equali: would 1 county' That more t ,,...,. The when 1 Orange 1970-71 with a "Let': Hinshsi\ 25 perc fa ir ma Pl, 'SE N find 1 TI clas Pilo pick "I acll• is j 842..Z A help thln1 ' • Laguna Beaeh EDI TIO Today's F ina ) N.Y. Steeb voe 63, NO. I 75, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNiA THURSDAY, JULY 23 , '1970 TEN CENTS Nixon Clemente-bound, Faces Utah Protests By RICHARD P. NA LL CH tM O.ltr l'it.I 111H As officials in Ora~e County prepare for a routine arrival by President Ni1on Friday night, a different type ttception was being hatched by dissident ele~nt.s in Salt Lake City. 'f Leaflets have spewed forth calling for a Yippie nude-in and denouncing the President. . Decorated with underground drawings, as Limited Drilling the pamphlell declare that 5,000 stoned Salt Lake freaks will "Mtip and strut" during Mr. Nixon's visit. The Weatherman, a violent faction of Student:I for a DemocraUc Soclety'(SOS), claims it will hold a :snake dance through the grounds of the Mormon Temple in the heart of the city. This, they state, is to .!!how support of the Black Panthers and all third wo rld liberation struggles. • Ill Hickel Endorses Oil Lease Cuts WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary of Interior Walter J . Hickel has endorsed the cancellation of 20 federal oil lease:-; and continued drilling unde r strict regulation to prevent future blowout! and pollution in lhe Santa Barbara chan- nel off the California coast. Hickel urged a Senate Interior sub- committee Wednesday to act promptly on a bill sponsored by Sen. George Murphy (R-Calil.) The measure would cancel 20 of the 70 federal ol\ leaaes in the Santa Barbara channel and pay the holders from a special acc<>unt built by oil sales f,tom Naval Petroleum Reserve No. I in California. The bill, one of six before the sub- committee, also would create a national energy reserve of 198,000 acres seaward of the Caillornia st.ate Santa Barbara County Tax Cuts Seen By Hinshau' By TOM BARLEY Of t1M1 Dilly Plltt Sr.ff A nine-<:ent tax cut seems certain today for Orange County taxpayers as county officials took a closer look At the statewide survey that made the reduction possible. County Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw today confirmed that ir State oBard of Equaliz.ation assessments are accurate it would not be necessary ta levy a special countywide achoo! tax this year. That tax amounted In 1969-70 to slightly more than nine cent.s on each $100 of assessed value. the assessor said. The tax reduction became inevitable wh en the state agency disclosed that Orange County's assessment ratio for \970-71 was 2..1.8 percent. This compares wHh a statewide average of 23.1 percen!; Oil Sanctuary. Some of the other bills call for can· cellation of all 70 ]eases. Hickel said oil production should con. tinue on leases where a 1969 blowout caused spills In order to relieve pressure and reduce the danger of further seepare and pollution. "We have increased our inspection forces to eMUte compliance and early detection ol any mishaps,'' Hickel testified. Wiiiiam T . Pecora, U.S. G!Ologlcal Survey director, said that seven ex- ploration wells had been drilled , but none was in production, on the 20 leases proposed for cancellation. Hickel and Murphy were the only wit.nesses among 25 heard at the two-day hearing to give unqualified 1upport to lhe Murphy bill. Many other witnesses said more than 20 leases should be canceled. Sen. Alan Cranston and Rep. John V. Tunney, California Democrats, recom- mended their bill! which would cancel most of th e leases and create a federa l· state sanctuary program along the California coast. The federal sanctuaries would extend seaward from exJ.stlng state sanctuaries. Tunney said lbe Murphy bill "could well ha ve been written in the board room of a large oil company" because it would shut down unproductive wells and permit all other offshore drilling to continue. Tunney i.s seeking Murphy's Senate seat. Cra nston said the Murphy bill is a "step in the right direction" but it "falls far short of what is needed and "it is not an adequate safeguard against the threat or future Santa Barbara catastrophes." Rep. Charles M. Teague (ft.Calli.) testified in support of Santa Barbar~ Jegi.slation he is sponsoring. A spokesman for a group of JI oil companies holding Santa Barbara chan-- nel leases urged that the Murphy bill be expanded to include payments for their unproductive leases. John Ohl said the Pauley Petroleum Co., and 10 other Hnna bid Sn million lor their leases. The small operators were shut down by the Interio r Department's new M!gula - tion which make their leaaes uneConomic, Ohl add«!. The President Ls to land Friday evening at the Salt Lake lnternaUonal AlrporL He has planned a brief visit with leaders oI the Church of Jesus Christ ol Latter· day Saint& and is lo au.end a rodeo at downtown Salt Palace. Paul Taylor, spokesman ror a coalition of groups. said they would demonstrate at the Hotel Utah across from the Mormon Temple Square where the Presi· dent plans the conference with Mormon ra leaders. Taylor 1aid the group was made up ol the United Fronl lo End the War, Mormons Agairuit the War, and Young Republicans Againat Vietnam Com- mitment. There has been little antl-war •violence In Sall Lake City in the past and there was no assessment of the effecllve ness of the plans to di..stupt the President's visit. A Gathering. o'f •Turtles The Young Republican Federation has announced plans for a rally in support. o( the Pre.sidenl. It i.s sp:inaoring an "Honor America Rally" about an hour after Mr. Nixon's scheduled arrival. The rodeo and other feaUvities are an annual celebration marking the set· tlement ol Salt Lake Valley in 1847 by the Mormon pioneers. Mr. Nit.on will board Alr Force One after the rodeo and fly on to El Toro s DAIL.l' l'IL01 lllH l"Mi. Fire trucks from all over Oi'ange CDunly lwnbered up the hill to Top of the World School in Laguna Beach Wednesday in a colo~ul show of force. It was . all part ·of a drill .designed lo fam,lliarize neighbor· ing fire department personnel with the intracacies of .fighting a possible brush fire in or near the citf. Clementean Wins· Delay Of 'Snohhisl1' Trailer Law Charging that a proposed code strictly regulaUng trailer, boat and camper p~r~· ing on private land was commun1~t1c and snobbish, a San Clemente woman won a planninf commission delay on the matter Wednesday. Mrs. Fem Dickson, lM president or 1 local rockbound club and 1 camper owner. charged that the cit.y is becoming iuKM:lbish with the resklence of President Nixon and ll!S8i1ed the code and said ahe was "ashamed of San Clemente." After hearing the spirited speech at the public hearing oon the ordinance commissioners agreed to continue the hearing for three weeks until the n~xt meeting. Commissioners hope lo resolve some 'aspects of the.rules.setting up regulations on where and how the . vehicles can be parked. "We moved to San Clemenle because people were friendly, but with Nixon (See DELAY, Page 2) Girl Hit.chhiker Leaps From Car ; Driver Sought A . 21-year-old woman hitchhiker who leaped from a moving ~ar nea; Crystal Cove Wedn.esday afternoon, was given first· aid by Laguna Beach firemen before being taken .to South Coast Comqlunity 'Hospital, police report. , Witnesses who brought the vjcjjm to Laguna Beach s~ld they saw her jump from a moving vehicle after it ran into a fence on Coast Highway at a~ proximately 2:30 p.m. "Lei's say you own a $24 .000 home, Hinshaw said. "We try to achieve a 25 percent ratio of assessed value to fair market va lue and this would give you an assessed value on your property of $6.000. "Thi.s would mean a savings of about $5.50 on your tax bill. the a55essor said. Bul he pointed out that the overall county tai: for 1970-71 still remains lo be sel. Lagunans · Push Green~elt The male driver got out and threalened the woman with a knife as they a~ proached. the witnesses .said. Fire Chief J,im U:Umer. who h'elped give the wofnan first aid for . abra.tlon"s on her baCk while t~e witnesses made their report to ·police, said she told him she w~s from New York, bu( TIOW lives in Laguna Beach and had been hitchhiking from the Newport area when the Incident occurred. PILOT AD WORKS 'SEW .. PERFEC1 'LY Nothing "so-so" about this sd lo find someone to sew: Seamstress -Exp'd to do pi~ work at home. call XXX-XXX . That hard·working little ad in the classified section of the DAILY Pilot. in only two 8ppe:arances, picked up 75 appllcant.11. "l nevet" expected th11t kind of action," said the advetli!IC!:r. Action Ii; just waiting for you, too. Call 542-.1678. the direct line to rtsulU:. A DAILY PILOT ad.vl~r will help you write 11ds that are 11ny- thin(I: but"~.'' I Dilley's Grou p Hopes for · 520-Acre Preserve By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of Ille DlllY Pli.t 11 .... Citizens for the Laguna Greenbelt to- day are hope ful that they may have 11. chance to acquire the Sycamore Hills property. a triangular 520-acre plot ln Laguna Canyon, and 3dd It to lhe group's planned open spact t1.round Laguna Beach. The property WR5 marked for develop. ment of housing and a 1hopping center, but the owner or the land, Great Lakes Property, Inc., hu agreed tn put 11 :m.day hold on the land, !iO tha t the Greenbelt com.mitt.et can explore the feasibility of acquisiliM. According to James Dilley, &ecreWy lo the Citiiens for the Llguna Greenbelt, U!.e aroup baa contacted Mayor Richard • Goldberg and requesled him lo authorize the city plaMlhi depJrtment ·to seek federal funds for the purchase of the Great Lakes property. The last pr ice quoted on the land was $4.5 million in February·of 19119. Dilley also said that lhe commitlee Is prepared to appeal to Laguna citizen11 for funds, if a federal grant would only be made on 1 matching fund basis. City planner Al Autry said this mornin.it that he had not been authorized 111 yet by the Mayor to begin investigating the acquisitio n of the land. He noted tbat any klnd of appllcallon rnr the a~uisUlon of the property would hlVf: to have OfflCJil backing Of the City Coundl. "I woul<t like lo .-et up a meelin& ~ wllh the il&epcies th&t are tnvolv~," 'Autry said. If he does receiv'e 11uthorizaUon to begin an investigation ink> acquJsltlon of the property, Autry said he would .set up such a ,m"'ling ',vith lhe Depart· ment of Housing and Urban Develo~ ment. the Southern•Calilornia Association flf Government;, Great Lakea Properties, Inc. aM the Oranae CoWlty Planninj Department. Autry noted th11.l acqulslUon or tht land with government fundJ would be contingent upon planned developmetlt towards a recreational area. "We would apply !Of one of the grants provided for open space from the federal goVernmenl The 1ttt.e Is another posslbiHty, but t understand that thelr funds are quite limited," Autry .sakt. She was released after further treat- men t at the hospilal. ' ' . PUBL IC ACCESS BILL REJECTE D SACRM1ENTO (UPI) -.A bill ' requiring cities and counlies to reject building p e r m I t 'l , sub- di visions or zon ing changes which would cut off public acces! to the ocean or other larae water areas was dcleated Wednesday by lhe A""111bly. The bill by Assemblyman John Dunlap (D-Napa), was rejected on a 35 to · %1 vote, with -I votet ' needed for pessage. ' Marine Corpi Air Station Friday to betin a !().day work 11ession at San Clemente with tap adviser:s. Police Chief . Clilford Murray· d. San Clemente said there are no known plan11, a.s yet, for demonstrations near the Western White Hou.se. Mr. Nixon may return for a second lo-day ltllion In mid-August. A huge anti·war demonstration w111 (See NIXON, Pase I ) 0 Laird Sees Pre-Vietnam Numh'ers WASHINGTON (AP) -S.cretary ol Defense Melvin R. Laird said today draft calls for the rest of 1970 will average below 10,000 a month, a return to pre-Vietnam levels. Lttlrd made this forecast in a speech for about 550 stuaents worklhg as sum· mer interns with the government. "In the remaining months of this ye8.r,0 Laiid" said, J'I anticipate that .draft ~lla will aveia1e ~low 10,000 per month." In the past, he ·has predkttd ttiit total draft calla this year will fall betwem 150,000 and 170,0dO younf men COQ}J>Pred with the 290,000 drafted tn 1M9. Aides said Lai.rd still sticks to that 'forecast 111rough August, draft calls this year have totaled 124,500. In his ta lk, Laird assured the studenta that "We are doing all we can lo plan and implement a program that w!U r~uce draft calls to zero and enable us ta establish an alt.Volunteer fO~." But he cautioned that, in order to make the shift, Congress must provide a major increase In the deleQSe budget. Laird offered no forecast as to when this might happen. However, the trend is taward smaller defense budgets and atronier prell.Sure from Congreu to cut defense spending, Lower draft calls are tied lo the U.S. withdrawal from South Vietnam and a concurrent reduction oC total U.S. military manpower. The secretary stressed once again that by next spring U.S. forces will be down to 284,000 lroopa or fewer -abou t half lbe U.S. garrison in Vietnam when the Nixon administration took power in January 1969. Briefly mentioning the controversial Jncursion in Cambodia, which touched off widespread campus demonstrationa in May, Laird said: "Evidence rnultiplles that the President's strategy .and h1s doctrine are produc ing the desired results.'' The Pentagon dlief did not say what that evidence is, but he indicated he meant IOwer battle(leld castialUea ln the Vietnam war ·and forward movement In lhe troop withdrawal program. "Concern for the lives ol our (See LAIRD, Pase ZJ Ora•1e Coa1t Weather Overnight Jows along the Orange Coast are expected to be 57 to 6S degrees. 'Mle h1gb lire forecast 1t 7~ to 85. Low clouds and local fog night and early morning remain. iNSIDE TODAY Republican Stat-e Senators ore optimistic that Gov. Reagon~, $I billion tu reform plan will J><W. 8ut Dtmocrota o:rt Ju.st u opttm.iltic ·that 'ht11 will amtnd it. See •tor11 Paoe. 8. c........... • CfllctllJlf UtJ 1 Cl .. tllllllil 11.a c-iu H c~ 1• CHiii Mltk M II M tlWi.I "''" • 1111.nlW.-1 ,,... Plfln(e 11-U -,. ~ ........... ti l t DAILY PILOT SC ·'Everybody' ' Arrested lnOemente A mon wantod by pcili<:< In Boston ln a thoot1llg tncldenL there was aJTested In San Clemente eaily today in a roundup -which also netted several tunaway younpters and an alleged Marine -· Jticblrd Lawrance Beede, 27, wu ar- reMcf by detectfvu at 1:30 a.m. along with the other suspects at an apartment ~ JL 510 Avenida Estrella, occupied moetly hy employes of a nearby car wlllh. Beede, wbo now awaits extradition ........... tO M-ch-. WU • .,.. ed In a wllTlJl! IS$U<d In Bolton an.r a lho!>lllll ol .a man tllere urller thll •11Dmer. Details of the original incident In New EngJ•M Wtn not clear this morning, LL Rober,! 1(-.i lllld. Muon and several other officen at· rested the man and at the ectne found fllll Keot Micha~ Prosek, also In the apliat.neot, wu an alleged Mlime -from Cunp Pendleton. '!lie ,.,._....id 1tvkeman who bad bela wortizt« at the car wuh wa1 ar- -afliq with two !S.year .. ld n1111Way sl<IJ from central Calllarnla aiicl a !S.yeal'-old boy, Police said 'I1le yoat.bs were expected to be relea&o ed to lbair parenla alt<r being charged w1th curfew violation. In ail. 15 residents pf the apartmenl house ...... cbeollecl by poUCe in the morning raid. Beede will be returned to Boston. where he will face action for alleged assault-with a deadly weapon. Ff'Otll P.,e l DELAY ••• here they'ni all becoming • bunch of snobl," abe said. Jn another matter involvin& parking W-ay COl1lllllssionen delayed 1ctlon on plllll to aet up special parking zoning on land currently In u1e for parking Jn the city's busintss areas. The JrO!lOOll, illcluding letters senl to more than a hundred bu!ine111Den. lellDI to· be drawing little favor thus far. Commlalonen: have received seven t.u.r. aplnol tile SDlllOI and one in favor, but aaMI they would withhold a ncommendalion unW m«e letltrs and a conference with parking commissioners are completed. The ecmmlsslon will have the chance to bring the mallor up net W-ay nilbt -.,., -• joint lludy -with the psrldng -and citf C01"1Cihnen al the Munlclpel Goll QJurse dubhou,.. II) ~ . 1C1ion Wedneoday ...,,_ missioneri denied · a conditional UM ~t appllcation for motorcycle aervlce aiid repair at a converted gu olalloa UM! mos1 rectnOy u the hNdquarlerl ol lht Nixon'I Pol!>t Drill)vood Company whidl wenl de!W>CI sdJiDg ocrapo of lloUam. The originahpplicanl, Steven Kennedy, had med for the permit, but has aince niovecj lo Orepn. A new appllcanl ask! the new plans for the 1taUon are stricUy motorcycle asles which don' require a J)enntt al all. 'I1le commil&foners also approved a ti.go Ucfl>Uon aou&ht by Alpha Beta Actne Markets for a nine-month tern~ ~ary algn beraiding the construction ·of 1 a shopping center at 400 Camino de Eltnlla neor Shoreclllls. The u.wal ])IS'Dllulble time is ~ days for BUcb algnl. A request for a variance by manufac- tum ·w. A. Hall to ..,. a paved lol for con!ltrud.ion of J10rtable storage tank! also WIS granted by the commissioners. Hall will build the large tanks on wbeelJ at 144-152 Avtnkla Navarro on land zoned for llWIUfaclurin(. • DAllY PILOT ----c--" ............ ........ ,...., ... _ OltAHGI CO.UT ~ILISltlHG COM,ANY ae'eert N. WeM ,...,.....,, tfMI "'111111ht!' Jee\ l. Cvrfn \'Ice l'fu:-' ...... G«w•I M•,...., llto"''' K,..,u f:dllor ttio11111 A. M1r,hll11 ,..,...lrllt f:~llor ll1her4 P. Nill lovlll °""'" ~ llllltf -C..~tl MCMt 2)1 Wtll ll'I' $~1 H""""r .. Kfl: nu Wiit .. ..,, """"""' ~ '-": m "-' ""-~ .. du t1111 htdl ..,..,,.,.. ... '*"""* -~ Ill~ ... OllL'I '"ILOT, WI• w:tldl It COl'l'IWNd the Ne.,..•nu. 11 ~I~ d•ll'f vc-.t s- "' "' ... ,.,. Ulltll!lf. fll' ........ -.,:,h, .......... ~ (ell• Mae, """"'""'" .._ n lll\ll'IMll< Ylllly, .... •""' t'llll ......,.., e111..._ or-C..tt l"Wlltllll!t ~ .,...,.. """' -" nu ""' ~ IMI., N._.,. 1-11. w# a W.1 .., ,..,.., ea .. !Ntl. , .......... 17141 14Jo4Jll C~ AMttW., 641.1671 S. Ch I le Al hp."1W11Mi1 , ......... 492-4421 ~. ""' or~ c-1 """1111"" ~y. .. ,.,., sl•ltJ. 111111tr1tleiM. ="''=.:-..a;,.·:~....,..~~ ..... .,.....,.,,_., ._... , ........... " .......... .,. °"" .... Qll ........ 5'' •lllllcn ... WTlw ., ... -..liltfl ., --•.• ~· f!ll....,., ... ,.._.....,, u.• -""'· • --- T11nlor. Jol1 "· 1910 DAllY•,ILOT SMft l"Mlt' State (}et1 Fee taguna Teacher Firings Costly While looking over purchase order1 Tuesday nilnt, the Board of Trustees of the Laguna Beach. Unified School District noted that the state was '9«:in1 paid it,886 for services rendered during the !iri.Jlgs of high school i.osttuctors JaCJr. Krefting and Donna Lynde. The.. figUre cover.s tbe cost of court hearings for the teachers. held in Santa Ana, and the cost of a transcript {$680) in the Krefting case, which. I.he board ordered before .firing the high school music instructor.• Botl\ Miss Lynde and Krefting appealed· t.he high school's decision not to rehire them for the lflG.11 school year. After the hearings the Board of F.ducation upheld the high schoOl's decision not to rehtre. held. Se*il ieacbtrs. were citied to lest~y in the hearings. The board will also have to pay the cost of a court recorder hired to take down th.e proceedings of tb'"e meeting when Krefting was fired. CQ:st per .transcript page is ft.90. Orphaned Seal Set Loose Today The apparently orphaned baby ... 1 recovering from poeuinOni, at San Clemente lifeguard headquarters, will go for:. a pennanent swirit this. afternoon after qiaktng a swift recovery,'his hosts said today. · CAA PLANTED IN IVY AS DRIVER FAILS TO NEGOTIATE TEMPLE HILLS TURN Another ,cogt incurred during the hear· ings, was $8tlO for :M> da,ys of. irub6titute teaching, whlle .court proceedings were In fact, lifeguards repor:ted1 the finned waif is getting. just too .active ·to handle in his temporary quarters in the station's large garage. Michigan Leads Traced In Clemente Murder Case 2 Laguna Teens I Hurf in _Crash; Auto 'Planted'· From Page 1 NIXON ... I held outside the Western White House last August, Murray said his department tries where posaible to work out around rules Jn ' advance With groups that ·arr nounce plans to protest. This helps con· ''He would have been set l~e Wed. nesday but the vet said be shouJd stay around one more day to make sure he 's strong enough to swlm again," said one guard. ' - Th.e brown pup, found coughing and weak on Unda Lane Beach Monday .night .by Ufeguard F..d Marsh, hu hid antibiotic treatments and a steady ration of fresh anchovies and mackerel during his cOnvalescence. A po1ice investigator from S a n Clemente is in Michigan this week Jn an attempt to 'sift even the remotest Jeads on the vicious beatb1g and stabbing murder of Mrs. C.Onnie Lynn Johnson earlier this 1Ummer. Detoctlve Leonard Goodwin hu been 1n tbe mldwut ltate for the past several dayt delving Into the vlcUm'1 pul in her home ltlte. But officers here ssld Goodwin hu not yet elaborated on bJs filding.s. Mn. Jobnaoo, elib~weeU.pnpanl wbe:1 she wu beaten then repeatedly stabbed on a rnid.JW'lt morning wu the wife of a young Marine who told officers be found her nude aid bloody body 1prawled on the couple's bed as he relllrned fn>m 111ard duly In Santa Ana. Since then exhaustive efforts l>y dettc· Uva: led to the arrest of a 11-year~ld Marine cook from Camp Peldle!.on. bt.!t the youth was subsequently released and deemed not arre11ed. The man, Frankie Wayae Mellino, spent ·• weekend in custody. but was freed after the Diltrict Attorney's olllce declined to ilaue a complaint. Since that upect of the Case -oc- currine over the July 4 weekend - officwl. awaited the retul'I of tbe vie· lim'• bulbond, Mark Jolmaon, who flew back to San Clemente from MichigaA A pair of Laguna Beach teenagers trol the ~ituation. "So far we've always where he buried his high school escaped serious injury Wednesday af. had pretty good luck," he said. sweetheart. ternoon when their car went out of Mr. Nixon's visit, with wife and But subsequent interviews wllh the C1;>11trol on Temple Hills Drive and laid daughter, Tricia, is to include meetings Vietnam combat veteran apparently shed down 149 feet of skiQ marks before with top advisors and a heavy work little new light on the baffling case. coming to rest in a front yard, police load. The President plans Sunday, 'I1le major rniuitlg links· in the repori. however, to take a breather and attend eVidetce chlin of the murder are three jn number _ the large kllfe used to Driver Christopher T ~ om a s eun. a baseball game between the Angela inllict repeated stab wounds oll the nlngham, 17, of 1863 Temple Hills Drive, and Washington senators at Angel woman's neck, chest and abdomen, 1 told police he was descending Temple Stadium in Anaheim. tennis lhoe which made a dlstlngui'>hahle Hills Drive at 3:25 p.m. when be lost First Lady Pat Nixon said today that footprint in tbe kitchen sink of the control of the vehicle. Jt skidded across she and her husband will live in Califor- Johuoa 1tudio apartment ind the de1d nia after they leave the white House the roadway, clipped a car parked In h ~ woman'• wallet, mJu1n& from the crime but did not specify w ether "uat means acene when ))Olice arrived. the driveway at 1645 Temple Hills Drive San Clemente. Another important factor which may and came to a halt alongside it. It has been assumed by many locally never be cleared up ii the exact time The wild ride also damaged 8 tree thal the President's purchase last year of death of the brunette expectant nd the fro I th of the old Catton estate, in which he mother. a nt awn on e property, obviously takes pride, meant that he Countless houri of probing 1n the police said. would remain a resident in the post. neighborhood failed to yield ~y soild CnMfngbam's brother, Anthony, 13, a White House years, probably establish· indJcation of the euct Umt ot the brutal puaenger in the car, wu taken to ing a library nearby for his memoirs murder. a private physician for treatment of and mementos. San Clemente veterinarian Dr. C. C. Marsh treated the sad-eyed visitor free of ch.arge. The transition from lifeguard head· I quarters to "Marineland" w11 a rare one for the guards, who said they took this seal in because it had a definite cltance to recover. Many other less fortunate sick seals I are handled by Orange County Animal Control officers and humanely dispatch.ed if treatment seems futile , guards said. "We just ho~ we don't get flooded by requests to ·take in every animal we find on the beach," a guard supervisor said. "This one was enough to last us for a wh.ile." From Pagel LAIRD ... One couple Uvi"" nearbv came clostst Mrs. Nixon's reference to future came -' mmo· r •·•ur1·es 1 1 to ,. t · ·u g servicemen and for their safe return by nporting'1 to police that b:>th the °'""' • n rep y ques ions rom a VlSJ n husband and wife awoke at 5 a.m. on Pollet saJd the young driver produced group of 35 school teachers from Ireland, to the United States was the key decidin( ••-morninc ol the killing, but thty . The first lady's grandfather was Pat· factor to cause the President to conduct ult;' only a drivln" lnltruction pennit when · k R. u· f "-Co ty th 11· ·ted peration '" Camhod1·a " ~·1d not remember what cauaed them • r1c yan, an na ve o •• ,.yo un , e mi o ... , -ked l hJs li J land Laird said. I ~awaken. i~·~•;:::o:'::·:·:ce;::nse::.:::::::::::::::re:::::::·=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;-"Thlt'a just not enough to 10 with," a detective aJd later. • Consultants Back Major Joaquin School Changes ..JJ. J. (Jarrell~ 16th Semi Annual Sale By PAMELA HALLAN ot ttla 0.llJ .. 1111 Stiff A major reorganization of the San Joaquin Elementary SchoOI District ad· mlnillralion WU p...,,,..... Wedneoday to. the Board ol Trustees by a consultant firm , Ttie reorganization plan would spread the district's work load more evenly between the 1t1Jfel'intendent and two assistant . mperiotei:iicnts, giving the superintendent a more direct hand in l'llllning his schoob. 'l'he proposals were made by Les Glaspey, representing the firm ol Davis, McConnell and. RalSton. The fil'm was hired by the board to prepare a five-year organization plan for the district, which will reach 20,000 pupib enrolled at the end of tbal lime. Among recomrnendstiom lo< the 197(). 71 llChool ye1r was the creation of a departmenl of facilities planning to be under Rex Nerison, the ass i at ant &Uperintendeot for busine&s service.!!. Also under Nerilon w o u 1 d be the departm<DI ol food services and the department of maintenance and opera· lions to which would be added con- structioo supervision. Malltrs ol faclllUes planning and coo· M.rudion are llCM' being supervised by SupL Ralph Giiles. The report lndlcstes that by removing these c!Utles which occupy about 50 perceDI ol t h e superintendent's time, he would have more time to direcUy involve himself with principals and scool admlllisltaUoo. School principab currenlly r<port to Dr. William Stocks, the assistant auperintendent for educaUonal services . Dr. Stocks also oversees the departmesits of special Rl'lvces, cur. riculum tervices and persoonel. The rePoft indicates that the personnel senioes deparlmt11t should be removed to the direct · supervision of tbe BLAPtrlntendent and 1hat more attention should be given to non-teaching classified employes in the personnel department. Other rewmmendatJ<ll$ 1 n c I u d t crealing m«e poUcles for clearer direc- tions, directing the top adminlstralOrs to desianate someone as an understudy to 1ct In their place when they mud be absent, evaluaUng ctntrat office personnel and coordlnaUn& committee ldJvitie.s more cl0&ely. Fbture recommendations Include the addition (If a department of research and development under the aupcri~ ltndeol of edueaUooal servi<es and tbt • • addition of a supervisor of aCCt1Ur1Ung and budgeting Wlder the Ulistant s u p e r i ntendent for administrative itrvicea;, When enrollment reaches 15,000 the district should 1dd an associate sllPCfinlendent to serve as t h e superintendent's f\eld representative. The district al!D ·should add a purchasing and warehouse department. When enrollment reaches 17,000 a departmlnt of d at a processing should be added. The board said It wiU study the report and make recommendations at a future meeting. Capo Bay Urges Billboards Ban A campaign to b•n billboards and a publicity b<ochure for the CtPiltrano 81y ma m1y be flnt projects of a new alliance of Chambers of Commerce organized Wednesday. Leadtl's or the San Juan Capistrano, Capistrano Beach, Dana Point and San Clemente Chambers of Commerce met . Wednesday to work on structure of the new liaison group ind to outline projects of common concern. 'Ille tnU·blllboard effort WU -ested by Capistrano Beach Chamber which is seeking county bans of billboards on scenic El camino Real and county sections of Pacific COast Highw1y. In the meeting chaired by Bob Oakley oC San Clemente Chamber, propo511ls for the alliance ol the Chambers, bl· monthly meetings, two representatives plus alternates from each Ch1mber, and leadership rotating between the chambers each six months, were adopted for recornmendatiO'n to the particlpaUna: Chambers. ReptesenlltiV¥Js wW br\ng to the next meeUng 511ggestlons of l n d I v l d u a I chamber projec\S which may be broaden- ed Into area elforts, and suggested nlmtl for the liaison group. Attending the organltlng session were Dr. Robert Bttsley, Wlllilm Webb and Robert Oake.ly of S•n CJ t men t e Chamber; James Elliott ind Lyn Harris Hicks of Capistrano Beach CHambtt: Bruce Winton and Cl1ude John of San Juan Capi!trl!lO and HoYI Poot of Dana Point Ch1mbtr • Shown: 72'' rectangular table w/three 22" leaves. WAS NOW (seals 12) ........................... 469.00 375.00 Ann Chair •.••.•..••.....•..•.•..••• 169.00 135.00 Substantial savings on Madrigal bedroom, dining room furni\urt and occ1slon1I t1blt1. Heritage -1st Edition and Ch1mbr1y Mdroom1 dining room furniture and occ11IOt.1•I table• u to 1/J off w.s Matching side chair .............•.. 149.00 China 58'' ••..•..••.•.....•......... 909.00 78" Bullet .......................... 619.00 , .. 119.00 729.00 499.00 All Heritage upholstered furniture c1n be ordered at 15°/o off 1000. of fabrics to choose from. Herltlgti Bron1inl occ1sion1I tablH up to .1/2 off Your fa.vorit1 int1rlor dc1igMT will b• ha.pp11 to a.ssilt 11ou .•• H.J.GARRETf fURNITURE PROFESSIONAL INTEkiOR DESIGNERS 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA ~ESA, CALIF • 646-0275 ; ] ] " ~r II lu " " rlr Pl or j J . • • •• ' ~ .. -. "'l. ~· OA!Ll' ~ILOT St.ff,...,_ Artistry iti Building Brother .i\rt Inc., a two-story "country store" complete \Vith flags, metal sculpture and leather goods rises above the Sa\vdust Festival grounds in Laguna Canyon . Colorful assembly of artists and artisan,., i . ., having some problems this year ___, uninitiated tourists keep try- ing to buy the booths instead of the wares displayed in them. Laguna's Public W 01·l{s Plans to Be Told Mo11day A rost.cr of 23 proposed public works project.! fo r 1970-71 will be presented by Joseph Sweany, Laguna Beach direc- tor of public works. at a Laguna Pl anning Commission study session Monday. Fi(teen of the projects are new, lhe remainder rebudgeted from last year. Tola! expenditure involved in the pro- .. gram would be about $184,000. including Slt2,000 from gas tax and gas tax interest funtfs. 1'1ajor items in the proposed program are: Heisler Parle renovallon of guard rails 11nd wallc.ways and improvement of drainage system, as part of a five.year ~am to comply with State Division of Industrial Safety regulations -$12,000. Street resurfacing : conllnuation of resurfacing program, including Jasmine. Holly and Oak Streets and Coast View Drive -$22,4QO. Traffi c signal it Cleo Street and South Coasl Highway : city share o[ inslallation (50 percent) to be made by State Division of Highways -$10,000. Hillcrest Drive retaining w a 11 : reconstrucllon of wall near La Brea Street, damaged during ' 1969 rains - Sl:i,500, w i t h posSible reimbursement from federal or sta(e funds . Park Avenue curve: wide n Ing hazardous double reverse curve betw~ Hidden Valley and Tahiti Avenue, built al minimum width for economy _ but not. safely negotiable for !Choo! buses and large trucks -$30,000. Laguna Lifeguards Set P.ublic Shoiv Saturday ,Ulg'Wna Beach lifeguards will be oul in·. torce Saturday off Main Beach. but no to \l"ake rescues. Tqe ~ifeguards will hold their annual "MlOfislration Day." giving a eom- pre~n!lve diSfllay of ~ue techniques and lifeguard equipment. The program bceint at 9:30 a.m. DurJnll the 2lh hours or activities. lile'guf.nh will hold races between the rooki~ guards, the North Beach guard!! Mef· t.71e ;&ulh Beach guards. They \fill vy~f 'jivins in both board racing and ~wi in&:. ·, '~ ~the races, guards,v.:ill ~bow both ii.tandafd f'eSC:ues and rescues usini the landlliit:, followal by demonstrations of hw't~ '\Tiassage and mouth to mouth I resuscitalion. A rescue boat 1vill also be used in a display. 'Following the rescue boal display, lifeguards Dean Westgaard and Skip Con- ner will lake to the air in a Cessna 155, fly to s;ooo feet and parachute to the water. with SCUBA equipment, to demonstrate para-SCUBA rescues. Last on the morning's demonstration, riopular in years past. is a display from the Orange County Harbor Department fireboat. The boat will first be used 1.o pick up the chutes of the sky.-0i¥jng guard s. and will then· show the various procedures used to quell a blaze al sea. The public is invited to the Main Reach lifeguard tower lo watch the demonstration from the .Boardwalk. By Phil lnterl•nd! .. .I' ' '· ' T'Jlursd11, July 23, 11170 L ' ~ .. ' ' . , DAILY PILOT 3 CROSS MARKS THE SPOT WHERE THE OLO EL TORO STORI WAS IURIED -IN THE NAME OF PROGRESS ' History Piled Up Old Toro Stor.e Site Buried By JOANNE REYNOLM Of flle D.INr l"l._I S .. ff Motorist.! crossing I.he Santa fo'e Railroad tracks on the El Toro Road overpass are not likely to be impressed by the historical value of the tons or dirt that supJ>Orl the ramp near Front Street. Perhaps they would be n1ore impressed Ir they knew that mound of dirt covers v.·hal was once one of Orange County's most treasured landmarks. • Human Relations Group to Meet 111 Laguna Beach The Laguna Beach City Council's Human Relations Committee will hold ~ public meeting al I p.m. Friday in the Community Room ' of the Laguna Federal Building, chairman Charlton Boyd ha! announced . The committtt, one of four set up by the council to act as fact-finding bodies lo expedite council work, was organir.ed last week by Boyd and IS interested Lagun~~· It was decided lo divide Into four !II.lb-committees, tech working in a specific human relations area: physical health, behavioral llealth, aid to the needy and justi«. "We are anxious lo have all viewpoints represented," councilman Boyd said WedneSday, "and we will welcome public participation In the var Io us sub- committees." 1'he other city council committees are Natural Resources, headed by coun- cilman Roy Holm; Employment and Commerce, Peter Ostrander : a n d Cultural Arts -and Recreation, Edward Lorr. Victi1n 's Note Leads to Arrest In Murder, Rape HAUPPAUGE, N.Y. (UPI) -Adele Kohr, who tried to elude her killer by driving to a state park loll booth, wrote a note describing her assailant and his car when she found the booth unmanned. Police said the note led to the arrest \Vednesday of RObert Hans Meyer, 13. an unemployed laborer, on murder and rape charges. He was ordered held wilhout bail after arraignment. His bride of foor months, Linda, 19, 30bbed during the preliminary hearing. Miss Kohr, 20, was driving along the Sagtikos State Parkway late Monday night from her job aR a nursing assist.ant at Suffolk State School of the htentally Retarded when she realir.ed she was beJng followed. Instead of taking the exlt leading to her home, lhe pretty blonde turned onto a spur leading to the Heckscber Stale Park hoping to find safety at the loll booth at the park entrance. But the park was closed and the guard at the toll booth had j u s t left duty, His replacement wasn 't du11: for another several minutes, police said. 'Psycliedelic' Shops Protected LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A Superior Court judge Wednesday ordered authorities in Sou!h Gate not to Interfere with 1 h o p s tipeclaUzlng in psychedelia. Judge Richard Schauer issued a wrlL ordering the city to grant a permanent license to Inner World , a shop which sells incense, water pipes and psychedelic lights. The license was denied Dec. t by the South Gate City Council despite advice against such action by Its City Attorney's Office and police department. Inner World then filed a tiuit which alleged the council 's denial wa&~ based on a personAI report from one of its members. Mrs. Ruth E. Wakef~ld. The suit said !he to~ the council the pipes could be used to ITT'IOke ha3hish, the lnctnae to disguise marijuana furnf'~ ·and the lighting effects to produce an unhealthy effect on mlnort . The El Toro store occupied lhe corner ot El Toro Road and Front Street in El Toni for nearly 90 years ·before it was torn down in 1961 to make room for progress in the form of a railway overpass. The store was built In 1387 when a short.Jived land boom sent speculators into the rural area looking for place~ to raise vegetables, citrus fruit and livestock. It was torn down In 1968 when anolher land boom sent speculalors into the same area looking for places to build horn~ . While it stood, the store was a gather· Jng place _for local residents and farm and ranch hands as well as touris.b who wen attracted to the quain~ country .Ii lore. Originally, built by El Toro pioneer 0. D. Fairchild, it was a two-story slructure that served as a hotel and poi;;t office as well as a general store . In those days, El Toro was not much more then a train and stage coach stop and Fairchild was the Santa Fe lllationmaster. The two-story building burned down in 1917 and was replaced with the single story building that existed until recently. Even as housing development.! began. to go up around IL. the wide porches of the store were still favored by locals as a place to sit and gossip. People came from as far away a,; NewJ>Ort Beach and Costa Mesa to shop in the cracker 'tiarrel atmosphere . , . . Toward the end of its long history, the El Toro store was owned and operated by Mr. and Mrs. William Bur· rows'. of Laguna Beach , who also grew oranges io surroul)ding·groves. Following h1c. Burrowe' death, the store was sold by the late Mrs. Burrow.~ and her daughters, wtio had mide it a family operation. In 1963 ~e Deane Brotheri1 de.velop- ment company bought the store along with a large portion of land ir\ the area that has sinct become the Lake Fore'st development. fi'ive yeafs later, the firm llOid tile land to the county and the old El Toro st.ore became 1 memory. DAIL l' PILOT ll•fl Plltle DIN OF MODERN EQUIPMENT DROWNS ECHOS OF PAST Site of Famed El Toro Store Now a Ramp for 1 Bridge Rock Conce rt La.iv Faces R~isions A proposed county, ordinance aimed . ' at cleaning up O\\ldoor rock concert!! h8s aone back. to the courity C01.tnse1·~ of rice 'for a.' llt'1e c1e"ailing up . suggested by Supervillor Robert Battin. Battin rejected the suggested measure . for the lecOrid Successive weei with the comment that It should be made · •·morj! ~stitutionally realiOTlable.1'. He 11ISo urged the inclusion of. suggcption~ offered when the ordinance was debated by lhe board. Prompted by recent incidents at an Anafleim Stadiuni rock concert, the meastlre sets .stiff guidelines fQr san.ita· lion; policirig ·and su'pervision of' lari• outdoqr gatherings in Oranle cOuilt)'. , ' . . .. EVERY FRIDAY EVENING-All .SUMMER 9 P.M.-ON THE MALL · AT F'AS,l(l()N ISLAND . ' . FRIDAY, JULY 24: Disney-"Toot, Whistle, Plunk & Boom" "Pigeon That Worked a Mlraci." FRIDAY, JULY 31 :, Dliney -"Nlok" and "Red Balloon" ' FREE 1 hour "FILM-O·RAMA"· spons~red by Falllion Island In cci- operatlon with the . Alidlo·Vlsiial Department of the Newport Beach Ubrary and the Santi. Film Circuit. 1-' Free Band Concerts Every Monday Ni9ht -9:00 P.M. 58 Fine Stores ind Services • Open Friday 1nd Monday night• FASHIONj.ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER Paclllc Co11t Highway-Between Jamboree and MacArthur • f ' I --. -----~ 4 DAILY PILOT (c..I ... .., ... DeffJ ... """ Cl1udo Rollin of Orleans, France, with 30 square inches of gleaming scalp, has won the tiUe of the Most Handsome Bald Head of France. The Brotherhood of Bald Hellls, assisted by colleagues from Switzerland and Belgium, met in Villechauve for their annual elec-- 1i6n and wine-sampling feast. Villtcbauve in English means "city of b&ld heads." • One oJ the" t:ducational e:e- , hibit.s at "Man and his World,"' &he ptNtnicL IMCC't8B01' oj Expo 67 in Montreal, if a drug exhibit . featuring dirplqs of rt'al drug1. s .... one stole th< fiWJ LSO.laC<!d IUOlf' ca&be1 recentl~. The .wga, cUbca . totre rtplacemtnh, puc tMrc afttr thUvt1 took the original mw:1 lMt 11ear. • Tlw....,, JulJ ZJ, 1970 Too Mani Lo••e• U.S. Withdraws From Fire: Base ~ SAIGON .(AP) -Heavy North Viel· namese fire that tu.led e1 Americans and WO\l.lded 34.5 ii the arta Jn the past three weeks forced the UoUed Stales today to abandon a patrol base ln the northwealern sector of llOUth Vlelnam. The U.S. U.0.,0 hutily pulled out of Fire Bue Ripcord near the LaoUan border, spiklnl aome of their O'<''n artillery, leu Ulan 24 boun after a patrol operating a mile away suflered Hijackers Get Hero W elco1ne From Egypt . the heaviest causalUes in a iln&le actio1 l• Z\I month3. The U.S. Command, revW., Us casualty figures , sakl 11 Amtncans were killed and 51 wounded in a mortar and ground au.ck Wednesday on a patrol oper,aUng a mile from the bUe. -Y loues were unbown. 1be CODlIDIOO earlier had listed six WOWl.ded. A· command spokesman said CR47 Chinook helicopter was shot down during the evacuation but there were no casualUes. The base wu evacuated under enemy fire, and at least three more Americans were killed and 20 wounded in l the withdrawal. • The base, on a t ,000..foot ridge aorth oJ the A Shau Valley end 13 miles from Laos had been in ope.ratlOll for tbe past 31 months and had been undtr mortar siege since July J. Troops ,of the IOlst Airborne DlYis.ion operaUng in and around the base screen-- ed enemy infiltration corridors Jead.l•g from Laos and North Vietnam toward South Vietnam's northern coast. ; llford, Encland police have wam-id bu!inessman to beware of a iang of pretfy girl thieves. A ~esman said one of the mini .. ikirted gills usually enga11es a lalellXWl in conversation wbile the ~ll!en steal the 'oods. VIET CONG PRISONER BROUGHT IN FOR QUESTIONING Captured at Sr"ang, Wounct.d Enemy llinclfolffd for Trip to Headqu.rtert. CAIRO (UPI) -Guerrilla Officials said today the EIYJ>ljan government wa!I treating as guests sil: Arab commandos who won the prmiised release or seven colleagues by seiri.ng and threatening to blow-up a Greek airllntr and all aboard at Athell$ Airport. The guerriDa officials said the sii: commandos, who included a leggy bk>nde girl, reeeived a hero's welcome from a high official of the , Arab Socialist Union, Egypt's only political party, on their arrival Wednesday night aboard their hijacked Olympic Airw1ys Boeing 721. As one officer put it, the paratrCk.lpet~ were to "keep track of what 's going: on and to prevent the North VJe ,;iameee from moving into the lowlands where all the population is." It was the first time since Nov. 2 that U.S. forces had abandooed a patrol base under enemy pressure a n ti deslroyed the guns to keep them ouL of enemy hands. FBI Study Says Guard S1wotings 'Unnecessar y' Slain St11dents Honored On Wednesday the enemy sprung an ambush as the patrol was oper<1tin& a mile east of the base. I AusLralian Carol Ryon, 22, has ... t henelf on the Brilllh marria11e twketalongwlth 'UO and a year's 4ilpply of beer. She Hys her per- lillf lo stay in Britain has run out ind she must find a British hus-1end if she'wants to remain here. In Kansas Town Funeral Qu~stioning (If the six by Egyplian ~ecur1ty men at a secret destination probably will be short, the guerrilla officials said. The decision to pull out of Ripcord apparently was a f.oI>-level ome aimed at avoiding criticism in the United States of a prolonged siege such as the 77~ay one at !be old Marine base at Khe Sanh farther to the north in 1968. • • ~Legislation signed into Jaw re- cenUy by President Nixon will per- lillt 205 Japanes e people to immi· i rate to the United States from the Bonin Islands. located about 600 miles southeast of Tokyo. The Japanese national. who trace their ancqµy to American saiJors, lived from l MI to 19116 under U.S. Navy supesvi.!ion. • A 4*1>9t1nd boll was born in Wintta"n-SOltm, N.C. 1'tctntly with a bulltS hole in his Ifft foot -a day ajUr his mother WCI .shot in the .stomach in an GrOVnNn& with a man. Both the fnfom. born a month prmuiture· i11. aM the mother, w~e report.. ed in ralllfactoT11 condition. • When Jthn Smith, 39, ol Notting- ham, Elllland, went on hi> honey- moon with hi> fia nce, Carol Shep. l>onl, 23, last week, he look liq her parent.a:. 111 get on ao well INith Carol's parents that I agreed fight away they should come on our honeymoon,'' he said. : . : The Lipperts cl Buffalo, N.Y. bow ire in their 5lst year of mar- t1ed 1ife-all four of them. Mlc:liHI G. Lippert married Marga .. 1 Schmidt and hi> brother, loul1 I'., Wed her sister , Emm• Schmidt~ in Buffalo July 14, 1920. The brothers are retired contractors. : . · stanningley, England post office 1>fficiais have threatened to fine iaraae oWJJer Fred Matthews J>e.. cause he painted a telephone pole out.side his garage to improve its appearance. Post officials said the paint job makes tt impossible to x:beck for rot. AKRON, Ohio (AP) -An FBI report on the May 4 &hooting deaths of four students at Kent State University ha!I concluded that the shootings were ... not necessary and not in order," the Akron Beacon Journal said today. The newspaper said in a copyrighl story that FBI agent! have concluded t h a t Ohio National Guardsmen w er e not surrounded by demonstrator!I, had not run out of tear aas and could have controlled the situation without shooting. More than 100 FBI agents investjcat.ed the May 4 shootings, wtiich came ai. guardsmen moved '° break up a crowd ol demon.!lralon,. I The Beacon JOc!rnaJ said the FBI'• 7,500-page report wu summarlud In a JO.page report w!lldl said: ...... About 200 dtrmnltraton who were heckllnc IUardainell could h ave been turned bock l! armu had been made or more tear gas fired. -1bat no guardsmen w~e hurt by !lying rocka or prOjectU.., and none waa In danger ot Joaing hi.a life and there waa no haU of rocks before the -I'· -That one 1uardsmen fired al a student m.Wiig an obocene gmure and another fired at a student preparin1 lo UJmr a rock. National Guard ofricia11 contended altertbe shootincs that their mm hid been surrounded on three sides, that each of aome 100 men in the rorce involved had been hit by thrown object.s and that the men fired because they felt their lives were endangerd. The newspaper said the report was •igned by Jerri& Leonard. chief or the Juatice Department civil rights division. It aatd Jt had learned that the report listed names~ ranks, and addrts!es of si1 guardsmen in connection with the shootlnp. The Beacon Journal says the report raises the question of whet.hoer or not t h e sllldent-cumlsmen CO!i-.ition cookJ be eort!idered a riot. It !laid that report asserted that guardsmen could be charged only tr riot conditions did not er.isl LAWRENCE, Kan. (UPI) -Students and townspeople today honored two university of. Kansas students -one black and the other whJte -slain during a week ot violence in the small colle1e community. Funeral proce~ons were set for Rick Donald Dowdell, • Nerro -lo d .. th by a policeman a week ago, and Harry Nick Rice, killed Monday night during a conrrontation between youths and police. A county coroner's jury Wednesd1y night e1onerat.ed patrolman William Gar- rell ln the death ol Dowdell. U has Gas Bombs Empty Parliament LONDON (AP) -An unidentuied man threw twO 111 bombs into the House or commons today, drivin& members from the ancient cbamber amid clouds of smoke. Couahlng and with eyes streaming, the members of the mother o f parliamen~ ran Into the corridors. The acrid smole billowed upward, fore· ins visitors and newsmen from their galleries and temporarily shutting down the house. The bomb-thrower tossed the canisters of aas·from the viJit.ors' pllery shouting : "Qel(alll. See bow yo11 IiJ<e It" He aPJWmtlY referred to the &as Britl.sb troops have been using to quell rioters ln Belfut, the Northern Ireland capital, during Roman Catholic-Protes- tant feuding. 1be House of Ccmmons had been scheduled to debate the case or the imprisoned member of the House of Commons from Northern Ireland. Miss Bernadette Devlin, a leader of Catholic civil righ~ movements. Becky Spawns Rain, Wind Wet Weather, Unseasonable Cold Invades Nation California Pl(Yl(W Of au Wl &?Nl•IUlillAUrOMWT TO 1:10•.M. EST 7 .. z4 ~10 Tempe rat ures M&n\lfW dovct. O!'ld lltory •lhrno.11 .u1111!!oe c;:antlnued "''-"°"' SOutht r11 Ctllforftlt too'IV II l .... 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First Mt~ SICONI flit~ . 1«1"1111 '"" rllDAY S\lf! lllsn S:MI t "'· M-l !Mt H !lf 11.m. l.S llf'W.r. Anoolllltr l•hler wh~h •" Stl! L•~1 C"!I., CeMl>llllN 11'11 1Wn1 C!ttlr...,ta lfl•fl S1n Ditto t:ot t ,l!I. 1,1 llomet In l"tlMICU. Fii. Ho J.r.!111"!1.t $111 l"r11KIK1> '-00 1.111. 111 '"""' rl'CIOf11d. S111I• ltt1H•1 ~·q ~.m. St Alhr111, G•.. htd lllOtn tr..ri 011t St1ttl1 11 :7• I.Ill. O.t ·~ft ot ••111 1,, JIJ """'" •••IV lodn. $1ooll•oe ....... p ""· MeP '°'I" """" l'llf.l\tl ot •• 1.. "" .,..,. ...... Slit ll:l)f.111. U f1H1ri.1-, flit., Wllllnttdt1. Wt1hht1loll • Hiii! l"" l"tK, ,, .. '' A. .15 '' Ml 1.1' IOI 7S u ~' ~· ., " " n st " " II •t .2t " " .. " J6 •l M " I'll JS .8' ~ " u .. u " UIS •1 u " M JS .10 ,. ~· " .. " " " " " ,. .. ,. ti l l . .. IOI 110 " " II 51 "' .. ~ " .. ,. " " h ., " .. A) l' It S1 " ,, .. " 1r~ u " " •• .. not been determined who fired the shot !hat killed Rice. Dowdell's funeral procession was pat. lerned alter that ol. Martin Luther King. An old fann wagon, draped in black and drawn by two black farm horses in bla ck harness, was brought to town to carry Dowdell's body. A memorial march along with the Rice funeral process.ion was arranged by Rice's father and approved by city officials. Another march, organized by a group or youths calling tbemselves the ''Street People," was planned at the same lime a!I OowdeU's funeral procession. The "Street People's" march did 00\ have the sanction of police. George Kimball , the self·procJaimed Ja.ader of the "Street People ," Wednesday caJJed the two deaths "cold blooded murders." City official11 blamed Kim- ball's group for the disturbance in which Rice was killed. Do~ll was killed in a Ne1ro section of Lawrenct, across town from the univers.ity, Rice died just off campus. Egyptian officials felt the commandos 1'had a cause" -the release of seven commandos under arrest in Greece - the Arab guerrilla ofifdaJs said . The pl~ was hijacked on a flight from Beirut to Athens with a total of 66 persons aboard, including four Americans. All of the other passengers and Dlle crew member were allowed to leave the plane before it took off from Athens for the Middle East. A! a hostage, the guerrillas took along Andre Rochat, bead of the Red Cross for the Middle East. Alihougti the plane's de!ltination was given as Beirut, it merely circled ovtr the airport and tllen new on to Damascus, Syria. It did not land at Damascu.s either, flying around Uie aif1Xlrt whUe the hijackers spake to the control lower and praised Syria's support for the Palestinian revolutionary movement, according to an airport of· ricial. The plane then Oew on lo Cairo where it landed about three houl! after leaving Athens. marlin ; SEMI-ANNUAL FACTORY AUTHORIZED New dim1nsion1 in comfort •re yours for y••rs to come with the m • n y spec.i •lly pric1d l•-Z-Boy R1clin•-Rock1rs. This is • onC•·•·Y••r opportunity to put comfort •nd be•uty into your home •f subst•nti•I s1ving1. Wike up your room dtcor with the ch•ir th et responds to your 1v1ry wish ••• rocking, TV viewing, lovn9· ing, even full bt d, r1clinin9. Ourin9 this factory •uthori11d ,.1., the ft mous La-Z-Boy R1clin1- Rock 1r1 •r• all on 1•11 at s•vings from $30.00 to $70.00. Hurry during our Store-Wid• 1111 for bt at sel1ction. Style 833 The Khe Sanh base was abandoned, but American commanders drew sharp criticism from some quarters for allow- ing U.S. troops to become bogged down in a defensive position. * * * U.S. War Deaths Reach 43,000 SAIGON (UPI) -The number of Amer.ieans killed in almost 10 year11 of fighting in Southeast Asia passed the 43,000 mark last week. with tbe deaths of 66 Gls, the U.S. command ii;aid today. Another 619 servicemen were wounded as the casualty toll declined rrom the prtvious week's 72 dead and 729 wounded. The only other full week of 1970 when American losses were lower was in the seven days ending July 4 when 61 men died in action and 463 were wounded -the lowest for American forcts in more than three and a half years. Co•tn ~lean'• Olden Bo11te •Om11e i E'11r11lture Sta r e! PHONE · 548·5131 1865 HARBOR BLVD. e DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA , , ' j ' f I ' i l I I 11 u • ,, • n <;: 0. J> " cl •1 N c "' " .. f f j loo E< we <O' I m< I I S: l wh Or Ill lri J Hil ' ~ , Ill ! an 16.• ~. sat ; "°' , be Today's Flaal San Cle111enie Ca istrano EDI TIO N voe 6), NO. 17 5, ) SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1970 TEN CENTS Nixon Clemente-bound, Face·s Utah Protests By RICHARD P. NALL 01 1M O.llY ,lttl lttff Al officials In Orange County prepare for a routine arrival by President Nixon Friday night, a different type reception was being hatched by dissident eltments in S&ll Lake City. Leaflets have apewed forth calling for · a Yippie nude-in and denouncing the ~liMnt. Decorated with undergrol.lld drawio.is, as Limited Drilling the pamphlet. dedare that 5,000 slMed SAlt Lake fre&b will "strip and tt.nJ.t" during Mr. Nixon's visit. . The Weatherman, a violent faction oC Studenb for a Democratic Society (SOS), claims it will hold a anake dance through the ground.a oC the Mormon Temple in the heart of the city, '111is, they It.ale, 11 to llhow support of the Black Panthers l;nd all third world llberatioo strugglt1. • Ill Hickel Endorses Oil Lease Cuts ' ; WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary ol Interior Walter J. Hickel has endorud the cancellation of 20 federal oil lea~ and continued drilling under ltrict regulation to prevent future blowouts and pollution in the Santa Barbara chan- ntl off the California coast. Hickel urged a Senate Interior 1ub-- ~mittee Wednesday to act promptly on a bill spoMOred by Sen. Geor1e Murphy tR-C1m.) The rneasur•. would cancel · 20 cf the '0 federal oil leases in I.be Santa Barbara channel and pay the holdera from a special account built by oil sales from Naval Petroleum Reserve No. 1 M California. nie bill, one of six before the kl~ committee, also would create a national energy reserve of 198,000 acftl seaward cl the CalUornia atate Santa Barbara County Tax Cuts Seen By Hinshau' By TOM BARLEY Of tM ~"' ..... '"" • A nine-cent tax cut seems certain today for Orlflle County taipayers as county officials took a closer look at the statewide aurvey that made the reduc:tion possible. County AssesM>r Andrew J. Hinshaw today confirmed that if State oBard of ~ Equaliz:.ation asstSSments are accurate Jt wou1d not be necessary to levy 1 special eountywide !Chool tax this year. That tax amounted in t96t-70 to slightly more than nine cents on each flOO of ~ 1ssessed value, the assessor aa.KI. The tax reduction became inevitable when the state agency disclosed that Orange County's asst.Ssment ratio for 1970-71 was 2.1.S percent. Thi! compam j with a statewide average of 23.1 percent. Oil Sanctuary. Some of the other bills call for cao- ce.llation of all 70 leases. Hickel said oil production should con- tinue on leases where. a 1169 blowout caused •pills ia order to relieve pressure and reduce the dan&er of further aeep1ge and pollution. •·we have increased oor inspection forct.S to ensure eoippliance and . early detection of any J. milha;pl," Hickel 1es11ne<1. William T. Pecora, U.S. Ge?,lortcal Survey dlrector, said that seven eJ- ploration ftlls had been drilled, but none waa In. procNcUon , on the jO leases proposed for canctllaUon. Hiclcel and Murphy Wl!f'e the only witnesset among 25 heard at the two-<11y he.aring to give unqualifJed tupport to the Murphy biU. Many other wltneues said more than 20 le.alt& lhould be c1nceled. Sen. Alin Cran,,ton and Rep. John V. Tunney, California Democr1ta, recom- mended their bllb which would cancel most of the leases and create a federal· state sanctuary program along the Califomia coast. The federal sanctuaries would extend seaward from existing state aanctuarles. Tunney said the Murphy bill "could well have been written in the board J'OOrT1 of a large oil oompany1' because it would shut down unproductive wells and permit all other offshore drillin1 to cmtinue. Tunney ls Rtkinr Murphy's Senate seat. Cranston said the Murphy bill is a .. step in the right direction" but it "falls far short of what ls netded and "It is not 1n adequate safeguard against the threat of future SanLa Barbara catastrophes." Rep. Charles M. Teague (R.Calif.), testified in support of Santa Barbara legislation he is sponaorinr. A apokesman for a group of 11 oil companies holding Santa Barbara cha~ nel leases urged th1t the Murphy bill be expanded to include payment.a for their un productive leases. Jofln Ohl said the Pauley P!lroleum Co., and 10 other firms bid •n million for their leases. The small operators were shut doYm by the lnlerior Dtpartmenfs new regula- tion which make ~tr leases unecooomlc, Ohl added. ' 1be President la to laod Friday evening at Ute Salt Lake International Airport. He has planned a brief visit wlµi leaders ol the Olurch of Jesus Q\rist ol Latter- day Saints and is to attend a rodeo at downtown Salt Palace, Paul Taylor, spokesman for a coalition of groupa, aaid they would demonstrate at the Hotel utah acro&s from the Mormoo. Temple Square w.here the Presi- dent plans the confertnce with Monnon ra . I leaders. Taylor said the group was made up oC the United Front to End the War, Mormon! Against the War, and YOWlg Republicans Against Vietnam Com-· mitment. There has been liUle anli-war violence in Salt Lake City in the pas~ and there was no assessment of the effectiveness of the plans to disrupt the President's visit. · The YOWll Republican Federation has INlOWICed plans for a rally in. support of_ lhe President. It is sponsoring ~n "Honor America Rally '' about an hour after Mr. Nixon's scheduled arrival. The rodeo' and other festivities are an annual celebration marking the . set- tlement of Salt Lake Valley in 1847 by the Mormon i)ioneers. Mr. Nixon will board Air Force One after the ' rodeo and fly <11 to El Toro s Marine Corpe: Air StaUon Friday to begin a ID-day work session at San Clemente with top adv isers. Police Chief CIU!ord Murray oC San Clemente said there are no known plans, 1s yeti for demon1tr1Uons near the Western Wh te Hou.se: Mr. Nixon may return for a second lo.day aession in mid-August.· A huge anti-war demonstration wu (See NIXON, Pap 2) 0 Laird Sees Pre-Vietnam Numbers WASHINGTON (AP) -Secr.W)' ol Defense Melvin R. Laird said today draft calls for the rest or 1'70 will average below 10,000 a month, a return to pre-Vietnam levels. . Laird m1de. this forecast in a 1peech -··· for about 550 students working u sum· mer interns wllh ,the 1overnment. , DAILY. PILOT,Sllff P"91e "In . the remaining months o[ this yea r," Lair'd said, "1 anUclpate that drift calli will . averaae belOw-10,000 per month." · In ·tht past, he .has 'predicted that _ total dralt calls thiJ year will fall between 150.000 and 170,000 young men compared wllll Ille no,ooo dralled iD JllU. Aides said Laird still llicks to that ·rore<::ast. Through August, draft calls thls Year have totaled 124,500. In his talk, Laird assured the students that "We are doing all we can to plan and Implement a program that will reduce draft calls to zero and enable us to eslabllsh an all-volunteer force." But he cautione.d that, in (lrder to make lhe shift, Congress must provide a major Increase in the defense budget. A Gathering, of Turtles Fire trucks from ~all over Orange County lumbered up the hill to Top ol the World School in Laguna Beach Wednesday in a colorful show of force. Jt was au part.of a drill ,designed to' familiarize rleighbor- Jng fire department personnel with the intracacies of fighting a possible brush fire in or near the city. Laird offered no forecast as to when this might happen. However, the trend ls toward smaller defense budgets and stronger pressure from Congress to cut defense 19pending. . ' Clementean Wins Delay Of 'Snobbish' Trailer Law Charging that ·• proposed code strictly regulating trailer, boat and camper park4 ing on private land was communistic and anobbi.9h, a San Clemente woman won a planning c.nnmission delay on the matter Wednesday. Mr1. Fem Dickson, the president or a local rockhound club and a camper owner, charged that the city is bei:omtng snobbish with the reeidence of President Nison and a.Malled tht code and said ahe was "ashamed of.San Clemente.'' After hearing the spir ited speech at the public hearing oon the ·ordinance commisstoners agreed to continue the hearing for three weeks until the ~ext meeting. Commissioners hope to resolve some aspects of the rules setting up re'gulalions on where and how the vehicles can be parked . "We moved to San Clemente because 'people were friendly, but 'with Nixon (See DELA 'I<, Page I) c Girl Hitchhik er Leaps From Car; Driver Soug ht A 21·year-old woman hitchhiker who leaped from a moving car near Crystal Cove Wednesday afternoon, was given fi rst aid by L,aguna Beach firemen bt(ore being taken to South Coast Community ·Hospital, police report. · . Witnesses who brought. I.he vic;tim (o Laguna Beach said they saw her jump . from a moving vehicle . after it ra,n . into a fen<:i! on Coast Highway at ap- prOximate ly 2:30' p.m. . Lower draft calls are tied to the U.S. withdrawal from South Vietnam and a concurrent reduction of total U.S. J'nilltary manpower. The secretary stressed once again that by next spring U.S. forces will be down Lo 284,000 troops or fewer ~ about half the U.S. garrison in Vietnam when the Nixon administration took 'power in January 11169. Briefly mentioning the cootroversial lncUJ1sion in Cambodia, which touched off widespread campus demonstratiorut in May, Laird said: "Evidence multiplies that the President's strategy and his doctrine are producing the desired results." The Pentagon chief did not say what that evidence. is, but he indicated he meant lower battlefield casualties in UM Vietnam· war and forward movement in the troop withdrawal program . ''Concern for the lives of our (Seo LAIRD, P11e 21 j · "Let's say you own a $24,000 home,'' Hinshaw said . "We try to achieve a .. ~ percent ·ratto ol assessed value to .i fa.Ir market value and this would give yoolu ' an 1uessed value on yoor property 16.000. "ThLs would mean a savings of about ts.50 on yoor tax ·bill, the aSM:ssor' uid. But ht pointed oul that the overall :; county tax for 1970-71 still remains to "' be sel. Lagunans Push Greenbelt The male driver got out and threaten«! ·the woman with a knife as they ap- proached, the witnesses said. Fire Chief Jim Latimer, who helped give the woman · nrst aid for abrasions : ()n her back while the witnesses made their report to police, said she told him she was from New York, but now lives in Lagun1 Beach and had been ' hitchhiking from the Newport area whe.n the incide nt occurred. Oruge We•ther Ceut L PILOT A D WOR KS 'SEW' PERFEC I'LY Nothing "'1&-so" about this 1d to ftnd someone to sew : Seamstress -Exp'd lo do piece work at home. cau XXX-XXX. That hard-working UUJe ad ln the classified ttction ol the' DAU. Y Pilot, in only two a~arancet, picked up 75 applicants. "r never expected that kind nl action," 11ald the advertiaer. Action Is just waiting for you, too. Call &4U178, the direct lll'lfl lo reaull.,. A DAILY PlLOT ad-visor will help you write •di that are anY· thing but ......... " ·-.. -.. ' Dilley's Group Hopes for 520-Acre Prese rve By FREDERICK 8CHOEMEHL Of, .. .,.,.., , .... l t•ff CiUzena for the Lquna Gte;enbell to- day are hoptful that they may ha ve 1 chance to acquire the Sycamore Hills property, a trlaniular UO.-acre plot ln Lagun1 Canyon, and add it to the group's planned open 11>1ce around Laiuna 11 .. ch. The properly w1s marted for develop- ment <Jf housing and a lhoppfn1 center. bot the owner of the land, Great Lakes Property, Inc., ha1 aareed to p.Jt a 31klay hold on the land, 10 that lht Greenbelt commltlff can explore tht feosib!Uty of ocqulaltlon. Acconllng lo Jam" Dilley, IO<ttWy t.o the Cilluns for the Laguna Greenbelt. 111< IJ'OllP has contacted Moyor Richard ) - Goldberg and requested him to authoriz~ the city plaMinc department ·to seek federal funds for the purdlase of the Great Lakes pro"perty. • The last price quoted on the land wa r M.5 million in February of 1969. Dilley also aald that the committee ls lftPl!ed to appeal to Laguna citizens for funda, If Ii federal grant would only be made on a mitching fund basl!. City planner Al Autry said this morning that be had not been aulhorlied as , yet by the Mayor to begln inve1tig~Ung the acquilltJon or the land. He DOted that any kind of application for the acqulslUan ol 111< prwer\y Would have to have officlal backln1 of the City CouncU. · "l would Uh to tel up 1 m .. tinr ... . -. with the agenc ies that a:re Involved," Autry said . 11 he does receive aulhoriution to begin an investigation into ac:qulsiUon or the property, Autry II.id he would set up such a meeUng with the Depart- ment of Housing and Urban Develo~ ment, the Southern California Association of GovemrnenU!i. Great Lakes Properties, Jnc. and the Orange County Planning Department. Autry noted that acquisition of the •land 1with govenWent fi.a,da would M ~tingent upan ~lanned ~evelopment towards a recreation~ ma. \ · "We·would apply f<>t one Qf .the grant.! ·provided for open space from lhe (ederal ~vernmenl The state-is another possibility, 'but-I. underatand that their funds are quile limlttd.''.AUlr)' aai4.1 She was released after further treat· : ment at the hosp~tal. PUBLIC ACCESS BILL REJEC TED SACRAMENTO !UPI) - A bill' requiring cities and cowilit1 to n!ject buUdlng p e r m I t s , su\>- dlvisions· or zoning changes1 whlc'h would cul '()ff public accer to 't6e octan . or otk~ large water· 'areas wa.s defeated Wtdn,eda)' tiy · the Asaembly. 'J.'he, bUI by A!semblyman John· 'Dunlap '(l).Napa), was rejected on 1, "5 to 27 vote, with ·41 votes needed for pa.uage . . Overnight lows along the Orange Coast are expected to be 57 to 65 degrees. 'Mle high are forecast at 75 to 85. Low clouds and local fog night and early morning remain. INSIDE TOD.4.1" Repubtica" State Senator" are optimileic tha£ Gov. R1aoan11 $1 billion tax r1jorm plan wiU pa&$. Bue Dtm0eraU are jU3t a.t optimUtic tllat thev will amend it. Set a'torv Page 8. J DAILY PILOT SC 'Everyb ody' Arrested lnOemente 'A ,... wanted by police In Boston IA a lbootiaa Incident there waa arrUtecl tn San' Clemente early today lo a roundup 'ttblch allo netted several nm1way ~ and an alleaed Marino -· IUimrd LlwranOI Beede, 27, w.u ar- rested by detective.s at 1:30 a.m. along with the other IU!pects at an apartment bc:Mlll al 510 Avenida Estrella, occupied IDOltl)' bf employes of a nearby car wash. Beede, who now awaits e:ztradlUon proceedlnp to Muaachuaetts, WU nam· M in a warr&N: lsaued in Bolton alter a "'°'*'DI of a man there earlier tllll ·tummer. Deta.ila of the orJginal lncldint in New England w.re not ·clear thl.s """"""· LL Robert M.-llid. Mason and several o l her officen at· reelect th& man and at the acene found thal Kent Micbaol Prooek, alao In !ho apctment, wu an alleged Mirtne dellrier from Clmp Pendl"°o. Tiie 21-,..r-old MYlceman who had belD wortlJll • the car Wuh wa1 ar· ....W along wilh two JS.yeor..id runaway llrls from central CalifCll'Dla and a 15-ytar-old boy, police said The youths were expected to be releas· ed to their parents alter beln& char1ed with curfew vlolaUan. In all, 15 miidents of the apartment house were checbd by police In the momlng raid. Beede will be returned to Booton. where be wUl face act.ion ' for alleged uu.ult with a deadly wupon. I',.... P qe I DELAY ••• btte they're all 1 becoming a bunch of nobl," she said. In amtber matt.er involvin( parking W-y c:umnJuionen delayed action oo .plalll to let up special porklng zonln& on land ........,Uy tn use for parking In the cltJ''• buslnesl areas. '!be -1. Including lettora sent to more than a hundred buaine..men, aeema to be drawing' litue favor thus far. ~laaioners have received seven letters aaalnll the soning and one in favor, but aUd tbey would withhold a rec:munlndaUon wtil more letters and a conference with parking commiuiooers Ore OOlllpiMI. The eornm1askm win hive the diance 'to brin( file maller up nest Wedneodly m,bl -.., -• joint aludy -with ... poroo, advioen and city C01m<lhnen at the Municipal GoU COuneclubhou.-. • 1n --w~ c:om-miuionen denied a conditklnll use permit 1ppllcat1oo for mnloicycle 1trvlce and repair at a converteict 1u ltltion 1llOil moot recently ·., the beadquarten ol lbe Nixqn's Point Diiftwoocl Compuy whidl weal dduncl aelllni acrapc ol --'!be ori&lnal' IJlPlicanl, Steven Kemedy, had uked for the pennlt, but baa lince """""' to Ore(OD. A new applicant ukl the pew plans for the station are strictly moto..eyclO Illes which don't raqulr• a .permit at all. 'The commls6ionfl'S alao approved a Iii!' excopUon 1ought by Alpha Beta Acme Marketa ,for a nine-month tem- porary 1ip l\<illdln& the construdlon of a ·shopplng center at 400 Camino de Eltrella nur ShOrecliffs. The usual poniuu;ble tilne ls 30 clays for such slpa. A r~uest ~ a variance by manufac- ~er W. A. Rall to use a paved lot for c:onltruotlon of portable storage tanks aillO WIS aranted by the commissioners'. Hall will bulk! the large tanka on wheels at 1~151 Avtnida Navarro on land ioned for JDll!Ufac~&- DAILY PILOT ..__ .... __ """.. ..... • ..... y..., C.... ,.... S.. Cfs :sale OUflfG• COAST .. UBLUHING C0M"AHY l•ffrt N. WeM Ptuldfnt ..,. l"vbtisllet J•lk I. Curt.., \lit. l'l'tJ~I •rid ~I Mll\fftf 111.,.. •• ic:,,,,a l•ho,. T\e1t1•t A. M~1phi~• M"""l!ll ftlltor licfl•r4 r. Nill ttv111 °''* eoun1r E41Mt -CMI• Mt»• ,. Wot a1v Sh'Rt ...,.,., .. ldl1 :n11 w .. 1 ,, ... , '°"'""''" i...,,,. llMdl: m ,._, ,._ M........,,. leidl< t111S kldl IMM.,, 1H C""*°'lr. JU Htrtll 11 ""'IM ••I -iL. • DAI( 't l"ILOT Sien ...... State. {lets F ee Laguna Teacher • . Firings Costly While looklng over purchase orders Tutad1y night, •the Board ol Trull ... of the Laguna Beach Unified School District noted that the state was being paid $1,816 for services rendered di.Iring the firfnp" ol hfih scbOol inltructon Jack Kreftln& and .Dnana Lynde, . The fl,bre covtra the -coat of court hearillgs for the teachers held in Santa Ana. and the cost of a transcript ($880) in the Js;.refjlng case, wjlich . tile board ordered befort firing the high 1Chool music instructor. Both Miss Lynqe and Krefting appealed, the high acbool's decision not to re~ite them for the 1970-?l~school year. After. the hearings the Board of Education upheld the high school"s deci!ion not to' rehire. held. Several teachers we~ called tG testify in the hurtn11. The board will also have to pay the cost of a court recorder hired to take down tbe proceedtna:J of the meeUng when Khftiria was fired. c.o.t per lranscrlpl pqe l.s lt.90. Orphaned Seal Set Loose .Today 'I'he apparently orph~ baby seal recoveri.og from pneumonia at ~ Clemente lifeguard 'headquarters will gG for a permanent swlm. I.his· afternoon &l~r ~ a swift reco\lery, hia bo.!ls iiald tooay. ' CAR PLANTED IN IVY AS DR IV ER FAILS TO NEGOTIATE TEMPLE HIL LS TU RN Another cost Incurred during the hear- ings, was M90 for 30 days of·. subat.itute teaching, wliile court proceedings were Iri fact, lifeguards re~ed, the finned waif is gttting just too acUve to handle in his temporary quarters in the station's large garage. . Mic~igan Leads Traced In Clemente Murder Case A Police investigator from San Clemente ia in Michigan this week in an attempt to sift even the remotest leads on the vicious beatiag and stabbing murder of Mrs. Connie Lynn Johnson earlier this summer. Detective Leonard Goodwin has been in the midweJt 1tate fcw-the put several days delving Into the vicUm'a put in her home state. But officers here lllid Goodwin bu not yet elaborated on hil fiad.lnp. Mrs. Jolm,.., olght-weeka-pregnant whea she was beaten then repeatedly stabbed on a mJd.June morning was the wile of a young Marine who told officers ·he found her nude aid bloody body 1prawled on the couple'1 bed as he returned from guard duty In Santa Ana. Since then eahauaUve efforts by delec· tives led to the arrest of a l,_yw~ld Marine cook from Camp Peldle~. but the youth wu subsequently released and deemed not arrested. The man, Frankie Wayae Mellino, spent a wee~end in custody, but was freed after the Diatrict Attorney's office declined to lllue 1 complalnL Since that 'uPect of the: cue -oc- clll'rini over the July 4 weekend - offken awaited the retura of the \llc- iim.'1 bulband, Mark Johmon, who new back to San Clemenle from Michiga11 where he buried his high school sweetheart. But subsequent interviews with the Vietnam combat veteran apparen tly sbed little new light on the baffling case. Tbe major miulng linkl in the evideaoe ch.aln ot the murder are thrte in numbu -the large kaife uJed to lnfllct repeated slab wounds 0,1 tbe woman's neck, chest and abdomen, a tennla shoe which made a distinguishahle footprint in the kitchen sink o( the Johuoa studio apartment and the dead woman's wallet, miaaing from t!1e crime acene when police arrived. !JK>ther important factor which may never be cleared up is the exact time of death of the brunette eipectant mother. Countless hours o( probing in the neighborhood faJled to yield any solid indication of the exact time rt. tbe brutal murder. One couple living nearby came closelt by reporting to police that both the husband and wlfe awoke at 5 a.m. on the morning of the kllling, but they could not rtmember what caUlld them to awaken. "That's just not enOU&h to 10 with.'' a detecUve aald later. Consultants Back ·Major Joaquin School Changes By PAMELA HALLAN OI tlMo Dtllr "lllt Sl1tf A major reorganization of the San Joaquin Elementary School Dls!Jlict ad- minfstratlon was proposed Wednesday to, the Board of Truatees by a consultant finn1 The reorganization plan would spread the district's work load more evenly between the superinteodeot and two assistant superintendents, giving the &uperintendelll a more direct hand in runnln& his schools. 111e proposals were made by Les Glaspey, representing the firm of Da\lis, McConnell and Ralston. The llnn was hit9:1 by the board to prepare a five-year organfzation plan for the district, which will reach 20,000 pupils enrolled at the end of that time. Among recommendations for the lfro.. 71 acbool ye!r was the creation ol a department of faciliUes planning to be under Rex Nerison, the a s s i s t a n t lllperintendent for bu!lness services. Also under Nerison w o u I d be the department· ol food servloes and the department of maintenance and opera- tions to which would be added con- structioo QtPe!'Visloo. MaUers of facilities plannint and con- struction are now beini tupervlltd by SupL Ralph Gates. '!be report indicates that by removing these duties which occupy aboot 50 percent ol t he auperintendent's time, he would have more time to directly Involve himself with principals and scoot adminlatl'atico. School princlp.als currently report to Dr. William Sloe ks, Ule aulstant auperlntendent for edueaUonal 1ervice1. Dr. Stoc.lts also oversees the departmt.Dts or special serivces, cur4 riculum services and peraonnel. The report indicates that the per&mnel services departmmt should be removed to tile direct supervision of the superintelldeot and that more attention &hould be given to non-teaching classified employes in the personnel department. Other recornmendation1 J n cl u d e creating more policies fot clearer dlrec- U6Ds, directing the top administrators to designate aomeone as an understudy to ati in their plac1 when they must be absent, evalualinl cent.rat olfice personnel and coordlnallnl committee acUvllies more closely. Future recommend•tlon1 Include the addlUon of a department of rtaearch and development undar the superln· tendent of educaUonal ,...Vices and tho addition or a supervisor ol accounilng and budgeting under tAe Ulistant l!I up er i ntendent for adm.lnlstratlve servic?el. When enrollment reaches lS,000 the district should J.dd an a 1 soi: I at e auperintendent to ser\le as t h e superintendent's field representatlve. The district al.so shou1d edd a pul'(basing and warehouse department When enrollment reaches 17 ,000 a depertmtnt .of d a t a processing should be added. The board said if will study the report and make recommendations at a future meeting. Capo Bay V rges Billboards Ban A campaign lb ban billboards and a publicity brochure for the Capistrano Bay area may be fint project.a of a new alliance of Chambers of Commerce organl.Jtd Wednesday. Leaders of the San Juan Capittrano, Capistrano Be1ch, Dana Point and San Clemente Chambers ot: Commerce met Wednesday to work on 5tructure of the new lial!On group and to outline projects of common concern. The anti-billboard effort waa qgesled by Capistrano Beach Chamber which is seeking county biw of billboards oo scenic El Camino Real and county sections of Pacific Coast Highway. In the meeting chaired by Bob Oakley ol San Clemente Cbamber, propooa!J for the alliance oi the Chambers, bj.. monthly meetings, two representaU\les plu.s 'alternates from each Chamber, and leadership rot.atln& between the chambers each .ahi: months, were adopted for recommendation to the participating Chambers. ReprnentaUves will brtng to the next meeUng sugsestlons of l n d l v l d u a I chamber projects Which may be broaden- ed into area efforts, and suggested namts for the llalton croup. Atttndlng the organl!Jng seaion were Dr. Robe.rt Beaslf:)t, William Webb and Robert Oektly of San C 1 em en t e Chamber; James Elllott and Lyn Hams HlckJ of Capistrano Be1ch Chambtr: Bruct Winton and Claude John of San Juan Capi1tr1110 tnd Hoyt Post of Dana Point Chamber. 2 La guna Teens Hurt · in· Crash; Auto 'Planted' A pair of Laguna Beach teenagers escaped serious injury Wednesday af. ternoon when their car went out of control on Temple Hills Drive and laid down 149 feet of skid marks before coming to rest in a )ront yard, police repori. Driver Christopher T h om a s Cun· ningham, 17, of 1863 Temple Hills Drive, told police he • wa1 deacendinr Temple Hills Drive at 3:25 p.m. when he lost control of t.he vehicle. It skidded across the roadway, clipped a car parked in the driveway at 16-45 Temple Hills Drive end came to a bait alongside IL The wild ride all!lo damaged a tree and the front lawn en the property, police llid. QuuiDlhain's brother, Anthony, 13, a pusenger in the car, was taken to a private physician fQt' treatment of minor Injuries. Police llld the Youn& driver ·produced only a dri\ling Inatru.ctlon· permlt when uked for his license. . .JJ. J. {]arreff ~ l!rom P1141e l NIXON •.. • held~oul!ide the Western White Hou.96 last August. Murray said his department ' tries where possible to work out gn:iund rules in ad\larice with groups ihat an- nounce plans to prolest. This helps con· trot the ·situalion.·"So far we've always had pretty-good luck," he said. Mr. Nixon's visit, with wife and daughter, Tricia, is to include meetings with top advisors and a heavy work load. 1be President plans Sunday, however, to take a breather and attend a baseball came bt~ween the Angeli and Wuhington senators a.t A1>1el Stactium in Anaheim. First Lady Pat Nixon said today that she and her husband will live in Califor· nia after . they leave the White House but did not specify whether that means San Clemente. . It has been assumed by many locally that the President's purchase last year of the old Cotton estate, in which he obviously takes pride, meant that he would remain a resident in the post. White House years. probably establish· ing a library nearby for his memoirs and mementos. Mrs . Nixon's reference to future csme In reply to quesUons from a visiting gr.oup of 35 school teachers from Ireland. The flnt T1dy's • l!'andfather was Pat- rick Ryan, an naUve of Mayo County, lnland. • \ . . "He would have been set looae Wed: nesday but the \let said he should s\ay around one more day to make sure he ts·atrong enough to sw1m again," Aid one 1uard. The brown .pup, found coughing and weak on Linda Ltne Beach Monday ·night by Llfeguard Ed Marsh, has had antibiotic lreatmenta and a steady ration of fresh anchovies and mackerel during his convalescence. .San Clemente veterinarian Dr. C, C. Marsh treated the sad-eyed visitor free of charge. The lrans!Uon from lileguard head- quarters to "Marineland" was a rare one for the guards, who said they took this aeal in because it bad a definite chance to recover. Many other lea fortunate sick seals are bandled by Orange County Arumal Control officers and humanely dispatched' if treatment seems futile, guards said. "We just hope we don't get flooded by requests to lake In every animal 4 we find on the beach," a auard aupervisor said. "This one was enough to last w for a while." From Page I LAIRD ... servicemen and for their safe return to the United States was the key deciding factor lo cause the President to conduct the limited operation in Cambodia," LaJrd said. i 16th Semi Annual Sale Shown: 72" rectangular table w/three 22" Jeaves. . . w~ Matchin~ side chair ................ 149.00 ... Ht.DO 72t.OO 499.DO WA,5 NOW (seats 12), .......................... 469.00 375.DO Arm Chair •. ; .. , .................... 189.00 115.DO Substantial 11vlng1 on Madri1•I ~room, dlnln1_I room furnltura tnd occt sional t1bl1a. l H1rlt191 -11t Edition and Chtmbray ·bM room1 dining r~ furniture and OCCJitlonal tallles u to 11> off . " ' Chllla .......................... 90ll.OO 78'' Bullet ....................... , •. 619.00 Ali Heritage uphol 1terff fu rniture can be ordered at 15•/o off lOOOI of f1bric1 ·I• chooM from. ' Huit• l ronalnl eccati9MI t1bles up to .1/2 off H.J.GARRETT fURNflURE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS .. • • I 2215 HARIOR !LVO. COSTA MESA, CALI F. 646-0175 I ': 1 • ' "' ' .. "· .:;..~ ' ' ;· l • .. ~-­, l i . . -· ~· "~ •Ml UI ., • • , • Sl1i •so Slft '110 ' l · R•i 18 INCH BIL POWER lAWI MllWBI • ' '. . ' • • IW~V 'lLOT J7 J ,No I . C.IT 11MS AVAii.ABLE · ·:1.•.Y~ClllflBT .• CAal .: . ~-.. . YIHllE . FRONT. " ·-• .. l ~ ... . ''YIJlt CAfl AFFORD . THE. ·THINGS ,YOU WANT. · . AT WHln .FJtONT ~: •• SHOP MOW! · · • • , 11 comparbnents 'With 2 trays. Room . for large 1eels. Plano · #7200 97 "'"" •MCll AIBMA1TIDI Perfectf0<camping. Box -waffle constructlonl Metal locking VJl'le! MT •. OLYMPUS , . IM!size •Z"18~". 110 lili:ll zip- per. Double 1ir uiat pockets. Two bap will 1ip 1Dietl1et. Kaavy duty IACK'PACllER STYLE . Lightweight, warm, ideal r"'o...(I for hikers. Nylon cover and lining'.-36"x84". ,,-.~ ·8.6 OI. dutk. # 1. " 111.l'lm-IOITllliiiiii WAl.lMl .. I Arm·chai r or .barrel chair in black or col- ors.1srtaupbe1rb11y ,, como e ·' OP,1(1 ,llW -.i.nu. ~owJ·88 ONLY IACM • ; " 3081.STOLAVL • JUSTOffN~ ~VL , "•H IE1WB SAN DllGO FRWY. AND BAKER ST. · · ·' · • Impressive 22x26 inch mirrors.CL!s- sic, baroque or ·Spanish desiRJL ' • OUlllo;LOW PllCl .. t7 s·•• .......... MOMOAY-HIDAY 12 MOOM·t PM • SATvlDAYlOAM-tPM ' SUNDAY10AM-7PM I •• . .. ' .... 11 DAILV PILOT LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Complete-New York· Stock List I I f I 1 I i i I I .1' .. ~--~~~~~~~~-----------------------------........ --.. ThuNd11, July 23, 1970 Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete New Yor~ Stock Ex~hange List Mideast News · ' 1\:\_LM_ ' .... -4 11 "" .,. ,.. + • 11h ..-. ... •·· .. ' SC ..... Newspaper Plam Told W ,llHINGTOK <tlPll - W1llor PlllOlll, ht Ill 11 """"ptl'lftlft ud D O w CO\IJ\lif for I -1111>- I comailllll, tlfd _, lit • ~·~ PW!Nd lo Join "' owun, ~ I ftlUOllll dallt-for I I • + '' n ls ,.verol ctU• wlllctl Jlayt DO momtn1 publklUon. Plncu1 &aid he 11p11*-' thl ,,... PIPI' IO btllo ~ "' lllo ..., ol lrlf, lnllll11i Mmnl 1111lvmll7 1nd IOllqo .,..., A rormer wrtllMdlW for the WllhlnrlOn Pott .., the Wuhlnf!On Stir, PlllClll now 11 with the ·llnllt flubo commlttM on U.S. llcm'tt7 A1re1m1nll lllld C- mllmlntt Abtnod. He uld he would lllv1 tllll loll 10 Join Dun Olf!ord., former legi9lat.ive assLUnt to 1~!-1 Ito. Edward M. Kelll!Ody, (P. M111.), Jn tl°)'lnl IO rllk aa 1 -attmated St.5 million in work-!'" Ina e1pltal. Gilford !1 mw • ·+r · 1 partner in the Boston to--\\ vestment corporaUon Cl r "·~ C1bot, Ctbot tnd Pol'bll. $•~ . Plncu1 uld the -"""' I ¥'Ii WOUid MYf ~ (n ""' Wublnf!On with I llall of , +ui two dOltn l'ltWtlDlft aM would con-rtlo on fn·dtpt~ report• ol "wll7 W.,. hao- pen," Ht 111d the ,.,_ -Id not have tta own prtnUna plonlo bul -1d utlltM -f1clllU• or<ilnd JM ••lloll. perllculull' pllllll ID II· __ ,.. ..... lobt-.Ho.i.llO!DllDO 1ny tplOlflo dUtt 'llltn It -Id. publflh. ' Ht uld tht -, -Id ntver bt l1r1er than ti p1111 ond would have 1 -14-vertllll!I..,.... rollo. The popor WOllld ~ publl1ll- ed ftyt d171 I -k. MondlJ throulh rrtdt7. THE BEST a •• ;1r-~1 ft ,e11. ,,.... "'••· 1111t1" :. '"' ,r -... • ...,,,,, ... , pepul•r ''"'le 11tl,u. k••; It clt ily hi th1 D"ILY PILOT. _,... ....... . GUARANTEED TIICSE fAOOUCl$ CAllllV "'N UNCONOlllONAl UONCY-IACK GUAll,lNTCl • LATEX ACRYLIC EXTERIOR .sTUCCO·MASONRY PAINT • 1·HOUA TO DAY • WON'T CHIP, . ' STANDARD BRANDS PAINT CO . .Zuy llie .Za•f E~ry lttm In 011r S10•t• Cartllitd by 011• 8 11ylng L•bor1101y '.· f.VERYTHING SOLO WITH AN UNCONDITIONAL MONEY·BACK GUARANTEE HARD HIGH· GLOSS VINYL ACRYLIC BUY 1 PAINT FOR BOTH . INSID• AfllD OU1'. · . .. • SCRUBBABLE CRACK GA PEEL 100" •XTERIOR • FINEST QUAU'{Y , INTERIOR •WHERE EXTREMELY<. EXTREMELY · DURABLE PAINT IS DESIRED • CLEAN·UP WITH • 0llAIQHT WHITE PURI WATER AND COLORS •PAR• DURABLE AND • 30 MINUTES Tp DRY• SCAUBBABU! FAST . · . • CLEAN·UP WITH WATER . XTmRIOR HOUS• PAINT· DRYING FENCE WON'T « PAINT CHIP ,CAii> ALIO --.~ ••t1011ct•U.Oll .. __ ... __ "!"' ... • OIL BASE CRACk • Fl•CIUAUTY • Ll-D DIL m.SE l • TOUGH AND DURAiLE !!ONG LASTING VINYLCOTa DRIES TO A HARD FINISH •BRUSH OR SPRAY ·FOR ALL OR . PEEL All • Ull! STRAIGHT FROM CAN OUR l'lllCa 1 •• GAL. • 1·ff0UR DRYING .• CLIAN-U' ' WITHWATIR • ICRUllAILI -, POl'ULA~ ~3 •• COLOlllS GA~ -. ~ ...... 3•• •ITAi&. l.IO GAL. ' BRIGHTEST WHl~E AND A COMPLETE LIN! OF' COLORS WHITE AND FOUR COLORS COMll. lllTAIL ,,11 EXTERIOR WOOD OUR , PR I Ca ~98 ~AL. SPRAY .lrNAM'l!L ,. Oz.AaROIOL CAN CllYITAL CLIAll VINYL ·LATEX:. · ; Sl!Ml·GLOQ l!N~Ml!L AN UCITINQ . Nl!W ENAMl!L· CASTING RESIN .. •HUNDREDS OF USEI 0 IEXJ!\E.llEtYTOUGH AND_•D.URAIL!rFINIBH • HIGH ~L.081 • FABT,ORYING . ' .. USE ON FURNITURE, MACHINERY, •EASILY FORM LAMPS. TRAYS, O!CdRATOR ITEMS . . THAT Ll!TS YOU CLl!AN·UP w•TH'.Y/ATBR .. TOYB, ETC. MARINE BEAUTIFIES & PROTECTS • DRIES CRYSTAL CLEAR '8RUIH OR ·. ROLL iAIGHT WHITI;, A~D . COLO ... .. r. '·;- " ' ' . • • . ' • • • • WloflTE AND COLORS l:NAMEL ALL EXTERIOR OUR- WHITE AND COLOll8 • FINEST QU,t.LITY • TOUGH AND DURAi LE • RESISTS DAMAGE FROM SALT WATER ------·---•(. .. .l . . ·' WOOD REDWOOD STAIN COMP. AITAIL 3.50 , CU.HIONBD VINYL , .. ~OR COVERING • FULL;llOLLS • FELT IACKID ·-COLORS· • I a 12 FT. WIDTHS • WARM a RESILIENT • l!VERAL PATTERNS • SATIN flNl~H • FAST RYING • WAIH COMP. RETAIL 2.49 . 198 ou11.p111c1 ••· ••· · DICOllATOll DlllONID FLOCK PAPERS I 1! • •un 11m111a .f • f !NESf.GRA:ot ! • IN ..YOUlt OWN AA6 f \Ml-TMJCAN ,AA GAL ·-······· ......... , ............. -: ' Mfl•'&M ... I ' 11"' . ~-~-~ .. ~------... ~ .... :..11 • e.uv .... ·~-· ' · ·°'·°""a•" , ro-:~ ' . . ...... '· !' ·-· ......,.,,AlllT . I ....... _ u. '!-··-.. --.. --............. ,;.,_ ..... --w.: ( .... ~~~-~--~·~-: _, _ .. _ "' PAM' ...... 55c llT• i 'ou" 1" • Al IMOWW I : NK:I U . • Pftl.TRIMMEO • IUN·FAIT • 21 '°PUUft COLORS AND PATIIR'NI l COMP. RETAIL OUR 3t5 6 95 PIHCS Piii 111.0LL • JllQ. "· 10LD IM 2 ROLL IDLTI ONLY .·Pt.ASTIC BLINDS 9UTDOOR YINYLON COFIDS l FOOT OFIOP .1-:-· ·l ' ! ' ' 1· I' , i :~ ~-'~· ' ' • i I ' I I • f I ; MATCHSTICK ~ INCH SLAT STYLE STYLE WHITI! • GR!!N/WHITE WHITE • BEIGE • GREEN • Yl!LLOW/OLIYE 3111 FT ...•. 1.39 311 FT •.... 2.11 4111 FT •..•• 1.81 416 FT, •.. , 3.98 611 FT •• , •. 2.89 6111 FT •• _ .. 5.98 818 FT ••... 3.19 811 FT •.... 7.11 1011 u .. , .. sg~ 4'1' FT.,,, .1,p1 ., STARDAB·D BRAR.DS IAN JOSI ANAHEIM DOWNIY ' • ·~ M(llllOIAN AYl COflt'I(• l•,.,COL N & l "'ID$('f t6J~ [, fLOfl(H(( AV( ........ s--c.ttOt&MDof...... lllrlc•l•!oto!lu,o•l'!Vt1I .it1~ewoodl'°""', ' HAYWAllD SANTA ANA .HI Jit.CllSOfol 1•16 5 ....... ~ Sol•lt WtM~ I 911:1¢~ Sowlh •I w,,,,, .. '°""''' 'IL C_,.0 LA MAlllA IOMO .. ,,. "'8LO C:Oltfil{ll Wtlllll(ll 1. 10,U.O SANTA MONICA l.411 llHCOLN l l\10 "s ..... Moll>f:• lhotl. ,'..! lh '-.0 ~·ilN SANTA ANA ; ll I " • <;" ,,f ... '" ' I D··ll,1) COllN[ M Of 11Nt!•lN"' l•tHJ-,fY ANAHEIM l lJ "'~ l ll! G•O< >' ,• llOVAauL SHUTTERS PHIL9"PIN• MAHOGANY l~X13 IN. 7X20 IN. 7X311N. •h••· 1.oe ••. 1.eeea. • HAND SANDED • "UDY tO lfAIN IX20 IN. IX24 IN. 9X24 IN. 1.1e... 1.1a-. 1.••••· 9X21 IN. 10X29 IN. 10X31 IN. 1...... 2.1•··· ..... .. 12X321N. 15X4DIN. 1SX541N. 2.1•••· a.ee ••· •·••••· 17 llZES IN STOCK . ' ~ T...a 1 .. • ::.·~·· ....... u.. _,....,. .-... ... ... ........ -· ' P!A:lf'I l!A,. Q.~). '•llt O•l{S I ..al.L' 2'°1 L~ 1£-.CH lilVO . 5o,ttl W>"°'" l60l l'tCI{ fl0., l 11111 ,_ ot Vlllty 2 llDC:'I Hcwlh ol (;OIOffdo IUlllANK MONTEllEY PARK POMONA-ONTAlllO SlO N, Y1CTOllT Bt \10, 12JI W RIGGIN ST, COllN[ll HOLT & MILLS ¥t I lk• North o1 M .. llOI.. ... Ilk. NOITh of 11•111" 1"41 A1l1.,1oe: I l lot' l11t of 1"41,.,, Hiltt l+.ct. YAN NUYS LOS ANGELES lllVEllllDE """"'9f Seo'I ......... ""'1etf 1 lloc~t (loll ol l!ltK" TOllllANCI ll\16 MAWlftOllN( lt\ID, "'lo-I• llvd, 6Xlt SE,UtYCOA I L\10 CORNEii! 0' ,1co I lllOAOW•V COllNtll M•CNOU• & JUllUll'A Coi11t1 [,..,.,, I l lot' South o4 YiCIOtY S li0<~1 No<lh ol Ct"l•it WOODLAND HILLS OXNAllD-VENTUllA 220!l0 'ol(ti!TUllA I LVO 225~ VIN[YAllO A\/[ TUCSON 1 l lot• w..11 o• To1Mn1~ Ct11 Cornt• 01n11d.V•M~Md lllO•OW•v AT 1111s1 •vc ND. A SO. SACllAMINTO • IAKElllfllLD • FlllSNO • SAN llllNAllDINO -LA• WIST LA. ~ c. 141'-$f. 1•7' s 11oet 11tsoJt ILVO ClAltDINA-HAWTMOftNS c.iN:r f. 1:4\,_ & 2~h Aw. 1 llot~t Soulll o4 11'<6 COflNt~ Cfl(ti!SM•W ILVO. &'1)~~ Sf. CllULA VISTA• LA MISA •SAN DllGO • IA•T. A Wl•T PHOENIX OPEN 5 NIGHTS O PEN ">U NDA YS Q 00 10 'i 10 M n,.OAT h <lllJ J~ll•~• ~II M !t)V P M ~fl.TUROftY '> H 00 I n f) 10 ---.. • I I I ' ' I I I t l f I ) • t ' • d $ ,, n • • n • n " • u 0 ~ b I' ,. I• • b •• T fi " "' n T } ' A Q .. C; g1 •• b, l i l I l Ir ' Capo's Fire Rate Rise s Like Smoke By PAMELA HALLAN Of fllt D•llY ,lltt St•tf J1 / I II. TIA# Jt•~O •' v:;; I 11 v J ' . I un 1\ I i l ~ ...... 4 - ThlW!dlf, Ju~ 2', 1970 $ DAILY PILOT 3 •• . • Boards Set ~ "" ---llr.M • . --· Joint Meet - InOemente -· • The cost of fire IMUrance for th~ Capistrano Unilied School District has jumped about 400 percent over last year. CROSS MARKS THE SPOT WHERE THE OLD-EL TORO STORI! WAS IURIED -IN THE NAME OF PROGRESS san Clemente's city coundl wlll meet wllll members of Ille plalmlng, partdnr and J)lrb and ...,..u.n comml..ton. In a dinner study seulon oell Wedneoday nlgtit at the municipal golf eoune clubhoust. The dismal insurance picture Was outlined to district trustees by Roy Miller, one of a group of insurance agents who hand.1e all district policies. Miller told trustees Monday that the Capistrano district's good record had no influence on the insurance rates. which. he sa.id, renect the reaction of insurance companies to campus violence throughout the state. · "Look what happened to nice, quiet Santa Barbara," Miller observed. Further difficulles in the Capistrano district include the district's widespread territory and its reUance on volunteer fire departments. He also pointed to the problem of having a great deal of value conceutrated under ooe roof at the new Viejo Elementary School and the use of older buildings in several parts of the district. Last year's fire, vandalism and ex· tended c.overage costs amounted to $12,000 for aboul $10 million worth or Jnsurance. Miller presented trustees with two op- tions. They could have coverage by the Insurance Company or North America for Sl,000 deductible for $12 million by paying a premium of about $32,000 per year. There Is a catch , however. The district would immediately have to install in- trusion alarms on every building valued at more t:han $150,000, install smoke det-ectors. and provide vandalism patrols. Ken McCurdy, di:ltrict maintenance dinctor, said this would cost about $150;000. DAIL 'f PILOT Ste" 1""9111 The board 's second option. the on• they directed Miller to pursue, was to negoUate with three companies for the same insurance, without any engineering dlanges. but for a premium totalling nearly $50,000 per year. The liability insur;:ance picture war equally bleak. DIN OF MODERN EQUIPMENT DROWNS ECHOS OF PAST Site of F•med el Toro Store Now • Ramp for a Bridge Skydivers, Too The district has been carrying S2 million liability coverage, but Miller aaid there was no company which would write a primary policy for $2 million or more unless the district agreed to vacate all of its old J?uildings by September. He said there was one company that was wllling to insure the district, old buiktings and all, for $1 million. This premium would run about $17,000 per year. Since the district should have no Laguna Lif eguar!1-s Set . . less than l2 million, Miller said, truliteu 4 6 would have to find another carrier. The board advised him to do this. - ·Public Show Saturday All p1licies would be for lhree years and would be subject to annual review. 1'he district's previous policies were for five years, without change. "Nobody's picking on your dis:lrict." said Miller. "It's just that the rates have gone up each year and yours has mnained the .same for tile past five. The rates have caught up with you." Air Group to Spread Wings in Capistrano An estimated 150 members of Civil Air Patrol units from ttlroughout Orange County are expected for a regX>nal rescue esercise Aug. 1 at capistrano Airport. The squadrons, i n c 1 u d I n g the Capistrano Bay area unit of the volunteer group, will participate in a all-day ex- ercise lnvol ving reseue procedures used by Civil Air Patrol members. Goin' Ji'ish.ing Laguna Beach Ilfeguard.<11 will he out In foru Saturoay off Main Beach, but not to make rescues. The lifeguards will hold their annual ••0emonst.ration Day," giving a com- prehensive display of rescue techniques and lifeguard equipment.. The program begirus at 9:30 a.m. During the 21h hours of activities, lifeguards will ho)d races between the rookie guards, the North Beach gua~s and the South Beach guards. They will vye for wins in both board racing and swimming. After the races, guards will show both standard rescues and rescues using the tandline, followed by demonstrations of heart massage and mouth to mouth resuscitatk>n. A rescue boat will also be used in a display. Following the rei;cue boat display, lifeguards Dean Westgaa~ ~od Skip Con· ner will take to the atr m a Cessna 155, ny to 8,000 Ieel and parachute Chuck Cook (in truck) Is retiring soon alter l4 years as an employe at San Clemente's water treatment plant and Richard Warren, rep· re&cnling San Clemente Sporlfishing. knowing Cook 's interest in angling, gave him a lifetime fishing pass. Cook says he'JI use the privilege regularly. to the water, wtth SCUBA equipment. to demonstrate para-SCUBA rescues. Last on the morning's demonstration, popular in years past. is a display from the Orange County Harbor Department fireboat. The boat will first be used to pick up the chutes of the sky.diving guards, and will then show the various procedures used to quell 8 blaze a\ sea . The public !:.; Jnvited to the J\.1aln Beach lifeguard to'!Ver to watch the demoostration from the Boardwalk. Dana Pt. Folks Honor Namesake With Celebration The Dana Point Chamber of G'Ummerce has scheduled an Aug. 1 celebration of the birth date of the community's namesake, Richard Henry Dana. Dana Days will range from the historic reminiscence of area old timers to swim· ming cmnpetltions for you n gs t er s. Scheduled events include: -An all.day display or recreational vehicles and equipment in the plaza beinning at 9 a.m. -Swim competi tions for youngsters nt all ages inside the harbor complex begjnning al 10 :30 a.m. The swimming event~ are amateur. Youngsters may register any day before the competition iit Black Bart's Marina or the D,ana Point Boats and Sports. -Hobie.Cat races sponsored by the Dana Point Yacht Club with a sktpper ':i: meeting at l I a.m. and raclng· at noon. More than 100 boats will be entered vying to represent the area later in the yeart in a q~~ify~g. race in Hawaii tor the Hobie.Cat Nallonals. -An after fashion · show of cool 1Um- mer apparel at 2 p.m. -Stories by old timers at 3:30 p.m. on the history and past plans Of Dana Point. once envisioned as a Riviera of the West. The non-aquatic aclivitiC3 o{ the com- munity celebration will center on ·the Plaza of Dana Point. A section will be roped off so that pedestrians may move freely in a mali atmosphere. Com· mlmlly gfOUJ>8 will provide rood al boolht. Aussie Beer Drinker Downs 17\.l Quarts MEWIOURNE (AP) '-Tom Ml:ln<r· ney, a 308-pound truckdriver, claimed a new AUlitraUan beer-drinking record by t1owning 17'h quarts o( beer in 10 hours -beating the former claimant'• coo- awnptlon by abolll four quarts. History Piled Up OM Toro St.ore Site Buried By JOANNf: REYNOLDS Of 1tM DlillY Piie! 11 .. f Molori&ts crossing the Santa Fe Railroad tracks on the El Toro Road overpass are not likely to be impressed by the historical value oC the tons of dirt that support the ramp near Front Slreet. Perhaps they woold be more impressed if they knew that mound of dirt coven what was once one ol Orange County's most treasured landmarks. The El Toro store occupied the comer o{ El Toro Road and Front Street in El Toro for nearly 90 years before jt was tom down in 1968 to make room for progress in the form of a railway overpass. The store was built in 1887 when a short-lived land boom sent speculators into the rural area looking for place11 to raise vegetables, citrus fruit and livestock. It was torn down in 1968 when another Iand boom sent speculators into the same area looking for places to build homes. While it stood, the store was a gather· Ing place for local residents and farm and ranch · hand.1 as well as tourists who wtre attracted to the quaint. country store. You'd Better Get Pl1one Directory A major switch In numbers for Camp Pendleton telephone s will accompany the release of a new phone directory for the Marine baH Aug. 1. Ba~ spokesmen said that all numbers starting with 2 at the beginning of tbe sequence after the prefix will shift to the numeral. Uwee. 'lllus, a hypothetical number o( 725-2199 will shift to 7'1.S-3199. The 30le· number will be the only change, apokesmeo said. . The change will mean that the vacant series of· digits will be left available for a proposed direct.dialing system to be set up for the nation's military bases. Origlnally, built by El Toro pioneer o. D. Fairchild, it was a twe>-story structure that served as a hotel and post office as well as a general store. ln those days, El Toro was not much more than a train and slage ooach slop and Fairchild was the Santa Fe stationmaster. The two-story building burned down In 1917 and was replaced with the single gtory building that existed until recently. Even as housing developments began to go up around it, the wide porches of the st.ore were still favored by locals as a place to sit and gossip. People came from as far away as Newport Beach and Costa Mesa to 1hop in the cracker barrel atmosphtte. Tu ward the end or its long history. lhe El Toro store was owned and operated by Mr. and Mrs. William Bur- rows. oC Laguna Beach, who also grew oranges in surrounding groves. Following Mr. Burrows' death, the store was 10ld by the late Mrr. Burrows and her daughters, woo had made it a family operation. Jn 1963 the Deane Brothers develop. ment company bought the atore along with a large portion or land in the area that has since become the Lake Forest development. Five years later, Uie firm &aid the land to the county and the okl El Toro store became a memory. Capo Adopts Program For MenlaUy Gifted A program for mentally gifted minors has been adopted for another year by trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District. The program involves aboul l75 elementary and high school iludents. Plans call for the assignment ol a (.'OOrdinatnr for the pl"OII'am. The MGM program involvn the students in 200 minutes a week of special instruction Jn 1dditioo to their time spent In regular classrooms. The informal meeting, set for 7:30 p.m .. will take place on one of the rare rifth Wednesdays of the month and ls aimed-at allowing city ofricials to el· change ideas under one roof. The council also will tackle a study aienda of sorts that night, ~luding filial review ol the proposed mobile home p.,rk development ordinance. The code, which recently completed a second review from planning com- missioners, js proposed as S 1 n Clemente·s first comprehensive code on mobile parks. Revisions made by the council recently won ~ne.raJ concurrence by planning commissioners. Other items or a general nature which might be discussed will include plan~ for the replacement to San Clemente's flrt-ravaged community clubhouse. At a rettnt city council meeting an architectural (inn was officially h1red to dralt the plans. 'l"he first step toward coostructing the new clubhouse would be to finnly eitabli.sh the t'Ommunlty's specific need! in the reaJm of recreaUon and meettnc place~. Parks and recreation commissioners have spent the ·past seveal months in· tervlewing potential d e s i g n • r r • spokesmen for groups which use tbe clubhouse and Community leaders: County Will Float Capo Water Loan Orange Counly supervisors have agreed to wait another year for repayment of a $40.000 loan by San Juan Capistrano- based Waterworks Dls:trict No . .t. ·The board agreed to defer payment of the loaii alter assurances from County Administrative Off~r Robert Thomu that non-payment would not affect the 1970.71 budget. The districl got Ille money from Ibo county tn 1969 Ind used the funds to repair faciliti'5 damaged tn the heavy rains of early 1969. It was agreed that repayment. would be effected during the fiscal year now ck>sing. Dialrict officials upllined lbat.falluro of 'h federal government to submit a promised reimbursement led to I.he delay. Supervisors approved an extenrico ol lhe loon lo June 30, 1171. EVERY FRIDAY EVENING-ALL SUMMER 9 P.M.-ON THE MALL ATFASHION ISLAND FRIDAY, JULY 24: Disney-"Toot, Whistle, Plunk & loom" "Pigeon That Worked a Miracle" FRIDAY, JULY 31: Di111ey-"Nlok" and "Red Balloon" FREE 1 hour "FILM·O-RAMA". sponsored by Fcnfllon hland ln·co- operatlon with the Audio-Visual Department of the Newport Btach Llbraiy pnd the..,Santia.gQ__Fll CJ1tult._ Free Band Concerts -Every Monday . Night -9:00 P.M. . 58 Fin• Storn and Services • Open Frld.y 1nd Mond1y nights FASH~ONj ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER Pacific Co11t Hlghw1y-Between Jamboree and MacArthur . ·' -• 4 DAILY PILOT lC-'11111 ~ IM o.tlr f'llllt lletl) Cl•udo Robin of Orleans, France, with 36 square inch .. of gleaming scalp, has won the tiUe of the Most Handsome Bald Head of France. The Brotherhood of Bald Heeds, assisted by colleagues from Switzerland and Belgium, met in Villechauve for their &MUal elec- tion and wine-sampling feast. Villecbauve in English means "city of bald heads." • One of the educati01111l e.z. hibit& at "Man and hil World,H the perrenial successor of E%p0 67 in Montreal, U a drug ezhibit fea,uring dilpla111 of Teal drugs. Someone stoit the-five LSD·laud .sugar cubes recentL11. The suga7' cubes were replauments, put there after thievts took the origtnal one1 la.rt 11ear. • Vl'IT•'"""" Too M any Losses U.S. Withdraws From Fire Base '"' SAIGON (AP) -Heavy North Viet· namese fire that killed 61 Americans and WOUJ1ded 345 ia the area In tne past three weeks forced the United States today to abandon a patrol base in the northwestern sector of South Vietnam. The U.S. troops hasUly pulled out of Fire Base Ripcord near the Laotian border, spiking some of their O'A'n artillery, less than 24 hours after a patrol operating a mile away suffered H i j ack ers Get H ero T[elcome Frorn Egyp t CAIRO (UPI) -Guerrilla Officials said today the EgypUan government was treating as guest.! six Arab commandos who won the promised release of seven colJeagues by seizing arxl threatening to blow up a Greek airliner and all aboard at Athens Airport. the heaviest causalt.ics in a single aclioK i• 214 months. The U.S. Command, revising Its casualty figures, said 12 Americans were killed 411d 51 wounded in a mortar and ground aUack Wednesdlly on a patrol operating a mile from the base. Enemy losses were unknown. The commaud earlier had listed six wounded, A command spokesman said CH47 Chinook helicopter was shot down during the evacuation but there were no casualties. The base. was evacuated under enemy fire, and at least three more American!! were killed and 20 wounded in the withdrawal. The base, on a l,~foot ridge Jk>rlh of the A Shau Valley and 13 miles from Laos had been in operatioa for the past 31 n1onths and had been under mort'ar siege since July I. Troops of the lOtst Airborne Division operating in and around the base screen~ ed e11emy infiltration corridors Jeadi11g from Laos and North Vietnam toward South Vietnam's northern coast. As one officer pul it, the paratrruper.ic "'ere to "keep track of what's going on and to prevent the North Vie .Jamese: from moving into the lowlands where all the population is .• , llford, England police have warn- ed businessmen to beware of a gang o! pretty girl lhieves •. A .spokesman said one of the nuru· skirted girls 1L!Ually_ enga~es a salesman in conversation while the othen steal the /,oods. VI ET CONG PRISONER BROUGHT IN FOR QU ESTIONING Ceptvred •t Srang, Wounded Enemy Blindfolded fo r Trip to HMc:lquarters The guerrilla officials said lhe six commandos, who included a leggy blonde girl, received a hero's welcome from a high official of the Arab Socialist Union, Egypt's ooly political party, on their arriYal Wednesday ,night aboard their hijacked Olympic Airways Boeing 727. It was the first time since Nov. 1 that U.S. forces had abando•ed a patrol base under enemy pressure and destroyed the guns lo keep them oul of enemy hand s. FBI Study Says Guard S hootings 'Unne cessary' Slain Students Honored On Wednesday the enemy sprung an ambush as the patrol Vi'8S operatin& a mile east of the base. Australian Ca rol Ry11n, 22, has put herself on the British. marriage market along with '120 and a year's supply o( beer. She says her per· mit to stay in Britain has r;un out aod she must tlnd a British hus· band if she wants to remain here. In l{ansas Town Funeral Questioning of the six by Egyptian security men at a secret destination probably will be shorl, the guerrilla officials said. The decision to pull out of Ripcord apparently was a top-level o•e aimed at avoiding criticism in the United States oC a prolonged siege such as the '17-day one at the old Marine base at Khe Sanh farther to the north in 1968. • Legislation signed into Jaw re- e<nUy by President Nixon will per· mit 205 Japanese people to imnu· grate to the United States from the Bonin Islands. located about 600 miles southeast of Tokyo. The Japanese national, who trace their ancestry to American sailor.s., lived from 11146 to 1968 under U.S.·Navy supervision. • AKRON, Ohio (AP) -An FBI report on the May f &hooting deaths ol four students at Kent State University has concluded that the shootings were "not necessary and not in order,'' the Akron Beacon Journal said today. 1be newspaper said in a copyrij:ht story that FBI agents have concluded th a t Ohio NaUooal Guardsmen w e c e . not surrounded by dtmonstr11tors1 had not run out ol. tear gas and could have COfltrolled the situaticri without ft>otlng. LAWRENCE, Kan. (UPI) -Sludonls and townspeople today honored two university cl Kansas ;t.udenls -ooe black and the other white -slain during a week ot. violence in tbe .small college community. FWleral proct!Sk>(IS were set for Rick Donald Dowdell, a Negro thot to d .. tb by a policeman a v.-eek ago, and Harry . Nick Rice, killed Monday night during a confrontation between youths and police. A 4ff-pi>und boy"'"' bom .ii\ Wimtan..Saltm, N.C. reccnUJ with a bvllet hole in his Jeft foot -a. dov afte1' hit moihn" waa shot in the Jtomach in an argument with a man. Both the fnJa.nt, born a month prnnan&re-zu. ond tht mother. were f'eport.. ed m aa.ti#fo.ctoru condition. More than 100 FBI agents \nye.st\gated the May 4 shootings, which came as llUOfdsmen '"°'*"lo brook up • crowd ol d-at«s. 'Ille, ll<aj:on JOIJfJlal said tbe FB!"I ';soo.pag• r-t was 9UDUl)Arised In A oounty coroner's jury Wedneiday niabt eu•"'ated patrolmon Wl!Uam Gi\:.' rett In the death of Dowdell. It hu • When John Smith, 39, of Notting. ham, England, went on his hooey· moon with his fiBnce, C•rol Shep- pord, 23, last week. he - along her parents. 0 1 get on iO well with Carol's parents that I agreed right away they should come on our boneymoon1" he said. • The Lipperts of Buffalo, N.Y. now are in their Slst year of mar- ried life-all four of them. Mh:hHI G. Lippert m arr I e d M•rt•Nf Schmidt and his brother, Louis F.,. wed her sister. Em m• Schmidt, ln Buffalo July 14. 1920. The brolhers are retired contractors. • stanningley, England post office officials have threatened to fine garage owner Fred M•ffhew1 be· cause he painted a telephone pole outJiide his garage to improve its appearance. PMt officials said the paint job makes it impossible to check for rot. • 10,.po,. nport which .. id: -About 200 demonatl'ators who were heckling gu.rns,men could h ave been turned btct 1f attests had bee1 made or more tear gu fired. -'lbat no guardsmen were hurt by flying rocks or projectiles. and none .... ,In danger ol losing his life and there was no hail ol rock.s befote the shootlnp. -'Ibat one llJ8f"dsmen fll'ed at a student mating an obscene gesture llnd another fftd at a student preparing to throw a rock. National Guard offlcla1s contended atterthe shootirws that their men had been aurrounded on three sides, that each of some 100 men in the force Involved had 1-> hit by throY"1 object! and that the men fired because they felt their lives ftfe endangerd. The newspaper said the report was 1ipied by Jerrll Leonard, chief or the Justice Department civil rights division. 1t .. 1d it had learned that the report listed names, ranks, and addresses of slr: guardamm In connectlon. with the lhoot!np. 'Ibe Beacon Journal says the report raises the question of whether or not I h • lludent-tuordsm<n confnriaUon could be considered a riot. lt said that report asserted that gua rdsmen could be charged only U riot conditions did not exist. Gas Bombs Empty Parliament LONDON (AP) -An unidentified man threw two 111 bomb!: into the House «. Conunons today, drivtnc memben from the ancient cblmber amid clouds of smoke. Cou&f>lnc and wilh ey.. lllreaming. the members of the mother o ! parliaments ran into the corridors • The acrid smote billowed upward, fore· Ing vlaitors and newsmen from their galleries and temporarily shutting down the houoe. The bom!><brower toeed the canislm ol 1as !run the vl~tors' pllery shouting : ".Qelfast. See how you like it." He apparently referred to the 1as BriUlh lnlO(lll have been usinC lo quell rla(en In Bettut. the Northern Ireland capllal, c1urlni Roman Calbolic-Prote,. tan! feuding. The House of Commons had been scheduled to debate the case of the impri!oned member of the House of Commons Imm Northern Ireland, Miss BemadeUe Devlin, a leader of Catholic civil righb movements. ·Becky Sp·awns Rain, Wind W et W eather, Uns easonable Co ld Invades Nation Ca Hfornla P'lmllW Of ltSA WEATHl:alUlll VfDRt'1ST TD 7:1D A.Jilt. lST 7 ·1•·70 T""'per atMrn Merri""' clOIHlt •nd h11"1' 1tt.rl'!O&ll NHl!llllnl mnllnwel tr>rwtl'IOUI lo.lltltlf• C1l/fefnl1 toc!tl' ft '""'"'''"'"" _. 1fMd\' Of' Ollll' 1HthllY 11111\er lfl ............. A!builu'"u• ""dlor••• At!1nl1 l'tltfl Lew ''"'· ... l.lt " .. " .. " .. LOI Aneeln w11 ftlr Wlllt 1n ••· ~.., ~"' of •.t. 1~1 -.... IMI NII W"°"'""'l'I'• etlll I iN9111ktlill -"""' tow {II "' Tiii Air l'.ilutltlll COll!niil Ol"•kt ,,_tl'd 11-M ..,. irrl!"""-~1..,.rltr 11 ttw lftt.and ¥tlltn. wltt1 1 rnlnlnMIM .. ltlbl111¥ " !wt .. """" ..,11 .. '*-°' lftOml"' foe ...., "*-Nr.. Molll"t ltlr "''"""' 11 ~ Hot tit lfMt ttweutll ttll 1"ft;IM, b111 ,,._ U.1. 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No htl vrltl .. ..,. rlllOl'lfd. Allltfll, C•,. !\till motf 11\t" Ol't l•lo(h flf •llfl In II• houf1. tlrly h!odlY Mer• •h•n •eur IM.frttf •• rt !n ftH •I ftlll~INft1 1'11,. Wldnlltl11o ~·~ff'lll•ld '" " ai ..... rc~ .. " 11111on .. " Chlcl" n • C.lr>tln,,.!l .. " c1.....i1"" " .. .,_, .. .. .tt o.i ... 11 " .. £ure-.1 • .. ...... w.rtll .. ~ ... ~ ~ " ""-~ " .w ·-.. " ~eu•Nfl ... .. l(•n.,, Cl"' ... • 1.11v.,., '" " I.Ill A/lfltllS .. " M!•ml htdl .. " . .. MllWllUllll " " M'-tllllllt " " HM.,_ .. n ,.. ... y .... " .. 0.-llMI " u ""'"" • " .... •00111 ' " " "1111.0.!ithi. .. .. ,.,...,.1. , .. • l'ltMIUl'tll " " "Ot'llllld " " Jttdll\lfl "' .. ··~ .. .. ,.( ... ".,.19 .. u $!, lW!I " " Sell L1•t (Ill' .. " ... Stt1 Di.to " .. ''" ''•ncl101 " " l1M1 l1r1Nr1 n " S111t11 ,, " SitOlllN " .. r,..,,.,,, ... " Wtihlll01"! " " not been determined who fired the shot that killed Rice. Dowdell's funeral procession was pal· terned after that of Martin Luther King. An old farm was:on, draped in black and drawn by two black farm horses in black harness, was brought to town to carry Dowdell's body. A memorial march along Y:ith the Rice funeral procession Was arranged by Rice 's father and approved by city officials. Another ln1rch, organized by a group of youths calling themselves the "Street People," was planned at the same time as Dowdell'1 funeral procession. The "Street People's" march did not have the sanction of polict. Georee Kimball, the self-proclaimed leader rJ the "Street People," Wednesdav f1alled the two deaths "cold blooded murders." City official.! blamed Kim· ~l's group for the disturbance in wWch Rice wu ldlled. Dowdell was killed in a Negro section ·of Lawrence, across town from the university. Rice died ju!t off campus. Egyptian officials felt the commandos ••had a cause'' -the release Of seven commandos under arrest in Greece - the Arab guerrilla ofifcials said. The plane was hijacked on a flighL from Beirut to Athens with a tot3l of 66 persons aboard, including four Americans. All oI the other passengers and ooe crew member were allowed to leave the plane before it took Off from Athens for the Middle East. As a hostage, the guerrillas took along Andre Rochat, head of the Red Cross for the Middle East. Although the plane's desUnation was given as Beirul. it merely circled over the airport and then flew on tD Damascus, Syria. It did not land at Damascus either, nying around the airport while the hijackers spoke to the control tower and praised Syria 's support for the Palestinian revolutionary movement, according to an airport of- fi cial. The plane then flew on to Cairo where it landed about three hours after leaYing Athens. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SEMI-ANNUAL FACTORY AUTHORIZED N•w dim•nsions 1n ~omfort are yours lor y•ar1 fo com• with the m • n y 1pecielly priced La-Z-Boy Recl ine-Rockers. Th is is • onc•-•-y••r opportunity to put comfort and ..beauty into your home at substantial s•vings. Wake up your room decor with the chair that responds to your every wi1h , , • rocking, TV viawing, loung· ing, even full bad, raclining. Ovrin9 this factory •uthori1td 1ale, fht famous La-Z-Boy R•clin•· Rock•r1 •r• ell on sale af 11-..ings from $30.00 to $70.00. Hurry during our Store.Wide sele for best salection • Style 833 The Khe Sanh base was abandoned, but American Commanders drew sharp criticism from some quarters for allOYo'· ing U.S. troops to become bogg~ down in a defensive posiiion. * * * U.S. War Deaths Reach 43,000 SAIGON (UPI) -The number of Americans killed in almost IO yeart Of fighting in Southeast Asia pas.sed the 43,000 mark last week with U>e deaths of 66 GJs, the U.S. command said today. Another 619 servicemen were wounded as the casualty toll declined from the previous week's 7.l.'dead and 729 wounded. The only other full week of J970 when American losses were lower was in the seven days ending July 4 when 61 men died in action and 463 were wounded -the lowest for American forces in more than three and a hall years. Cmtn illesn'• Oldest Uo111e•Omnel f'11rnil11re Storet PHONE ··548·5131 1865 HARBOR BLVD. e DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA l • Man Held In Hostage Murders MIAMI (AP) -A :tl·Y•U:· old cab driver caught by a police stakeout at lnterna. tional Airport has been ac- cused of murdering t w o women hostages in a $2,000 robbery. Pdilton Niporl was seized at midnight WeGlesday as be stepped off a plane wblch police said he had boarded in Loo Angoles. He was charged with the murders ol Delores Palaclno. 42, and Judy Lamb, 4'l. The bodies of the two women were found in a lonely • ... . .. Love on a Litnb field Monday 10 miles from The day was pleasant and warm, and a group of Sacramento employes on the scene of the early morning their way home from the state capitol didn't even notice this couple perched robbery, a Western Union on a limb of one of the trees in the Capitol Park. Robin Bell of Sacramento branch in Coral Gables. Both and David Dunlap of. Napa didn't notice the employes either. had bem shot several times -------'--~--------'------''-----­ in the head. Police found the bodies after a third victim, Bruce Reitz, dragged himself I 1h miles to a highway. He had been Shot l wice in the head. Reitz, the 39-year~ld night manager of the Western Union office and Miss Lamb's boy friald, said that just before the shooting the gunman asked him if he could take tv.'O or Reitz' tings. Juryw Hear Identity Link changed brief smiles with Collins, who .shifted his gaze from witnesses to attorneys ~ testimony tmfolded. • Thursdl,J', July 23, 1970 DAIL V PltDT S 'Conditions' on Peace Plan ' . Mideast Conflict Goes on As Egypt Posit.iQn_ Told Dy Ualkd Pre11 lnleniaUoul Egypt was reported ready today to discuss a negotiated peace in the Middle East - ·with conditions, But the cOn- flict went on, and Israeli planes bombed Egypt's Suez Canal defenses today for the 63rd consecutive day and struck guerrilla bases · in J ordan. The official Egyptian posi- tion was to be set. forth by president Gama\ Abdel Nasser in a speech marking the 18lh anniversary of his rise to power. The Cairo speech at 9:30 p.m. PDT was being broadcast throughout the Mid- dle East by radio a n d television. One interpretation of Egyp- tian policy came today from the official Communist newspaper Pravda Jn Moscow which said Egypt iii prepared for the first time to acknowledge the existence of Israel as an .independent state. \VU.h this . optimistic report came a statement in the Soviet army publlcaUon Red Star which said fortification of Egypt's Suez Ca n a I an- tiaircraft ~efenses was pro- ceeding apace in a buildup that has helped Egypt break Israel's mastery or the air. would caui;e lsraeU Prime Cairo spokesman said ZI Jn Washington, the Nixon Mlnlater Golda Melt to alter Israeli planes 8ttacted Egyp- admlnistratlon was · reported her atUtude to 1 UmJted cease-t1an poslttom: on the northern pleased by Egypt's "positive~ fire. amt aeutbern sector• of the response to a Mldeast peace SUU hanging flrt was a ll"' waterWay and that ••our air proposal made by Secretary ctnt Soviet. proposal for a deiente sy1ten1s engaged the ot Slate William P. Rogers. Mideast setUement, ooe tt\St attacking aircraft." He said But it was acknowledged the won praise from U. N. •there were DO damages or u Secretary General Thant. Its casualties. · over-a 9t1tlook f 0 r the pl"l)-details hive mt been made Israel, which ls intent on posal remained uncertain. officially knQ"fn but it was prevenUna the further spread There were several snags. said to ensure safe Israeli of SAM2 and SAM3 missile Egypt mainta!N that the 1967 borders with U.N. supervision sitell in the canaJ area, 58id U.N. Security Council resolu-of de.milltarlied iones. all of Its planes returned safe- tlon which helped end the six Jn the actual conflict, a Jy. <lay war called far the -=--------'---'---------wiehdrawal of Israeli fo-i:ccs from "all" captured territory. Israel and many other naUons do not see it this way. Another snag was in Rogers' proposal for a three-month cease-fire to permit United Nations peace efforts to get moving. Israel opposes a tern· porary cease-fire in the belief it will enable Nas.!er, with Soviet help, to buildup for a Suez Canal crossing. Enjoy the thrill of an Old Faohioned Log Ride-- Knott'• uewe1t attraction. It'• Exciting! Washington officials said they would di~uss the Egyp- tian reply wllh I s r a e 11 representatives and eventually . with Soviet and Jordanian diplomats. They silid they hoped the d.lscusssii,o~.n~coul~~dl!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ pr o d u c e assur~ces which Reitz: objected and he gun- man tossed the rings on the ground saying '''Ibere's a little bit of good in every thief." Then he repeatedly shot all three and fled. ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI) -Exactly one year after Karen Sue Beineman disap- peared, the last people to see the coed alive were to testify today at the trial of John Norman Collins, the former shtdent charged with her murder. Wa s ht e naw County Prosecutor William F. Oelhey said after the third day ol O>llins' trial Wednesday he would ire.sent two secondary wjtnesses. then call P..1.rs. Diane Game an!1 :Pw1 r s • Patricia Spaulding. Miss Beineman, 18, a slight- ly built freshman at Eastern Michigan University, was not seen alive again. When her nude body was found three days later, she became the seventh and last young woman slaln in a two-year period around Ann Arbor an d YpsilanU. Collins, 23, a former senior at EMU, is charged wlth first«gree murder in her death. No one has been charged in the other slayings. LUCILLE'S Juniors • Corona . Del Mar A sketch of the gunman was made from Reitz' description. "We canvassed the airport and found an airline empk>ye who recognized the composite :iiketch and said the man had flown oot of tbe cjty," said Ralph Page, wpervisor for the Dade County Public Safety O.partment. "We found someone who thought they recognized the sketch," Page continued. ••we checked the man and he had a criminal record. We found out he had f!Own to Atlanta and that he would probably return to the city. We staked out the airport and waited.•• Both women -especially Mrs. Goshe -are' key ~ secution witnesses. Both have identified Collins as th e motorcycle-riding yolmg man who drove Miss Beineman away from .the downtown Ypsilanti wig shop owned by Mn. Gosbe around 12:30 p.m., July 231 1969. Defense at· torneys Joseph Luisell and Neil Fink have challenged those identilicalions. FormerNewark Mayor Guilty of Extortion TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - Fonner Newark Mayor Hugh J. Addooizio and four codefen- dants face up to 20 years in tirison on each of 64 counts of conspiracy and extortion. AU five were convicted by a jtry Wednesday night in what the federal govenmlent described as a Mafia~cked scheme to squeeze payoffs fnm a>ntraaocs d o I n g business wilb tbe state's lMgest city, which has a population ot more t h a n 400.000. No date was set for sentenc- ing by U.S. Dist. Court Judge George ff. Barlow. 1be trial, which began June t, ended in a hush ed courtroom in the state capital after the jury had deliberated Jess then s.i:r hours. Lyle G. Cook, foreman of the all-white jury ol. seven men and five women, read off each ol the 64 counts or the indictment which included ~ count of conspiracy and 63 acts of ertortk>n. "Hugh Addoni:tio, Anthony Lamcrte, Joseph Biancone, Ralph VlCaro, PNlip Gordon were found guilty by the jury," Cook repeated S4 times. Eadl Umo, ho misprooounc<d the former mayor's name as GUILTY IN EXTORTION ''Ad-donz.i-o." Ex-Mayor Addonlzio Seven young women testified for the prosecution Wed· nesday. Two of them u. · Girl Dies Of Friglit At Dentist LONDON (AP) -Fear of the daitist killed 4-year-old Denise O'Connor. She died of. !right after four of her baby teeth were ex- tracted, a coroner's court was told. Within mlnules of the brief operation in the dentist's chair llhe had a heart atlack. Still unconscious from the gas anesthetic, she was taken to a hospital, but died two days Jat er. Dr. Victor Goldman, a Harley Street anesthetist, told the Mquest: "Fright is generally acknowledged tn a dental patient, but the degree of apprehension depends on the patient's exp er I en ce before. "Unfortunately In Denise's case she had a bad experience or a local anesthetic for stitches being put in her forehead." It is rare for some- one to die this way, he added. "But w h e n people a re frightened adrenalin is relus- ed in the bloqd. In this case so much adrenalin must have been released that her heart slopped." Denise's father. 27·year-<>ld trucker Patrick O'Connor, said there were 13 people in the London Teaching D e n t a I •losplta1 "all wearing white robes and masks." "A lot of them were students, just walching. and that contributed to her being frightened ." Coroner Gavin Thurston said no blame lay lli th the dental surgeon or the anesthetist. He gave a verdict of accidental death. Have you shopped our children's SHOE SALE? GREAT VALUES 30 FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT BEACH .. NEWPORT CENTER • "44-2464 • 3641 EAST COAST HIGHWAY Our Purpose Is Cl•ar •.. W• R.c•ntly Shut Down Our Burbank Stor• And Moved lt1 Stock To Our Corona del Mar Stor• ••• LEAV· ING US WITH A TREMENDOUS OVERSTOCKll ••• Our Auditor Now Oemends That We Reduce Stocks IMMEDIATELY ••. Al The Very Cllm•x Of Our Selling Season! ••• Cona.qu•ntly, This Is Your Opportunity To Buy ••• This S.a10n'1 Styles And Fabrics • •• At The Pe•k Of Their Demand , •• At Fabulous Price Reductions! WOMEN'S ~:: !R~UP $288 Rog. $11.00 $717 SALE PRICE SALE PRICE Sweaters 0 , , Goin; O ut 11 follow1 : LADIES' CAPRIS F11hio11•d by GRAFF, WE STS ET, JAY!RO of CALIF,. DELLA, LONDON BRITCHES, 111d Ot~· .... All Goin11 1t th• G•11l•1i Dit<oi.tnh E••• Off•••d in Our B111in•u Hi1~ry. ONE GROUP Reg. to $10 SALE PRICE ONE GROUP Reg. to $14 SALE PRICE ONE GROUP Rog . to $17 SALE PRICE $288 $488 $688 WOMEN'S SKIRTS IOll!llE llROOKS, MURR of Ctl· ilorni1, DELLA, PLUS ONE, GRAFF ind Oth•r F1mou1 l r1nd1, Ftoll'I Jr. Si111 5·6 lo Wom111'1 tt. ONE GROUP Rog. to $8 SALE PRICE ONE GROUP Rog. to $12 SALE PRICE ONE GROUP Reg. to $16 SALE .PRICE $288 $388 $488 BLOUSES A Widt S1l1clion of 11011111 to Go with Our SKIRTS, cu. LOTTES 1..0 CAl'RIS ••. Iv IOllllE ROOKS. WEST.SET, JAltlO, GRAFF, ALFRED ll'AOU· ETTE, LADY MANHATTAN , , • l11cludln1 Loni C1p1! Topi. ONE GROUP Rog. to 512 SALE PRICE ONE GROUP Rog. to $15 SALE PRICE $388 $488 Lady Manhattan Junior Petite DRESSES Si111 J to IJ ••• F•1hiontd I v SAIETH, JP'1 ONLY. RAGE, IOlllE BROOKS, COUNTRY JR., CANDI JONES, i nd GAY GllSON ••• 111 100% T111.· lur.d Poly11t1r, and W11t.,bla Klopma11 F1b1i c1. ONE GROUP Thi V1rv L1 t11f ;11 BLOUSE Reg . to $17 FASHIONS •• , Auort1d Solid SALE PRICE Colofi ind G1y Colorful Pri11h •• , Thi Fi<111I in Machin"l W11h.ble P11m•nt11! Pr111. Reg. to $6.00 SALE PRICE Rog. to $8.00 SALE PRICE Rog. to $I 0.00 SALE PRICE SWIM SUITS & BIKINIS Rog. $12.00 SALE PRICE Rog. $15.00 SALE PRICE Reg. $11.00 SALE PRICE Reg. $24.00 SALE PRICE KNIT TOPS Ul!'llted Group, ly ll'LUS·ONE, 10.lllE IROOKS ind SWITCH. MATES. Reg. $6.00 SALE PRICE ( ONE GROUP Rog . to $25 SALE PRICE ONE GROUP Rog . to $35 SALE PRICE WOMEN'S DRESSES Now! lti9ht 1t th1 P1•k of 011 S11•on •• , Ju1t wh1n you 111•d c.loth11 moil • , , N1w Poly11t1r F1bri1:1 •• , tr.ti Mirt· cit F1b1l1: Mi11.lur11 Th1t 1r1 Pt rman1ntly Pr111od i nd Mt· chin1 w •• h1bl1 ••••• th1 Gr11f11t S1•ln91 f.,.,, Offer1d in Our lu•ln1it Hi1toryl , •• Si11s • to 20 • • , i.11cludin9 a Lill'llt1d S1l11:tion ef H1lf Si1e1, ONE GROUP Rog. to $17 SALE PRICE ONE GROUP Reg. to $29 SALE PRICE ONE GROUP Rog. to $33 SALE PRICE BETIER ' DRESSES FtthJon Hitt from Tho· World'• b1t1Un1 01tl9<11r1 1..0 'Ma11uf1c· l11rort in Ono tnd Two ll'l1c.1 Styl11 • • . l<1cludin1 IUTTE KNITS, ll'ATIY, JULIE MILLE!!;, IUP;T STANLEY. Alt N1w, Su111• 1t11r F1d1lo<1t •.. lnclvdJn9 N1w Atrl•1l1 for F1lll ONE GROUP $1288 Reg. $33·$39 SALE PRICE ONE GROUP s17aa Reg. $39·$45 SALE PRICE ONE GROUP ~288 Reg . $45·$56 SALE PRICE CAPRI SETS M1tchln9 Co·on:lin1t11 F11hion· •ti by WEST-SET, PLUS-ONE, JODEE, SAILMATES, tnd Al· FRED PACQUETIE. ONE GROUP Rq. to $1288 $25.00 SALE PRICE ONE GROUP Rog. $1988 $31.00 SALE PRICE ONE GROUP Rog. to s2488 $37.00 SALE PRICE Short Shorts Walk Shorts Short Culottes Reg. to $1.00 SALE PRICE $388 Rog. to $11.00 s4sa SALE PRICE Rog. $13.00 SALE PRICE s5aa TEINFORM -BRAS $131 Reg. $2.7S SALE PRICE Reg. $3.00 SALE PRlCE BEACH TOPS Rog. $7.00 SALE PRICE Rog. $12.00 SALE PRICE Reg. $15.00 SALE PRICE $468 s7aa $9'8 BRAS Our l!;o9ular Stock, fttdircod for Thi1 S1l1 Onlyl ONE GROUP Rog. $5.50 SALE PRICE ONE GROUP Rog. $7.50 SALE PRICE Panti·Hose Reg. $2.50 . SALE PRICE Reg. $3.00 SALE PRICE s1to : $197 Body Hose Reg. $10.SO SALE PRICE Reg. $15.00 SALE PRICE $68t $9'8 PARTIES- 67~ 1. • • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Freeway, Deci·sion Due Tbt route of tht Paclllc COUI Freewey tbrallJh Onnc• Oowlty a .. cla for a legulaUve abowdowrl Mon- day befori Ille Senate Transpol'latlon Commllltt 1n S.ctameuto. Arrayed on one side, seeldn& to retain the rnute of Iba PadJlc Coast Freewpy u It II now adopted !rem Beach Boulevard In Hunungton Beach through Newport Beadl, are the County ol Oranae. the cltle• ol Huntip&· ton Be.ch, Coal& Mesa, Fountain Valley and Laguna llMch. Seekln& to have the freeway rnute wiped out in that area b Newport Beach. TIJ• Newport Beach City Coun- cil Monday Dlgbt unanimously voted support for a bUI authored by AsHmblyman Robert Baclham (R·Newport Beach) which would delete the contrnversial route on Iha 1tate'1 freeway system by a leglalaUve action. The ANembly bas approved the bill. In doing so, the City ill Newport o~en,Uy b11 come to the conclusion that the freeway pn.blom Is ur· gent enough to justify the elly'a taking la chances on some aerloua long-renae problems if the bill paaa•. Among these: -Flguratfvely burning the city's bridges belllnd It with the State Hlgliway CaouniJslon-and llteraUy abandoning the city's long talked ol wtab for a hl&h- level brldRe over the Upper Bay. -Having the Coron• de! Mar Freeway taken off the state'• priority construcUon list, for redoslgn and probably re-hearing, because ellmln1Uon of the Coast freeway would wipe out the tetminal for the Corona de! Mar Freeway. -Serving offlcW notice on Iha nelibbortng com· mun!Uea that Nawport'a j>rOO!eml with !lte Pacific Cout Freeway aa now adopted are Irreconcilable with the lnterosll of the nelgbborlnr cities. All of thla adda up lo a prilty strong commitment On the other side ol the argument, the other ef. ftcted cities appear equally adamant in support ol Our Problems Are Closing In on Vs ' .-' t,,. .._,.. I • "£>1 '· ~· !;' 1 . . "",,. . ',, , I ' .,, • '\,U'41 " ! ,. 'nJe conveot.lonal wladom of our time --pointing to oor space pnllfl!D ., u eumpM ol what we cu do, _..... II lllth our oocW po~, u • emnpJe of w'ha1 we cu~ do. Bui convtnllonal wllltom, M 11111&1, II wronc n could do fir fDP1't on ell'th tban m lpract, u .. w1nted lo ..t deddod lo. II II 111 will 11111 It m,..., not tho WOT· Don't write tllll ol! II the wllHUl thlllklnl o1 oome ru .. IJ • minded ldealllt. Jt 1'81 llVll'al )Wn .,., In lac~ that the manager ol the JICA 8,...,1 IJe. ~ Center told a conference of markeliq m,n that alla<idnl our ..Clil problm11 was much more Important than the natlon's apace program -and that "" llrndJ had the 17ilems fll&inetring capeblllllna to do K wltb. TBS IAMB m-loCY used in ~ 1)'1tem1, be pointed out, can be Ulfld to overcame the 10Clal ills d ••poverty, rotting cities, the need to CICJDlfJl"Ve natural remun:es, lmprove beatLb and education." IM he wun't Try hopeful that this was go1111 to Uppell lor a long limo. We apply oor 1Clt11Uflc knowles;• fDOltly toward the thlnp that pey In lat lhort run -to apeclllc, objectJve, mraterlal goalt thlt can be delimited ml quaDtUled. Our lnctllllve l)'Stem ta -almOll exctua!vely on .,,.. Mllnl -ledp lllto profit. YET TBS UNMJ:T aoclll needs ol Dear Gloomy Gm: Robert Louf1 StevenlM aald, 111.et *"Y man 1pfl1k Jona enou&h, be will get bellevera." If be were a Jive lod&J and °*Mnr -ol our long·wlndod demaiOfl!H tn po!J. Uct, he would know he 1j>oke an etemll truth. -J. S. T. l1lh ..... """"' ,....,... .,...... .. --"" ...... ti '" __,..-, .... y ___ ........ ., .... DellY l'lltt. the nallOn -and, oven "*"· ol the world -~a tremoncloua lo11, nol meft!y tn unfulllllad productivity, bUt tn P!Ylnl lilr rancli>nl .......U• and 11)'11\l>l<lmatlc treatment thal never l'I to the root of the aUmettt. What doe• ll qoot 1111 !or poor educodonal pollclea, lot tnel!ectl'° wellar. ~ !or h1dllent medico! can, ancl all the nlll rJ lliese peld!W<>l'k p1lU1Uv11! As the man uid, "Our problem! au cbing In on u1. 'I1>e tbn1 for im- provlsatlon i• p11t.~· Ot>vtoully, we need ~ he recommendtd: a 1yltem1Uc, planned, tndustrial..,cademic-t0vernment approadl to 10Cl1I 1her1py u a whole, ' Trtattnc the parb lep&l'ately results only in conflict, confusion, contradlct1on1 and -inulni !uUllty. II' YOU'RB PUZZLED about the kind ol mtOhodoloCY used tn ....._ sywt.emJ, let me recommend a a:ood new book for the layman, ''The Sy~ Approach" by C. West Cburdunan (llolta Paperi>ack '2.21), which uplalna In non~al ttmll ho" this revolution in approach and pllMinl can be fl· ficienUy applied Lo aoclal problems. This is not ,to say that tclence can do It: First of all, the pubUc must recognize the gravity of the lituatlon and the lnctpoblllly d any political doc- trine to cope wttb our ills. When we wa.M to build _. IOund • society as we do a spaaeshlp, our technology Is able to lead u1. ()ply, tlrtt, we mutt bt willing lo lead It, and not he led. The Upper Bay Trade To the Editor: M a fairly recent arrival to the area (two )'111.n residence u of July 1, lt70), t decided Lo attend a aeSSion or the hearlni on lhe "Bay Trade." The lqal pme " language 11 undoubtedly cum· hlrnDe and perhaps {or decorum the c«U't must role out random voices. Vet tn the i*erest or jwtlct, the public mut find a way to ~ what It fttls. nte quMUon belng conaldered ts too f~retchinl to be quashed by the gentle tmipo of writ& and brJefs. No wonder our yo11111 people feel the nece .. 1ty to ._. In eye-catctllng disarray and lhout laJilulP diltutelul even to lhem~lvea jual to bt hean1 IT SEDtED like a .1ta1wettin& and It. judp_oWy •cUnc out a tole -not ti hll ct..ln(. 'l1>t case la being con· tklered on the bltll al a Je111 contract .....,. full bnplic.1tion• wlll never be mown. I !ell the fruatratloo and the dlolUll o1 our youn1 people taday in their .a.Ill lo be heard. No on• wlU lllton. The re11 qaeauon 1o be CONldet<d ls : How can tile people pmerv1 thtlr herilap to tlial lhtir children and thtlra tn tum. CM Mva ICCM to God'• sr«n (and blue) _, .,,,. lrvlno C4mpany talU ol the lli,hell flnanclal bcntfll, but wbo eter uw • child 1klp rocu tN• a pfJe ot money! Bflltflt lo whom? TRI "IJ&AL" with the IJVioo C.mpeny WU.-,... -Ilia -bllcame cnictal ta our "open apace" pQfo. WI» I Lettera from reoden ar• wtkomf. NormaUw wriUJra aMMld convcv tht!lr m111ao11 in !00 wordl or 1111. The right to condeme l1ti1r1 Co fi t 1pac1 or eliminate libel ii rtnrvtd. AU ltt- ter1 mu,t «incl11.d1 rtanatur1 and moiJ. ing addttu, but "°""' may be wtth. held on rtqt.11.tt •f iufflcll"t reason ii apJ)«rtnt. Poatry 10W not bt pub- U.h1d. abould have the rl&ht lo""''" our &horn -onb' thoae with money to pay for aCCQllt New York City h callln1 In the fedtral government to deVelop nt- tional parka In 11• midll. NewpOrl Deach has a bundle from heaven ln It.I bay -why tan tt into the !,..,.,. Company vaulta !or Ille ketpinl! lltTA K. WHITE Dr •rt Weme"' To the Edlll>r: Women th1t art In favor Of the Women's LibtnUon Mov,ment maybe havt 'forl'IJ(tln thlt men have to be dratted tnlo the sttvlce. Do women really wanl to be lrtattd N equal lo men la evayUJlnfl U:fG!I ANN !iARMS what they c6ncelve to be !belt lnter .. a and reqlilre- menta. HunUn11ton Beach doas not want the niute cl!anred or delayed to upset their city plans. Fountain Valley doea nol want a new rnute cuf through ita relatively arnall territory. Costa M~a, with Iba Newport, San Diego and corona de! Mar freeways already cultin& tbrourh 11, does not want a rnute change which would absorb more of Its taxable property. Laguna Beach does not want anythinf done to upset and delay the Pacific Coast Freeway s promise of rellov!ng congelllon on the highway tbrourh down- town Lacuna. And, Oranae County government doe• not want the freeway network delayed or left with a gap. One factor which should weigh on Newport's side In the beariog before the Transportation Committee on M6nday-though no one at this point is able to tell how heavUy-is .the vote of that 1ame Senate committee earlier Ibis week to delete the adopted Pactllc Coast Freeway route from the southerly city limits of Santa Monica through the City ol Venice. What ls not clear yet is how many parallels there are between the problems in Venice ,and the problem5 In NewpOrt. But clearly a precedental action bas been taken by the Senate committea which cannot help but give strength to Newport's stand. I The coastal freeway inescapably is a dominant con· sldei"atlon In the city planning and economic develop- ments ol. the communities along the route. And, major cbangea in treewl)' routes usually result In years.long re-studies and far·reaching changes all the way down to the secondary street patterns in each city. So, the vote of U>e Celifornla Senate committee on tranaport•· Uon nut week -either way -could become the major single governmental dkiilion of the next decade fOr the Or8n1e Coast area. 'Chief/ Those aenate dovea ttole our weopo118}' l\'l~on Derides to RIB'k Humlliation Major Drive to Elect GOP Congress WAS!llNllTON -fn undertatlng I major c1mpalp for ~ e)ection of 1 Republican eon;..., thl1 bll tho While Houae II' •"""'"11 tlaelf to open r1su of .erfou!l humtl11tton. These rl1k1 have been weighed and the decision Is on the aide of talh1&' them for an obvklUI rea90n, 'M'le humlllaUon would be the nme with or without a major campaign and the pl'Olpect5 are conaJdered b r i r b t tnouah to warrant an all-out lllorl U.. volving eablnet - members, ndio-TV llma, and -1bll' Prelldent Nixon's personal particlpa~ tion. ~ of maldna allnlflcanl 1alns, parilcularly In the tlenale, are lhou&ht lo be 1ood In Te-, Oonnectlcut, Nevada, Indian-. Tuas, and worth extra effort in Michtaan, New York, Illinois with a possibility of further ialna In the Home in Callfornia and elsewbert. • FORMER HEW Secretary Robert Finch'• shin to the White House takes on 91peCial slgnlflcance because the pro- spect now is that he will be one ot the leading organisers of the major cam· palfn and will participate In it also u 1 campaigner. His speclal relaUonshlp whJch 1oes back to Nixon'• vice presiden· cy In the Eiaenhawer adminlatration serves to Illustrate that the Preiident is daring to make h i s own leaderstilp the major .luue. Vice Prealdent Ainew, J n t e r i o r Secretar1 W a It e r Hickel -virtually everyone tzcept State Secretary Rogers and Del•-Secretary Laird (and perhaps even tbey in a sneaky w-.y) -wUI be called upon lo do his duly. Nlibn lll1 apparently been building up to this political confl"Olltation · for a lof1I' time beginning with his veto ol lbe HEW af'l'"'prlaUon bill laat year, running on lhiouah tho Haynsworth and Carswell appointments, tile Cooper- Church amendment to limit his war-mak- ing power, the ve(o Of hospital ~ atrucUon authorization overridden by Congrei;s. There are likely to be other ~uch conflicts before the campaign begins to warm up. THE DEMOCRATS are quite willing to have it this way, ,Under Chairman Lawrence O'Brien, the D em o C r a t i c oraantzaton ia making Nixon the issue. In other wordl, U both akiea have their way the contressional election this fall . will be a referendum on Nixon'! presidency midway in his first term. Rarely has there bun a C{)ru;cious effort to make the Issue too !harp, and In these circwnstances it cannol be doubted thal Nixon will take a person.al band In those states where be thinks he can do some good. The truth of the matter, of course, is that Nlion loves campaigning. fie simply could not stop after hll defeat in 1960 for the presidency and for t h e governorship of California in 1962 bul kept right on with scarcely a bnak in otrlde. There are .1 o m e agonizing problems, however. One of them ls in vir1tri1a where Sen. Harry F. Byrd ia nlMlng as an Independent qaUwt Republican and Democrailc opponents. tt would have :i.erved Nixon'• personal lntarest better if Byrd had tun aa a Repu~llcan and been elected u part of a new Republican majority in the Senate. But the Vlrstnia Rtpublican organilalion now building itself around a new Republican governor can scarcely bto blamed for not being willing to give lb'rd a free rkSe. THE CHANCES ARE anyway that if elected as an independent Byrd wCJUtd vote for a Republican organtutlon Of the Seoale, and bis vole would be cruclll 1n a clo.tt situation. New York is another problem. Sen. Charles Goodell is not much of a Nixonite on the iuues Nlion considers vital but his vote may be needed, too , to organize a Republican Senate. NiJon is asking for support on the basis of having created a majority policy for the country , and not a silent majority policy either. But it is a majority policy in the sense that it is not frustrated and warped by t he special interests of mlnotiUes of whatever color, race, religion . or eC{)nomic class. Appeal tn the black Vo\e will not be overlooled and Nlion will 11> on his record which is likely to be elaborated on al length. HE IS.SEEKING the labor vote, too, over the heads of labor leaders who will 1upport Democratic candidates. The appeal will be to the hard·hats an the simple Issue of support for the President of tile United States in a time of trouble. Nixon has apparently been heartened by the warm public receptlorui he ha.!11 recreived in St. Louis, Louisville and elsewhere as iOOicative that he can afford to take the risk of humiliation. So, il will be an intere!lting campaign to follow and one in which Nl:ron''I Political fortune will be told for the rtmainder of his first term ind the presidential election in 1972. Why Does Learning Come ·So Late? There Is ho aphrodisiac like a well· shaped mind." So t'a'ent1y tpoke that admirable BrltJlh journalist, Alan Brien. He added: "There are men who think of women as just peripatetic 1lda of meat. ''I don't bllme the remale commandos for fingering them 11 'l'be Enemy." There an words that catch you up 'lhort. ind these are 1uch words. I had alWays thought of myself ns a jolly tood fellow, that is, a man who regarded women as sldes of beef. A well-turned ankle, neat email European bret.st1, and a good caITiage, were the pauporta to my affection. Or so I thou&ht. As I look back on the women I have been besctted wtth, however, t mnembcr they have something in common besides a good appea~ance, They have all had well·shaptd mµids. A ~ mind In a pretty bocly I• all that any woman needs, and Women's Liberation can 110 to hell, and tell them 1 told them IO. Equally, U\fl canfl(lt live with a body, no matter how comely it is. THE FUN OF MAKING love, among oilier aspects, la waking up with 1 dame .---B ii 6eOl'ft! ---1 Dear G«qe: I've written yoo three lettert saytns I think your column &hoold be canceled because there'• no place for 11.Ulntt.,, in this aeciou1 world. All thr,. times you answered iNUltin&IY and I plan henctlonb I<> write to your edit«. FURIOUS Dear Furious: Good, I Wll •"Una alclt ., you. • \ I ' 1 · Chatl~ ',Mc~f~il who thinks lhe world ts funny and nice, and has her ways of saying it. 1bere is nothing In the world half '° pleasant as a woman with a sense of humor. If one learned about sex {as Jove ls sometimes called) on street C(>l'llers and in pool halls and under lhe bodies of automobiles, one learns tndeed that wo1nen are alabs of beef. This is some kind of protective knowledge. Some kind of way of escaping the wrath of our mothers, who don't wish us lo be spending our substance on other, and younaer, women. t don'l blame the remale commandOI for being mid at us for thii. It's a \'iew which leads to hideous abill!es, like somebody setting 80 buckl a week more for the same kind of work, performed in the same kind of way, slmply because he's a man. 'Ibis is wron1, wro111. NOW THAT I THINK ol II, I really feel qutte uncomfort.able In the presepce of good-looking women who ire not what I would call bright. l don't mean they have to kJ\ow the collected works of Splnou; ool thty ahould know their \lo'ay out of a dart room. Now that l am engaged In this orty of h\Ellliation, I should admlt that many o!' the women of whom I've been fond have been a damned sight miarter than 1 am. This is awful knowledge , but true. Smart women are smart because they learn from men. Some smart men are M because tht:y learn from women. \Vomen retain better. 'ltlat Is the secret. \Vomen who love one man all their life are doubtleu admirable. So be it. Social Securit y Dangers The (ederal Social Secwity sy1tem was aever intended to be more than a sup- plement to old age reUrement plans. Privale penalons and private savings art basic to the pttpetuatJon of the private property, rree enterprile system, aa we have known ll ln this country. 11le Coutcll of Sllte awriber1 of Commerce WIJTll, 1"lbe fuhn of private pwlon p1Bn1 ls jeopardlud u the Social S<curlty progr•m with Its rapklly rbi11g tax1ble wage batt, tax rate, and emplo~~ employe cosb incrtaslnsly shifts from Ill orlslna1 purpose as a bulc floor of protecUon to a basic rotlrome~I ay1\em. C1pllal fonnallon In thla counlry will be threatened If prlvale l)enston progr1m1 are 1uperteded by an expending Social Security progran1. Prlvale penaion provams are now a m•Jor aoum ti capllll !or ecOllOlDiO • Gueat Editorial growth." EVERYDAY, WE read or the billion• ol doP•n that muat be opant by lnduatry to keep up with the nceda of U.S. cltiaen1. If thue billion• of dollars of Investment capital cannot be secured from private citJzens, where Is Industry to •t them' Once private cltl.Mnl become w1rd1 or the govenment, lndu.Jlry rnuat alllO become a ward of the pvtn\rnellt, forced to go with hat In hind to the taipayer for the c1pltal to build new plant11. All.out welrarelsm and socialism are dif· ler<nt aldca ol the 11rqe coin. ladUlrill Nawa lllvlew But there ls nothing so stlmulatlng as a woman who has gone through many husbands and many lovers, and is still on the prowl . If she has any mind at all, it la by now well·sf\aped, and well-aimed . lF YOU, IN YOUR superhuman way, decide that you love a woman tor her body alone, give yourself a second think. 'lbe1't is a itrong chance tbat within that sound body. there is a aound mind. or one you think is aiund, 'Ibe idea that a woman Is a person ii repugnant to a man who was brought up a.s J was , which is doubtless the source or much of the difficulty I have had with Ole species. In ooe sense, the sexual revolution arrived jusl in time for me. In anoU'ler, H was a bl! too early. It is weakening kno\Yledge that when J thought a good pair of legs wt.re bringing me to desperation, it was really an orderly and productive and funn)' n1lnd. Why does lea.ming come so late! A lorty I.Q. is qulle as ready a road to perdition as the loveliest pair of breaN on earth1 no ? ---1W- ThursdlO)I, July 21, 1970 The edjtorial page o/ the Dail11 Pilot seeks io •nforoi ond stim- Miate readers bt1 pr1stnlh1g lhi.s , 1ttWl))Gptr11 oplnlon1 and com- mtntof'!I on topfcs of interest attd lignlf~cottte. bu providino a forum for ihe txpression of our rtadert' opinlona. and bJI presenting the diverse view- points of it1forn1td ob1trvf!'r1 and 1pokesme11 Oll topfca of the cloy. J Robert N. Weed, Publisher ---~~~~~~~~~~ ..... • • Tllllrsday, Jul7 23, 1'70 DAILY Pl~fT l Scientists Term Saccharin 'Safe~ Girl s Sentimental -But Calculating By L M. BOYD advisers termed safe. "'ld-o nesday the artificial sweetener saccharin. But they ftCOD>- mended addlUonal studitl Oft ils possible lint to cancer arwl other diseases. On the basis of available fn. !ormallon, lbe _. and projected usa~ of saccharin in the United StaUll does not pose a hazard," sakl a special, eight-man study gnrp of the National Academy el Sciences -national Researdl COWlcll. commllllt'• burTy-up ··-tlbn of oacd>lriA In Mlldl lfttr a UDl•"1lly o I Wllcoasin researcher linked tbe aweetener to ~•DCer ln mlct. Moro than low: lDi1lloll pounds of llCdllrln ... --Ullb' In diet loods and drinp. 'lllt cl>emlcal is 300 '° 500 times as sweet as suaar. The "POrt dismissed by im- pllcation the significance of tbe finding by Dr. G<or1e T. Bryan that saccharln implants in the bladders of mice pro- duced cancer in almost half Ille IOI! 1nlmals. Tbe 1d•iler said -Ill st11dles ratbtr tbaD. pellet im-- planU « other --ta! -,....111y ... llie on-ly i~le .. _ to the ClllCV-lnduclnl -1iol o! Slcdluin," aceotdinc to an FDA 1111M11ry of t1Mt report. The lull repoft WIS DOI im- mediately available. The NAS panel rtcom- m e n d e d klnger-term, ad- ditional studies on the tftects of . feeding saccharin to animals. FDA Commissioner Charles C. Edwards did not comment oo tlMt repocl'I concluSionl. litmtd bY I foedil!I U· DO lttldioo ti ... """' but But be said the doc\IJMot pen-1. ••u+ 1111 ,_-ICltft.. wooJd be rtvitwed by top Tbe NAS panel performed tlllc data, Ille RIA - agency olflclab. Sacdwio b11 tme<&ed I S I ..................... .. the moat wid•ll' Uled ottillclal • ,., the flrat fl-•-. _,, .. ,.., • swetteoer foUowtoa aovern-a thtre 11 ON olfieit 1ulti, •we...,. 1R • ment Mtrlctlons last October • .. tbe use of cyd11n1te1 In •· The Mercury $aylw •kit-• ae-J-purpose loocb and • ....,. drinks. • 7112 l!dl ... r (at IMch lfwl.) • Tiie first ••idfnce tb.at • H""'lnt'"" Wch • cyclamates cau.aed cancer in • A lt••wtilwl. 4tli ""' "'a,, ,.rtitifft4 •• fiai.W. • anilnals came from earlier ••r.r•., 900 USiAILE ..,,.,, f .. t, .n _.i. .. •Mil • pellet implantation st11di11 by • 11ti lti•• -$100 ,., ••atl te 111 11.nt• .. ..-" • BrylJ). • fl••·Y••r 1, •• ., 11\e cancer findinc f o i • C•ll Mr, P•rlla l4CMait 8 cyelamatea was la\ft" con-"• • • • • a • ii .• • • • • • e • 8 • •. • • I VENUS -Tape mea.sure-- ments of the Venu s de Mllo, reJIOfls a subscriber, are as follows: HeJght sin feet, neck 12 7/1 inches, waist 2811, hij).' 36, thigh 191>, knee IS'f.l, ankle BY.a and bust 34;t_. Young lady, how do you com· pare with that hiatoric old girl? \Vould you look all right in marble? ror as much u 30 ytl.rl h•~ never even aeen a diamond. Odd, what? ••• TllDE AllE !S BONES ln a swan'• neck, only seven in a lifaf(e's. Whit, you say you don't care about that'! Well, bow about the bones in a duck's neck! There are 11. . • TAIE THOSE convicted feions qed to. They're numerous, but that's not the point. Point is six out ol 10 ol same are repeaters, alrt•dy. The scientists referred tol the "M>-year history of s•c- cbarin use by man WitboUt r-,..,,. evidence ol. adverse effeets." 1 CALIFORNIA has come up with more new klnm of roses than all the rest of the world put togetbtt •• , ST. FRANCIS AT 4-feiet-f.incbes was uactly as tall as the Statue of Liberty's nose. UNDER 111E LAW in Iowa, a one-.armed piano i>layer can play his piano in public all right, but he can't charge admJssion •.• DRY CLEANE8S nationwide agree the life U:· pectm:lCy or a man's overcoat is four years, no more . . , IT'S A SCIENTIFIC FACT the Japanese have larger brains than Occidentals. CONSIDER TllIS -Note It stated girls are mon romantic than their gentleman friends. Our Love and War man disagrees. More sen· timental maybe. But more calculating, too. When a man contemj>tates matrimony, it's his romantic nature that calls the turn. But when a woman thinks about getting m~rritd. it's frequently her opportunity for advancement that decides the matter. This is particular- ly true of petite blondes with retrousse noi.ses. YOU'VE HEARD of the Kimberley diamond mires of South Africa. A lot of men 1\'ho ha ve worked those pits HINDRIX CUSTOM&ll Sl!llVICE-Q. "Art cranes anci herons lood to eat!" A. Cranes ar~; HetOlll Mt too filby , , , Q, "How tut does the wind have to blow before you can C.U it a burricanet" "4 At J"st 75 mllel per hour • , • Q. "Are cats colorblind!" A. So it's said. LikewiM dogs, p14s, sheep, cows, bones and fro&s. Salamanders are colocbllnd, too, but no need to make much ot a point of that biecause: trus ye&r there's not all that much intereSt in salamanders. t'OMMON t'ONCERN - Wbat .. w01ries the averaae man moetf Either money or the lack or same, I tbouaht. That's not right, evidently, Polllters now claim the com- mmest ooncem among g?OWOUl>S has to do with get- iln& <ll!I ol shape pllylically. Too fat. Too soff. Too short~ winded. Too weak. Your questions and com- ments art' welcomt"d and will bt' used in Cht'eking Up wherevt'r pos.ribl1. Ad- dress Jttkrs to L. M. BO]ld, Bo:t 1815, Nt'wporS B1ach, Calif. 92860. l•nd of Gypays Includes: \Vho Knows, Machine Gqn, Chanau. Powtr of Soul, Jt1eua1e To Love, We Gotta Uve Toaetljer. Lht ''·" PIGGY UI Brltl1e Over Tro.,lalo water Jnclude1: Raindrops Keep Fallin' On l.fy Head, Bridge Over Troubled \Yater. The Thrill II Gone, 1'.ere'1 Al· ways Somelhlna Therfl To Rep1Jnd Me, W~t Are You Doing The Re1t Or four Llfe, I See Your Fa~ Befortt Me, Sometfiing Strange, You'll Remember Me, Jq,ve You Seen My Baby, He Uaed Me, Lisi "·" . ' The FoOd aod D r u I Administratkn requested the' Zoo Animals Not Cut Off ST. LOUIS (AP) -If the Sl 1..ou4 7""' d,...'t pay ill water bill the &mmals will get water blt the people wun't, water C<lnmiliianer Conway Briscoe said Tueldl.y as he -anded thot I bili ol $Ze,07S be paid by Aug. 3. The zoo board bofjlll bat- tling the city m the price ·of waler when rMes Wf'l't rais- ed last year, In a letter to the zoo board, Biilooe said unlets the bijl iJ .. Id water will be cut off to the zoo's administration buildin( and ...-.. stands but be would make aure "the anirnils receive at least their minimal requirements o t water." Pole-isb :Quy SEA'ITLE (AP) -The flr~ department 1hla week sold :13 old bran poles, the klnc! firemen slide down, and all 23 were bouiht by firtimkn. Now thru SUNDAY JULY 28th $ 88 lltlC.ALLY PllCiD ERIC CLAPtON •••· ulT ... 11 $J.14 $J.14 CREEDENCI CLEARWATER:~.~· ... .. COSMO'S MCTOlT TRAFFIC 116, LIST $1.tl $4.14 JOHN u1Lnco1N MUST Ill STORE HOURS: Mon. thrv Sat. t:ac> h 9:30; Sun, 10:00 h 6:00 NOW TWO GRANT crrrs TO SllYI YOU ANAHllM HUNTINGTON BEACH l h11•ll• • s.... c • ...,.., •• .,.._..ch-. Ht.,. It A.M ... t P.M, hlly S11Hkty 11 A.M. t. I P.M. ................. ,..c-W H ... t ill -.M ... t 1Jt P.M, hftf ~ 11 A.M. te I P.M, • BUY 2 ••• GET 1 FRE E! THAT"S RIGHT! ~ ;~LAST WEEK TO IMPROVE ' YOUR Tllolis•nds ofTop9Hllty ....... ENVIRONMENT CIMloe• "'-! . c-11•. Avoclldos, Citrus BEACH .PARTY? C-.cl, Hot lurnl119 Oran9• Firewood 98¢ PER BUNDLE DEATH TO WEEDS Kills Duffs Fast • kllb ot1w1. Dlktl cw.w. :.:r~~ 4i.':.!.~'"'''" • , .... ~kllfilfr• , ... fMI 19 Y'Wt .. Wll. • 0.......,. _. ~-I! IMer.h. • llliMle. lrM. Stil.....,. AMltllllHI & ZfM, APPLY NOW- SAYE NOW Prevents Blu91rass Germination 7. 8 WEED'S 'N FEED 5000 ...... I Nn SAYE$$ ONLY $5.91 ....... ,. • IUl.U PUT-....... iH, Clilcll ..... .......,.. ·~ .... _,,-. ....... • '1l!PPLl•i C!0¥!}1TI LI.Wit POOP fl"" •11ti• at;llM 1t1m.-. J I 'I I . '!J. . " 18-4-4 AT GREAT SAVINGS! an ONI FREE PIACHES e PlUMS e FIOS APRICOTS • APPLIS e OllANGIS LIMONS e TANGERINES DWAR/.iCH~S I. NICTARINIS R19ul~$1.95 l•ch ,,_....., --o;-... ,- An~'°Lhe ;,. <> c.1;bnio pnlming GET YOUR COPY OF SUNSET'S LATEST GARDEN PU8LICA TION FREE! ' •uv lNy rwo e e. vi-. Junlpen. ......... _. , ........ Fer111 Limited · to Stock on ·H•taf. SPECIAL Dichondra Seed e 1001/, 'ure • Ml Germination • ... ,Time Te ''•n.t • We'll Show You How 1' SALE $4.98 GET TWQ 0ALt0..S $4.99 Flower Shop Special . Ll>N6 STIM Dl>llN CHAltGI IT IJ PHQNE WllM TOUR CllDIT CAID NO. 2141 Harbor II•'· • COSTA Miii "Qu•iltr.•~d S1rvlc• Sine• 1946" CALL 541..sftS • • OAllY PILOT Tax Plan Okay Seen COP Optimistic As Democrats Tlireateri IACl\Al\IENTO (UPI) - -supporten of ' Gov. 'Ronald Reogan'1 fl bllllon tu revision progr•m predicted to- day upper bawe 1pprov desplle Dtmocratlc thre1ll to booby trap the plan. "l think we're going to aet Jt." said Sen. Robert J. Lagomanlno (R-OJal), who trill lead floor debate on behalf « tht R .. pn package. But Senate Democratic floor leader George M o 1 c o n e rtBect.ed similar oplimlsm saying hf: was c e r t a I n Democrats could succusfully amend their rival plan into . the govtrnor'1 legislaUoo . , "It takes only 1 majority : of those voting to amend a bill on tbt floor," the San • Francbco lawmaker said. He added tht Dtmocrall 1-d to command .such a majority. Republican e!lorta to secure the necessary votes, however. ·depended on pressure exerted wtthln their ranks. At least three GOP senators indicated they wou ld vote agaln!t the program. The governor's program eventually would shift $1 biUion in local property taxt3 to state levies, including the sales, income and business and corporations ta xes. One of the meaBUft'S would levy the taxes to raise the revenue to lower property tax· ea httweeu 20 percent and 40 percent, according t o Reagan. It requires 21 votes. The second· me1sure would provide the p~y tai: relief through lnc rea alng the homeowners' ei:emption from $750 to fl,000 plus 20 percent of the remaining assessed valuation . The proposal would also ex- tend the exemption to owners of cooperatives zld con- dominiums, who do not now get it. The meaaure requires Lockheed Rescue Plan Depends on Congress BURBANK I U P I ) Lockheed Aircraft Corp. 1aid today Congreu must decide whether a muWmllllon-dollar rescue operation planned by %4 major banks can be put into operatk>n . Keystone of the plan is a highly controvenial S 2 0 0 million contingency fund to help the natioo'a largest defense contractor cover cost overruns on the giant CSA cargo plane that forms part of the $20.2 bUlion military procurement authorlzaUon bill acheduled for Senate debate Thuraday. Another flOO million would tome from a "V" loan, guaranteed by tht government and provided by the 24 banks under the Defense Productioo Act ol 1950. Both provisions, which form the bulk ol the ~ million Lockheed is believed to require to solve Its liquidity problems, catl for government aid or backin&, or both. "It's in the lap o f Congress," a L oc khee d spokesman said. "It's no secret that for some time Lockheed ha• been talking to banks and other Interests about private sector ft.nan- cing." Arnong opponents of lhe plan in Congress i5 Se n. William Proxmire, (0-Wls.), who oo Tuesday vowed a fight to knock the '200 million ap- propriation out of the military procurement authorization bill and to oppose any loan guarantee for Lockheed. Other parta oC the financing package being discuued hy the group of banks include a further drawing of $M1 million from the aame banlr.11 from Lockheed'• e x l s t I n g credit Hne, and an accelerated payment of $50 million In "progru:s payments" by the buyers of Lockbeod'• L-IOU trt~jet. airbu11. Chief Davis Attacks U.S. Jury's Study LOS ANGLES (AP) - Police Chief Edward M. Davis aays he Is ''absolutely amaud" that a federal grand jury Is investlgaUng t h e shooting deaths of two unarm· ed Mexican nationals by police last Thursday. In bls flnt public statement since the shootings, Davis sald Wednesday that the grand jury probe is "precipitous, provocaUve, political and In extremely bad faith and bad taste ." "I'm just absolutely amazed that Atty. Gtn. Mitchell would Invade the city o( Los Angeles and preempt, in effect, the Child Born To Indians On Alcatraz SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - 1'be JX>PUlation of Alcatraz Island hu increased by one, a papoose born to Mr. and Mrt. John Trudell and named "Wovok•" after a Paiult medicine man. work bein1 done by the district attorney," Davis ad- ded. On Tue!rl!.y t.~ i.os Angele!: district attorney charged each of seven policemen -five from Los Angeles and two from San Leandro -with two eowU of manslaughter and 1lx counts of assault. The grand jury is in- vestigaUng possible violation of federal civil rights laws, and hu subpoenaed the of· flee.rs to its third day ot 9eCJ'et hearina:s today. The seven officers opened fire during a raid on a dowrtown skid row apartment after the six men in the room scrambled about, causing one of the policemen to fire and trip. Offlom oakl tiler thought be had been lhol. KJUed in what police later called a tragic series of mistakes were G i l a r d o Beltran Sanchez, 23, and his cousi n Guillermo A I c a z a r Sanchez, 22. Neither they nor the ether four men were wanted by police, who were looking for a man named in a San Leandro murder war- rant. Davit said he was not told In advance <If the grand jury Investigation, and said the federal government h a d "disre1arded all cuetom and lradttlon" by entering the case since local authorities were taking action. fl votes because of the ap- propriation it makes t o ~ fjnaoce U\e tax relief. But three conservative Republicans opposed to the package reduced to 17 the number of GOP senators who ·could be counted on to cagt ballots for it. Sens. Clark L. Bradley (San Jose) John L. Harmer (Gle~ dale) and H. L. Richardson (Arcadia) listed thepiselves among the disaffected, but not neceuarily in favor of a Democratic alternative. Bradley opposes raising the sales tax l cent to providt property tax relief for wealthier Californians:. H e agreed with Democrats the sales levy hiU poor people hardes t. Harmer opposes giving large state r e I i e f to homeowners, claiming ii then subjects them to civil rights legi sl a tion and other regulatory controls. Oil Drilling Bill Killed; Jess Abse1it SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Assemblyman Jess Unruh's absence from the legislature t.o campaign for governor has contributed ·to the defeat of his bitl to prohibit ne\v oil drilling In the Santa Bafbara Channel. The Assem~y rejected the proposal Wednetday on a 46-%2 vote, only one vote short of the -ti required for passage to tht Senate. Unruh, Democratic nominee lor governor, was absent and reported · by his campaign headquarters to be holding "private mee ti ng s'' in Southern ca1uom1a when the vote OCCUJTed . But assemblyman A I a n Sieroty (D-Beverly Hills ), a co-author, kept the measure technically aJive by ar.· nounclng that he would seek lo have the defeat reconsidered. The bill calls ror, banning any n e w oil or gas drilling loo state-owned tidelands ln the scenic channel effective next April l. Additionally, it dec.lart'!I oil operat.1001 in the Channel an "ultrahazardous acU•lty," a condition which would hold an oil company strictly liable for a n y damage its operations caused. The Channel was the site la.st year of a Union Oil r.o. well eruption on a federril lease. The spill coated miles and mllet of white Southern California beach with riw petroleum and killed hundreds of blrds. Skunk Bite Dangerous; Rabies Told BERKELEY (AP) -A statewide rabies alert against skunks has been Issued by the State Department of Health. The alerl orden 1 o c a 1 departmetU to report any cases ol skunk bites promptly and warns travellers not to bring skunks into the state. where skunks are illegal as pet.. Dr. Louis F. Saylor said the action was t.aken after five pel'IOl18 in Washington and 10 In Oregon were reported bitten, all by skunks from a Wolf Creek, Ore., wholesaler. Sayk>r said 24 vials of an-- tirabies serum have been flown to Oregon as a result, and that persoos bitten by J>OS8lbly rabid skW1ks require lengthy treatment until the 1nlmal can be identified and tested for rabi es infection, Trudell, one <il the leaders ot Indians who occupied the former federal pentt.entlary in 5an FrancUco Bay, returned to the mainland Wednesday to aMOUDCe lhedlikl was bornlr================;;;;;;;;;;;;11 Mond>y and 1• "squamng, All Alt11r• fir C1l11i11 lsl1nd ...... and healthy." Dr. IMr)I Brllllant, who ot, ftci1ted, aald be believed ll w&1 the fi,. cmtld born on the lilland ind certainly the llnl Indian. lndlam -the lll1nd •ieht .-.,. ... kine to ti.ft it into a tribal tullural .. ,..,, Trude 11 , origln.llly from Ntllruka. 1i a Slou1. 'A.M. IMY PIOM ~A PAYIUOM"" 4M IUUI, IAUOA LUXUIY CIUISD "lsll• 11111U1" 1.-tn, -11.H U ... II -14.21 - ,. lllll'llTlllS • "'911.,. -m11 1nms TOTS LURN TO SWIM AT YOUa ORANGI COAST YMCA 642-9990 • Summer Dress SPECTACULAR $ $ $ SAV.E 30 TO 70°/o, REGULAR TO 17.99 Ov1r 600 dr111•1 in thi1 9roup in 111 1l11 r1n911. F1bric1 in· elude poly1.1t1r1, cotton1, decron & bl1.nd1, HURRY IN TODAY AND SCOOP UP THE SAVINGS. COTIOllTRIY ' mClllll TOWRS JO.QI'. fOAll ICI CllUT SALi 64C • Ctmiplet.ly imullted • GrM& Jar pimica l1MIT1 2 pter-te..r SUMMER VALUE DAYS 4 llli DAYS N-..._ S.., July :u .. SHOP GRANTS AND SAVE CHILDREN'S SHIRT 'N' SHORT SETS SALE 78~ A. Crop tops ••• for Hltle &iris and toddlen ! Ma. e h i n e-washabie cotton: print, iOlid combinations in sun-fun colors. Sizes UX:. ~· _ New sand box favor- ites! Elutic \11alalband in short, cool comfort.Ible col- Ions, Bright ool.or1. S.12 moo. BOYS' SHORTS SALE SIZES 3 TO I 1.36 IEG. 1.96 TO 2.99 SAYE NOW! lays ...... lo Miids • &tripn. Some pemN1-preu. ... , 1tyln to choose ftOftl. Srle JO to 550/o, Summer c.le1n up 1111 llOW in progr111, l ig 11vin91 in 1very d1p1rtm1nt. Pr ices on all 1umm1r it1m1 h1v1 been tl1sh1d. · 'llATillll STllTCll' PlllTY llOSI Sale 57~ • Sbearnylonmeeh •Move, bend withyoll •Nude heel .• au. Pl A, T/rr. YAl.lllmtr lllllSPUY SALi 37~&- • Whit&. briPt co1on •9i .. 6to8 LIMIT & per~ GRANT PLAZA • Brookhurst at Adams • HUNTINGTON BEACH - • • Thursdq, July 23, l 97G OAilY PILOT 9 By Phn tnterlandi Wallaee l'letor11 Ktllefl Tactie .. ... 'Drop WASHINGTON (AP) -The Ripon Society urged President Nixon today to woo voters in the "peripheral South" and abandon "'lhe S outhern Strategy·• because G e o r g e Wallace's victory in Alabama killed it as a national tactic. "In short, Mr. Nixon js in trouble," the Republican research and policy group said in an 84-page report to GOP. NaUonal Chainnan Rogers· C. B. Morton. "The old strategy that aim:i. al the old South has' failed ,"' the society said. Nixon has denied the ex- istence of any strategy that would write off politically any part of the nation. "'Frankly, Yr. Forsyte, I'm not intereated in Y~ai:a." "The right-winger s in the administration have failed to eliminate Wallace, and now Mr. Nixon must eliminate their strategy if he hopes to win in 1972 and build a truly tw~rty South," the society said. I ! Geologists Startled By Peru Avalanche " .•. We call on the Presi- dent to fulfill his campaign pledge to forge a •new align- WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Preuvian earthquake o( May 31 triggered a disaster of a kind "never before recorded ," two U.S. geologists reported Wed;nesday. 'fhe quake killed more than 50,000 persons and injured about the same number. Jt wrecked 186,000 homes. But the specific event that 5Ull startles geologists who surveyed the scene afterward was a gigantic ava1anche oC ice and rock whlch fell from the 21 ,flOO.foot heights of Navados Huascaran, Peru's highest mountain, upon the towns of Yungay a n d Ranrahirca. by the quake. Dr. George Ericksen ol lhc U.S. Geological Survey in Washington and Dr. George Plafker of the Survey's Menlo Park, office have just return-, ed from Peru where they studied the quake as part of · a special United Nations team. I' The destruction caused by the avalanche, apart from all the other damage done by l fhe quake. ··was a Imo s t I.\ unbelievable," they reported, :r "possibly surpassing in I magnitude such catastrophic ennts as the Mt. Pelee erup- tion oC 1902 on the Island of. Martinique, aod the erut>- lioo ol Vesuvius in the year 79 A.O. that buried the city I ol P001peii." I In the beginning l he auGGIO .... ~ So.uther:q. " .. Strategy' ' Says Ripon ment,' and bring the new std' '111 llve of the lasl ~Ix 'Given a choice between a roots base ror the Republican The repOtt came IOOn after Soulhern moderates -blacb., l\Nll<=idential race. s. Al the consefvaUve Republican and party In the Sou'' and ·Se St Th"-~ 0 • C • • ..--1.11, cap-n. rorn w.~. J.v.;J •• , young wortters and, .. me time, it sa.i'd, .the a conservative Democrat. 1 r ,. ,_ 1 d Slat ·u · •• .-. NI d businessmen _ .into t h e southerners both black and u e. 1.ne 1\11,;a an e c:rt ctJ.~ ... ,.. 1 o n a • COP," U1e societY Said. peripheral South. -Florida. white will vote for the government positions that minis tr• t lo n ' a acbool 11 predicted Wallace will North Carolina, Tennes~. Democrat," it added. t'Oltlprise that infrastructure desegregution poljcles and carry the areas he won in Texas and Virginia with ?8 But ~ven U the COP is of American politics. it will !aid the President could not 1968 and said Nixon must look votes -has bacb.-ed the Win-Coreed to cede the deep South be DeCeSSU'Y to bid carefully be cmfident d carrying the lo the major industrial states ner all the way. on the presidential level, the for the kind of voter who Soulh 1 1- f h. · of · IO soc1'Jy sai'd "This does not will ·-te Republican more fr .. ,,. ___ ._ .. _ •. ____ _, or is margu: VlC ry. Th ~ ' ~ ... Also, it said, ''The COP must e peripheral Soulh can mean that state parties should quenlly than every (our decide which part of the South be wooed, the report said, throw up their hands and let years." the report said. it war.ts," the Deep South or by cultivating moderate sup. the Democratic one--party rule It cited in this connection the peripheral South. port on issues of social pro--continue unoppo s ed In· the efforts by Govs. Winthrop "You cannot take all of the gress that have broad aepeal definitely." Rockefeller in Arkansas and South," the society said , in the South. "Racism will "In order to build a grass-A. Linwoodlloltm in Virginia. noting tbe region has not voted fail, as it has in the past," the •=r;;;::;::::;:::~=:¥.::::::;:::~~lll solidly in presidential elections society added. .II in 25 years. If Nixon "does not pursue ""' ... •lftt ..., UMI Wine mi.. .,...,.. tfrM wwW ''The choice should be a moderate strategy, he must 111 ~1 11 z I easy," the report , aid. either put Wallace on the -* . . . ''because not only Js the ticket or concede defeat ,'' the peripheral S o u t h more report said. · lucrative, but it has also been =;~~~;;:~~~~;:_; ,.._,_,.. MMh •ftd tfMMn far more receptive t o ;:. NIW SUMMER. HOURS ~:';,!!can campaigners on all STARS •~8Y .... llfiur.Mlayta.M.t.ll p.m. ' d o I P..W., & iahfnla' t ..,.._ M J .a.m. The report' noted the deep ->v n•v m•rr ;, on• o th• South -a belt of states from world'• 'JIT••t ••trolot•r•. Hii COMPLnl PARTY PLATilltS colurn" i1 on• of th 1 DAILY J27 THALIA A GLEN l!Y E LAGU South Carolina to Louisiana PILOT'S ,,,,, fiihn••· N R , NA BEACH and Arkansas with 53 electoral 494-5250 vote.oi -has been on the losing __ --~==--fNexl to R~t IJquor Store) Complete-C.ttoring Sftvll:e' = THINK SALE Y2 PRICE! Wtstcliff Plaza Only It buried these two tow"-' and smothered or smashed the life from 20,000 persons. This one happening accounted for 40 percent o£ the total tcill of the whole disaster. The other 60 percent died in the collapse of brittle houses throughout the region affected avalandle, triggered by the quake, started with the sliding of a mass of glacial ice and rock about 3,000 feet wide and about a mile long on the near- ly sheer slopes of Huascaran. *1st Qua\ity jLLL _, .. , .... na•S BBl'I MISS IllS CORK BULLElll BOARD!!! Batk·toschoolers, even Mom or Dad will find this big 24x36'' bulletin .board 1 welcome mainet for mementos, sn1pshots. reminders! Resilient corl< llmirote<I to thictl f~r1boonl takes to llcb, PllSll1J""' l'l1cisicJn.mlte<I I-pc. 1luminmn frlmo Is ,.. inlon:od for oilded ~ f1ctDly-mounlld hanprs. OTHER BULLETIN BOARD SPECIALS 20" x 32" Plain 24'' x 16'' Plain 36" x 24" Pl•ln 11" :it 24'' 01cor1tiv• Design Reg. 4.19 NOW 2.95 Rea. 3.19 NOW 2.19 Reg. S.25 NOW 3.69 With Tacks Reg . 3.99 NOW 2.79 17" x 25" Wood Trim Rog. 1.49 NOW .99 39" x 24" Self Adhesive Reg. 5.95 NOW 3.99 • $ 1995 '"''"''""' $ J.Jhl•t•1111 .. 1.111.ol. tf11t't41 Ulll11911/1JI J,fJ•1tl•7111J) 2695 ..-.;. I --·. }f DAILY PILOT Thursdlf, July 23, 1 q10 Ex-aide -Tells Wliat Reagan's Really Like MENLO PARK (AP! - Gov. Reagan never made the remark. "If you've seen one redwood, you've seen them all." He does not dye his hair and . he never uses makeup. r understood some ol lhe as (ar away as Oh.lo about Seeboh.m or CinclMati: "I'm strain he was under and I the redwoods, 11-trs. Davis said. happy to have a chance to thought be had acted righ.Uy She quoted from an answer straighten. out the question o( to sustain the decision o! the he wrote ·to Stanley E. the redwoocb. Very simply, c:oorts. t just never made the remark. It wa! attributed to me by my opponent duri11g the cam· paign." S liare a nd S h are A· lick Youthful visitor to Philadelphia's zoo takes a second look al a barnyard sheep. \Vhile he's looking, a cow wi\b a sweet tooth tries licking. DIAMONDS AND ESTATE JEWELRY PURCHASED 5ovtlt Co•'' Pl111 l ri•lol 1t tit. Sin Di190 Fwv. Co1t1 M111 540-9066' ••• IS - Mammoth Mutin)- 'BANGKOK (UPI) -Sixteen Thai elephants on their way by ship to perform at Japan's Expo '70 staged a mutiny al sea and forced the vessel to turn back to Thailand. The eleoltants broke electric wires on ,the Toyo Maru Tues· day, plunging the ship Into darkness and for cing its return. The leader of t h e mutiny, a 20-year-<ild elephant named Plai Tongkham, broke the • ship's main power line with his trunkJ Yushiyisa Masuda, a Bangkok hotel manager who is in charge of the journey, said limber had been purchas- ed to buikl: )>artilions before the ship left Bangkok, but was left behind when the cap- tain said he thought the elephants were sufficiently tame lo make the voyage without causing trouble. 'be 1: _re "Those are just rumors." says Kathy Randall Davis, tM governor's former p rt v a t e secretary whose book "But What's He Really Like?" was published this month. Mrs. Davis handled all the former screen actor's con- fidential work a n d cor- respondence for foor years before leaving Sacramento in December 1968, when her hus.. band, Ken, became v.ice presi- dent of a San Francisco Peninsula brokerage firm and they moved lo Menlo Park. Mrs. Davis said in an ln· lervie~ that she had no sensa- tional disclosure to make. She was interested, rather, in' making an "in" presentation of the affairs of the exec utive running the nation 's largest state. ' She said the governor had :i habil of writing a \ol of his letters longhand and, after typing them , she kept boxes full. The governor is deeply af- fected by the decisions he makes. she said. On a night in 1967 after Aaron Mitchell had been. ex. ecuted in the San Quentin ga.s chamber for shooting a Sacramento policeman, ·· 1 Wl!nl into Ws private study where he was sitting alone, with drapes drawn . I told him • ""Thank you, Kathy,' he r said, Bis eyes were filled with tears. So WMa. rny own. l left qWckly." The governor Oil Paintings Win Conest An oil painting of 1 sailboat by Corona del Mar artist Clay- Campbell was a rWl·a\vay 2-.to- I favorite among visitors who cast ballots at the art show duiing the six-day 19Til Orange County Fair, George C. Cook or Santa An8 took secOOd pl&ce In the balloting with his oil painting of a foggy landscape. Third pla ce was won by Frances E. Johnston of Tustin for her oi.I portrait or two girls. Other artists who placed in the top ten with their entries were Donna G o')t d m an , Orange ; Shirlene Sc h oo p , Fountain Valley: Byron Wells, Balboa; Gwen Conway, Cost.a Mesa; ·Claire Jones. Corona del Mar; and Sophia Liv- ingston, Garden Grove. A se- cond entry by LhiJ'd.place win- ner Frances Johnston -an oil still life of while nowers tbat was "Best in Show" in the official judging -also placed in the top ten in the popular vote. ' \ "81MNI on m1nuli!u::lurers' ~uggtslfld rtla1l pnc.1!$ tor cornpi1rabl1 modi I$, incltH:11na led1r1I ft~f.l.SI t&• i nd ILISl••led d11ler new Yl!llicll prep1r1tlori ch1r111.1 .-·4 -.llttJDkwood Wa,...~2·Stal) Impala Spart Coupt,' VB.' -- --lMontt Corio Coup•) , .. /1npola Sporl Stdon 4119 .. ,1·.~ ·Chtvtlil§port_Co .. pt.,6:<YI.) Ch"'"'· Sport .C··~·.!'.'8] Malibw4·Door stdan; VB' • lµalibii Conimw/L; 6-cyl.J /Mal~ c;;.,.,,ibl.;y1f colii:our1, Wagon=z.,..,, 6"1L\ All of these· Chcvrolcts are lower-pri ced to bCginwith., · ,._}And now that America's back on Chevrolet Savings Ti me, your Chevrolet dealer is more anxiou s than ever to make owning one easyr - -, l'iitting you first,' kee~'u1 first:, · ··--- , OD I ·ogsnnie. - .... "ytll Heoy ., .. Zall ''PAY YOUR$ELF FIR$T'' Here's t he new money-saving plan t hat really works. Set up a speci al account for a special goal. .. Your Home,YourChildre_n1 Vacation, E ducation, Christ- mas, Your Peace of Mind. Home provides a colorful passboo k, a packet of 12 mon thly co upons, and we even send you a friendly reminder if you miss a pay- ment t.o yourself. · I t's the sure way to pay cash for what you want ... wit~out borrowing, without going into your regular savings. Start now to PAY YOUR$ELF FIR$T. You deserve it. Come in for full d(!tails at t he new HOME SERVICE CENTER now at lOS ANCf.llS (MAIN Off"IC£) HIGHLAND PAlllJC 761 s 1roedwl)' &100 H. f l1u•ro• st. •I aui . (2J3) 627·7991 •t AY& 51LA.90042: AlHAMlltA (213) zs.t.,5114 •Ol E. V1lle)I 19lvd. .t . HOLLYWOOD Sl..,.1 Vbl•A.,,., •C2ll)ll9.0211 JSOO N. Vine ANAHEI M •t SunMt. (%13) 466-11.2 1 21 1 E11t Llncol" A.yt , Opp0s1t• Cit~ Htll (7 1•) 535·2883 AlllCADIA 60 E11t Hunll11ston DrlYt It flflt 12J3) -t•6·R21 • 681 ... 14-4 8AllSTOW 1232 £. M•ln St. In theSuptr S Sl!oppll'lf C11111r (7 11) 2! ·21ll BEVEftlY HILLS HUNTINGTON l"ARIC 7141 P•clflc BlY<I. •I Florence• (21S) 588·1177 U.KlWOOD 4909 L11t1wood l lyd, •l Diii Amo (213) 634-4909 • 636·1446 U. MIRADA 1 ~121 L ltotlC•IJfl• AYt. £1,.t of l• Mirtdl Blvd. 01•1521-1310 92•S Wilthlr• BIYCI. LIVElllMOM: ltl.l.lTO ,- 118 s. Rro111n!d1 "Y•. 8iotw""'n lit• Ri1lto • '114) 17$·7010. s-.N SUtNAl!DINO . 301 W. HlcJtllt'ld AYI, • J •t Anowhl.cl•(714)112'33H ""l SAN 'IUNCl5CO 2500 Ml••ion St, 1t 211l St. (I IS) 6-411·8900 s-.N JOSE 1221 llneoln Ava. Willow Gl1n Oi1tr11:.t (IGll) 217·0107 So\NTA ANA lJOO North Ml ;., St. ~I w1~l>•n1ron AY1. 111 t )s,41. 611 So\NTA MONICA 2&06 W1l1h"• 81"'1 It ~6111 • (2JJ) 828 '541 •I i'luford Drfvl 27S S. "K" St . .t )rd SI. 1213) 273-6666 • 171..«55 <f 15) 447-4660 STUDIO Ctn' •U~A PARK LONG IDCH 1 7051 Venlur1 Bh•d. •t &OJO B•adl Blvd. 201 E••t flr.t St. L1unol C1n)'Ol'I • (Zl3) 163·1$41 at l• P•Jm i it lbcuN • (211) '436·1231 TOIUt-'NCt: 17l4)121·4'6l 151 1 C•1¥1nt J.vt , SUl!l-.NK 940 N. Sin MONT£•El l0 at El Prtdo f<11rn1ndo Otyd. 1•19 W. Br11rl)' BIOld. t21JJ 328·9244 •77!1 3118 at Burb1nl\ Blyd. ~I M1pl1' (213) 721 IJJ17 VIC,O•VILL[ I (''3) ••• ·7211 •849·3J41 • l 'I097th 51. o-.11L.A D "''''"'Vietor V1ll1y COM"1'0ft 1801 H. Lon& 250 E11t Jlth S!. S!wppln1 C.Ot1r B11dl Blvd. •t Goldt!"I P•1k 8"'.lk\<tnl Di1trkt (7J.4) 241-6327 1213) fi3a.17J5 • 63W031 (415),465-3400 WUT COVIN .. ENCrNO P-.IADQtA l00~1ntAY1. lf107 Vtnlur• llvd, 160 Ea1t Coffir1do llYd. it lt!t Sil'! l•rl'!lrdlne Frt. (•,1•3m) ,",."" • ,,,.-30 1t l1k1 f213) 966-15'1 1.000 ~~ t213) ,,5.5174. 611·5174 a-.Root QROVC WHITTIER 11922 Broolth11"'l 'I, l"ICO IUYEl!A 15625 El1t Whltll11 B!Yd. at CM-•!'!• (114) 530·5610 9125 t. Wl'llttl1r l tYd. [111 •I S1nt1 G1rtn.1d11 GltNo'.A°U: of llntn1t1H • (213) ttt•lll71 ('213J 691 ·6761 li20 14, Br1nd l lYd. P'OMOtCA WllSMll!t COO'"tlt at th1 VllMUl'I ,.,,1• 100 '"°"'°"I Mill Wffl 3750 Wlfallilt lhod. 1213) 241 .. lOZ. 24!1.S15l (114) 6;!-2491 II o.-rord • (ZIJ) 315·3~7-l )[em~: FEDERAL Saving1 and I.nan lnauranca Co1·poration llenl"ber: FEO!RAL llotne Loan Ban le Sy1h~n1 . • j I I i ' . • ! I • ! I • I i I . • j l • ' • • ' • ' l • • • • I Thu~. July 2l, 1'70 OAILY Pll9T lJ Sneak ' Preview Police 'Get 'Educll;tional TV . THINK SALE By PATll1CK BOYLE "The-gtnertl consensus or ol searcllt police Sgt. David Lel&hton. 11Jf we · are receiving 1 ot· t111 Dll•• ''"' , .. ., all the men ls that the quality "At the end 0( tach pro-. ''The 90Und Portion and the broadcut from Los Angeles I AtUCI LOS ANGELES -It would or training ls excellent," cram," he added. ;·an ex-video porllon of the program and they are y,sl~ thtir radiosl 1 be lron.lc for 1 burglar to Sorensen said. "For a change, plan1Uon Is given of any re-are oui of phase and we cm't at lhe same time, It goofs be caught stealing a televlslon he : IRVINE -Two summer orientation programs are ~ ing ·prepared at UC Irvine to help new studenb get a run- nliig start on the opening ol set by a police oJflcer who l lrailling ses.sions are very cent court declslo~ rtlating always get th em syn-up the screen and we donit learned to catch thleves by enjoyable. 1be programs are to .the program and how they chronlzed." get 11nythlng." watching: television. very realistic.'' afr~t ~he poliao depar~ents. "It would be better if they "Som@ week.! It l.s beautiful 'It JS up-t<Hiate legal in-taped the shows In Los and others lt:Ls terrible,". he Y2 PRICE! But that could be the case, A3 an e~ample, he cited forr'(lallon that is needed by Angeles and then sold us the adds. because educational TV is, in a recent program In which the agencies that have to en-tapes,'' he add!. lp;;;;i;;;o;;;o;;;;;;:;i;;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;!I : school this fall and to help j;iheir parents understand some ~of the problems they face. fact , being used to train a car had Qeen stopped by rorce lhe laws," he said. But HunUngton Beach has11 Orange Coast law enforcement a police orncer. At various Bu\ even the police have ,, different reception problem. Yo11r AdY•1tl1l119 Wo1•1 D•v I .JE.Glrl ~hi f John C. Hoy, vice chancellor for student affairs, said ell entering student s and their officers. points in the program the some trouble with their TV "The city vehkles for the Nr,ht-Y•11 Doft't H•Y• To - The Lo! Angeles district at-film would. stop and a 'voice reception. water deparlment have two-w. Do, tomey's office Is broadcasting would -explain circumstances "Sometimes, we can't gel way radios in them ." says T.it11ll•" ...... 1., l11r .. 11 Westcllff Pl•M Only a monthly training program,to under wh.ich the car could the equipment working Huntington Beach police Sgl. 835·7777 f parents a~e being invited to Take• Ga't'el • icl p&te in the annual slu-189 law enforcement agencies1 ,_'.':b<~se..:a'.'.rc~hed~..'.'IJ1nd~t~he~m~ethod~~'_!Jll"'t>'r1~~~y~,''._' ~·~ays~~Cos~t:a~M~~es~a:_SOr~~-~·":·~ __ .:_ __ :,_!~~~;;;;~;;~~~~~=========:::: throughout Cali:ornia, ln-1' • dent and parent orientation Orange City Manager 1 ~ during four weekends starting Gifford , W. Miller is !,July 31. About 1,500 students l9?()..Jl chairman of Or-J and parents are expected tG attend, with one-fourth of the ange County's Criminal i total bein1 accommodated Justice Council. The or- ~,each weekend. ganization coordinates i. Students and parents will requests for federal •'I lay in campus residence halls eluding the police departments of Costa Mesa . Newp9rt Beach, Huntingt.on Beach &Oct San Clemente. :. during the weekend. They will grants under 1968 Om- '* hear talks and pa n e l nibus Crime Contfol ~ discussions on such subjects Act and wbrlts on ;~s the university 's role in means of improving i:society, the Irvine approach crime, control and cri· ~ to education and the problems t of studepts~ minal justice tQro~g~· The same ·program ls brotd- cast twk:e a month on Channel 21 from Station KCET in Hollywood. The algnal ls elec- tronically scrambled in such a way that only the police stations can receive them. The shows have such titles as "Stop and Frisk -Deten- tion," "Llneups," .. Criminal Prosecution of the Intoxicated Driver" and "Search War- ranu." ::-A second, in depth, 'orien-_o_u_t_th_e_c_oun_t.:cy_. ___ _ ) tation program is being of· Each program lasts about 30 minutes and utilizes the latest television techniques. : 1ered to 300 entering freshmen : :90 a first come basis, Two fMtwo-week sessions wlll~be held • between August t16 a n d :·September 14.. Students will : lake three cogrSes daily , in- :J:Iuding speed· 1eading, study ! skill.!i, comrounic1Uoo skills \•and educatipnal Values. ~· Students will explore their • own reasons for coming to • 'the university and what they • hope to achieve rrom their : 'educatioo. Films, g u e s t speakers and recreational ac- t tivities will be among the evenls. UCl students have helped ~· plan bolh orientation pr<>- grams. i . !.. Michelson ., . Speed Limit r SANTA ANA -A 25 mile , per hour speed limit has been ; establistied on Michelson Road • (formerly Mathews Ro ad l • between Culver Drive and 'Redwood Tree Lane by the ; Orange County Board of : Supervisors. ! The reduction from 35 miles t per hour was recommended ~,by the county Traffic Com· ; mittee following the pleas of " residenls of the area, located I just south of the San Diego t Freeway in University Park. i Death Notices r DICKMAN l1tr~1 Olctm•n. 35, DI «II At11nt1 SI., M~nl!ntlon ll11Ch. l!molGYN ol Ooutltl J,,!(<r11t. GrtY .. ld• S1rvlc11 11 AM Frl-l:iil¥. J11lv 20, P1clllc View M•morltl Pt~. l:fnllhl' Mor1111rv, D!rector1. , MtcDSRMID 1"'" L. M1cDermk1, 7002 E11! S1nt1 l1r1. Senti l.111. Dll• of dt1!h. July 21. SurylYl!'d by wlte, Ruth, of lllt home; ...,, 01vld L .. Btytllt. Strvlcu pendln11 f•clllc Vltw Memcrltl "••k. ~ MtlNTOSH Ma rv I". Mcln1o.h, :ltt A"lll S!rNI, l1· ~n1 S.•ch. 0.11 ol dtllh. July 21. Su•· Vl\>ed b'I oon. Frer>ll;, Monr,,...11; 1l1ler, "1jd;t Smith, Or11111e; 7 tr•ndda111hter1; f, 11re11-or1ndchlldr1n. Memorl1I S.,.,lc11 W\tl bl ~Id M-ly, Julv 71 11 1 PM, P1cltlc View CM~I. lnurnm.,,t, P•clfk vi.w Memorl1I Pen.. FamllY w nr1t1. t,. tl>osl wflo wlll'I, cet11rlbutlon1 bl m..i. fe lhtlr t1vorlt1 th1rllY. Olrn:ttd ?II' ll'•tll!' VirN MaNu1rv. ~ l'AllLIH a 111111 P•rl11>. Cl>lf't ! S1rvkr Ind 1"1.,.· ~nl J PM Friday, JulY 24. W1llmlrwt1r M4marl11 P1rk Mortu•ry 1'111 c...,.1.,.,, .. 11.Ees• Owls J1nt llee11. Sury/ved by 1>u,b1nd. Wlhlam I.; son. Wlllltrn I. II; d1u1l>l•r, AUl'°n II.; "101111ir. M,_, Mtrll••.tl Fi.II- ~! brother, Leonard Lt11; 1111•''' Mfl. C!fll'lll•nt• Osl..c-!; Mrl. A~to!ntMt C11r· tin; Mr1. ·Marv Alltl Herm1"; Mr1. (troll Cu1,.m1n. llOY,.., 1:JO PM Tl'M.l•I• d,9t. July JJ, Mid Mtll 10 AM FrlcMiv, July 24, balfl ti It. Joi\" 1he ll110!l1t ,(lfholk Ctwrc~. ion w111 81k1r. Coslt ,If'--· Olrlct.ci by For .. I L1wn, C~or•11. '' ARBUCKLE 6 SON "· We1tcllff Mortuary " '17 E. 17th St., Colla Me11 llMll!I • BALTZ M,ORnJARIES ' '"'Corou del Mar OR S.H51 '. COit.i Me11 ~n 1-uu • BELL BROADWAY MORnJARY 110 Broadw1y, Colla Mesa · LIW!I • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORnJARY 1795 Laguna Canyon Rd. 49'-H15 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach. C1Won11 '41·!700 • PEEK FAMILY COl.ONIAL FUNERAL HOME 710l Bol11 Ave. We1tmJn1ter ltWW • SHEFFER MORnJARY Lagvna Beach 4H-1US San Clemenle 4ft.G100 • SMITHS' MORTUARY m l\taln St. Huntlnrton Buell -I Arthritis Group Names Officers FULLERTON -Mrs. Al Campanis ol Fullerton has been elected to a third term as chairman of the Orange County ArthriUs f'oundalion . Members <lf the organiza- tion's advisory commitl~ from the Orange Coa!lt area are : Mrs. E. Mortime G~ennan, Mrs. Gordon Berlin, Walter Burroughs, and Mrs. E. V . Dray, all of Newport Bead\ . Mrs. James T. Ferrell or Huntington B e a c h and Frederick Hugbe5 of South Laguna, Initial financing for the pro- grams was provided by the Los Angeles County Peace Of. fleets Associ1tlon and several · foundatioils . Now e a ch participating agency contributes a specific sum for financing. Costa Mesa, for e.s:ample, pays $600 i year. "We tape each program for later shoWing," says U . Mike Healey of the Costa Mesa Police Department. • • T h a t way, they can be shown to all of our officers." The response of the Hun- tington Beach Police Depart- ment has been enthusiastic. according to Sgt. Robert Sorensen, the department's training officer. Hospital Gets $75,000 Gift ORANGE -The James lrvine Foundation of Newport a I d Beach has granted S75,000 to eve an the building fund of St. J...,eph Hmipital here. The foundaUon earmarked Ooses Parts th• fund• for constructio• of the coronary care facilities in lhe $15 million expansion Qf -P~kland ~P-""'~•""m,,,,o1...,.th~•~hoopi~·1a"'1. -1 LEGAL NOTICE EL TORO ._ Portims cl ,..,,,... Cleveland National F 0 re, 1 <•1tT1J11cAT• 0J1 •us1N•1s. JllCTITIOUS NAMll have been Closed because of Th• """"''* do t_,lltv lti.Y •rt h'gh f' d ....._ COl'IClllCll... I bu1lne11 11 2'1S llffCfll'I 1 ire anger. i ue areas, s1., NtWllOl'I a.1U1, c.u1orn11, llnClol'r the most inaccessible steeper lhll 11ctttlou1 firm n11ne of flltlSTOL • OllYDOCIC CO. •'Ill !Ml 11id firm slopes of the forest, wtll be r1 com'°•lld o1 1111! lollowlnt "'IOl'I•· -led with "Closed Area" whoH .,...,.. In 1u1t 111d 011c11 01 r -rt110enc1 111 •• tollD•l'I: signs at all road and trail J1m11 L eu • ....i, "lJ 1111con s1 •• •• ndt '' IN.•. en .. ances, a a 1nterva s c11v1et1 L. eu1nc1 Jr., ,"°'° e. Flo-entrances and at intervals m1r, wr.1u 11r. ,' Olllld July I. HIV along the 'closed area" bound· J1mes t. eu .. 1c1 ar,leS CllYlfll'I L. EllMMI, J r, • 111!• of C1lllorftl•, Ort"'• County: Stanley R. s t e v e n s 0 n . Oii July •• lt7e, befwt ...... I Noltrv SUperv.isor of the f 1 Id .. 111111c Ir! '"" tor ... "' 11111, --.uy ores • sa 1ppe1rH J•"'" L. Ell•nd tnc1 City'°" that persons having official L. E1111111 Jr.. ~-n ta me 111 be , , tt... Plf'Mln• wtloM 111me1 1rt Mlb9c•IMd busmess m the areas may 111 ..,. wllflln '"9!f'WMrll 1nc1 •W'IDW•edt· obtain a written permit for roF'm1~"t.K~'!l~~ ........ entry from Ule Dist r I c t JOSEPH e. o.-.v1s R M . "'°''"' Pullllc, C1t1forni1 anger. aps and complete .. r1nc1 ... 1 001c1 111 deacfjptioM o( the restricted ~y·'(!~i:n E~lrn areas are available at all J1tnt 11. ,,,. F ~ Se . ..!-· .. ubll'1>ecl. Or1 ... e Coe1I DlllV Piiot, ore:1~ ryn:c·stat1ons. Jutv t, 1•. n. :111, lfl'D 11!1.10 . I THURS.-FRl.-SAT~ ONLY _ WAllH_ REPAIRS! . ONE F\lU YLU GU , .-. 'l' :ii;1' (~ . "''\~-. ·. YOUR WATCH~. LADIES' •• MEN'S COMPLETELY, OV•H~ULED I e Comp"1t.e!)' cleaned, GIJ&d ahd rerulated'. AT 'l'H1': LOwr..sT PHI~ EVER. t C'nmnosn.D111. w11«pniof1, s.u1'JmAUl'll t llthtly hlri. -l'\lllH wctmet DIN ! not Included. ' W111f THIS AD Kl~K CHARGE e MASTER CHARc;.E e IANKAMEIUCAAD "The Store That Confidence Built" • MAll•OJt HUNTINGTON UM Hll'Mr •""'-INdl & ldl,.._. (Mfl M9a -- . '·LI H.nflfll'tlll l..cll MH• © el.DfllA4 ln·•I Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. 10 a.m. 'tll 9 p.m. lllllMI. BUY IN PAIRS AND ·SAVE • ,-17 (i I TIRES UlllllMI. ··""" ftS·ll ., 170.11 20'15 t.,ltcH Hl·ll ;r .... ,..,. 2 ,., •69 • .. ,1>\l•\o . 215-15 '""'" 111-11 ., lf70.ll 2 '" '75 235-15 EACH S16 9S Plw F••· tr. T111 s 1.14 ,. 2.04 ptr tire ••p•ndint 2 ... •79 each S42 50 Tubeless Whitew1lls & 'lll1ck 2for$25 VW OWNERS 560· 15 .650x13 700.13 73lxll 69Sx1' 7l5x14 2for 128 775Jrl4 125•1• 155114 115114 775115 125•1 5 1551115 915111 J TT ( . TIRES • ' EACH S19 9S Plu1 fill. Ix. T11c $2.17 te 2.23 ,.r tir1 ff,.1141"1 M tilt EAfH S?'1 9S Plvs Ftd. E1. Tix $2.47 t1 2.80 per lirt dtpendint Drt 1i1e UNllOTAl COAtT TO COAIT L1m1Mt j WAllANTY 11 ..,, ll•l••Y•I ..... '. .••••• ... ..... ...... j ti...o ... IN--"M,\" ., ••1'10 .lDI", hlo !w , _, ··-"""" ...... H .... l!o,!e J"'llC!. .. -·~l •-ifM .,_lo .., •II•"'-.. IM -· .i.e ........... 11 .. -.... ~ ........ :,;. -t -..... ;.;,.. -i.....1-•1oo •• , ... ,u.1. ,.'.NI 1o.o1;..11•o•t .... ,,, ... 1 ... , ... 1.~-·· ..... l•d-1 -••I<• -•.•• 1_ .. , .,,_1 ........ ,.,. 1.11 ..... :i .. - ,. ......... 1 .. -Ill• ,.,.. . NO TRADE-IN NEEDED " UNIROYAL~ ~ WHILE THEY LAST SPECIAL PURcHASE- /SLIGHT BLEMISHES FASTRAK GLAS·BELT 2 ro: 44:'WtfiFt1 E7&.l4 Ptu• fed. [1. T11 $2.35 per tf19 + GLASS llLT 2 for $52 2 for $56 li"l'l:flj . na.1111.1s.11 G7S.l4/l.2!i·l4 na.1s11.75-1s 071-15/a,2S.1S Plv1 r1cl. fa, Ta• p1r lire S2.,j IO s2.n .i.,.~dift' .ft .;,. .l-171-15/1.55-15 J1 .. 15/l.&15 l'l•I ••II. I•. T•c ,.., Ii•• $1.tl .. U'.01 111,.ncl!ftf °" 1lc1 WHITEWALL ONLY $2.95 MORE MDtt 11z11 ln 1lock. 20,000. Ml~ GUAIAIRE BRAKE I RELINE .-•"s ·FOREIGN CAR TIRES• WIDE TIRES· WIDE OVALS· STEEL REINFORCED· 78 SERIES· 70SERIES • &. 'Where tJiere is more than meets the ey'b Seturitp ANAHEIM I coRoNA I GARDEN GROVE I H~WAllAN GARDENS 1 . HUNTINGTON •EACH Tire ·s101es ' 1961 llOOKHUIST 136 w 6th ST 1601 WISTMINSTll 11t7S CAISON ST. 1t411 It.ACM llVD • .. !AT LIH(Olll) , ' • (6 ILOCKS (,lJT oP IU.C.11) (llTWEUI PIO!l€ll & fl!OllWAUQ M Mil( NOlllf Of' AO.U.UI ~...:..:..:~.:..:..:;;...:...:...:.~~-'~'~"~''~'°;...~.;..~~n~s ... .::;1~0~..:.~~~·~·,.,.;.;.••~·~~;....~~'-'-'~-'-'-'~~...;~~...;'~2•1s.11_~~- SANTA AHA SANTA ANA I TUSTIN I WESTMINSTER COSTA MESA· I SAN CLEMENT! MAUOI AT IOI.SA 1211 W. WAINll .AYL 121 l. ltt STIER WISTMINSTll AT CEDAI NEWPORT BEACH 927 JC. n CAMtHO llAL (WAIH(I AT IUJJOU (ht AND "t'I" StJ (2 llOClS (. OF GOLDIN WESI) 322 lAST 17tft ST: 492..SS4i 129-3700 ........ 54'-tUI 1n.:is21 '42..i1S1 Ull YOUI MAJOI CRIDn •CAllll OPEN a-a::fo DAIL y / 8-5 SAT. " www. I '! I ' 11 D.lll y PILOT Tllu~IJ'. Jut, 23, 1970 Long Mail Bun Bike Rider Takes Cake BANGOR, M1int (U Pll - A tired 1&-year~ld rrom Alt.JC· andrl1, v ... cot off his bike Md walked up to the general delivery window al the US. post office here to pick up mail from his p.a"'nts. He got the mail Ji.1onday from the post ofr1ce. plus an angel rood cake as a reward tor endurance. Glenn S, !o.!orrow, I he bicyclist, had pedaled I.he 700 miles rrom his home to Bangor. The t:.S. mail is a Jil!lt: faster. Glenn's mother, Mr~. Christopher Morro~·. had writ· ten the postmaster a lelter July 13 asking. "If he iG\enn) makes it 10 Maine land al the rate he's traveling. he ~·ill) since "''' will not be. there to ~·elcome him, will you bf kind enough to de!egat1 someone to do lhis?'' She said her son W()Uld be al the po.51 office to pick up his mail. i\1rs. Morrow enclos- ed a $5 check for expenses, saying, "f v.·01.lld Jove to have a cake wa iting for hisn. No chocolate. as he can 't eat chocolate." Postmaster William E, C.Cmer replied iJ1 a lett.er, "We will see that he gets the cake, the $5. and a pat on the back for his noleworthy achievement'' The postmen thought they Praying:> Stuart T. Sau.ode.rs, for- mer heed ol .the bank- rupt Penn Cen tral rail- road, appears to be praying as he speaks to a Senate Commerce subcommittee \Vednes· day. The group is con- sidering $750 mi\J io n railroad loan guarantee l e~islation. Saunders "'as told such loans \vou\d probably not help Penn Central. THINK SALE Y2 PRICE! Westcliff Pla:r.a Only PAIKIHC-. LOT STRIPING PAINT $3.75 GAL. ALUMIHUM EXTENSION LADDER JJ PT. $79 ,00 had plenty or tlml' to plan for Glem1 'li arrlvat. But thry underestin1ated him; When Glenn arrived ~1onday 11fternoon. Comer's secretary, Jude Eicher, rushed to the bakery. ..The bakery h,tid llQthing bot chocolale cakes left." she said. But• generous driver in 1he bakery pulled "a nice angel food out of hi s truck'' to save the day . Assistant Postmaster Byron L. Tripp presided ai the cakr· and-eheck ceremony in the postmaster's office. Then lilenn hcnderl south for Bar Harbor on his bike on the first leg ol his return trip. U.S . Urging Tire Bu ying Recall List WASHINGTON fUPI) - The government Wednesda y proposed tire manufacturers keep an address file of their customers lo sin1plify tire recall safety campaigns. In a nOtice of proposed rule- 1naking. the Transportation Department said it planned to require every tire maker and retreader to pt'ovidt a means by which distributors and dealers ~-c-Jld be able lo record the name and ad· dress of tl'le fi~l person to purchase a tire. In the past. tire recall cam· paigns were criticized as not fully effective si nce 1 he manufacturers depended on public announcemenl.s to alert their customers to a possible tire defect. Under the new proposal the lire manufacturer could notify each customer directly il his address v.·as on record. The proposed rule also call- ed for a sy.SU-m of lire iden· lificalloo which would require the manufacturer to label the tire sidewall with the dale of manufacture. the name of !he manufacturer. the size of the tire, and. at !he option of the lire maker. any ''significant characteristic of the lire." · A spokesman for the Tire Industry Safety Council, Ross R. Ormsby. said the lnduslry already was at work on its own system of Ure iden- lificalion. ''We • will study the government's new proposal with a view lo suggesting possible imp rovement based on our experience," Ormsby said. Olympic Air Appointment ATHENS (AP\ -Aristotle Onassis. the Greek shippi ng magnate who is married lo the former Jacqueline Ken- nedy, has named the first American lo a high post in his airline, Olympic Airways. The appointment of Victor ll Harrell to be a vice pre!i· dent of Olympic was iin- nounced Sunday. Harrell started with 1'ran.c; World Airlines as a pilot and instructor in 1945, was general manager and chief executive officer ol Ethiopian Airlines for II years starting in 19~1. was then vice president and general manager worldwide of TWA until J969, and recenUy hart been president of Golden Wes1 Airlines. OUR BEST WHITE HOUSE PAINT $49? .. OIL IA.SI 3" STRIPING TOOL 1.78 METHYL ETHYL KETONE 97¢ 9T. WALKER PAINT WORKS 116 W. T6th St., Cost1 M11• . R~ll..Xf ' }'. .. ~. ' 2nd Blackout Due in ·New York? ' . ~ ~ .. ~ ,_• 1.1f=,~U it?"'i: j NE W YORK M -!he f t:...I: J city'• eight mllllon residents •,'"'cl). ·i;. 0 •~.'-NOS . were l•ced anew Wedn•sdoY .g;-; with the spectt.r of po"wer f · fi.lf4fiR'l'l'LS .' . shorlages, ~fl"" • h u 1 e I , t i Queens generator broke down :. u y t ... t-NT for the secood Summer in a i.1'1 1e Y:-0'-.. 1 row. A iimaller unil has been j · C: ··W · out of service since mfd·May. i. '0""' i.-. <''"'I 0 • ~.v . l • t , .! The twin failures ·c ut ; ' · Co~lidated Edison C o . ' 1 };_ ;.(QHRS • ·~ capacity to generate power t. .. ~f·~\.~f£t1~~.,;;! ,: . , i by 15 percent, and left it with ! •""~.[. ~~:~"' ~T.,~?tt:i·; , , • ~ less than enough current at ~ '(..,, , "'-'"'· ~~i')'".;-' ~· . . . , , ._ hand to match pea le demands ? c: .. -.·~-... : . .-.:~":·:·:~.::u.;.~5 of the past. In case ol emergeocy, the utility would have to depend King-sized quilted, button-free ~·lreSs... No-iron fitted bottom sheet 2 No-iron pillow cases Lovely decorator print cover Innerspring --- construction mattress and box springs on help from outalde sources until mid-September. Both plants are e11pected to be down for the rest of the 5Um· mer. Con Edison Sllid k saw no . lmm~iall': need lo ration current, ~ call upon con- sumers for a voluntary cut- back. as it did last year. The S1.Jmmer thus far has brcn generally cool. But the mammoth utility was obviously CQO(.'erned over its ability to supply the mo.sl widely electrified city in I.he nation with power in event of a prolonged heat wave. • Joseph C. S w Ind 1 er. chainnan of the al.ate Publlc Service Commission, s a i d "Tt!e power loss is a substan· tial threat to Ille maintenance of a service in the event of a heal wave. If we get the breaks In the weather we'll be all right, but if the weather turns hot, the company may well be in trouble." Because of the vast amount of air C<lodilion ln the city, a heat wave brings a hu6e increase in the amount ol elec- tricity used. Ma)l{lf' John V. Lindsay call· ed the situaLion "distressing." King-Size Includes all 13 Pieces With eve ry King or Queen mattress you buy at Ortho you get: Mattress and two box springs with the King, mattress and box spring with the Queen. Plus the Ortho-Pak which includes: Fletdcrest no-iron top sheet. Fieldcrest fitted bottom sheet, two King or Queen bolster pillows, two King or Queen pillow cases, KM"lg or Queen mattress pad and metal frame on casters. Als o Ortho's "' famous Double Bonus of headboard and quilted bedspread. Total = the ~;fl-i'="·::,:!.;~_{~-!~1. ~~~1-;ute best vaJ ue . Everything at one low, low price ••• only at Orthof ., . -~ Twin or Full INCLUDES ALL 13 PIECES In lhe aftermath ol the big Northeast blackout Of 1965, a number or steps were lakrn In an attempt to beef up the acea's power grid, through which reserves may be traded. The current Con Edison breakdowns could mean that New York wolud have nothing to COlltrlbute in e\·ent of emergencies elsewhere In the Northeast. Even before the present failures, Con Edison had warned that temporary lielec. live blackOYt.s in certain areas of the city might be necessary this summ er 10 benefit more populous sections. Arv! both the state Public S-!r\·!c.'t' Commission and the Fc.'<.leral Powf'r Commission warned last DecemQer that power sh9"lages similar to 196!J"s \\'ere possi ble this year, in the event of equipmenl breakdo\\'ns. - On three ocrasions last sum• n1er. Con EdiS{lo asked (Of \•o!untary power cutbacks hJ consumers. Housewives were asked lo turn off their alr <.'Onditioneri for l i ml le a periods. a use King-sized mattress pad · ' 2 King-sized bolster pillows . Vertical stitched· border construction Air vented borders 2 Box spring foundation: atching box spring fabric Metal frame with ' . easy roll casters • Many more great King-size values Queens and Twins and Fulls, too ' ' • . ' • We invite mail and phone order~ Home of the original Ortho-Pak l ._____. .. ·~"'" ' ~ ) 6 ~ ·.• ~ --..i The nation's largest < ~~l'/'4~ ~ · You can only buy chain of , ••:ft ft . 8 a >~ Ortho Mattresses Mattress Specialists .; ., f. .. l\' • at Ortho Stores FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Harbor Blvd. (Next to Zody'•) Phone: 839-4570 ANAHEIM 1811 W. Lincoln Ave. (Just East of FedMar~ Ph•n•: 776-2590 LAKEWOOD 4433 Candlewood Dr. In Candlewood Shops (Across from Lakewood Center) Phone: 634-4134 (IPEN DAILY 10·9 •SAT. 10 -6 •SUN. 12 -6 •IMMEDIATE DELIVERY• CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE· BANKAMERICARD •MASTER CHARG • '' - WV • l~ • ' .. ~ ·"'!. • rt ·~ ,J • M~ • ' •• I '° l ,: • • ' " ' ' ' "" • j .. l ' ,. •• ., " " " " " ., 21: " VI GI " .. .. 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We~ff, Godllf1Y1 NMlll 11111 ..,..1111 Sdl11tr, C.ro1Y11 ltll" 1rwt 01111111 •rl· ( 1Mhll. ....,.,, lorr1lnt 11111 J1dl " • 1.. .. Dr wt, W.lm Mllf, ' '11,Hlf. John Tl\Omll ...a Dorl1 Mii!•. DonNo Dirltlll iM MldlHI GI -· PIMV J•111 11111 Dl•ld C1rrilll l•n-. JOlnfl I~ Junl•r ClllfOrd nl ..... 11•nt Ind s ""' '1'111'11, LIOt• "· Ind "_, J, Tr11illlo._'°llflll1 ..... ll:•"'llt G. Mcl~lln, Mll'l•r•I M. 11111 Clydt w. l'l!IOll. t.indr• ll1tn Ind ODNld Opetl Moo.·Thun. 9 ..... ~ p.11., fri. ' ..... , , .... IUI NA PARK ~UNTIMITINI I UCM Mercury Savings Bldg. • Mercury aiiwinll lld£ V1Uey View at Lincoln 'ft Ed_lnpr It 8tacft ********* ··~~··· WALl..lts.GUOltA., ~" M., ;:· ., C• ... lY" kolt Wit""' J\ICIY 11111 W•llfl'• L. Mt ..... lllnlr T. I ltllY M., ' " "' I , ••lbOI t 11<1., Adlf!ll, Ji.d(lll "'-"· •nd l.OlfMY c,_, .-lltl1 ll'ltl -••n Lllfl T11tllt", .... ..,. M. •NI Jellfl •. """"" 111111 or ........ Otll Allen. lllY,....,. c:i-..r ... Wiii ,.,,,._,, I!~, Jtc~lnt S... INI 11Clblr1 k!IOOfoDV.,., tfltlld Ind l1rJ Dulnt ·~=====================:;:::;:::;::==;;; LOGE.f:MMOHI. Dftlllls L , .. ot 'IMAL DICRtas· llf!tlll Jldl ».1, Ft1nc:.I• l..y-, 1111111 Jlflrl'f' II ,,l Mvlllc 'W•Y• ltf!l'll llldl ..W ....... Ml ... rlf .-. 11111 T~ I. Aidwf" M•rll IC. llld 1.."'"'-n l..11 E-0.oltl\' L.. 11. 11 Jtt5 t . IMl#llllll ·a111tn11 J•IY ll T .. 1tt-... tvrk1 1111111 OwwM W1klltl, l •lll'll A. lfld Ski(, BEST v11w. ............ 1'1;'""'w' MldlMI •nll J-M,11•11 tM1111.. "~ 11111 JI.to ... Tlll:LOCUTOllY DICll:lll J11••-L...,. ... .,. J1di VAN MAUTE·UOWN. OIYlll G., ti, r1,~ ... J11l}t: DI-1nd IC~ G:ul1111, ~u Arw1 -Er-I 1t1111lll ........ .Mlly 11 (1fbtrf, ,,.,,.., D. Ind fll111 J, or.. D'llY PILOT II f h c_ f ' •· I n .. I t lor $1 anll ~ J .JU Umt1t11!, JoNo M, Ind $.Ill!'"' Lii LlrlclY1U. Ptivllls II, 1nll llotiltlgt. H. Urblfl, Nk:k lllll Bt!IV Jl"I '"' "' e 1rt .._...,, e t I ... 1t llhlfll, •'I ltrvt f ~ 'oo "I Trv11H41, lllefllrd Llel'd ""' M•rlon l1rne1. Cllt\11 Jr, 1nd MIU')' l!llr1bltll C.-~ MIOdl!Hn An11 Ind lledfwy l 1, II . 'tn2 " rM, • ., !lrii>«J Ntm111, WrllY" •NI H•flld JUOOMINTI 11i1r•1y of r11d1n, t•1it1ol1 in 111y 111w1p1p1, 111 t+i1.111He11. w .. 1ro11N1w. ,~·~··~r~:·~·~·~·~·c"~·c'~"~·:·~·~·C"·c· ___ _..~ ... ~·o·_''~"~ff'.._;'c·..!:''c·_''"'~-"'!"~~~"-c""~·~·~·~~c·~·~~~~'!"!.!"'~~ .... ~!"~'"'~~~(-~ .... ~~·c'~"~~~·c'~""~·~~"'~c'°'~"~~-:!::===============================:::=======::======:::;===~ NOEl·PAllKEll, llm\191 W,; '1, II lU!ll Llv'"91-, T11ttl1111'1d '=illl Viti::' If 1ilfl VII Vlll\te, M Iii.ti 1 { ~ 1, ,/. ' . . ' I > GLEASON..JKOOG, 01•r.I I.,, If, If IOU I!, ltth SI. 1NI It-M .. 10. of ... , e.llllOO. ll:llljl; ... ""f'! et W•llmll'lllll', ' WDltOIEN.OJ!;EEN, O.vld E,., 17. 11 m s. Tr-. Analllltrl 11111 t1rtlel• A., 2J, or IM LMll'lt!Ofl Lint, c..--· HUISlTT·ll:OtlllTS, K-tll\A,, ft, el ltll Ce»M1 A\'t,, ~. llwl 11111 Jllll• K., 211, If lsn\. ~ W.1tmlmt.r. MOtlS<OAUOH • ....., l .• 20, II 11»11 Mt,.._ L-1nd l1,..r1 A,, 10. " uwn ,,...rk Awt.. Nit! of WIUl"'l"1!1r. llATHSUN-NOllLE, D1vld J., :I!, •rid C1rol1 A., 20, bofll flf 24511 Grld1tr, El Toro. AJINOLO.ll:IC:HAltDSON, TtrtY 0 .. 1', el "'1 W, C1<1tr1I, Gird.,. Gro\OI 1nd """le• A., n , or '110 1..1rku>ur Ori~•. w111mln1l11', WAl..LIMS-OUDKA, G-M,, t•, ol nl t:. t11bci IMI. 1nll Slllnln M .. 211, "' t2I I!. • ............ "'"' .. •••bol. L0Gf.£MM0Nl. Oennl1 l .. 21. te aJ5 M•lllc:. W1W, Lt-ll>ftt tt1Cfl and Der1llrt L .. 2t. f/f lfU f . -.nl1ln View,,~. YAM MAUTl·tll:OWN, 01vld G., 21, oA 111111 t1v1or SI, 11111 ..,.ni. J., 11, or 5731 Atl<ld, botll of WttlmlMler. NOl!l..·PAll:Kl!lt, Slm..el W,. ti. ol I.US! 1..IYll'ltl'-• Tu1lln •1111 01botth S., 11, II Ultl Vl1 VIM!lo. M!ulo!I Vltlo. IUNI. U •OSl!NTHAL<OLl..INS, Edw1rd II .. 10, ol ,.,. ,,.,. t11 Ore. C:v1ru• 1~ P1frlcll A .. tJ, II lSUJ V1rmont SI .• Wnlml"''"· CHltllTOPMf•·Kl.NAVEL , J1m11 C , n . o1 1nn w11 .... 1, T11111" •nd CMl"l'I L .. 2t. of Jtl! AIH"1Nom, w~1tmlflottr. OL!oON·LlOYD, Jol\rl If .. 11, •nll Lindt s.. 11, boltl "' 1'313 ..._ st., ,_l1ln V1llrr. W1LtOUll:NE-MllllEll, 1..-n I'., 72, 1NI Llnlll t .. lS, bllh ttl '*! Str11t If "'9 ~ l•nfll'fl, Dine Point. PEll:ll:Y·HASLWANTl!lt, IE ... ,,. 0., JI, Ind Mlrlott I!., )ol, llcllli" _, HIU -1. Co!d'lnttr LllW:, t:tu11tlftlton t1Kll. SUTCMl!ll:JONlfS, ltenowni I ,, U, of "621 H1.tiof" tlvll., A1tl. Af 11111 J.,.""' c. It, of )II l!1t...,, both ol COil• Mn1. Dissolutions Of Marriage 2666 HARBOR B~VD. 546·7080 COSTA MESA WEEUAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY & SUNDAY 9 TO 5 REDWOOD 2 11N FINISH 0 Nit j..,.,t•tl.1 1111111 ,1 •• ~ t\1t ul-•1111 i11 • Y••r v•••• cl ,jf l flifl, .. I 3 19 liAL. \ I J , ' . ' • 10 OUT OF 9 PROFESSIONALS USE • • GLl~DEN ACOUSTICAL CEILING PAINT 0 Tli1 1tuff ••• 11., cev1ri ,,.a furflt .lirf-1 c1ili"91 i"to lik1·111w, D Ori•• 1 nic1 off.whit1, nof foe 1tto"•· "'!too mut1d. I 1ort of lik1 th1 ri,ht •mount ef 91rlit i11 1 1•l•dl. 0 Thi h11dlin1 m•y b1 , littl1 wh1cky, but ju1! c:.o"lillor th1 1er.1rt1 1f tlii1 . .. ,,.,. ..... 97 GAL~ FREE CLASS •1tEGISTE-NOW. ltt "How lo H•"9 W •llp1p1r ... July 21, ~ro"" 7 to I P.M. A •t ry h11~y Tr.111d1y 11i9kt . Ail•orti11d 1p1ci1lt ,oo-1 thrr.1 July 29, 1970 • 40 PIECE TAP AND DIE SET 0 Tl.ii 1i th1 11t 1 "''" .lr11"'1 tf. I f11"11y, I k1111 4r11"'i119 of b11utiful "W•,..111. I 0 If I h1•• *• ocpl1l11 wli•l It 9e•t, y1u .. ,"'t "'"" a. ... ' ASSORTED PEGBOARD HOOKS IJ!!illl!Jl .. ,,,. .. !"'~.,'i'll!lll.ll D A fr1c:.l io11•f1 c:.111t 1pitc•. 111d 111 ki11~h 111d 1h1p11. 0 I jull k"ew th1r1 mr.11f b1 I Chin••• wlr1•puul1• i" th1r1 11"'1wh1r1. 0 No ""''' "Witk tfi1 '"I ••• 11othi119 11 h•119 111yfhi119 with" !tit. I Honors at Entrance A dmits 11 Students • PLASTIC TRAY ' LINERS Thi .. k of tJ.. fim1 ye11 tp1llCI c:.l1111i"t 1ul *"• .... +.1 tr1y. BLACK AND DICKER HEDGE TRIMMER DRYEJR VENT HOSE i;:-~~::~;.:~_,~,1 0 Unl111 yo11•1 t futifiv1 The University of Southern California has granted honors- at-entrance to 11 Orange Coast area students who will be entering use as freshmen in the fall. The slUdents are among &00 of 2,000 freshmen who main· tained a 3.75 or better grade average in high school on the 4.0 scale. They are: Costa Mesa -Robert.a I. Furness. 340 Alva Lane, Mater Dei High School ; Susan A. Paplham. 2713 Lorenzo Ave., Newport Harbor High School. Newport Beach -Cynthia C. McWh.lrt, 1712 Marlin Wey, Corona del Mar High School. Huntington Beach -Robert A. Cook, 6323 Marconi. Hun-- lington Park High . School : Daniel Coulter, 2954 Live Oak St.. Huntington Park High School : Glen Emery Dysinger, 16711 Bolero Lane, Marina High School. B<nena H. Xohlmann, 3007 QUEENIE • Flower St., St. Matthias Hip School ; s..dra-A. KlmlllUro, 16721 Phelpft Lane, Marina High School; Paul Lar!len, 15252 Yorkshire Lane, Marina Hl1h School ; Stuart R. 1'fork; 8311 Shields Drive, Marina High School and Grelt'f'Y J. Naroe, 16371 Duchess Line, Marina Hith School, Highwa y Taxes Total $893,712 Orange County has received iL, June apportionment of tht highway users tax, accordln( to Slate Controller Houston Flournoy. 1 The county d Oian-ge rectived *3.71128. Cost 1 Mesa received $53,631.50 and Laguna Buch recti ved 110,230.0IJ. ly. l'hll lnMriancll " 1:·. ';'• • ~· •• '· l • , 0 Thi11li ef·tt.1 +;...,, yeu 1p-d 1cr•pi119 ti!, 9111! 011f. Tllinlt ef I pl11tic tr1y Ii"''· (AU ffii1 +hi11lii119 h11 "''d• "'' 1l11py, I'll p1inl .fo,..orrow.) IA. ,. 3 PIECE BRUSH sn 0 Ch1•p, but 11ic1ly f11fh1r•d nvlen ltri1fl1, 0 A91i" fer thi1 ,rl11 you Clll UI• 1...I f1t1,.•r if your1 i"cli111d, cl1111 tl.1"' "' 0 Geod luc:.li, Ch1rli1. • SPRAY PAINT Ji'~~lfl.1"-;;;•\l'l""I 0 K1 r"' h11 I stec:.lr. *• 1'11ko 111y riero 111vieu1. 0 111 "·'·· lfllll'll lt, flllff• fi11ith. l1c.qu1r1, ,.lyt, 0 c.re,., 111!1 I f1l11Mw 111111 I l11•011't feufHI t+i1t ,..t •f ,.111 y1tl. SHEPHIRD TYPE • CAmRs 0 Tho1• do11't "'''Ir."' t+.1 fle1r er "'11h t+i1 cot,.of, 'o If 0 11111 ;, • h11vvw•ltht WI ""itht h1•1 I IJtfl• 1qu11h 1fld t•u91, llvt ll'ltrlr 1M "'••"'· 119.,1,, D ••••• fi11i1h, ,,,t ., ,1.1 •. 77c u.. • .. 0 Thi 1111111 for d1p111d1ltl1 pow1r. 0 Th . f1 clory •"••p l11llt i11 p1.+111rohip witlt th1 Ell ite11 ce111p1ny de it fer you ind you ''"' th• ''"''· BLACK AND DECKER ORBITAL SANDER 0 Ev1ry ti"'' I r11d thi1 I tlti11\: of t+.1 thl119 circli11t th1 moo", 0 Orbit1I for f11I w1rk, u11 h11vy er fin1 9r1t, 0 Tw• lt1"d1d d11I fer 111l1r c:.e11hol. 1499 BLACK AND DICKER 1/•" DRILL 0 If you ho1r ef •11y1111 llt•+i"' thit price 1nywlt•r•, w1 w111t te lr.it0w. 0 l1c:.11i111 nellodv, !tut 11oltody, 0.1h •u• ptlc:.• •11 +hi1 drill. 0 l'•1 h•1r.I th1t 10111owh1r1 i 1foro wh1" I WIJ 1 y1uth • 7'' 7000 BLACK AND DECKER --· .llG SAW ... ,j 0 Cemplot• tli1 111, !1 ltuy th1 whol1 J>1tch. '0 Yor.1 de 11".I your wif1 I will f"'llli y1u, !Jut J l(•ffl'I wll! th1nli y1u. 1 0 '''" 11f1, 1Hck witll yor,1r wif1, 12·~15J • fro"" "T1n•11" you'll w111f to 911 1id of tho ju119I• mu99i11111 i11 th1 1•f'llc1 roo191 or t•r•t•· 0 J uit •tt•dt 1114 pip• It ouhid1. H. FAUCET WASHER KIT 0 Ht11dy little ffiin9, It'll t1v1 yo11 doU1r1 !" 1n '"'''l'"c:.y,'" 0 And "''"' UI p111"l11. 0 l u+ p1n"i11 "''Ir.' ... u,,.. (Ah, 1111 Fr111lili", l'.l·li"- yor.1 t11ywhor1 I 59c ...... ,; WATER HEATERS 0 fully .,1111 li111.I, fot r1t1 ef r•c1,.1tif.I , II••• 91t "Woid). 0 Auto 1hr.1l·1ff !11 c•1• •' 111y ,reltl1'". I Il k• Y•ll d o11't pty th1 911 ltiltl. 0 Full r1119 1 1f w•ltt *•"'p1r1tur1. Ch1tlr yeur troct "'od1I. h It t•Hi119 •11? Wiiy wilt.for th• fleetl1 20 GALLON . ............... 43.50 30 GALLON ....... ········· 44.SO 40GALLON ' '• • 0 ' ' I• '0 •' o o 0 52.50 SO GALLON 0 'o •' o ' I ' o' • o • o 0 62.50 ., . • ~ Dlll V PILOT DICK DACY TUMBLEWEEDS- - ThursdoJ, Ju~ 23, 1970 "DOH'l' KNOW, JUS1' 5HMS 1 PATMrnC.-A. &UNO ORPMAN ANO HER UTTL.E OOG /' ' By .Tom. K •. Ryan . ' • • U'L AINa S:At.1.y, IANANAS ' MUTI AND JEff· -B~ Al Smith u (i()RDO ,------+;>' /-':,;:-;:===="' ,,.-======"""" .--,.--r---'-r----. MUTT, I INVEN'TEO ITS REALLY GREAT! -rHATS ITI NOW RINSE A NEW SHAMPOO! I TRIED IT ON AND DRY' • BRUNO BFCALlSE MAYBE A RLIG SHAMPOO?· I ' .t HJ'I! WE LL MAKE A I HAVE l>/Q.HAIRI FORTUNE I -rRY l-r.' JUDGE PARKER MAYE YOU SEEW J-'SON. !ti NCE HE WENT TO PRISON, JOANNA.? [DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I ACRO SS I Plralts' quest S Go····< 2 words 48 lllort strange 50 Heavenly 52 Hearing organs /10 Fi1tfigh!trs' device 54 Bounder 55 f rl ghtlul luss: I 14 Ra in rralty hard 15 Miss Cavrtl l!. ContintnJ : Co111b. 101111 17 "Let 'rm rat ca~r" character l9 Up--·· good: 2 words 20 Humb!rs onrsrl! 21 Cannon 23 Spiro A9nrw, for onr : lnfOfmal 25 Indefinite quant 11y 211 Covertly: 2 words )0 Made art u111pleasant sound 34 The March King JS Private eyrs 37 We nt in tuste 38 Taste 39 8011nie Sl ang: 2 words 5' Yukon's ntlghbor 6) Nor'wtg ian commu nity b4 Freeway sign: J words Mi··'·· ch tese &7 Only ·····< 2 words &8 C0:mpos.Hion &'Dispatched 7D Of more rtcent origin 71 Ex cept DOW N l Resorts 2 Negative contraction 3 Detroit or Osllawa product 4 Lo<1g nalfOW channtls 5 Mort rhi1h-stru~ • Piec e of verse Pr1nct 7 Mtatiness 42 lr1trn\1onally 8 Holy Roman so wr illtn emperors 43 App l!ed ., 9 A_'J.",."_.'« 45 As well • 4111 Opera ' 2 Word5 1 ' 3 • 1a· ' • , " " 11 II " ~· " . I• 2J ,. " " " " .. 1 .. 35 " " ,, '1 .. • "' . . .. •• " . " " " " " " . ., .. .. ., .. ,.. • ' 10 Having the biggest waistline .11 .,Izard •• ··: 2 words 12 British composer 13 "Jrlc •n 18 S. "me r. crttpln g r,1 1111 22 ' ..• ·One Girl Man ": 2 words 24 f lower part 2& Bulldog OI Fivt Stir Fin al 27 Cacophony 28 "Te1rillc !" 2' fl 1lhout ur1necess11y verblage 31 TV westtrn g1oop )2 Ht ilth genus JJ Kind of \11nsfer 36 Weaver 's product • 'ii' . " H > " " " l"I 30 ~~ " ··~•7 " " " " .. " 7123 ')(I 40 Old woman 41 B1itish eSSil)'iSl 44 Gr1du11!y disappears: 2 wonfs 47 Southern US city 4• Put on the fttd·blg 51 Auto tlCCtSSOf)' 5J Rrsult of sleeping on one's back 55 Moves up and down Sb Small isl a nil'" 57 Secluded vall ey 58 In the ·-· liO Knoc k out bl Ship's back bone li2 Pretending to be arltsllc 1115 Full ol; Su If ht " " " ,1 ~~. "· " " 3l " " " " THAT'~ A 1RIC.K.>/ WE.e, -aui; . ,~NS! By Harold Lo Don " MOON MUWNS PERKINS ::fl'{. ¥ '" ~ ... ... "' . .. "' ... ... .. ' "' .. ' "' "' MISS PEACH STEVE ROPER ,, '" ""'" ,,. THE DOC SAYS I CAI' 60 WOW LOOK, Y.0Ul0'')'0U! tfOME lQlJIGMT, KASEY/ MJM5E.LF JS WALKING ··BUT J MAY HAFtA USE ABOU7 AS If HFD ~EVER THIS HERE STICK FOii HAD A BROKE N 'A L(»K; LEG.' 11ME / PEANUTS • ~. . ANIMAt. CRACKERS "' .. , '" '" '" "! "' ... ", ' 'f'3 .... ~~, .. -A "M. ... By John MH11 ' ' ' . .A-'-},./:: . ,, . By Mel •J ~~.If' .... '*"i IT't NOJOJUI ,,. .,. By Saundon and Overgar!l . - >-N' I W/>.S THINKIM'··A MAN DON'T WANTA l lMP OOWN THE AISLE WHE"I HE'S GETTIN' MARllEO /··-SO ... ' By Chatlos M. Schub ""''"'~----•·""·" ~~-E-PRaeA&--~-V-lllO_U_LPN_'_,T HAVE IAAllE IT IN // NEW ORl.EAHS, EfTMfR .. 011 , \I HU STlANGI WOllD ~ MR.MUM ByAI~ ly Ford Johnson ."IH~ Nl'/IR M1"1!>-IF 'l/ORSS COM1$ 'TO WOl'ST, 1'11. JU5T ' STAN!> ON l>IAMDNl>JIM'!.J , '5HOlJl.O~l'S! ~---.. $ By Roger BoU.n :I 11-lllJK 400fZ Fcor WAs ~ "ID'fE Oil IJOOl e.\1-1.. ·- ·~~· \bY\ ....,,__=----""~ ) . . DENNIS THE MENA~E ' ~ I • • r ' ' • 1 ' ' r ANH - w E~ RE NEV C<din G""f month tlonar: patriol for no Im • ed aln before OV<T, C06l tt hall a ACCO' Yor Washl &CCOlll """""' Tuesd; au th Wuhl coont, mod« Kiln CllSing paddk the n> arnoul ref ere pendit corUt count pttcia Was detail purdl; aca>l'( sirnpl! army, MAM ~ In -fav.orl Waoill ekete &C,& Kiln .... u off ere comm COl1li1 .. ,.,, his .. cash just over·r has le The 62-pai aCCO\ll today' write! PAID "Th paid i PY t Wash! int.ere from surch: the d< th< bo "Wt right Is ..., biollr• loved -Kitr have times but ti have mode Ba Gi1 MO Then thiev« terfin o/ "' F0< arme rn>d1 car • miles week As clam! Jooon accld WOUD c:o... "Sc --a lw the treat.t rt lea· Washington Expenses Revealing NEW YORK (UPI) -'!be C<dinental Congress olltred George Washington $500 a month to Jead the revolu- tionary army. W aoblngton lhe patriot agreed to do the job l« no salary, just expenses. llis expense account averag- ed almost $5,000 a month and ht.fore eight years of war were over, Waehington's expenses cost the Continental Congress half a million dollars. ACCOUNl'S for each year of the war, Wasbington submitted e%pf:nse accoont.s averaging $56,US, ....ro~ to a book published Tuesday. Marvin Kit man , author of ''George Wuhin,gton's Expense Ac- count," figured dollars in mocI<rn day purdlaoinf pawer. K.itman said he was not ac-- cusing the first president of padding the account, but said the meticulous listing of small amounts and the rather vague reference lo J a r g e ex- penditures "is IOfDethlng the corttmporary e :1 p en 1 e ac- count businessman will ap- preciate." Washington went into greal detail in writing up the purdlase ol a ball of twine, accordifll to the book, but simply noted, "dinner for one army.'' MANY E'lt.E1'ERAS In enumerating household e1penses, in c 1 ud in g his favorite maderia w I n e , W lll!lrlntlf<in "'80ried to many ' etceteras, which be wrote as &C, &C, &C. KitJn an writes, "Congress was thrilled wben Washington offered to accept lhe post of commal'ller-in-chief of t h e Continental Army with 0 u t aalary. Obviously they ttiooght !Us .._ would he • petty cash deal, but they ran up just like the military cost over-runs with whidt Congress has to deal today." 1be fu.l tabulation of the U.page hand written expense account total.! $499,000 ln today's buying pcrwer, Kitman writes. PAID IN FULL '"llte Continental Congress paid in full and appeared hap- py to do so, even i f Washington charged I percent interest on all money paid from his OW1I pocket and a surcharge for depreciation or the dollar during the period," the book: says. "'Washington's exactness - right down to the penny - ts .'tj"most revealing biotira?U<ally. Obviously, he loved doing accounts," Kibnan writes. Kilman says the erpenses have been ~ teVtral times in ~ last 200 years, but this is the first time they have ~ looked at as a modern upense accoori. Bandit Fires, Gives Aid MONTREAL (UPI) There may be no honor among thieves but at least ooe but- terfingered bandit bas a tenae of responsibility. Four gunmen, masked and anned with pistols and a maddnegun., held up the mail car of a passenger train 20 miles east ol MonltUI last week, taking only to seconds. As one ol the bandits clambered Into the cab of the Jooomotive, he atumbled and a«identally fired ru. pistol. wounding fi reman Ro I e r Gosselin in the hand. "Sony, I didn't mean to l!llool," said lhe blll<lll Re band&l'd Goaelin's hand wtlh a handkerchief, and fled with the others. Gosselin was treated at 1 hospital and released. -----~---.----~----·-----~-----·-----·---- WHITE FRONT Th11tsdAY, July 23, 1970 DA!LY'PILOT JS $250,000 PURCHASE FASHIO SHEETS A D CASES F 0 R 72x104 TWIN FLAT ot TWINFlnED SPECIAL PURCHASE! NO.iron fashion sheets and pillow coses in decorator prints and matching solid color5 at prices that can't be matched. Of 50% polyester/50% cotton percale for that.smooth silky feel. Take advantage of our low prices now! P.S. We dare you ta spot the irregularities. llO·IRON PERCALE SHEETS llO·IROll PILLOWCASES 11•104" er full fitt•d King flat ll.i•9 fit'•' Kine 1ia• 42x4644 1tandard 1ize . , 42•36" 2Foa$2 101.115" 72•14" ~ 2/5.88 ._ ______________________ _ 2:2.48 5ee 5ee 111111111 ·1!111111111111!11II1111I111111111lI111111111111 · First time ever! MACHINEW LUXURY BED PILLOWS 20 X26 SIZE! Naw Celanese® introduces a new luxury pillow at budget prices! Plumply filled with continuous filament polyester fiber that will not lump or rnat yet it's resil ient, machine washable dryable. Covered with a permanent press ticking of poly- ester and cotton in a distinctive stripe and floral design. 20x26" Finished size. QUEEN SIZE 20•30" 5'' EACH KING SIZE 20x36 " 7'' I "" I l1111111111111111r111111111111111r111111111r111111111I DUPONT DACRON 88«> BONDED POLYESTER MAnRESS PADS :ZIPPERED YIN:~::~~:::.~ YOUR CHOICE 168 IN TWLN OR · FULL SIZE! . 51" ..... , KAPOK FILLED BED PILLOWS i~~:-111 ~;::238 ~~~'7'":22x21" 20•36,. OUI llS. PllC( 2.JI OUlt llG. PllCI: 2.t7 NI. On•oUetgertic Wopot filled 0:11~ f '"" •leep f ,. 0 • com Ott, J urnbo corded trim: ., ......... *«llAa•llT * • IAMlAMRICAID COSTA MESA 3081 BRISTOL AYE. • JUST OFF NEWPORT AYE. MONDAY th,. FllDAT 12 ....... ,,.. SATUIDAY 10 tet SUNDAY 10to 7 • WMITI FIOMT CAID • MASTll CMAIGI CllDIT (AIDS • BETWEEN SAN DIEGO FREEWAY AND IAKIR 5T • - • • J f DA~LY PILOT Ti..nd11, J,11 2l, 1970 ~!ti ~29 WHITE FRONT LADIES' SWIM SUITS A fantastic assortment ••• all r00oc9d! One and 2 piece styles, 3 pleee sets. Solid col111S and prints. Cottons, Helenca" nylon, Antron• nylon-latex and otliel' fabric blends. Sizes 30-44. l~~::1~·E 544 •• 44.744 7.17 TO U.17 GADGH ASSOITMENT "Gol'lllf' COOK SH 53 PC. ASPEN CHINA TERRIFIC SELECTION FOR EVERY NEED! • Your choice: 5 blade chopper, set of 8 com ho ld- ers, grinder-grater, garlic press, ice cream scoop, stainless steel tongs, 3 pc. mixifl'! spoon set, egg · poacher, bacon crispers •.• many more! 12 IAL PUl11C TUii CM Finest quality ,1astic recep· Jaclt, tight cover. OURLQW 299 PRICE STAINLESS CHIP·PIOOF RIMS Porcelain cookware in lime with white in- teriors and stainless s!Eel chip proof rims. Set consists of: l qt. saucepan; 2 qt. sauce- pan with cover;'S qt. dutch oven with cover; · 10 inch open skillet. NOW ONLY TOASTMAlta l·CUP COFFEE 'MAKBI BY FAMOUS NATIONAL SILVER Settings for eight include: dinner plates, soups, cup and saucers, bread and butters, fruit dishes, serving bowl, platter, creamer and covered sugar. NOW ONLY 19 ?~ ~ f l ________ ._,/ ____ _ PROCTOR "LIFE I Mini• SILEX •wna 2 ·SLICE TOASTBI _______________ ..., ..... --·-···--.. ~-~· '' ITYlf llAll IPIAY cOnce11traled la~: regular or menthol. Includes price off label. ' MlltmciMd.I. • • ~ 3i$1 ·~~ •• . ' • ! ( . . -. • Record & play·back with drop.in tape cassettes. RecorddiJllCllyfrom radio. With mike end batt~ies. 14!.! • rttel•ll ------------------· WESTINGHOUSE AM *CMARel IT* ·• HNKAMlltUlO • WMlll llONI tAID • MAITll tHARCI tHDtlUUS CLOCK RADIO New, spacimaker! Wa-es to music or buuer arm. Slumber switch; il1umiriated clock fac e. 1497 ... , l.tl PllCl1fJI . ' * RUGG 18 INCH REH. POWER IAWN MOWER NOW ONLY Reooil starter, runnin& control on handle. Self·sha1penlng blades; adj. cutting htigh~ #2020. 69!! rtlkl 7t,,, ----. • I • Th~. July 2.l, 1970 · OAltV '1L07 J 7 -(:£! 11 -=a:¥: CREDIT TBIMS AVAILABLE DR USE. YOUR COllVENIENT CRBllT CARDI YOU CAN AFFORD THE THINGS YOU WANT. AT WHITE FRONT ••• SHOP NOWl .-wliiTE ·FRON'T Heavy duty trolling 119 7 reel. Stainless steel with brass parts. Machined ouuia.tow gears. #103 """"'' -----------....... IA SAIT. llftllll WATll 6'5" heavy action, I pc. wliJI detachable butt. 4 hard·clrnmed sbinless steel RUldes. #2899 ou1m.1397 lDWPllCI 11J1 PENNRER free casting 119 7 spool. Siar drag. Capacity 500 • yds. #SOO . SPEciAU 11 compartments with 2 trays. Room for large reels. Plano #7200 97 11s:n SHELLED HOOKS 1·9: ~iG::~lllllllC. $1 llH IEI. Plltl U1 BACK PACKER STYLE AIRMAmEll Perlect for camping. Box waffle construction l Mebl lotking valve! 4t?· Lightweight, warm, Ideal ,,_~, for hikers. Nylon cover and lining. 36"x84". WAil Ml•m Arm-chair or barrel chair in black or col- ors. Su perbly comfortable! · OVlllC.lDW PllCl Lii U. NowJ88 ONLY IACH . 30BB;llllSTOL AVE..• JUST Off NEWPORT AVE. IETWElll SAN DIEGO FRWY. AND iAKER.ST. • Impressive 22x26 '· • inch mirro~.Clas­ s i c, baro9ue or • Spanish design. OUIHl.LOW , PllQl.'7 5•• ltoa•--· MOND,lY.fllDAY , 12 NOOll-t PM SATUl!IAY 1t AM-t PM SUNDAY10AM-7PM ' . -. " -JI DAILY l'llOT • • '"' I ~! ·~~---·-·. -· ~ -·. ·--· -- + + • • .,,. '"' • • i ,J ' ' ' 4 .... ' . ' " ' I .. ' = = 'i:I ' ·1· ! ) I ' ' Finance . . ,lkiefs . .. " WAIHINCJTOll '.,(Ul'J) -N~Qlfp. ......... lo join Clrl M. ,,....,.., Inc. In bulJdlnc ZI °'"*°'~ .... -on. a,-. ltlel .. "' Che DlotNI "' Columbla. N_,... alle' wtlJ bull4 lllO I a r f 1 • ·-"' Ill ...... Ibo Intl • .. I l I I I \ I I I . . . . l :: . . • :· -.-~-....-' '""' ......... ..,.... .. ~··-· ·-·----~---...-~-~·-··~·---------~-. -·~-·-·-·-· ~-,---~-~-~---·--. ---. -• • • -. GtJARAHTEED ' STANDARD BRANDS llAINT CO. Jlt(SC PllOOUCTS WllV AN UNCON01llONAL MOl4tV·I ACll. CUAAAJllTll l:ATEX ACRYLIC EXTERIOR ; STUCCO•MASONRY PAINT FROM 2ooo • f·HOUR TO DRY • WON'T CHIP, . · .• SCRUISBABLE CRA'CK OR PEE i:_ t~ . COLORS FOR • CLEAN-UP WITjf • BRIGHT WJilTE ". PUA• • · • WATER ' AND COLORS R•PAJll ' _Xft~ CAN • HOUI•· AUO· PAHA" • .. ' .... QUAUty • UNIUD OIL 8AH • TOuON AHO DUOAlllJ • tONG U.ITINCll' . • USI 8TIWe T"f!!Oi! C~ , , VINYLCOR ~ • PRIC OOLOft 111J:1NO it· ·~- OUR· lllllQ• ' 199 GAL GUARAN EED . 1·COAT ACllYLIC LAftX . . "' . .' \.•ou•· Dti.,, .. ~ • Ct.U.H·U' WITH WATllll'( r • IClllUllAILI --COLOll8 3 ~.! • .... '~- -· 3•• •ITAi~ t .IO .... L SPRAY ENAMEL 12 OZ. A•,llOsoL CAN • • EXTl!EllEL Y TOUGH AND DURABLE FINISH INllllllOll llLAT PAlllT . · • 1..ffOUR.TO DRY • 8CRU81A8LI ' • HIOH 'OLDll ' •.FAIT DRVlNO, . + I ' ~ . '-DRIUTO A ' Hl,RQ flNllH IRIQHTUT WHITI! AND A COMPLl!TI! ' LINl·oir-c;OLOlll I '' -· -·3•• 1 OAL WHITE AND FOUR COLORS COMI". •ITAi~ 1.71 INTERIOR ENAMEL HARD HIGH·GLOSS • • • l!XTl!~ELY DUllAILI! . BARN AND · • IRU$H OR SPRAY • FOii 'ALL EXTERIOR WOOD OllYSTAL CL•All . . . CASTING ·RESIN • HUNDOIDI OF UIH • IAttLV FOii!' LAMPI, TRAVe, .LASTS ,., . · YEAR!i WNI~· AND44 COLORS 'OUR l'IUC• ~ ... ~AL • CLEAN.UP wrTlf WATER " •USE ON INTERIOR STUCCO, BRICK,· · MASONRY ETC •. • USE Dl!I FURNITURE,' !IACHINERY, .TOYS,'. l!TC. • OICOOlJOR ITIMI MA.R. ·IN• BEAUTIFIES . . & PROTECTS • 00111 CRVIUL CLIAR . '. ' • .. BRUSH · ·oR ROt:L BRIGHT WHITE AND COLORS .. . . ' OUR . lllllCll 3 •• GAL . I DICDllATDll DlllGNID FLOCK PAPERS ' . • 'Rl ·TRIMMtD • I UN-ir.t.ST , • 21 POPULAR COLORS AND PATilfllN I COMP. RETAIL OUR 3115 6.95 PRICI: 'I JI ROLL 3110. "· SOLO lfll 2 JIOLL IOLTI ONLY WHITE AND COLORS l!NAMaL ALL EXTERIOR •• • FINEST OU1'LITY • TOUGH AND '·DURABLE o RESISTS DAMAOI! FROM SALT. WATER ~" . ~ •FULL.ROI.I.& ~ PILT IACICID .i MIOftTID . COi.Oiia . ·COii,. ~AILMt . WOOD REDWOOD • I & 12 "· WIO'!lfl • WARM & OHILIENT • 81VlllAL PATmlN8 OUR llRICl 1 !.t . ,AND • COLQlll ) ....._..._ MAMOOANY I~ X1SIN. 7X20-IN. 7XH IN. •h ... 1.oe ... 1 ...... IX2D IN. IX24 IN. IX24 IN. 1.ae... 1.1a ... 1.11 ... IX21 IN. 10X21 IN. 10X31 IN. 1.ll•a. ............. .. 12X32 IN. 15X40 IN. 15X54 IN. l .78ea. a.ff ... IAI ... 17 .. Zll IN 110CK :.Ju9. IR0 JJoal I -" ' H LI P. D IOfl -ha\ .... W8J lhil "" acr isn to ' ... u Fl1 "! If ey1 •rr U> I . -. --. '-·~ ~-... ~·--------------------. ..--~··---·--~ ... --··---···----··-------------------~-------~-:----:':""'~~'If' • • ' • ••• • ·"' , . -' --. . -------r-r~- r .,..,.._., -.. '"' ''" ll I HOPES AL IGHT -Illuminating their way toward a successful first year as Las Amigas de San Jose are (left to right) Mrs. William Reid, Mrs. Frederick Presci>tt 8)ld Mrs. William Hood. Guild Changes Name: Charity Still Its Aim / St. Joseph Hospital Outservice Guild has a new name with e leisur"' ly Spanish sound -Las Amigas de San Jose -but the new purpose is filled wiUrenergy. Along with this changed title is a changed approach to fund-raising, with members' aim to raise funds for special projects within the hospital rather than contributing to the .overall building fund. .Officers·installed. to lead' the group for the coming year include Mrs. William Hood of Santa Ana , president, and Mrs. Frederick Prescott of New- port Beach, vice president. . Others on the leadership list are the Mmes. Alex Bowie, Charles Zeigler, John Steffy, William Reid, Robert Ball, Milo KeD8rue, G. S. Hard- ing and Feter G .. Mulh.,' · · Two prospective. fund raising projects will be a dinner dance in October in the Balb6a-Bay Club and a fashion show schedilled aboenl the refitted Queen Mary Iii Long Beach at the end of April, 1971. .. -- .Airing a . ' Trying out a breathing device which will aid an asthmatic is Mrs. Leonard Zusman or the Pace-. setter Chapter of Orange County, Children's Asthma Research Institute and Hospital. Looking on are (left· to right) Mrs. Mike Sim sek and Mrs. Bernard Shulman, incoming president of the group . Oth er t#ew ' Ye ar ' , I .~ ,I :11 lj . ' 111 1:1. ' 1 I [,i ~ 'rl• "I officers i-ecently installed include the Mmes. David Sandor, Herb Lenchner, George Dotti, Mark Mil- lard, James Campbell and Mike Simsek. For a July 25-29 CARIH convention in O.enver, _site or the Asthma Research Insti tute, Mrs. Zusman has been named delegate to accompany Mrs, Shulman. . . Treasu re Seekers Alerted It's t.ime ror fre1sure seeters again. The Ninth · Annual Flea Mark et will open It.I doora in the Santa Ana YWCA from noOn to 9 p.m. Wednesdey through Fiidity; July 29-31. Shoppers may find 1. varied assortment of-W'ares,' lncludinc ant.iqlles, coins, glass clocks. ' glassware, boob, print.!1, doll! jewelry and wearing aJ>Pare1. • Mrs. Wiiliam Riley "is c)lairman of the sale, whlch w.IIJ profit the YWCA youth program, • Proceeds will help the YWCA train communJty recreation I e ad e r s and cooperate with other com- munity organizations. , Assistttig Mrs. Riley will bt1 the Mmes. Giitner Knudscin. V. L. Montgomery, Michie! Joyce, Keith Gaynes, Joaeph Artollo, Wllllam Hentges and Harold A. LeSieur Jr, I I I Las Amigas de .San Jose members are keenly aware of the work ahead of lh~m. for1 St. Joseph's Hospital has expansion plans to be com- pleted in 1973 which will rriore than double the existing area and will p~ vide additional operating' rooms, X-ray rooms,. nud.ear .mediCine and op. ' . erating rooms u well as greaUy e>panded bed space. . SWEET TOOTH -Baked goods will entice shop- pers attending the S.Ota Ana YWCA's ninth annual F1ea Market, as the Country Kitchen adjoinin~ the sale will be open for the delight of hungry patrons . . , Pi-eviewing dessert are (left to ri ght) Mrs. V. L. Montgomery of Laguna Hills and Mrs. Walter Con- verse Jr. or Irvine. . Mrs. Walter C:OOvene Will I be in cha_rge of the Country : Kitchen, where shoppers may . pause for refreshments. Sharp Answer Needed to Cut Off Nosy Neig ·hbors' Prying DfAR ANN LANDERS' Our t.enage 1011 lja<l .. s1Jt8"'Y lat week aiMI Y,OU woukln 't belln'e the questions peoi>te: have asktfd me ·about. the operation - even after· l made it-.clelr I didJl't. want to d.ilCUSI it. Why do ltieee clods think the inUmate details of surgery are public property? How does one get across the idea ·that if the tnlormation isni volunteered it i.9 bad manners to JX'Y? Yesterday a nelghl:P.' bombarded me Vii th eome extremely 1peraonal quest.ions. F!ially I lost my 'temper and 1111<1, "I really don't want lo lalk abOut i~ If Yo• don't mind.'' With !Ire Jn her eye she snapped, "l asked because I am INTEflESTEO In the boy. 1 can 't underatand why )'OU •re JO teMit.ive." I <oded up by 1pologWn1 but I felt like kicking her h1 the teeth. I wu brought up to believe U is rude to put 1 peraon through the lhln! delf<e about personal matter1. HO'w should I deal with nooy folks? -T.N.T. MOTHER DEAR MOTHER: 'l"e bnt wa7 te hudle 1 N_.,........_. lypo - Uon J1 by nldng a comner •IMlkli: Example: --why do yoa all:?" tr 1•wut tn earth do 1" w•t " Un I«"!" u ti•• hnokllead ·-,.... ..... tlOo and COfttlnoet to pre11, 1l111ply 1111 11Dt .. . , • ,. -r we ..;..,. . t.. .• je<I .... aw! .... , JDlft dretthll7" "' DEAR ANN LANDEftS ,. Wllr ··<fon't you mind your on businessT A 1'\'ffiAR in Californl1 wrote to say 1he 11'. her blllbud were reUIJ>&<.alool lint, Plol'inl cards, w11cl1Jn& TY 11111 aidlring lhems<lvea and YOU !ol1 !let I( add a little au to her marriage al It will be better. How do you kno1f'! Maybe they don 't happen to be tel maniacs. Of cour1e my hUlband cut out that column and waved It li:i fro11t of my nose. Now he bas it pasted to his denture glasa. Every night "before be goes• to bed he ~.eads me a line or two of you.. adVice. I'm so slck of you, An• Landerr, I .trJed Lo cancel the newspaper butJD¥ hU!band wouldn't.1la"<l for it. If l hadn't see0 yoo wttb my own eyes. when 'you spoke in Bolt.On l .would swear you •were a man ... I won't be reading )'Our column anymore '° good-by forever. -BROOKLINE WIFE I DEAR ll'IFE: Sorry to tooe yoo, dtmie, bot J llave a lilnc:lil JWr Mlllnd wUI keep yao p1111td. Tllako !or the dtbkr. It made my day. DEAR ANN LANDERS' You once n!pUed when IBked If women were smarter about marriage than men , ''Have you ever heard of a woman marrying a man for his shape'!" J laugh· 'ed when t read il, but it started me · Utlnkm&., , \ What 00 women look for when they want to marry? All around me I tee lovely gals wOO are supporting toaret1, boozers arid chasers. These men ·aren't particularly handsome or interesUng or even decent, IA some instances . Why would a pleasant, bright, successful woman who can support herselr In style hook up with a jerk who 11 Inferior to her in every way -and carry the financial burden besides? This is not a new wrinkle, Ann. I had two aunts who dkf it 30 years ago. Nobody In Ute family could flgure It out. can yout -B. MUSED ' DEAR. B.: Some pl1 •re 11 lenUW , . . ' of 1pllu1erbood they'U R~e for ~. He.{ien katw1 wtlj, b9at die amll'ri~ m• 11 viewed u a ,.....,...., eluam l•Y bid; w~ the' tlqle "'mu • tbe lyla1 ... " u ii --.. old malcl. Of eeane db .. rd't .... I'"" nlcl tt be!.,. and 1'11 aay It qala1 Ary womu eu pt MUritd -If Mt Mtl ................. . Too many couples IO from matrimon1 to acrimony. Don't )et 10\D' marrtqe flop before it tela -· Sod !er AM Landers' booklet, "Man'ilge -Whit lo Expect.''· 5'nd your roqueli to Ann ' Lander• in care of the DAILY PIL01' enclOllng 50 centa in coin and 1 to.a 1tamped, 1elf·addre11ed enve lope. ' I j I I - I l I ' - 22 DAILY PILOT Your Horoscope Tomorrow Sagittarius: Pursue Endeavor FRIDAY Your judgment may not be value. Key Is to r<eoptze your sense ol drama. You are JUL y 24 Jood for final -· But own nee<b. 'lben puzzle p;..., -begiming to •""'°"' from )'00 can plant ~ which fall into place. Aries individual emotlooal atieU. w e 1 c 0 m • By SYDNEY OMARll will bear fruit. Melll.1 feel sell flne example. Genuine challenges, new c 0 n t a c t s • De Libra man strives for YtlU1' way. This is a tJme to bara:aln b available. Throw Ui tensions. You can jlllilce, t.Wes for hJi eoa. probe , test. t;. IF TODAY 1$ Y 0 UR now earn happiness -if you vlctlom; ~ 11 suceptlble to SCORPIO (Oct. 23-NOY. 21): BIRTllDAY you have natural so permit. o.u..y, apprttlalel _.,. Your ability to harmooiu wtth1----...:.. _____ __: _______ _ aad adora women wbt aa associate:s, CO-W<W'kers i 1 1allP la die face of adven:lty, emphasized . Avoid making He II especially good, iD a Wlreasonabl.e demands. But U.-dl.l sm1e, for ladles bona get just reward. M e a n s a.der Vlrp. Re 11 apt &o elevate self-esteem. M a n y demad perfecUon, but wtU desire )'«It aervic:es. se«le fw leu, provkled JCMI SAGmARIUS {Nov. :ZS. ..-bhn. Some famoua ,Dec. 21): Learn as )OU pro- mt11 bin wider Ubra are ceed. Plmty , ol action. But Ed SaWvaa, Art Bucllwald ud you can allO refine .tedmiqUd. Jottpll Alsop. Punue aeati?e esxteavon. a..g,s will P""' beoefidaL ARIES (March 21·Ajril 11): ~ thb, tad ,_.Q. , ... Get down to the busioess ol ....iqly. • ' aooompllifment. Smle, ac-CAPRICORN (Dec. DJ111. tually erMous, may attempt lt): What wu nebu lo u 1 to belittle efforts. Key is to becomes eolid. You get eo6cf outltne ood pursue bosic Joal. idea ol r-to 0cjeal wtth llP"l---~---'----------....,1;. TAUllVS (April 20-May 20): par<flt dilemmo. Check Secrets, rumors dominate. values. Apptiee epecifically to \ Verify Information. Second· hooldlold 1tana. Slrive to . • . ..: Pf(lllll!ms. Know lll;s and ree-AQUAIUUS (Jan. Ill-Feb. hand reports could create ..-aecurity.. , s pond llOOOrdqiy. Member of 18): !hnt journey is oo ll(<f> opposite &ex proves valuable da. Make "'-'n cts. Put ideaa .,.WI' ally. Gil paper. Mtmjory may not HOW OPEN H Volunteer Service Neve r. Given '-"'Btush GEMINI (May 2l.Juoe 20): be-· ,._ -Ideo e Accent en pleasure m hmne cao be .i,.eloped fato thmle. del;gl!U. Mean.. st"!> feeling Reellst til, add pr~ ao-54 grax; is . creene.r elsewhere. cudkJily. ~ . • ·:I There'll be no brush given to work assi~ iG' var~ Chairman while Mrs. Clayton Thompson contem· ious chairmen of Orange District, California Fed~ platea her work u historian. Both chairmen wi~ eration of Wom,en's Clubs. Mn. Wallace Bagley Mrs. L. H. McBride, literature chairman, are mem- (rigbt), president already is impressed with en-bers of !be Newport Beach Ebell Club. OJW.vate what you have ..-. PISCES (Feb. lt-March 20): you baw """" 'than m;crrt y~ -occnethlng ol F' •smoH IS' II un ·a· be realized. Join femily in n w .a..nnu - ~:ijllll, 21.July %1): .Dance Club • featuring FLORllJIEIM s _· deavor tackled by Mrs. William R. Ludlam Jr., art ' Strive to perceive t*iden 1 for Men and Women - . ......,.._ Be subtle ;,, putllllC ™ lint; third and filth ·HAIR BEAT Huck Finn lives I oWn points """""· -Fijdaya"' lhelllDlib are the • COMPLETE CHILDREN'S DEPT. Cu iriary· Arts tn authority wants to promote dance data lldeded by Lace featuring STRIDE RITE · • ! , your wolf are. Show that you := square Dance Club • Picnickers Gather Sharpen Buds ,C~~c~:"~f,;,. z:i: :i&:,·~;·'/:"U:~'!:: SH~ES' At Dime-a-di'p ~ ..:~ ~ ~.!:.1· . ..-;.;~ .. .,., ..;.'~un_ttnaton.c:.__e._ac_h_. --------==:...:::....::.~..=·:.....:=::....:=;,; Tom Sawyer, Be c Jc)' the group, the Mmes, Donald beyond apparent limitations. -·~ Thatcher and their cobol'b J. Andert and John H. Homemade dishes and You gain added rewards kl' HAIR STYLIST "THE SMALL HEAD LOOK" 9.-1 .. : h it tru• th•t the bit buff•11t typ• of hair 1tyl• i• 9oi119 out1 IMr1. J. Jt., Mi11io11 'Vie}ol ~: Yes the bit buffa11t 1tyl• i1 9oi119 out •1uj i1 beirtt r•placd by• "smell h.eJ look" thtt wou1cf Le 1omewhot /11 pro· portion to a perto11'1 botly. 9-t'1ff: Whet ••• 1011'1• of tfie 1tyle1 comin9 ill along with the "Midl"7 .(Mn. ll.D., H111rtin9t.11 lttchl' A._: As an ovar•tl, very 9en1r•I prediction, I porto11elly would tty th1t my new lint wlll be more heir 1Jiowin9 down from • hip of the he1d in•l•1d of the hit l:i1ehive look. Ex: Thi Sh19 look 91ttin9 lo119•r i11 v•r• l.d l•n;th• in 1t1•pi119 with the •metl h11tf loot ~: Whit do you think ebout #11 Midi loo\1 h ii 9oi119 to 90 over bi9 i nd be occopl· "'' I Min J ,J., S111t1 Anel .......... : Li•• different new heir •tvle1, if will be eccepfed by wotnen who c1n weer it. If your 1tyli•t k11ow• hi1 "tf.ing," ht 1hould be 1ble to 1dvi11 you 11 to whit you •hould w11r #11! would cornpl1111111t you from heed lo 101. h : In Eu1op1. I 1111d1nl1nd tt.et Midi '1, booh 1..d boyfri1nd1 ''' in for 1v1n· Inti, end for tf1., 111111, il't 111ini'1, shopping 111d h111band1. Pl.-. Mllll or Coll 911fttlo• To: ~~!' 71 •AIHION ISLAND I Nrwroat CINTllt '44-J1S1 will get special treatment: on Zickgrar, co-presidents; John desserts will be ottered from accepung mi:ponslbllity. Have Sunday, July 28, when the F. Myers., vice ·president ; 4 to 6:30 p.m. on Sunday, confidence. You're a wimer. Orange County Chapter, Im-William J, Kennedy Jr. and July 26, at a dime-a-dip din-VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): maculate Heart Collea• Alum-Robert R. Buchi, secretaries; SWdy Inv...,_ potential. nae As:!lociation has its annual AJexander Burnett, treasurer; ner. lAOlk beycod the immedi1te. summer picnic. A. Jean Verbeck Jr., publici· Appetites will sharpen when You oan get rid . o( peUy Huck Finn Day will take ty; Frank Curran Jr. and the Halecrest Women's Aw:· ohslacles. Take giant 31.ep place on the Mead Ranch, Arthur M. Bradley, phone iliary sponsors its annual fund-forward. Refuse to be held hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Frank commit.tee, and John D . raising event. back by oot who ~ the Curran Jr. and Mr.and Mrs. Omes, put Jft,Sident. The public is invited to sam-blue!. Jack Mahoney. Members and Proceeds will be donated to pie the !are at 3124 College LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): friends will gather for swim-the college scholarship fund. Ave., Costa Mesa . Spotlighl m iegal deal •. min(, booting, fl.lhtnc anc1.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=-~.....:..1 eotlnr poduck sa1ada lllld a barbecue. .~=f':tinl with the plan. are the -ly fmtal1ed Alllicers ol Volunteer ·Staffers Appealed Call.Uc vohmteera: for a helping hand. A variety ol jd>S -ts area vollEteen ol .n - who haw """"° time to give to Ille Easter Seat Sodely for Crtppled Olildm1 and Adulls "'Onqe Qiunty. '!be oocioty's oenler In Orange needs -for .... ~ on their way t o "recoVery; volunteers for tr~ and persom able to type, file oc stull envelopes. Those interested In l!ivlnl! • porilOn of their tlme to volunteer work may call the director of volunteer activ!Ues at the cemer, 633-7400. Weist Watchers TOPS Waial Watchers assemble every 'Ihnday at 7 p.m. in C°ll'Cle View Sc:bool, H~Beach. ' ·It doesn't grow on trees Did you ever wake up in the middle of What the cheesemake r does to thm the night and wonder how cheeres are pieces determines the kind and quality made? .. of cheese he'll eventually produce. In case you're ever plagued with that All this suggests thlit cheesemaking is problem, here's a short course in the complicated. fundamentals of cheesemaking. You better be lieve itl The simple cheeses are simple to make. The better things in life take a little Heat some sour milk, scoop out the extra effort. CAPRIS • l>R£SS[S • SKJlrni • BLOUSES • SWIMWrAR • tlNGERIE • 25% curds as they form {the whey too, Miss That's why we, at Hickory farms, put Muffett), and drain them in cheesecl oth. more than a little effort into satisfying Easy, And virtually inedible, Ugh. your craving fo r cheese. To achieve a sophisticated, palate 126 varieties of cheese in each of our pleasing cheese requires a complicated sto res. In Orange, in the Town & Coun· process. As much art as science. try Shopping Center. And in Newpon E PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER -• ~ SHOPPING CENTER _.__ • ,#:Jt ,ASHIO!t ISLAND -·· , ...... • TMf CITY -- First you get some milk. Not just any Beach, in the Westcliff Plaza Shopping old milk either. Qften special cows. Or Center. cows on special diets. Sometimes milk And at both of our stores, we urge you fror'n sheep, goats, buffalo, camels, rein· to sample as many cheeses as you want. deer, or a Himalayan yak. Before you buy. That's just the beginning. Then the • C'mon in. Our personnel'll be pleasing· milk must be separated into curds and ly plump to tell you all about our whey by adding a "starter." Creates a cheeses. The genealogy of each. The minor storm within the milk. After a secrets of cheesem1king. Even recipes. ~fiiiki1~i•i!!f; Newport Beach Westcliff Plaza (Westcllff and Irvine) 642-0972 Orange Town and Country Shopping Center, 543-8016 . • • t -. . ·'t •TO•'IBE •WFZr• FOR "IllE•BE3'! •IN• lJIDIE~ • P.EG4000 YANTJlrJpJ#1~2o·· TANTALIZING TOPS~10~ ==============~N~~"'t:oo oo 4oo'l'o 700 '"J ~'-'== ~EM SJI1F111S i,PANr»l\ESSES '-'~/JB .. ~ 6,,..-r.800 BIG LABLE TABLE 11'EMs4,oo ~'.~ $0u.\~\dn.d, L ocati'on.5 ~:::::::\, • SouTH COAST PLP\-i..I>. ..... 333!> BRISTOL ' ~/ • BA\.e.oo. 15\..l'.N D ~ 2.0'!-MARINE. A'J e... .. Ll>.G.UNA 13EJ>C.H ~ 2.'4-0 BRo<>.OWAi I .• Co5TA ME..'5A ~ 2..?0 E.. 171«. ST. • E.L 5E.GUNOO -.32.\ MAIN 5-r • . • . • . - .. ,. ' r Jui cul ; mt 1u, 'Va Mc l ·rn, me • clu .~ ~ ·.~ I ;:"" .. ;~RO .. g .. • '11 ..~ un J . . . /JI . ' l l ( I I • ' ' I ' I ' ._,-...,,....,..-'I'" ---,.. ---....-----------,.. • -,.. -,.. ,.. ,.. -... ~ - Winners Feted ' At Luncheon Mem bers of th~ South Coast Junior Wo man 's Club culminated a s u ccess ful :-membership drive with a _ luncheon in the FQW'tta\n ... 'Valley home of Mrs. Jon McKibben. Under the direction of Mrs. -Dick Trodlck, last year's membership chairman. the l club was divided into two ~~teams for a contest to interest _;~prospective members )"ith the t~·losing -te~ prepa:rlog and • lervlnglwch to the winners. ·:f_: Because o( Mrs. Trodick's ~ rect.nl move to Flori de, P.1rs. • R~ Somma served as £~ =· cllairman of the ,• 1· I " \NESTCLFF PLAZA .. l 7 th Af\D IRVINE 541-41}1 "£Wf'CRTBE'ICH.~ Welcomed into the club were the Mmes. Donald Anderson, Barry Blake, Cliff Brightman, John Davis, Jerr.y .Eisele. Arthur Holderlin, W a y n e Jolliffe, Richard Kobayashi, Sal Liberatore, Bruce Mat- tern, Norm Murphy, Milton Schneider, Robert Tomeoni and Ronald Zebartb. Mrs. Kip Payne is a recent transfer from the Seal Beach Junior Woman's Club. The South c.oast Juniors will not conduct ~ir summer Youth Employment Service this year but imtead will be aldi.1g Teen Help in its YES project. Club members will aid in the training of s tudent volunteers to take applic_ations and conduct interviews. Boxes oC supplies havb b e e n transported to the Teen Help off ice, 944S Heil Ave., Foun- 1.ain Valley, and a donation of $125 for Teen Help was made at a recent club meeting. The Juniors also aided llun- ttngton Beach Junior Woman's Club members in establishing a Youth Em_ployment Service ln their commlJ'l'lity. ' Collection ReduceCJ ' . . A new kitcben · appliance which may repr~t ·a sigrdfi- cant step toward · aoluUon at municipal waste disposal pro- blems has been introduced by a major manufacturer. Called a compactor, this ap- pliance can compress a week's accumulation or trash and garbage for. a family of four into a' small disposable bag, says the firm. By compressing waste in the home and reducing the vol.wne of trash collected by sanitation departments, the compactor can help lower the waste ool- Jection costs of American cities. Another benefit to cities: long-use of landfill sites. The units cost around $200 acd crusb metal cans, glass and plastic bottles, cartons and garbage. Clean Collars ,....To clean stubborn soil rings around shirt collars, fill an empty roll-on detergent boltle with liquid detergent. Apply dired.ly to ring. Chorol Group Every Monday at 7:30 p.m . members of the Prospective Aliso Valley Chapter of Sweet Adelines convene in ~1ission Viejo High School. Georgetown Manoi: home fashion SANTA ANA SALJZ Ethan Allen Our Best Selling Rocker ... Hearty Pine at Spectacular Savings! N11w, ju•t in tfmi, fl)l'.our Mld-Summtt Sile, and In ordlllf to lnlroduce i·ou lo m11nlf1Gtn! E1h1n 8450 /,Hen, he..,'• 1pccl1I ''"Ing• on our best Hfli"g Jockerl Tt't auflt!rblr eomlor11bl1 wllh •n t!l1tr1 thick, dMplr 11ddh1d Pinc 1e1t .• , tn Old T1•1m tin11h. I!'• richly hand slencllled la Sold color, Reg, $112.50 and has M•ple and/or lllrch In lls 1t,,.clur1l 1Nrtl for adde.I 1tten1tb. At lhil a1le priu for• Umllvd '""~ onl~. Mond•1 """ r1 i4•r JO 1.rn. to 9:00 P·"'· .S.lurd~ 'Iii $;.JO Sund1ys J:OO "·'"· 'tfr J Georg~!Q~.M~oi: l1tl /14, T\JSTIN AVE.Jrolwth nf ltdt !11. • IANTA ANA• 7W1b..wM TO SANTA ANA: S-....... fwy ... N~ fwJ ... 11tfl Str"' ott..,-on1, rs ....... , MeQ Wt .. "' "'-17Ht SffMf to T111tl• AM .. -Mlllll• rt11tt hnl ...S ... M.ct Mrtlt" f., .. , ..... . ---------------· ------.. --------------------------.,..-;-....,.-...,.. I • I ' ' • Thursday, July 23, 1970 • DAILY PILOT 23 • • MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9:30·9:30 -SATURDAY 9:30·5:30 Bullock's carousel leaves today for an adv,nture full of bargains. The August Sale is Bullock's Biggest. A California tradition. ' FASHION . GAUERY DRESSES, First floor Venelion Room Setter Dresses reducH 1h inti more MISS 'IUUOCK, First Floor Designer Dresses_ .•... , ... reducttl 1Aa anti .more . Circle Roo111 Casual DreHes First Floor "A Fashion Wrap-Up", Rayon-Pc lye$ter Wr09 Dress with side shoe bunons from far;;cu1 Cclifomia mok- er. Moss Green, Chine'e Red, Jet Sieck. Bright Na vy, Light8one.Sizes8-1 8 ··-··-···-···-···· 19.99 LADY BUUOCK SHOP FU-st Floor Budget-priced Custom Size Dresses from our fresh stock in Amel Jersey, Cotton, Polyesler Novelty Fob- rics. Sizes 121/J. 22112 . . .. .. .. ... ... R•••cttl ~ GAUERY FURS first Floor Great Group of Furs at a very special value. Full- length Mink Coats ................ ' " 1090. Female Mink Strollers . -•••. --........ 995. Mink Jackets .........•• -... -. .. . . . . . . . 595. TOWN & TRAVEL KHITS, First Floor Famous Name Knit Dre,ses $60.-$80. You'll spot the well-known designer by the smart styling and tine hand-crochet en these dresses! Acrylic a nd nylor ir, siz•s 6-16 .• -....... ..... 32.9Ul.90 Town & Travel Dresses First Floor A group cf McMullen . " .19.99 canon Print Dresses , ••••• . ... Town & Travel Suits & Coats First floor Made Exclusively for The Bulloc k Customer. Khan All- Weal Coats. Tweeds and Solids in the New Length. 63.90 T~wn & Travel Active Sportswear First Floor $"40. lo $60. Wide selection of Pantsuits, Fashion Col- ors and Style1. .. -· .. -....... 27.99 ACCESSORIES FASHION JEWELRY First Floor Pierced .Earring Sp•ciol. 1 "4K & Gold-fill ed. Large Assortment . _ .• _ •• , ••• , •• , •.••.•••... 3/10,00 FINE JEWELRY First Floor $1700. Selection of One Caret Diamond Solitaires cf Outstanding Cutting and Fine Color, • • • • • . 1360. HOSIERY First Floor $3. Wo1hoble Orlen Scu ff. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.49 • HOSIERY First Floor Softies that look lik• leather. Light w•ight and easy ta take car•. --. -... -..... -.... -...... -.. 2.99 HANDBAGS, First Floor Shoulders, Pouc hes, and Tote• casool handbags in a great selection of color• . -, • , , , •• , , , • , •.• 12.tt MILLINERY/WIGS, First Floor AGiftForYou-1$25.itretch~ig ,1 $2.SOccnwJg spray with the purchase of Jerome Atexondert' Moll· bu stretch wig .. , .•• _ .••. , ••••.•.. _ ••. , . :IO. WOMEN'S SHOES First floor $25. S1accotos Folhlon Shoo1. .......... '. lf,99 - FASHION ACCESSORIES first Floor $11 fom0111 Maker SIMvef11s Shtlls Screen-dyed prints, mochirte wothoblt ....... -...... ' . 7.9' ' BLOUSES PLUS, First floor Famous Name knlon Knil• Taps Short Sleeve ··" Sleeveless. , -.••.••••••••••• • • • · • • • • • • • · 3.99 Long Sleeve ........................... s.•• Ca.ardino1e Ponti ... , ..... _, .....•..... I .ff I ::=I ==C=O=LL=EG=IE=N=NE==~I I MEN'S STORE COLLEGIENNE SHOES, Second floor Famous Brand Dress and Cotucl Sl\oe1-Regu1or Price Range From $11.00 ta $27.00 , . , , . red•cH 50% COUEGIENNE' DRESSES Second Floor $26. to $46. Special PurChase Suinmer Fashions by Ke lly Arden. -. -............ , 14.991025.99 COLLEGIENNE SPORTSWEAR Second floor Imparted Card igan Sweaters· Wo shcbl• lOO o/o Acrylic -Assorted Colors. • _ 10.99 an414.99 COUEGIENNE LINGERIE, S""'1d Floor Flannel Sunny P' Js Reg, $11.00 P-S-M-L Now 5.99 INTIMATE APPAREL I DAYTIME LINGERIE First Floor S 10. Famous Nome Slips. .. " 5. FOUNDATIONS First Floor Hollywood-Vcsscren• Girdles and Pcnty-Girdle:L. Assorted Styles, Colors, Sizes. . .... lt4ucetl Y2 NIGHTTIME LINGERIE, First Aoor $7. e nd S8. Famous Bre nd Name Pciomcs, Sizes 32- 40 3.99 HOME STORE DINING ACCESSORIES, Third Floor Closeout on fin• Tablecloths from Colifcmic Hc nd- Prints, Pla ins & Prints, All Sizes . . . . . n•uced 1h DRAPERIES & CURTAINS, Third floor Relurned Cu1tom-. Mcde Draperies . . . . , · Reduced 1/2 & Moro • TELEVISIONS & STEREOS, Third Floor Tuner Amplifier, 30 Watt Ampllfi er & 2 Spe ci ke r1 . 59.95 DECORATIVE ACCESSORIES, lhkd Flo" Framed Reproduction, California Arti$t$ on Lend & Seo·-·····-·-·····-·······•········· 11.99 I BEDROOM ACCESSORIES Third Floor Non Allergenic Polvester Bed Piltcw1 SS. Sfcndard 2(,,26 ....................... " • • • .. 2/6. 99 S7. Queen 20x30 ••• , •• , •••.•• , • • • • • 2/9.99 $8.King20x36 ····--·-·······-···:·•· 2/11.99 FURNITURE Third Floor $219. LA-Z-BOY Recliner. Choice of 3 Sfyle1, limited Selection cf Fabrics & Nougahyd•. , , • . • • • . . 149. BATH SHOP Third Floor Reg. 6.00 Bullock's Very Own Terry Jacquard Color Bright Cotten Beach Towell , •••••• , ..... , , , 3.99 ' HOUSEWARES, Third Floor America's Poce..S.nlng Stalnleu Flatware by Oneida 57.95 Two DJ1tlnctiv1 Patterns; Texturo, Contempo- rary Bold Swirl• with Bright Finish; Wlntenong, With Satin Finish SO Pc. Servic• fer I, Pfus 6 Pc. Hott••• Set, ................................. 21.11 LAMPS, Third Floor $"40. Crystal Tobie Lampl .•...•• , ..• , •• , • 19.99 FLOOR COVERINGS, Third Floor 16.9.5 First Family, Elegant Wool, Semi Shog1 Sole Price doe• not Include ln1tollation a nd podding 11.95 I MEN'S CLOTHING. fintfloor Out11anding Savings on Regular Smck, Name Brand, Suils & Sportcccts • -, •• , , , rtdDcH 1/3 •Rtl "'!" STUDENT SHOP; First F'loor $1 B.-$22. European-Styled Bccly Shirtt ...... '·" Men's Shots First Floor Sole Porte-Ped Shoes, Lorge Selection of Styles, Built in Arch, Cushion Sole end Hee~ $2"4-$24.5019,99, 2/38.99 $28.-$29. & SJO. ... "· .. 23.9', 2/<\6.90 $31.00-$32.00 . ...... . . . . . ... 25.99, 2/50.90 WYNBRIER SHOP First Floor $10. & $11. Famous Maker Long-Sleev• Dress Skim.. All Fashion C~llor1 with Double Sutten Cuffs. Penna. nent-Pre11 In Alsortad Sclids ond 5tripei 5.99 01.3/15,00 MEN'S FURNISHINGS First Floor $20. -$65. Men's Robes & Kimonos for After Seth, Poolside, & lcungeweor Assorted Fabrics & Colors, Some Terry lined . reduced 1/3to1/2 MEN'S SPORTSWEAR, First Fl°"' Jock.e t Spe<:lcls S2B Bush Coot ot Polyester a nd cot- ton In three fa1hion color' 19.99 '25 Yukon Washable Lined Jacket cf Polyeslef and Cotton in thrett fashion colors 19.99 I CHILDREN'S & JUNIORS I 110Y'S SHOP, Second Floor 5.SO to 6.50 Levi Drew Jecn1, Permo-Pre&s, All Sizes, S Colors 2. 99 PRE· TEEN . ~.Cond Floor Blouses -Asserted Styles. Cclor1-. 1b:es 6-1.(. 2.79 or 2/5.00 GIRL'S SHOP Second floor Schoel Dresses. Perma~nt Pre.ss. Good A1sortment of Plaids. Sizes 7-1.t ... ......... 5.H YOUNG JUNIORS Second Fl00< Cools · Aisorled Colors. Styles -· Sizes 3-13. . IJ.99 BABY & TODDLER SHOP Second Floor S 14. Comforter. . .. -................... 1.19 Polyester Filled Satin Pillow. . ............ 1.19 MISCELLANEOUS FABRICS & YARNS Wide Assortment of Polyester · Double Knit ... Prints- Stripes & Solid Colors 60" Wide •.••••• , , , • 4.19 Stationery & Social Engraving First Flo« S6. Cool Look Recipe Flip Album, Acetate Pockets, 3 Pages accommodates 60 Recipes., •• , , , , , , • 2.9 ..... COSMETICS, Fim Fl"" TOVAR WIG SAtE $26. Oliver and Juliette • , , 19.ff S30. Streight Swinger ••• , •• , , •• -•••••••• 1t.9t $29.95 Human Hair Wlglef • , , • , •• ,, , ••••• '·" ' . . I ' ': :~ '• ~ l I ( , ' • • ' • ' • ' ' ' ' ' • i I • I ' i I • ' ! ' ' ' ~ l· ' ·' • •' ' ; ( l • i ! ( ~ . ; ' .l r ,. s } • , . • .. r '· ~ , • ' .J. ' ' ' t { •• I • ~s_14 DAILY PILOT f>ursday, July 23, 1970 1, t;• . ' '"' ,. ·' ~ 'C _, -Fabric Shoes Set New Trend l . New fabric ~ reflect the Fttbrlc shoes range from elepnce and ftmlnlntty or U;le young, 1portive contemporary 1-leortb ailhouetle, said boots 1 n O'lnkle-textured Ted PatoslQI, presldent ol the vinyls lo the QpUlen<:e ol aUonal Shoe Fabric Assocla-brocade and velvet opera Pll!Jlps. COSTA MESA GOLF $ptcl•ll1h11 ,, u.N9um .. COUNTRY CLUB AND Wt:DDIN4 llClnlONI Proudly Pre1ent1 G.Orge Tipton --·--..... -----• -fhnMrt, ec tN '-Ce#lil C.C.J I -·---v WED. & SUN. AFTERNOONS '/ --THURS., FRI., SAT. NITES H_,,, "O..W. ....,. .. How, MHCkry ..,_ Friday, 4 ,_ 6 ALL FACILITIES OPEN TO PUBLIC -FOOD . 1701 Goll CourM Dr., Costa Mo,. 54().7200 '!i+ii ... ...,!:!!111 .............. 11:!1:~1 , : ly Plpular d8manl , . . . ·We 31ain . offer this u111sual ·~e ----·~--·-· --............----~ .... . ---· ~ --.. In Fashions and Climate Aussies a Season Behind By JODEAN HASTlNGS Of 1M Deltr PUof Sl1ll The world'• her oyster and phµ:king pearls on three con. tlnents IJ Sydney-born 2._year· old Maryarm Scott. Honey-balred, tall a n d willowy Maryann stopped oil In Huntlnglon Beach lo talk about men. women a n d fashions around the world. A scrawny, leggy 13-year· old, abe WU proddnd lo enroll in a dwm school to deve1op her own sell confidence and !nm the charm school slie was sfnlled out for model's lraining. 1be friendly, can d l d Australian was en route to New York, Washington, D.C., London and Geneva where she planned to visit hieods, brush up oo bu cooklni and her Whip It Up French. clothes of &OOli quaUty for said. "Australian girls are e:r. AlthoJ.l&h fbe has done both very litU~ .-ioney over there," pected lo actively partici~i: types of modellng, Maryann she auerted. in sports rather than be ~· prefers mannequin work to 1be attractive model doesn't tators. We're a happy peop11:, pbotography -' ' m a i n 1 y think maxlstirt lengths ever and we like bright colors - beeause I love clothes," she will be popular in her own even if they're oot in fashion ." admitted. country. "We may be a season behind Jn Australia the emphasis "Minisldrt.s suit our cUmate in fashions -but our climate is on the natural look with .;a~n~d.iiqur~~w~a~y,;;iio~f ~ll~f~e,~";;;;;i;she;;;;,;;;;;nm;;;;;siitha;;;;;t;;;;;w;;;ay;;,;;";;sh~e ~sal~~d=·:'i no exaggerated makeup re·rii q~;::.::1~":1:~.1." •he CUSTOM-MADE explained with her melodious, DRAPERIES clipped accent. "We is more · relaxlng ; there's not the pressure there as here in the USt: OUI CONYINllNT SHOP AT HOMI SllWICI States." American women keep to their own style in fashion, observed Maryann, who has modeled tn Sydney, London and Vienna. She thinks Ita1ian designers do the most to make women look feminine and feels London fashions are terribly "way out." "London is best for bargains, since you can buy -· .. 1474141 A Werd1 d•cor•tor will ctl1 et your ho111• with • 1trlkint 1ol•ction of t!i9h q~elJty low coit f•btic1 for 'l'OU to choote from . No obti9'1tio11! Comploto decoretor ,., ... ic1 -11phol,tory -1lipcov•rt. " ..... "-,,., .. • 17ft ........ F111e touill li.•111ond end f•p•r.d b•ti.iotte1 • '. , with mati;hi119 w.d,1119 r!11g- FASHION-MINDED Au1treli1n M1ry1ftn ~t SUMMER SPECIAL BLEACH, TONER, SHAMPOO & SET ... ; "' "' ;i1 ' ,, ., /' ·' -. .!• . ,°!.!"' •• -r• • ,L.,' ...... ' ,, ,. ~· ' . ·Ii ,, ,.,,., ,.... ... ~l ' .$12tS The Tee ' .., ttt1"ut,.. •lua 1aphhirt1 or rublts- $450 Buda<! Terms J.rranred Kirk Chai,... -M••tor Ch1r .. -11nkAmtrlc1r4 MUNTlNOTON MAlllOll SHO,.PIHI CIMTlll Cl~Tlll 9-11 a lflNtr Ult Mti'Mr IMI. NllllflloflM 1..ui Celt• M ... -...... o,.. ...... n.... "'· 10 •tn t ....... ' '. Star Members Cut Dessert A dessert card party will begin at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Masonic Temple. Those interested in playing cards with the Star Club may call the office at 49M!BI. Hosts ror the evening Will be Mrs. Harry Thompoon and Mrs. J<>Sf!Ph Penna Sr. Patio Roofi PERMANENT CUSTOM WOOD CONSTRUCTION Can be scrHned now or later. Co111,.,. o•r prlco wlffl ,....... el or pl•ri-• obtlt.,1011. H11MCl'"J A'folloble ART SHAPIRO "Quality Begins With the Builder" IN IUSINIU SINCI 1941 17141 541-3233 SUMMER SALE NOW! BEST BUYS DRESSES P•lpttert. llMlll oH 11C11Y c_.. ..... Na. SI-. 7•15, 1°20, 121/t 0 211/1. 3o0/o • W/o OFF MENS SWEATERS c.rt1i9•n• •rid pultov•t• 12.00 TO 16.00 NOW l .tt•t.tt 11.00 TO J0.00 NOW 10.99·11 .tt MENS SLACKS NO·llON TAPllS .......... l 99.5, 99 NOW •••• • . PLAY SHOES Uniroyel • Ked1 a K•d•tf•1 11•. 4.tl NOW2.tt 11•. 1.tt.6.50 NOW l .tt Si1e1 up to 10 PANT SUITS s.,.,.,. p•11h a i•ckeh •11d coorclin•li119 top1. 300/o • 45°/o SHIFTS Colotf11! pri11h • Por111e11e11I pron • •••¥ c•r• febri ct. HG.7.00 499 NOW •••• o . AND MANY MOU TOO NUMllOUS TO MENTION OPEN 9:30-6:00 MON.-SAT~FRI. 'TIL 9 P.M. ..... --et West ff4 of M .... 11• DllPA"TM•HT aTOft I 116 NEWl'ORT ILVD., COSTA MESA Tattler Volunteers Earn Pins Auxiliary memben of South Coast Community Hospital will be honored !or service by hospital directors on Thurs. day, July 30, at 10 a.m. at Rancho San Juan. The volunteer recognition coffee is scheduled once a year as the board presents an American Hospilal Assocla· tion tionor pln to volunteers who have contributed 100 or more hours ol service during tlle year. Of 143 awards this year, 4S,I84 hours have been Whip up new fashion vesl bl fluffy puff stitch. Easy! Go to new fashion lengths this year! Jilly· crochet vest, cardigan coat of w:orsted with No. I p1utic hook. Tupi skirts, dresses, pants. Pattern 7224: NEW sizes 10·42 incl. FIFTY CENTS for eodi pal· tern -add 25 cents for each pattern for Air Mail and Special Handllng; otherwise thlrd..class delivery wlll take , three weeks or more. Send to Alice Brooks The Daily Pilot, 105 Needlecraft Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea Station, New York. N.Y. 10011. Print Name, Addret1, Zip, Pattern Number. BIG 1970 Needlecraft Catalog -40 pages, 2 O O designs, 3 free pat~! Knit, crochet fashions. Quilt, em- broider, weave. Toys gifts! Send 50 cents. NEW! Complete A f Iba n Book -marvelous afghans, fa!iiions. pillows, baby gifts, more! $1. "50 Instant Gifts" Book. 50 cents. "II Jiffy Rug1" to knit , crochet, weave, sew, hook. 50 cents. Book of 11 Prize Afghans. 50 cents. Bargain! QuJlt Book I has 16 beautiful patlerns. 50 cents. Museum Quilt Book 2 - patterns for 12 superb quilts. SO cents. Book 3 "QuJlts for Tod1y's UviDJ." 15 patterns 50 cents. donated. ~==~=====;I Special invtlationa have been extended to civic leaders, hospital dlr<etors and staff and the press. Gloomy Gus 11 Your Kinda Guy CANDY IS DANQY BUT DIAMONDS ARE DYNAMITE For a doubly doliciouo gilt, hide a pendant In har Valentine candy. Diamond pendants !tom left: $1.500. $32.50. $495. $75. $950. 665. Ch1r91 Acco11nh l11oi!M A111•rlcefl EJprou l•11kA1111rfc•r4 •ltd M•'kt Ch•"I•· t... SLAVIC:K'S J1wolo~ Si11c• 1917 18 F11hlon lsla~d Newpofl Buch -6~4-13 10 0,.. Men41y 1"4 '"''' untll t in I a GRAND OPENING SALE 4 DAYS ONLY THUR. lHRU SUN . JULY 16·17·18-19 'HIATHH' pr ... c1ri.d c;HIVOLON qUALITY KANIKAl.OM sTYLID IY • Henri rt.IMIUM TOO IUSY FOR THE IEAUTY SALON7 READY-SET TO GO STRETCH WIGS Have a w1J Wardrobe ... you're off in an in.!tant wJthout a cal"I about ba!r. Washable, permanently set, packable 77 • , • just slluo out, brusll aOd weer. SALE Natural colOn in soft modacryli c. AfMt Sale $19.99 \ Soo -._i ... ,.....,._of ecceuorf., .•. wit.,...,., pl"' Giid.......,. STORI HOURS : Moo. tin Sot. t :JO te t :JO; Sia. 10:~ to 6:00 .1 i'lait!M KNOWN FOR VALUES BRANT PLAZA e Br .... unt 11 Adams e Huit. Beach ~--~-...---·-.,. --~ ----~--------~---~--------------------- Laver Best in \Vorld But He's Getting Old -Newc ombe NEW BRAUNFELS, Tex. (AP) -Wimbledon singles champion John Newcombe says there's "no questian" that Corona del Mar's Rod Laver is the world's best tennis player. But be a.lso says Laver ii getting old. "He's getting on in years now ind there are about four of ·us that a~ on a level right below him," Newcombe said in an· interview. " He listed those four as Arthur Ashe, Tony Roche, Tom Okker and himself. "The thing that makes Laver so good is bis maturity," the Australian • atar said. "He has reached the absolute peak or bis career, but he's not get· Ung any better." Laver is 33. Newcombe Js 28: "l believe you reach your peak tn thls game at about the age of !3." Newcombe went on. "J know that I am atilt learning. Small things, but in the loo1 run it's the small things that win matches." He commented after returning here from the Wimbledon matches, where 1 be teamed with Roche to win the doubles title. Newcombe is vice president of a tennis ranch here and Roche, also from Australia, has now joined the staff too, it was announced Wednesday. t "The center ol tennis is shifting from Europe and Australia to the United I States," Newcombe said. "By the late 1970s this country will dominate tht world of tel!,ni.1." Increasing interest ol the American business community in the game ls among the reasons for the: switch, he said. "'Ibe money Is in this country,'' be said, ·~and businesses are getting hold of the sport and investing in it." He said there's still another important reason why America will pro- duce some "fantastic playeTs" in a few years : "TeruUs is being brought to the poorer people in this .country through expanded public programs, and everybody know1 poor people run a lot faster than rich people.'' Asked about the upcoming United States Qiampionship tournament at Forest Hills, N.Y., he said it is "worth .,-e .Onanclatty than Wimbledon, but it doesn•t match it in prestige. "Wimbledon is run like a preci«on clock. You are driven to the: court evttry morning in· a chauffeured limousine. At Forest Hill!, some of the players have to ride a subway to get to their matches." , Meanest Man Gomez Clinches Award After Yanking Pitcher Preston Gomez has probably clinched meanest man of the year laurels for 1'70 by his dastardly act in San Diego 'l\lesday night. Wilen he pulled pitcher Clay Kirl>y In the bottom of the eighth inning for a pinch-bitter after Kirby bad no-hit the Mets for eight stanzas, Gomez put himself in the same category as the IUY who steals toys from the Orphanage ----~ ~ WHITE . WASH ·--·-- ltl.INM WMITa or the one who robs the poor peopl,'s collection box at church. Gomez says he was more interested in winning the game -which his Padres trailed 1-0 when Kirby was pulled and which they eventually lost, 3--0. That logic might be digestible if San Diego were a serioos pennant contender and the game had great significance. But the Padres aren't hardly in the running to flllish as high as fifth place and that game with New York -win or lose -hardly figured to h a v e any affect on the penriant picture, the price of gold or the stock market. However, it did indeed have a 1reat Dodgers Get Hailer's Help LOS ANGELES (AP) -lt was just the beginning of spring training and the Los Angeles Dodgers were thinking d making a third baseman a catcher and several other kids took turns behind the plate. The veteran, Tom Haller, 33 and a Dodger for three seasons, watched the experiments with interest and then an- nounced : "lt'1 great to see the Dodgers give everyone a chance like this. Jt'1 the sign of a class organization. But I'm 1till the catcher here." · Haller made that ruiner than ever Wednesday night wtien, as a pinch hitter in the seventh, be smashed a grand slam home run to highlight an incredible eight-run Los Angeles rally to overtake Montrea l, 12-10. </Maybe now we can get rolling," Haller said alter his grand slam, the second of his career and first while a Dodger. •·we have been wandering around and m1ybe this will give us the spark we need." The come-Crom-behind win gave the Dodgers an even split in the eight-game homestand as they he1d out for an 11-game road trip to New York, Philadelphia and Montreal. Los Angeles travels 11lur&day. then opens a thtee- aame weektnd stl with the Mets. Bill Singer will make hls first start since bis r.bilter when he opposes New York's Ja'ry Koosman Friday night. MOHTRIAl LOS ,t,Jilllll!.S ... , llnl ...... ," ... Siltl'letllM, 1' 4 t 1 0 Wiit., n I ' ) I f'llHU111, ct I ' t 1 Slr-1'•. :ti J t J t Cotolr, ct I I O W,OOvlt. (I S 0 I I St•ub. rt I I t t W.f'itrlt.,., Ill J I 0 I hllly, If l J t l l 1l.iiv,t, :. J I I J ll'•!rw. 11 1 o • t Gflrwy. » ' 1 1 1 l•ftmlfl, t S I I t Mott, ft 0 I a 0 LtboY. ll> 4 l t i ltu11flt, If l 1 I 0 ,t lrly, 111 ,t 1 1 t O'f_,..,_, rf I I t I W .... ,U S ttOTot~,C l l t l M.(Glfl!I, 11 t t t I t'ttl..,., ( 1 I I I 1""9,,...,,, 11 t 0 I I O!.,.ffl, P J t t I llt~. f t I I I ,_, • 0 I 0 0 ''"°""'-'l"f• • O t t t JW'!Ut, 1111 2 I T I .... _.. p •••• Ttltl• • 10 II t lol•R Jr ll I i U MonlrNI to2 on IOCI -)0 AttntllA -u .m . deal of significance to Clay Kirby. And in this partiCular case, Kirby deserved first consideration -not the team. Besides, something nifty like a no-hitter might do something to attract Border City aficionado5 to the ball park. Nothing else has channed them thus far. But maybe they'll turn out just to boo Gomez, which isn't 8\1 all bad idea. bllervlew1 for people .. terqttd i• enrelllng ln u.e third annaal college of clen1 wUl be stagecl Menday at t1M: F•nlln. Bill Ballantine, director or clowning for Rln&linl Bro1., and Bannon and Bailey wUl conduct illttrvkwa. Pel'IODS t.ttftlted lhoa1d write ltm fmm e dialely, &1vln1 tomple&e biographical tnfonnatltn and. a Uleplme nambtr where tltey can bt reached. Corrapendenct tltou.ld be addres1ed to: Bill BllJutloe, Rlngliq lln>s. Ind Barnnm Ir Balley Cimlt, '.J1te Forum, PO Box ·11, Incfewood, IUOC. Tbe taUloa.free Colle1e ol Clowns will begl• It. amal lftliOll I• I 1 t e fad at ·tbe Clmu' Uter quarters In Venice, Fii:. Saecea1ful lfado&tH of tbe college will be offered eoatradl with nest year'• edtdon Gf Ringihll BfOI. aDd Barnum " Balley. * * * Dennis Hamilton, former Huntington Beach High basketball standout, just left the Orange Coast area to return to Arizona for a bit of water skiing. Hamilton is set for another season with the AUanta Hawks of the National Basketball Assocatjon. He'll be a team- mate of John Vallely, Hawks rookie from Corona del Mar IDgh, Orange Coast College and UCLA. · Dennis was in Huntington for the wed- ding of younger brother Gary, also a former Oiler ca1er. Joe Louis Da y DETROIT -Joe Louis, former world heavyweight boxing champion now 1 pa- tient in a Denver hospital, will try to return to Detroit Aug. 12 when his hometown celebrates "Joe Louis Day." Mrs. Louis said her husband will return to Detroit if his doctor approvet. Louis, 56, has been undergoing psychiatric treatment at Ute Veterans Administration Hospital in Denver since May. He stays at the hospital during the week and spends weekenda with his wife at their Denver home. ' JOE PEPITONE T~ursdlJ, July 23, ]q70 ' DAILY PU.OT ZS Conflicting Gont1·acts Cause Break Gurney Drops McLaren Team EDMONTON, Alla. (AP) -Dan Gurney, pointa leader In the Canad1P.. Amerkaa Challenge Cup road racing series this year, has been forced to leave the McLaren team because of conflicUng contracts, it was announctd Wednesday. Gurney1 of Costa ~esa, joined the McLaren team after Bruct McLaren was killed testing a new car at Goodwood in Englud JW'Je 8. The American won the flrst two of Lefty Calls Fen way Worst Park in Loop By HOWARD L. HANDY ot 1'111 0.llt f'H•I ttaff BOSTON -They took th~ M and M's away from the Angela for the Boston Tea Party and when the latch on the creaking bullpen gate quit swinging Wednesda~· night the Halos had dropped both ends or a day-night doubleheader, Hand 8-3. "We can't outslug them and this is the worst ball park in the league for young pitchers ta be indoctrinated into action," manager Lefty Phillips sym- pathized. With Audy May and Tom Murphy (the M. and M boys) mis.sing from the scene for the second week, pltchln1 depth is beginning to tell. Both will return this weekend t.o give the tearn a boost at Anaheim StadiUm. The biggest thorn in the side of the youilg Angel mound corps w a s Ca r I Yastnerll8ki. The former triple crown winner Is making a drive to overtake Uie American League .. s leading bitters and in tlle three games he has blasted nine base hits, including two home runs and a pair of doubles. He also bas five Rm. "You have to be aggressive at the plate and. . use a . great deal or ('()n- centration. Every batter has 1 streak once or twice a season," Yaz told reporters after the game. "I'm more confident with my hitting right now than I have been at any time his season. Wehn you're in the groove they fall in. I'm awinging: rood Tight now and I'm also gettin1 IOmt luck along with it." :rom Satriano, former catcher.first ba3eJD.an of the Angels and now a team - mate of Ya1, is one of his biggest boosters. "Most super1tars relax and t.ake things in stride. Not-this guy. He works hard at it. He's always doing something to build muscles or sharpen his bitting eye. "It seems he has to prove to ~imself that he can do it every day instead of going along on what has been and what will happen if he plays like any other player. "I really can't explain It. You have to see him every day to belJeve the thi ngs he does to improve himself." John Kennedy, the fonner Dodger in- fielder, played in both ends of Wed- nesday's doubleheader ·with the Sox, going nine innings each time. He had two hits In each game, including a home run. · "I'm just taking a short, gOOcl swing at the ball and hitting it as well as I ever had. 1 was a little Ured after the first game, but I stayed in the clubhouse to rest and I don't {eel tired now," he said. KeMedy started the selson I n fl.lilwaukee livery, wa1 sent to1 Portland in the Pacific Coast League 1 and was picked up by the Red Sox five days after the tra~ing deadline in June. SI CONO eAMa CAl lf'O•NtA I OITON tllr ll"'I 111'11"1 AkllT'llr, 2t. 4 o 1 O Meir•~. 111 • 2 J 2 Repor, cl J l I I Tllom11, 11 S O J 2 FrtUOtl, ., J 0 t I Y•1lrr1m1kl, II 4 0 J 2 .t..JOll,,lotl, ti 4 0 2 o ft.Smllll, et I o o o Spene«, 111 4 0 0 0 l"ffr0t;1Uf, 11 S I 0 0 McMullen, 3tl 4 l I I Flore, 111 ' l o t You, If 4 o O o kennldy, 111 5 2 t l E11n, c J I 2 2 S1lrl1r.o, e 2 1 2 l QuHn, p 2 0 0 0 MOits, pr o 'I O o OOylf, p 0 O O O Slotb•rl, p J I O I ke111v, p o o I o Koon,e, • o I o o Jollnstont, ph i• I 0 t E.Fl1h.,, P 0 0 0 0 Tt111~ J217J Tt11l1 34 I 13 I C1llforni. 021 oot 000 -J tfn!On Ola 100 30lc -I IP M It I R 11 10 Q.....,., (l.1·1) J.1/J f 5 S 5 I Dcylf 11) 0 0 • ' 1 0 k•l•Y II) 0 0 • t 0 e .Fl1"-r 2 ' ' J 1 , $1t1Nr! {W,10-S) 6-211 1 1 ) ' J Koonce J-1 /J t o • • 2 Tlmt -2:a, "'"""''"~• -n .1u, the 1970 tl·race terles which has prlle money totaling nearly II mllltoo. Teamm1te Denis Huhne ol New Zealand wo• the third ract two weeks ago at Watkins Glen, N.V., the 16th con5eeuUve victory for the McLaren team. A spokesman for Edmonlo• Interna- tional Speedway, where the four th race is to be run Sunday, said Gurney had a contract with Castrol Oil Ltd. while the McLaren team had one with Gulf Oil Ltd. The apokesmu said the conruct of Interest forced Gurney to leave McLaren. No successor to Gurney haf been n•m· ed but it i! speculated that Peter GathlA, 30, of England will get the ride. Gathin won the 1969 Formula 5000 title, Europe's version ol North America's Formula A series, and is the points leader in the 1970 series. With Gurney out of the way for the Edmonton race, the McLaren team's domination ol the Can-Am series - 22 of the last Z5 Tacts -might be ended. Hulme is still having problems with Cha1np . .Ilnloads on Chiyoda huds that were badly burned during practice for the tndianapoUs 500. World champion Jackie-Stewart or ScoUa.nd, wbo drove Texan Jim Hall'!! new Chaparral at its first appearance two weeks ago, will not be here ,for the race. The car, with two vacuum fan.{ lo help keep it on the road at eotr1lrs. sucked gravel into the fans at Watliin:; Glen and forced its retirement after Stewart had it h1 third place. Practict for Sunday's race -the Klon- dlke 200 -begins Friday. ' Ruben Olivares of Mexico (le-ft) lets loose with a left to the head oC Japan's Sbuji Chiyoda Wednes- day night in a bamtanweighl non-title bout in Chi- cago. Olivares won the decision -his 57th in 58 bouts. Sports Clipped Short Mantle Next A's Manager? OAKLAND -Charles 0. Finley, owner of the Oakland Athletics, says he ha s designs on Mickey Mantle as a coach or manager. "Who in hell \vouldn'l be interested in having Mickey in this organization," Finley declared Wednesday in Chlcago. "I certainly would be." M:anUe, wbo played for the Yankees 18 years before retiring last season, said in Miami Beach that he could become ''as good a manager as anybody." but added that a year's coaching would help him "see what it 's all really about." Mantle's predecessor at center field for the Yankee s, Joe DiMaggio, was hired two seasons ago as an A's batting coach, but has since returned to private business. • NEW YORK -The National Football League Players Association agreed Wednesday night to move mediation meetings with the 26 club owners to Baltimore today and "work around the clock" in order to come to a contract agreement so next week's College All· Star game can be saved. However, the players refused l-0 allow the veteran Kansas City Chiefs players to report for practice so they can get ready for the charity game in Chicago July 31. "We are willing to work around the clock so they can begiJI practicing," a spokesman for the Playt!rs Association said. "If the negotiations are not settled by Friday we will have to consider allowing the Chiefs to practice without a contract." The owners, who have locked out the striking veteraits, agreed to open the Kansas City training camp to the veterans so they could practice for the w~k they require to get ready (or the All-Star game. • The San Diego Chargers' rookies left their I.raining camp at UC Irvine Wednes- year players. Even though the Charger yearlings came out on the short end of a 17-12 score, ht!ad coach Charlie Waller voiced optimism about the s q u a d ' s im· provemenl. Waller said, "Last Saturday when we pla yed the Cowboy rookies we had only IW\'.l days of practice behind us and they shut us out. However Wednesday we played improved ball bUt beat ourselves with fumbles and in- terceptions." Rookie free agent Jim Whlte, a 5-1 , 210-lb. rookie running back Ir om Arkansas AM&N became the third casualty of the 1970 San Diego guillotine when he was placed on waivers: White's release lowt!rs the remaining number on the Chargers' rookie roster to 45. • DEL MAR -Del Mar kicks off its 31st season of thoroughbred racing Fri~ day with a card that features the Palomar Handicap for fillies and mares. The Palomar, with $12,500-added purse money, drew 20 entries and will be raced in two divisions al 71,1: furlongs. • CHICAGO -Veteran Ernie Banks. 39-year-0ld first baseman, was placed on the disabled lisl for 21 days by Uie Chicago Cubs Wednesday because ot an ailing left knee. Banks, in his 18th Cub teason,fhas appeared in 54 games, batting .233 r<ith JO home rum and 34 RBI. He hurl his knee in mid-May and since then has been troubled by an arthritic con. dition. • CINCINNATI -While Cliff Richey's thoughts drifted, upset-minded Patricio Cornejo of Chile nearly sllpped by'hlm in the Western Tennis ChamPionships Wedne9day . " Richey, defending champion o£ the $25.000 tourney and the No, 2 .seed thi11 year. blanked the unseeded Chilean 8-0 in the first set, dropped tbe second 3-6 but rallied to take the third 6-3. The tourney's to}>seeded man, Ken RoSt!wall of Australia, alJO rolled to an easy first set victory -6-2 over Jim McManus of Berkeley, Calif. -but had to come back from a 5-6 deficit in the second for an 8-6 score to win the match. • LONG BEACH -Billie Jean ~ing, perhaps the world's greatest woman ten- nis play er, will be walking sUff.Jegged -and not playing at all - for nearly six months, her doctors say. 1 Mrs. King, 26, underwent surgery on her right knee Wednesday. Doctors said the surgery seemed-sue· ces11tul and that Mrs. Klng was resting comfortably, 'Ibey said she won't be able to bend her knee at all foUowing release from the hospital, and will re· qulre at least a half year to recuperate. Pepitone Steals Home--Skips · Clu~ NEW YORK (AP) -Manqer Harry Walker. of the Hou1toa Astros waa still holding the bag after Joe Pepitone stole home. \\lalker trit!d to keep things under hi1 hat Wednesday wWle talking about hi1 wayward first baseman-outfielder, who had niturned home to New York ofter skipping Ibo club. "Everybody know• hlnt, so there's no nefd saying a lot. of thinp,~ 11y1 Walker. Pepitone was suspended 1Ddefb1ltely without pay after talllng to report for Wedlltlday night'• game. S p e c Richardaon, the Altro•' gcntral manager, said he would wait and see wbat developed befo:-e add.Ing a fine for the telL·styled mod swinaer. , Pepitone landed ln New York Wed· net.day, saying he \\-'OUld spend a few day1 at bis Brook.Ty• home to ponder hla future Jn baseball . He spent most Of the day talking ""ith business partners 1t his Brooklyn boutique, called Joe Pepitone Presents My Place. ''I'm just solng to talk with my mother. my family and friends," Pepitone iaid. ''I haven1t made up my mind what I'm goi11g to do." Pepitone, upset after being slugged with a $Z50 fillfl for miaslng a Ju ly 16 workout, asked Monday that he be put on waivers so he could move to another club. Pepitone, sidelined since July 9 with a palnflJJ elbow injured In play, claimed he was unPble to work out v.·ith the injury. He balked when the club suggtst- 1 ed he have It treated at a hospital. The fiery, long-haired lefty thell asked to be put on voluntary retirement after being assigned a roommate -pitcher George Culver -for the current road trip. "I hoven't had a roommate In seven years," Pepitone said. "I was promised wben t came here I wouldn't be roomed with anyone." Richardson !lild he wasn't sure whether the team had made auch a promise -but considered It a key to Pepltone's disenchantment "The club knows where r am." Pepitone t aid \Vednesday. • "R!chardMn said he wanted to see. me In St. Louis. But he siid if I w•s aotna to quit, I abould take a few i days off and think about It. "He 1aid it would cost me, thouab. I'd be fined and suspended. I said It was okay with me." . Pepitone said be "had M)thing •fainst Richardson -but tor the past three weeks, Walker and I just have••t seen eye to eye." "lt wouldn't be so bad if he hid one rule,'' Pepitone continued, "b~ lbt man has a million of them ind I just can't llve that way. Wilker treata you like a kid and when I'm treattd IJke a kid, I act like a kid. "JJ I'm treated like a man, l'R Id accord ingly." ' Walker: "I'm not involved In this thing. He didn't talk to me when be left, and I'm not Involved.'' -----:,-:----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ Th\irsd1y, July 23, 1'17Q ... DAILY PILOT i Top College GriJ. Prospicts Featured . -~brine Classic Set Tonight . Jy IUIGllR 'CAllUON .................. Calll<ft!a'1 annual display of !ls !Jnaat coil<f• fol>tball proopecta of the year js oo lap ""'181it -the 11th unual Shrioe _NortWoiltlj ~ daaalc Idea off at Loi Aqtlet Ma-tat Collaewn. · ,ldloo it' llated to Ill· 'Under way at 1,u lollowlni -ame·ocUvtly. Tl<keta for the uttavapma are oealed at IS, IS and 11.10. , Expedocl to lead the South ls the :\. one-two punch of Blaft lllah'• Jim ·). McAllater and Kennlt John1011. ·~ : Auimentbtc .that !andem II a quaNI ' • of slandouta· !ram Or-C:.U.ly - '-Ught end -crai, Grimm ol FoolhllJ l'llJ'll ~\ Mil<• Hanna •I ~a, hallbock Gary \ 'Jame; of llanchO Alamltoo and qu~t Georc• Fruor of Anahtlm. All lour led their teams to league dianiplomblpo lllt ....... McAllster, the C1F AAAA player of lhe Y•ar, Is a f-1, llJO.pouDd fullback who~ :m points bls-)'W· Rllnnlol mate, hallbock J-, added 111 polntl to the Blaft tlllal u the Vlklnp swept to IS llnlaht wins and the AAAA -"' sec:tlon tllle. Both of the Plair stars, aloof with G<1mm (e.;, 32111 ol Foothill, are headed for. U~LA. . 'lbla year's edlU.. pils the l'UMbtl of the Blaft tw!Jls for the South acalnst the North's aerial pme .. Quarterbacking the Yanlteu are CUey Ortez of Sk11g Hip (Stockton) and Ron Adolpb <i Dinubs llJ&h, Ortti was named to the All·Amerlcan Hlgh School aquad by Sports Magazine and Adolph, lmOllf other lhlngs, toS!ed SO louchdown p..,., In his final two 1U10D1 at. Dinuba. List year's titanic was won by the South, c.31, to five the l\tbell a oom- manding 10 wins five loss and Uiree tie """'1. The North came back from a huge deficit In 1169, with the aid of the provialon allowini a team behind by el&!t points or more to receive the kickoff aftet scoring. The North trailed, 20-0._ In the lint htlt before rallying for a 21-21 tie at 1he end of three quarters and nearly p.itled out a tie in the waning moments " the Issue. '\ Foothill ~ge To111'1ley Ex-Centennial ,. Tritons Upended, 71-65; Players No""· ' ~- (· Artist.~ Trip MV, ·69-44 Making It Big BOSTON -Can you name the second base-tbortalop comblnatloo for c.n- tennlal Hlgh School <i CO..ptl>ll! By BOii ltOl'll ' ...... ..,,, ........ ::: After finlshinc one.two tn the ftl'Ullr -· '""°"• · Foothill and Tultln will meet .·•.. . . / for the FOQ!hlll Hilt School SUDl!OI!' · ·7'>asketball !~ague 'Mlamplonilllp Monday. .~ .. f ORANGE COUNTY NUGGETS -Orange Co1111ty ·WW be represented by four players on the1 South , teem in the annual Shrine benefit football gatne to- : Jligbt at the LA Coliseum. From I to r they •rt Gary '. James (Rancho Alamitos), George Fraser.1• (Ana~ heim), Mike Hanna "(Loara) and Craig Grimm (Foothlll). The fO<ir chat with a young patient of the Sl!riners Hospital for Crippled Children at a recent visit. · Mesa Upsets Eagles, 78-72 · · Champio1is'fiip, '81iared by Three Teams l . . • --~ ~~ Scott Frlested poured in 25 points 28 points (14 field goals) to lead i\.1ater leading Coste. 'Mesa High's suminer Dei to~~ one.point victory, Rick Kniffen uketball•tellp to an upset 74-72 victory .·had 17 and Pete Roberts canned 14. ver'EstanCll · m the a;mcluding nlgbt • A tw~k double elimination touma· \II( the Mesa·Newport Recfeation Depart,., m.ent inv:olving the lea.gue's six teams , t league at Estancia Wednesday . will ~gin Monday with Costa Mesa The loss, coupled with Mater Jlei's facing Pacifica at 7: u; and Newport S-74 win over Los .Ami~.ln _the com,. meeting ~ Amigos at 1:30. Estancia · n game,· created a· three-way tie and Mater Dei drew byu . the league championship. Eslancia will meet the winner of the Pacifica-Costa Mesa game Tuesday night at 7: 15 while .Mater Dei battles,• the Newport·Lo• Amilos victor at l :JO. • Consolation games wUl be held We<lnea. day night . Semifinal and final games will be played the following week with tht> championship tilt · acheduled Wed· nesday, Aua. Sat 7:15. ...,OteJocla, Mater Dei and Newport Hartior all finished with 7·3 records. ff'ifll<>rt held the league lead through 8th Victory in Row 01t of the slate, until dropping il.s inal two games to Mater Dei and Estan· ia. In Wedn.~l\Y 'night's game, Co!!ta esa. jumpe4 .out to _a 41-3.l palltime vantage and never trailed . Friested's 25 counters took scoring nors for tbe night, although three ther Mesans also hit in twin figures . Mike Allen pqtted 14, Allen Moore ollowed wtth 13 and Doug · MacLean 12. Gary Orglll's 23 points paced cia. Jeff Zelsdorf followed with 2 for the Easies. ~ • In the .lecoilll,gam~;Steve F1itz cained ·*;· ii \ * l1IMC .. OJI. (_,I• M ... 1711 GWC Opening Eyelids . With Basketball Play Golden:·West College basketball fans al the halftime l1tennission (~37) and 'sat. thr®&h a long and disappoinUng although East LA warmed up in the 1969-70 season. second half, the Rustlers maintained a · The fr(~hman-domh1ated Rustlers of comfortable advantage . coach Dick Stricklin co,uld only manage . Leading the way for Golden West was five victories In %'1 outings. Brian Ambrozich with 22 po in t 1 . Both clubs won~ their Nmlfinal contests ~fn Wednuday's tournament action. The hoot Knllhls move btl<> lbe finals by virtue of their 71..S win at the · ",,.... .of . IJ\e , &an Clemen,l.e Triton•. ·tfutin topped Santiaao, 7'4, to · eam Jts position. In a conaolaUon came played before t simlfinal~ Lal'Jl\a Bw:h hsndted Mlas!Gn Vlljo OOblos, IM4. San Clemente wa.s the cn1y team in the league to defeat Foothill dllrinc the tfgular season and it loll Its HCIOnd 111eeUng Wtlb !lie Knlpls hi two o~ort!m••. But with a lhi>t at tllt cham- p!Onshlp at llake, Foothut wu. jllll too DtUch for coach John Baker's crew. . Forward Brod McCulln sporked the Trlf<>11.1 1o a nm period lead, ecorlng hi. t<am's firot six and tut lour polnls ill, the stan:r.a, ~or an li-IC marrtn. "Foothill forred ahead 2f..2-4 midway ttirouab the second period on a Jim W~st field ioal and it kept that lead throogh the intennl!llion. With Steve Kalo!a. and Cral1 Anderaon letlling the chara:e, the Tritons · took the ,lead hick at ~ with 1:1:8 rt· nwlnlnl In the third .q"l'rter. 'tilt a S&-37 lead ·was the lut one held \)y San Clenentt, as the Kn!p.ts oulscored the Trlf<>ns lM durlnf · the " 11iitta .. IU I TUdlll (ft) ''""'· 'l""~ Hl1Ml'1 l I l 1' SwllM I 1 12 HUl ll l I 1 t CruMllV t 2 J I D!tt I I l t( ZY'lklwt•I ' I 1 lC ll~•M 1ellH1tm 50110 1•"'91 IOJtHIMIW t llJ l'lt~tr ' O ( I 11""'1a 1 1 I J lt1-s • 21• OW111t J I t , t 'H\lll 1 '1 I a·c.m,..IJ I. 1 I Ctmh t lt I 16 H lJ 116 U Ttt•tt H J2 11 7( ... " ., ... ...,.. 11 lJ It •-U I I II 11 •-74 finan,Sll ol tht third period. Scott Pllekltrtr and Illy Sclrulll com· bintd for 14 of thelr team'• IS polnls dllrinf the llttak, while Anderson wsa the only Triton to maintain hi5 ICOrlnf sbll!ty. During the final quarter San. Clemente cut the margin to 57-56 with (,:;g left to play. However, at that juncture Foothill !allied •I< ..,.,...uve points to secure ita lead for 1ood. -kHleroon paced the Trltons In scoring with 21 and' AfcCaslln, who picked up four fouls in the first half, added 15. Laguna Beach, thowtn1 marked Im- provement o.., ltl play earu.r bt the campaign, tralled only once in it.. contest with Ml&!ton Viejo. 'l1le Artl!ts' tuard combination of Nick GWesple and Chuck COrwln waa too much for the depleted D!ablol to cope w!lh, as they got logether for (I ol their club's 19 points. Gillespie WU the main COi when Laguna !!each built Its ~ly lead. With the ,..,.. knotted at 10, GUlespte IQ)..,.t the !Ina! two buckets of the first period and added the openlnf field eoal of the second quarter to give his team a 16-10 advantage. Corwin lf!l:I the final char&e that saw the Artists build a if.36 marfln to a safe 50-35 lead, in the third period. He and Gutesple both scored six points dur- inf the~· ' 'I' op Midget Field Headed by Sachs Lowell Sachs heads. a talenled flold when the Unlled Stat.I Racine Club midpts: make their ntntl\ • a"ppeuince ol the aeuon at the Oraqe <'Aunty Speedway In El Toro Saturday 11ighl · Rick Goudy (Norwalk), Pete Sllmple (Diamond Bar) and Jim Fawcett (IA>ng BOich) hava daf,.led Sachs at El 'l\ro, but no driver has been able to cut down the San Diego vetera11'1 USRC point lead . Sachs, Jn the reliable George Newman Olly, bu finished all II USRC main eveats with his worst finllh .eventh at Bakersfield. Sachs haa 111 main event points, followed In -nd place by Danny McKaight with 379. Area. driwrs compe-Un1 Saturday nilht include Duane Stars of Wtstminlttr and FA!dle Mllltr of Colla' M ..... The aeven, event card conunencts 1t 7 with Ume trial~ The trophy duh . is ldwduled for 1:30. flftl'I .~,,. ltlll'fl, •ltdorl • , ' '4 I 12 Mlcl•111 s-1 2 12 Ill .I 1 •». Frlft*I 11 J 1 2-S ,, .,tdetf '1 1 I S-MOOtl J I S IJ l(•IUf' I 1 I ! Mlfetllo<ll!fl 0 2 1 1 oor1 JOllAllM 7 031• H•Y'I o o 1 o S1mp5on 1 a 1 ' But if ,Jyst a little of Golden West's Ambrozlch, who played for the Rustler11 type. Of PlJIY ln the Rio Hondo College two sea!JOt\! ago, then· sat out last year summer ibasketball league carries over with scholastic dlfflcuttles, hit 15 in the ' to the· 1970-71 season, Rustler cage fans secoid half. are 111 for an e1ciUng tlme. Chris Thompson, the Jlustlers' one·man Major League Standings SllWI,, .S 0 J 11 Oelmtt 0 0 I 0 ~=~ ~:·:~:,:~, ~1:~ T•hll1 2t 11 12 n T11111 » 11 u 11 Sew. •11 ... ,,,,. •• E•i•11tll • 17 '''If 17 -72 eoti. Mts• •It' '?I ,IJ 2S -11 Mlfw o.i Oil ~ Lt'f At111t91 170 """" """'' .. ~ .. .. ,....,.. .. ._,, --· K1rtell fftlll , .... '1 S J H ""'-'''' I • J 22 J J lllK"Mir , S OS-I 1 1 , 1• o,.m 1 J i"' S 0 I I ~r<ll 11 1 1• 1 02 28KlrTI 11 1) i. I J 21 H.it11llll I ? I 1 Sl!rout 0 0 I 0 Joi 7 lf JS TOlllt JI U IJ I• S.C.N II' ... ,,,,, '' 1• 's 11 -7J " u '' 11 -1• Wednesday night the Rustlers made sooring . machiflt in the 1969-70 suaon, it six ~ .a•fO~ in the Rio Hondo circuit, · followed with 17 _ all comil'lg in the battering E;lst LA, 101-89. . ihittal half. ThomJS&0n fouled out in the It waa a.ie sepond game ib a row ·' .\Vaning moments of ~ first half. that the llilstlers. better~· ~· century ' · . Former SanU'ago High star Greg JC3ile mark. Monday night, Stricklin s hot~t· COWltered wilh 16 altd Jim Anderm, ting crew .routed Santa Ana .College. ,. who helped lead Rancho "Alamitos 1o 102-88. a successful season last year, hjt 15. Although Golden West's victory margin Jeff Powers a Goldtin West letterman, was 12 points, the game was not that had 12 to. gi~e the Rtistlers five .players clost. The RuttUers, hitting from all in double figures. over the court, held tt 23-)Xlint le•d · Kyle, a guard: had 14 of bis 16 ~nts Jn the opening 20 minutes of play. Sam11aer Water Polo The Rustlers, now wilh a two.game bulge in the league, will attempt to win their seventh in a row 11ainst Rio Ho11do Monday night at 1:30. Estancia Trips Marina ENncla jumped inf<> • 11'1l place ti\ A' league water polo play Wtd· 1y nlsflt, following a 5-J victory ver Marina in tht Oranae Coast Colleae !. Both Ettancia and Mnlna have f.l goals. Laguna brote open a tigtl\ gan1e wlth seio-en .goals in . ute fourth quarter. Mardy Ma<tlson, John Wt llafry and P.Uke Roberts hit two each for the Artists while Vince Franton paced Fountain Vallty wtth two. U.S. Spikers Face . • USSR, New Track ; ., ; NA110~.U.,LEAGIJE ' .'.:_. -~Pel-01 Pitt~. 53 13 .553 New York SO 44 .532 Chlcqo 47 46 .505 Philadelphia 13 50 .412 Sl. Louis (! . 53 .(31 MonU.al .., ·55 .Ul \\'est DI.viii• Cincinnati DMpn Atlanta San Francisco Houston San DJe10 17 29 .Ill 55 39 .SIS 46 43 .... I( .. .(!I u 53 ,l(l 39 59 .391 I (\I Ill 11 1211 ll 20 21 2111 29 Baltimore Detroit New Yorlr: -Cleveland Wuhlnlt<1> PeL ()JI .QI .SIO .113 .U7 ,(62 .us • 711 • IS 16 5 10 26 1711 19 Both are now estabu.bed outfielders bt the American.League. Let's llO a step farther. Ont plays for the New York Yankees and the other for the Bolton Red Sox. Another · clue. Don Wilson, the Houston Astro pit- cher, was 1 thinf telllUnate. Roy White ol the Yankees, one of the leading hitters in the American Leaiue thl! season, played llCOlld ba!Jlt for the Apaches when~._.. 8 ~r. Reggie Smith of~ w11 the team's -uowARD ·:HANDY · ahortatop, ~n be a® Wilson were aophomores. · Another teammate was Larry Dodd. now a member of the Oakland Raider football team where he is a reserve quarterback. Paul Schaal, former An&el third baHman now with Kansas City and White's Yankee teammate Rori Wood, ~Jed at'Colnpton Hlgh the aame year.· tnckltnti:lly; CcmPton wu the. )tagut champion and weni on to win the CIF title while Centennial had to 9ttUe for second place in the ~ ~gue, stan- dings .. White spent hi! enQre n\lMr league career as a ·second baseman: When he wa! calle(I up to the Yankee& in 19fi:i, Bobby Richardson was ltlll an acUvt player.' -Mickey Mantle and Rot;er Marls were tn the Outfield although bot.ti were injured and White was asked to fill-in. -He made the team ,is in outfielder In 19" but WI> brought back to tht Infield at thlM bl~ In. 1117. Ralph Houk, 'Yankee managu, return· td blm to the .o!ltl!eld in 1918 with th• inrnlse that he Wllllld be playing there .all the Ume. "! ·enjoy ·playing th< outfi•ld · and 1 .don't think J would like to retµrn to the infield," White says. He has, been in a battlng.shlmp rectntly. Hls average has dipped from .347 to .315 ·In ·the last two weeks but he isn't concerned. "I'm hitting the ball but right at somebody. They'll begin to !all in again ."' White has a lot of power desj)lte weighing only 170 pounds and standing 5-10. He leads the Yankees with 13 home runs. u. PEAN LEWIS . ANNIYlltAlY SAU SPICIAL 1970 TOYOTA 'YIAGDN :=s1a17 ................. M .. ,.._._...._ leNiCN ..... C- VOLVO u, ~ed by Newporl Harbor, 1!'.411an and "811Jn• Beat!! (W). Edison's six-goal second quarter was too much for Newport as Matt Kroona paced the Charge" -ajth ~Ol\l' ~als. LENINGRAD -A ·)'Ollllf and splriled U.S. trick Ind field team meets a strong · Russian team today -and &ell the , dubioua honor of brtaking In a new , rubberized as)ibalt lr*>k In the ·~. . .-------... ----------------' "This· ii going to cause pro4lfml: for D E A' N. L I w I s 1'7t DEMO Don J{llll 'i*e'f "the Estancla win a pair DI p~ while Larry Plat· m, Daft Ambuttey and Dan Zan<l- had -each for the Eal~-. la odler aetloa, Bueno Part '"pped M-. ll .. ; Laruna defealed Foun- iln ,Valley, JW; and Edlaon outlasted """'" l(a111of, JI ... Ill the Lapna vtctory, Rick Gulledge lbt way lot the Artlat1 with four • Bob Wurster added fhr~ and Pat West had two for the winners. NewPort was 1'11 by Jim Lord and Steve Smith. "ch WJU\ a pair()( t1Ules. Allan Langston hll lWO llOlll In a toslng caute tor Cost.a Mesa. The battle tor the league lead In lhe AAA di vl1lon ls on t1P: ~fonday when Corona d'I Mar and Newport, both undefeated, meet at 1:30. some of our NMe:rs, '1 said' American 1 coach Lei'oy Wolker of Durham, N.c; •. viewing the tr&ck at Lenln Stadium for · the flrot ·Ume Wednesday. "ll leaV.1 a lot to be cfellred." Tractloil , probltms are expected,. upeclall:y for tho hurdlcn . Workers wer~. 11111 palnUng . the lanei on tht black surface Wedne9da7 t vening. . ' . ..... 1966 HAUOlt ILVD., COSTA MESA Servi• .,.. Partt hr All 1 .. a1 loll Cara MMom ....., .... hr All c.ra 646-tJOJ ~·County'• Lvfest and MOii J\loclam Toyota and Vol'fO Dealar .... . . $2699 142 2 tit. r-41•, "'"'· •·•P•-'· IStr. #4'40I 1KI f TOYOTA COIONA a1111, ......,., 11ut1t1t _.._ 1..1c. l.Wl _. $1595 ~ • . • Race Entries "OU•Tlf •AC•. 1511 ¥1tdl. l "'"' .tell. c111m1,.,.. -Pu~ 1hoo. Cl•lmlna Who Cares? No oth1r 11tw1ptptr i" th1 world c •r11 1bo11t your co"'mu· nity Ii•• your c1111111w11ity dtily ntw1p1ptr dots. It'• the DAILY PILOT. For thrllls and beauty ... watch the Thoroughbreds! Ruervod.-ts rrom 11.25. (Sofurdaya & holld1y1, $1 .51J.) Phone (714) 755·1141. For •P!"i•I buaea, ca" Greyhound. Racing M0n. thru Sat. Poll time 2 pm. Back Pack & Bags • 12.95 to «.95 • Day Bats Stull Bats Slee!Mg Bats Freeze Driell Flllds Plastic lllttles Cams Mess Kits Masks Fins Snorkles Speedo Swinsults Speedo Tninks Lifeguard Trunks Bikes Parts ... 538 CENTER. ST. Phone 646-1919 I" •• 11· ' I 1:1 'I' ,., '" '" "' "' "' "' Alamitos Racmg Results " \ ~.A~~ ~. ' ' USE SUFflCIENT LOfT'fllOM DllP IUllllllll I Tllut1d1J, July 23, 11170 DAILY PILOT %7 Open Basketball Monarchs ChapmanHits .25 Take 1-0 I ! ·ono of tht moat 1ru11tat1'1i. experience& in tolf· ti to hit P LOI A~ITOI •••Ul.TI othtrwis• •~tlftftt sand' ..... •-=·:'::mt 'in'to the side of thtbunktr. Tilll • To Nip Nutrilite ~e~,:s:r i)t; MooardlS were victlmlaed by their own ml.slakes Tuesday nlgtit io a t-0 Sa(lta Ana sum# n\ef basebalf' Ioque setback ar the hands of Saddlebac~ at Santa.-A.DI ldemorill P•k . .. ,.,T llACI. ,. rtNL ""' .,..,.., h II loo 1r-u1n"'v o1• 111•1c1to1• ''" .,, c111torftta. c111nt-1ppens • -u, .... • · ' Wilala, Ford, behind the 25-UnlvmitY oC Nevada (Las pq_iot CJUCiput or Utah-bound Vegas) 'Is tuning up for his Bruce Chapman, s I i pp e d date wilh the Utah St.an of ' Nutiillte Its first 1"" of Ille tlie ASA alter being drafted ......, Tuetdoy niplt In Ille by Ille Stan and Ille Dt<roit IM. P11rM 11,1'0. Clalll'lfnt wlc. U.000. ·1nd $imply becl~SI thl ..... ( ,,,,_, Tlnr !"-' , ... s.oo 1·• fails to Select I · club with IUf· °"'""" °'""' 151 '•"" 1 ue '·'° f1'c1'1nt lof' " ,.,, l .... (Mtrl'l91111) ,,.. \. Timi: lMJIO. Hllf Quid! fllllp'*I tlllr" Wll fl~ -lllltd ,,.. Ill.ad ••11. SICOlllO •U.. 400 YtrllL Tlnt Y .. Mldl Ind Ufll, Clalmlflt, ,_ .. SIJll, Clllfnill9 wlao st.000. C~f' CH1r1) JM ... 1.11 ~ •Mut.t fl.W.ml 4.ICI IM .._.._, (hrfllf'I IM tlrM1 .. 1/10. MITILY OOU•LI; 1·1,..,_. Tl.., Mii IO!ctr #11 .. , .... HUI. Tt!llD IUCI. 1JI Wlrcta. Twe YMr-old _ ........ '"-,,, •• lold A,,.,.,,tllrto (Ht r1) t . .0 1-'0 !.• S1nlt 91'11 CC1rdol1J • . 11 .. S,,jO Slrwl ILk>lw111l J,IO TlrM: 1 .. 2/11. Al• •lfl -"!Ml Wlol, Ol/f C-Glrl, Ot! ti.dclr •• PKut ,rkM:t, ~ tolrd, Tu •1111. "OUlt'TM llAC.. 111 v1rd1. Tl!r" YH•-okl• ..... WI. Clllmlne. PurM s1,100. c111rn1 .... wic. 11.0 . Wtr Oii l'owrlY (l(tl\ll) ft.Ml I.If S.• J-'I Git! IAdllrl 4.411 J.ID 'T111W'1 SPttilblll !Plrfttrl 11,411 Time: 0 ·1111. ' . AllO ••-'1rlltl11tor, lt1t1 McCtv, pon l(ur, Sir Wiiii, Ju1t1nl1. "IP'TM ltACI . DI Yl'rft. Twt r11r· o1111. l\li.-«1nc1. 11'.ur:w u.ooo. O,nl .. GH IM1lr) I.ID 4.00 1.IO A.11>111M01 lll11t IC1nlo11J J.ID 1.ID Jt1'1ltdr1..lldl. IH1rtl J..O TlrM: II. Nt llCfl lclltl. ltV•NTM UC•. )4t Y1rdt. TllrM ,. .. , ..... , t nd ,.., Allow111ee, '"11r1t n ,500. S1lnl'• Stftlt (1..h11\1111l t.411 J.» 2.llO Moolll! ltockef (Ct .. 111 !G.00 J.00 L .. Sir ''"" !A•lrJ 2.60 Tl111t: tJ-4/10. Alto rift -°"" Plltllllo. Vt111nl Prl-1, llonnle .. "'' l(ll'tr'1 SI••• Llk1 l11clty, 119 Spy, lw~r. ' 81DlfTM ltACI. SM v•r... TllrM Yt11'41d1 11111 up. AllowMci.f1'ta. II. Mary's Kllll'llll Oulld. !"Vn.,.,!f.IOO .. ON Mount IPl!'ntr) UI lM IM Counf Cllrllft (llllMI 't• S.1111 t .111 Ollf' 0tc:l1loll (Htrtl 2M Tlmt: 1J.l/IO. AIM rln -Liz •1b¥, lt1dlu111 ill'l'I Doll, Mltlth' Moon. lleM Clllr" 11r, FtncY Ml~. Boll'• l1r End, l(e11M• , .. IONTM HCI ..... 'l'l rdL Tint TIC· t1c11 tllcl #. Clllml!lll. Ttit l11Kte. PurM 11.IOll. ci.11111119 "'IH U,SID. I UM'l''l ltll COl'rl•rl s.a S.00 1.411 .... "°' l.llCk ( .. nkl) 1.00 1.- 1..111 co. S.m fC/'OIOll I l .• 'Jl1111: tt-4111. U: IXAClA, ..._.. .... .. ,....,. "" ......... im.... . Costa -Open basketball Pislo .. ol the NBA. Hloil at~I hav.doubts IDoUI ie...,. II Southern California Plcldng up Ille slack for Ill~ 1!111 €ufficitllt to ci•r . . CoUese. wuson FO.d in ttie second ;i;~ Ii ' 1111 ~p; •lWIYS "" • The Wibo~ O<ltflt SIUlll Ille hall WIS Brian Ambrolich of ~ dub. lh~~itf~ Jftriously ,u n def e 1 t e d Golden West College, wbo · Yoll Will ach-lfu!rillte crew with &11 n.ao came lhn>u&h with 11 ol his . ; say, II'.' ~·iron •nfl I setback, avtn&inl an earlier 13 points chiefly from tbe ·9.Wtft, 1'1tf be ""'"rn1I. D-11 Joa ·to the same team free throw line. lntfirlt RlWld hostilititt Ambrozich potted nine or Vi<tor7 moves wu....· Ford II ~tiempts froni the gratis Into a. tie for first w:ith llne!to ~id the winn,ers' ~use. N triJjte, A-..i.. team boast' Jim Hatchett, who had 19 .u . e.gi. me in the first-rowtd los:i to tCh:' ~ in ~ ouUncs. . . Nutrillte, •dded 11 mar~ers SOuthern Pllstic l.lold np.. in disposing ~f the UC lrviJ'le. ped N,wport $tatkmers, 'B-49, navored Ndttllite quintet. in ~ other test. . AU~. Young. was .high point. Chapman, one-Ume Costa man foi; Nutrl,Ute with 1' while Mesa Hlch and Orange Coast foor othen "ere in double Colle_. ~~ WU the figures. . With one out in ttie loi> of the eifbth lalling, Sacl- dleback drew 1 walk and then toided tbe b8llH Oil I pelr Of 'Monarcb mob. 'A baaebli-ICOftdwhat proved lo be th only run ol the CDOtesl for dlhe< aide. Bill CIDUP ~· the loo• Mater Ile -J 1oot11> a first-baning sin&lt. .._: '- Steve Marmaud tW'tld on !he mound for ,the ~ tl!d ,pitched to one batltl" W-lh• openiqg frame b/ef~ blln& replaced by Clwck ' ~. . w:bo went the re1~ distance, aUowina ~ h»I ~t'ncl no earned rum. . • _, :f t N ctrtaln woitll club to Ulfj "'"~ ,._uro lht 'loft anio ., tiM• chlb you lrt COO• li<l .. lff .H I lfll doift& in Uti iffU1tli!Qon , ·Juli bt I Urt that ~ de ...i around t ither club · 1n;tttt .. nij , th1reby incorrinf leadift& factor in the winners Newport Statk>oer9 tried to MAT•• D•• 1" • r (rabbing 1 sl%.polnt Jn•rlin cunpete with_onlY, fiv,e-players · ·?='~0•b . t l at the half 11 he tallied 17 and . "'1'5 . unable to . keep up A•r.ii .,,.. ti' •· of his markers In the first withJSouthern Plastics~ pace. X~. ~ , . 20 minute$ ol action. ' Dave Paine led a baJan~ ~~ (I.~. · . 1 t • ... ~•11y: . Tbe M graduate of the attack tor the winners with ~;:::;, 1t, f~ ,~1~4~·~~~_:_~~~~~~-·~·~=-~.r.~~-w~·-"~~~~"~ S Kllij . Third ea . ' . I bi Metrd FiiJals .• !11 del Mar 11J&11'1 J;.. M;i.d.r. (II) and t b t mer wresUiJc team flnllliid Q:largers (tl). 'M>e cham- a hi""'Y res~•ble U*d~· 11 plonshlp i.am .,., mad< up .... t"''"-of Bolsa Grand• and Paclflca the Metropolitan W I Hlih students. The Charcer Leque flDals Saturday It team repre!eftted C y p r e 1 I . ' . ' eyprea Collete· . Coller•. . Tbe Sea Kings totalfd1 &5 HUntln:ton Beach placed poinU in the finals to flirlth ·rourth in the finals with SS behind the Marlnen ''" d points. I , Top area effort. was lumed t 1 In by Corona del Mar's 11m l)ra~ . Ti•tJh. . llandel, who captun!d the 170-]1 ~ dlvisiOn. The Sea Kings' ~ 1 Steve Wade wu third in the 0 h T !-· tlO-pound class while team-ll t C ~C male John Blanpled placed WIUOM , ••• nu .. " ... "I: =" ~tj'I ~fiiP.,,.."' II I .. Wiii 1 •S "••r 1214 Mlftt'tlM 4 I S I '· ""'"',.,, l ' j I tl. ThwnN>ll 1 f IS A=ldl "U at ',11 IUITlll.ITI .C•I .. ft,. .. l I l '! ! i !'1 ' ' I'! J·J~~ Wllllll '-" •• N11ti'llllt MfWPOltT tTATIONIRf lttl ""ff,. .. I J ',, • ' I ' 1 , 1 l ' ' ' il ,1, ,: PLASTIC MOLD ul1 .. "It! .. Ori-I" 4 1 I • >lo111s1., • • 'I "111\f S •t l Cll"tlu 3 t J I LV'Olll tlJIO G. •rvcb 2 1 S S Nt11Y Jt ll Slr'N !14 S s"-'''' Tot••• » r '° n H1ltllrn.: '6lrllllfll Plt1tlc MIW M. N.-t lt11lciritn Ji. Deep Sea Fish Report ' lhlrd in tht 130 division. NIW""T IO•'lt't'• LldlW) -224 .,.1.,..1 • •iti.u.r•. 1""9 blu, :m • Tbe fourth unUIJ U.S. 0>rona11 Bill Cur land, =~~~··1111f1'1111t'.*i~., 1.:i ·~ -.,....,al Dracster Chill· """'11nC tt 1«1 pounds,,finl~ iu .,,.i.,.., a •lblcor1, nt lllrr1c111t1. ~ • ;.~-· , .t... .... 1.. t M k " llonl'9. '" bin, 1 llllllbut. 4 -....~J 1tf tchedulfd for 0 lfi JV!MWI lod f.tamma t tr m1cil:•rtlil. ,,__..,.. , .!.. ~ Bear (lto) WU third. Doug &AN (l.IMINTI -ltt 1n1lers1 Saturday at Orlfllt U>UMY ffllllard of Corana was second W ~~~ ~~·=•ti.!:~ 11oni1o. t .. •--UoDal J\actftJ ' Iii di·'-'-'· l.OND SIACM fhhfttllt Pl.r) -~ · ·' ln the l ruiiun. u 1r111tni m Mu, u Nrrtc\ldl, n. ... iu.~-for the .......,, r.v1.'.... a. .... ,e•• pla-·• 86-I MUIMlt. Slf'lt -15 l"'ltrt1 J ..,_...,..... -,1IYI" '"-J .., '-~ Nu, I Jltllbut, Jll 111tcil:tret. IP..,.... aiJ.Diebt .affair bejjM at t · · cond in tb1 lto-.._,..,. dlvWon ~I -17• '"'"''' 14 •Ible-. wl _._ •~ .. L • ol .,_,......, · lS blrr1C110111, ' lloonlto, t 1!1llbv\, .... m. tb u~ 11C1t• nmna. 'fw Huntintton whfle team-1.111 n 1ic. Nu.* blw bl". l'tellk LOS ALAMITOS • WIST O" DJSNIYLAND ON KATILLA " • fuel, fuel futmy du' and mate Frank Alvarez was lh!rd .,.,..... ... , -ua 1"'11"1 11 combo ellmtnaUons ttaktnc It at 111. '11>e 0 0ilers' Ken otaubo i~;~1:::C~,;;,,,~·~',ii,',,~~~.~~,'::'~:.~"~ii· ~"-";;•;;•K;;"';;;;;;";;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ f p.m. , (150) wu fourth and Jim Pot.- Guaranteed pria ~ tl ttr (llO) wa9 lhird. 111,m IDd ~ '11,11111 In Eltuda'• Oiuck Kayler mamtacturers '"""'~ U· wu foul1h In 'the 110 div W., ~ to lurt • fttlf' ~er while ~.Kurt Cluff of Edison Z50 .eptrles to vie for !!"Iii-finished 1_.i to Bandel. ~ position. J IEdlaon'• Jim sw .... y plactd Jmy ljullr ol heitl! lad fourth In the lll61>0tn!d clus. Portluid'• J<:f1Y ~ Wel!mlnster's · RJck Maltefl are given 1 '::t ,....,,... ,. · wu thlrd at 150 and titam. 1 double~north .IWt,tP, ~ mate John Sutter. wu lourih Soothem C a I II• ro II "l"I> 1n the hea eilht dlv181Gn petlion will have It ,, ., vyw • t!leir tool. A\ Loustanau of the Marlnen and Matadon was named tbe outstandln1 W?<ltler ol the '111U• and tournamen'~I :.oust.an111 l1 a 140-pounder. · C-a del Mar captured tl\O ""ttiem half of the Metropolitan Lea;ue with a 7.() mark. IT'S NEW· -IT'S FUN SEtF SERVICE MAJOR QUALITY '" ·'• •I ,,. •, ' .. '' . .. • ·~ ... • • It ., Tllllis Rackets ' UP TO PER GAL TelllisShes ' Tennis Sllits ,, Tlllis·Shl'ts Telllis $u Tennis t:any ,AI ~ TemisS~ ' • ·-'. -----------------.... ·' I I 'I ' • " I ' ' I AU You THE MAN FOi US? IT'S EASY- 1. DltlVE UI' TO l'UMP ISLAND 2. GIVE YOUR ORDelt INTO 'Sl'EAKElt 3. l'UT IN Y9'JR OWN GAS 4. l'AY AT CASHIR 800TH •• • • • _, " - SAVE 5 $ $ SAVE$ 5 $ SAVES SS SAVE $ 5 S ..i FOLLOW CHARLIE CAR WASH · 1761.17thlt. c ........ INHI h locurlty ,tclllc ltok) ' • .. ,, • I I ' WllAT'I IN ...:;; OUTDOORS? Northern Report Reporta from the lakes north of Oran1e Cowiy are all eooct. 1be daytime temperatures are hitting the hundred degree mari:, but the early mornings a1td late evellings art cool .Reer e•tlo11 V11Ht1tlteol • Cl•T"'ICATI: O" co1ro1ATION ll'Oll TaANIACTION 0, •UllNlll UNDla ,l(TlflOUI NAMI: TH£ UHOEltllGHEO COltPOllATION aott.-Mfff¥ (trt!!J '~•I II 11 anch1dlt11 .. 11\11•-· lot•ff'd .. , ,,., 1•1b'9 llou .... trd, N•-1 &tKf'I, C1lltotMI Vf'llHil' !Ill tktllleul flr111 "'"" el PILOT .. ll lNTINCI .,.. NI Wtltt "'"' 11 ~ _., .,, !flt ftllewlft9 ~tllol'I. """°" PrWIHI ~ ef llllelftft1 11 '' '-ile<wlf OrMWt c ... 1 Plllllllfll"" CMID911'#, :no W•lt .. , Slfftl, Cnll Mt ... C1!1ffnll1 WITHlll Ill h•lld ffl1' n llf NY SAVE15%! CUSTOM· LONG MILER i\ 4·PLY llYLOll CORD TllE ' . ""' AS LOW AS $1670 Whitewall "BIG EDGE" am~os .. ~2/~2222 . r ......... , ...... AVM•M2AT 2/'2P .. _ ...... _ .... BRAl<E LINING SPECIAL ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT QUALITY LININGS • JMtlllledon o1 rtnings • Repeck front wheel bw•• • COl1e<t tnb a..-i i-i • i._. onti,. lnb- SAVE35%! ' RADIAL 990 RADIAL TIRES AJ LOW, LOW PllCD AS LOW AS s2900 st.. 1'511" .,,,....,. "-fM, b.. T• u.n ,., ... ~ .......... 40,000 MILE GUARANTEE 8.F.Goodrich guarantees the Raybes,tos Ravmold brake lillings installed on 'tOUI' car IOI' 26,000 miles when used in ~ passenger car service. ShouJd the iinlogs fail or wear out during 1hk -· 1hey wll be """"'"' at no chatQt for h linings and oniY ..... -.... for-11atlon. f!eph1cemen1. onl'( .°' e.F.G004ri<J! stcn .,, dealtt .fnak.i~ OhQ•n.al installition. .. Ju", U19. Thi '··uno HlllJ Guo Club wUI hold •• lnvllaliooal ATA r~r;.~;;."""'~ -JONES TIRE SERVICE _,, ·--~ nd Th -•-• II "--!C.,.,.,,. '"II ArAs,....-r ... ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS HONORED ~ Tl"lp Shoot thl• ~e . e aJIUl.ff, WI ~ over ITATt oP CALIFOllHIA. ·-.......... ~· -for Ill -~ltrl "'""" 0 ' o...... ... 2049 HARBOR BLVD. (At lay) k two _, .,......,. wan "'""' ' °" tt111 nM d•• of Julv. A.D. 11111 II fnLtresied shootert m•Y partJcilpate in the shoot as they "'°"' "" '°*'"" E. o.v11 • "'°'•" COSTA MESA • ~ -• ~ Thi P\11111( Ill iM ltt H lf ( ....... " ant can join the ATA prior to .-. ""' on ul'I! nngt. s ~··~. ,...111"' 1t1ut1", 1111" n11111111..,_. ., 1 MM""°' wUI b< one ol the blggr ~ or lhe "1'°" oo<J ihere l~ '!f.:;''"· .:::.':"'~' :'~"' .. '::! l'HONE 646-4.f 2T • 540-4343 UPllAYlll llADIAL Tillll wlU ""-tome a.op cuns preaenL. Por more lnlonnaLD phone V1c• ,. kll"' o1 ffl• ,.....,,,... tNl ., .,..,_UM 4NDC&O,,. _ .. -- .. ~ • -·-I ._., ... Wlllflill lllMIMIMlll ....... , __________________________________________________ ............ -... ___ ., --~ ., '"' (.....,.11 .. llMftllil ,.....,.. Mt BJ'G d ' I I -.--.....-----..-.....-__...,...-...... -~------,,...----·----~ -·- OA!LY PILOT PAID ADVlltTISl!MtNT 'AID ADVllllllllMINT Grand Opening at Lucky Discount ·Center . Save Big at Huntington Beach_ Store, • 9051 A tlania ·Ave. at Magnolia · Today!,, 1 llL"'.'11 ·~~. - YOUR BUDGET'S BE ST FRI E NDS-As~istant Manager Ken Brun1rner (left) and Manager \Valt Tale chec.:k in some barga in s in canned goods to stock shelves of the new Lucky Discount Center at 9051 Atlanta Ave., lluntington Beach. They advise c.·uslon1ers to be on lookout for ''key buys" r metchandise bought by Lucky Stores chain at especially low prices becahse wholesale deal- ers or manufacturers allo\v the chain a promotional discount). 1'he "key buy" n1erchandise is priced even lower than Luck y's day-to-day tow disco unt prices. -DISCOUNTS HERE , TOO-Pharmacist Edward Mil- ler is manager of this part of the new Lucky Dis- count Center. The pharn1 acy offers complete drug- store line of ine rchandise and pharmaceuticals, plus pharmacy service. ;\nd aJ l at discount prices. .. ,. , -· INSIDE : ALL KINDS flF 'GDODIES'-Firsl of its kind lo open in the area, this Lucky1S.~permarket Disceunt Ce nter offers shop- pers even 1nore bargaj1'S 1.ind cr one roof than they can find at the center 's •·sister" supel'lf{,J'kets. The Discount Center offers hun - dreds o{ items 1nore th U1e supermarkets do and includes in its inventory such things a:i uto supplies. appliances. cosmetics. gar· den supplies, giltware, ;;:reeling cards, hardware, linens, 111aga·- zi nes. paint supplies. stationery, sporting goods, toys, wearing 1.u'l apparel a nd .. nore-all offered at l.ucky's usual di scollnt prices, of· :-:cci course. Ne\v save-big-n1oney su11·e is really a!inost Like an entire :.·i.!_ shopping tenter under one rool. 1 l. offel's shoppers a •'grocery ,'' : ··~ft n1eat 1n arket, delicatessen, liquor store and hardv."are-varicty . store-all in one operation. .~.•!·" ".Go't . •d 1 Lucky Leads Discounters ·'' Jr,.~ ····i' •"·' ... Lucky Stores' newest Dis- count Center, localed at 905 l Allanta. al f\1agnolia, in Hun· tington Beach, opens al 10 a.m. today and every day this "grand opening week." Like all Lucky Stores, the new Hunlin&rf.on Beach Dis- oount Center offers the finest in customer-convenience shop- ping. 1'he Center reaturcs na- tionally adv!•rlised grocery brands. top QUillily 1neats and f<1rm-fresh produce. ll a!so ht1s a large \'ariely department where i1cn1s suc:h 4'! weari ng ;ipparel , hardwarl', housewar'!s, to.vs, auto, t>lec- trical and p!11n1bing supplie:;, garden u e ll d 5 , stationery. domestici; and ~heal th and ~uty aids are stocked. As in ;di Lucky Stores, dis· CQun t prt1.)·,;..: 1~ offered in all deparllncnl;;. The new Dis· coont Center offers i ts custonlcrs lhC' convenience of one-stop, money.saving shop- ping. Lucky Stores· rnanagement, 1Nhen questioned about their tti8CQ11nt selling policy, said, '"DisCQunt pricing is not new with Lucky. \\le ha1·c-alway!\ believed that food. as an esscnticil item. should b<' inade available at the lowest possi· ble price. Lucky has followed this philosophy sinct• 1963. Wt! do not t'mp!oy g1n1n1icks. we do not play g<11nes. anrl we do !lll' lo1,1•er the pricl' on a few iten1s and then shout discount. Every itcn1 the Jaw :·. allo\\'s is diseount pr1cc1I. BuiU b.v I':. \\I. llahn, General Contractor o( .... Hawthorne. the 33,820-sq .-ft. i::!\.,o. build in~ o I conte1nporary design by Ainsworth & McClel\a11. with interior design by l\cnngott-Brossn1er Co lor Studios. the con1 pletely air condil1011cd Discount Center features the latest in customized fixtures. ·\ ~~ ,,, . . . •I ' ., 1111• < < .. 1 ~1' .,.~ ~•,w ·-.. •• 11."" I ~ .... "I .... ..,.,. . ~ "l,u<:ky customers actually save hundreds of dollars a year on their food purchases. In addition to discount pricing, Lucky Stores is also the first !I u p e r n1 ark e t. lu our kno\'•ledge. lo do away with multiple pricing. Evf'ry iten1 is individually priced so you know exactly what you are paying." NOT PR IVATE STOCK-Jolln Burris, head of Lll cky ' ,.~~. Discount Center's liquor department has shelf after , e~ shelf full of bottled goods that are strictly not privat~ ' .. ~ stock. He wants to share with everyone-and al ,.' 1 di scount prices, Loo, .. , .I(. l~ ...... ----------------·· ··- • BONDED FOR QUALITY-Dick Varn~r . plunk• a chunk o! Luckfs typically lean and luscious meat Onto the scale in the ne\v n1eat deparlment he h,eads. Lucky bu'yers personally select the beef animals from which Lucky &els meal so llood that ll 11 boallo • ed. 11 you're not satisfied with Lucky meatJ eliv· ered to you fn special slyrene loam trays onl~ arter careful trimming of fat and other waste, yoQ.t11nonny will be immediately refunded. ,, 'SOFT' LINES-That's what a professional like teorge Evans, variety manager for Lucky's new Discount Center, calls Ulis department. But1 whether you call it ~·cJothei" or "a.pparel" or 1 ready-to- wear" or whatever, it i§ thi s department and several other speclallty 'J"'ll' within the new Lucky s:or~ which make It much . mu h more than a 'rsupermar• 1 ket." George and tho other department managers at 't::;t>I\ the new •tore are anxious to make you welcome to ,\ -. the are•'• newest one-stop shopplng place Luck y Discount Center. 1 • ,, ... l ((Jr, i' id ., I .. ~ I • foam bed plllow1 97~ ~~'f171'2i ,,._ , • .._. tMt ere non~ .. .,. ... tc, Mt•resl1tant. 3-pl••• bath rug set • Ito MOST EYERYTHINQ FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY AT GREATER jEYERYDAY SAYINGS An lnnowatlon In ONE.STOP FAMILY SHOPPING ••• wttere in addition to LOW EVERY DAY DISCU.T FOOD PRICES you'll find '°vlng1 on most everything your fam1 ud1. YOUR NEW LUCKY DISCOUNT CENRR offer5 an outstand~ selection of quality merchandise, from wtarlng apparel to hardware, hm patio fumlhlre to plumblnCJ supplies and at low every day dl1co11n rices 365 doy1 a year • , , your budget will love the chanCJt! mo Jave thermal blanket 01pana towel ~~ensemble UTH 111 TOWll WASH MAND CLOTH TOWll 3.7~ 67~ lu1<or 3·plece bathroom 321 ensemble 677 24 "40 area rug ........ .1 " 721<70 59 7 Lightweight, woahclble blanket In Sahara 1trlpe. Our thick and thirsty ter~ towels wlll 1lv• your .. th• rnodlterranean look In '''f''' Machlne-wa1hable nylan aetJ tank, lld and 1eat cover, In deeptone colors. mid-summer VALUES! quality • • 1amaacas 147 Neotfy .. tallor•ll J111Mlca1 In wanted 1olld color•1 fin• t1uollty fabrk1, many with permanent·pr••• fin Ith. lound out thl1 •••· 1on'1 wardrobe •• , bwy ahead for next year I a11orted ladies' shifts from 3s6 Shltt·Jnto something caol and pretty I Pick up 1everal of th••• attractlv• print 1hlft1 ••• you'll find your fov• orhe 1tyl•1, In rM1rvelou1 colors and prints. W•shable, of course ••• many are "o-lron. All 1l.r;e1 In the group. 5/BxSO flat vinyl 5s3 garden hose " ' Stays flexlbto w:hen tt'1 cold, " dollvors fuil flow, automatl• cally 1queo:ro1 out water when flow 11 turned off. cast iron 696 hibachi •pike proen sprinkler 114 Sprlnlr.le1 a ..,... area up to 32 x 32 ft. Metal con1tructlon with extra dun1ble pla1tk van•. calorado 5 9 l fan 1prlnkler ••• 1 ·lb. 1•rmaln'1 kolorcoat dichondra seed 97~ AVAILAILI AT MOST LUCKY DISCOUNT CINTERS Heavy Iron hlblichl ho• two separate grills that adju1t 10th• right cooking height. Dlwover how great It 11 for gourmet patio cookery I Whether you're 1tartlng a new law.nor r•·•••dln9 an old one, It pay1 tou•• th• be1t •••d ••• for th• b••t re1ult1 every time. Ideal lawn you wlll enfoy. 1-1••· prestone "anti- freeze 199 and1ummer coolant D•p•lt4altl• year round en• 9lne 1oollne •Y•t•m protec· tlen. lxctu1lve mot1n•tlc fllm hel,1 prevent ru1t. playtex anap-on baby pant1 59~ S.ft, wtltffproef vinyl whh nen-ltlntlln1 wel1t an4 le9 .,.._1n11, ventl'-ted 1tde11 rMChlne er hand we1heble. ploJt•• I 11UN-on baby pant• 44 auto cool cushion 129 Air clrculate1 under ond be· hind yo~• you drive In cool comfort. WC1ter repollant. le prepared thl1 1ummer. 1-qt. 30-wt. 1 a• fllmoll ••.••••••........• kaopectate DlfOrted metal file cabinets check 111•~ 'per1onal 9x 10x12·1/2 4·1 /4•9 "5·1/2 129 129 ' iumbo 1t1e 12·1/2 x 101<9 119 It'• ea1y to be well oreanlt•d ••• keep lma.ortant popera, cancelled checlr.1, Mlf• and ea1Hy acce11lbl• In one of th••• durobl• metal fll•• with ••cure lock. Th• lltr1ght dal1y design otld1 a decorator touch. Plea1ant•ta1tlng llquld formula for th• rellef of 1 09 diarrhea; 1ate for children, panty ho1e 97~ novahistine An effective preparation for 1 th• relief af nasal conge1tlon 1 9 due to colds or hay fever. • mare:z1ne I le1y·IO•toke toblet1 for 6 a~ the rellef of motion or ' air 1lckne11. Ten so .. m1. ,AVAILAILI AT MOST LUCKY DISCOUNT CINTIRS wol1tto toe •• lndl1penMbl• ,with mini skirts. Cinnamon, klge, caffee1 petite to ••• ,. t•ll 111••· chlltl'1, women's, men's 1orle1 ...... ; ... 4'!.241 - BOND JED for flovor ond !LADE CUT LOOK FOR THE LUCKY IOND ON EACH PAC~· AGE OF MEAT SOLD AT LUCKY ••• IT'S YOUR UNCONDITIONAL GUARANTIE OF C 0 M PL ET E SATISFACTION OR YOUR MONEY CHEERFULLY REFUNDED. U.l.D.I. 6RAllE I T·I PC CHUCK ROAST 49~ FRESH FRYERS • 29~ RIB ROi ~ST LUCI! IOI QUALITY IOHllED IEEf WllOLE IODI HHOE! CHICIEHS LUCI! TO ' QUALITY IOMW I lllf LUCKY BACON 73c SUCED-t·'""D r15, .-. _ FARMER JOHN BACON 79c SLICED-1·,0U•I r1c. ..._. . .• ~!!,,~~S~H 79c OSCAR MAYER BACON 88c , Sl.ICED-l·rtllllG rlC ... _, ---· __ THIN SLICED BACON 8CJC OSUI ••nt-1f·OZ. r1c ..•... _. ___ , ____ _ PORKmE lll:IADID n GOLD PA.CIC 89~ PORK LOIN ROAST 11:11 IHD-AltMOUlt 68lb FOUlt $.TAI LOIN END PORK LOIN ROAST AtMoUa FOUlt .... 78lb Disco1it1t prices on fresli prodttce ite111s SUMMER FRUITS ARE HERE! Thty're at their flavor peak ••• juicy·ripe, sweet and tan· talizlng; nature's best between-meal snacks! Everything from sun-ripened bing cherries to red-ripe watermelon! ... There art hundreds of low discount prices on the sea· son's finest In frtslt fruits & vegetables. Talce your pick naw. •.. at low discount prices. BANANAS 100°/o CHl9UITA BRAND c THE FINEST 9UALITY . lb IANANA YOU CAN IUY LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ON HOUSEWARES E BEAUTY AIDS PATIO TABLE ~)V Sh!t-rn111ut, •111y-p1tt111H top, 11 llUH II •111111•. Sllll'llJ tUular met1I 1111. fol~s tor 1tor111. ~~~ ::1't:~ .. ~. $118 DISH CLOTHS TEARDROP PATIO CANDLE AtlUCtl'lt lt¥m~l~llll IIUI, Wit• lilt-·48' tel O'l!fll): 111 cl~tro1111l1 lftM ti kltll aut' HO. Alll'd tolDl'L ULTRA BRITE TOOTHPASTE COLGATE 100 MOUTHWASH FOi LOYllS n. ,ie11U1-lut111 1111tnn• 1'11 •• W'lal' llllltttnU Jw lillMl'I aM '°"'· TrJ Ill 99'< 11 OUHC! lllCLUOES Ile Off BRECK BASIC M1lr OlldltlllMI' lr 1111 PtO~lt 'fM l1t11• ~Ir MIL A•:11 •ew _,,, lilt IN lllltr • • · llfU •1lr "~fftl", •MH It llllFI MMlfllll1, 4-0UHCE Sii! OU! LOW P!IC! VENTURE HAIR TONIC Tiit ti«1 tJPt 11 •11~r1Ul•1 t•1I co~1ror1 •1!r ~1l1n11r. 'lt'llll' 111111 H 11101 or rnu1. 4-0UHCE IOITL! IHCLUOB le Off JERGENS LOTION rrt111m111 '1 wt "-• th• •r 11w Ult lt!IM; totllltl, IOl'{NI 1111 ll'flllCll 7n.r .... 7 ..... l.S-OllllC! SIU IH(LUDES le Off BAYERS lOO's hl1 ltflrll, DI 1Nlt1;1, Mii llhclltt 6ftl ,.it f'tllff lllll»it tilflOll I ..-a1t-7,... 11 ... It.ct "' SK Mc ST ' c• . t · TIDE ' IVOR IVOR SAL~ tHEE JOY DI 10 COMI SAFE KING DIXll MOO l ICE I lAD\ SOUi tJ DI 48 TEND HYDI RITZ BREA BUH! FRf~ RICE MAH POP JELL! ~ ~ D.I C1 l -·9-·-·---~-· -·-·--------·---------------~----. __ .. _ ----:~-.,,,,_ • I ' T·BONE STEAK PORTERHOUSE TAIU llMOYID LUCKY IONDID 11111 ~ Price• ar• Discoun ted Exc•pt on Fair-Traded tnd Government Contro lled lt•ms. 7.21.10 ·······-·-··--··-··· .. ··-··-·· .. ···········- STU.I-TAILS llMOVID $141 LUCKY IONDID lllP. • ·······-·····-··············-····----··-· u.. I C!Mnl STIHDIM6 CUI Ill.LY COOl!t • Ll!G! !MD B ROUND lllM!R JOllM C:oovrl1h1 C 1•111 DI' Lucky Stom., ltM;. -AH 1uoi.i. lttMrW<!. GROUND BEEF c ~~:ix.I z:: ~~~~r ....................... 55 Jb LEAH GROUND BEEF CHUCK QUALITY 77 !a ' LUCKY IONDID ................................ NEW LUCKY DISCOUNT SUPERMARKET GRAND OPENING 9051 ATLANTA AVENUE ~ST as~ STEAK 89~ HAM 58~ EXTRA LEAH GROUND BEEF ' QUALITY LUCIY TOP lllllLITY l'ltl1 SllAMI lllf ROUND QUALITY 89 ~ I IEff IOll!t ll!f KOCI llMOYlt AT MAGNOLIA ST., HUNTINGTON BEACH DOORS OPEN AT 10:00 A.M. SKINLESS LINK SAUSAGE~~~~~~~ 29c McCOY BEEF LINK ' SAUSAGE :;~~ 31' STANDING RIB ROAST Luc:~:!!"~:i:.., s1:. CHUCK ROAST CINTIR crot:D~K~OP 9UAllTT 59~. . l.~'1~ JtDE DETERGENT t,:, ":·-·-··--······--·· 82' • IVORY DETERGENT .~0:~· IOffiL ..... 57' IVORY SOAP FLAKES " OI 82' 101 ... ---···-·- .. ·1:4t&vt.-- LE ROMANOFF HTTY CIOCICl!R 45" ILMOMDllll. MACllOMI • I ClllDlll SY.~L IOI SALVO PELLETS •;,r•:;"~, _74' f N~E~IQUDETIDE~~.~! :. DI -_, ___ 8822: TOMATOES ~?. : .. ~'.'_ ···-··---·-·27' ' " DI. """ --·------POTATOES,":.": 111"_'~~_, ____ 22· ···ket&;t.-- ITCHEH CUPS DIXIE REFILLS TOO CT. IOX .... ...... 69' COMET CLEANSER :::'· '': _, ___ 26' SAFEGUARD SOAP :~LIT"' ·-·-··21 ' KINGSFORD BRIQUETS .~::co::,_ 7$' DIXIE TOWELS ~~·~,•:._ ____ .57' MODESS HAPKIHS ,\"!,'."~. _ 11' I . i. ICE CREAM '~' .~\'. en. _ 65' LADY LEE BUTTER ::1 ,1"'::.". -~ 79' SOOR CREAM .~~~.'~"".'"~--·-·-29' .. · 1:4t"&tt.-- C.H.B. PICKLES ~~~~i 1om1 .......... 5 9' TEHDERLEAF TEA :r:, '" ___ 63' HYDROX COOKIES :.~·~,' "'·····-·-47' RITZ CRACKERS ::11: .. , ____ 43' BREAD f,~~~~TlO~~f ·-~~~1.'.~. ~~-~~~,~-··---25t BUNS :••i,~sT r~~~ M-~~.1~ ... 0~.··~-~~~~:~ .. -.. -31 ' FRENCH BREAD ,'I ~a~;~:.. ___ 41 ' RICE CHEX ,\":;~· .... __ ~----48' MAHATMA RICE .~":;, ,.,, ______ 20' POP TARTS ·~~~·:;~ "' -·----· ··-----46' JELLO DESSERT ."~t";: .. ______ 20' ~ ... 1:4t"&tt.--. \!;? ~ WATER SOFTENER WH ITE KING 79' 112.oz. IOX . ..... . . U.S.D.A. FOOD ITIMI' COUPONS Gladly Accepted • AS 8' ' ROGERS PETITE PE " II. "' . --2 PORK&BEAHS \:,r."::. ........... ____ 16' TOMATO JUICE ::":0.':. ____ 24' STOKEL y APPWAUCE II DI. w 21' BORDO GRAPEFRUIT .~~\'"w ___ 39' DEL MONTE PEARS ,, "· "'·-··-··· 47' HUNTS CLING PEACHES II IL ... 29' ~-··/:4t&v!.-­w~ -CREMORA IOllDIN 'S POWDUID 69' 16°0UNCI JAR ........... . Hl·C FRUIT DRINKS .. oz W ....... _, 32' HILLS BROS. ~~ CIL 87' HILL BROS. ::'::' .,. __ 11" HILLS BROS. :"'~. W .. -'2" IHSTAHT ·:~,. ·:::· ~~'. '1 " BORDEHS KAVA ~":~',.':~-·---1" OLIVE OIL ~·::~"... ___ _ ___ 85' SALAD OIL :.~ m . . ... 53' ~--·~Iktt.-­w ~ACCENT SEASONING FOR 'ADDID 6ftc :~.~~CAN -· . . "'I NESTLE QUIK ,':':.'':..~ __ , ___ 47' PLANTERS PEANUTS :r: .., 38' KOSHER DILL PllPS~" ~~-~ 54' CAT FOOD ~· ~~ "'~-~-'~ .. , __ 14' FRISKIES I:.':' J: ''~-rn~·----___ 17' GAINES DOG FOOD \:'~, ..... _ $1.59 HI a.ASS DOG FOOD .ll ~-$2.39 .. LUCkY IONDID ............................... ·---~---, I n;sco''"' prices on 1res1i I delicatesse'' itenis! I Ou r LOW Evel)day Price! LUCKY FRANKS ILL M!ll-lU P16. lll~L l"I~ 45<1 59': ,,_, ORCHIDS FOR LADIES THURS., JULY 23rd 10 A.M .. 6 P.M. POLISH DILLS ~" 11~~.~.~-.. -·· 54' HALLEY'S CHILI ~·~. ... .. .. 41 ' STARKIST TUHA ':,',, ... -·· __ 34' JIF PEAHllT B!ITTER II OI. , .. _J 1' KERNS PRESERV~ "::':,'.'~!. ···-·· 58' SANDWICH SPREAD ,·.~ m __ 46' LINDSAY OLIVES I :1~~ '':.'_"''._ ·39• ORANGE JUICE ~~ '''········-··· ........ 46 ' ···~"&tt.-- FAVOlt WAX ~~~:~AN . . ., .. ' . 69' FRIED CHICKEN :'rr~ ,JHu"·--'1 " FISH CAKES ~"::. ·-·,····-·· ·-··-·-31 ' BREADED SHRIMI' l"J:~----11' ' KOLD KIST STEAKs l:Wi~. ~,'.',.. 73' BEEF STROGANOFF ". .. :, •;::_ ___ 51 ' SARA LEE CAKE i~ ,r;::. 79' PET R1n PIES .. ,, ,,, 34' ""'" (,,...., ,._,,., Qllln, .. ~, LIMEAID ~'',":, ':!: _ _ _____ 13' SWAHSOH DIHHERS II Ol "' ..•. ,, 52' ···~"&tt.-­ "fRSHEY'S SYRUP ~tgf.OJ-tJE .......... 24 ( BROCCOLI SPEARS ~~":,'.'\,,, . __ 32' CORH OH COB '!':'' .... ·-·-····· __ 48' BIRDSEYE ~~· ,;r.·~·~11! ... ~~~ .. 41 ' et' tlkM 1"911 W/Or-1-t CHERRY PIE ~~·.t"~ __ ...... ..... _ 89' VEGETABLES ,."·.,,, ._._, ... _ .. _ 38' f'lth_.... ltllt c ... h-. ~· C#r"lll) COROHErS .~1: :'...'.'!~.~".'. .. '1" MAR·KES BURRITOS 1":: J ~~-55' MAR·KES TAQUITOS ::g II. "' .. 65' BAG-0.PIZZA \':' .. "~:. ___ .. _79' BAG.O·PIZZA ,'~" .~r... .. . . .... 89' Von de Komp's BAKERI ES • We lake tlte Way Y.ou Would If You Had flle Time • FEATURING A VAST AR RAY OF FRESH IA~ERY GOODS e PIES e CAKES e COOKIES e IREAD AND OTHER TASTY TREATS. GRAND OPENING FEATURE· TUIS. THRU SUN. JULY 21 ·JULY Zt AT THI Nl'W LUCKY STORE ONLY 9051 ATLANTA AVE., HUNTINGTON llACH CINNAMON ROLLS ~ 9c Ptlll. OP •••HT ,,,,_,_,, .. __ .. _,,,,,, ___ ,,_,,,_,_,, _________ .. L ....... few tte.t """" .. tw. ,... ....... . 111•·· ..-. ~.,, ... ,.,,,, •• "' .... ... .... ,,,... ............ ,.. • LMily. "IEY IUYS"' .. .i",, ucll;& ;._.. ,_..._ ., ·.mdadlnt•J' )S!WJ 11111 ll•aJll ..... -... lllo '°UY IUY" ......... lill I "" .... -tll1rl ..... _ .. ,._ ... ~,.. llldi"" • .._-an nr -Jtl ,......, .. "' HIATll IVllYDAY SAYlllUI • n o DAIL v PILOT •1 U.Wl:INC• l!STllADA "°" t 111 tdlf uc:u-r ,. 1n1 ,..!r 1.•vte by loPtt;htl ,01orlng ._,.. 11lcl1M1S wc:fi .. tro.rlnt, llplnf er ,,,..,kio>t, 10,..11111 ~ ~ by ,. ........ Ml'l\ll •tr•• 111~ - ""Ir 19 pr011i09 Conltfll Wllrl ,... Mrtrr NII;, Tl"'"9 It 119'!! .. lrllf "'9 llPI of ~ IWllr -· ....... -wl"' rn ·tralrof, Ill-I _, plM1lfll •l«t, Sltetltiflt k li9'0wtillt wlitl>t wll!VI llA(ll '""" !fie I.Cl. SofM - riwn l1kt ""' _.., 1nrt<tkloi ol • wti1i. Mio ettlict arllll!lll 1tM MlrHM. :wen t"ll«li ,.., be 1.,..atc11lfl9 -PIHllfl!I wtien -IY 0DM. °"' tar,,.... II<' ,,..._1ttic.ld IMllCll- lftt C.,, lffd N dlw-llltmlnl. l'W N 1tl!lfnlllf "' •II l ll!Kfi ol hllr U•t. ~ "" '""' --~ .. /Joust of Estrada " .. --~ ......... ,., """' ........ NC'... .., ... , .. NANDY HINT l'llOM 'THi MOU.S•• ('"r N II POlllll "'-"" I !loocl 9IW 1or ........,,,.., DrOI< ... cldn& 1nd lnlnf -lieu SIN!! l19fl'U. MOt'-lARCH BAY Dl\UGS .Spect"a-lisls M the f.ost ,t:/,-{. of Sen1!cs • Lo5melics Ca.Mies Gi~ls If .,,. Aoi!l h-.vt i,t ... bJC, IJ.{1\\ O<kr ,\.) NL"J~'-'E. II · 171 So•ttl Co-.t Hlgllwcrr Mt•r tlle "9191 lltvM ~ ~~7~~~~ W•Ttll IS M•Kt •~tRUll .PEANUT 65~ BUTTER _ "' MIMQIEJ f\R.L 1 • rtlSU'QTMS POUNI Roasted & $olte d In-Shell 39c REGU LAR PRICE 55c Save 16c .... ~ .. Th11rsdu, July 23, 19711 B ik i ni Ups Sala A t Station OCEAN CITY, Md. (AP) - ''Some guys come in and get 50 ceots wortii ol 1as. five times a day," reports Carla $rubf.ker, a 28--year~ld bikilU- clad gas statioo atteodant. Mil$ Brubaker is ooe of several shapely girls f n swimsuits 'o'l'bo pump gas at a service. station off U.S. 50 west ot um resort town. 1be girls, wbo eam $1.'li Ill hour, rate the job u bttter tlwl average for summer work. Let J aetson. a co-owner of the station., $8.id be first hired gjrls as attendants last sw. . mer. He began with two, one c! whom be married, and now has eight girls working at the station. he said. Using girts to pump gas, check oU and clean windshields has brought a reported 50 percent boost in business. Jacbon attrlbutes part ol this to the girls' Jo- dustry. Trage~Yi Recalled At Fire Station : • ' ' ~ l s.vfa!-maoiiho .,. a cn>Wd ol _.. plhered at tht ~-Ftrt, ~. • , ~t w• durinl tllO February, 11111 11oods. Silverailo had -pll1ly ........ out, and the only 1::i:i•lo and out ot t.bt. canyon ~unity was by he • TM, ftni ltl~, bUDt at the base of a towe.rin1 hl_P.. side, wu the Jul JI-ol refu(e 10< maey memben of lhe _,....,iv. . • l"be:ll""' it bappeDed. The weight of the water was t11 mud! for )he hlllmM to ,bear. A nwalve landlllde craalled down the hill. Tbe am4 and rocb ~ a Iara• tree, ......, It lllto a batterlnc ram that miohed b>lo the fin staUon. • .' ' Flva peOfllo were killed undu the crey lki<1 ol Fe!> ruary 25. ·Another crowd gathered at the silt of the station Sat. unlay (July II). But they met under bright, sunny Hi• and sooll>t the 11111<1< afforded by those wne old lreu. They ~'llbere ID honor the five who bad died under the muddde, and to honor two other fireme.n who had died ol hefrt attac:b while serving tbrir commwUty. Followiqs the memorial, &ervices, the new $85,.._ Silver1do Fli'f Station wu alao dedicated. It wiU house three pumper1 and a rtSCUe-salvage unit. Under the direction ol Count.y Fire Batallion Chief Bill Alderson, SI men will be on pa.id call to protect the com.l mwt.ity from fire, flood and other disasters. Red Sch'ool Flops- Chinese Seeking lnte1lectuals' Help TOKYO (AP) -Mao Ta&--•·we need not worry eveo twc'.,1 l'eVOl.utlonary ph1n to If there are a small num!w tum OffJl Red China'• educ1-ol people who rtfuse to be tlonal aystftn to workers, re-educated and dine to tbe peaMnts and soldiers has bog-beaten track."' Jt said. "Cta.s ged down in near..failure. He struggle js protracted and -called on the country'• • much-maligned intel1~tua1s to such people JnvariabJy ezilt. help. 1'ft' we need is to cany on 'Ibis was the tenor of a deep.going crltidan or their lone article today in the old ideas, and pay close at- theoreticaJ journal Red Flag tention to · educating and wh1ch ruiewed the two-year-remolding them in \he coorse old ~l of Ille educatlooal .-.lutlon." Diltributed by p e k I n g • r °"< ol !he dllllailties in Hshlhua ne'lt's a1tneY the artl-tbe educa~ upenment, cle hailed the fact that Red Flag indicated, was a workers, peuanb and aokliers tendeocy by the work~ "~ have ~ted university plat· m ~~op o ll z e ev.e~n •. forms and c 0 n tr i b u t e d Chidinf them for this, 1l wd: »0melhin1 of value to the ··workfrlg class leadership in ·educaUonlt 1ystem. e~ does . not. mean But it said that 1 majority monopolizing everything. or of the prlcinal teachers have been retained and that they are to be all~d to carry out their "ideological re- education" by themselves and as they eonti'nue to teach. OWJ'Whelml"I everything by crude methods, or placing and lahding the imelleetuals in a pa!l!iiYe one-pu..91-0ne-stcp posi- tion. Relying on the revolutionary lntellectual!l and bringing their Jnltiall\le inkl play w i 11 slrelgthen !"Orking c I a a s 1eadershlp instead of weaken- ing It." It said Mao's Idea or "letting • hundred flowei-s blossom and a hundred schools of thought conll!nd" -Id be put into practice, creating an atmoaphere "in which people ·dare to criticiu and argue." It gave ita approval to the lntroductkiil of technical in- novations, <:onsultatioo of foreign books aria reference material. "We like it. the girls Jike it and the COIDpagy_ lik~s it -wC1ell inoii gas," Jacbon Financed by people who wanted to honor the de~ through a~memorial, the monument was unveil~ 1by wo-· men from the Sllverado Fire Station Au'xiliary. It read:' "This memorial dedicated to those who cave their lives In lf!l'Yice to th.i! community." Beiide it are the names ol the dead: Hobart F. Eash, Hobart Pigmon, Richard R. Black, Montell H. DeWitt, Robert Hendricks, Mu Nell and JanJe Schrowe. This Is a sharp reversal of the dictum that they should first bt re-molded by the pr°"' leteriat before bein1 fitted into the new e d ucational framewcrk. Loretta Young Wants Out of 'Myra' Scene CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) - Cleveland attorney Richard Bertsch said Tuesday that, at the request ol. actress Loretta Young, he has requested 20th Century Fox to remove from t.be mov1 e ''Myra Breckenridge" a clip from one of Miss Young's early films with Tyrone Power. COO!ider legal action in the oase, whether or not 21>th Cen-1 tury Fox met his deadlin e for removing the clip. He said f use of the old footage was unauthorized, was an invasion .of Miss Young's privacy and damaged her reputation. SOUTH COJIST ''" ... ' '"'"""•~···· said. "They always are polite. and you can:t fool them on credit cards." ~-------------------' Besides tbe frequency at Y.tiicb 50Ule custcmers stop by for small amooots of gas, Mi~ Brubaker said, there is sometimes another unusual skit effect. ··When we Meck oil, old ·men get out of their cars and come around to watch," she said. • ''I guess they have never seen a girl do that before." Gas station work isn 't for every wurnan, however. Texan Offers to Sell ' Hiroshima Photos • oo Aug. C. Di.DOD said ooe ol the shotJ was mapped a few moments after the erplosion ol the atomic bomb from the "Enola "In order to help the te.achm meet the needs of Socialist eolleges as quick1y aa possible, we should persist in uniting with, educating and remoldinf them while usln( them," sa!d Red Flag, which speab for Mao. "'lbose who alleged that 'we should not use them unless they are completely remold- ed, • in fact fail to see tM revolutionary enthi.mum or the i,.Uectuals and the pro-. trac t edn e 11 or their l'emoldini." Bertsch saX! be h • d teltgrammed 20ill Century President Richard Zanuck. demanding that !he clip be removed from a IOdomy scene in the movie. Bertscll said he was a friend ol Miss .Yoong and a member of a law firm which has of- fices in Los Ar11eles. A b'PQkesman for 2oth Cen· tury Fox said that deleting the segment from the film as quickly as Bertsch asked would be impossible because "we have 400 to 500 prints of 'Myra Breckenridge' distribution." Opt• Ni9htlr, 6:45 111.111. M1ti11" S¥11doy, 1 :45 II'·"'· HIROSHIMA. Japan (UPI) -City oCfJciaJs have turned down the offer of i former officer in the Anny air corps to sell his coilectioo ol pic- tures of the World War JI atomic bombin1 of HJ101him1 for $5,000. Gay," the B-29 aircraft that released the bomb. The need for them has pr()o ven ·ao treat, the article in- dicated, .that even thost who h•ve resisttd the aystem and tho.!le: who are not judged qualified are to be given °a way out" and invited to con- lribull!. Bertsdl said he had not received any reply Tuesday to bi1 48-hour ultimatum to the company to remove the portion of the llim ·s11ow1og1 --------- Electricity Comes to Town HART·s LOCATION, N.H. (AP) -Ninety-0ne years after Thomas A1va Edison invented the electric light bulb, elec· tricily has come to this tiny White Mountain hamlel, the last New Hampshire com· munity to be electrified. WAllTED! TOO MUCH FUN AT SMILE ·A-WHILE DAY CAMP ~: 14SIZ '"'tr. laula••• Why: 5wha k....i e S,.,,. e Craftt e c. ........ Tri'"' e 0ftfllJfMI Wll•: loft & Glrh 4·14 ...... Ins af tcllffl , ....... Yo11r Clialca: 1., Dtry, W • .ti, M111ttt I t WlleJe i11111m.r. Na Ml1ll111111 Slt a·a, RtqtitH '°' .... ., .. & 1.t."'""4M 894·2312 C11l 53Q.3333 A spokesman for t b e Hiroshima Attn.le B o m b Museum aakl the offer came from Elm~r Dixson or Tyler, Tex. In a letter offering to sell the pictures, Dilcrt said that durina World War JI he wa:ii: a member of an aerial recon· naissance unit stationed in the Marianas Islands and had kept photos of the Hiroshima area u souvenin. "If you are interested in IMff<:tHl!ing Ultse photoo for the museum l will sen them few ~.000," the letter react The Mahi newspaper of Tokyo published an interview with Disow today, alon1 with one or his photo1raphs. The paper s!Ud Dixson heads a small air conditioning com- pany that employes about ~ penons in Tyler. , Asahi quoted Dixson a! sayina that his unit took about l ,000 pictures a day ol Japanese cities that were targeta for air corps bombtrs, before and after attacks. His file o( sir Hiroshima pictures was taken between April 13, IHS, and Aug. 10. The city was le veled in history's first atomic bombing ~""SICC~-lt ~-fell ITI (.614,,,_. UNI OJ"QllllUIY OAMICAL ... ~ AN ll"P'' 'NT •1.11CT1W CWOMltr:M CtU ii 1'W. WE 14M "K ll&T TIT~ WOllCS nl ~TOO<. IW~ LMIJNI. MllSIC ClmllMf IS l'llllll. GOii& TO 1'1115 "-SC Ill OAllolA Mffot. A spokesman for the Atomic Bomb Museum said Dillon Miss Young and using her voice. He said he has asked voice. He said he has asked that the film fi.nn advise what steps were being taken. w a.1 advised by mail thit his pictures would be accepted 11 a dOllation, but U..t lhe city F=========. wook:I not pay for them. t Who Cares? Zanuck was unavailable for ccmment and a 1 t u d i o $poke!man said the firm wooldn't reply to the ac- eusations unless a suit w~ "We are uncertain of the Na ath'•r 111w1''''' i,. tk1 ""•rhl ctr•• •ll•ut y•u' c:ammu• value of the pictures, and the \iity 1~. ,.,.,, ••m111111ity cl1ily route by which be obtained 11 ••• ,.,., ••••• lt'1 ttt. DAILY filed. them," the official said . ~PliiiLOiiiTiii. iiiiiiiii Hiroshima A-t>omb survivon11 Ber<scb said he had been aiihorized by Miss Young to interviewed by Asahi had THE FAMOUS JULIA HICKS 111gry reactions . Mrs. Hid< Hayashi, 65, wtio FIOM CAltLSIAD, HAS BROUGHT lost i.er huOOancl .n<1 hro HEit ANCIENT, ltAltE ART OF children in the attack sajd, G' ass cum · .. 1t is exce>sively cruel 1o • ... NG TO LAGUNA ! make such a money deal." Powell Slates Voting Appeal NEW YORK (UPI) -Adam Clayton Powell (D-N.Y.), said Tue5day he will appeal a court decision denying his request for a new election in his Harlem district, where he lost the Democratic primary last month by 150 voles. If appeal of the state supreme court decision, which he called "arbitrary and capricious," fails, Powell said he would pursue the case in fede.ra1 courts. His request for a new election. which charged that 1,200 voters in the primary were not properly registered or not Democrats, was denied because he did not file it within 10 days of the election, as required by law . EYES RIGHT .. ti. LOUIS J. HASILPI Lt ,..,..,......__ hl -.tr.tM .... ..., ................ . ........... """ ,..,. .. ... ......... ....attw , .. .. ... .,.. C.n.4 ... tltJH , wlwir. .................. i....-. ............. ,_ _,.." ·----'" .. hi ..,...., ............. , . .,, ..... II ·~ tr.• flltflla .. , •• llfllhi ~ ............ .,. -lfk: ..,...,, 0.1 .. .... """"' .... _ .. _ ~--... ,..... ... _ ... SM deN this in Mr 1hep ••• ri9ht before your •Y•• \-ene ef few artiNn1 left in the United Stat•• t• :.l1y that cvtt 1la11 i -UPSIDE DOWN- :,An interesting trip to her Tiny Unique CRYSTAL AND .GLASS SHOP will net you many surprises. " SPECIAL THIS WEEK SET OF I YSTAL NAltATAKE snM WARE MOT a COL• CRYSTAL. llEit·MUGS l •AM• •l'l•ltAVeO $4.SO & $5.SO s24oa Milk• Y-TIMI 1,."'-let Cry11.i M1Mtr1IMll Beverage Pitcher• From $4 lo $10 ~stom Handcut Crystal In n.. ART CENTIR -Opon 10 lo 5 Exc•pl Mon. 1. SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY al Mountain . LAGUNA llACH-494-4220 .. lll'fl. IAll I ITIOM JINLIT l!:vll" 11fd ll'llK• •• L-KrWfttl'll l tlo\lrllll " Mlrdl " 1 Nunt.ln II ,...,111, ll'l&nkl!lf -(lllrt\eul1r1r the ............. -..... &11n• • •!ft'll- llr .. wlw .,. • '*"-wUl+llll: w11, • Atnt•IPll fl> 11t •rtk .. ft l'lld Ir! ... "fE' 1 TM'fa -.ctar, Mii• H,..,...I I .. ,.._, ellffnl Ill C*" '"'-"' .,, --" ..... WMltol lrllldlMI " ..... ,1a_ .......... flt • mll!!Vtl tf • .. ,,. fy"' " ..... .,_ -.... --.__ "" ... " ..... •• ANTICS ANTIQUE """ .................. _ ........ T 111J T ovatt Sez - VITAMIN S -MINERALS faotari119 IMPACT FOOD SUPPLEMENT The dvn•mic: n•l~r 1I or91flic di1t1ry H1 ppl1ment which 1,.,b,~,1 1 o••r 10 k11lth b~ildni 9 •id1. WELSH'S NATURAL FOODS ' • : ,~ .... •I ..l " 3 26l FOUST AVE. LAG UNA BEA CH 494-3582 { ~ We Have A New Name appliances FOIMALLT srEAllS PlEEMAN Al'l'LIANC[ 888 GLENNEYRE LAGUNA BEACH 494-0582 WASHING -TV--REFRIGERATORS MACHINES • Generel •General Electric j . ' . • • '~ ,-. .. ''Artistry in l\lovin g" · for the BEST MOYE of YOUR UFI Cal: ...... _ ...... -.................... .., " ............... ... °"· ... tltfml tlMol ti lllllCflMt ....... .... "" '~ fMllfll ~ wr111111n "' _.,, 111(.lw .... "' ..... wlfll "" ~ Mil er-....,.,_ ., '1"!1111. •-al l loch'i< •M<yt• Eltctric • Westinghouse e Zenith • l•nt1 -· l"-~'""'"' lb•! 494-1025 580 BroaclWay .....,,, ................. ,.. _ .... _ , ............. · ...... . ...................... ........ :1 ........... ,.. t ,,., a ,._ .. 1111f1Mt ........... ,. ........... .::::.. .. :r • .::.::..-:: .. .. -.... ""· ,._ ..,.,m "' '"' .,.. f &I I s. ,..._ 147·1JJI Tlltrt II 111tM lllkll. 11' ClllM - .... ,, .. ,,,..., """' ... ~ k • ...,_ wtlldl .. '*1'11 ... ~ 1111.iv, ,. ... .w:1111f•oll.W.. At 1nY r1tw. ftlt llllll'IC "blw • lllf ""9 t1n1Mr . .......,..,.. " "" .... -.e- tw, 1t ...W"'Y tt1, ,,.... K'cwAw "' -fMflf •lltfiW clleftt., -\,ail! " IY•ON fl'•NL•Y INIVAAHCI. • Mllll 111 HWll'I ...... a'ICh ......... fa ... """ _. II• tltll.t '!IC::-._. fw Ill tM!r ~ ........... 011 ...... -------·-·----------- • TOVATI'S APPUANCES .. , ................. ..... ...., .. 1 , • eWntJnthou e RCA • Gibson BUY DISHWASHERS "'wE SEll\llCE .LOCALLY • Gener•I MOSl MAJOR. & Electric APPLIANCES"' SAVE e KllchtnAld • l' .. ,. e~--· •Maytag . See Us Before You Buy ! '( j I r . --.. -·. ' ~ . ;Stars Brighten Day ·1 or· Veterans i ~ ANGELES lA'P). ~.:.... Edward G. Robinson a pastel handshakes an9 autographs on Rogerses ln show business, in· to say a prayer. •1~ould 700. do ,(De .• favor? paintlng he had done. outstretched scraps o( paper eluding. Will, Gh)ger and Roy. ''Bless. us ttiis day , , . J' e n:ever ~n Jussed ~y J~y Canova autographed a and even nurses' caps, as Then came the handshake for.nve us our sins , . , ln a movie star. a man said, mans leg cast, then . . tour of. several wards in the r.• ~~ oyi hl;s cheek. Loret-discovered he'd been assistant stars v1s1ted veterans Tuesday VA center• s 9 5 0. b e'd Jesus' name,'' prayed, tbe tat:ll/Oung kissed it. director -0n several o( her to celebrate the Veterans Wad~worth Hospital Re~ Al Johnsoa. A radio ;·~,shell-shocked WOrld W.ar hillbilly movM!s. Administration's 4 0th a n· Loretta y 1j1 r and blared music at the foot of U!\'eteran gaYe art collector So it went, with smiles, niversary, be3utilul i~:· ~U:i:ored his bed . Ray Bolger wowed a n dress, leaned over a patient A\', man in a wheelchair • U.ST l PfRFORMANCES auditorium crowd as "Sad and said, "We're just in to tearfully told Robil\Son: "I'll Sack" with overseas cap and say hello." tell rny kids about Ibis.'' rifle, barking comm and s, She told another, "Your eyes llobinson told a bed-ridden convalescent : "A lot of it's stumbling through d r i 11 s , are gorgeous." fwnbling through the manual He replied, smiling : ''One up ·Jter:e" -tapping his head . I · ti!. · I " "1 wrui ... ~sed to have had o arms. is ar Jcia . MM.,...,. ~-------,-------·---~--~-...----.--_,,.,.....,._. Tlwnday, Jult 23, 1970 DAILY PILOT 29 . ............... ...;~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;~~~=i ' Direct from 1!5 Sensational Reserved Seat EngagemellY '' I J I • ' ! ' • • • : l ! • ' • SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY EDGAll \.EE MASTEllS "l"ulllully P'Mllc --• SI•~ ll•llllt~ ---I.tilt INCi! ll'T Buddy Rogers recited a She asked a B a p t I s t a heart attack, but I never humorous poem a b o u t evangelist facing foot surgery I ~l~et~n~· ~g~et~me~d~own~·~"~~~~ll ' . ' I FD• kES£•VATtDH5' CALL "'6-1lU 1127 N-port IMI., Coul• Mew · Fo~wsoUTHCOAST -PLAZA THEATRE San DitF fl'ffWly at Bristol • 5•&·2711 EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT CONTINUOUS DAILY AT 1:30 P.M. IO·X OFFICE OPrNI 1 P.M. PllEMl!RE EHGAGEMEHT lur1 L1nc11t1r Dt•n M.,1;11 "Allll'OllT" IG) Color 11 l'AMOU$ STARS -·-........ ~S-)lll ,.REMIERE ENGAGEMENT "WOODJTDCK" Ill.I Cohlr TrlrM 0.,1 .r 1' .. c1 ·~ MVlic Unttr 17 MllSt h Wllll l'-1 All CNr Sl!Dw "200\t A SPACE ODYSSEY" Iii) R......, Ry-clllldl C-rs '"C,l\l'TAIH NEMO AHO TH E UNOERWATER. CITY" tGI P•IMilRI SNCf"OIMlfHtl .11111 lrt--L" Vt• CltM "•t. COfllOOR" l•l Coler "THE LAST ESCAPE" (0) Undtr U '4Vlt •• Wllll l'•rl'lll EXCLUSIVE SHOWl"GI Clint hstW916-I." M•"'"' "P'AIHT YDU• WAODN'" (GP) C.ltl' ....... ~ "DOWNH~LI. llAClllS" 10 .. ) C•IDr liXCLL!StVE SHOW1NGI Clillt E•dWtoM-Lle ~rvln "l'AIHT YOUll WAGON" (OPJ t;olDr Rotlfft ••cll•fll "l>OWHHILL RACE•S" !GP) C1t1r EXCLUSIVE SHOWlllGI (Ii) Color JtrrY LIWl5 ''WHICH WAY TO THE "RONT?'' Ok~ Vin Dy'llt "CHITTY CHITTY 811.HO I .I.HG" (CJ Coler All Color Show Wimu" Hold-Erntsl aorgntne "'THE WILD IUNCH" IRI "THE LOSERS" I•) Uncltr 11 Mv1t It Wlltl P•renl ~~~ ~;;~~i~~~~~~~All C1111r S~ow Rklllrd 911rtM-G<l ... Yl ... 1 ••J91d "AHNE CF THI! THDUSAHO OAYS" IDP'J "THCllOUOHLY MODE•H MILLIE" ... l! ...... ~ C:-wy t.,... ...... ,.-.....,."""-,M.SlwllT...,,-.lllltl•i. 0116tOD.MIO' lllOOPMS.. 1"10,MG.JJO.l.ot ' I~ ,MS... l,Q), :llQ.S.211, '"°' & t.JO P1' __ ..,.... •tmaJIU ....... Q.~13-@ · ...... f!.Mhuda Of'stlrt Ctm"-/.1 Eng11gnnt11I Special llew fOIJular Prices •o a•SUYID SIATS •• 2" Child1ea 11111! 1• Mew "UOU 'f" $howtimes 1 llllOHQt,' 1tllU FRIDA'f P.ll & 10P.M. . ~'""'""""·'·~""'·"' lfi"HELLO . 11 A DOLLY!"© ·-Co11tl11-O.lly 1 P.111. "20lll: Sl'ACE DDY5SEY" "~ A DIYtf S...n ''IT'S TOUGH TO IE A 9tRP''. Wed .. Tll11r'I.., Fri, & S.t, Advll5 .... ,, .................... 1.75 J"'lors .......................... 1.u · Qllldren ••• , ..................... 11 RICHARD LURTON GENEVIEVE BUJOLD .. rm HAL WAU1S "'~ £'.Aq11tef tife tfo• De_rf ....... ..,11'1 r.l!J- FAIR f1,t, f11ir. f1tlv1I. Tho11 lhr11 worch ,um up f1clors in op•r•lion on th1 DAILY Pll01 oditori&I p•91 •Ytry 41v. NOW -EXCLUSIVE HARIOR AREA SHOWING- An epic drama of • • adventure and exploration! ::;., • . .f FUN·FILUD Co.fUTU1tl DAYID NIVEN L01A"ALllfilHT "IMPOSSIBLE YEARS" • IOTH IN COLOi j e RA TED "'G" e I For an e egant . . -evening Goach& c:Horse~ Superb D ini~g and Diincing SEVEN NIGHT$ 6 P.M. to 2 A.M. ' Exclusive Southern California Engagement -----·-~- LOOK TO EDWARDS LUXURIOUS CINEMAS FOR THE BEST SHOWS TONIGHT • * 91!ACH Bl. D. AT Ill.I.I• • ir •llT.,COA•T HWV, 41 ...... 01100 P'W¥0 M7•9009 • HUNJlNOTON 9U.Clt JACK LEM MON e SANDY DENNIS <1 ''The Out Of Towners'f, PLUS A;NTHONY 9UINN IN 1 "A WALi: IN THI SPllNG'IAIN" NOW! AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS At Popular Prices "The epic American war movie that Hollywood has always wanled to mak~ bot """ had the gub to do before~ _,.,.,,_ EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT ~ IW.AO.M rr::rue .... GRAND OPENING 0, THI ALL NIW ILE.GANT l llAUTIFUL CINEMA WEST #2 LEE . CUNT JEAN MARVIN fAS1WOOJ> SEBERG DIRECT FROM ITS EXCLUSIVE RESERVED-SEAT ENGAGEMENT ••• CONTINUOUS PERFORMAllCES AT POPULAR PRICES! "A Big Musical Hit- In The Winner's Corner!" -ARCHER WINSTON, N .... fort Po.t "Hilarious And Entertaining. In Jhe Stream Of 'Sound Of Music'!" -.IO'f~[ HABfR, l09~(11 79'1• SyPdlctlt "A Big Ba\¥dy Rip·Roaring MusicaU Howlingly Funny! See It!" ' -WANOA ~ N Y 04!"J N ... Premiere Orange County Engagement RATED Gp IT'S •C!R ALMOST -EVERYBODY "THE MIND BLOWER OFALL TIME!" Q "····••rl• woodltock NtWPOltT llACM • 011.1 .. 31<1 ' ' l ' i ' . ~ ' i ' • ' " ' " ' ' • 1 • ! I I j ,... l(CET to Present • • Bussing Program . . . . I ., \J • .., 1. • ' JULY Z3 Frid Alllll 111 a l'IC9ldln1 el a d1ulc l'ldlo .... ·--(C) (3") D lllllJJ llln.t •~ It> l30l (R) ''Gont A.COUrtJn'.• An11 M11ie ls hlrtd bJ • lroadwtJ "'"'"* lo """"" • 1111111 col11mnlt1 dwt111 • • .--.ctlMftt el 1 nst1unm _ ... '"" 11 111-(C) (IO) ""'Qoino11J, • ,, '" ... ''"' (C) (3~ om" ... ., ......, ce> <90> • ..... -..... ,. ...., (C) <30> 8 C.. Y• r., aw (C) (!O) .1111'1 e ...... 1tM (C) (% M) ''Ml 81dtt1, Roll M1rlt Ind .llCl c.rter UltiMo T 1np." • 1ue)l a:• e r.......w. Mllicall ($5) Q Sll Cl'aldl _, "3C -l :IO B UCIJl!Jl-CCI (IO) Plrt I (dr1m1) 'IS -Jamts Gtmtf, (R) "Good WiU Tout." Clllef lf•on11dt Evt M•rk Saint, llod T1)'1or, Wtr· k•ps 1 ntc:hhll 'YI on 1 uown ,.. Pet•rs. Al1n N1pitr. Tha IUOCISS IN'illct durint his rilil lo Sln of tht'WW II NonMindit lnvlllocl k fr1ndeco. BraOford Oillllllll l\llStS. It st1ke wht11 111 Allled Int.I~ e..., (C) (90) Jimlll)' Flttdltt officer la druutd tnd midi to "'8· . n. H11111 Cl•'k 111 1 11·round boq_I lit't'I tt1t ·•• ·Mt beeJ\ °"' for fot tbe St1t1 lfel¥rnltltt Chim· 1111"1 J'Nrl. pio11shlp. O f'"" (30) D llilCil !llhwN"' !Cl (301 ID TH AillblHa (CJ (30) (JI) "Just • Kid Aa1ln." T1bitl11 ma. Tl1l (t) (60) thfnaea 1 t01 saluman lntt • little boy ind he w1nts to stay @CJ) UC fftlllltl ....,. (C) (30) tt11t way. f.D WMl't '* (C) (30) "An/mil m Davl4 frtlt ... (C) (90) Artit hhl¥ior." St11w pl1r:t llo$I •llen BMrly Siils. 9 (() CIS Mm (C) (30) JtrJY lest.r, Cht"J' 01Yil tnd Dllid 1 II,...... • hpnm (30) SllYitt 111est. • (I lltlll TOM Ktll.edy (C) (IO) fD NO ....,.._ (90) (R) "Thi 11!1 Tllh 41 a.t btrlln (30) aJ C11lepin1 C-..t (C) (30) Grahlm Ktlf. Dual." Veteran newsman Maury Green will be the hoot-an- chorman for a repeat of a S{!tcial program exploring the controversial subject of buss- ing and integration in the Los Angeles City sdlools Thursday at 10 p.m. on KCET, Channel 28. In its "Bus-Go-Roond" pro- gram, KCET will present the bussing plan devised by the L.A. school board together w i th alternative solutions, utilizing a computer and animation technique s in graphic porµ-ayal s to he.l~ give the viewer a clearer picture of this complex situation. , Among the many specific questions to be illustrated are: t) How would school at- tendance lines ctiange ii every child went to the school closest to his home?; 2) What could happen to school attendance lines i! we applied L.A. Su perior Court Judge Gitelso1l"s S0.10 percent re- quirement - not less than ten percent nor more than feet integration: and 4),. What if we used existing RTD bus routes? Also included are brief com- mentJ by Arthur Gardner, president of tbe L.A. Board oC EducaUcn; 8 a y a r d Berman, attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union: Max Ralferty, state superintendent Of edutatlon; Governor Reagan, and Mayor Yorty. The final ae.gipent will in- clude a dlsCusslor. b y Gardner; Bennan; John Mack, ex~utive director of the Uri>an League; and C. Wayne Gordon, acting dean of the UCLA education depa~ ment. Having seen tbe for~ ing parts of the program in adyance, they will comment on the issues and queslions raised. The program w a s written and produced by Bill Donnelly. Israeli Movie 'Music' Airs At Mt. SAC Rodgers and Hammerstein's Broadway musical '"Ibe Sound of Music" will be ~e_sented this week by the rfiilii1c and drama departments of Santa Ana College, in cooperation with the City Recreation and Parks Department. A Z p.m. matinee will open the show Thursday aflernoon in Phill4Js HaU at SAC. 'nle performances Friday an d SaturdllY will be staged at a p.m. 1:30 D Mic ..._.ICI (C) (60). Q ""'"° ,,_. -(C) (GO) T1nt1tiWI lllesb lntludt H1l Hal· broolc, Klis Krlstoff111011, frtd Smoot 11111 Dr. P111I Ehrlich. 0 TIM: C-ll• (C) (30) S1ll1 Aa11 Howu, Rlclltrd 0.non ind ROSIJ' Gtltr put. 50 per~t minorities in each HOLLYWOOD (UPJ) 1:001141 (.JJ CIS Tll"""' Mftit: of the sctiools?; 3) How would "The Shatter~d Silence," a CCI "'HN T• Sbltf 1 WM lil!lli" other a1Lemative plans, such novei by lsraeli author Zvi <Juvanilt) '65 -Annttt• funlctllo, as pairing and the use of Aldouby, will be produced, u Dw•1111 Hickln•n, Mickey Rooney. magnet schools, educational a movie by Daniel Mann Who Tht ''bllcll Plrtf pn(' t,,. to parks and flexible schools, al· will also direct tbe drama .. help 111 1dwrtilln1 111111 In hit; 1-'======::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l:-­••rth for the typictl "airl·nul:· door" b'Pt. Tickets may be purcllased in advance at the coUege bookstqre or from th e downtown offices of t h e Recreaton and Parks Depart- ment at 1104 W. 8th St. Tickets will also be available at lhe door.' m.,, __ ,3~ @ [IJ ""' """ (IO) u (!) ·-'""'" (C) (30) D 1!1l IJJ !Ill• Joo• !Cl llOl (R) J1nls Joplln, Glen C.mpbln ind Th• Commltttt (Ulll. ail NltHll1 (60) l:IO D U (I)!!! ..... d !Cl (30) tE Ln for tlll '10'1 (C} (30) (R) "Robblf)' -Thi H11r1SSin1 ~ CIJ DI ...... (30) l " Wift.• M il·convict't 1lcohollc @II Notlcin 34 (C) (60) Wlff ICC11311 h!111 of commJttJn1 ntiahborhoad robbtrlts ind Sfl. €l!I IQlll a-rt llltlert (C) (30) frill1y 11111 Offlc1r G1nnon must Qi) SMtl a.. • U. (30) stp1r1t1 t111 truth liom tht 1111· m ....._. <C> <30> 1•tion1. 7:00 ti CIS l--(C) (30) fJ m -(C) (301 w11t. tton111t1. 10:00 a QJ oo m Tiii ....._. <C> D WWs My U.? (C) (30) (60) Cherfn NlllOll R1illy ii 1 ... m I LM tlCJ' (30) lured r11ullrly. M1rty flldm1 n II Spteill l!Jt:tt. m ....... Clod (Cl (301 0 m .... (C) (IOI @ (!)--!Cl !3~ D llllCil !BTllf """"' !Cl fJl)...,.. tile Clit.W I (30) "f'tofts (60) (R) Wht11 P'tllUp H11tinp on tht Fourth Strine." le1r111 the ClrlJI• b1nk hu ffded (B (J) Tl'llll ., r..1111111tct1 (C) S1n1trTI1'1 molution, ht p1tns to (30) · ult tile idOl'Tllllion aplnat D11ne111 B) Tr111 ~ (C) (30) ind ll)'lor. fJ ) ... (C) (60) m st•pleMQi Mw <~> m ...... '-<MJJ Ill Tllfl ~ CCI (301 fll) Tllf I•" -CC) (90) 1:30 8 QI (i) fMllJ' At111r ('C) (30) "Educatloll 111d S.ir .. 1t1on." (R) Buff}' 111d JodJ' inlltrlt 1 small CB,,. WW. Dlllhda, (30) 111m of mon1y 11111 lttni tlllt hint al) HlillCllPI CM II P"'-ti«• "rich" Cflllts lllW probll!llS. Hill (30) D @(I) !ll DnW -(C) l~IO 11111 -(301 (60) (R) "All Angel Crild." A «m• Trw ,._ (30) ncwltlltt non, the to11 aul"ri¥or of ll:CIO II Qt Cl) &I""" ('C) 1n lndlln 1tttck, f•cn I crudll a ID (l) ID .... (C) decision wllen she It r•Uld by U 0.. ltlf ..,_. Josll ct1mans. D lftJ Cil &I .... (C) 0 n.. Mwll C•• (C) (30) Th1 8 c.111 If t111 w.t (C) 1•111 of Jeny Lms. Klr11 Hunt11 m ...._: (C) •11111n An CW. end Ratill't Cummlllfl compdn .....,. (dr1m1) '46 -Rlclllrd 1plnst L•iall Tlylor·YOUllL Ry111 H1rriton, Susy Andn:lll. O'Neal Ind Lily Tomlin. (D Ht Slid. Ai Slill (C) D @(]}Q)Anlllll WtrU (C)11:15Q})(l)CIM• SMlten: ·1111 (30) "'Elapti111h Of lndt1." Holl irtd G1npter." 81ny Sulliv1n. Ntrllw BAI Bllmid shows 1111 hit· ll:J0114IJ (]) lllm l rif!IR (C) toiy, pr•nt st1to1 ind Mure rol1 Cl QI (IJ ID JIM117 """ (C) of tll1 lnditn el1phlnt. which It atlll 8 Mwll: "1111111 Vtnlict" (drl· one of the prlmtf)' "mtdllnei .. of mi) '48 -RIJ Mlll1ml, Flortl'ICI lndi1. M1rltr. Broderick Crawtord. 0 Mlltioll $ Movit: (t) ........ a m Dk:lt Cmtt (C) ONr D1rth'I(' (corned)') '63 -1J Mwlt: "l1M DlrlJ ,,... (1d- Dori1 Dtr. Junes Gimer, Polly vtntura) '6~111'1 Fond1, Robert D&rpn, 111111111 Ritltr. A wlfa, b•· Rr•n . lllved dtld for IMll Jtlfl, niturm ID ..... : .,_ llWH ca,.~ (m)'I-°" htr husb111d'1 •lddlni dty, llfJ) '56 -Rtr Mlll1nd, C11udett1 Colb1rl m Trdl • Co1111t111t11cn (C) (JO) @I Wnllfn ... II RIVilw (t) (R) ID,.,,., 111-<60> 1:00 D Mtwll: "'l.ttil StitJonsoo (dr1- ll:I 1'1111 "" the BulltN Ml· m1) '56 -John Lund, Ricltlld dl111 (C) (30) "Posture" u:mlsu 1r1 shown. IE) btlfl dt A1111t (30) 7:SICEIC-" - """'" 00-(CI m Morie: "Holld., w11t· c~ m1nc:1) '57 -Lllllt Dwyer, Ust D1nllly. l:OO G Qt CIJ "-0.,. (C) (IOI l:H D °"'"""' ''"" .... (C) Helt11 D'Connell lfld Bob Eblrte 1r1 2:00 m All-Ni&M SMw: (Cl "Thi Mlb· the 1J11Clal aunt :sl•rs. Comldy do," "lll'l'Uion of tM V1mpir1S" apob lndudt Jam11 CllMJ In •n Ind '1 W11 I M1l1 Wlr Bride." old fl!m dip, Inf JICk le11"' Ind l;Jll II "-/lht "' TMs .., (C) rr1ut.r DAYTIME MOVIES For Top SPorts Coverage Read the DAILY PIWT "THI OUT Ofl TOWNllS• II SOMIKTIN• fO Sii. WI Pl~ DICT THiii WOH'T 11 l(lOM IN THI AISLD FOi ALL THOSI ' WHO WILL fALL Off THltl SUT5 LAU•HIN5!" --IONA IAllm Wlien tllq,....,._forat•~, a.., r~....,.,..,. JICllNllOI um-• ··-llllllY· TIE OUHIF-IOWa -2nd TOP .~IT ANTHONT QUINN INGRID BERGMAN .Jl~Lt intbe ~ __ ,, -... ''IOllSE 10WE1S sums tJ .... _ ............ --a.-. ''"·---\ TECHNICOLOR• ol!ll 1 ACADIMY AWARDS WINNlll "IT'S TOUGH TO BE A BIRD" -Ah+- ''SWISS PAMILY lOllNSON" CONTINUOUS DAILY MOM Z P.M. STARTING MONDAY • Only on Cablevision f:EwroRT: Mon. -Fri. 119 PM; ~ ~"'-Sun. et 6 PM. MISSION VIE.\O: Mon., V.W., Fri. et 9 t'M """-bekft .;.; \tkst Coat TV: the original, l.llCllt dessic. NOXI R.AYINCJ: "The Gokl Rush"" with Char~e Chaplin ln1t1ll1tlon • $14.,5 Monthly S.rvico ( ....... $6.50 Enjoy 20 Ch1nnol TV F0< Only 22111< Per Doy. ''TMERE'S MORE TO SEE ON CAILE TVI" • -----------------~------'-~----------- ----------------- ·Bewitching Alice Ghostly Trades Broom for Vacuu1n . By Terrtnee O'F11berty' You know Allee Ghostley -the actress who p I a y s ESJReralda, the baby-s1tling witch on "Bewitched," the one who fades from s i g I\ t whenever she gets nervous. Well, apparently during one of her fadlnc spells last season she faded over to "Mayberry RFD" and got herself a job as a housekeeP.er for the com- ing season. A very wltchy thing to do, I would say. "Not when you understa·nd that a wllch has the r l g h t to moonlight," she told me in Hollywood recently. I had come to her on personal business because Esmeraliio is the only witch of my ac- quaintance that I trust. "It's about this ghost I have in my house," 1 began. "He's a kindly chap and has never tried to scare me but he makes a lot of noise coming and going ... '' "My dear fellow. the 1ady you should see is Mrs. Muir. SHE'S the authority on ghOsts. t•m a witch. And there's a big dlfference. Ghosts are dead folks. Witches are very lively and they get around a lot faster," she said. "Well th en, as witch, do you believe in ghosts? "As a witch 1 believe In anythhlg the writers. tell me to believe in. But they are .NQT ghost writers, you un- derstand.'' "Not even when they're writing for Alice GHOSTLEY? I asked. 1 guess it was the wrong thin!J to say beca~ she began to fade immediately. Either that, or my eyes were starting to dim as they often do during TV Movie Approach Applauded HOLLYWOOD (AP.I -You might say that the ABC Movie of the Week "'How Awful About Allan" was 71k years interviews w i t h television stars. When she came back into focus !he was saying " ... and put a string of garlic around your neck. It may help." ''In an ITALIAN nelgh*hood?" I ci'ied ... He'd go for that garlic like a Neapolitan cab driver!" Try laughing. They're not coming around where people are laughing at them . Frank- ly, ·I've never thought it was prudent to dismiss either witches OR ghosts. At least not where they can hear you. t ,,. Certainly not after tl1e s ucne~ fire th!$ sprin.it anyway. nfre entire· set for 'Bewitched' was burned. All, ibat is, except Elizabeth 's room ! While it'• being rebuilt we're going J.o Salem, Mass., for some q- terior shots" 9 '[ "Isn't Salem a rathf<r strange place for a trOu~ of situation comedy witc~ to be going? I've never exaeffy associated Salem with fun as far as witdles are concerned.:' She agreed heartily. , "l THI 01.A'Ol.ll'ST MAN Al:l'IE-T.lKl'S ON A '#HOLi ,A!lfi'Y , a.INT :EASTWOOD ~~.,.,'Ii& o · SHIRLEYMACLAiNE ~Wli TWO MULES FOR SISTER SARA 2nd BIG WEEK-MATINEES DAILY ,. r I In -"t •.'I EXCLUSIVE ·A!lEA SHOWING CALL 673-6260 FOR SHOW TIMES • ' .. I " The Deadliesl Man Alive .. I A ., -· _-... TalcesonaWhole nny.;.., .. ti sm~~~OD "TWO MULES FOR SISl'ER SARK ' ~ A UNJVERML PICTURE · TECHNICOlQR•· PANA\llSIQN• CO"'f/ in the making -but it really!-==== only took. 12 days to film . This.---spooky tale s l a rs Anthony Perkins, Julie Harris and Joan Hackett an was writ- ten by Henry Farrell. whose past works include "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?" The reason it took so Jong is that t.he producer. Ge<irge Edwards, said he first called FarTell 71h years ago and sug- gested they do the film. They didn't get around to it until recently. Perkins says he much prefers the 12 days . He took lime out from directing the Off~roadway production in New York of "Sleambath," M which he also stars. "l find the TV ~movie very different. but it's the way I think all movies should be made," said Perkins, who was wearing yellowish pajamas and a blue checked robe for a scene. "It's fast, it has spontanlety. It brings out the best in an actor. It's sort of like doing a live TV show, in a way." Perkins. the chaplaM. In "Catoh-22," said, "The bigger the budget, the more stale the actor. The more time you spend on set-ups, the more lime . the actors sit ar0W1d. Nothing is harder for an actor than waiting. "On 'Catch-22' sometimes y,·eeks went by without a set- up. \Ve had 26 set.ups in one day on this." A set-up is just what It sounds like: the setting up of the camera B'11d lights ror a take. Tony sat in a chair, tying knots in a piece of golden cord as he coMidered whether he wanted to become a direc- tor full time. Previously, he directed the road company of ''Star Spangled Girl." "I don 't want to give up acting," he replied. ''I tblnk someone ought to be. able to act a.ld direct. I think the fact that I've been an acior helps me to direct and I think that since I've directed it's helped me to be & better ac- tor." He tied another knot In the cord and added, "People seem to be very suspicious of people Jn Ulls country who can do more than ooe thing." EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COU.l\'TI' E.NGAGl!J\IENT ., NO IESllYED SEATS C•1tli11uovs PtrforM•11c1s S .. rtl T•tll•' MONDA'I' TMRU FRIOA'I' Al 6:00, l.00 l ID.1)0 PM 5ATURDA'I' 1:30, 3:4-0, 5,30,1,00 l 10;00 PM • N 'l'l:00.3,J0,~:~0,7•30 6 9.JO PM, • 'WMll1 Pl:'lllUClll'lllllfl &imM••llflmllllt Miiii. AMIKENIOOlSllLM AlAN AllKIN • .. ~\;\\-·i~ (,~ ........ . JDSWll MlllR C.\'cl1tsi-11t OraHgt Cou 11ty 1:.· ngagemcnt Special New Popular Prices NO RESERVED SEATS Juniors only 2" Children only 1" New "DOLLY" Showtimes 1 MONO AV THRU FRIOAV 7 P.M. & 10 P.M. SATUROAV ANO SUNDAY. I. 4. 7 & 10 P .M. mir:m . "HELLO , DOLLY!"oo , -· Tony, wbo plays a man su!· feting from psychosomatic lr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,_Oiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Oiii .. ' blindne53, was called back \0 the set. He and director curu. Harrington went over & scene in which he has to put a record on a player by feel alone. Behind the camera and 11ght.IJ. Edwards said, 1'Tony ls an incredibly organlud person. t ~nt the script to him in Ntw York and he said he would do ft lnslanUy • FOR ADVERTISING IN _THE ;, WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 . " - ' -., '' '<.'\; ' •· ' ·----~ OAILT PILOT HOUSES l'OR SALE GetWr11t 1000 Gener•I 1000 Gllner1I 1000 Gtneral ---------· * * * * * * * * * '" .. *TAYLOR 'C ORONA DE L MAR CONTEMPORARY Fbr lhe young at heart and just two years new. One block to beach & short walk to shops. Custom built wilh fine quality detail. Ocean view and deck off huge master bed· ~m. By appt. Go Conlemporary, Go Span- i/lh. Go See! · HOME FOR A YACHTSMAN 'Exclusive Linda Isl e! NE\V 6 bdrm home on lagoon. 5 baths, fam. rm. + RR, 3 fire-. »Wees. Spac. master ste, w/walk in closets. ~ ' i169,300. pPen Daily 80 Linda Isle ~·aur 25th Y ear" ;· ~. '"':PLEY N. TAYLOR CO., ~ ;..,_. Rrlton ti. 211l San Joaquin H ills Ru d EY(PORT CENTER 644-4910 * * * * * * * * :t :r:al "!· bH __ l'OO_ms_· -. - T-"9ths ··Pool • ,1 ., ~2!:?.0!.. ... ;'s to believe ii. Located in lfst Costa ?\fesa area on ~.lined street It's in ljautitu.I move-in condition, th hardwood noon, forced · .heat, double garage, r lot adds privacy, t or traller acceu. Step ving bulit·in kitchen. \Vhat can "'" say, ~ it. .+!ARBOR BLVD. • 546 1640 Cl'EN EVES TILL 1,30 eDLDEN WEST ESTATE ar 4 tJetlroom, 2 bath . _ f. Model with cus- t , ·~ts and drape~. • 4utton kitchen, FOR· llining room, SEP AR. famUy room and s& UOED inuter suite, As. subject to 6~% gov. nt loan. $37 ,900 FULL lDDD 4 Bedroom 2 Bath $25,958 Located on seduded cul.de· sac street IN N 0 RT H COSTA ME.SA. $16,(0) loan at 51i4 % for anyone, Pay- ments S1l6 mo. for every. thing! (Open Eves. 'til 1:30) Newport at Fairview 646-8111 (anytime) FOR THE TALENTED YOUNG• COUPLE: · Excellent Ooor plan with 2 bedrooms, separate den and 11,2 baths -in 1op Newport neighborhood.. Two fireplac. C9, spac:e for boat or camp. er parking of! alley. Nf'eds ''HER" ideas and "IDS" handywork. PRICED AT APPRAISAL -$31,000! POOL />. n /) Go s~::d'!~lppln' ol.inJa .J6l e STARTER BARGAIN !fyouw•ntapool-yoom"" PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOM ES see thi.s home! Beautifully """'"' indoor swimming CUSTOM 4 TO 7 BEDROOM HOMES poo1 -heated and tittered FROM $135,000 TO $500,000 and wry Private. The born e it.sell is iri better than model PRIME BUILDING LOTS home condition with 3 king FROM $60,000 TO $175,000 r.§.t~ 6 lh ? 111 '1"ReA.LTY "'·~~~·[1 1 f}j II.\\ ,\ Ill' IC II Ill II.I\ 1\1'. a.!7.e bedrooms, 2 tiled beth.!!, For Information on professionally landscaped All IOts & homes, call: f \' I ' ' I' INC. REALTORS NlAR Nll'll'ORI PO ST Offl(f CAMEO SHORES Investors Attention! MARVE.LOUS VIEW and manicured front and rear yards. Assume existing Bl LL GRUNDY, REAL TOR VA loan. Annual rate of Ill Dover Dr., Suite l, ,N.8. 642~0 HZ-4471 <:::: J MMl OJI sir,. Total moothly payment ~~!!!!!!~~~~!:!!!~~-~~-'!!"~~~!!'!!!!! $196 including tcxes. lfurry. Call today, Here's a real steal near th@ 4001 Bayside Dr. Beaut. Large 3 BR. borne situated Catmery In Old Ne\\·port. shake roof },sty, 3 Br. 4 ba. on 1/3 of an acrt', with hid. C-2 Lot w/i:ooct 1-Br. plus watl.'rfront honie, xlnl swim. awimming pool, in park-like oUice. Priced at $21,000, rnlng beach. NC\\'IY rederor. lil?lling. Beaut. view or hilb . 0\\'nf!r needs cash of $7,500, $1~,000 SHO\VN BY APP'I'. Wa lk to t ho Beach I Neat l clean 3 &: Fam i.'or· ner borne with ahalte roof, boat gate, outside 1hoYt~r. etc., in lovely Newport WHI borne. Owner moving out of area. Anxious. $32,500. ~G,;;".:.;"°.;,r;,;•;l;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;l;;DDD; Genera l lDDD 262' HARBOR BLVD. 546-l640 OPEN EVES TILL 1:30 EASTSIDE SPECIAL 3 Bednn, 2 bath home \\'ilh beam ceilings & mOdern ex. ter!Or. Huge play yard aDd owner \\i ll sell no down to Ve1erans! $26,850 (Open Eves. 'Ill 1:301 Newport JUST LISTED 1800 SQ. FT. MESA VERDE MESA VERDE CREAM-PUFF $12,500 thUs Y.ill sacrifil'e at a price 8 111 Grundy, Realtor 00lfi~1if:Ulf!.....!: ;eh:ch ~!,..~~tle8!~:-~ A~~ 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 6424620 ltiiffif4t--·-6754747; 673-9000. 0\VNER _\VIU. FINANCE Open Eftnin&1 Adult occupied all ill Jile, ~~~~~~~~~~! ae· •-p,_. A in th.i8 3 Bedroom 2 £&.th -, 644-2430 133-0700 EXEC'a dream. Sale by ~at t_he tight money marker ~ 541·5110 ownt>r. ing uan<U1u . ., 1 •• il R ' Co fMll'O... 1 beautllul 3 Bedrm t Cam-BR 3v RA fam rm '10x19 Pus am Y oom, rona OLLEGE REALTY i bridge homr. with outstand-Co1ta Meta 1100 ~I . One r:U detac~d l.'On· del ?ttar Charmer._,OnJy 11,J •1500AdlmlMKnlt.tM • ing Interior decoration. H11ge talning 600 sq. ft . Beaut BICX:ks to beach. 6 Jot, Ei. ·~~~~~~~:!'!• used brick fireplace faces FHA R 1 brick wall encl patio w/w elusively Ours. W E'RE SOLD CUTI an expansive picture win· es a 1 c,...tg, d ...... , Ideal' loc. To Inspect Call 673·8550 Anractlve 3 and family rm. .... ....... Ustfnns Needed dow. Very attractive land-with boot entrance, good $67,000. Open 10 AM Daily, "3 scaping Mmpletely 1;prink. 5~~ % rnA loan to assume. 1724 Port SheUk!ld P l .. NB. We won't call you untU )'OU ter controlled. ~~% Loan ,, ..:644-51.:.:..c:.:::89:_~~=~-call us! · v.'lllk to ato~s. schools. On1Y1· 25 ~-rt asswnabl.e. $36.500. $25,950 or offer. BAYFRONT I-'""""""""""""!!!!!!" • Years "'""r> enct co: Ts . WALLACE REALTORS _ _,,54166-44141- (0pen Evenings) Open Evenings BUYERS ATTENTION CAM ~O HIGHLANDS •We Buy Equities Vacant R-1 lot 88 II fronf. Charming 3 Bdrm., xlnt cond. 84.7-8507 642-G42T eves: -5~5·$1110 ~. Ovt'r l30 fl. d~P. Un. Cl.a~s lanai _for your rnter. m ! ( el*flt i.trl) belil'vably priced at only tn1n1ng, BJt.111 oven, range • 1 • iJ; f f4'1' i LLEGEREALTY $2500 front 1001 & dish11o-shr. Pt'rfcct loc. 1 ,L,..,.J.,.,1~·n 1 lSIXI Adlflaal.Htlilr,Cll · . Quick poi;sel>li ••• .... ., ..,.,...,.., ____ •1JoNES REALTY 1,13.G210 MORGAN Re •t f•irvlew 646-1111 (anytime) Seldom homefl available in this area, located close to park. schools & library. Home bu near new carpet, huae master bedroorn & beautiful large living room -When you see the back yard, the trees will make you think you're in the Red. woods, Owner will help tin.. anoe, only 10% down, Don't!'!!""""""""""""""""" FOR SALE BY OWNER 2001 w . Balboa, N.B. 67U642 ~;IZS9 3 UNITS I l f =~ house.i v:7 ~e DELUXE spacious 3 BR & 2 BUYER with Ca.sh wants 4 Blcks from ocean I: lot $69,500 Spectacular 2 wtory with miu seein1 this home -It'1 probably yours at $34,950. · Nichols Real Estate 546-9~21_. white water view _ walk to "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'""" sandy beach. 2 Massive fire. -= plaCl's and 2700 sq, ft. of immaculate living area. Call 54"'424. • * .. • We have l\\"O openings for an experienced professional man or woman. Eic~lional benefits!!! Call 545-8424. Here it is. 3. bedrooms· $22,950. Unbeliev•hlr but true. For $'.?2.950, you gel beau1i~I wall lo wall deluxe shag l'arpeting throughout, new tiled kitchen and bath, :\ bedroom11, large lot, IOYely back yard' and patio, Low down ntA. Set' this one NO\Vl LEASE WlfH OPTION" . 4 BDRM DR ;& FAM. de ~ • r;r Pee ~cl" · BR four . plexes. Exce.Uent. view home in Corona de! your tenan!J: make th!: i ttn P'H · ~ne f ~~· Owner OCt'Upied and tax l\far. 3 Br, 1 story. 673-8916 pymnts. 1 ng room. ouse JUSt re,.,,. fll 210 . '-======'===-o-• ..... Uln ....... 847~'' I · ted \Vil! JI VA sheller property_ .,,., 1n.1 · 1uy .-u,.......... ....-.u ~ {1{~~21 Soo se or come, $75,000. $15,000 Down. Ba lboa Peninsula 1300 ' CALL ' EVENINGS PERRON 642•1771 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! OR WEEKENDS e BY OWNER e WE.ST BAY AVE. LmLE MONEY NEEDED 67US61 Charming new 3 bdrm, 2 ba. I RfAL £STATE MA ~T TO MOVE IN. Stunning .4 Upgraded b~uU condo. 3-BR, Mediterranean style; Block h"•• bodrnom•. Do"bl• fiu. WHAT!! $29,000 21> BA. L•k• ~w. l42.500. !rom "'"" & b".Y. B";tdcr'• REPOSSESSION! , place, Bullt in desk. FOR-NestlM i homes ranging to 644·1629· • home. top quality. Larne 3 to 5 Bedrml ' t.1AL DINING. Family + . 45.000. See the ocean 4 Br, pool, Baycre11t-likc Bill Gr undy, Realtor Some-:ith 3 bathl, all homes room. GOurmet kitchen with from your front lawn in a new, Fee ti11e. Fam, rm, 833 Dover Dr., NB 642.4620 newly painted, Good °ierm!I! : buUt ins. Move In for option sectuded area of c .M. 3 BR. gel loan, nr. schls, 1hop1~~~~~~~~~ HAFFOAL REAL TY to bu)' money and redo~ 2 ba fjin Rm O,.n Agent :><;::lh!28lc::::::_· ------ 11.bl" rent. JUST LISTEO. 1160' Glc~agl~s Terrace, DOVER Shores -Owner 51 L:;.l;;;d;;;o..;l;;;•;.;l•, _____ 1;;;3;..:51 '!'l'"""'!'~l4'"2'"-4405~""!'""'"""' Call 645-0303. Costa f\fc1&, Calir. 642.6657 br. bay vu , imm. OC<', reas, "'Near New 4 Bedroom FOREST~· HOME + s:!'d term&. 1712 Antigua Way. law son Built-ins, dlshwuher, car- INC. REA RS 5 ... •:,>-..:>tc=l----=-d 2 ba'"" b' INCOME ELEGANT Hom!'. 2650 sq LIDO ISLE ~~ $29~=·Take 0~;; G.~ NE~3LR~~~CH Relirlfl&' owner will sell 7 BR. ~ 111 press~ie:ic:~~r, 1:i:.~!eu~ Bd~:us~ loan, $3(XXI dn. will handle. 5 bedrooms, spa \l.! PATIP 2 BA • mo&t furniture, Now Y OWllf'r. ' . . 40' lot and spacKK.is patio. Courtesy Realty 952.7751 and 3 baths. A ally pat U9ed as guest home for aged . ./ BAL. Penin. l Br. Larae $63,000 Brochure on reque11t.l 0~B~D~R~>.-I .c,.,,,-.-!o-,~-..,,-. .-i.c-.,.' famil y home on "1iet TREE-Wonderful potent1!'1· $30,000: patio. '45•950. Frank UO Via Pliermo. OPEN wfopllon or rent, Padlic , .. LINED 1tlftt leav. $5,000 dn. 646-8lla Marshall Realty 67>4&00 SAT. J.~, Sands. New at.&; l'\l&. ing 1tatt-and prieed at COZY COTTAGE. Nerdtt , 1210 LIDO 5 BEDROOM redecorating, Tl'e:mend'1 juat $34,950. , )'OU DO some tender, loving care. Newe;ort He1ght1 l..8.f'Ke paneled living room, value at $19,500. P h i '~er&Lee Realtors _ 7682 F.dina:er Colesworthy 84~ 541)..5140 & Co. REALTOR Newport Beach Office 1028 Bayside Drive 675-4930 262' HARBOR BLVD. 5461640 OWN THE ! Just ll.1t. Largl!, &<!rm with heavy of BR. Latlti llvini mom, dining room, 5 baths, Brkft 536-433l or {2ll) 254-1761 eel SEE NO 1t1hake root and large lot~ · · · , BY OWNER 3 br 2 ba -Aski S2J 500 b · 't firepla.ct, k1tehen, dining room. 40 st/st Jot. Leue : , • Walker ,. ·Lee FHAn! VA 'term;av"anuamb!e: rm: family ~m. Beautiful option available, $89.000. crpt, drapes & 1and1C1.ped. t-"" -'" NB Hgt Assume lo intereat Io an, CaJJ 545-3424 South Coast pa ":t *;;;"'"" '· LIDO ELEGANCE r Majer Shopping able lolln, Near So. t Plaza. 4 It. Fam/din \vlth s* % FHA loan I •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii., This one has everything, for. mar dlnlng, lge family rm, musive master bedrm, 3 oll:ter good sized bedrms, .11.ttrac 5paniah like exterior. Just 'listed and easy to see Drive by at 2029 1t1andarin, Mesa Verde. OPEN EVES TILL 1:30 TOTAL PAYMENT $127.00 PER MONTH Real sharp 3 bedroom 11ome, luxurious bath. Freshly painted In and out. FHA Joan of $15,400 at 5% % an- nual interest rate. You can't beat it! Separate service area. bbl. garage. Forced air heal. Completely fenc. ed. Deep.pi.le carpets with matching drapes. New tenns available. CALL! 3>43 Weatdiff Dr. Realtoni App 0 y. 846-5.l8J Perrectlon e~rywhere you :"c'=·Olll)=·=......i==='===:. ' 646-mt BREAD & Butler Unit.!' 2• BEAUTIFUL home i11 Nwpl turn in this "like new" 3 Ope n 'til 9!00 PM 2 BR homes, income $26.'i. Hgts • 3 br, 2 ha , Jge Bdrm, 3 bath a n d dining 1 _F_ou_n_t_o_in_V_a_l_l•~Y __ 14_IO e over, Showa like a I. BARRETT RLTY 642·5200 ble on this neat, clean 3 Bedroom living with brick tiftplace, c kitchen with dl.sh- r, , .A ttal dandy al 3 bedroom, 1 bath, ....... p- $ per mo, Take over loan • Price $17,950, Brok- , DUPLEX 2 B(lrm., 1 ti., Ea.11slde 9" 6" ~ loan. $34,950 RTIN CO. 6<12-51XQ room, 21tory, new &hag rpet~. tun price Ut.900. tQJ payment 1153.00 ptr . Broker .545-9491. SPEC14L ! Harbor Vie w 'Hills Spacious View Home With 3 bedrooms, 2¥.i baths Family room & fire place Sunny view breakfast room 3 Car garage Large enclosed yard $57,500 HAft•Oft "'"'..,., "Our 25th Year In the Harbor Area'' 673-4400 • )llcsti\ ?ro1· ·~colt}' 546-5990 Newport Beach mo, Priced al $27,500. $2500 fam rm w/b!g fr p lc , room ho tnr. Prime Iocallon DR'1 HIDEAWAY dn. 1993 Anaheim. c.~f. 642-8972 with ~· on Via Genoa. ON SECLUDED PRIVATE Day s: 83 0-3140/eves: -.-·· $93.500.Brochureon request. DRIVE. Beaut. custom mod. -496-3893 University Park 1237 BAYFRONT TRIPLEX ranch home. <I BRs. fam rm, 273 SHERWOOD "La Sa lle" Lido Isle 3 Bdrm, 3 Bdrm, & 2% bath11 on appx 1 li( acres. 1 Bd 3 R' ht Big 3 & family Eastslde, C.i\t is th<-nnrne of this noor nlan. rm. car lf:'Bl"age, 1g Comp, air ronditioned, love. '' .. _ .. _ h 11« ~ B Asking $29,950, °"'lll'r may 4 Bedrooms. 2'iii Bath1. Lgc. on t,...,. ....,ac . ....,,........,, ro-ly w/w cup &. draperies h I Jease option. Call Glen lamily rm. w/private cour1. c ure on reques . incl 22 Avocado tree1, n> ft rorralt,-..~ horse bam & Queen, Heritage Real Estate ynrd, ''Tinkling'' fountain _in howanb lowson j Jl . Wa Iker & Lee .tatk nn .. ICaY trade', $69,500. ~115l entry cou1'1',y~rd .. 2.StY. hv. R.eoltoq A bit of country~ Peach, ap. MAIN R'tALTY, REAL-3 BR·2 BA-heavy shAke·at· rm. Frplc. in ilv. rni. & 3416 Via Lido 67;)...4562 pie, pomegranate &: lemon Realtors 'JURS !>45-8977. trac. comer loc. w/ boat mstr. bdrm. 2500 Sq, fl. of Call Anyfm ::::z:=:;:;:=:=:==:m=: or trlr area. \Vlll sell below good living: Prime Joe. on 1 e trees, flo\\-en;galorr., park-2790HarborBlvd. at Adams ----------.. _,, ~ h 111 'ARGE HOME $23,300 ASSUMABLE Yes, 9.al'lwne this 8% F1lA Loan on a Beautiful 4 Bed. room, 2 Bath home. All new carpets & drapes, Excellent cabinetry in kitchen with built·ina. See Today! I Call 546-2313 " THC RLAI, 1R CSTATCRS FHA oppraisal. Qnon house green...., ....,t\\'t!en s u r . '- '"" yard wilh lhis 4 Bednn, <>"9491 O"" 'ti'I 9 P 'I •-......, '' FHA LOAN weekends. 545-8771) bonrd Cl. & adult swimming 5 Bedrm., family nn., xlnt -LA-WEEK fam rm home, v;ith all mod. .., • --coovon•'•o-s, •.xt•• A MOST ! BednnthOme, 1%. baths, DUP'EX .~500 Ow r pool. S39,SOO Price lncludeH stre<'I to street .fS ft. lot. 3 BR, 2~ ba, 1-fam rm, ~" •• ' wd d ... ' ...,, · · 11. "Forever" view. By opp'l only. %' storage-garage, ?t1ariflt'rs • • • hrd • crpls, rps. lvng.. 2 BR, c pt f d r p , Bottom dollar $30.900 CdM school diltrict. Satisfying l•mily • home frplc, f ed air heal stv/rer, gar. S3000 dn, inc BOB PETTIT, Realto r $97,000 5\4% auum. loan. Open House Sat & Sun 1•5 Every comfort has been $26,500. Asswnable 1'1-t.A $300 mo. 2244 State, 642-7-172 "SINCE 1946" Owner may trade down for J 714/839-7839 PRIME 2001 Lee-.l"IJ'd, Baycrest esnbodied in this 4 BR. 3~ loan bl118l,~7• 15%~0 i~tcl.) Days 83)..0101 N ights CBdd~'"1 ·,,~,.11m'.'...,i,n" Tv',."',w'"•o ·-w-N_E_R-,~Lg-.-,-bd-.-,~,,., DOVER SHORES I I pay& e .., , pet tnO. In .1.1-•a v--...1· J 110 I>, I ..,.. • VIEW J830 Smith, Reaftor :: o~e~ffl:·0~m~ti1;ai~ Prine, Int, taxes, Ins. ;~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, SHARP I I LIDO REAL TY INC. l!t: $Z2,~~~ mo total. Lara:e <I bedroom home ~·ith lighttul kitchen w/blln. BBQ Well1-McCardle, Rltrs. . R..Nihl' ff ' 3 Bdmui., family roo1n. Gttol 3377 Via Lido 673-7300 \VIII take 2nd. 968-l4M 411paciou11 hRths; all electric -==·==W..-=315=5====1 lor gourmet cooks. $63,500 54ltlO..!_ewpr>rt EBlvd., "AA~~ ..,,..., IC ome greenbelt Joca,tion; I c .!I ~ <15' lo1·S~2,500 --------- kitchen; dining room; mar· ii """"""""m•--• g..,, .. ,, ver. """.......,.. l:uidscaplng ma nt. than apt. $7500 down. 3 br. J~' ba. ·-------- ble fireplace & huge living NO i=.iA'NCY S'OGANS OOll'!~V.jmIJE!.........!: t -+ -. LAtn 4 Bedrm -family livine;! $3.1,950. 67!°>-2643 or 497·1265 Westminster 1612 room. Landscaped in a m&n. lwitlifi>nest value"'_ so dil· ltifujfji5••illiii1id . LIDO \;TERFRONT formal dining • great pool e Red Hiii Realty LESS THAN RENTI ner to maintain an open feel-tinctive. 90 charming, ao Ul-0700 '44-2430 APTS.-m LIDO NORD home. Immedlllte OCCU· Univ. P~k Center, Jrvlnt' H~ngton S.ach 1400 4 Bedrms. 2 balhll, carpels, In. & lo ·'low maximum . N-~DUC ID TO pancy. Owner will take low Call Anytime 833-082n d 1 -~ -· ... irrestible, without a doubt ""'" do t I OVER'OOK rapes, a.rge Ycu-u. r • ..,.... View of Back Bay, Only PAINTER UPPER 1 wn paymen or ease op. ------""' ' t t Lo Be h ont-of our best 0Herin1t1. $160, .Xlnt Terms tion, TURn.E Roek I yr old . 4 THE CITY way minu es 0 nt ac · $89.500. Call for aPR'I. 3 Bedroom, 2 bath home Vacant lath Ir plasteJ'. three 6 Beautlht!' unt ta. 6 c.t ga· J Srn'th R It BR, fa~ nn, ATRIUM, d1n Try lo imagine a quiet C'Ul· Only SI64 pe.r month. 6\~% Macnab-Irvine Reali.)' Company 6424235 675-3210 ----§ ___ _ with an entrance that will bdrm. home. Large lot, good rages &~ptillty room. \Vith ean I t ea or rm, patio, sprinklers, 2fJ de·sa.C street. Large 2 story, FHA of $18,500. Ful.J prlt't. ma~ you feel Ji~ you are neighborhood. Out· bl towtl 1 II) fl i ' on excellent air, CTptl, drpl, bookcases, Spanish adobe with 3 car just S2'l,500. Courtesy Realty gtiing out of lhiA v.wld, at ov.·ner s&Ys SELL ·. SELL ·-IWimm· ,beach. Units Are 646-32.SS nr IChls, poola, courts. pk. garage Enter home thru _o;>. __ 77_5_1. _____ _ only $26,950 wllh EZ 1ern1s. SELL. A bargain at .on!)' newly .,t. Avail by ~ ht. l.160. mo. Spanish wrou&ht iron gate & S21,950. Low.Dn. convention.. Bill 'G y, Rultor BYOWNER Yrly lse. fn<ll l.U-1692 C"*""'led .......,.-.ard. S.•ut' ·S---A--H---1-._..., li • rHA·VA Term1. -. " N.B. &42-4620 .... u .. _ .. _ -..... ~·~ .. -•.n!a __ na ff•. -PA.ut.WBl'ii ..... _ o.w Cuatom .., ..... t, 4 unu•n, fam. lul 4 Bedrm home with 2 ;;.;.;;,-;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;, lal'l)ain Hunten CAlll'IABAN M. M . La Bor-, Rltr. • · lly rnom, 1 big """'"' ... Eu tbluff 1242 ""'""'· tormat dlrung $2l,SOO aa.&l.TT co. 646-05&i Eves: 646-4519 FOR· EBY OWNER This beautiful home over·_ . _ rm, fam ily rm & a. black POOL HOME 2, Houses on or:ie ·Joi, taree HARBOR VIEW 3-Bedtoo •houae. Very !up k!Ok.!I the 171h fairway of BLUFFS: Condo S bd, 2~ leather den, a perfect place bedrool'Wi, near Costa MllU. 1093 Baker, C.M. 546-5440 5 Bdrm. 3 bath Broodrnoor fenc@d. •perfect for chil. :P.Iesa Verde Golf Course. ba Spilt level cholor.1 to unwind after a long day. J Bedrm., hv.·d floors, 18 x Anthony pooJ, all on parlc le clubhoUR, By •P. """"'""'""""""""'""""'' I home Corona del Mar dreq pell, Paneled Jlv. 6'.4 asswnable loan. 3036 grttnbell. ' S38,5oo. By Aa:IUme an existing GI Joan · Im r -• $29,950 Priced lo s~U at $67 50) ing Rouse Juat fresh-J ava Rd. 5404095. $62,900. owner • .:.iA....49(Xj a~ 6% interest at $282. ,.r 65' x 135' lot. Priced at GJ appralaal $25,500. Veta dn ; Ji1IA lo dn. po1n en 0111y. l 675-l'62 ' Jy pain( . WW" ad.I VA ot ~ mo. With 6:1/4 Loan )rf4. . Colleae_P ark 1115 Irvine Terrace 1245 Loch en my er ~(· 11to1 1800 Newport mvd.,' C.M. CA1.L'6f6.3928 or 545-3483 Open Evenings BLUE PACIFIC VIEW Lp. <I BR. 3 ba. home bu evef')'thing Jor the ''Good Life". Pr:lv. pool It patio; 1~. din. rm. A: !am. rm. llltertain at home or priv . beach. $84;750 • ~\\t-~ 13i.o7" 644-2430 BeauUtul family bomt, entry JtW.TOJt CA' EVENIN. GS • -If 'hall, 4 bdrms., huge family Cotit•N·MAwnNI ANDNl&EKENDS FOR .!!ale by owner • 4 tlr. 1721 GALATEA .i9om, dining room, plush c:==l ll •llll :.... 1'7M.MI , 2 Ba. Lndscpg, bltn SBQ, OPEN DAILY l to 5 t6W7l ( - ) 546-1103 BRING $$ & SAVE " FULLER REALTY 546-0ll•· aha& carpeting, qu&Uly built-cov. patio. 5%. %. $28,000, 8arTCU Really 642-5200 . -· )n•. Pork-Iii" yoro, •prtnl<-$24 000 STEPS TO OCI AN "'"""' GI NO DOWN UTJL >cl. 3 BR,. Jen. 6%.% annual rate loan 1 3 BR.· '2 be.tM. Ab.olutely ---\VALK 1U BEACH. 4 Bcdnn, Urpl, WfW. Av•IJ noW. a.111Umable. 5f0.1720 4 Bdrm. 2 ba. immaculate! Owner anx. Newport Bea ch 1200 ~_!!,el M•r 1150 l~ BA, s.ep tamlly rm, elcc BB~roi<~or:._ ___ _:~~ ''We sell • home Owner desperate! Prime ioua. I;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:=;:;,, kit •• approx XI()() sq, rt. De-- eve ry 27 minutes'' are• t>ream all buflt-ln Try $25,500 Wllh 10% down CDM clgned tor t"mily entertain. -L---.-_-ch---1_-,I TARBE LL 2'55 Harbor kit-. dining room, '""" CAYWOOD REAL T Y ~ DUPLEX Ing. aguna -a ·- optn till 9 Pl\f ~i.~irat Umt on martet. 6.106 w. Cout Hwy .. N.B. i;;:::::J, ~ ldeaJ ror tllf' "owner occu. 14'7-8507 • Evei : OOS.U7I F AMILY SIZE JUST TARBELL 2'55 Harbor e 541-!2'0 e pent" "'d har<I to !ind II ~ 1J ilp 4 bodroom, 21> bath OCH t ACRE eu..n c 11 y BAYCREST oo!y , y, l'-.r j "~ viow "'°"· ovw 2100 ... It LISTED MODEL HOME w/"°'b otyle "°"" • yn 1970 Top Voloe . 1"1<• 4 159.000 :'it', Large '!L" !&milt IWOI, l\fESA VERDE homt-that Avail now • th\1 spacious • eld. 4 br. 2 ba, wall lo &drm + ta.mil)' le: formal On beaullful tree lined tru. -•• un ttreplace1• Secluded ~ mows like a mode:I . .f B@d.. Br. 3 Ba home. Fam rm. wall crpt., Intercom din., 3 Baths A service 3 BEDROOM, FAMILY RM l BLK to OCMn, J Dr, 2 auitewtth prlvttedeckbuU , room, 3 8Ath, tri·k:Vcl, Hlah Jae din Ir Uv att1o1. w/vlew. throurhouL Obi I• r • i e porch. Custom carpeti It. 2% !JATll UNITS cty Condominium. Frplc, over double ltraae. Sever. on the hW with a VIEW. I«e atrtum, view kit, oompl wfeleclrlc aaf'l&'e door drapes. Home .l gardtnt In excellent condition and In eltc bltns 2 car gar 11 , at levtl1 provide spaclDus- Ira cha,,, l cltan. $46,9!0 cp!d, drpd, wallpeptttd, ~~· ~~jg' tool v.Fu·otlll """" !~Olll)1n evA•vaflry.waybl' " !OP rental area. The most Balhl. Pailo. Spac. ~nd: neq • prlvaey. Only '42.!k!O. . • .. ~2JlJ lfondM:&.ped. 1106,000. Roy J. P Ce .,_, . • e for !ht leul In Corona del nd bid Want Re11tor, 1430 Galuy T t FIC BUY now. Ca.II S40-U51. Mar today. iurrou in&' :ri 2 poo!S FOR Sail -$482.000 • Modtrn home with-frlcate frontap. Btil'll financial 1tattment ' c . Quintard. Realtor. Shor! 1-o THC RI:AT. ··'"'\. r;sTATCHS Properties Port • I d e A -'======== Dr. 646-1550 (Open DaUy). S\SOO 1nkt. 3 BR, tusl. Call Us Qutck. 615-8650 aw:;. ~ for ·~~P~~ DON'T JUST WISH tor bit lrit, Dbl 1ar, Pat'c, Cor. '9f..M86 eves A wknda. furnishings for )'OUr Mme, ral for pony, 2 sheds, I-luge find pt.t buy1 In today'1 lot·all tncd. Shade /trult 1.;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;~!\_Jt!l!llllllllJD~A~IL~Y~P~ILOT~~W~ANT;~AD. ..A&tan ji REAL ESTATE . I 1100 Gtenneyn St. • Forward of City Hall . \VANT ADS SELL! 642-o56'73 Ousifled Ads. tttt1 .• 91'2 or 784-08TI. Olal 64W678 6' charae U. ,...;;. ....... =.:..;;;;;;._ __ _ 494-0!73 -~ 1 I I ~ -.. -. -. . LD-y PILOT Thund<1, J•~ 2J, 1970 l;ls l'Olt SALi RiNTAU RENTALS RENTALS f --"'-~.....;---1 -l'umltMcl ~h. Furnlahod Apts. Fumlahod RENTALS Apls. fumlahod RENTALS RENTALS RFNTALS REAL ESTATE Gtnerril ~ L.,._ BNch 1115 ~ s-.. , -•Is 2'10 Nawport Beach 420tNewport llaarh 491 CootoMooa Apt&._~....., I-:-:-"""-::-· _U_nfu~m_lsh-:-od ___ Ap-'-1-s._U_n_lv_m..;.1;;..sh.;.od;;.__ 41• c .. ta -. 5100 Hulll"'!!!!! Beach 54mHuntinglon Bnch~ ~ooms fo, Rc;.•:..•..;.l _;...S99_5.1 ' ' I e HANDYMAN SP!lCIAL • -= 4 UNtr -..1., aer:an Ude Of e BALBOA 2 Br, TV. nr bW)' a,ppoox. JSO )'di, tram oe1an. ba¥ A • h o p • a . beach. Groued $9.000 Jul SlQ)-.$150 v.·kly. Avail mo. yr, Ndl. paint A: dwnlp 61S--5llO « mier. Price S69.500 WD..L o·"'rx""1u"' ... '-~Gvde-~•-,C.c=ttaie=. TRADE. ' bUt1 from bch. Pvt patio, MISSION REAL TY f!M-OT3l JlOO ._,kly w/util. 4gg...a)7 * OPEN HOUSE * LIDO, LINDA "''· ..,...,., 1°" Daily Portatina Llguna Dr. " Penin, watrrtronta * SUNNY * * ACRES * * Motel-Apts. * SIUdlo A I Bedrooms LO.V RATES Dt.y, \Vfl'k ot Month e Color TV e POOi Is Phone Serv incl FAIRWAY VILlA APTS. 2 & J BR's Private patio, pool • indll', laundry fac. - THE HIGHLANDER "Scottish Treat" 16161 Parkside Ln. Mgr. 142-1969 R."1 P!Jt. hOme, w/1M1>1tle ki t. priv. lilatu~ 11urklng 11v- man. $lrl mo. 5'W-6620 LGE furn roo1n, p\1., bomr kitchen pr~v. Nr. sbopplna; -centers. 5-19-1061 lfomes Ir: Bulldlnc Sltff off-\1.·ater Udo homes 1 Up NYH Pl. ·off Coast llwy. Bill Gntndy Rltl' 642-4620 \; V"""11a 8'ac•"'"" RENTALS • Mald Servi~ avail 1 Signal So. of o.c. Near Oran&e Co, Airport UCI. Adulf1 only, :!0122 Santa Ana Ave. S&n Diego fr\\')' to Beach Bl vd, 4 blk1 So. to Holt, \V. on Holt 1 blk. l·tO!lfE ;tlme)lllpherc AR. Prk~ Sp:J.C:C', kil. 11rJ\llJ. $60. lD'il Llotl~·n Pl. C,\1 .. tl8-8207 PRIVATI-~ ruo111 J· buth furn N, 1·nd l-a<,:1.1na fll•a1•/1. SSO ii nio11H1, 491·12:;.'! PLACE REALTY ~ Houses Untumllhtd 2969 So. Coast Hiway - * $33,50o * General 3000 \Valk to Beach, Xlnl te:rm1 PLACE RE.ALTY 49l-S704 2969 So. Coast Hiway Laguna Niguel 1707 VIE\V HOllE • l..aguna Nigultl., 3 BR, 2 BA. Jenced. $32,850. Owner. (714) 495-4439 $95 House trailer. C?il 2 Bednn tots/pets OK $105 2 Bedtrn, Costa 1ttl"Sll $125 3 Bednn, Collta Meu. $150 4 a.drm. totJ/pets OK $185 6 Bednn, all ldda/peta S225 STAR*LET 547-0063 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY NEW 3 br. 2 ba, home, S•n Cl•mente 1710 TUl>t.irr llleadov.-s. Firplc, I ~'---------din'g nn, blti.n, boat & H.IGH on a very high hill ov. trailer aceess. Kids OK. erlc~ the \Veste.rn While $295 mo 544-7752 aft 1:00 pm 1-lou~ &: many mil~s of Pa-$225 INC uU 2 Br 3 Ba cific Ocean, :mo SCZ. ft. of ~'!\Nie. CID, d is h w ht. gracious liying. 3 Br .• 21/r Chlldr/pet ok. SH., lge fam. mi. 'v/im· BJue Beacon, Bia. &p-Olll mense frplc &. gas B-8-Q. 1 Large <.'Qtncr lot; secluded $17.5 • 2 BR. ~· trp c, /b ._ .. 8 o.n-cptd crpt8, drps, Easta1de. patio w """ . .,.., Wue Bea.con Bier 645-0lll "'OOd floors, For the dis-• · criminating home -seeker. $140 • 2 BR. low~r, chldrn $70,000.00. By appt, only, A. &: Pf'tl ok. Gar. l!A:: "ill R. Scheele, Jr. ExclU11ive Blue Beacon, Bkr. ,,........, Broker (714) 492-515-1. Pride of Ownership Custom bit. duplex, No. or J-"'\\y, nr. Golf Course. Good residential area. Spacious 2 BR. I< Jge. 1-Br. This ill """"" property". MORGAN REAL TY 67~2 67~59 s.n Juan C•pi1tr•;c"°;:._ ___ 1_ns_ DOHENY Beach, Dana Har. hor 1 n1i. from unique CW1tm 4 Br 3 Ba w/extra guest kilchn, Cenlr patio, huge garage + alle)'. boat spce. $36,900, EZ Down. 496-3377 RENTALS Houses Furnished Cost• Mesa 3100 ·'---'----- 2 BR. Gar: Patio, crpts, df'p!, stove, ttfrig. Bamboo Village ha! privacy .It quiet fot mature adults only. 0-.\'!lhvn Of. From $150 • $170. 54S-7134, 544-00.2. 2 BR. h.!e. Crpt It drapes. Lg. ''°""' ynl. 2658 G. Orange Ave. $175 mo. E. Side 3 BR, 2 BA, crpts. drps, bit-ins, Quiet st, $245 l.se, Call 837-00.7/54.8-6330. UNF1.JRNJSHED 2 BR house. Adults $135 mo. 2 5 2 Sherwood, Ott ~ 2 BR. house, u.nt. Cpts, drps, 2 children ok. No pets. 2077 Wallace, CM 646-2719. Ganaril 2000 Newe,ort_ B_•_•_ch __ 32_00 :.:.... ___ _ $137 .50 • UTIL pd. Bachelor apt. Nicely tum. Poot. Avail 8/20. Active, Bier. 534-6980 $130 • I BR. a.pt. Fncd yard. Garage. Wshr/dry. Child ok. Acti~. Bkr. 534-6980 2005 2 BR .• + gar 1 car. 1 blk. to ocean .It redec. Yr rnd lease. 1 l'hild O.K. Day 531-9101, alt. 5:00. 642--8678 3 BR, lam. nn. bltins, 2!.k ba. Lg, liv"n: rm. I< fenced yd. Nice ar-ea. S300 per/mo. Lease. 546-4Ul ...... 2 BDR)f, 2 Ba. Townhouse. ELDERLY wo. "1'1l: woman, po o I . l...t!a~Lease/opl. privt rm. share expenses i•=s~l o "' ··-+ \\"Ork. No drink or smoke. ._ _, · wner. ~ 673-2393 HOUSE wanted lo rent or lease on Lido Isle lrom tst 1 MALE or female; to ibatt September. GT".>-0054 5 br. view home In Laguna Beach. 494-7G5.' 4 BR. 2% Ba., bltns. Steps h to ocean. $3j(l, Lease "'Il..J., !than! my 0 me Ca)'\l'OOd Realfy 548·1290 w/gerr.tleman, All f a c i l, ~ btwn 7pm l 9pm 3 BEDROOM, 1% BA, crpts, I drpll, $250 Month. Ph: REFINED lady to stir love Y 64;,..2552 hm in Bluffs, NB. Priv ha ========== • all privil. $80/mo. 644--0lf.9 Unlv•r•ity Park 3237 Oakwood ... a new way to live in Newport Beach lt's run, fme neighbors and prestige liling, all in one luxurious package. That's Oak· ,\·ood Garden Apartments i11 Ne"'port Beach, just minutca from Balboa's Bay and beaches .. There's a'"' million dollar ClubhouRn \\li th party room , billiards room, indoor 801! clri\·· ing range, meu':J and \Yomen ".s hcolth clubs, saunas, tenn is cout'ls, resident 1ennis pro ;ind ·pro shop, a nd Olympic size pool. AH this. and much mote, jusl slcp~ fro1n your professionally decorated aparlmr,nl. ea1.h '\"i lh pti\'ale balcony/palios. Air i.:on<lit:ur;. ins• fireplaces oplional. Oakwood Garden Apartments On 16th Street betweO?n J1·vine and Dover Ur (714) 642-SliO J.lgr, Mn, Joachim, Apt J.A ALMOST new 2 B@drm. 2 S'I~ BACH Apt.. MM only. 8A apt w/trplc. Sl85 nlO. S!Wl & up. 1-2 Bl\ trin. Adulll only. "No pe1'. Im-lA QUINTA HERMOSA Fairgro1Jnd11 1376 Newport 8.1\l'd. 548-9755 l31 \V. \Vilson. Clot. 548-95n, mediate Jl()!fSession. A,;:ent "Modern Spanish" 642-1265 s-t&-4141 ~-~~~~~~ 16211 P•rkside Ln. -*-.s'"u"'s..-.C"'A"'S"IT°'A"'S.----1 Gracious Adult Livln1 Mg r. 147.5441 - Furn. 1 BR. Apt.. Adults 2 BR. w/w cpta, drps, blln FURNISHED MODELS NOW OPEN only, 00 pets. ruo Newport RIO, spir st:r'c8e, frplc. 145 Lush landscaping, cabana, covered court· Blvd., C.P.1. * Ga!l286. E. l8th. 557-6682. $l90. yards, sunken swirn'g pools. BBQ's & foun· *"*\VKLY-Lovel,y &pl Bach 2 BR, l~~ Ba $160. CpUdrp, tains. or Cp.I. Furn. Kitch, $35 ~Uo, pool, bllnl. Seacli.ff ''THE ULTIMATE IN APTS" ~~-~~i 998 El Camino P....anor Apta. 1525 Placentia 1 BR's-From $150 2 BR's-From $170·$175 548-2682. Ask about our dJ& All t"I ' I F & U f }.jERAI?.fAC WOODS hf'w count. · u 1 • inc • urn n urn. luxury 1-2 BR, air-cond. 42.11 °"=,..,-~==~=~ l\1errimac Way. 56-6300 See VILLA MESA APTS. Newport Beach 5200 Huntington Beach 5400 2 BR. Priv paUo Htd pool ---:;;:--• •• class SlOO 2 car encl'd pi-Otildren 3 BR. 3 ba. Frplc, pool. BEACHBLUFF APTS STU D I 0, Utilities pd, ""elcome, no ~ts please! $285. Baytmt 2 br, 2 be., Ne"' 2 Br. 2 Ba. Poot . Gentleman preferred. After $165 mo. 119 \V. \Vilson. $300. Al[!. ~ Dsh\\·hr, patios. 8231 Ellis. 6 PM 642--3234 64~1251. 842-8417 Of 841-39j7 Beautifully furnished DELUXE 1 & 2 Br. Bltn IRVINE 5238 ATJ'RAC. 2 BR. $135 or $149. bachelor v.·/util, P.tature atv &: <l!hwhr, pool, encl All extras. Poo~. Kids/pctJ;. aduit. No pets. 548-1098 &"«rage, a1J util pd. From NOW LEASING• ok. 1743l·C Keelson Ln. LRG, clean 1 Br. Pool. \V-$13>-$110. thlldm welcome. • 847--0325, 8'17-7446 side. Work'g cpl over 35. 241 W. 'Wllsorrno. 5. Ne:-v. family and ad.ult un its NEW t Br-blk to bt'ach. ;135. $120-util pd. 54.S-2407 ~8-7405 \\'ltlt total recreation rJub Prlv pat.in • QUIET~ c::i r, 2 BR turn in family section. $170 and pre-school. l , 2 &. 3 Single adlt.s, couple. 2{12-A Pool. Na''." Palm•, 111 E. • B l'' B 1· bl I bdnns 1rom $150. Nr. shoJ). 14th. 536-1319, 673-178-1 .. '1 r.. 1 a. pa JO, t· ns, · tr bool J 22nd S 64" .,., ,. pmg, go , SC s. ust t. -.xMa crpts, drps. Ask about our south of San Diego f'\\')'. on Newport Beach 4200 B,t. YCLIFF MOTEL * LO\\" \VEEKLY RATES * Kitchen, TV'1, ma.id service. Heated Pool. discount plan. 880 Center Culver Dr., Irvine. 833-3733, St. 642-&40. HARBOR GREENS :t-lR~'/:e~ls GARD~ Ai: STUDIO A.P'J'S Chvned and 1.tanaged by Bach, 1, 2, 3 BR's, from $110. The Irvine C~mpany 2700 Petenon Way. C.M .. ,,,..,..,..,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!O * 2 BR l~I ba, patio, pool. S165 mo. ?tlora Kai Apl~. Ea.st of Beach Bl, 1~ blk oU Garfield. *LOVELY NEW APTS Near Ocean & park, l & 2 Bdrms. 425 13th St. 8-17-3957 -=-~-=- 6000 Income Property -----'--- OCEANFRONT t! 11 p J r X • Nl'1\po1·1 2 Bdnu. u11!1 s $10.00U Ot1\\ n 1.2 A<:RE!'i Rnkrr ~1 .. ('o~ta !'\l,,si1 $!9.000 On , 7 j'~ on haJ:Hl\"C' lll':1h1nr1n111·1i U.wp l Co11u'flt•rt·l;1I l!kr. tii.t-6700 ci.JSfu,1-G'""""'Uni~ prln1r In<.·. 0\1111('f'ti 4 Br, clen, 3 Ba + 5 h7; i<:lurilos; lpl,~s. patios. l"'cl $198,500. Qv.·11('r rr. ... <'J(J.1.1. HNTG. Beach -:;:zo !Ith ~I ,'lt'W Spurush t;up)('.•:. Z1,• blks 1o OceaJl. LiYr ill 3 BR. rent 2 !~H. $15.500. LlNOBOJll; CO. ri:J6...2J7!1 * NEWTUNIT *-By Builder. Nt•r1r fK't'&n, l·t.Fl. Also, r1('11' i:I uni! Si ·I Unlr. * 817-39~1T Business Rental 6060 COSTA r-.tesa: GOO 1n1. fl , ufticc. 600 sq. tt. store, sro S<J, ft. shori. * Owner 646-2130 SHOP . .')!01'{', •lffl("f'~ -2."«0 I Ne\\'JKlrl Blvd. 100 ll4J. fl. $.'lj. 646--:5-41 or 5-18-8333 STORF:-Ot~FICF: Sp1clou111\tdio, 1 • 2 Bedrooni 1ui1e1. furr1i•b•d 11r 1.11htn1WIN. l lt l lo $311. J111nedi1te Qc;Qlplncy 64&326' 2 BR UPPER-walk to bch. ..,."':-----,.=========:' S250 incl util, Yrly avail S4&<l310 ' NEWLY DECORATED East Bl~ 5242 /li(·11 J1(H'l Sch. 825 sq ,, I 5620 .,,~·""~f.~n="~~=-os=r~='='°~'==*== ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;, Office R-;,;tal 6010 2 hr & gar. wtr pd 636-4120 - RENTALS 9/l nUt>-7045, 213- Houses Unfurnished General 4000 447.9443 2176 Pla«ntla-D Sl2' PRESTIGE LOCATION 2:.66 Orange·· D $ll5 For lease. deluxe 1888 sq_ ft. VILLA MARSEILLES BRAND NEW SPACIOUS OFFI CE SPACE Huntington Beach 3400 LOVELY 4 bd, 2 ba, formal din, rm. All modl'rn con. veniences. 4:-fncd/yd, w/palio. \Valk 10 beach & school~. No pets! 2 Chldrn. O.K. $350 n10. 962-9700 3 BR, l!:l BA townhouse. All bll·ins, nr bch. $250 mo. 536-1382 3 BR. 2 Ba. Condominium. Bltns, crpt'd. rlrp'd. SJ7j mo. 968--6412 or 968--0234 4 BDRl\I. 2 Ba. aosc !O beach & schools. J\vail Aug. 1. ;275 mo. 968-4lil HUNTINGTON HARBOUR 4 BR. 3 BA lea!k' . or opt 847-8553 Bier. K93-4152 4 BR. 3 ba. fpl. dbl. i::ar: cpts, drps, bltrni. 1325 Lsc. Agt. 499-2238, 49!).3403 San Clemente 3710 ------- j BR, 2 & home, n111.gn1fi- cl'nt OC't'an $27:1 1no. 601 -------Just For OCEANFRONT Apl. Yearly ttntal. 2 BR. Furn. TV, FM radio incl. ~1756 Single Adults ~,~"'g;:~·ye;~~;: Sou1h Bay Club iii a whole lease. $250 mo. 642-3443 new v.·ay of life designed • WINTER RENTAi.$ e just for single people. It's Rent NOW for Sept.! fun living with wann, dy. Abbey Really 642-3800 namic neighbors. It'~ a * 1 BR. $1l> yrly, util pd. $150,~ Clubhouse w 1 t h Adults. On p e n I n s u la . heR.lth club, sauna1, swim. 675-45.13 ming pool, party room, bil.l"=""=""====== lia.nis. i~r goli driving Newport Hgts. 4210 rang<', tennll:I courts, pro ---''---''----- i;hop and resident tennis pro CLEAN 1 or 2 BR. Adults Single, I & 2 Bedroom lux-no pets. Lrg kit. .Sll>-$150. ury apartments with all the 2421 E. 16th St. NB 646-lSOl modem conveniences avail. :::c========= ablr-. f-Urnished and unfurn.. Corona del Mar 4250 'hcd . RENTS FROM $150 to $350 1 BR. • '.:1 blk to ocean, $145 mo &: up, utl pd. Also furn. room lor rent. 2500 2 BR. &mong pines on cul-de-4 BR, 2~· BA apt. Frplc, sac. Crpts, drp1, GE kitcli. drapes, crpts, wet bar, pr! encl gar, nr bus. $145. balconies. dbl gar ofl kitchen Adults MP". at J2.I E. 2Dth dshwhr, dbl oven. Pool. Conv 2 BR., unf. newly dee. Crpt. to shop'g sch\! & recreation, drps. Encl patios, Spac. From $325 mo/up grnds. Adul!J only. $140 mo. 835 Amigos \Vny, NB 2283 Fountain Way E. l\fgr, next door 865 Amigos. (Harbor, turn \V. on Wilson) Managed by LGE 1 Bdrm apt, $121. 712 WILLIAl\I \VAL TERS CO. Shalimar, No. 0, C.M. e NEW DELUXE e 642-2623 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lease. 2 BR. upstain;. Bltns, crpts, Incl spac. master suite, din drps. No pets. 568 \V. \Vilson nn & dbl garai::t'. auto door St. 545--0700 opener avail. Pool & !lee. 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. Adult Living Furn. & Unfurn. Dli.hwasher . eolor coordinat- ed appllan<.~s . plush shag carpet • choice of 2 colo r schemes · 2 batiia • stall showers • mirrored ward- robe doon • inliirect light. Ing ln kilchc:i . breaKtas! bar • huge priva1e fenced ;,, HUNTINGTON HARBOUR 3 suitC'!I avallablt' in llun1 1ng1on ll;i rbour, Boardwalk crnlCr. 270 SI"/. ft., 500 SQ. ft., GOO sq, ft. Cull Ron BortleH 213 592·1361 • il 11&1&1361 lluntin!!lon J{al"boUl' Corp, 4241 \Varner Av<'., H.B. patio • plush ''UluSCA ping • Nr. Orange Coun!y AlrJll'!r t brlck Bar·B.Q's . large heat-& h'\·inc I n d u s t r 'i a I ed pools & la'lal. Compk-.\", Curpet. dl';\ll''", 3101 So. Bristol St. musit-. air-conditionini:-& SPAC 2 Br, lli-ii Ba Studio. area. (~:i Mi. N. ol So. CO<' 'f Plual janitorial srrvie1'. s12:i i\to. 2 children OK. No pets. e FROi\l $265 e Santa Ana BOB PETTIT, l~r.~ltoc $150. 726 Joann St., ~1584. 860 Amigos Way, NB PHONE: 557--8200 I • 833-0101 • * SPAC. 2 le 3 BR's. Crpts. f\.1aAAged by "'"""'""'"""",_"'""'-1 f()RF.1'T. i;ut>-Jr•;J""· fum 11. I 221-t Coll \VJLLIAM WALTERS CO. $150 • LRG 2 BR. Slutliu l or 11nJ.1rn'1J. 'l nr 3 rin Dtlls. Poo · ege AJJI. (T':l·lple:-:1. Fan1 ily siu-ofllt-V :-nll c u1 ll'\"ifl<' i n1I. Ave., Apt 2, 646--0627 1---------k I h /bl I d 5250 J c · 1Y 1ns. crp .s, fJIS. Con1µl r,. r.J:O. unfnrn'd. ! !O 2 BR. Crpts, drps, pool, KidslC~_!jjtonjjjjjjaiiiidjjojiljiMiiiiaiiriiiiiiiiiiii frplc.. encl ~ar. 1 or 2 furn'd. Ph: .>1G-90R~• b<'t 1~.j NEWPORT BEACH 880 Irvine Ave. Irvine & 16th 1714) 64S-05SO ok. Sl40 + dep, 1998 fllapte,11 chlldrt>n ok. (Nr sch].')) No I P;\I. Apt 1: 5'l&-2808 iiets. ~ s . ~_nLri:_ .,s1.. .o..""D~E~S~K~~S~P~A~C~E~ NORTll o ... Iront l Br. 2 BR. Unturn. $1J5. or part ~-:='·=A=. =N='='='="""='~'·=~=1-<50==·:: I ~ fu N I Wtt pd ~ . 305 No. El C11mino R·eal Yearly . $2 50 mo. m. o pe s. · • Professional only. 67'":>-5666. 1 ~m=_.,,.;,.-,--· -cc=c-,:=-::::z Laguna Beach ~705 I Sun Clemente Sea view ------->102--1420 1 BR lg closets, rn!W crpts, ON 1'EN ACRES * Q Huntington Bud> 4400 pool, utll pd. lllO. 1831 I • 2 BR. Fum • Unfllrn N RTH END * DESK SPAC E . Monrovia, 548-0336. Fireplaces I prlv. patlc.s I On<> or 1hosc rarf! lo1·<'lv 1 ( \VANTED: 1 or 2 femaie roommates, $165 mo. Lll- guna Beach. 4!M-3901a.rt6:30 ROO~f~lATE wanted. H.B. area, lihare apt. Cost. long hair. 962-9943. Ollie 3 BR. k Atrium $300 3 BR. Choice location $325 Calle Real. :110-1810 SOUTH BAY CLUB APARTMENTS I BR, new !hag carpeting, swim pool, v.·aik to beach. Adults, oo pets. $140 mo. Tradewinds Realty !W7-&5ll NR. New 2 Br, 1~~ Ba, Ct'!>tS, PooJ7, Tennis . Qintill'l Bkfst, l BR apts, I block i;hoppi11g, I 787 5 Beach Blva. drps, stove, dshwhr, :::at'· 900 'Sea l .ane. CdM 644-2ti11 bcachc~. priva te, t'ncloscd Hunfington Beach 3 BR. FIR• DIR 1335 RENTALS 4 BR.. Jo~am. rm. Ii Din. 1 __ A_,_pt_s_. _F_u_r_n_is_h_od __ _ Rm. Turtle Rock $360 General ' . . •105 3 BR., f /R &: DIR S350 4000 Li"• where the fun iii Laguna Beach Newport Be•ch 220'1 3 B«iroorn & dining roon1 :..:.::;.:;.:.:c:..::.~----!Furn. or Unturn.) ./ Studio apt, util. pd, Avail. RENT FURNITURE OCEAN front-All new 2 br, \VE HAVE OTIIERS~ RE?ilAH.KABLY Aug, 7. So. Laguna, $105. built-imi. bar, decorator BOB PE"JTJT, Realtor DIRECT TO YOU 24 Hr. Delivery UNBELIEVABLY 499-2972 furnished 714/646-1234. ''Since 1946" E X T RAO RD I NARI LY 2"SLE"°""°E°"PIN"''"°G°'R"m"'s-. "u'"m"pd::;. Days 833-0101 Nights Corona del Mar 2250 2 B<lnns. I-bath $2'0 100~;. PURCHASE OPTION Complete l BR Apt .. Lo1v al\ S22 per mo. BEAUTIFUL I 11'/ Free TV & radkl. Val D'isere Garden Apts ZNXI So. Coast Hwy. SCHOOL teacher, 2 Br. Cd~1. 3 BR. 2 Bath& S32:> :io Day f\finimun1 \VIDE VARIETY Putting green, waterfall .It 2 BR, tum or untum, util paid. $250 per mo. 3 BR. 2'if. Baths S325 Avail. 9-12 to Z.2. 50--J020 3 BR. 2 be., fam. rn1 $375 ~·1eam, Dowers everywhere, Ocean view, Shag cpte 4!i' poril, rec. room, billiards, $200 * • 494-8188 !:.~!un~-B_•_ac_h __ 2_1o_s 5 BR. 2~!a ha, UW e RED HJU. REAL TY Univ. Park Center, Irvif"ll'! Custom Furniture Rental BBQ's, Sauna, furn.-wtlurn, ~----- 1 & 2 Br. aJso Singles from San Clemente 4710 ;1.35. Sre ii! ~ Parsons ------ I 2 BR how;e I 1 BR apt $140 Call Any1im~ 83J.0820 $125 ---~--'---- 517 \V. 19tlt, cr-.t. ~~IS.:l-181 1568 \V Lincoln, Anhm 77~-2800 Rd., 642-8670. Behveen Har· I BR. liv m1, kit &: bath. bor &. Newport • 2 Blk N. 19th Ocean vie"·· v.·!k lo heh, Permanent. Adu1ti;. Dana Point Responsible Refs. 494-8170 2740 TOOTHBRUSH ALL U NEED 10 enjoy my beautifu1 home. 2 br/2 ba + dt'n, Jo~inest coast vu from priv. patio & llv. rrn. Adults no pets. 1 yr IR. SllS/mo. 491).3234 "Fr $38 SO Wk l'iiiiOiiOiiiii>iiiiOiiOmOiiiiiool s hopping & s ho,v. Corona del Mar 3250 om . . I' reasonable rate. '192-9996, _ -----From $165/"''· Lu>Ury s;" PALM MESA APTS. 492-5189 ClITE 3 Br. 2 ba, house on ocean side ol h11'Y. Lease $.150 hlonth. Corbln-1\Iartin Rltr 67f,.1662 EXEC. 4 Br, 21,J Ba dplx. 2200 11q ft. Bltns, n\vly pntd. Gar. $425/mo ls. 540-7573 gle Apts. Co1npletr n1alcl k==~~----- scrvire, housc\van.>~. l111cn~. I BR FURN $149.50 RENTALS all util, hroted pool . Bac h<'lor & 2 BR avail. ~P!!:,~nfurnl&had _ VILLAGE INN n1n./mo. OJ< Gentr•I 5000 Laguna Beach 49-1-9-t3G • POOL BALBOA INN e S.AUNA Balboa 67a.87~0 e JACUZZI ClDMP-Li-LIBT ~~~~ .... .,....,.~! APARTMENT 1,S'-'u"-m"-mo--"-r--R-'-o-nl_•-'ls"--2-9_10 ~~l!!!!._on Beach _3:400 HOLIOA Y PLAZA DELUXE, spaciou! 1 Bdrm. Furn apt. Sl.35. Plus ulil. Heated pool. .\n1ple park- ing. No children • no pets. 1965 Pomona, C.l\1. I Sa"e your car • ti's not FINDERS lar! J ust reach for your llundrcds of Apartments 291D OCEAN Front, Ne\lo'J>Orl. Dix., comp. tum. 4 Br. 2 Ba. 2 Car gar. Sundeck. Dsh\\'hr., wshr/dryer. Linens turn. A .... 11. 8/29 to 9/12, $375 Per week . 675--8658. After 7n8 caU: 11<-TlTI Lido S.yfront-2 Pool& Kitchencttt~ ruiles l rooms by day, week or month, LIDO SHORES HOTEL 617 Lldo Park Dr NB 673-8800 SU~tMER Rental. 2 :QR BeACh howlc. Sleeps 6. JiW'n, Available Au;. l•t thru Sept :U $150 v.'ff:k. --~ 2 BR apl, rum. acr'O!l8 from aWn beach, !.qun&. 11"' a week, 259 Lowtt CHU Drive or ca.Jl 2U: 34~10t.1 WEEKI. Y Rentals. 1.2 Br. From $100. Near Beach ' .81.1! <U 683-1347, •knell 675-8)11. ,/ ON the water, Balboa lat. v.•/ pier. Slpg 8. AUi' l·U. $500. ~ SUMMER Rental apt, t!eeps 4. On Baytront nr. Udo ....... 61.l -St. m-098 ./ BALl!OA ISLAND • Al ... J 8' """ "" •. J'uly Al.II. al'SU. 673-.1503 UDO lalt Aptt • llpt 6, 100• trom bttch, $D1 wk. 2 wk. min. 673-3948 * QUICK P0$.5ESSION :> Br-pool-Jba-lease 817-8553 Bkr. 847-D363 phone & call Daily Pilot Listed Nn\\I C:.assilied 642-5678 Charge Call 642_..56 your ad • today? Gener•I 4000 General 4000Genaral 4'000 NEW 1· 2· 3 Bedrms. All ::.:"'°'.;..:;;_ ____ -"'---;...:.'-'-..O.------'-'.;_;;.;;c.:.;_.:.;_ ____ _;=c1 bltns cpl/drp, gar. Nr So S©\l~µ-~f,tfS8 Tho Punlo with tho Built-In Chuckle I GAW NO .! '.I I I I t • IDYLAL 1 I I I I 4 J. A fosli ion plote: She loolcs . _ . _ os if she wa1 poured Into her r::--:--:-::-:--:-----, dress ond forgo! to - -. I M A J T E s I 7-U ~-~,~,,..;.,....;.~,~s-0.1-,~,-< Q Comoltite rhe th11tld1 quo1ed by l1lh11g i11 ths m•»111a WOidt -. YOl.I d1velop from )llP No. :I below. e ~~~~~~~~~f~lrT(RS r r 15 r 1J I' J' 1 e ro:c:~:r'. """'I I I • I I I I SCRAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 7000 Coa!t Plaza 540-1973, 5-15-23Zt 2 BR .. 11; ha. studio apt. crpt, drapes & bltins, Close !o shp Slli 847-0CiOS Costa Mesa 5100 ----- .s._ MERRIMAC .A_wooo s New 1·2 BR., 2 BA., furn or unfuro. alr-cond, self clt'an ov~n. beain celling, dsh\\•r, p1·iv gar, elevators, U1crapy + s\vim pooh;;, BBQ's, s&unas, clubhowe. Adults. From $140. Jus t Ea~t ot 2600 Harbor ne1r r>.'abers C&dUlac at 4~ ATt'tTimac Way. 545.63()() BAY J.1EADOW A.PI'S Nt'W f!)i:Ciling 1 BR. 140, ~f=· ~~;Jg~:~ce~~: prlv. pntio, !IOmc w/b'ple1 Pool, sand VOllP-y t>.il crt, rec bldg., pool tables, put. Uni: green, Adull1, no pets, ~ \V. Ba.y, Open Houte 12.1 pin daily. 64G-0073, *DELUXE 1 " 2 BR Go.roen Apt1. Blt-IM, prlv. patio, heated pool, frplc. Adults. $1 IS mo. 546-5163 766 \V. \\lil90n, 642-79~ iM:tcArthur nr Coliat Hwyl patio. $17:1. I d 83().4237 or ·l!l-l--llS8 1 __ 612-4321, t-:xl 276 _ 2 BR apts, b lM, cpts, rps, 2 BR 1 BA &: 2 BR, 2 2 BR. Ocean V1{'11, l lilk DESK SPACE • Clean. Inquire 1552 "A" BA; 'gar, .,.·shr/dry avail. Coriander. 546-52.68. Clean. Blk from })('itch. $190. 10 heh .. shag crpt.~. $l8:. 1 222 !=orest Averi\ie 4!»-8188 • • 2 BDR)1. Crpts, drps. Pool. 213: Cl-l.l.9;i. or 61;,.7478 Laguna Be ac~ '. 1 Children ok. ~ al 126 MODERN 2 Br, bltn R/O, General 4 1\fonte Vista, Of. g. disp, frpl, temtce. view. REAL FSlATE 4M-9466 1 I BR Cond. New carpets, util $190 mo. 61.>-5752, LI DO BAYFRONr:- pool, \\"uhet " dryer $130. 540-2266. Rentals Wanted 5990 DESK $PACE A\"llil 8/16. 546-tl.30 aft j SP=A~Cl~O~U~S~l 7b-,.-A7d7•7ll-,~$~160~ 1\VANTEO • House lo lease. $45 $ll:i. LARGE l BR. Cpl~. 309 Fernleaf £75-0692 Responsible fan1ily desit'l'S r.1·sz::n drps, bltns. patio, gar. 673-3127 4-5 BR home, Corona tic! ----' .i-; ~~- Adults, no pets. 64G-li62 fl.t ar Sehl Dl.')I. L i kc I 1IPST.\lflS fror•l-h:;ht , ~''I Lrg t Br. Unfurn. Eastbluff or Harbor Vi<'"' rt . 2 p\I r.-stnn.~. pv1 park- 998 El Camino Dr .. c .r-.t. Huntington Beach 5400 Hills. Pool prel'd, ruru"d In'~ !1)1. l~l!l\'!'014'!1! !fl b<.1111;. • :;46-&151 * --· or unfurnished. Take 111:111 Po:<I lHlirt• fii::-1120 long a\\•a.ltcd cruise 'l'hilc NE\\ POlfJ' Bcn~h-dcJU~c-nr $150-2 BR. 2 BA. Sunken ON BEACH'. \\"f! CIU'C lor yo1n· homt', rice .... All"COtld. JIU[ Prlv. liv nn. Crpts, drps. bltns. No pets. 1251-0 Baker SL About Sj(l(J. Call .Judec, ti11 . 2100 \\', ()'i:t~! IJ'\\ e 2 BR l~!t BA FROi\t $225 !n~J '.'i l&-9501 -·--_ 2 BR. Crpls, bltns. Pool . e 2 BR:.! BA FROli-1 $260 Commerc ial 6085 1 No children, no pets. Sl5li .• 3 BR :! BA rnor.1 $360 -....... -I 325 E. 17th Pl. 646-Gl9:'1. Carpets-drapes-<l!sh\vasher ;-} ~Tort's. $110,0!10. li~!;....fi!lS \\' I RENTAL FINDERS l!J1h ~1 Bl'll!w l •r111\·"r~ 1Y1r heated pool-i;auna.lennis Free To La ndlords nrr. ~~11i--17fi); 1\1:1. I Newport Beach 5200 rec room-ocean views --- PARK NE\VPORT care free livg ovrlkg the \\"ater. 7 pools, 7 tennla els, $750.000 Spa. J."rom S175 to $A50 Bach, 1 or 2 Br. Also 2 ioty patios.:.amp!c parking. 645-0111 Security guards. 435 w. lfth, C•st• Mtto Industrial Renta l 6090 FURN, also AYail, HUNTINGTON PACIFIC ~ FOR J1•11i.r; 5:0i) HJ fl pr1n 1~ 4-6 BR by Scrit l. Yl'arly, 11't1h'hnu~r ,;pucr-t1U •l 1 nr school~. up to $450 1110 p:1r1, lr.1nr l n.h1~1rral. C;1!! TownhoU!eS. Elec. kit, pri 711 OC:Efu'IJ AVE .. 11.B. Box Af-1091 Daily Pilot ~ I \I1· Rull~rd :.1~_<o:_·,_1 ___ 1 \VANTED 3 BR. Costa l>l<'<-a pal or bal. Subtrn prkg, (7141 536-1487 opt mald ser, cpts, drps. Ofc. open 10 am-6 pm Dally Just N. of }'ashion Isl ~I J\1anaged by Hi dist, by Aug. 1. $250. Lots 6100 mo. Responsible. ~1 97 ---------- • LANDLORDS_e_ fREe RENTAL SERVICE Br-oke.r 534-6982 VA C,\NT 7.0NF.0 FOR \lUL TIPLE UNIT:- Jambortt &: San Joaqwn \VlLLIAAl \VAL TERS CO. runs Rd. 644-1900 for leas-I~~~..,~~"'"'~""' ing lnlo. BEACl-l apt Ocean Vie~\" ....,....,_,,..~ Sunde.ck. Ne"·er spac dlx * OPEN DAILY 1..S * 2 Br, bltm, crpts, d1-ps, -----Clo:-1r lo I lal'hOr Bl\'11 BLUrrs. ~~I Bluff-Nicr "I !)fl' '( m· 11ilh ,l(OOd d!1Wn . br, unfum1~J ,RP( or 011ne1· 11111 hnanl'f' '2:i.OOO. 777 .AMIGOS WAY Indry. Nr 11hops & pier, $1 75 2 BR. 2 ha, unlls, unfum. yr round. Adults. baby ok. hruse. 644-$18.1 J''horl!• filli-i17 J Outside llvlna areas a.nd 536-2131 ELDERLY lady \\'Mnt11 furn,• dO\\'lllOWn H.B. Apt. Can pny S!JO mo. mux. 536-4771 double garages. $250 to $300. N''E=A7R~~H~u-,.~;-,.~,-.,-,~.,-.,.~bo~u,. * •1617 it_ Ne\Y Triplexes. Qu iel area. SNGL fem nel'<I~ funk)' un-~~~---Lrg 1 BR'!. Dishwo.~hf!r. furn 181· h.'lcl nr N"'Prl Bl!llCh LARGE, chetry 2 Br, 2 Ba. SI50. Pet ok. (2131 S92--2623 I 11~ \VII' o -· IX Up, flOIS!'. rielu:ice apt. upstairs w/ or (7141 IHG-3009 pet. PER~t. no agent,;, rcft>. frplc. bltns • 30' balcony WANT Manager for 6 unlls Eves. 968-7824 overlkg Lido Isle '= ocean. Huntington Bf!ach. \V i I i ROOM ---or Bachelor Apt, • 2 car gar. S2r.i mo. Phone reduce rent on 2 hr apl. Ne\\'J)Orl arl!a. Re>sp. H 1\'t.' 1 F' Kingurd, Realtor. from n20 to SiO n10. 213: refs. \\'rite Daily Pilot lk>x 1.ft 2-2222. 657-MU P-1006 2 BR. $~ Yearly. Frp!cL2-=e~R-, ~ .. ~wl:;;,y~,.=-c,,~,~,.•1.~,.::;:fn~·.~ .. ""ANTE°"D~, •s~,,=o:.,,:-~s·101'l'lt:r ' pr. Will ge.t new crpts bl.tins eocl pr. $1Ei0. mo. garage to rent "°" In Co:.1a Ir drp~. Avall Aua 1, l izx.i ~Ul. Adult.s, no pe11. ~tesa are11, 642-196,1 child ok. 309 3Gtb St. Key Tn.dewinds Really 8-17-8511 1 --------- at 3ll '145. l BR P\1. gar A patio. * 2 BR._ 2 BA l2 story). All dlx features, 4-unit blda'. ~-•• ------ l'ltns, pnv. petio I ~OOTIY-96l-Jl21 or 841--0087 OWER "'Oman only, New, Rooms for Rent S99S Ht11g hosp. area. S185 rno.l.,,===-;;--:-ft.-:::;--;;;I Appt. only. 4247 Hilaria BEAtrrtnJL 1 BR &pt. All l!oep, lltudio bdrm w/ba. Way. NB. 54(}.0093 bllnl, J<"um, optklnal. Patio, ""m'd Si8 Mo. N . B . CRANN&LF'RONT 1 Br apt. encl pr. M2-5i05 ·,""""=-,17=,.-=-,--- ytly, Prt.ly rum. Sa:l . 1 k 2 BR. New. F'rplc. Near *SIS PER \Veek -up marure lld)'. No 1 • r . ocean. Patio. Adull•. w/kltchen, $35 J)f'r Wt'l'k--up 67~1902 L DBORG CO. 5.JS.2:;79 J.11ts. :\lOTEL 5l8-!)i:ij CONOO)ffNIU~f • J BR. 2~~ 1 8 . Near Ocean. Patio . EMPLOYED lady or -shi. BA. w/ pool prl\I. ' frplc. Adu! dent. room In love!;· kunl<' $285 nlO. 673-918.l LIND RG co. ~~m A\•11ll 1\tJg l. $8.i. !i-16-67<10 • I ,, M1gnificent OCEAN VIEW Le nd 1fi2·,..110· Lngu1111 Bca1·h 11 ~111~·1 in1riro\!1'n1tnh1 undt'r 1\·a~·. M J. 2;,· lot~ !l"Jlin;.: ;i l.11.nr $8.!m Askini:: $2.i.!kXJ. ~iobmir dn l))'trlf. ~ 49i'-l2l0, 4!17·1021 f'\1(''1, * SS,500 *.~­ \'i"""'..t'\"f'I IOI'-1-:Z T,..r111-. Pi.AC!-; Rf-:."LT\' 1!)1.!J~01 2969 So. Coos! 11111-A)' e LAGUNA VIE\\1-urr-e Quick Ca.~h Sale SS.~ .-s.i.9;4g Acreage ____ ...;6200 CJ IJ::CK THIS FOR PP.I f; J:°> SICl'f'!', frunti1p• 011 h1· IC'M\IAll' l:"i, HI min lr-nn \"lt•1on •iU,., SJ97 ,>£'1 •·· s1.1.ooo 101111 r~r11u U1ti·. 6-11-16711 ' (/ I I ' , ' ' I ' l t 2 I' l I 0 ! I . ' ' f f ( s l I ( • r ' i' i ! • • ' ' ·----~ -..·-------------------------·-----------------------------.. ---------....... ___ * ___ * __ l!l*--*---1 ANNOUNCEMENTS * 1nd NOTl . .:C.::E;:.S __ _ Found IFrM Adtl MOO - Plumbing PLUMBING REPAIR No job too &mall • 6(2..J.128 • Paat Service '910 :::~:::::::.=..::::':;:W.:::::om~ .. =-71~00.!. I ,,... ~. W-. 71001 --BANK TELLER DESMOND'S \\'J£xper.. Plrlme. Cool{ F11hlen Ill. Salary. Xlnt worldrc cond. Apply 1n pert0n bl Wt!ltern lllulk, 1~ CoJden,vest -NEEDS - r'OUND on Androa St. abort haired ' milted .tetritr type doc. Die. ·browri, white on taOB. la.~ tot1ar A flea coll&r. Takrn to animal ..,.,..,. When You Want it done ri~ht .•. CID -=°':!"·_;'cc'-.:8:..· ------A washes, rtpalrs, 10 Bar.kin" Ladle1 Reacly .. fo.WHr FOUND: ft.1ostly bl&ck, male dog,.btown tace. White IJIOi e>n tall. Bret'd unknown. F'li¥ colla.r. Al Anlm1tl Shelter, N.B. Call one of the .~.xperts listed below!! yrs. In Ortree Co. i\ty tt·• TELLER S1le1wotn.14' custon\e1'S II.rt my friends. <•lUST BE EXPERIEN~ ~Ul6 Mature person with book· 1 ..,....,) kl!t!plQI,; and/or eaahler bk. #3' Jo"aablon l1land Remodeling & gmd, !tfust type: ~SO wpm. Newport Beach -Repair 6940 ,P_;1,.="'7""::::1:1 .:(162.:;c,:55.l;:;l·:,....--1 ""' Whaddy1 Wanlf Whaddya Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Speclel R•t• 1 S Lines -S time1 -S bucks IULIS -"D MUST INCLUDI 1-WMI .,.. llllH 19 If.... 1-WMI yM Wflll Ill -·· )-YOUll ,...._. •Mftf ..,,HI. 4-1 llnft 9' ""trllall!f. ........OTNINO •Ott '"LIE -"flAOIS ON<.Y! To Plac. Yaur Trader's P•r•d lse Ad PHONE 642·5678 Beautiful quarter hor!le stud. 3 yrs, with l!ltk. Trade for car, 00..t or ? 541""39 Eves 646-464.1 SAIL.BOAT 20', &leeP» 2. ruly equipped, $1800 vaJue. Trade ha!J intettst or all for Dune BUUY, Sta tion \Vagtin or '??? 49'l-8008. HA VE : Antique buffet or dreuer_ Tiger Oak . .Valued at $650. WANT JoUrniture, art objects or ? ? • 613-0J!02 Trad(' clear lot w/bt!aul view in Laguna for small hol?lf' I lot CM or submit. \\'. E. Lachenmycr, Rltr. 646-39'28 Call Evt!S: &U.m7 Have delllXc Costa Mesa triplexes .t: 4-Pleires! Want al or more units, Orange County, Fortin Co., 1711.C Westcliff. NB. 642-5000. Want home : have 2 dupJex units on 13,500 sq, fl Jot zoned AP ; $24,500 Eq. Plans for ollicea avail. KEYS Found on beach vie. Island & ·Balboa. Inquire ROOJ\t Additions, gar~~. ,, .... , """"1"· Dally selll/ICE DIRECTORY seRVICE DIReCTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY ... modol. Lo-. ... ,,,., .. '" Pilot, 22:11 lWboa, N.B. ---· ·""-'-'""~'-'"-"'--to\vn. Lie. co nbta c tor . BlG dog, mate, about 3 m, Accounting 6500 Contractor1 6620 Hauling 673C 64=2-2988-"'~~-~--- brown, white I< black, Vlc:l----=---.....:.:.:;;1-,.----------MY WAY, QUa.lity home JUverslde & Coast Hwy, FUU. Charge Bookkeeper REMODELED pa In tin 1:, llA\JWNl• SIO A LOAD tePi\lr: \Va.lb:, celllnr, floors N.B. 551'-9873 Needs P/Tin1e \Vock. dryv.•all texture & ac· C\ean up: Trw, Sf!rv. Gen. e:tr. No . job too 1rnalt. 4 KEYS & pocket l\'lltch. 968-2078 coustical spr.yin& of 11.ll Pruning 6·16-2523, 543"8043 i-="~>-:,,:.14=":.------- Vic, Onnge Ir; l 6tb PJ., :x:~~~S3;~~le, Lie. TRASl r Ir garu.ge Cielln·up. f18ERGLASS 1howers & CM. 548-4690 Babysittint 6SSO "" "' !\Ion-Sun. $10 a load, pUllmans, ~91J uk for RABBIT· 0 Addition:§ • Remodelh~ Free Estimat~, 548-5031 Jlerb Vic Wilmn • llarbor y UNG SE'T Fm:! ll. Cttwiclc. Lie. 1'.10VING. Garage clean-up GEN'L remodeling & main!. PRE-SCHOOL ,673-6041 * 54S.2170 5e5448 ~cs 2.10 1 days, 6:30-7:30 1"::::0========'1 & lite hauling. Reasonable. No job too s ma 11. 3 MO. Black male. Vlc 2500 hour.~ day or 11i·eek. l'~ull Carpet Cleaning 6625 Free estlmales. 645--Ui02. Lic'd/in.sured. 6/:J-8183. Blk Santa Ana Ave, C.M. & pt/lime. 50c per hr. 1 YARD I Gar. Cleanup. • 642--5630 child. 75c for 2, $1.00 fnr Remov~ lrccs. ivy, !rash. Sewing 6960 BLACK & white mix collie, 3 in the iame famUy. '~ ~ Grade, backhoe, 962-8745. QUALITY you'\"e a 1 w a Y 5 female lthr col.lar. no faV, Sprcial Summer Program ~ur!-~ llAULING * F1lEE EST incl, Ueld trips, swimming wanted. Dressmnking -Vic CdM. 675-4887 for 6-W year olds. All CARPET A;;k for Butch altcrauon~. Kt>y · Say. 1163 MALE bea.gte IY.r. yean old. qualillcd teachers. 152:i San-STEAM CLEANED :148-7265 or 5·LS-0240 Orang~ Ave, C.?.1. fHa.'!2!12. Heil k Nel\·land area H.B. 111. Ana Ave, C.M. &tG-9210. REASONABLE RATES _ 6735 SE\VJNG : \Von1en·.~ & 847-5990 646-3706 A18o car11c1 l11staUatio11 Houiecleanlng -Children's \\'ear. F 0 UN D, power saw, MOTHER & teen daughters 646-5971' Housecleaning? Cnll 892-49-14 A·l ALTfo:RATIONS Newport atta. ''ill babysit sm chlldrc11 our GIF"T & COUNTRY STORE ____ J!39. __ 3'38____ home. l1ot lunch. big yd .. TERRIFIC LOCATION! FOUND lady's w a! ch, loll! of play equip & en- Boyd Realty Expert SC'rvlCI', rcaR. prices. OWNERS SPECIAL WE'RE THE 500 sq. ft. $20. Dla1nond EXPERTS!' $4.000 equity tor 6'13-5935 l < r I a in, Sl5/,vk or t:omparable or what have ,::;:==:;=======I S3.50/d11y. 968,587L ~"Lou L I 6401 Ann" you? 646-5383 os 1~==------- DlITCH t.lainl Serv. criit Call s.IG-S441. c!ng, ilr \\'axing, windO\V I~========= \V:\shing. Harry van Bcyncn Tiie; Ceramic 6974 537.1;J()8 if no ans call alt J. V Tl Til •r -* DIVERS * Men « AR.E YOU Womon, ID letrn 1btlone BEAUTIFUL?? diving. 6 ~"' 1nt1n1c:tton. • no aalaey ltt 4 wkt. 11'11 all In tlwt eye or Utt bo-Average earnings $110 a hnlcler. Check Ole 1V CCO\• day. Start work tmmed. 1111. you watch a.nd lf Yoll after completlon of tn!n!na. fecl you're as pretty as PROFESSlONAL DIVERS, SOnlC or tJl05c Pl'Qple, call us. INC. Interviews TUe•Frl CALIF. CASTING CO. IO.m·7pm, Sat 10.m-<p.m. 13 <.'Ontlnuing It's aearch for Holiday Inn Motel, 3640 everyday peop,le who ha\·t" Lakeo"'OOd Blvd. LOI! 1 A desll'e' to Y•ork on TV or Beach. calil. Thl!I is no ~hoot n1odeling jobs, $15 to $125 =="="="'=.:,.,o=o:,;~=I per day. No fee tu you e\'er. ELECTRONIC ASSE?IIBL£Jt * FOR ON CA?ttERA • TOP quality onlt, •re 30 AUDITION * or over. Microscope expet. CALL (TI4) 835-8282 pttf'd. SmaU mfr. co. 10 Ai\f to 6 PM w/lclnt trin. bertetib. GENERAL ?ttONITOR.~ * * BARMAID, Bikini, full 3019 Enteorprise St. C.M. ••,pl. limo. Top..,. Apply, * * * ENGINEl!D Sassy Lftssy, 2901 Hal'bor P' Blvd, C.J\f. Orange l'ounty Dlvl1k>ll of BARJ\1AIOS . ExPt"riPnced. NYSE firm has an lmmed. Apply In person, Vegas iate need for a ~hanlcal Rooin. 6.'!6 \V. 19th, C.i\I. engineer \\1th eXpe:rienee in BARMAID, sharp gai, no asst'mbly and fabrlcatln1 c:ostu1ne. Age 35-40, Day or teehnlqut!s. Should have nlle shirt, also pt-timt>. no background in time 1tudy exp nee, Mil train. The and be well versed 1n too]. Place. 2000 w. Ba.Jbott. Blvd, ing. Degree prerd. _ Not N.B. 675-5171 mandatory. Excell. benefit.. Re1!. Jot, Yucca VaUey, un- derwmd util, approx ~ ac. Take qual. Oriental rup of ~.value. $3400, cla to schls, Prime location. 4.94-9352. Mt. Chalet, Ctt!Uine • St. Moritz. Fabulous vw Lake Gregory. $35,000. Trd ~. $3lM tor prop, N.B., Cdtt1. <n•i 6'2-3339, 525-8886. 8 UNITS I""' ood pl ----------YOUNG, married girl will ''6'ew us LOST: Cd.lie Sbcp~rd pu~ babysit in own home for clear commere. income, for py. brown & wht. fins 1 or 2 children any age land, hoo!le or beach prop. ''S p ?okle.'' Jo'ri.endly. during weekday~. Front&. Carpet Cleaners. 187 21iil St., Costa i\fesa. 645--1317. REMXRC Servfces. 3 roo1n.!I S21.50. Ft,IJI,} guaranteed. Credit cardf..GK. 847-6688. SfEAi\f jet ca11)et eltanins;:. By ClarKare, nation-wide service. Ft1!e est. 642-lO:>:i -~=~==~'-=--"""I * ernc, 1e e ., an * R ES I D ENT I A L , com· Cust. \\'Ol'k. Install & repairs. merclal, garage & properly No job too sml. Plaster pa-BEAUTICIAN, experienc.'t!\I, clean.up Uo. Leaking sho.,.,·cr repair. 1~·Hh foUowlng pref'd but not Please send resume to Box ?.1-lQS.I The Daily Pilot, N.B. rrty. Equity $103,oo::I. -:nsitivP, 1?ves c~ildrcn. backyard play an-a. Vicini-894-6103 1147.195711WHr.Kl6 nee. \\!illfng lo assume ----overload of cllenlcle due lo -Experlenced- Sec:retaricll and New Ac:c:ounts 2 transportation cars '57 ltfere wagon, '00 Mere te· dan. Good cond. Trade l or both tor euns. boa ts or ! 541-6639: eves 6464643. OWner '1'15-0259 Vic Placentm & V1ctorl11. ... of~ Irvine k 17th CM l...gc 4 BR, 3 ba Dover Shor· 64!Hl952, 540-4416 64&-1302 ' -· f'!J 1¥>mf', $82,500; Trade SIAMESE cat (~ blue-LICENSED Oiild care, my equity for duplex, condo or point . & seal. point) male. home. !\ton thru Fri. 2 to Carpet Laying & i\1e!Hl Clcanini; Servi<.T. vacatio1111 etC'. Call bet. Repair 6626 Caf'l>('ls, \Vindows, floors. rte. Topsoil 69n 10:30 nm.fi pm . 847_91s1 sm. homP, Harbor area. Loal 1n the VIC. near Shan. 4 yn. Fenced yaril & --'-------':C Res It Commc'I: 5484DI ---- JOE'S CLEAN SERV. ~i~~L:e_:i~g~7!~fi~ o:;~~,,0~~~~· c~~~ur~~ I STll.L have lhe Brst tlt>a l in rown in Carpet-Lino!t'urn· Tilr. C.A. Page. 64)-2070 Dept. * ~2991 *' non & Collegt> _ C · M · 1lloyroom, So. Coast Plaza \\'(' do Evcrythins·P.t''I & -19:>4632, C.i\t. 540--0550 MARINERS SAVINGS Com1n. Ftte !!:st_ &12.110:1 =~·""=,-,,===== BOOKKEEPER-AND LOAN Prime 3 Store commercial, Ot:. Owner Oregon bound - trade tor vac land. will car - ry lit TD, Call 56-M24. South Coast Real Estale $40M equity 3 br. 2 ba Ilse In pvt beh area. So. Laguna %. blk to heh. Trade for 12 o'." more units in Orange Co, 4~ 1282 aft. 5. 'l'radc $12,00'.l equity in Ige Reward! Day ,.7-9:l07 f'Ve area. 349-4038. 4 Br, 2 Ba hOme for small 1 _54&-3 __ 708_· _______ FANTASTIC & exp·d mother El.cl't·cal 1.1..1n BAY ii Beach J anitorial Tree Service 6980 .._... SECT'Y. 1515 Westclltt Dr. ---·-------Carpet.~. windOl\'S. floors. BOB'S TREE S GER . N rt "· h ,.,._ home or Jot. C.M. Submit. MALE poodle, black shag cul otters bab)'!ittlng service. \V. E. Lachenmyer Rltr answers lo "Mr. l\fizer." Fenced yard, nr. gchoo{s, 646-3928 Call eves: 642-2237 No rollar. \Vhitr !lpo\ on Nel'·port Hgts. 642-4224 <I<. R<-. & Cu,nmto'I. 646-IAOI UR Y Girl 1''riday !or Real Estall' ell'pD .....-ac ~ ELECTRICIAN. Small Jobs, " ,. ., I c. k 11 rt "-ntaintenance & 'r [' P a 1 r .> , • • s u.ic o · <! JlJ: '"" same 1.lanagemcnt. Local. full EXPERIENCED SHIP ches!. Vic of Richarcl's & 548-0a!J Jan1tarla l Service fine Qualify Tree Servlt:e. cllllr{:e, 1vith Honie Office CARPENTERS RI'!. & Comme'I. 64_t6824 * 540-3798 * ussistanee. Reports. AI R • ?.tARINE PAINTERS &: 8 Room, Z7(Xf sq, ft. borne, the Channel on F'inely Ave. COLLEG.E stu?eot. dayll.me Back Bay, 4 Br. 31h. Ba., Reward. 615 _ 6 81 2 or ba.by&lt~ng. Licensed s1v1m· gst apt .. pool, Want duplex 6?3-43SJ ming 1nsll'. Prefer beach Floor. 6665 ~ DON'S TREE SERVTCE Aii A/P -posting, rental income 1\f~RINE ~1ECHANICS. · lronin~ 6755 · s A 1 · · Ll d ---·-------types, Lisr & Ins. Free ,~. rxpenRC11. horthnnd or PP Y Ill perllOn o Cd1i1 or smaller home. area. Own car. 548-1489 Leon Vibe rt Rltr. 548-0588 LAB retriever, blk, answ to OCCASIONAL b b . 1. CARPET VINYL TILE IRONINGS done in my hnn1e Estimates. 642-5.58 1. !'JX'~·rhvritlng. No 1)3)'1'oll. Shipyard 900 Lido Park LIC CONTR. FREE EST. SJ hr. Excellent ivork. You TREES & shrubs: pruncct, Full tin1e, Salary :· advance. Drive, Newport Bch. 47' Twin diesel houseboal. clear, $36,000 value. FOR houae, unltl or 7 No out of state property. "T ·• I th II a ys1t1ng In ar. ea er co ar •"-Alt , 00 \Viii trade Gui Bransen h d. you uumc. e n n s. spinet piano for older car. w/nail t>ads, isnppeared evenings or w.ee k ends * ·~0-7262 * pick up and de l iver. shaped, remove or replant. trtt>111 good, Major health Experie n ced PANTRY Nr.1vport, Costa Mesa area. 25 yrs loc. 838-2528 aft 6. plan. W0~1AN \l."anted, Spqhetti 642.-8581 ::::::::::::::::::::::::::I Caldwell, Banker & Co. Bender, 620-t W. C4aft Hwy, Must be in gd running cond. 7-15-70. Vic: Hunt i n.g: Ion 64~238 . Furniture Re1toring & have gd tireR. -"-"~'°',,,..:·_R_w_d_;,_84G-4 __ .,~'--1BABYSI1'TfNG l\'ly home _ & _Refini1hing 6675 Upholslery * IRONING * 6990 Call 714 : 673-3114 Call 646-5381 \VHJTE female w h Ip p e I, Costa 1'.Iesa area. Day or 1\1y Home. ~l Hr. looks like small Greyhound. night. Fenced yd. 642-;)299. Jo"URNITUru; Strippini::: I· P itk Up & Dt-liv. 545--7641 1''ABRIC SALB :l4) ac. 5 yr old Riversidl'. Orange Grow: managP- ment frtt_ $5,650 ac. $76,000 eq. For: home, income. land. 4.94-2936. li\ acres Lake Co., Ore., $8(Q) free & clear • l'X· change for So. Calif. Roy J. Anltlon, 1000 N. Cour, Lag Bcb. 494-7260 2% Ac. e&tate lot, under- ground util., Gavillan Hills, nr. Riverside, Lake Mat. thews view_ Trade for Inc., trades. etc. Bkr. =>47.&169 2,000+ Ac oI Magni/. Utah land. Nr . Zion Na!. Pk. \Vlr, trees, road, nr. I a k e. $350,000 eq. For trades: Inc. Of '!? Bkr. 547-6469. * REAL ESTATE Gener•I Acre•ge * 6200 S AC, undeveloped. Lr.k' USUI'e3 apprec. Hunt, fish. Take over lo dn SW mo. 897-.8478. NORntEAST Anttlopt Valley, 2% acres. $199.i 10% down. Agent, 642-5586. 646.a;82 BUSINESS and FINANCIAL Laundramat -26 "!ashen, 10 dry. Lakewood $8!!00. Trade for car, boat, TD 's. property out of area. ....... Lovely high desert home. 6 acres, $30.00'.l value. Ex- change for your property NeWpOrt, Laguna area, 494-4746 or 499-1331 By Dwner l:lB Units. Low interest ass~umable loan. Will sell or trade tor 32 to 38 ff. Snilboa I. * 546-&169 * \\'ill trade lrg j Br, 2 Ba home in San O ementc: magnificent ocean view. FOR: Income property, CM or Nwpt Sch, area. Call 540-1810. * * BUSINESS and FINANCIAL Bu1ine15 Opportunities LIQUOR STORE OLD LICE."iSE S400.000 A YEAR * 6300 PRESENT OWNER • 15 YRS CAIJ.. VAN AT 64&.TI71 'rHE REAL ESTATERS • CAN you use more m()Jl('y? Minnesota Co. ex· pandlng into Calif. Call Roy \\'alkin:s, 642-9107 Business 6300 8u1iness Wanted Opportunities 6305 ~------~ COIN LAUNDRIES FRIGIDAIRE JET-ACTION Costa Mesa choiee loc·Sloo::I per mo net. P..1inimum $10,000 down payment. Santa Ana, Alpha Beta major shopping center . Big Vtl!Um(' laundry, $39,000. ReasonabJe ""'""· l2 \Vashus./8 Dryers, good IDCatioD. $8,oo::I F/P. Small down payment. COlN-0-MA TIC EQUIPMENT. INC. 525-7833 BUY or Lease !!ma ll business. Motel . mobi l e home park, retail tranchise. Couple 1vlll inveflt 1().6() M. Box No. PJOTI, Daily Pilot Maney to Lo "•'-'n--"63_2_0 1st TD Loan 81' INTERESr 2nd TD Loan Term!\ based on equUy. 642-2171 545-4611 Serving: Harbor area 21 yrs. S•ttler Martgflge Co. 336 E. 17th Street MATURE WO~t:EN w/Own Car Y Olfll he Surprised - Your s~ Time i• $$ to You Join Our Staff Of Baby-LOANS $50,000 & up. An,y Sit .... lst 2!i Who Answer real esta1t or business. Mr. 'ThlR Ad Wiii Meet for Sem-Dolhun 303:922--2305 no co.1- i nar July :zG. Dell1httuJ .l _1c:°":;J~coc:l;cb"". ----- ~ic Balboa Blvd Ii 20th CHILD Care days. f'VP.!\ & rcfinish2" .. · ",.~73 • 2.'iOO BJur Chip ' lam p !I St. 54IH308 a.Iler 3Pl\t. wknds. Near Paularinu ,,_ ... "" Janitoria l 6790 Jo"REI'.:. 3-pc dlva.n & chair Heartbroken? Bri!tol. 546-5028 ---------\VORKERSA\.aiiab~·Anv $69, incl des fabric & labor. Si'\l wht male poodl<'. Vic. : ONE lo 4 Yr!!-\Vkly $20. Gardening 6680 kind of work. anytim~. AU "'ork done in 5 days, Bal ls.le ir . Ferry land g 0 , tity hoine. F~ yard, hot ------Oeaning, ta"'" "'Ork. etc. F'J"C(l estimate. 821-5471. Owner anxx>u5. R w d . lunches 642-56.19 AL'S GARDENING Efficient, reliable. $2.50 hr. \V\UJAMS Furn & Crpts 61>-2398 ·==·::.· ===---~ tor Gardening & small land. A&k for John or Nicholas RN.'Over • rr.pair e clC'an. IE •. . H WlLL cart' for l child my scnping servlttos call 5'10-'>i9S [ 646-00Th. Beaut. \\'Ork. 1)42..Sl&t LADD : S1bcnan usky; home PVe1! for worldng blk/wht. Vic. \Varner & th c 1j 642-9'193 Serving Ne1vpor1, Cd~t. Co~. SPARKJ.E .Janitorial & \\"in-JOBS & EM.P [O'YMENf Springdale: H. Sch. 847-7671 mo r r. a · ta 1\1esa, Dow.·r Shores, 0011• tleaning Scrv. \\'Jn· -- SIAJl'ESE Ca' d 11 1 al C . 6 \Yestclif!. do11'1. ~sid .. corncl, ronst. Job Wanted Men 7000 ., a u em e, arpenter1ng 590 '""-"'-''-'-'=-'-;..:.: Sealpoinl. --. ~ \VE AL\I 1'0 p LE ASE cleanup. fo'rf'<• £'SI. 962..()672 --- Ph: 548-9797 CARPENTRY Complete garden rervicc. CAPTAIN MINOR REPAIRS. No Job P.eliablc l'xperl cleanup & Landscaping 6810 Lict'nsed -Iladar -Loran. Personals 6405 Too Small Cabinet ln gar-minor I an d !I c p . Call Morf1IEHOt.rE"O\\iNE:RS :10 Yra~ rxp. sail or ~wer. -'"-'"'"'-""------'-''-' ages & 0 th er caolne!JI. "Ff'arless F'm:I" 962-4914 Bond-Rock will mold your r:rorcss1onn1. Sport F111:hln,c; WORRIED ABOUT 545-8175, U no answer leave NE\V Lawns, re-seeding. J'.tTfLVl'I tight. r 0 r in-Llu1dr J\tciocan & CcnlrnJ RETIREMENT~ ms& at 646-2372. If. O. Complt>:~ la\\111 care. Clt>an fonnution 5 4 8-7 2G!i or Americ11n \Vatcrs -nliw Jr you don't l\'alll to live Anderton up by job or Jnonlh. Fre£' 548--5240 ARk for Butch Het•nsC'<f mulr i..,..ni:c. commer-~i,t_h11 youher 0 childrechn or CARPEN,'T=E=R=.-. ~R~,-m-.-,-,-1 ~ estimates. l''or info call cial pilot. land & sen. Ad- ,.,..... ves, res a i'.lnce Patio work & Cement k 897-2417 or 846--0932. Painting, ministrativc experience. to do someth_ int:: abo. ut. it. •' P••."l•-. No ,.. b wo,00' I==~~-~~-~-p h • ,850 Best of refcrenccR. Write Ou r t " ·~ LA\VN & Garden Care, aper ang1n9 Box l't1 1060, Daily Pllol. r non-pro 1 orgaruzaUon, small. Free es ti mat e , IX'autifieatton, weeding & for over 80 yrs. has made 5.3&-1544 cleanup by coll<"ge students. PROF'ESSJONAL. Pa.in~ing, SCRAM LETS retirement dreaml!I come Neal work. f'1nt" paint&. • true for thou.sands. If you QUALITY \Voodcraft. sml Reas. S43-'7363. Calina Bros. Roller, brush. air -I cs ~ have 15 m before you plan Ken'I <.-onstr. ~ carpentry, JAPANESE Gardener l\fo. · ·r ANSWERS to l't!lire, you need not wor-Fre-e consuitatJOn & quote. Rate. Gcn"1 Clean-Up. Ex-sprayi ng .. accous. eel .ings • -• .,.A _ _. -~. ad"-•• • Cill Ken M!).-0()44. 548-4235. .. ~ l..ocal ref s. Lo\v prices~ •J _,... ......... ..... .. _ per. n.ell!'!. r ree e s t. n ,,, 1··· o 642-2239. oy -........ Aching -\Vagon -Dally -phone nwnbcr to P .. Box REMODELING THE J OB You Want Al The> Jetsam_ SAY WHEN 10332. Santa Ana, 92701 lor REPAIRS LANDSCAPING. gardening, infonnation Apt Maintenancr . . Price You""' \Vllllng To A fa.~hion pla1c: She looks II" .... 787 ..... .,., ~..,, prunuie. lnmming a 11 d Pay. Special prices on 11pts. a!I if she was poured lnto her MEN? \Ve lake pride l• °"' · '" uun ...,,.......,1 ... OOV•ling Call ·•to• 5 pm " • .._ · "-' · · S!evr. ~8--4549 df'('ll!I and forgot to SAY work. We are here to make A-1 Small job specialist. 54&-5200. ' 'Ou look bel1er. \Ve UM' Call Go~o-. TWo UCL.A students nced,1_v_ll_E_N~·-------•u" G/\RDENTNG : Land •· Eu-an Razor Cullin" M' ... ,. mont'y. F.xp'd hou se M.ALE NURSE ... ,_ "' ........... cleanup~. Sfm"Lkr Rys. roro. · F • J etaire or .... -hatev_>er Is CARPENTRY·. C h 1 , k \ prunlcr!I rec f'.'11. Ken NIGHT DUTY -can cook nereS'51lJ')'. Our main ron-. . a n' s • ~~~ \\'Or 'II. n c [' Y ~1·1-307-1. Call Ray 646-1896 t'VC~ rem is your good looks! Room . ~ddit•or:s. Pauos. METICULOUS PAINT Sir \VaJter's, 2C}j2 Nc"•port Any size JOb. Mike. 64&-2576 AL'S Landsc<1ping. Trt'C • -------- Blvd .. Cl\1. REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS removal. Yard n>rnndrl1ng. BLU'E CHIP STAMPS. INS. Job Wanted T h h 11 1 1 1 crew col students. Int-ext W ' 7020 •FUL.LY LICENSED• * CABfNETS. A~y size job ras au n,1:, o c eanup. houses. Exp. Docks. G75-~18121 ___ o_m~•~"-----'-'- "-oow-• Hl•du Spl•"•tual"••l __ :n yrs t>xpr.r. 548-6713 ~pair sprnkl~. 673-U66 n...-·~· " ~ -No \\'asting Two \\'Omen \\'Ill clcnn. Advice on all ·matlel'li. Gio.."N. Rt!pair, add. cab. Lav.m main!, Life haul'~. * WALLPAPER * , $18 & $20 Love. Ma1Tiage, BusirK'S.'I Formica, paneling marllte. Trees removed. Comm'! Wht'n you call "Atac" 836-6468 . 5'16-2260 Readlng!I given 7 days a Anytk; .. ,,! Dick, 6734459 & reJltlenlinl. :rlt}021li !:==·-:::'::=:::::::::;:::::: .-=='=~~-~--·1548-1444 646-4032 BOY 15 desires employment. week. 9 AM-9 Pl\f 213 N. El JAPANESE Ga rden l ng Camino Real, San C C &rvic4 Neat work. Cleanup JfOUSES dock!! boats Cd~f Rnlt>Oa Island area. Clemente, 492-9136, s.i2-00i6 ement, oncret. 6600 yd. matnt. 968-2303 a n Y ! h, in &-e ~ e ry t hi~ 675-8931. Allk for Phill ip reasonably painted. For ln!e1----------Single-Widowed-Dlvorccd CONCRETE. All types. Free E XPERIENCEO Japanese ., • I "·wt b .w h J G d C I rslima!c 646-9'75~. Job-u-n Wom 7100 *MEN-WOMEN ."·"" ng. n:..,.,ng, a.u-11.r e-ner. omp ete l----------i-;;;;;;;~;;;;;,;;~;;·;;;;;;;;;;·;;;;;;;;; 1ng .!: sklploa.d1ng. Set'V!ce ServiC(l. free est. 546.--0124. PAINTING -Ext.·lnt. 1s11 l.Veryone'a looking for the & quality. 548-M68 Bob. GEN'L Cl U yrs. exper. Ins. Lie. Frtt rhi;ht 011(' \Ve have a "':!.\'-.~ ean p, tree 11erv, t'!lt. Accousf. Ct> i 11 n gs . call 113 &, begin 10 t.TiE! CL\fENT WORK, no jOb loo wt'ed till, rot<rUU, sprinkll"I!! 5"4lhi32:i. 547.fi667 Small, reasonable. Free repairad. 646-5848 ,'='==~-~-- 24 }f.r. Reoordin" Estim. H. Stufllck 548-8615 c0cA~R=o=E=N=ER~---51=m=u~BS=-I PR01''ES.SIONAL, 30 y ri " exp, paperhanging & paint. * GRAND OPENING* DECORATIVE CONCRETE MO\Y & EDGE irg, from England, 968-7461 . DRIVES-WALKS-PATIO Free EstimA1c11 lJ-19-9195 ~1ass8Re * Sauna CAI L DON 64U514 CLEA..'l UP SPECIALISf PAINTING & carpentry & * Whirlpool ~ ' all i;maU n!palrs. t~rce abilities unlimiteC> agency TRISH HOPKINS Female Staff. Ask 11boul our CUSTOM CONCRETE Ne\\' lenrt! & rl'pair. Odd eit!mate!I. 646-3645 ...__ 1..ru1 Vegas vacation. PATJOS-DRIVF.S-ETC. jobs. Re11fl. 548-G9jj ----488 E. J7th, at lrvlr11~. O f .-•=-TRADE, Palnt!n&: by Ileen&-642-1470 Noon-3 AM * 7 48y1 Free estimate. 675.5516. Complete Yflrd Carel f'd contraclo'f' for truck, I"''"''"''"'""''"'"'",...,.!!!'!' 293D W. Coast Jlwy 548-3608 * CONCRETE work: patios, JIM !i4().4S.17 furn. or ? &12-45:18 ACCOUNTS CLERK •WILL take care of elderly drvwa)'ll, etc. Li censed. YOU ~upply The Paint. a ExPt'riencf. n.equtred. Type persons. Phlll.lpt1 Cemtnt. 5484i380 Generiil Services 6682 Br, l)v Rm & Kltel'leD ri0 1vpm. 1..-Fee Paid (Also * 548-9488 * MORE;, Concrete patio for Pt1inl!'rl. $50. Call 557-86.18 Ft'C' jobs/ Cnll I.oridnc, A 1, COHO.IJCS Anonymous let~ money. Artistic srttin~. \\'all CIC1U1!ng By M11eh1~ fNT & Ext Pninling LOclil 64a..mo. Westcliff P erson- W eel 6350 Phone 5'2--7217 Ot' write lo Lie., call Max 111 644-0687 Fas!. low CO!t, dripless ttl:•. 11~·.d: lnii .. frte est. nr.I Agency, 2043 Wt:stcl.iU P~nts Babysillirtt Agency ~ey ant P.O. Box 1233 0.ta l\1en. F'rtt ER!. Call Chuck, &l.'Hl809. '.:°'.:,·c;N:.:.·:::"::_· ------ Profitable Work, Call M2-5S31 f r reservation ,....,..,... otU\ 000 I $100 000 c t t 6620 B "B QUIK KJ~EEN ,. o .,.Lo.,..,. ...,.,, o • 1;:;;;;;;;;;;.;;;:;;;;;;--;;11,;;o;;";';ac;;:;;o;;";;;;;;;;;;:; tr 002-51101 • RETrRED Painter: 2G yrs AUTO mechanic, llghl, fOT l STORES loan Jor goinR cosmetic An t 6410 =~=-----exprr. Neat &· hoMsl. Non MA lllU'llge, .perm. XL.NT SOOO' Heart of Lancaster. Lot bullness. Will gtve ptR. + nouncemen s CONTRACTORS APT Cl.EANl.NC • Painting trlnku Call SJG..6801. !Hll6ry. Hunt• Texaco '18 x 178. 2 storerooms 1r l ··"':::::".:'"::t.:..11::::<',.:&lG-4;::.,;,75~50~--I RESUMES Scrfpll GENERAL CO • Rug Shrunpoolng & Lite · · Service, l·IM N. Coast -NT · Jlep11.lr s . REMARC *PAPERHANGING . Hl;bway, I.q:. Och , Mc at Market includl~ ANNOUNCEME S Reports £dl!lng -Wri ting M<Jjtlon.Re~iN: SERVICES, 847-6688 & PAINTlNG. t 988-2425 lf!M..:JllXI equipment. Corner A\~. l Ir: •nd NOTICES -Rewriti~ Fast Accurate Res.idt.ntial-Comma'CW ---. . ~~'"'"'~----- di\llskln. AcroM trom Fair. ----------Service. Rt1 aonablt . e 5.ll-3699 e Jor;NCJNC. repairs. pa111U1li, ----------IAMiAtant Trainees grounds_ Excellent lnVt:st-Found (Frff Ads ) 6400 64&-646 LleenRed Bond~ ~neoral malnt. Plastering, P atch, ** HELP ** ment! HEAL'I'ij Spg ft'lm'lbcnhlp, 646-1800 or 646-9900 R I 6llO $3.55 per hr. $55,000 LADIES charm br acelet 8 months, price $83. C&ll *THE RDfODl:LERS* HO~lE tk>paJn &. Li i • --•~p:t~-'------1 12 me" nuded now Mn. Riley afttt '· w/chlldren'1 dAtn of btrth, Elsie Lowe, 91j2..Q}C7 Free t'sll -100% financing Main4~nallCC!. Balboa Island. • PATClt PLASTERING Perm. It 1emp. employment, n4-M0-6595 silhoUettes, names 4 Un;y Kltchelll pTagts -carporu Call Grorae. 61".>-8198 All ~· Flff Ntimalea l>c'llvrry drlveri, order dept, * DIVING SER.VICE baby 1hoe1. Mull have Men-TIRED of that old tumilurc? Compl•te Remodeling . Clll ~:is; ~1th ste~TV Co. ?.11.t1I be Ntwport Harbor in.Jlow tlmental valU(". ro11nd II"• really not that hard ~!llt7 Contractors. &12-I' 673 ----------I neat Ir ~l\-v, 11nd over water. Operate lull or .,..n Delaney'• Sta Shlitt)' park· JW01 H•u 1"9 __ • 0 6l90 19, Compaoi "-W tr11.in. lime.' yn in &reL Dlvlni Inc IOI. Owner rMY have to replace. J ust watch the ADDmONS, L. T. con-T.Ni. Lt.wn Se r v ice . !.!_.umblng Mr, Ruff 956J:87l tugboat, equip., cuttomer with delCnltc ducrlpUon. . mJ 11 . •trucUon. aingle or 2 gtory. cara.iie cle1ui·upa, hauling :u Hl't PLID.tBlNG BAB)'SITTER wantf!d, Aua: Ne. l l\ah rate of rttu~ 675--0672 fumitm"'t .\ ~ &neoul Platlf, etllm1tes ' layouta. & lldll movi11J. ~. Ii REMODEUJNC 10-&:tpt 14, G:.t~ .Ut-3:35 min. in~ttnent under GRAY glt'ipcd kitten about columns In the Ousllletl IW7-J5tt 531..J729 557·~4 P~t. my home, 3 02 3 $5000. Chvrltr movln1 out R wk:!I near J<enl and Sunn Rlllyhrook La, C. Al - or 1tam. 5U-Of40 Ln. in N.D. M&-1849 Sectkin. 1167-74.-19 ------. . . i Ne\vport Beach 833-0700 N.B. Ph: 645-Wl BOOKKEEPER -&>cretary. Sh. 100. good typina:. ThnJ Trinl Balance. Call Loraine, &t:'>-2770 Wt"!!lcliff Prnonncl Ag<'ncy, 20-13 \VestcliH Dr. N.B. **BUS DRIVERS 10 Mo's . posiunns lit $3.10 per hr. Apply Mon.Fri. lrom 1 ani- 4 pin Rt bus gilragc, 000 Jr. Vhlt' Ave .• N.B. 642-7007 CAHPENTER'S ){elper. ll"ill train qualified man. Call for appt. 826-5620 · COASTAL AGENCY A member of Snelling &: Snellinc-JnC. Tho World's Largo1t Profession•I Employment Service 27911 Harbor Bl, C?.1 540-6055 Harbor DIYd. al Adams COCK'T' A lL k Steak House Wa1tresfiCS \Vanted for New VIJJ~ Jnn in Laguna Beach. Only young, healthy looking girls need apply. Eves from 6 'ti! 8. 4941986 COF'FEE SHOP \VAITR~S. experienced. over 25. 4 to 12 shift. SHERATON BEACH INN, 2U12 Pacific Coast Hwy, Hunt. Bch. COOK \Vnntcd lor retirement he>mc, Lag. Bc!lrh. :F'ull timt>, 40 hrs, wk. Call 491-9'158'-----= * * COOK -Gravt•yard shift. Apply in person, ODIES ltESTAURANT, 1400 \V. Cons! H1vy,._ N_;_;.B_. ___ _ * COO!( * Experienced. 1u!I limt>. Park L id n Cnn· val<':acrnt lfospital. &124'044 CONSTRUCT I ON ac- countant, expcr. Comm'I mlldienl. Salary. ag<': open. N.B. * 557-7300 * COVER TiiE WATERFRONT 2 Experienced Advertising Sales1ncn needed as perma. ncnt Orange County Repre. liCl)IPlivtl for Boating Indus. lry PublicatlOn. See 1'1r. ThOtnpson Thunr. July 23, 2 PJ\1-6 P~t. Room 112, Edgewater Inn, 6400 E. Pa. cllicCoast Hwy, Long Beach DENTAL receptio1t!t1t, exper ncces&ary, Rlart Sept 8. CUm i 673--0400 DEN'l'AL A111t. & Seely, Ex.p.. HB. 646-2'728. 962-2436 :..68-5782 * DENTAL ASSISTANT '* Front desk only. Good hni, sa:. opert, Dental •Xl>t'!r. nee. Beach area. Call be! B am & 9 pm. g.t&..354.0. DF.NTAL NURSE for front office. Ex:tcutivc: qull1111ca· I.Ions, non-cmoker. Complete re11Umc kl; Box M.UIG6 Dal- l)' Pilot. N.B. DENTAL ANitlant, 18-25, mmUy chaJr with mme dCtllc. t\ lab. Nev.'J)Ort Beach. 6'4--0922 £XFER'D. Lunch Waltretl, 11).3pm, 5 dayR a wk. Ph: SJ9..6835 bef 10 am. EXPERIENCED wire Ii soldering girls. 540-5249 FAT & UGLY??? II you are, we prohabl)o can't use you. CALIF. CASTING CO. Ts continuing ifs aearch tn Orange Co. for a variety of types, for \\'Ork in mag, mo. deliJli, TV commJ's. I< ind. films. Great pay, pl time. \Vr. are client paid, no fee. Not a school. FR!E TV SCREEN TEST P1-I: (114) 8J5..8282 10 AMlo6PM Female ALL THIS am Free Al• Mode, Tool I ORIGINAL HOUSE OF PIES i.1 you're a wa.itress and you'd enjoy being 1: WAITRESS CASHIER HOSTESS Ir you like people, •. and do- ing your own thlna:. • .op. portunitY tor advancement, then this will be like no other job )IOI.I've had before. We"re opening soon ••. at: 9791 Adams, ltunt. Bch, Don't walk ... Run!! SUN. July ~. 9 A~M. Sec You Ther. .•. FINISHED Carpenter, •xp In display \\'Ork helpful. Zap Environmental l n t e r Io r Desig1., 831)-5282, 496-4226 FULL or PART TiltfE . EARN UP TO S5 PER HIL FULLF:R BRUSH (: 0 , 546-5743. GENERAL HELP** f'uU or part tlme, a.ge 19 to 31 Lg exp&ndlna chain. $3.85 per hr, 6 MO's reat. dency req'd. MR CLARK 956.2870 GENERAL OFFICE Nn.tional leader In' the enl•r· talnment industry, located In the Irvine Indu11rla1 Com- plex in Oranre Co., hu 2 Immediate openlna:R. Merchancli1in9 Clerk 2 Yr1 office experlence-lype 50 wpm plus-1eU 1tarter • able to work with Utile IUP. ervi!lion. Secretary-Receptioni1t 3 m o~ exper .• type 60 wpm plus-dictaphOnt tran. ll('rip!lon eicptr. 11 a mU1t - abLe tq take on respor!rllbll- ity I. w•ork wllh minimum instruction. tr qualified, pie~ call Mt. Adana for an appointtne.nt. 114/546.7946. GIRLS .. LADIES TIME FOR (j)UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT To 11.'0rk In phone otdtt dept. N'•wp1 Be.h. omce. o1 hrs a day, 5 dt>a a wl<. No _typing. Muat haw rood telephone wlct. 60-2115 CRAVEYARO 1; otJm abll\I • Ttlephone O,....IDI' .... '4M-<113T __ W_A_N_T_A_D __ I Call 1142.6m ......... It· • , DAD.I' PILOf 11nond'1, Ju~ 2J, 1970 ~~L ~~rt~~·~"~~~~~"rf~~~l.~IMP~L~D~Y:_Ml~NT~j·-;Ml::;ltC:HAN;:.:;..Dl.:.;Sl=PO;ltmMl;;;llC;;;HA;N;;;.Dl...;H..;;:..:·l'Olt"i;iijjrJ: IMIMl~lt~CHAND;f":;...;.111.;,;;.:;l'Olt;..;.__ SALi AND TUDI SALi AND TUDI ISALI AND TUDI ~ J1hz MM-11. W... 7100 Jobi Mlfw W... 7100 J1•1 M.n. Wem. 7100 Pumttw. -Fumllvre -IMmlcal MlllCHANDISI FOil SALi AND TRADE -DAILY PILOT CLASSlflED INDEX HOliEWORICEllS WANTED --....... ----.... s.c•.,....,..,,.,., 1-;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;[]1~no1~rv~m~,.~·~h~-~·~·u~ ,._ . '--..1. -QU~ "100. """'"'"' oppo<1unl1Y.f ' --*-M<N--1-NG_* __ Rulh atamped. aelf.ad-PLACEMENT nadonal firm, Lowly of· ATTENTION•. sr..rN'GERLAND 5·plec:e to 110· E. llth -St. DIAi. DIRECJ' •1J dr••••d envelope. Since 1964 tlcu, topbeneftta.CallMiu dnlm let complete w/ac.- "" "\jANODON WORLD Bell>. 56T-<122, Ahlpll Ah--a 5 Zilcljlan ..... Hllltron Ctr., July 20th ~ 1 1 ~~·~.:.x ~ Ntw"A!!:~Mnnel ~ w~~San': 8edrm and Uvilll' Ron CUJRCI $ale =:..·~~:-:;:l~t 1:: Je:~i'.y~je= au~ HOUSES FOR SALE "~rt 9f::D ~· Couitri ·= I-••1 Do-r Dr ' ~ ~10 ...... "• 11liea Ir rockbound -·Ip. •uittAL ................... ; .. ~uE1t HOMl!;i.. '"' -•o -..,. --n•-FENDER. BASS AMPLIFIER .. ,... <'OITA MIU •.••.••••••••••. 11• Ml$C, ll'ENTALI ,,,. ER. ' --• 4570 C D ·~ ""1 "OVR LOSS YOUR GAIN" Complete line o1 cutin& MU.t. ••1.. M4I .............. n• 1NcOM1 Pll:OP••n .......... .. .vr HOTEL CASl(I e ...... e. •mpu1 r _.,_.. J>El,.UXE RJOCENBAOIER MIU VllD• ................ 111• IUllN&SI Pl!;Of'E•l'Y .. ~,I •NCR GXI 6Jlft' ewntiaJ. ~ See Bltt)i Bnlot M BASS GUITAR auppliei. COUIOI ...................... 1111 1Jl.tdLE• ,.Alt.CS ••u ----_,. ... NEWPORTER INN, QUALJFJED SALESMAN w. ·-~-••••• out&.t for the n•tlon'1 l•r.. ·-•••• * • SPECIAL * t:r ... ", ...... , •• •n ............ , ..... IUllNIJJ ••lll'f•L ........... .. --p:~ (tt4) &M-1100-WI~ )TS exper in mail m lx ••t h:r~I;;;. rtnt•I com-nv. vio•·v-... All Stock ~ redlJced Xl7Q U.L90A COVIS .. ::::::::::1nj ~:::i~.~l"tiMSiiri".' .. :::: --•-"'~ , ·:.1.,1. 'AC ,..-r Open 'JUe thru SUn INIWl'O•T JMOllf . ., .• , •• ,,.ltM COMMIRCIAL a * HOSTESS * or dlftct .......::1. ~me t~ UliJ ., Pianos & Of'.'Slint 1130 • -1Avc111T .................... 1m utou11a1AL lllNTA&:·:::::::: i wtwd with a rapidly ll'OW· Complete Bedroom set in rubbed walnut lln· Closed Mon. ~~~~:=:an ·:::::::::::::::: 1-0T1 ...................... 1• I ~ Eves., full o r pt time. tnr Garden Centtt & Arcncy b' Career Gltll lsb, consists of: dr esser w/m lrror, 1 double SAVE NOW S M GEMS w11TtL1'~ 1m •AHcMn ...................... •iN A£s25-3.!. Apply bet. I and scape Development no W. Cout Hwy ., N.B. headboard, 2 nite stands, double box tprln~s DURING SUMMl!R Ptuent address: AA••oa ," .. "'U:iiDi'':::::::.1m,., ~1l~l1tOYn .. ·:::::::::::: .. =: ~ . 0 r. B l I ·--Bdrm J "-UN IVl•I TT 'Alta .,.,,,,..,,1 L.t.al llLllNOll .............. Atl I '2: P.M.. ........ .,. 1n ran & e .....,, ... Y appo n · ..._ & mattress w/ frames, 2 amps, uoi:: ,. CLEARANCE SALE 21"';:0 Harbor Blvd., 11-A 1•v•N• ...................... '*· •11.so•T PIOl'llTT .......... .. R~,L-n's Coco's Trehnkal u:per. prd., but sprtad &: bedroom chair ...•.•..•...•. $17t. We have trade-ins, .. -. Coata Meaa * M9--~ .••.,•,•,,1,",, ........ -............. ',"'.., •0•u•,•., .. .,••.·,'", ,°',.,'"" ..... .,.,. .. uw not mandatory. Xlnt pay SER.VlCE Sta.Hon Attndnt. ......, Reu of CoUep Center 11 Tift; ................... lttt ..wu,.T.&.•N a oesairi :::::::: ... .. • Costa Mei• with corp benefita Ir; opp Ex~nslve local eXp, eve. 5 piece Spanish Bedroom set, finished in an-rent retutn1 1 floor models SHOP CLOSED MY 19th/ 1•V1N• T•••ac• ............ 1w 1u1orv1110N LAHD ......... .m , "· ·~ w. Ada--. for -•·--m•nt 1'nlo --1. •"'" --·. -•--• , 1. • 1 I 9 dr d ol every model Hammond C(:llllONI. DIL MA• ........... 1ts1 1u1A1. llTATI s11v1c1 ..... au ......,., .. ~ .............. .......-wu... ....,.. rv uu..:: • 1que green, cons1s s o : awer resser Organ, Buy now 1 receive %3rd •.u..u ,,N1N1&1U. ......... t• t.1. IXCHAN•• .............. «111 i HOUSEKEEPER • live in, Contact Mr. Wall (nc) halt. App. S-3 pm dally. w/mirror, l double headboard, (2) 2-drawer u:tra discount. :.~cf.t::Js ";::::::.:·:.:::.:::: t. •· WANT~o .. .. ........ .. , 1L1.g. Bc.h. 'VI dower, _......,.===---.-===~ SHELL SfATION 19th I commodes .............•... , , ......... $13'. HAMMOND L100 11L1 .................... 1u1 BUSINESS and i -""""'-n 3 & 5. 6 d<>v "'"Mk. RESUME only Production Placentia, C.M. • u.1.10A isu.JfO .............. 1m FINANCIAL _, 0~· ~ 5 · C t Betlroo t a1n t ln CORONA DEL MAR MUNTIHTI>N 11ACN ....... 1• ~"" ,)250. &49-UOl days, 49f.6297 Foreman, mobile-modular SERVICE station Attndnt, piece on emporary m se ' w u 2854 E Cou H 673-8930 MUNTINOTON MA••oU• .,,,., .. IUllNl!IS OPl"O•TUNITlll .... wlmds. homes. Exper onl)r, Experienced. for fUlJ tlm!. finish, con sists of: 6 drawer dresser w/mlr· · t wy, UMDA 111.• UN 1us1Ne:11 w.uiT110 ........... .... Open "1on le Fri e,,-es., . . "4.INTAIN VAl.L9Y .......... 1411 IJIVIEJTMINT ~ ....... Alli ~It noOUSECLEANING •-Child minim~m 5 yn in mobile Top P1¥ for looct man. 990 ror, 1 double headboard, 2 nite stand s .. $6t. IUL IUCM ................. ,. llNlflTMlfNT WANTlfO ...... Ult .. ho field all ...s....-.. ?t!a E O:wut H NB ShelJ PIANOS le ORGANS IUNSST ..... CM ............... 1UI MOt\lllY TO LOAM ............. mt ·~ [llC&re. $50 wk plul nn. " me • ...-. . . V.'Y, •• , Tw' '-d bl bo rln '-tlr NEW .. : N•DIN ••ov1 .............. 141' .. 15..DNSAL LOANS ............ au '"'">1'''°"~--·. sin days. Rtrs. PH: jestic Homes. 18060 Euclid sta. m °' ou e x sp gs °' ma esses & USED LON• ••AcM .................. 1• ,.,w•L•T LOAN• ............ .me I Tl .......... St, F v COURTESY ·-·•N ·-• .........:I ' ••••••••••• ' •••••••••••••••••••••• $29 • •••• • Yamaha Pianos: ~ LAI( ... ••• ..... , ... ;;.;.;.;.;······· ....... ~= 'toLL.ATlllAL LO.t.Jtt ......... .m • t540-U~ . . . .~.,, Ill """"' • -----"---MAST, Jam.--', boom I tit. _.... ............. •IAL llTATI LOANI ........ QIO I~ RESfAURANT Now ta.kin& 1 to 'Orie ult Bob B' S . h •· , 2 h . . ed/ Id ........ u ............. "...... ""-" OUT o,. COUNTY ............. •• MO•T0Ao11, Trwt ci..-.... _. I . LJi!:iK.l"RS Emplyr pay• fee . . -pace w ~anlS SOuii °' c airs ID r go • Kimball Pianos ting fol' Sabot .. l9:d alum. OUT 0, ITATI ................ 1 ... MON•Y WAINTIO "' ......... QM n; Geo-All•• Byland "-n-&pplicati005 for .waitreases, Edwards. 962---7751 Speclal.i&--flnls ''" cabnast. 10' L. p It r. k e I TANTON .................... l•ll ANNOUNCEMENTS ... ~ "'6"' 11 m I: dishwaahen .......•....•.......... ·~ ......• ·'· • • Kohler le Campbell WISTMIMIT•• ................ 1'1t cy 106-B E. 16th, S.A. ~. · 1ng in H.B., F.V. area wood & rlfw runabout. MtDwa v <.tTv ................. 1•1• •nd NOTICES • ~·7 •395 APPlY Colony Kltchen, 3211 Massive 9' sofa & Jove seat, a reen/gold COAST MUSIC Rutan hutch. 400 38th st. U.MTA AMA • ................. 1m I ; -" -u • Harbor Blvd., Cos~ MHL e SHIPPING le RECEJV.. • ll NEWPORT & HARBOit SANTA ANA M•n. ............ 1'31 '0:U ND .,,.. Ml) .......... , .... ! 10' 110USEKEEPER needed R t uoo ING CLERK, to l!arn to floral pattern, complete .....•........• $ 45. C.OSta Mesa. +.-6(2.2851 .~N~•~-=-"~~s._._,_h._~~=-1~~::,:• ::·:-·'.:::::::::::: .. ::::: ~~TsoNaLi · .. ::::::::::::::::::: '• Sept. Balboa 1 s la n ti . . e~•P • ..,.. . umt in QC. Perm. po11tlon 8' Spanish sofa &: love s eat, blue/•reen m a-Open lD-6 ™ 10-9 Sun 12-5 YARD vacuum, cost $ZXI, No•™ Tvst1M ............... 1w •HNOUHC£M1MT1 ............... ,. 1 ... .-•-r,---ut-·.~.9013 L1tefiUng&::typ1ne:. . _,, 1 XI,~ • _11 '°' i~. 3 .• hp 1,, ... •NAM•IM .................. 1659 11•TNJ ......................... 11 1 71, n.c '"'"'~ ·~-. ·~ .,,.,.... 1n am .... mg. oo, n u•nre rlne floral pattern $ll9 .... 1J J .. siLv••Aoo CANYON ......... 1w PUNl!aa1.s ,_, ................. u R btn's. H.S. Grad. Elec-. . . . . .• .• .•••.. .. . . . • !~r. cost $115, sell $45. LAOUNA MILLS ................ 1111 , ... 10 OllTUAlt Y ................. u FIOUSEKEEPE ' compan. Qualltv Placement 1-~ •• ~. p-l'd. •-e no I a· I •-h Ir n b HAMMOND, Steinway, Yam-Both almost new & still U.OUNA l lACh .............. 17tl FUNIE•AL 01•1no•• .......... :• ion, some nunlfli'. ExchTef. , ........... ~ ... ~ .. , na so a oi:; c a , ·o ral Jue/green marine _,__ N .. --• , ____ ol LAGUNA N•OV l!L ............ 11u •L0•11Ta ............. iM • S ince 1964 barrier but prefer man at It u.. •uo.. ew I: """""'Piaf~ under g\llU'Mlee. 644--0740 MISSION Vll!JO ............ 1n1 ta•o o' TllANKI ............ Mu \\'ill Jive in or out. 494-4475 pa ern .....•...........•.............. ·-·· moat makes. Best "'"""S in SAN CLEMINTI! ...... int IN M.llMOllAM ............... MU least 25 or over. ""'J BOY'S Schwinn 3 1pd stick SAN JUAN CA,IST•ANO 11U CEMITl!kY LOTt-L!."""•"" .... Inrurance Casualty ~ncy. Newport GENERAL ti-10NITORS 1 8' sofa & chair, on gold tweed pattern $59. So CalH. &t Scbm~t Musk shift bike $15. Bwnper pool CAl'IST•ANO Ill.ACM 17M CIMITt•Y c•YP'Tl ......... IMlt Corona del Mu, part time. Personnel A"ency 3019 Enterprise St. C.M. Co. UI0'7 N. Main, Santa Jna tbl 17 DANA POINT 1141 ~=:..:1~:: •• ~•Y,TI ......... =: EXPERIENCED all tines. • 3 beautiful high back matching overstuffed 5• paddle board Slo, ocl!aNsio• ................... 1151 'tl.•MO•IAL 'A•Ki"'"""'"'td1 P 0 •-N g 4570 Campus Or, NI SPRAY PAINTER .... h . . Id 1 t $Sf h 1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio I telesrope $20, Lawn Boy ~:.:~~g: C:'oUNri":::::::::;: 1.ucT10N1 ..... ::::::::::: ... Re!WDe, . · ,,..,... o. • 557-6621 fumltutt tlnishina: exper. c airs m go v e ve . . . . . . . . . . . . . . eac . 1• power mower $90. 642-all9 MOus11 To 11 MOVED ...... 1 ... •VIAT•ON s••vice .......... ~ Cdr-.t. d ·~ b tlal ORGANS CONDOMIMIUM ' ......... IHI T•AVEL . ' ............... ~ * R-opto'onlat * esu"" ut not essen . I 36" while stove w/ grt'ddle top cloclc •-it \VIUTE N'"-ara recliner DU,.L•JC•• "o• SALi! ....... ins a11 T•Aw1,ow.TATrOt1 ....... ...-***KEYPUNCH .... Sr ban1 $2 50 • u -A'AtTMl!NTS FO• SALi .... ltll AUTO TtAMSl"OllTATIOfll ..... '4U Moha.·k operatoc. Experi-per .... hr. HEno mwoo'D'· •• ~ storage space ...•............•..•.•.... $49. Dlacountl chair top cond. Masse.gr &: RENTALS ~~'!.~L .. NOT1cUTE1 ....... .u• Full ~-25-35 ...,,. heat control.I. liand vibrator ,,,_N • T ••1N• ..... ..,. I ~=.onT=~ n:; P~ attractive, sharp, min. Placentia Ave. C.M. 130" yellow stove, almost new .......•.. $69. ~~W::~~ = incl., $250 or otter. Ph: ii!!°!::-' -~~r~l~~~ .. w ~c~~u~~f;.~ ~I~~~~.~!. I . 1 yr_ exp. type 60 ace STOCK ROOM CLERK 1 new Wedgewood built in oven & broiler &U-7656. 6=30 pm. •l!NTA1.1 TO sMA•• ......... 111111 ANswi•ING sl!avic• ....... .,.. ' •• ·urn.A.VERY PRODUCTS SH t nee &aut H.S. IJ'lld, 1 )'f. vcperience -' DINETI'E set 35" round 1able COSTA Ml!IA ............... 2lM APPLIANCI a1,A1•1, ,lltb .. 6111 no , .. ~ ... "~"' in electronic components: de-super deluxe •...... , , , , . , ...... , . , ..... $ff. ANTIQUE Pedal organ Good one leaf extends to 47". =~t ~=~o':"• .............. ::~ AS,MALT, °'" ..... . ........ mt ' Consumer Division Bay front ofc, .,..._,.,,,., condition -... c~LLl!•E ,.A•ii".'.'.'.:::·.:::::.11is .... ",','•·'•~~ .... •...,• .. ,.,., ... , ......... ..., I 1ir@d. Good pennw.nshlp, _.... • Vinyl uphol, pedttstal NtW,O•T &lfACM l2QI - 26lD So. Suun, Santa Ana ,..tail GATES LEARJET JHE USED FURNITURE FACTORY C.U 642-1030 c!Wn lbe"ei~ldJ, $15. NOWl'OH ••» .. ::::::::::::..,, :~:;'l:j\~~""'' ......... !!". I Contact Personnel: ~ S•le1 -e ""¥ M•WPO•T 1Moa11 .......... mt ........ .. 186Sl Von Kannan, lrvlne BALD'VIN organ model 47. 557-7781 IAYSMO••s ................ ms =~~~=Es':"::::~.;tc.. ....... ... KEYPUNCH OPER Reteil 1115 H•rbor •-.. lov•rd, Coat• "-•• like ne~ Fr ~·-~-· 113 H.P. filt•r. _,00 12, DOVE• 1Mo11!1 ............... 2221 •u•••••• ........ au • SUPERVISOR, LVN or RN, DVV 1TIW ' · c•u•ua.:...,, ai WISTCLIFP . .. ............ mt CAT a ................... .,,. 4:30 pm to 1 a.m ahHt 3 to 11:30 shift. Park Lido ~Mn cherry wood, $199.5.. 6"-4277 doughboy Pool & ac-UNIVl•llTY ,. ................ 12n CA•~~.:...k""""""" ...... WI Prefer one year Keypunch Convalescent Center. Ph: o,.. .,....,.. f·l:Jt, ht••'-r•.f·I, C:S..-hMrp BALDWIN Spinet piano , cessoritt!. $50 comp I! t e . ~=~~": ... ;.:· .. ::::::::::::::::::::: ~~1tPINTE•1:• .:::::::::::::::: e<perience. MEN'S 6'" -••. ll!!!:!!!!!!:!!!:'!!!~!!!:~~~'!!!~~~!'!:~~~~!!'!I Like new. Sacrifice $600. 968-2893 IA.ST ILU'' .................. nu CM~L~"!~,c9flf;'~_:.:.:·········"°' _,..... l!I T•.-. 2264 ..,. If, .....__ ........ "II • 1 COLLINS RADIO ....,., rouoNE OPERA~R Prlv. party. 642-0!in * FOR Rent_ Cabl~ Mam-IAVINI! T•••ACI ........... nu CONTltACTo•S ............ ... J bo Rd •~en w p If -Offl f I tORONA OEL -•• -•• CAR,ET CLl.lNINll .... ,,jd(I 19:~~ ;:ch · CLOTHING 3-11 pm Sat a: SUn um vre -ca um ture I010 PRIVATE PARTY moth Lakes, sips 7, furn., IALioa .... ~ ... ::::::;::::;;; ~!~:~.rs"'.'."~.~ .. ~~.~~-'~.= uni l 228 Fottst, Laguna Beach 20 PC·. ,,., 'DRID" n-"n'd M~. -~ d-·'--. V.'IUllll to buy piano frlpc. 5 nites $75. 5.11-3374 ~~~ ,'s'~NDi''""""'" ...... re! Dl!MOLITIOH ................ Nat Equal opport ty emp oyer """ n.cu -~VII wuuu i:alllll tor Qlsh 213: 461-1423 (ll' 540--0617 eves. ' ................ o•APTING •••VICI ......... -"11 SALES TEL Answerilli Serv. Exp. 3 ROOM GROUP 169.SO • uJln'd .. _. arm"==='======= 1---~~-==~~ :tL.~~!0','•"'•"•0••<•······· .. ··= l!Ll!CTltlCAI. .................. .... KITCHEN-man aome clea~ qua! no:~ wuuu 1• SURFBOARD: 7'"3" Soul, ......... l!OUtPMINT •ENT.AU ......... ,. up. Student preL No exp. pref'd. WU! train lfled FROM MODEL HOMES rotary chairs, $29.50 • We Radio 1200 :.,nt for Calif beach break. FOUNTAIN VALLIY .......... l41t !'ENCINO ...................... .... nee. $2.00 hr. 30-40 hr wk. \Ve ue interviewing to hire girl over 30 540-3:>52 Includes: Qullted aofa &: have !ht lara'e1t selectk>n --w· ~~~~ ~~~~ ·::::::::::::::: .. :~:: ;~:.~sci'l'i:PA"1•s:·i·ie:·::::::= Gol•·n ·--•••9102 Telephone Solicitors. chair, 2 end tables • c:of!ee of used office tum in this ANTIQUE A.!'\t short wave Gd. Cond. $65 or bit ofr. H:ANlll COUNTY ............. 2'°' PUINITU•• ••ITO•lrrte I "" ai::-... .-r quallfied salesmen for sultl, ll CM 842--6023 SANTA ANA ................. 211t a lll!FlflllSMINll -~ 7 ts &::: alackL Charity appeal. Paid weekly. table, 2 lampe, drtuer, mfr-area. radio $3S. 898 DaITe • . WISTMINSTI!• ................ MIS OA•Dl!NING .... ., i:.VN. relief week '1:1".... •port CO& A l ·~ N __ .. ...___ .. ...__ _ _, qulllod ~ ., .. _. __ ~ k 646-8513 4 x 8 REGULATION pool MIOWAY CITY ................. 2'1• GlfM EaAL s••vtcti' .::::::::Mi:I ' to 3:30 shift. Puk Udo Coo-pp y: ~ . D~u.uway, ror, 1.::au ....... u, """' .. c ............ u.;!i "===-======= UNTA ANA MlflGMTI ........ Ult GRAOIMO. OllCINO .... . p b We ·-·-an ex--"-nt .......... Rm. 410. Santa Ana. 1prinp le maltra!, 5 pc 1800 Newport Blvd. I ---. --table complete with all ac-COAITAL .................. :11 .. OLA.SS ........... Ntt ! • valescent Center : ,,..~., l%IS .... v ..,A., oA~ T I I 1 8205 ces!IOrles. Xlnt cond. $350. LAOUNA I I.ACM .............. J1tS o•1&EN TMUMi .............. .. .. " -·• ~m of •mpl-~nefi•-* 1•• • ...... .,.._..._. _ Coffee Shop, dlnin& room; table & 4 bi-....._..:,,,, • •Y s on_ LAGUNA N1ou11. ........... , .1111 ............... 1111 """°"""" .--VJ~"' ""' ... 'Y""''~ 646-3629 before 4 PM. MISSION v11Jo 2101 GUN SHO' ................. 611• M.:::.~,=.~-~H~O~T=E~L,-=D~E=s~K' I including pen!UOn .. major owr 21. * Cook-r.dy Apply back ch.airs. '67 ZENmt Color 21" lV 1.1.N CLEMENTE ···::::::::::: 2111 MEALTM CLUll ............... ,. · M Lanes., 1703 COMPARE AT $749 95 SALE ~ CRAGAR S.S. cron1e IAN JUAN CAPIST•ANO ...... 2m MAULING .................. •nt CLERK w/h!11vy exper. re-medical ins~ etc. iSun ~n,C M"' .... . I coMO.ltt. X1nt cond. ~. reverse mags; to f i t CAPIST•AHO •EACN ......... mt :Tu::~'".•"oN~~•A+iNii """'~m qu'-"'. THE NEWPORTER ~=~=-=·· =·'~·--.~~~·INo •-·-Pm .. ., .. ~•y 116 mo Back ~---Imports l9S5 Pomona, Apt. 23. OANA POINT' .......... 11ct rNCOMI TU ..... ,,. "= W l ·1 to >-p In and W-AITRESSES d A l Ul1\•u ....,,u ....._.-u o """"' Chrysler product. I mo old. RIVE•llDI CCUNTY ........ 1i01 O•OH ---•o ''~ ........ ,,.. INN. Ph: (nC) 644-1100. t nv1 r you lllV · , e:iip . PP y, WELK'S WA.REHOUSE u,. y ....... a.~ .. •---'---' --~==""~"=· =o-='7'--642 ~, v•cATIOH •l!NTALS ......... tftl , • ...,_,,_ • -...... .. d•--·· •••-aaJ JO' b "'th '~ P·"--•-Rd SA ""' .....,,.......,1>C.1,1:an1 $'15. Alt. j:()() -·~ SUMMI!• RINTA'• ......... lflt •ONING ' .. .. .......... •7u . A ly -.;u,aS u.... es ~· ~ ..............:! .. • • NEW .. USED TVs CONDOMINIUM -tHf INSULATtNO .................. , .. "~~fuigt:n-S: J:tel our store manager. * THE DERBY * 600 W. 4th St., Santa Ana 1196 Htrbor Blvd. CM For sale/rent STENOTYPE fl.I ac h in e : DUPL••E• Fu•M.'::::::::::: 1971 :=~~~~~0c:TiN0:··~· .. !: L. I I . , .......... n-... .. H B WANTED: Part time, licem-OVER STOCKED 642-7576 Du.nlap'a, lB1.5 New....-C\I. Court Reportttr3fl.~~l.,New, RENTALS IANITOl1AL ' .... :::.,,. J;-lllUJ; ......... --.: .... ., • • DESMONDS _, RE aal l "" P k .. .,.,. .. Other access. 4-.w.:.o Aft HousH Unfurnlshtd JEWELtv .,,,.,111. •1e.. ...... .... ?ttAIDS. Perm. fulJ time, 25 "" · · '' peop e. ea MUST SELL ar In Rear 5'8-778S ~:30 U.NOKAPING ........... "1t l wknds. t...chenmyer Rltr. Ol!Nl!llAL .............. OCKSMITM ............... 'tH or over. Good salary for .,..., -6"-''77 Twins •A9 95 Fulls •::O 95 23" COLORED PIULCO FENDER Bass amplifier CCITA MISA .............. st• MAID SE•VICll .............. H21 d_....__le \\'Om&h. Apply: LONG BEACH D'ftN<f....,, evea: ..,-= .,. · ' .....,. • 2 'VALNUI' 60" desks; ...,JV\ 00 MIU.. OIL MA• .............. 11es MAJON•Y, 1•1CK ........ ...,. ~.. WANTED . -llabl• clean!"'" Queena_$89.95, Kinp Sl.19.95, l\\ivel, tide cha.in A pads. .......... dehu:e Rickenbacher bass MIJA Vt •DI ................ 1111 MOVING. STO•Aoi: ........ ..... 3151 Harbor Blvd. C.M. ~,. ,.,. Twin S H d..._•-"-$7 95 673-8671 tuita.r COLLl!OI PAltK ............ ,1115 PAINTING, Pa_ ..... ..., test woman one day a week. 11.e ea ............ . • 67S-4392; 67s-4422 NIWl"O•T ••ACM ............ not PAINTING, SM . . ' .:::::: .... 1 ~.-tr&n1portato'on Trundle Seta: $89.95, Sleep.. "=====:::::==:::::::..1n·· ZENITH Black" white • 67"a-M04 * NIWPO•T MGMTS ............. t21 1 PATIOS ................. .. ...., ... ,. 'I_•• "".: NIWPOIT INOlll!!I .... , .. ,,.int "MOTOO•APNY ............ rt Male RECEPI'ION1Sl" fur beauty 536-4001, after 4 1'1.f. r-r Sofas $119.95 I: Up, Studio Office Equipment I011 TV Con10lr $50. KING-SIZE mattress & box IAYIMOllES ............... ms ,.UsT11t1No, '•1Clt. •-Ir .. AN =~=~~-----1 Couches $89.95, Corner 548-'i;,OO springs. Good condition $50. oov11 swo•11 ............... 2221 l'LUMllNO . , .. , , ..,. salon. l\fUST be tx· WELDERS (2) exper in Groupo $1'9.95. ELECTRIC IBM Ex-·ll"el-===='======= Wl!STCLIFP .............. nM '•T GROOMIN• · ........ ,,.. £f, HEY • Looking for an exciting lob • _ • with roorn to grow. NIGHT MANAGER UTILITY MAN BUS BOY BAKER'S HELPER Interviews start at: ri td 635-C108 ....... y '. 549--0674 UMIVl•llT't'l'AllK ........... mr POOL IE•YICll .. .,. pe""""e"'nc'=".'--',C..~~-,,-1 plant layout, muM be exper SIESTA SLEEP SHOP &. Unden "OOd forum, SlilO. Hi-Fl & Stereo' 1210 GOOD s.n•--18" el--o·c •v1N• ...................... IUI POW•• 1w11P1N• ,',',',','.'.' .. '.'.tn1 RESUME only, Production only ln mobile homes. Ap.. Deska 2 I: 4 drawer !I'--·-------""' .... " ....... aAca IAY ................... 32441 PUMP Sli•VICI ................ ,,. Superintendent, mob i I e-plication to J\f 1J _est ic um Harbor Blvd., CM 1882 ,Vhlttier. Unit v, Of: 2 AM/fl! Kenwood stereo power mower $50. :f'l,,!LUFP .................. :!: ':..~~J~~effift."ate:·:::::::::::: modular homes. Ex:per only, Homes 18060 Euclid SI 64$-2760 64.., ••no re<:e. Brand new l70 M2-32'l8 ••V1Nt Tl!ltUCE .... -...... nu itEMODELING & itEPA•• .. . • • 34155 Cat H D Pt ~ lVrrl. . CO•DNA DEL MA• ........... 21» •EMOOl!LINO, KITCMIMI ... ,.. minimum 5 yrs in F.V. ·.~~;, ana . NORELCOmodcl""ca~age watt-$275.130watt ·$225. GOOD small Zenith IALIOA ................... ,. ICISSOIS IMAIU'IM ...... : .. :.'" oupervi11lon all ,.j.ue•. Ma· 0 G EN~., ,,.,......, °"' •u• .,.~1568 e.-a\asff"S hi!",..;,,., aid $50. IAY ISL.ANOS ................. aua IEW1NO .............. ·'"' ...... 4 y UN ?t1 ,,..,... dictation system, complete. Prv, party . .,...,..... J~.. -~.. LIDO llLE ................ ml Sl!WIM9 MACMIN• ltl,A1•1 nn Jettie Homes. 18060 Euclid tU'll $100 wk and up. Car -=-----~-Ne--od. ~~. -'888 642-3228 IALIOA !SU.NO ............. ws Sl!,TIC TANas. ~ •1e.. ..... 1 St F V . _ _ _ ,.. ..,., .,......., ~ NllWPOIT WllT . , ............ U7J TA ILOllNG . .. .. , .... -: ... MN ' . . nee Call after 5 pm SPANISH FURNITURE Sporting ~-~. asoo FA?t11LY member. h Ip MUNTIMOTON •IACN .. .,.,.,... Tl!•MITI! CONTllOL .......... mt . • 1-ELEC la\! st•ndard .... -~-----MUNTINOTON MA••Ou• ..... ,...,TILE, C.,.ll'lk " ............ ffr4 RN fur ICU. all shifts. Xlnt 557-8075 FACTORY ....... writer (elil• •-) u~ SHOTGUNS • Mod. u ~.. Balboa Bay Club. FOUNTAIN VALLIY .......... Mii TILE. U...Urn .. ~ ... ,, •• .,. working cond's " benefits. .,,~ '.7t"" "" "' 675-4537 Sl!AL IUCM ................. MM T•l!E lllYICI ........... .,.. , Contact Director of NUJtS. School .. Jnatructfon 7600 OPEN TO PUBLIC new. Reuonable! 644-5179 12 gaugtt, Mod 97 win. 12 0.t.•D•N G•ov• .............. M1s T1L•v1110N'i-• ..,..,., Ste. ... •9U I MAN To asalst mgr of local ---. -gauge, RUles. ~Spring-75HP Johnson 0 -B motor ~~:::~b~Nri".','.".".'.'.','.'.' .. :=: ~~~~~~·· ...... :::::::::::::: appliance 1tott. Neat ap-~IN..,G~·~c~~~M,, .... =M_,,~-morlal....,.*_""'l'-,-,,·-1 1T'S YOUR MOVE next 2 WMk• C1fe, Resteur•nt IOl4 neld, Stevens J0.30, 22. $250. Sabot hull dinghy $35. SANTA ANA ................... MU WINDOW CLllANIMO ........... #f7 9791 AdlUl'\I, Hunl'g Bch SUN. July 26, 9 A.lt1. • .,., 23S3 Mr 673-0013 WESTMINSTI!• ................ a.i1 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT ""wrl.,....,.ght 0-'10 :'.:"on1y. • SALESLADY tor dre" •hOP. Whol~le/Below RESTAURANT EQUIP Ph. 897·2064 after 6 pm. M10WAY c1TY ............... ,." ...... --T\VIN size-canopy bed w/ SANTA ANA MllllKTS ......... Ult JOI WANTIO,,,.. ............ 7MI MECHANICAL tparto -~.m,e,·.,!t•M~:... AA~~ely·• INDUSTRY CAREERS T:;_b1up'':, "' ... ~~;.!allup.ahelves-* 546-5&50 * ~t!;, ta' ~l~~y~1;~~~~ mattress. Nr new. $65. Aft ~O:tiA; 11.\cM ::::::::::::::~: 1g: :::~:g; •-........ 7Wt ...... ,..., ..,u1e v .., Ul3 'fV~ 6 pr-,I, 546-2525 LAGUNA NIOUllL ............. 1711 Ml!N & WOMIN .......... Jin Ex:pericnced with hand&: Balboa Isl G S I I022 New cover Delivered. $39S. MISSION v111Jo ...... w.,,, ... J70I SCMoou • 1N1T•UCTIOtl .... t• t l Capxble of · _•rage • • 646--36()2 s4s-9909 ANSAFONE, Best &::: latest SAN CLl!MINTI ...... _1111 JOI P•EPAIATIOM ..... ., .... ,... pov."e:r" 00 1· Sales AIRLINE & TRAVEL G1lleria Furnltur• --,-----• · sAN JUAN caP1sr•ANo nu TMUT11u1. .......... JM accurate •'Dl'k. ~1177. GARAGE Sale . WI ha ve ARNOLD Palmer complete non-remote model, T1.x <.A,ISTRANO ••ACM ......... 11:11 MERCHANDISE FOR: TOPATRON, INC. D d E d'I 2013 Pl•centii evel')1hing. 90J Celtls Place, set, 3 \\"Cods, 10 Irons. putl!r deductible. Of:fer. 4!M-ll82 g~:~:-~~~~M ::::::::::·~;: SALE AND TRADE ANIC ea n 642-7130 (Easlbluff) NB Sal. Su• • ,__ u-~ 1969 ......... OUPLIXllil UNFU •N .......... :tl'H FURNITU•• ... ..... I MECH • • OPERATIONS AGENT ~ 25th & 26th. ~7 ...,.. 32&i _.... . ........ SUMMI!• lllMTAU .......... mt OFFICI ,U.NITU••"::::::: ..... ,, •1 • SOo/< n 1 FURNITURE -··-~ from _.... RENTAL~ oP,.tcE 11:0111,M1Nf ......... 1111 .,-•Ible pxy pJ-•·. • ' •TICK~ SALES •«~•~ 1 ---------~ ''"'' <ouo•M<llT ••I r;~ or atraigh;'°~ary. Bar-Money Too Low? • RESE"i:VATIONS display 1tudlea, model horn-GARAGE SALE, ETC. LANGE ski boots, size 4;~ Apta. Furnished ~AFIE, IEITAU .. AMf ·:::::::::.u wick Datsun. Laguna Beach. e AIR FREIGHT.CARGO ti, d~ton cancellation. 252-A 16th Pl., C.M. ~:a~~ SL Head skis $60. ~::T~u,l°,u,··:::::::::::::::::·~ ~~~s=~~r;,1111:~ct·::::::::::=: MG-4051 or 494-9771 Alk tor Bored? • COl\fMUNICATIONS Spanish&: Mediterranean GARAGE SALE SAT of .. MESA Vll•D• ................ 4111 O.lltAGI! SALlf ........... Mn ?\Ir, Toomes. e TRAVEL AGENT R D FURNITURE 3274 California St, CM ----------Q 0 ~ :::;g:~ :::~:Ti ''.'.'.:::::::: :~~t.':.~c•111 au~T~~.~.::::::·.m: 1••• Newport Bl c M ~=;;::::;====;;;J~~l!~~I~~·~·~·~·~•!.._ _ _!~~ .. Nl!Wl'O•T sMo••s ........... •m 'Hr1ou1s ............. 1111 MOTEL MAIDS ...., ., • • ~ t .. -,. WllTCLIF.. .. ........ ·°" Sl!WING MACMINI ............ t lH r;~ wan·-• f-new 133 unit fhe.n step up to the growth Airline Schools P•clflc every nlte 'ttl 9 Appll•nc11 1100 C~~~~~ uN1v1•11TY 'A•K _,, ....... •»1 '-!us1u.L •NsT•UMINT ...... •1u '-= "" country where the money 610 E llth S 'Vtd Sat.&: sun 'til 6 MOVING SALE r _V ~ IACK IA Y ................... •tff 'IANOS a o•oANS '"'"'"''"'1• motel in Costa ?tle91.. Apply road and excitement never • , ant• An• ·• · ~ IA.IT ILUP' ............. .nu 11ao10 ... ,, ............. .,.. t l ..... ,. MOBILE HOME FRIGIDAIRE \\'Uher It Evel')'thlng goes, ~ "· couch l t COltONA OIL MAI ........... •ut fELl:Vl110N ................. ... in ~Titinr st a n I ex· end. You set your own paeil --IAl..•OA .. . ............. UM Ml·FI . STll•l!O ............... •21• .. rlence, phone number & _your own_ .. , •. This,._ M"RCHANDISE FOR MODEL FURNITURE Penncre.111 elec dryer, Both and matching love st!at • tAY nu.NDI ................. use rAPI! •1!co•o1!•1 .......... 1121 address. lnterv ewt specttd land corporation SALE AND TRADE '""• ove sea , u..i ... -. se..., IALIOA Ill.AND .............. ws N011v su,.,L11!1 ............. ... held in Ollta Me• July will sOO. how ..,,.,., m•v _ beds, etc. We deliver. 847-8115, coffee table and 2 matching IWNTIMOTOH llACM ......... .-l,OllTINO oooos .......... ... I will be 5......... I: Soh-l " .tt..1.... t. late modtla, Xlnt cond l90. crushed gold velvet chair, )( LIDO ISi.i ............... 4UI CAMIEltAS a l!QUl,MINT .... ... will be d JVU ..., UST SELL "A" _..., end tables _ dinelle set and "0UNTAIN YALLIT .......... .ctt 11Nocuu•1, KOPU ........ nH · ' 30, Applicants a • reach them with u little furniture IOOO M ...--og,. llfAL ll!ACM .................. 64st MIKELU.Nl!OUI ............. ... vised where to come for JOMICRA INC 19261 Beach "=""":;-;=07-,---..,.--1 dx chain -washer, dryer, ---~ ~ONO l l!ACM ................ <llOO MISC. WAMTl!D .................. 11 Iv k will begin effort u possible. •• SOF ' 6 MO old Frigidaire custom refrigerator; TV w 2 beauti-, ...... GI COUMTY ............. 4"1 MACHINll•Y. lie.. ............. ,.. tntennew. or T.i start, you will receive ex-A, never used, quilted Blvd .. H.B. 5.1&-6511 deluxe rang! & dbl oven, GAROl"N o•ov1 .............. 4'11 LUM••• ................ 11st 11.bout Aug, 4. \\'rite Bax floral scotch&uarded Jl25· ful tall table lamps. Lots "'l!STMINSTI!• ............. 4'11 ITOl:AOI! ............... 171J lensi\'e sales training, And ' • HAVE e )C pen. i ve con-self-clean, ttlail1 tor $465 <If miscellaneous household ~tDWAT CITY .: .................. " IUtLDINO MATlfl:lALS ...... ,, .. M1032 Daley Pilat YQU'il be backed by a power-1-latching loveseat $ 7 S · lemporvy dining rm table Wlll sell for $240. 557--8140 '-'NTA AMA · · · · · ·" ........ ...,. IWA~• · · me NEED Frr babysitter for fut Itad producing advertis-53G-833'l + 6 matching upholstered ltems. 541J..T772, The ~~;~r,.a~.~-~1~.~~.:::::::::: PETS •ncl LIVESTOCK Infant. Prefer my home, bul Ing program -plus: 17 PC. KING SIZE chairs . ~1ll trade for or ~~ ;~her$90• = 3 LG. pieC't'S pink carpet. ~?fMAAL ••Aitt ................ :;: ~~: ·~~-~~~-~~-:::::::::::: .. : wW con1idtr s ome b 0 d Y + Draw Plan Available BEDROOM buy Duncan-Phyfe or Vic-' · ' Excellent condition. J.lake uouMA NIOUEL ·::::::::::::·,1rn 0001 · ......................... lt:U tlse'a. S36-'l92S +Work Cloae to Home I.up 9 drawer dre11er, mlr-torlan &el. 645-25&2 dell\'er. 847-8ll5, 54&-8672 offer for all or ptlrt. M11s10N v11Jo ............ 47tt ~'~~~~~ ......... : ......... = 1 · · NEWSBOYS + Car Plan Available ror. 2 bed1kle stands, King tl> KING-SIZE bed, 3 metal FRIGIDAIRE re.trlc, Lge :r.tatching fonnal drapes ::: f~::~~lsT•ANO ..... :fil CALIFORNIA LIVING for + Be IUI associate of H, ,V, al.te headboard, frame, quilt ,__, --e•. 2 m•lching "ilh freeier, Dbl doors. with awa.g. DI c I a Pho n.!. I A I LY CAPIST•AMO •t:ACM .,. Nu1t11•111 .............. "1t "' l• ..,.,.. UllHI Good concl. •M 527-1579 Boy's Spyder bike, Slide DANA l"OIPIT .................. u .. SWIMMIMO POOU ........... .... DAILY PILOT Dwight, respected Calif. ed mattn:u. sheets, blank· sMfed·blue Ooral chaits, 2 \ 'f'AI M' -·· W'od ard . T•l .. Ll)C, •k.. .............. ··"" ,ATIOS ., ...................... m l ttd N Ca . rnr RE Broke ttl etc I rved uSED Ila .. TV C8.9eS. l!JC ... ._ I w r.ONDOMINIUM ............... ft5t •WMIMOI ..................... ,.,,. F~UNTAi'N .;A!LLEY' :+ G~Up Hea.flli lntun.nce 'ax;lc-e or Spanlsh ~~~;!r'lflnnb, :1or A•; All gu:!:nt:. 1 Dunla:•,, Ln. NB 646-9I04 RENTA'l.'S""'""'""'"' .,,, TRANSPo11.AT10N"" ( •• ', 4'.ge• 10-14 -S2S.OOO major medical, <It' ~fodem Style long. 6.17-6032 1815 Newprt, CM 548-Trss RUMMAGE SALE Apt1. Unfurnlihecl IOATI a YACMTI ............. ... ... ··-llf nd acco"-•t ALL FOR s2•9 B•-.otna Galo~uly 2344-25 •••••• , -SAILIOAT1 .............. Hi t ~ ea ""' • ,. 8' SPANISH olive green KENMORE pa stow >Ont -.. ~ .... ............... POWllll c•utsll•I ............ me + U"llmlt .. r-m~-Fm.' Nod-pmll ••ly -mo -.. •• rou· •• broll•r • .:......,. m,. N•wport Blvd., c.~1. Pl LOT COSTA Ml!SA ................. llH S,1!110-110 10.lT .... . * NURSES .. ttlit[ shill ...... .--·1 • "" . velvet sofa w/matchlng "" ,..... MEIA v••D• ' ............. Slit IOAT t•AILIRI ........... tm i ~ RN'1 for days + •Bo""""100 Altil SoJPl"· WIOOELwK',SthWSAt RSanEH .... OUASE lo\·e r;eat &: lamp. Call _locl~u_ded~·~l60_. ~-~~1839~--iu',.'•:ne e~.'!!11.!."'°:.~~:e~ot :::;g:l ::fi:n ·::::::::::rn: :::~ ~J:~:",::c•··:;::::::: * LVN'1, ew Ii: nights nut ncen ve an · " ... na 548-3202 G.E. built-In elKtrlc oven 9:30 to 5:30~"'"' _........ "•WJ>O•T IMO••• ........... 1211 MA•1NI! 1Gu1,, ::.".'::: ... : ... • p·'·ln pel"llOn Step up now-Call: Da.lly 9-9 Sat u Sun 11-6 BEAUTIFU. L -an formal and ' ISO t:~J.",',',,', •••'".I.'"'"''" ,Int •OAT SLl,, MOOalM• ........ .. .. v N l MR CHURCHILL ... -~ -tabl A kt .--~ range op, · LADIES dlamond dlnnot 1acK1AY " ........... m.,..' IOAT se•v•c•s .............. ,.., Lll'lll9 Beach ID'I na • "UU''-= ...... y-e coc all dining room set. 6 cha.in, S40-0020 IAST ILUP, .............. ,142 IOAT ll!JllTALS ............... ... •.at: l"'H KENt.IORE Wuhtt ~be•f center diamond, 2 diamond• IALIOA ............. •ISMINO IOATl ............... ... Home, Pb: (n() t94-807S (714) 135-3231 table to match. Xlnt cond. ovl.I tablt. Pd $i:JO, will ring, set with 1~ karat ORANGE co•oNA o•L MA.11 ............. sue 90.AT CMA•Tl!:a ........ -..... ..,, mmO"~~· Su---. LVN SALESLADY wanted, Ex:per .,._.. .-•c $350. &42.-6115 U Ex ll t --•1lio ~v tSLAMDt ............... PM •oAT MCVINe ................ ... .. -·-=-· ~ ·-Park & c 0 er. Cl! en LVUU n. • ~~ karat Oil e~ch tide. LIOO Ill• ..................... IQAT ITOJIAO• .... -........ ?!:! I' I -w RN, Jl-1:30 shUt. only, Lillian'1, So. Coat M R HANDISI l'OR Kl\"EEHOLE desk. Wom 9 Call ~2996. Brilliant cut S&crlfiCI!! Rep. IALIOA llU.ND ........... ms 10...n WANTIO .............. !!'!'.! ••1 ·~ ~t Center. Plau. c .:r.1. SALi AND TRADE x 12 beige rug, !\lake otter. MUNTINOTOft •Ucff""""",... AIW.CllA" ............... h .. .... ~ ---ly to Box Plfll, Daily P ilot. POUNTAIM VALLIY ......... '41t li'LYINO LlllONI ............. n• Ph: fCS..a>M SECRETARY for Fashlon Isl ,-I 673-(191. 9ll N. Baytront S.wl-Machin• 1120 SALE ol ··-CENTURY er COAST'S ll!AL l lACM ............ MCllLI HOMI!/ ............... :" O~•UG xlnt ·--St-• e-~-. Gd _..,,,_ um tvr• IOOO 88-1 Isle ••• u... .,. LDNO ll!ACN .................. MOTO• ltOMI ............... 1• rrc.n.LI~ ............ ~~ UUI ...... ~ .... "' ,,,,,.... -washe & ..__ 1200 O•AMGI CCUNri ............. _ •teYCLEI .............. 9121 !"-....-:.a-"--1< ---n _, ... _, to for tast-.....i atftct' Sa.I BEAUTIFUL g• ~--r J971l SI -·-• ---ti r . "'""'r • OA•Ol!N ••ov1 ............ 1111 ILIC.TllC uas .............. ..,. ~ _.._. .,, ...... --" ._....... • ANTIQUE dtskl colonial ..... l"-n 80 Ill 11,itt wuo.:•l"'V"lna c, Palntu'1 pror. color mach. WllTM•NITll .............. Mlt MIMI 11K11 ................ n11 ~l ~ atudtnt In ~d .. _ .. e $~00+ mo. 6"-2442 mahott.nY painted Fttnch. 9o1th A fluffy pillov.'S. 2 mo tla-za,g, bet,ut. walnut con-• elect lhektp.ql ' 1al MIOWAY CIT'T :::.:·::.::::: .. :: .. " =a=~~: ............... = !al' Lilht houlebojd Dual. SECT'Y, Briebt. S/H + Conilolt walnut f'r. Prov. old. Paid $415. lst $250 takes IOlt', makes button holes. $1.50. 646--3619 SANTA .............................. AUTO llftllVICll . ,.;.m·::::.-~-·· ~--Xlnt t . -'-'n-c--1--. _,_ 'IV N ral it 6f6...5396 ....... _.. ... ., "'mo, •1 1nd '.,--.,.,,-.,-,,,--,,.--..,---.--I d" 1•w1a AMA MlftOHTl ......... MM AllTO TOOLS• •ou1,., ......... , lt 'Ali~Gl'""'71UI' YPllli .,..._.., ......... I' '-V'Vl • atu wood ' .,.,"_.. v -Lad pool ourriam t ea 1ng U1Tlfll •• .................... r•Alllll,TaAVIL ,,,,, ...... .. ~"PBXOpeftlOrb"answttfnl optn.Call AMERICAN bunk bdrm lf't fromSOFA &:-chr. l!Ct'I, hem•.dHIPIAelc.Guar. lei Wedt ' 9r:,n ~~~A ... L••AcN ':::::::::::::·:=T•AtLltllS.U•lltr .............. ... .. ---'--.... ... ...i--"'-I& LEARNING CORP. 842.-0606 Finland. 9' custom aota., ttUpt.obtrd. btn tv.ttd li5. $44 cuh or amall pymta:. evuy . nite : uouJllA lf1Gu11. ............ PW CAMPI•• ·· .............. ... ..,. ....... ,,, .l'WI llll""'• ~ MS-&23&. • Every Thur n1te men'• 9:00 IAM CLIMlfN,. . . ........ ,Pl• T•UCKI . .. ... _ ......... - Mel& a'ru, Ml-8000 SIC~/PERSONNEL natural llMn lat 9oi111 C-'Wr. S~f'fO consl $125. 549--4317 -'---'---'--------l'I'he Plai~, ~ w. Balboa. SAN JUAJll cA,llTllAlfo ..... ins ~"of:,. •IJ11TALI ............ ::;: • ..,.,.,, ,,___ ,, __ , ~4$1 ~·tOVING •1 ••. 1 NB M k I CAPtlTilANo ,_.CM int oui.i• iuo•i•• ttu cl tt.t old rumttunT ......... _,..,...., O(lpor,,_..,. " : ,, "'-'1 errantan 01.d you tver thlnk ot IWIP-ar etp ace .. RE·A· L .. E •• S,TAT"E,'"'""",.,.. IMl"O•TIO AUlOI ............ .. 1,,1 r-1IJ 911t that bud nrm/xln't btntfif1, Call $15. Slf\IMONS 90f'a bed, llv'g nn 111!1, Contemp dln'g tna that \Vhtte El:ep~t In Jo"IA~P"LE""'"''IV""'12S.=°"D"l"'sh-WU_,her,.-I ll"O•T u•5 ............ ,, IO .. ·•·-, ..... wa.tcb the H~n Scl'la.ffer, 644-4981, bel;e. $2'. Yellow loo~ aet A much n"l<lf'e. 84:2-2615 t'he atUe ..._ oomelhl--· ·~. 0 _,,,_ m•chlne i••. Generil ANT1ou1s. cLASs1c1 ......... Mu -•• ....._. __ ,.,_ E halr ... wrllft' U2 00 ,... •• 1vv -..., .... "' &Al .... c. u••· ltOOI .......... ,.. ,.,,It... A: m.llcell.neOUS i.Wn'WI!' ..... nter mployment c . , .,,pe . . SOFA 98" blk. tufted vley1. can uaef Try the 'Ihden Couch $25. Pmtrer mowu ,..,,.1.•i... "'"" ............ ,... 1.uto •vaNTs ............... ,.. -'•--bl tllo CJ•MIW a ... ncy, 500 NeWilOrl Centl:r S46-G1l Brand fl'°\\', 1135. -•• ~.... Pand!M col"mn ln ·" Dal· •M. Rup n -•~ UI r , CCN11oo,.ii11t"1,_ """'""")JM 1.UTOJ WANTID ............. '"8 ,._ ...... _ ------...... r~" .... -" tm _, ... .... _.,. llNTALI WANTID .......... ,,,,. Maw CA•I ............... ,.. 5ec6on. Dr, N.B. Suitt: 2!0. DIME-A-LINES. 642-6671 \)'. 9(l8-.(S33 l,y Pilot Want Adi. 18th St. C.ll. ·~ ,o. ••"T ....... ·-.... •UTC 1.IAllN• .............. "" ----------I , I • -' --. ---_:_ _ _;_""""'~---0 -.. - : ' • ' f. I' Ii il ' ' ' 1• " ' ' I· 1· " " " I• ' • • " ' ,, " I~ " ~; I' I ' • .. ,. ' I· " ,. ' I~ ThVrldll, l'~ 23, 1970 DAILY PILO{ ~!Ji ' -MlRCHA!IDISI POil MlllCHANDISI POil FREE TO YOU PITS ..... LJVJSTOCK TRANSl'ORT4f lON TRANSl'OllTATION TllANSl'ORTATION flOOiilPORTATION !~Sl'O~TlTIO!!l-.1 j SALi AND TRADI SALi AND TllAD I , I--------ti-. -SPo"-="'L.J.i. -Mobile Homoa '200 Trvcka ffOO C:~!!!I!!!.' 1520 lmpom.I Autoo ~i 1~ • 1 • •• I· ' ". "' "' .. , .. , ••. 1 1"" 1 ' '. • '• . ... ,,. ' ' " ,, " .. , ... '. MlacolS-1 lfll!IMl!f!fl•onuo -BEAUTIFUL b111 ti.111 CR\JELLO .. ~, u yn. 16' iiiiRjiy ~%BR. """'"'leicss dbl .• ex· '66 VW Camper 42,tm ml'• fllll.tll H b.lalkY mix, male, • b)OL, n.l or Westtm. Sate Jct in.bd, JfHd • aldJlot,t Mut pando, $6950 • Sp No. 86, • MW reb.11 tn£. Ntw tittt -* AUCTJON * ---&<I ~d. Clll att. 1,00 p.m. ... Olla wbntl. aw-... ll461 Cout Hwy, HB. Key IH. . paint. All ..... .,,. rqWp, Pl llltAlll ~~ .. borne, ~ )'d. 9D-.e'1Cll M~Thurt .. S67..$U1 FDOYtd out .r._ 1 ta t e , at Sp. J.2.4 aft, 3:00 pm. + attachable tent. $2400. N....,.., 1mportl' uA, ~ 0... f Id 7 30 " -1111 TlilNSH5iifATIOli S9SllJ-.; -" C&ll .... '38-Slll6 .... ~· -~ r .., , I p.M. Kl'ITENS • b1act l>ol>-bll .... 7836 Motor Hom H '21! !' FULL calH>vu comper, Ind -· , • 'uly 24 -· ... ..-... A very ..... & Yoclth -••n-·" •--·•· 17' • , . 1970 lact, d.....,ttnuod mod>!, 84LES-8ER\IUSP4 • _ ... , -i• --•A ~...... ti1 ~.._ui.... SCHOOL bwi oonvtrted mto t ·-w 1100 w ,.__ quiet wwte • a-n..,.... .. ... -•IN ~ 100 hp Mert. Make oHtt, motor home. Butane ref&'. Comptll!. -· 869 tftt H_,.:_......_~- Uncl•imod Stor•go Estatu & Repo• 641-4823 112.1 _.... '"' Take VW bu1 or hui, part II: •!Ow ~ beater· TRUCKS lJth St., Cotta Me•. "2·9'<0 .... 7. .714 TO COOD honM. Male collie ~ • Radar -Laran. tr9de 61J..0598. lhowu ir toUet facilitiel: Autborlltd Penarl-..,_, re.: '"Izaak" 1 " old. Supe• 30 y,~ exp. lall or...-. 12' MINI·SPOl\T' 40 hp Hot • cold runn1"' water. TRA YELALLS D-Butllff 952.l 1-:::==o;=:;=::=;:i;= lrtondl>• !OS Victoria, CM. Prot .... onat Sport Flsh1"' Evinrudo w/b'a.ller, elec, moo. !WM-DUNE BUGGY French provincial bdrm set, Sphmet piano, Color TV's, Stereos, Chests. Bunk Beds, Hutches1 Divans, ·Kjng-u mattresses, Coffee tables. Desks. Distressed maple tables & chairs, Maple rocker, Babf bed. New 3-door refrig & like new side-by-side refrig. combo. Stove, washer, Dryers. Office desks, New furn &: Much More ! WINDY'S AUCTION COME BROWSE AROUND Aak !or Vicki. T/23 Gulde Mexican A Centcat atart. $12l0. Alt. '' oo ,... • SCOUTS Part Sdll>allJor, part tomtr American waten · • atao !16MOST Mini Blko1 '275 · , CHASSIES II: put TT Male dos abt f llctnsed mult!-t-111', conunel'· l.f' GLASSPAR. tk1 boat. 35 --... AVAILABLE NO\V Ytars l9$S thru 1968 avail· mo'a old. Very 10Yab1e and clal pilot. 1a.nd A Ra. Ad-HP EvimudNlec itarttr Bonarua 5 HP Mini bike TMMEDIATE DELIVERY ,enOe. ~ 9>-1536 mlniltratiw ~. "trailer ~15 962--409l · Xlnt con4 SUS Tut Drive One Today Al able. .... o! reta.nca, Wrtte • • . * ~ * K astom ... Futbacl< 1600 fuel il\ie•I· BLK. Poodle type red color Box M tp60, Daily PUot SKI BOAT, LIKE NEW. ed engine <WQ0300) $699 A wbt ,-. Vic. nr. Uth '67 PA-··--· ••~·-* FlJLLY EQUIPPED * Moto •-9300 BILL YATES st. A M~ Newport ~ _ .... $lDI • 495-Sl.16 rcyc .. t M t ... ....... mi. ,,.,. ............ Xlnt cond. ;;.---· - -0 ors VOLKSWAGEN AN Atte!ctionat. 1 'ft blJc Dual controls. 250 h.p, v.a. 13' Boat • tr•ller I. ... -.;. _ __. fem. 0>cppoo wired 12> f)w. hrs, 10 pl. llpg S2CIO. 531-0051 THINI Harbor Atta'• only aulhoriz. 32852 Valle Road -···~·-·All· 1 •o t 1 4, head 6 radio. O.F., cock· uo•m a ed lntemational Han-tatl!J' San Juan Capistrano ~-· 11 1J23 pit cowr, w/tull lftd M•rlne Equip. 9035 ~..i....,... Dealer. 837-4800/(93.4Sll/499..2261 2075'/i Newport Blvd. "·-· Xtru• ,., Baker, C.M. S40at5 '69 D B h d T S FU1FFY 11'1'. tQtten• room. -~ mon . LARGES!' d1'countl on aO (Next to 4'Moot u.,.....> UM UCJCJY Be in ony's Bldg Mot' ls SepaNieeb' _. tllptbl!r to $9,CUI ot bat offer. 613-13&5 mariM equipment. Radios, Roll bar, ftoatatlbn tires. Costo Me s• * 646·8686 '1ld !amlly. ~m>, 1/%5. °' 614-!1'3 compuseo dopth aountlon, BRAND NEW Complete'> road rqu;pped. % FEMALE 1>la<k lcitteftl, 1961 %1' LYMAN. 17& HP '""""· .. ,: -·-tor 1970 6.M.C. % TON (ZZ8 515). OPEN DAIL y 9 to 4 . T -~-old ~.. • .. -Vs G SIS _,,_, .... """" and .... $995 '-=========;=========I r~,,:::!. · ..._ _.._....,....:. ..... ~·d ~, · , .. !, ri:arine "Battery Showe. i--_..... ·-~~. ~•' navy op. ~ 2<10 W. C.Ut H N lkh CAMPER TRUCK BILL J ONES Mi1c1U1ne,u1 MOO FREE TO YOU 1 WK okl eoc:ktr·mix pup. covtr. Top Conditi on , wy,, · · B.J. Spor11 Car Center ~. Sm lc med alze. 61S-.5882 eves. 6.f2..COlO days, INBOARD tranamilsskm 1 to 2833 Harbor, C.M. 5.fG.44.91 _.. 1 ~ et drive p 350 V8, 4 speed, power 1teer. =~==~-=--~~ -~I "FRIEDLAllER'' 11711 IU.CH INwy.~t NIW·USID-•V: YOUNG adult neuttt cats, 5'8-1511 1123 Priced Rl!u;inabl.Y. •1,~:'... <ablet. co'n° .. P1 1 1' ; •• ,cu.atom moutcllnp, heat. '69' MEYER'S Alanx Dune all •• ·~w,,, ' ' -"<lo B t built by -MIWM colol'9 all varieties. Ion& p~ . f.rf:e to rood 25' CAB Cruller, alps 4, windahieldt taflkl seata tr, H.D. shocks, H.D. uggy, CU5 om '"' hair, short hair, l to 5 borne, adon.ble fluffy ldt-pllty,btad,compl:0Htf1&., instruments'. @tc. 5419--0530 ' springs, dual mim>r1, 1tep Meyer's fact«)'· not a .... t '68 124 WA~ON )'fl. FOiler or permanent tens. 531-?m aft 5. 'l/24 SIS ndlo. Bait tank. $1500. BOAT G 111 . bumper, ?50x16 ipllt rim ·LOADED. $1695 firm, Call Rad nit, b o me . 136-4 .f 9 ! , 3 ADORABLE 6 wits old Slip 223 81.yside Village, Ct o:ne~ U 214 a:;; tube type tltta. • (643!5. 494-1708 anyti~. I•&~· :::~~I) Jllg- 548--08ll 1124 fluffy blk A wht kittens. NB. CaQ aft 4, 64217&1 Top~ltion. er$470. Cali $2499 CORVAIR powered dune $1299 LOVABLE very prt~ly 54l-0813 f/23 24' CABIN Crlriler. New 64U876 for demonstration, buggy street legal, reg., BILL JOf(ES'r .... ul'IU!Ual ~or. blk w/1tri~ PT BEAGLE puppy 9 wks. paint. In water, tt&d;y to UKE new '$9 Hodaka Ace (with purehaae of Truck & plates, chrome whls, rail B.J. Sports Car Ctn of tan te~ k1ftfn 9 wee old• bro wn 1 em a I e . 11".l filblnr. $2300. PtJ'feet ... , Sllp Mooring 9036 100 & Kawasaki 90. Both ';;:i;)r. Road cam~r. Sertal construcllon. $950. 64&-19.34 28.13 Harbor, C.M, -"' ad "°"" 631-7312 96>-TD Tl'IS "-' U lnt.,...ed, oaO .a... & dirt •qulp 'd. UNIVERSITY 83SM93 . 1123 MA.LE poodle AKC apricot ~ 2.f' BOAT SLIP Hodaka $400, Kawuaki S300 'mported Autos MOO '61 124 Sport Cou FOUND' G"" Mtb yellow 2 Id all ...,.. 17' GtJLF........., 1966. . .. FOR LEASE Call 613-2527 OLDSMOBILE • •Pffif, d;.., b.-akOI, ::·; M ED ITERRANEAN."""' head .. ird. Very tame • -o ' TnS fib.,p11, 150 hp, Me.,,, JN HUNTINGTON '70 YAMAHA 125 2850 Harbor Blvd. AUSTIN tlte, IZXX 018). " E o I SON crib. Dark Obviously tomt00e'1 pet cruiau, in-Outdrive. $3900 HARBOUR ENDURO Costa ?tfesa 540-00IO $2199 ' Fruitwood with KANTWET Vk: on PU'IOfll in C.M. FREE couch • 3 cus~. new. M* otter. 8.f&-3221 WILL ACCOMMODATE UP $400 or Make Offer ,59 AustI"n W-on BILL JONES J i ,, h\.'0-timer mattrta, bardb 'M5-07M int Need• rec o vt r 1 n1 21' SURFING 011l'RIGGER. TO * *-6291 • 'S7 FORD Pickup ~· ton. -"3 B.J. Spona: Car ~nipr " u91!d. Coet $1Z comple~. HOW about adop~ an 833--1258 /f5 Cuatam built by Phil A 30'-BOAT. 8' Flectsidt, 1plit rims, V8, Great fun transportation, 2833 Harbor, C.Af. 1 I.,' A real barpln at$15. orphan "1ttrn'! 1'he1 need 2 LONG haired brown and EdwardL$200.Needl'M>fk. CALL MG-2«1 '70 KAWASAKI 230 O.D.,R&H,newpaint,1tall (QGX272) S195. ,69 124 SPYD R 1 549-067.f Jd bomes wf\otl ot Sove. blk k!t~m. I wltll. ~ Call after 6:00 pm. ~ NEW slips avail for 32' to 9s~wlnd•"·1 °111rt I: -~tyl. & carpe.tL Excell. cond. BILL YATES :·. "••• ••~ 7123 ri...-i.-5.f6-il59 1,_ '8' • 70• il ,V<N m " e on w,..,._, M 1 -tter "·U S speed, 4 wbrtl disc b krt. NICE refrlg-ffteur $75, · ~--r-..u.o••v• CATAMARAN, 12' Cal Cat. • ~oru.. S600 T74-2l55 I.II set . ..,, .. oro ,....,. Sto~e sl'°s , ~:._ .,,.AJ1& J"~ ~s ~~ .~ -~ PITS o"41 LIVESTOCK , yn old. _, condatt, ~· BOA -~~~ .. • 1969 ~AMAHA • 250 Entluro Andl' Brown . .....,., VOl~SvWatte~~dEN Radlat $i5W 8~1 liO • ........ • : ..... ..,ey ....... n&irft.I .... white, $500. Call "'Vm T __ ,......, &-to ac-Street legal wtdirt ac-'65 FORD 'II TON ~ n.uco BILL J ONES I , 6'JG-2T42 sbort haired. 1 wka to 28 Pett, Gener1I .. 644-2988 eomd. 31).32' boat. Balboa . $57~· r bst oft 358 V.S, auto-tranA, 8' 1tyle. San Juan Cap~ B. J. Sports Car Cenitr , 1 . , DIAMOf'lD WEDDING SET. wk.I. 8364.f9J, 548-0313 7124 (S) DUCKS, (15) Mallardl 16' TNBRD/oultlnl, 'ii Pen:inrula. jT3.-QlllO ~. ;;~ 54~ , side, 1plit rims & step-bu.mp. 131-411Xl/493-i511/.f99-2261 2S33 Harbor, C.M. ' BEAUTIFUL! $300. 548-8941 4 U:ina: & short ha i rt d a: {5) Pekin. $3 eub. '612 clulic. $1450. For info., ph: BHt s.-s--HARLEY vidson 14 er, Sll!iO or beat oUer. eve1. '1'.. &ft 6PM. "'" •!riped lrltteN and M•11 Dr .. Upper Bay 613-1671 -~-· 9037 ·~!..,...,, aupe~o~ .... XI.NT 616-5237. AUSnN HEALEY .:~u9tiful815lmeo ~yd •. "." rdlo.! ·· FOTRON camera &: portal>IC 1 mother. box trained. 20 BANTAM Qdx n .50 each, 14' MFG Runabout 40 HP FORD &qi, tnalne with runntnr cond. $llSO, or DATSUN truck, small, 196.1, I .;..;.;;.::....;.;.;..;.....;_,.--7 '."" 1-•·-~ ,;··. air conditiontr. Btw. 4-7:00 646-7302 7124 .f tor ~-Alto full Jl'OWD• Evinnzde, trlr, pa tank, 2,000 mUtt. Btst ofter takes trade for van. 546-3798 4 cyl, $150. 6.f~ or AUSTIN A M°ERll"" A heater, Hardtop. CYPs·1249). r1,; p.m. 543--8289 TWO small Terri er '612MnaDr.Upper&)' ba.tt,Llke...,,$925 968-&215 tftnl. completely rebuilt. '68 BSA .f4l Victor)'. Xlnt 549-2257 ,..... $1699 'o ·,'. .• ;: KING-SIZE BED Chihuahua puppies 5 weekl GEESE CS) Gotllqs (S) 2,000 milts. Beat otter takes cond. Aleo cycle trlr, llke Salel, Service, Parts BILL. JONES , I Complete. Good condition old. 970 Governor St. white OI' Gray $5 .-ch. '512 S1llHett 9010 5'8--5380 new. Draft~·Must sell! Jeeps 9510 Tmmedlate Dlliv1l7 B.J. Sports Car Centir ! ., • 64Un6 • . C.M. 11'l3 Mem. Dr. Upper Bay * New Catalina 22· trailer-Fiberrla111 A Gelco.t 61~30n LEAP tall buildinrs in com· All Model.I 2833 Harbot, C.M. 5444491 l•i HAVE 4 tickets Festival of STANDARD pooille apricot, able w/retractable keel r--..,.~ .. ~~·~ •• l""" 1969 BONNEVILLE fort in 1 'SS Jeep Wagoneer '69 124 Seel• • •. Arts 7124. Exchange for 4 )Tl old, xlnt watch doc --• .,1:61:: r ,....., c.•..._...,,, .... o-1;u Xlnt cond sooo w/ compl reblt .fOO CJ Mere "'7~ 1.,,; / .............. _ .-uw "°" ene, bi1 tittt, AM·FM., o, dilc b-"e , ___ .... -· · aame 814·8/14. 66--0749 I: lively companion C1t1 1121 * N ... :.'.' =_'n_ 1'" •·-"y -,.._....;.. · 0 AM/FM, air cond. 4 ~heel I.... 631·2670 1 23 -... r·--aea -1-"~--Boat Ch1rt1r 9039 •tc. 49f-'7182 ,.,. •. ~ u ...... ,vw · • tcf l6l0 ,,..., ..,.....,. .v .. ,. --sa.ili1I& sloop, main le jib. '69 KAWASAKI 250 cc mi, (ZDU 6161. 11~ Miac. w~ -----HELP! Beautitul mother cat Pua" bu 2 free kittens SaU away price only $51.f FOR a.rter to qualititd 1ldl!Winder, lots or chrome. JEEPS'TER '10. Full pwt', ·~-w ~-~u NA $1599 I STUDENT needs TV's ..wrk· ~ ki~ns·i! wk ~~:~t to launch. Prefer home complete. i kippu. Beiut. 35 Jt d~l Xlnt cond. 84U687 air, r/h, 4 wheel, 5,000 mi. ~ .~i wy.,541).l7" BILL JONES :• • ing or nol. •"""' ~ or aboard ship. • Balboa~. 26' Aquarius %1 sloop. S375 Ptr week, S700 '68 KAWASAKI 350 Scramb. New l5700. Sac. S4500. Auuiortztd MG Dealer B.J. Sports Car Centtr ••-642-6589 go to pound. SG-283.'S ?12.f 546-fi&l9 * 494-St • Hobie cata colon. Imm. for 2 wetkl. 673--0339 ler almost ne~. best otter, ~2629 2833 Harbor C ;;'.: FREE Calico '--Del. l 71' TRdiAN Oy brid&e 9'i""2 .... Jeep V6 CJ~ extru, '62 Austin Healey 1970 FIAT ·,,.·M~. ~ ;!~; FREE TO YOU ~.fem:;i:dcat 1~::;1, n-1 • 1125 CAP'N ~:6CS-22M cruiaer-loedtd-slps6$85day 1968 HONDA 350cc 2SIXI mi. Xlnt-cond, Belt offer over Radio, heater, over drive, 3 moe old. Llkt l'll!W 1y ·•' 1123 ::.::JI l200W.CslHwy, $650. wk. 6f6..9DOO ·Xlnt cond. $580. $2000. 536-UM wire wheels. f11B ARB). equip'd. $3100. 6.f4-4 84, •:~. 3 FOIALE ki~ns (3 mo.) S43-{ll3 WANT an adorabJe ~'!How MOVING I-• * 675-4194 $1399 548-1936. ·~•· & mother. B.lk w/w'd. FREE· l&rie uson.,of cute about AKC. tiny tDy poodle •acR1•1cEI F1"-Ll1111Boot1 -BILL JONES !===-===~= j I'·:··. m~-ir: ....... _ n..-ra.te! Good kitten1 & cats to choole. -· .... Ital t have 2 white S·L-E -r -NEil .,.. ..;.:r:a. '67 300 Hooda Sttambll4tl0er. Rec:nat'n Vehicles 9515 ' __ ,. -·~ , -· ~ •• vn B.J. Sporll Car Ce•tec JAGUAR 1 ~·1 . w/sm children. 548-76721123 from. Gd !w:n:nes Wanted. fenWH I: 2 male tftcl!pl, LUDIRS 16 12" 5'h ~p Johnlon out. Excellent condition GO•KART 2833 lilrlJGI', C.M. 5.f0-4<191 _ , :~: MATURE B mK!st: cat lem 531-2136 or 892-8881 1 brown, 1 cbunpapt. 3S3 ~ ... -..i-nt -" .... __ .,. ~ .• ftilcr. ~p~ 646-4629 DI ... ; 11 · Will deliver anywhere 1123 E. 11th St., Of, M6-0l.f2 ~ 1111 ,,_.._._ ..... -.--$3liO ~ '84 HEALEY 3000 MK • JAGUA~ •• 1• Wonderful dlspo1. lo good 2. 5 hp Mere. motor. Dan. • 750 HONDA W/McCullouJh e,.-. II: start. British ractna gretn, elect ... 1 homt.645--0391 7/'13 GUPPIES1reetoyou,5le1t. GERMAN lhort h a ired lorth ho Knot 1 -· 1 11.-new mllltsell er ad'-roll ba HEADQUAR · S 1 •-t • 1 9 -~-AKC anc r. -me er • .,, MeltJle Homft 9200 ...._ , __ . OD, lralll. r ,,,, r. 1t;; t CUTE kittens before 10 come • " e1m1 .. ~ pointer pUJ>I, ...... , 114 full slip, NB $1915, 5«).0020 . S12>D, 67J.5741 r..fake Offer Gd cond. Sl395. OWl:ler. nie -• .. .,uthcrtied J Arit'•ft ''" a.m. & ,,tt. S p .m . 60-3246 . '"res.Hunttnaorlhow, : A.rt.6:00839-6!'1:1 Dayi : 830-3140/l!Wll: .,,.., ~r"'nn ~:;: 675-3558 ?/'13 2 sr..t Blk dors. Mixture 832--52.fl CAL 25 -Bright, llhiny A 'Oranp County'& 500 CC Matchlta! dirt bike, 496-3893 dealfor In the entlrt *bar l• • • Karen-Tnrier I: Poodle. CHDIUAHUA PuJM AK C w.ll equipped for ncinr • L•rfltf Selection ~11 minor rep~ $1fi0. or Area. ! !: ·; 1 ~-poo, female and l Wat. Need children, 54S-59tl 1123 Hle/brk A all lhotB $25 cruising. Hard annodiled Of 'um' l-L.-..1 Btlt Otter! 6.f&-1 1 Cimpera 9520 1956 AUSTIN HEALEY Completi... ~ 1 1,., 11t Malt, want good home1 al.lo lho qU&llt;y mMt & boom. RDF, S/8 -'61 SUzuki 150 $350 SAL.E S 1 'L" Ph· .fM-9868 7/24 1 PURE wht part St..meee ~. w · radW>, Dinette model. U69 Moltlle HOIM1 Good <."Ond. good price 615"-0629 SERVICE I 1••; · . . , odd eyes 1 yr okl female 547--3814 Jleet c hampion le 67>2664 ~ i 1;1· PART Cothe, 1 yr old, ma:e, 8364493 7/23 GREAT Dane, male, 6 mo'1, Governor's Cup win n tr, Homes from 12x44' 10 36x6.'i' p~~TS 1 !'!'1 has had shot.II. Gd with ped n75 Call ei:TlO ,,~~ =-" ·70 Norton 150 Conunando DATSUN BAUER ' ''"· ch"~--· -7123 SHAGGY eo< • .,. h m. papen, crop · • ~ • -· · · o all · ped $1400 BUICK I I•' • LIUI~•-o;o,ruav• •l*Yl!d 19 mo Must move. Diane, M6-l23S or ltUS2l HOBrE Cat .......... No.360 Claaslc Mobile Hom11 ~;-'~1 :i:::~. ~""71 I ~!'. EA~ ~ns to good att s:oQ 6.fS-2152 1124 dt 5. ' $995. S13 No. Harbor, S.A. $ IN ,,;;; horn ... ~ '. 71U SHAGGY dof rr.e"' &d hm, AKC GERMAN SHEPHERDS U.S.·l'IM ••••••••••• No.ISO 5Sl.SSn I 250 HONDA. "ml-oho~ OPEN ROAD ..,. ••111111 -COSTA MESA I~" WHITE Roo.ttrt, 3612 ?ifesa nee-M .fncd-in yrd. Likes 6 wbchamplon slrwd. Eut.. U51). Ch1pm•n Rrbuilt engine, tram. Manufacturers of America'• -23.f E. l?th Stntt'I . ~. ~ Dr .• Upptt Bay, 7124 children, 897.7355 1/24 mi bitch, 1hob. $15. rrs.m'1 67"">0629 Mobllt Homes cond. * 675-61Q3 * * • * fine•t Luxury RecnaUon 548-1165 ~ I•!•. % SIAMESE kittens,;, wk.!i. FREE dartifW Calico kit· !:rr. Btmud Pupp"'• _ AKC KHe 611 wttf\ tnlltt. µis No. Harbor, S.A. '67 Triumph Chopper Vehicles. "LNderlnTher..arJ10the1" 1165 J : · 541>-5978 7/23 te*'• '6 \\'ttks, trained to $125. A1to male at ltud. Xlnl cond. $1!K> 531-8105 • 548-9886 • -e-11u•r 2. ·~ -~ta c M 61" ••-67" "~ • New Campen ZIMMERMAN Sedan. A ....,._;on,_, BOSTON Bull tttrier. 1 yi!ar box. 540-1083 7124 438 M-...... • . • -· ...-u-.o 12331 &aeh Blvd., G.G. BLVD t ~-•-•-·'· :' 1~ 7/23 Auto Service from 2145 HARBOR , 5 ee • .,05, power ur.&~11 a.ai-, ,•1• old. 548-u~• PURE 'White female kitten. GERMAN Shortha l red Flbt:rglau I: 530-2930 MOO $995 ~l O AMYP.tradio,chrome lre fl'l" , PUPPIES ) mos. old small bliw tYH t..s shots, early Pointer pup1. AKC, shott, * • Repairl * * & P•rt• • , .. -e Selection of whee:lll, radial tirei. Jnjnac. I breed. 54$-293' 7123 A.M. 54$-5379 7/23 wanna. R<u. 963-1390 ,.,.. Eotlma"• 518-175'1 ; THE MEADOWS FORD 6 cyl. '"'"" w;., Now-;;;: Uaed Campora DOT DATSUN wat•. Lio: zxu m. f' ,.,, 4 Darling Kittens B l ack, FREE kittens. 3 male, 1 OLD Enelish Sheep dog, U CORONADO 30 trans. completely rebuilt. -e-OPEN DAILY · $2399 • I;-; whit• . ....,,.,.,., !162-J<Sl t•m. W"""' & box ... inod. mo, t•m. MovJna·No ...,, W/Sllp. 61>0810 2,000 mu ... Best ottOT takes OPEN ROAD AND CHICKYWIVERS N 1·' • MINI poodle ptlPfi, 7 wk.s, 548-6046 ?/2.f S250, P9id $400. &75-8994 Spinnakl!t' Jor Coronado 25 (Irvine) 548-5380 no Sf) HAR.BOK BLVD. SUNDAYS \.' : 962-o1084 7/23 FAR out long haired ki~n.1, SHERRY'S Poodlt1; Tiny Xlnt cond. 'SlJJ ReservatioM ~ now beln" e vw pans, trans axles, Is KANTA ANA, CU.It', llllm Eeach Blvd. ·::~ 2 YR. ~d blue point spayed 1-black 2 w/ striped .facts. blk Pi ~ Apricots $50, 833-3172 taken In Onnre Coun~:; body parts. (5 miles IO, of Disneyland) Hunttna:ton Beach . 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 Slamelil? 897-5480 7/23 642-3929 1/24 all color ds, 546--280 IJDO 14 • No. 692, w/hwy flneit j; most complete parlr 6'2..{)443 (114) 611""51 e U l-1130 842-77h or~ 1970 HARBOR BLVD, :~! ~~r'.'::::.:·:: A~;a~,:~:~. ~; ~:~E~ ~ ~~K7;~:0 ""' ;:a~~~~:~ :~:~~e.:.~·~i,s ~~~~?.;.'!;1;~I~:: :,~, ~~~~ ~~~~!, '67 i;;t42o~~n ,. . condition. 546-3475 7/24 WHITE Siamese female 1 FOR .ie or trade, R.,t1. Bfft offer, 675-69U c-11 193-5130, 531.SSn ur CUSTOM, all leather lklt air con.d. Dir. Will take interior 4 speed. Dir., (RUC Factory air cond ,, Al\1 /,1-~~tl ;, : ADORABLE Cock.a.poo pups yr, Heinz 57 puppies, ~~.~PUPI. Be1t CAL·21 t11f5 S;Sf.at~. door panels Jor '51, '58 car In trade or finance pri-851) will take trade or fin. shortwave, wll"t' whls, ;;:.' 846--6815 1/24 an.ila.ble. 897-5480 1124 * f"-X13s' * ,C BAY HARBOR ~~25· ~ vate pll'ly. 'C.U 5t&40S2 ot ance private party call disc brakes. Egy Whitt w/ ;~; ~ MALE It Female Chihua.hus C~~ =~~ ~~~~ ~.~bte~:i b::. ColumliJe 22 MM1&9 Home S•les Tr•Uer, Tr•vel M25 494-97'73. 546-4052: or 494-9'713. ~ l~~e~~terK>r~·tlon. 1;~'. mb< .... ~ •. !ll2-.o631 7/'IS 567-9115 7123 Champ blood, $50. 5'...... $15.0!07 ALL NEW '70 MODELS New '70 Datsun INGUSH FORD (WAV 17&1 Take dor :~ '.~ 8 MO. !lltt blk malt cocltapoo, 2 STRJPED femate kittens SKYE Tenier pl.IPI AKC. KITE No. lt3 wt tralltt. NOW ON DISPLAY "" 1600 OHC, Pickup with camp. tn.de OI' 1mall down will ,. 1 lovell kids. 6f6--559'2 7/'/S about 3 months old . fluffy blk Upped, .Uvel'1 Is Needs IOntt work. $500. Jl' .. Wkln u low u $5995 537-4011 er. Sale prict $m dlr. fin. Pvt, Pty, dlr. eatl)PhU l'i'. ,: CtrrE • Fri1ky kittens, Part 642.-804.l 11'15 creams. 56-2541 * 644-1008 * 12' Wides to St' \"Mes ( • 61198) WW take car In ALL NEW ENGLISH aft. 10 AM 494·1029. Sie.rnett. 6.fZ..<U3 11'15 PUPPY, female, 2 mos. Hu SCHNAUZERS, miniature TWO.r saillni' dinghys, com-Puk Sl*el Avallable S Li ?O trade. Will finance private FORDS NOW IN S'OOCK PRIVATE owner • I I I ~~.;'.DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! I shots. Older child r en. AKC ~ paper,p plete Sll~ ea c h. (n4 ) 1425 8aJctf St, Colta Mesa trum ne • party. Call 5'6-4C52 or DRASTICAIJ..Y aacnnce 1970 Jquar 2+2 DialM2-$78f01·RESULTS ID-3Ml 'fn5 Re~Je. Pllonl!962AIOC. IG-f3z ~~EutatHarbor·Blvd. T1rry;•Nomld*O•s11 49&-9713. REDUCED Jor quick ale. Uke •new !~ '.', CORONADO 25 Cqata Meq <n4l Mn-94'111 Exp-.r Motor Homes 1969 Fie.ta Camper UIO TO CLEAR wstb lea than 5.000 ~lln ' . " • ' ' .. I" .. , . •• . . ... .... •• ., ,. .. 1 • "' ... '·'" :• ·-' , .. ' . . ' '! • I ' I' • . •' • I' ' ••• . - r . • • I ' ,. ' . '•• I ,, '" . ._ __ W/Sllp. 6.f5.0BIO SPACES Fourwlnd•*WMkender Al90 LARGE SELECTION le lactory wan'allty. 1 Hu 32' COLUMBIA Ra c 1n 1 AV.ila.bl.e ln Huntlna:ton TRA TEL 3 Motorcycle trailer $125 TO %':'.:r':°M a,uto. tranami.tlon, ~ w r eru111-Sloop. Sips '· llMch • Coata Me11'1 nlc. TRAILER SALES 546-6906 atrr. "'°". wave A'1·FM .-~ "' parla '"' vw ~.. N•w •-ROllNS FORD rad~, full lea.,.r. Ch!Ome Mfi0.(nt)846-3445 ·MOBILE HOMES 11172Herborllvd.G.G. Umi. ;t;;_1~nt co~'. 2:)60Harbcr-m vd. wire whh, w/liw r,.dlal SPORTYAK II America's filll!ll, av&Uable 1~ Blocks No, ot 6#--2.188, S4Q.S892 Mr . Colta Ml!N &U-0010 Ures It more. Wilt' 1take $50 in every s11e 6: price range Garden Crm•e Freeway .Cam,ble trade u pert pymnttcall 539-IT49 JDMICRA, INC. ' SU-IOll 644-1'9< l , GLASS SABOT/NEW 19261 S.ach Blvd. '68' NIMROD "''""'· '''" Com""" 9S20CamP._rs 1520 '67 XKE COH"'E' $)19. COMPLETE Ruhttnrton S.och ..,.,.,1 8. llv, icobox, din tbl '600. w. "ff * 613-0S12 .. HESPERIA MOBILE HOME ~ 4 spUd, wire wheelt, ~. Vlclo'Y 21 ESTATES. Low down ·1!<1. --"A COMPLETE SELECTION (XDA 293b., I $ll00. 645-0TDT mo . pymlt. Min. ''" Truckt ffOO OF c•IMIERS AT BILL JON ES 60'XU>' 10 mt lrom new '85 atEVY \\ T '"P aide Mii" B.J. SportJ Car C. ' ,._ Crvlao" !020 lake. Hwy 15 lrom San Pvt 1 t TOTAL DISCOUNT PRICES" _, H -CM ;..;.='--'=="'--=~! Bemardlno _, Hnperla oH pt.y. Best o er, .-1 , . , 1967 LUHRS 28' C.C. t'ly ramp • ml £ut. Stt or SCl-6639; eves 962--4981 1966 3.1 JAGUAR AH bridp, radio, bak tank. wrtte' • Broker, Bonntl! • '59 FORD 10.whl DUMP e ANGELUS • llARVEST-VANS .uck. $2,CUI J Saillnc cttnchY. Lo _hours, Ch3pman. P.O. Box 542, ** $1700 ** e TEAR DROP : ~~~~~fiS M2.-Q7I • NC", '6500. 213 I &1911; HESPERIA. caru. !m.f5 837·1™ or 494--"66 : ~NRJ'WTHE ROAD e OLX. CAMPER _ ... -- f!VH ~. 1-$1,~ 141.tlO '63 OIEVY " T. deft aide: e DJ'• SHEU.S CHEAP IMMEDtATE SALE! 1·$2,300, 1·$2,300-auto. Pvt prty, Belt ofr. e DISCOVERER e CAMP KtNG 2t' fantail Monlltrcy, dleMl, 2 w/cabanu, 2 w/avm\np, 00"6639; evt1 9S2-49a1 e CHASSIS MOUNTS CAMPERS ..,.0 .... bOaL 67!5-39TT Prtv. J>UI>. ........ '60 FORD \IT plclt up. Pvt $875 2!' FLYBRIDGE Pmdn1 BARGAIN: Excl. Lldo Partc plll'Qo', Best oUtt. 54U839, NIW die9tt, 'SI. Xlnt eond. AU Trlliltt t ab. 2 br., din., tvet 9Q...f981 PULL CAIOVla CAM Pl •I atw. After 6 pm, 49M618 .75(0. 61)..M2.f •59 FORD \.i ton ptck~p. PaOM Good tlrel, paint: """ ..... It )'OU ad in the clatalfitd rrs Besch boo~ ttme. Bi&· Xlnt cood. $425. &f&-8522. SECJ'ION! Someone I• eert Hleetlon ever! Ste tfle So. c.1. D lacount Center waldl1"' .... u. Dial .DA!l,Y PILOT Q111t.lled THE QUJCK!:R YOU CAIL, 101 2 N H -$A • m-1n2 llMm Intl... ...,.., """" '--' 111!: QIJ1CKE1t YOIJ SELL ·----·-·--·-· ··------11 EMPIRE CAMPER SALES ' 1961 190 SL C $1.900. m-2&0 or Gt TIME FOil Cj)UICK CA THROUGH DAILY PILO 'WANT AD ----------~------·---~ --·-· ·-------·· -·-~· ________ , ________ ~----------~-~------...... DAILY PILOT PCRf#TION Thday, July 23, 1970 SPORT Tl N TRA SPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION --TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION -lm.,..md Autos 9600 lmpotlad Autoo 9600 TRANSPORTATION· lmpomdAuloo 9600 Im~ A-9600 lmpotlad Autos 9600 lmpot'IM C•rs 9600 impartec\ Auto. 960Q 970ll PORSCHE TOYOTA '65 PORSCHE Cou~. New enginl:, Must :iee to apprecWte. J?.CX219. $3499 'CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 E;rt. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ITJOIYIOITIAJ ANNIVERSARY SALE 1970 TOYOTA WAGON 6372 0..... $1117 Toyo!• Mork II $2149 Lie. ZPB516 · DEAN LEWIS '63 PORSCHE ·s· coupe. Agean Blue finish. 1966 Harbor, C.H. VOUC~AGEN · NEW VW IUG $55.89 pr. manth $147.71 down lnchld11 t•x & Lie. VW LEASING AT CHICK IVERSON vw 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA VOUCSWAG!N VOLllS~AGEN ~3 VW \119 "-Je SeleCtion MECHANIC SPECJAL Of YW ,._~ Uc. 01¢.612 "' --~·· sm • VClllS, Komiil1, CHICK MRSON Bues, New & I.bed VW lmm.dlah Delivery _ 549-3031 Ext 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 1966 VW !lldan. Sunrool. Am· Fm. ~ Inquire at 603 lria Ave., CdM. CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext. fi6 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA WANTED yoi,.vo ~ THINI( ~ll>!!~ "FRIEDLANDER" 2 dr. Demo. * $2750 * 1n1t •ucM orwv. WI NEW.USID,SHY. VOLVO VOLVO ANNIVEASARY SALE 1970 DEMO , "142" " .. " " " . $2699 4 spt.."Cd, radio &: heater. • 4740, 1800 E C:>e. for deliv. ery, Ovtrseaa del $.QP.ciallst. ,~DHEf..~ c';!W!~~ TOP DOil.AA . '"' CLEAN USED CARS Set Geora:e Ray THEOOORE ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor mvd. Costa Pifesa &12-0010 WE PAY TOP DO~LAR For, cle1tn, usc.'li cars lop. ABM/IFLML. (JYGEA978T)ES TRIUMPH '65 GHJA.·54,000'mil•" COod , l)io======== I condition, MAKE OFFER! VOLKSWAGEN ~~~ !!~ w~~l:i .. 613;!;'~:~11~. '68 V\V Pickup Ha.rd to firid model! VUH 126 $1B99 CHICK IVERSON vw ,,..........1 _S"'po"-rt--'C..;.•,;..rs;._ __ 9..;.6.;,:10 '~0~"fa:11a.;,.,:. ~ '65 . VOLVO 544 and uk for Ron Pll>cbol Sodan, 4 •poed, All o<lglnal JAGUAR JOHNSON & SON LINCOLN Pi"ERCURY 2626 l-larbor Blvd., C.M. IMPOR'fS WANTED Orange Countiel TOP S BUYER BlLL 1'1AXEY TOYCYrA 32852 Valle Road -Radio, heater, 4 iipecd. XJnt cond. _,.,, or 549-3031 Ext 66-61 613-0!IXI (RFW 637). Take io:maU 1--------- . ' · down. will fin. Pvt. Ply, dlr '68 XKE &THINK San Juan C8pistrano (WRG 705). bat ofr. 673-2798 837-4!0)/493-4511/499-2'.lil $1999 '69 VW Bug, Good amd 1B881 Beach mvd. '6 J VW Sunroof call P\tll all 10 am 494-l020 CONCOURSE CONDITION! or 540-3100. Low low m.Bes. Just llkl' :· ''MG'' ~ ... !EDI.ANDER" MIDGET $1995 n .... CM (MW'f', Jn ~ ~ ' ' MG ~ Servk..i, .ParU Immediate Drllveiy. All Modeh J}CllllJOrl 31111por1i:, 100 W. Caul HW)' , N.E. >40-1764 Authorb:ed MG Dealer • onvrrliblc, 3 speed, dlr, ean car. (0XY819) Will :,fake car in trade or finance ,Private party. Call 5464052 }>r 494-9773. ' 1950 MG TC CLASSIC * VERY SHARP * * S995 494-9748 , MGB t-65 MGB Roadster like New! Owned by little hid school teacher from La- kuna Beach. Black leather lnterior. Tonneau cover, , .'"ire whet"ls, cxcellcnl con- 'dition. Take 11mall down lWin tin. Pvt. Pty_ dlr. Call t.)im aft 10 AM .f94-~ or s.ro.lUlO. ~fGB-GT, B . R. G. Mf/f'~M. wire wheeh1, im- •inaculalc. S2900 or best or- Jer. ~ after 1 pm . PORSCHE "66 Porsche 912 . 3 TO CHOOSE FROM ; Priced from $3499 04 WDZ.926 CHICK IVERSON vw •• ~r\9-3031 Ext. li6 or 67 '. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. -COSTA MESA tilt PORSCHE 912 coupe. Absolutely concourst' cond. $4695. Call alt 5:00 pm. 642-5965 Porsche '64 IC I XI.NT CONDITION $3(0)'? ... 66-0168 : 62 Porsche S Coutie. Ab90lutely conoourse condition. Lie. SBNO'll. $2699 CHICK IVERSON vw ~,.1!1-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA ~tESA $4900 for '69 Porsche 912, SILL JONES R/H, $15.25. Xlnl rond., Jo mi. .European B.J. Sports Car Center \ * 646-6071 * ~.)OO~~~ldeal(r. 283.1 Harbor, C.M, 540-t491 1969 . SQUARE Bk. Auto. =~'-"'~='-~~~--l'IlUUMPH '64 Herald con· Racho. Lug. rack. Drk blul":, '66 PORSCHE 911, :>-sp, vert. Beaut cond. 28 mi'1 Nl":w tires. $1895. 64>2076 blk-blk, stereo, mag whls, to gal. Owner goirJ&: East. car rover. Must sell Uris $595. 891.3440 '63 VW BUG wknd. Concourse con d ! ,.~ .. ~TRl""~UM=PH°'""g'°'d,-oo-nd-,--w~in-1 Red bl":auty. Exoelll":nt condi. 673-22-16 ' ' lion. New va1ve job, small --==~~--7 1 whla, roll bar, bckt lrtl . .$950. do will !in Pvt ~ ••-'69 PORSCHE 912. 4 spd, Lido Pk Fremont 31, NB. wn · · • •J • w.r. RENAULT "'A""~'"" Call Phil aft It> AM 54{1.3100 1 ~15~,000~~m~I,~~~·~"°=· Ll=·="'=""=w".11 :~:;;,~:;;;;;;;;;~;;;:;;c I or 4!M-10'29. S.'il50. 496-1408 VOLKSWAGEN -~.6=7-VW--.-. '64 vw 5'19-3031 Ext, 66 or 67 .1970 ~R BLVD, COSTA MESA '68 VW BUS 7 pass. J~ like brand new #3600, $25!5, CHICK IVERSON YW ~149-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '63 VW, front end damql":d, Make oiler.\ 962-1782 or 545-6519 Uc NUF 315 S599 CHICK IVERSON YW s.t9-30ll Ext, 66 or 67 1910 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '64 VW XL.NT cond, some new eng. parts, rear chrome wheels. Bet!t otter. Call for more info. 8.12-5191 '63 RENAULT Caravelle 2- top {.'Onvt. w/new Corvair Convertible rng. Good tires. $400 or best Orange with brand new pai~ ()ffcr by July 28, 548-5986 Jey top & brand new engine, Squareback Sunroof PILOT WAN'l' ADS! 64.2-6678 ~M radio, tape deck, Air '67 VW, R4H, blue. New rings, valves., brks, mast. cyl. Xln't cond. in & out. $1400. Call 673-2514 ll"Ves. Lie. OYJ798. SUNBEAM '6B TQYOTA $1199 CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext. 66 or f;1 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 1963 vw AUto. R.H . .' wbUe walls. New pairrt & clean S600. (\THH379) $l4!Xi. 54&-1614 BILL y ATES 61 vw. """"11'"1 ,,,.,.mlon. NEW PAlNT. 646-4756 aft VOLKSWAGEN ,,.,_ 328.52 vane Road ·63 vw-.-Xl~nt--oond-.~T-ape- San Juan Capistraoo deck, Por9che exhaust. 837-4800/493-45111499-2261 Good tires. $675. 549-UW4 '69 VW Xlnt. lJ,000 miles, BIIL MAXEY R;aed ror 1ow1na:. 11m. cond. l0,000 miles on new Imported A.,,,_ 9600 lmport9CI Autos factory engine, Lie, UEP46f $1695. 9 other square backs to choose from, CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext. 66 OI' 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '64 vw RADIO, white side walls. heater, must see to ap. preciatr. $620. Harbor American 1969 Harbor Blvd. 640-0261 '60 VW. Newly upbolstttf!d sea.ti. Matching headliner to be installed. Engine & transmission in very good condition. Nl"w tires $425. 774-2155 '68 VW Bug. Beige, AM-FM. New tires. Swing-out re11.r windows. Like new • .$1395. John 833-1408 '65 VW Sqbk 1500$-radio, WW tires, clean, runs good. $995. 830-4786 aft 5. '67 VW. Lt Blue. Radio. Xlnl cond. $1,:m. Call aft 6 pm, 6T:>-5603 '68 VW. Many extras. Clean, xlnt oond. Pvt PlY. Under. priced Sl.550. 673-4945 '63 VW, needs body work. RUNS· GREAT. * 546-2087· * 11~.w COSTA MESA HONDA SET.I 4G MILIS PER GAWIH • Front DiK lrak11 e Full C1rpotl"I e .7S MPH e 4 Speel Tr .... UtjlVERSITY .·OLDIMOslU 2150 llAHOI fl YD. r="'"""""""'=r.:,...,,...I 6W-5149 aft 6 pm. !T!OIYIO!T!AJ °'N"'ow=c-."' .. ====-9-IJClli=..:..oiN=:•;w=c=.-r=, ====.~...,.' Cars 9100 11111 BEACH BLVD. Hunt. BHch 147-tSSS I ml N. ot ~Rwy. on Bell '68 TOYOTA CORONA Sednn, cllr. automatic low miles, radio. heater. (\VXT. 087) Take older car for down will fin pv1 pty. can Phil aft 10 am 540-3100. '67 Corona Rrd • Fully factory equipped. fVLK927) Will ta.Ire car in trade or finance private par- ty. Call tor appointment, 546-4052 or 494-9773. '69 TOYOTA Ccrolla Wag. low mi .. great cond. $1400. Please call 968-1097 a.ft 5 PM. 1 '69 Toyota Corolla \Vagon luggage rack, 3 new lire!>, X1nt economy car. aft 5, 67:Hl917 TOYOTA Corooa Deluxe '69. 2 Dr. RIH. U,000 1nilcs. Xlnt. S1795. 962-2872' JOHNSON ,, & SON LINCOLN-MERCURY THREE GENERATIONS IN THE AUTOMOBILI BUSINESS BIG SELECTION BIG SAVINGS ON STATION WAGONS NEW MONTEGO STATION WAGON MONTEGO MX VILLAGER 1970 MERCURY MONTE GO Z DR. HARDTOP FULL FACTORY EQUIPMENT INCLUOING' AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, P 0 WE R STEERING, TINTED GLASS, AM RAOIO. #OHDILS98534. fmpomd Autos KOOlmportod Autos 9600 l51-4Y , ...... 1 ... 1 ... ,.ratlft 1.m1 •• c ... ,.,, S.IKt- Sillft T,...1t1i11lo11, Co11rtfty Lltllt Gre•p. WSW G·71a14 Tires. Pow« Rnr Wlldow, l..,.,_ c.m.r -W/Alt Dt>fltr, Third s..t, RMr '-ci111. Po.., Stwri .. , Alt c ... dltf.-, AM R ... lo, Th•tH GI ... c. ... ,. .... Dia. S... & flT Sho116ef lefts. lo-N CTL L.tt HM Mlrrc1r, 0.. lne Wi...t Coqn, Tr11H., T•wl1t1 Pecll .... #OHllMS· " ' . ... "' , How Dou · Fiat Do It ·· ~ For The 'Pric• 7 I lill Jones I l.J. SPOITSCAR CENTER 21» HAR.IOR BLVD., COSTA MESA -·. 540-449 J OPEN SUN. 10 • I " I ' . . -· ' 11627 • Save$$ '67 COUGAll $2275 '70 l'OllD M1wencii AllM. tt"IM., IKt.ry lir ~ilillll"", HW11r A.T., luet Ill/let . • ,_ .... .....,. llnltff, ...... ""'''· ...... "'""'"· IUTIC 7221 '65 T·alllO $1175 '66 M•ll.CUllY l"lrtli.M ~-101• '4SI I DMI" ......... ,. "KtefT •Ir <t"'lt*l"'9, 1'•11 ,.._., IKtwy 1lr. htll ......... , ..... Metw. '""'"" ceMltlM. CSIM Ntl 166 MUITANO O.T. $1475 C""'pe. A ..... trim., t~i.ry 1!r t-ltlloft· '67 1'0110 c-1.., w11. $2275 Ille. ,._ ttffrlftw, -· ........ rHl9, A.vi.. t,..111., ll&M, P'.$., l",I ,, tir:c~ .. ltMlw. CITY +ul noet r1U ... CVQT '"I 114 CottT1HINTAL l'Kttorr tlr <-1119111"', !vii,..,.,,, ..... tll1lw, UftlltieMll'I' UIAll. (01.T ... J $1575 '61 Ol'IL llJl.LLYI fWDI Ill) $1175 '&7 MIUICUllY • $167& '67 COUQAll $2175 CJtllllt OT ~ Dr. H.f , GTI 1t Lii,.., Aim. INllL, ,_Wlr 1tMrlnt1 L.M.... . ,._ llrtllM, ,... .. , llMtw. He. UfUI. 188 "OltD C...,.t,., S.a $187& '67 l"ONT. Cit, C,._ '$1375 f Piii., ...... fl"Nt., ll&N, llr V .. , •1,11t, fl"IM., ,._ slit!" ..... CIM .. ,_ •1111. lTD• 1111 rMle, 1111...-. tUMP Jfi) 168 CONTININTAL ClllH. "':.:Tt 1ir ciWMlltlNitlt, 11n .-wtf"• llHll'llflll tlN. ••K ns. $3675 '66 aUICIC SllYlll"ll $159& ' o.tf" Ntnll9f Alltt', ti"-., 1taM, flllllNf 1fff•lflt· '&l COltTINA , I Dwr. IVTP 1111 $97& '&8 vw S.-nMctr 1w1r no $1&7& NOW IS THE BEST TIME IN TEN YEARS TO BUY A LINCOLN-MERCURY PROOUCT ,ohnsOD•SOD -T!Ti'L:-71'NCOL!jl CONTINENTAL • MARK Ill • MERCURY e COUGAR~~- oraftf• County's Olll•t latallll1.,_.. ,actery Dll'9Ct Llncoln-Mercwy DMlw 2626 HARBOR, COST A MESA 540-5630 540-5635, t1 Miio So. of Son Oiogo Frwy.J , ' DIME-A~LINES' &I.turd , .brand new, Pht>ril": ml": at • • a.Y s home &M-1538 or at wm'k R. Beach. Ph. 847-85.'lSI Da.ily Pilot Barp.Jna, I 540-5630. A.lik for "Petet the Phone-6'2--5678 Greek" For Fast results .. Cal.I. .. TM-. Hot Line" Daily Pilot 1 Cla.asilied Used Cars 9900Used Cars 9900 ONLY AT • CONNELL CHEVROLET '70 CHEY. CUSTOM Cpe. Air cond., P.S., auto., radio, 7,600 miles. Gorgeous gold car. Fully factory guaranteed. l'lllAKBl '69 CHEY. IMPALA Custom cpe. Auto., n&H, air cond .. P.S .. remaining goar- anll":e from factory up to 50,000 miles on engine, trans. & rear end. (YYJ65ll. CHOICE GF SIX OTHERS AT SLIGHTLY HIGHER PRICES. '68 MALllU COUPE R&H, automatic, power steering, nice. IWVJ218) '65 CHEY. NOYA WA~ON Automatic, R&.H. factory air. You should see this ni{'(' car. 1513ASL) '65 CHEYELLE 1 owner 2 Door. Nrw car trade-in. Automatic R&H. (HFVOO) '65 FORD UNCHERO VS, power steerif1a, auto., R&H, y"u better hurry. This is a sJ.cal .. IMR06421 '68 TOYOTA LAND CRUISER 4 W.D. hardtop. All the-good.Jes, new car condition. High rubber. radio, locking hubs. This is a real strong car. tWQG898) '66 FORD MUSTANG 2 Dr. H.T. Radio, heater, P.S., auto, trans. Nice. (SrL878> '68 MUSTANG 2 + 2 Fastback cpc. P.S .. radio, factory air, like brand ne\v. (VHF85.1) '67 PONTIAC GTO 2 Dr. H.T. Power steering, automatic, radio. (WCA9401 '66 PONTIAC GTO Convertible. Real strong car. P.S., radio, a uto. trans. (XOF9701 '68 Y. W. SEDAN Stick shift. radio. New car trade-In. (VGJ4321 '69 TOYOTA 4 DOOR 4 spcC'd, radio. Strong 20,000 mile car. (XXB250l $1199 $899 $999 . $2599 $1499 $2399 $999 $899 $1249 $1299 ALL ABOVE CARS ARE "OK USED CARS" DESCRIPTION ICELLY •LUE aooK P••Ct: '6' OLDS CUTLASS "S" 2 DR. H.T. $3030 Factory fresh. Air, R&H, P.S .. P.B., tXSH604l '68 PLY. SPORT FURY $2335 2 Dr. H.T. Ai r, P.S .. auto., buckt-t sts., console. (VEJG!>.11 '67 CHEY. MALIBU S.S. $2240 396 V8. R&H. P.S., air cond., li~e new. (TUJ621·) '68 FALCON FUTURA WA~. $2070 6 po.ss. V8. R&H, auto., P.S .. nice. (ZVZ881 I '67 CAMARO $1845 2 Dr. H.T. Au to .. P.S., At.1-f"M . new car trade-in. ITY1'571 l '70 • THIS WEEKS Sl'ICIAL MALIBU S.S. Cowl lrlductloft. >N Cl;!. 111. \IL """'· ,,,., wtlftl•, 2,650 mllts. N.w u• OU-••n,.., r..ilt,. SPMd, P.S .. P-<lllsc tw•kH, -r., budtel '""· Prlctd lo ... 11. 'f"'U blllw bltlt". Siie. P!ID6 TRANSPORTATION CARS '66 MUSTANG H.T. '"0HTIAC WAGOJit OUR PRICE $2699 $)299 $J849 $)699 $)599 Air cond., •UICI,, rod ~I, dO It }'OllrHlfll'. '62 f peu'"'""r. lfl9ASWI. s499 $549 ~ 'IO 110•0 1 ooo• s299 Auto,, VI, riKilo, huie._ '63 VAlllANT .• S499 (TWGl4.!), Volll•. tlallan "''°"· IWWZWI. '&2 CMEVllOLIT 4 DOO• S499 '64 VALIANT Sfi99 H.T. ll:&H, 1uto., ... S .. • Dr. Nice Cir, Aul!H'll-'lc: 11107911. llOn.MI. '&& IAll•ACUDA. s799 113 IEL .t.1• I DOOll s499 • 1pnd, 11""'9 ur. P.S., •&14, '"'ta., 1lr°"9 ISVL1 •1. , ••. fl2:ltltl. CONNELL CH EVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1203 ( 1 I ·' 1 ) ---·----~ ---~ -·------·----~ ----,---..,.--,-·~-----·---·:;--·:--~·"'!"~~'".""~"""----, .. =-•: ----••:•_"!" __ .,. .. .,._.a .. -••••1 Thurldly, Ju~ 2', 1970 TRANSPORTATl,ON TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ,• 'TRANSPoRTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANS~RTATION T ~.;;.;.;;.;~;.;..c;.;,;.;.;.~;.;..c.~;;;;.;.;.,;.;.,;,;.;.;.;.;~~:.:.:;::.:;:.;.,;;;;;:.:;:.;.:::;;;::o;,; NtwCa/:! " ,_wears ·-aw Cart --cm . ..00,...c.n . · .~9'0eNowC.ro ; , -·-caro -• NawCaro _..._Cart 1970 RIVIERA ' . Beautiful Titian red with blacl custom vinyl notch back interior, ·power windows, power 6 wty seat, power steering, power bra~es1 factory air con· ditioning, tilt steering wheel, AM-FM stereo ••· dio, rear window defroster, tinted glass, white side waH tireo, custom wheel covars. (2672). MANUFACTURERS' CAR (USED) . ' OIL¥. • ' • . . ~.__, l f ___ P_LU_S _8 _MOR_E _RIV_IE_RAS_A_T ·_SIM_l_LA_R _SA_V_ING_S_! _HU_RR_Y_! __ _.I I PRESTIGE CARS AT -SENSIBLE PRICES r ~ " 1969 CONTINENTAL 1968 CHRYSLER 1970 VOLKSWAGEN 1966 JAGUAR 2 + 2 1967 RIVIERA A 1tunnlng di1mond zr•111•2 door ht rdlop with / TOWN a. COUNTRY WAGO N WINDOW BUS Tlil1 i1 111 e'llirimely h1rd lo lilld model, Equip· C1tt tlli1 t1lc1 1r1 v1ry h1rcl to find tod•y. lo•d· bleck vinyl top •rid It ek ft'l•tchi119 lt•tfter 1,_1 Thi1 i1 th• top of th• lint t11odtl fully •q1,1ipp•d ' p•ueng•r •nd i1 j111f ltr•ntl' 11tw in condition. p•d with •utot11•tlc b•n11ni11ion, 1ir condition• •d lncludln9 f111I pow•r tqulpll'l•nt, f•ctory ,;, with VI •ntin•, •11tom•tic h'•lllntlt•ion, r•dlo t•rior. 11 j1,11f lo•d•d with •II of flit pow•r ft• L.11 th•n S,000 fl'lilt1 on thi1 \'try h•rd to find conditlo nlnT, 1onom1tic redio, mint 9r11n 111t1r• c11iori11 inclr.id ing pow« deot le:clt1, tilt 1+.1r• ind h!ll•ftr, power 1fttrln9, !>"Wtf br•ltt1, ftc• item. F11Uy equipp•d witft 4 1p1ed hen1mi11io11, illf, chrom1 wire wh11l1, r•dio •nd httltt, lttfh. itt with b •ck Yinyl top •nd fl'l•tchi11g bltck ing wheel •nd of co11r11 f•cto,.,.-1ir 401Mfitionint• tory •it conditioning, roof ri ck, tic, eh:. A ht1+1r, 11iding 1id1 doort, tic. You won't w•nf tr interior •nd h in 111p•1b condition. !XER· 'l'inyl buck•+ •••f inl•rior. Don't lit thi1 Oii• 91t A 9om.I0$499$' loYtlV •lpin• whit• ••l1rior with 1im. wood 9r1in to fl'lin tut 011 thi1 '"'· (7741EPJ, 0691 IW•V· IUOE766l ,.,,i;~.J$311' 95 $3~5 $3195 $2995 .. 1968 CHRYSLER 1969 FORD TORINO 1969 MUJTANG 1966 BUICK 1970 SKYLARK 300 2 Door htrdtop, Compl•t•lv lo•dtcl with 35 I Vt ••tlrt•, eutometlc tre111mi11lo1t, rtdio, 2 Door >,1rdtop. Thll 41.l•oltid blue eulomobil, CUSTOM 2 DOOR HARDTOP ' h••ler. power 1t••ring tH di1c ltr•li:•1, pow•r C111to111 l•S•bro herdtop, This low 111!1119• !1w1I •quipm•nl. Full pow•r, f•ctory •ir conditionint1.. window1, pow1r t•il91t• win.dow, feriory 1ir lri1L tho 151 Vt •nthlo\ •uto111,tic b•111mlnion, VI, •utom1tic, r1dio, h•1ter, pow•r 1t•1ri119, •t•r•o AM·fM r1dio, split b1nch 111t, cu1tom conditionin9, 2 w•y t1il git •• Ju1t 14,lllJlllJIM. 1NW•t 1t.1ri119, powor <llitc br•k11, rtdio e11d 11 lo•ditd with full power •quipm•11t plu1 f1ctory powor br•k•1, f1ctorv •it conditioning, Tlrih c•r cJ1ro1111 wb11l1, r•cli11lnt •••t, tic, l1•utiful Lo•1ly rn••dow gr••" with 1!111ul1t1d wood tr•in h•41tof, f1ch)J.. •ir c1Ml~onl119 ond it i11 fin• 1lr conditioning, cu1to111 cloth llltorlor ,11n much, w11 1p•ci•lly purch11•~ from the 1111nuf1ctur1r cor11 111t1rior with bl1ci: •i11yl top 11!d fl1wl111 p•n•lin9 plu1 co11be1ting •II ¥inyl int•rior. Ftc" t11tic coniitl Dr Iv 1 thi1 on1 ti.om• tod1y, 111uch mor1, Th i1 on• i1 ju1t 1howroom fr11h, ind h•1 th• f1ctorv werr•11ty. Tr1moftdou1 ''"" i11t1rior. Mutt'''· tVRYOll I fort w•rr•nty 1v•il•bl,, tZED7SSI, IZ~\'6tSI ' ITEW2l01 11111 to you 011 thi1 on•. 116211 $2795 $3295 $2695 $1695 $3695 . " ,, ,. ~ "·' ,. ,,., • .. ,r,j . ' .. ,, Specializing in JAGUAR I" 234 E. 17th St. AVTBORIZED BVICK"'1PEL-IA6VAR SALES ·and SER VICE COSIA MESA 9900 UJ9Ci C•rt 9900 Und Can 9900 Und Caro 9900 Und Cars 9900 MUSTANG Used Cars tor used can A: trucks just call Us for tree ntlm.ate. GROTH CHEVROLET WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR CONNELL CMEVROLET 2828 Harbor mvd. Costa Mesa w~m WE PAY TOP DOtJ.AR· FOR TOP USED CARS U ;your car, ii extra dean, Set: us first. BAUER BUICK 234 E. 17tb St. Costa Mesa SU-.7765 BUICK '61 Cadillac Factory F.quipped. Full power. 1299 ---'63 Cadillac ~·ull power, Air. 1'199 NEWPORT&R MOTORS 2036 Harbor Blvd. 64U156 '6'1 CAMARO Rally Sport, stlck, -cond, 11600. * 644-0437 * '68 CAMARO 327 auto. XLNT cond. New tires, brlul, shocks. Make offer. 6'7S-1608 '61 CAMARO Rally Sport, air, AM/FM, poly alas, Hurst -kp, $1600. 837-9139 CHEVRO~· '66 EL CAMINO 396 VS, 4 speed, R.H., P.S., Air cond., bucket &eats. (U29510) $1795. BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 837-4800/493-4511/499-2261 '67 Malibu '67 CHEVY 4 door sedan. Auto , R.H., Pwr steering. (ZSC 4.37) !1045 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road - '65 CADILLAC Coupe. a .... n CHEVROLET San Juan Cap~trano 1;N.;.ow;;.;;....;C;,;•;..'.;.S ___ ..,.._ w/ black vinyl top, Cruise-837-4800/493-4511/499-2261 A" ntl G I 's control. Factory auto. air. '64 NOVA '57 CHEVY e Oft • • All power, Exceptionally Auto., radio, heater, (OLB 4 dr., wagon. Thinking of buying an aulo-clean! Low mileage. Priced 8831 $595 SACRIFICE mobile after returnlng .from sale ••• ·~ BILL YAT s $115 or belt otfu att 6:00. ov•rseu? W• at BarMck for qillck 1 --E 8311-6573 Importt would like to eXtend '70 COUPE de VILLE ourbeartieatC0111'8!ulaliom Beaut, ...,..,,,., J.,.lher, VOLKSWAGEN MIUTARY • beU>g lraml. · I ~ air ...... /radX: '61 Olevy lmpala, $4Sll/ tor a jOb ~done. Let U1 viny ...,.., • · 32152 Valle Road best otter. Xlnt cond. help .elect yoaf new car or M&II)" Xtru. Pvt. pty, $6100. San Juu Capistrano 64i..29!16 \lied automobile. Call for •P. Sll-«159 R37.ol800/493-451J/499-2261 .~="""°"="--=- CONTINENTAL 196.1 CONTINENTAL. All ex· traa! CU.tom eleC. sunroof, Am.Fm. etc. Xlnt cond, Private party. Blue book priced. 536-6697, 536-1728 CORVAIR '64 CORVAIR DODGE UN COLN PONTIAC ---------~ '" ... '69 DODGE Ciwler· A"' cond. Pwr. 11eer., brakes. Vinyl top. 642-5873 Alt 5 P.M. EDSEL '59 L!Nt'OLN P r eml•r: '65 MUSTANG motor I: trans, lo ml. $150. V8 aulDmatic p S . air car was wrecked to take cToa 045) s:OOs. · " · · all ~. ~-BILL YATES '64 CO NTINENTAL, 1 '67 Le Mans ·-------owner, movt:ng east, xlnt Bucket seat. automatic, I' •• er steering, air cond.l Dir. {#288-479) will take trade., finance privale -cpJ\ VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road 5464052 or -494-9773, '59 EDSEL, 4-dr HT convt. R/H, take best offer. * S.U.1285 * San Juan Capistram '69 G.P. 18,000 mJ. lle'!'.vhlit 837-4800/493-4.511/499-2'261 tlres all power, air. JJ,39&. cond, air, tuU pwr. 497-1627 Std. trans,, R.H. (869-091) I z:=======: MERCURY 19116 CLEAN. look• & runs M,.. Motol 415 Npt Blvd. --------illre new, aooc:I tires, new No. 9 $495 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN FALCON '65 FALCON Futura, g<:od cond, VS, R/H, P·•·• p.b., auto tr&M. 846-47'1 A REAL BEAUTY paint, $12SO. 646-5265 '6'1 PONTIAC Le r,1ans; air, PARKLANE "'-==""-='=====-PS, PB, BS, auto, ...-, OLDSMOBILE stereo, Dawleu. $1650 : 1984 Marauder 2 dr H.T. __ _ best oUtt. 83&-Snt ,t ~ll 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 837-4800/4934511/499-2'261 '62 , ci>RVAIR Grtenbriar Van', Recently reblt eng. 2 new Ures, needs clutch. Black vhzyt top, 300 engine. '64 PONTIAC Grand • FORD Black upho111e..,.. ...... '66 Cutlass P''· p/b. 1o • .,,.,, 1 a.lr, Cherry Clean! Must be xi -54 la s Full power plus air coml, nt. $;r.r.i. !h3456, 642-7 '65 COUNTRY SQUIRE ,... to appttc le. alur-Yi I DI ( ' . day, Sunday & evenings aft ny top, r. TRF 306) 64 Bonneville, p.s, p.b, p 6 PM. &f4.ll91 . WW take car in·trade or tin. window!, nu tittl, _11_00_.~sc~...-~-~~--1 Station Wagon. Must sam. ~66 Corvair 500. flee. (375 BEKl. 2 cir, 3 ::pd, 110 .... $1099 842-7513 BILL JONES '62 CORVAIR 4 spd, station B, J. Sports Cat Center wa&0n $200 2833 Harbor, C.M, 540-4491 '64 COR:i:: MONZA '66 FORD RANCHERO ance private party. 546..f052 -'.......,;',;'c.65""'=:-.=-,,5:': '67 Montclair 0• '"'"'3· ·s. CATAUNA , Ill'. Full power plus air cond., '63 OLDS Sta. Wag, Good Auto. P/s, P/b. Good Dlr., vinyl top clean as you conc1. All pwr, Alr. Radio, $600. '675--4945 will find CVODCH9l. Will take All new tires. BeM. Otter. '55 •PLY M 0 U TH car in trade or Una.nee pri. 642-9433 daya transportation $50. 67S-l vate pe.rty, 5464052 or '67 CUTLASS S upre me. aft. 6:00 "4-.9773. Below Blue Book. Best '69 PONTIAC GTO oonv cond. 14ded. An x Io us ! 4 &pd, 13,000 mi. $2700 6 cyl Automatic, l2 dr 268), --------·I 540-5483. bit otr 847-'4539.att 6 CORYEI IE WW take car In ttade or MUSTAN~ "''60~0~ID=s~88~.~F~lne~in~le---. 1968 FlREBIRD <00. XI ReuonabJe * 642-3826 ------'-'--I IJnance pr Iv a le, party. --,6-1-M-US-JA_N_G __ I g<:od running con d" cond. Prv. por(y 548-4052 or 49f.9773. everythln& workll! $ 2 0 0. 6#-4279 or .1~ '66 CORVE1TE FORD 6 "" ...one with _54&-097,..,...,,-=~,...,--.,--- ConVtttlble, 4_ speed, air trans, completely rebuilt. Automatic, air cond., power '67 442 OLDS. Low mileage. '67 GT~, CoPvtnvert., cond., power steering white 2,000 mlles. Best oiler steering. (VFU 298) Wlll Xlnt cond. Drafted • MUST ~~ cuior. pty, wlblue interior, Beautitui ln takes. 548-5380 take car in trade or tlnance SELL! Call 675-4683 snd out! Muat .ee! Loaded '63 FORD GALAXIE 500 private part,y, 5tM052 or 1964 OLDS. Xlnt cond. air, with all the aoodies. {ZDU. Auto, air cond. Xlnt. cond. 494-9773. PS, PB, xlnt cond. Make ,, ' j, " ' " ' 26.11 . $29/ mo • finance. Pat '65 MUSTANG! tn hne oond. ~·""=;:;' =-=1605;:::==== I G 1 , BILL YATES :1:iMACH I al Aulo, 'T"· 289 ~":i ~v. •LYMOUTH ·~ ~-co:.""iitoo.o I VOLKSWAGEN • pwr, r, owner. ny reaso e o er .-&ft. 5:00 646-0~ Jt..,'l'I • polnbnent, 5'6-t052 or '68 COUPE de Ville, All ,59 CHEVY '65 CHEV, Impala SS.VI, 4 ~ -11-·•• -~ El spd, Fae. ai, ·r, $1200 or best "'~' '"· power. ....~ ... , ... -~-RUNS S50 u .,. ,,_ - --Dorado inttt>or, 'low miles, &12-7590 o er, ~.i. er M6-4l80 Auto Lntlftl 911 0 1 owner. $3750 ot best offer. _a11.,.,,5,,· ,-.,,--,-~~-I 1----"'---l •99-<J.98 '57 °""" Stn Wm '65 Impala SS f"1 LEASE f"1 '68 CADILLAC Coupe de IISO v:;;u:. ~77 v.s, Auto., R.H., Pwr. s1 .. "10 Oev, VS, CU.tom El Ca.. Ville. t..o.:let! Immeeulatel ,,7 M.llbu SS 3'6 bucket 1eat11. CNGF 677) mino Pickup, Rodlo, ..-21.000 ml, Milot .. n. "'""" vs· 4 ._ bucl<ot .._ !1045 """'°· ..., .-.. 3300 m1· •• $39'5. 64Ull5 cbrom. ~" <wm "':.S, BILL YATES $89 per mo., P. di9e bn.kel. '65 CPE DE Wle, $1695 Air, $16fS ' SOUTH COAST whlle/blk lttr int. lmmac. Bl.LL YATES VOLKSWAGEN CAR LEASING all pwr. 614-lllil 3l852 Valle Road :JOO W. Cat Hwy, NB. 645-2182 ~• CAD Convt, 10,000 ml'1, VOLKSWAGEN San J""l' Capistrano Eve!i A wkndl ~ Completely equipptd. Beaut 837-481XJ/W5ll/499-Dn "" .. ~ -673-1655 3l852 van. ROid = UMd Cart 9fOO co ' __.,, ..... San Juan Ca~ima.no '66 CHEV. 11 Nova, 6 cyl. I---------1959 CADILLAC Heene. Ex· 837""800/'93-45U/499-2261 2 dr. R/H, auto: P/S, extra CREDrr A PROBLEM? NEED A CAR7 --~--' d!:llent condition. For in-cl Sl050 545 73 8 formation call 5'1M895· CHEVY '67 El Camino 396, e~~~lmd. -6 * '61 Whl Codi~-~. ~·~~ !'riv. MOVING! Muot gcll '62 $350 ** ~· '67 Bel Air Sta W&E. v..s, Oevy liltcaYot •tatJon THE QUICK.l!.'R YOU CA1.L.. Pl s. P/b, fac air. CLEAN Wl&OO. UOO. MM008 THE QUTCKER YOlt SELL _cll_l;o_;., _548-_94_90 _____ 1 Saturdq -OtM&-A..uNES! \ ' ~ ;;:~2988•"1<.. Xlnt cond. 6"""~'red. Call 67$-23TI alt 1965 p Ly MOUTH "'" ::::::::::::::::::=::;:; j 32852 Valle Road ..,. • ..., . .,..,,.., ,,;-•m..,·==c:-=-,.,.-.,,.-1< -· San Juu Capistrano * 1961 FORD* '69 CUSI'OM M ustanll', r.euda, ,good cond, white t f-l~D 8.1'7-CS00/$451V499-2261 CUstom 4 dr. Make offer yellow w/blk hood, vs 351, w/rtd lnf. Bucket &ealJJ, ,64 VE'M'E • New 32'7, 4 642-1450 or 54M326 FM/AM stereo, rt.c '1 coneole, auto trans, .\1.g, T·BllU>"•et; ';429" va, r , l!Xi AM/FM '66 FORD 5ro'fl tic para, Like new, 15,000 tonnula S.•$925, 962-9897 tot')" ~it, Ni Power, Til : • • • Mlcbellllll, uloma , new mi's $7100 897-5m '65 VALIANT Wag. 200 ·1-way S~ Wheel, ( map, 2 tops, $1500. 494-G863 til'es. bnlkel; needa paint. ' ' Berle• v.a Ml Runs '"'4 ~ Seat Speakers, i '64 Convert., entirely rebuilt "!'60__,."'M""'7.-it.,.,.==-,;;;;-'86 MUSTANG, Power S/B, • • · .... Fibe.r&lu• Tirei. , Itnme.c. Mui\ ltll 01EAP '67 Ford Cortina GT auto. tius., mag wheels Gd cond. $150. Aft ~ MUST Stcrifi~. ( ! 675--8770. Must Sell! VERY Good con-xlnt. oond., $1250. 968-3493 545--0041 6"-5793 , --------·I dillon. &ts-5826 '6S MU Sf ANG Fa 1 t back '69 ROAD Runner. XLNT ..:.::c.::::;1966-...-;;T;:;·B"t"'RD"+~il! '66 Van·x!nt cond. MO.st sell Stick, radio + Jtlli wbeell. cond. MM)' t )(tru. Cash sUOO or best OUC1'. immediately. Wttl aacrillce iaso. Alt. 5:00 644-0236 dral only. 64t..9737 , 545-5694 after 6 pm. DODGE 1or $1375. 557""981 '67 MUSTANG Convert, stick '63 BELVEDERE. 9 paaatn. '62 T·Blrd. full power A • '67 DODGE Charger '68 TORINO GT convt. 390-slilfl, xtnt cond. Orig owner ger Station Waaon. Xlnt. alr. PIO. 646.7561 1 ~ ~t~~ ~· Ai!~·1 CJ, V.S, PS/PB, Air. Radial SI,225, 494-2900 cond. 2278 AValon St., CM. 1990 Pomona, Costa Me I •1 ~ ...... , .. ~.. Wl1NUWf, ti ll'IOO ••• ~•• ste~r, dlac brka:. Lo. mUe. rtl. · '"..-"'"'° 'tia Mustang, sUck 11hllt, ra. '68 PLYMOUTH GTX clean, '57 T·8UU>, ' '60 i Xl.nt . C!Cftd. Sf9...s Alt 1 '• ,.._,, white d¥:a. btattt Privatll .Pll'V· 4 lpd, 440 hllh perlonn&nce. StarliMr ~/both. Gnod. ! .;.P...;M _______ 111ts. 61~2;67 17Sil, <9<1-9683 ---------·I Cond. 526-2Sl4 ot l46-20lJ 1 1 • ,. • TIMlrsd"I, .lull 23, 1970 ' I ) ANCHOR MOTORS 2150 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA • • S46-3050 · " , •OPEN ,7 DA VS • • 9 ·A.M.· • 9 ,,M. • ' I f t .,.----...------. LPL/LIZ k4P.LZ2ALlLLL SI MAil.A llPANOL WE CARRY OUR OWN CONTRACTS Everyone of •srt and employed c1n buy a car at ANCHOR MOTORS. e Even if you h•v• no credit e E ·Z Budget Terms e WMldy, Saml0Waokly I •Monthly P1ym1nt1 e Divorced ._. No red tape • '63 T-Blrd A11to'"•tit, r•dio, h11!1•. IRlCYSJtl '62 Lincoln Co11ti ... 11t~l...full pow1r 1rtd ,;,, IJRHSStl '64 Ply. Valiant ~l1tio11 W1go11, A11lo. tr111s., r1dio 1..0 h1'1tor. IOYS619) '65 .ford WE DO NOT REQUIRI! A SPECIFIC DOWN·PAYMENT · No R .. -w. OH... RafuHcl on Over IOI C•rsl '61 Chevrolet · lrookwo!MI St1tio11 W1go11, A11to., fully ... ulp,.M. ClltTUllll .. 62 Pont. Tempest Co11•1rtibl •. Auto., r1cl io incl h11tor. INo. 111&51 '61 · Dockje Lancer R•clio I h•1tor, fully •quipp•cl. IFNFJ041 '63 Ford V-1, 1uto tron1., 1ir eonclHio". )7619 . '56 Dodge 1/:z. Ton IJCKU,. v.1 ... 1peeG. fH414401 . 57 Volkswagen 'f 1po.d. IQUL96JJ ~ cf.!ievrolet Van '65 Mustang v.1, foet.fy ._,;,,.111, IKDS-0671 $AVE $AVE ~~ ~~ ......... "·· s299 (IEF,-110)' , ... ;~,_'·"'· ~ .... ~.·· .. ··_·"'!'_ .. _ag,--en _ __,..$-=5,_9=-9=-. u ':60 Vo"'swagen . s399 a.it., II.em. ll'VW.a771 . . . WWFVLWKS ,z .,.. ~, -----·ii·rn-· :· ANC OR ·. ! MOTORS . ztso HARBOI BLVD. , .COSTA MESA • 546-3050 · Ol'IN 7 l/AYS f ~ e 9 P.M. • •• .;. l"l';I' .. ' ' • • .... re,.._ Joe Berfolfi~ Bl LL SALES • SERVICE "UMl:r ~a'"u .. ~ Boach OFFICIAL T & M . ::;: :· ·21~~~!!*~D. , ' MOTORS . JONES· UNIVERSITY • 5*64lO 70 2850 HARBOR BLVD. ( ' • 1 BIG F RD • 540--• • Announces : H 0 D A IS HERE! oF · earance AUTHORIZED SALES, SERVICE DATSUN Sale Pick Up WE~. HAVE 1•HE BEST : Trucks ALL COLORS READY FOR . IMMEDIATE DEllYERY ' . um._ .. ''Leader In The Beach Cities" ZIMMERMAN 2145 HARBOR BLVD. 5*6410 BIG AT SELECTION 'OF SO.UJ:H COAST 'FORD BMW'$ ·IN ORANGE COUNTY • All Color• e All Moclelt lmmed!•t• Delivery '66 v.w. , ''ll.1dio, he•t•r, oco"orny, dt· P'"dtbility. You coul dn't find • b•tt•r b1rg1!n. lSU 7lll $895 -·-'69 Y.W. -SPORTSCAR CENTER 2133 HARBOR COSTA ME$A -·)-H you awn an im· ported. ~~ and need . service, _cpme. ·se.e .. .:. ) us at B .J 'SpMS Cars. AU new, serv· ~e anil palts facili-. . ' ties. We service ALL imported cars. * • * ....... ..._.... ... , SELEO.ION The 1971 Models wili be in our show· room in a few short weeks, all new Mus- tangs plls the ma· .i!itJ If our , llSlll car stack 11111st lie sold. To sell these Ca{S as quickly as paSsible, we have ta cut prices dmticaJ. ~. HONDA 600 SEDAN 75 MPH -4 tpeed tren1mi11lon -front disc brekis -full car· peting. 40 miles per u•llon. -•!: -• ~ Ill THE e CAR THAT i EVERYBODY TRIED ..... c - = 8 • Ill TO BUllD PLUS UNIVERSITY SALES e SERVICE COSTA MESA 2JSCI HARBOR Bl VD. .• 540--. • OF · - Redio, he•tor, .-.tro 1,eci1I c•r• h11 Do•" t1~011 with thh De1uty. See end cfrj,,4 to IP•' preci1to! 10519). ' $1995 -·-WI HA.YI 'A ftNANCING To The First 100 . ,Cal's WI.th ·I This Coupon Imports Only DATSUN Sta.lion Wagons ALL COLORS READY PLAN TO PIT YOUR IUD· I • • • • • • • • I •n. COMI IN AND TALk WITH ONI OP OUR D· '* • * PlllENCED COUNIELOIS. FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY -1 "'!" j ...... "Leader in The Beach Cities" ZIMMERMAN 2845 HARBOR BLVD. 54().6.110 FINEST MOST RELIABLE SERVICE DEPT. ANYWHERE FOR ALL OFFICIAL '70 FORD Clearance Sale AT -·-'68 YW f11tb1ck, r1dio, hooter, r11I 1h1rp little cer. A·I 1h1pe. IWTP066l $1595 -·-'62, FIAT Co"v•rti bt.. P'~tiect htl'll· port1tio11 e1r. Mech1nic•llv topll ISFN-1641. $495 -·-'65 PORSCHE SPORT COUPE l r•11d 111w tngint, aot • ll'lil• on it ! R1dio, heet1r, irn· 11'111ul1+• throughout. Whit • bo1uty! $2995 -·-'65 SUNBEAM "Tiger" 260 . V-1, AM/FM , h11dtop, ell 1y11cro '4·1peocl. Soe thi1 on1! llSZ-142}. $1295 SP~RT SOUTH IMPORTS AUTHOllZD • COAST IALll ' SllYICI H;°me--;f . The Best FORD s2000 · , Car 494-8515 Joe Berfotli 6 , T & • 303 Broadway, · MOTORS ''Leader In 'Th. &.ch Cities" ZIMMERMAN 2145 HARBOR BL VD. 540-6411 " Laguna Bm 549-3851 OPEN SUNDAYS 1011 Gfrden G,..... Boulevl't"CI Y, Ilk. E. of Baa~h Boulevilrd · "' 534-2214 . 892-5551 . TUNE UP SPECIAL . INCLUDES• Set C1rburetor, Plugs, Points, Cond9ns.r, Timing, All Pi1rts & Li1bor REG. $24.95 4/Cyl. l...,.,...i CM Olly -·-BILL JON·ES • SPORTSCAR CiNTER · 2133 HARB .O~ COSTA MESA ·: ~ 540 4491 ' Cotner Of Herbor & Elm . ..!:,S.rvlce tntrance On Elm ·\ f \ f .f ~ ~ . 0 ·<,> w ·' u E > 0 "' -.,, w .... o 0 .,, :I • l • d • ,, c II d v ~ 1r ,, .. L j .. IT c "' ir p !1 p ~ 0, " Ii 01 p. A n a