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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-07-27 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa17 , Merger of Sheriff-Coroner · Criticize~ ' ' £osta Mesa Tot 0 Out of Danger After LSD •Trip~ DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * l ' MONDAY AFTERNOON, JUlY 27, 197P ·Slieriff -Coroners Sehip ( . . Not Answer, Jury· Says . ' United operation ol the offices oC sheriff and county coroner is on I y a ''satisfactory temparary measure" and is not a permanent solution lo the coun- ty's problems in this area, the Orange County Grand Jury stated today . The panel urged ·county supervisor! fn. a special midterm reort to "continue to considel'! lh1s an unsolved problem." It urged the pooiibility of either ap- pointing a medical examiner "or seeking legislation permitting the appointment of a capable administcalor as coroner, independent of the sheriff's office. "l would be helpful but not essential for this person to be a medical doctor," the ~and jury report states. James C. Musick became Orange Cvun- ty's fint &herill-coroner. with a con- vincing victory over one opponent In the June 2 primary election. He had previously served for 23 year• as Orange County sheriff. In other recommendations, the grand jury urged the Board of SuperviJora to quickly eslablish a c e n t r a I county morgue. "The jury realizes that such action would involve the expense of building end equipping the facility but feels that in the interest of long term economy and efficient coordination a central morgue for Orange County is a necessi· ty," the repart states. Still No Clues in Theft At Pendleton's Armory Federal agendes c:OntilltH!d· to ,..k leads today on sUJPeCt1 and the location of a cache of weapons ·11tolen from a Camp PendJeton armory .over the weekend. Spokesmen (o~ the Marine Corps said no new information had been found on Two Countians · Killed in Crash Of DCB Plane Two Orange' Coast residents were among four crewmen killed . today 'in the cruh of a. Flfln'g naer Airllrles Del t:ransport RI~ In ~kiniwa. : Officials at the,line's headquarter1 jln Los An.geles Identified the victims 8.s Capt. Cleo 1.1. Tien, 58, or 15936 Mariner Driev, HunUngton Jreach. and Flrzt Of· ricer Robert Foley, 59, of 811 Avenlda Tere111, San Clemente. Foiey's survivor• include his wife, Mr1. EllubeUl Foley, of tl l Avenida Tere.sa, Sart Clemente. 'I'reft was not married and his ":it of kin reside in Iowa, accord.Ing to a Flylna: Tiger spokesman. Their plane crashed while approachipg the U.S. Kadena Air Base on Okinawa. U.S. mil!Lary authorities atld t11e ·e11ne, carrylna: millt11ry cargo and mails, oroke into plecea when it hit 1 coral reef as it approaehtd tor a laf!dln&:· • ( the theft on the Canlp Marprlta lll'l!IOry late .Friday night when apparently three men clubbed a guard with a rifle butt then stole rifles, a grenade launcher and the guard's .4kaliber automatic. The incident , occurring within an hour of the arrival on the South C.out of President Richard Nixon, sparked an immediate response from the Western White House Secret Sirvice corps, who joioed in the weekend investigation . But on Sunday White House spokesmen played down that agency's role in the probe of the weaspons theft. Presidential Presa Secretry R o n Ziegler said no extra security measures involving the Chief Executive ensued. The theft occurred at about 10:30 p.m. Friday night as Cpl. Kenneth D. Roberts was on sentry duty outside the arms 1 atore.house. 1 • The assai(.an1a, ceportedly blacks dre• ed In Marine fatigues, clubbed the ,auard unconsclous, then took'-nlDe M-11 combat noes, a grenade launcher and lhl j guard's sideann. ' . The huge ba.Se'a ·exits were i m ~ mediately sealed .off and inttnsive searches by Marine authorities. the FBl and the Secret Service were launched. The assaila.nll and the arms are believ. ed to be llil! on liue, apoi<esmen llll(I, ' The cache of arms may pouibly have been stoitn for use by mllH.anta, llOme eourcu 111d over the weekend, but Lt. Col. Ed Schultze, 1pokmn1n for the base, sai<I U.11 without 1pcclalized am- munition (which was not kept in the the armory) the 1una and launcher would be useless. •' Family Bids . .. lo Block Lil& ANGELES ill.Pl). -. n.ren,. lawy'" '°' Charles Man'°" and ~ fema1e. memheri el· biJ hfam.Hytt 'tr*I tod•t:. tO .l>IOc~.Jhe seeutl0n'1 en)J M!ll lo Sharon Tate murder1.._. : I Prior to lf!e ,opening.()/ the'iriomfoi1 sesslbn, Att.m<y P.W Fllzgtrald told newllinen that as aoon u tmda K:aubian, 20, takes the· stand, he . would a1k · Q>e judge to delay her testimony. Fitzgerald said t.be qererise would ask the judge to grant t~em aceeM ~tD statements Mrs.· Kasab1an, a co-defen- dant turned state's witness, had alreidy made to the prosecution. He said the defense wa1 unable to prepare it.s case without knowing what Mrs. Kasabian, who will be granted immunity for telling her story, bad told the district attorney's office in private meetings. William Garret.son, 19, told the jury in the trial's opening teslimony that he was awakened at dawn bot heard no shots,. acreams, or ' loud noises in his bungalow which is located on the other side of the swimming pool from the main residence. Garrel.!orl said he first )earned of the killings of Miss Tate and four oUlers when police burst into his collage wlLh drawn guns the next momln&. He wa1 at first charged With suspicion ol murder in the slayings but later released . Mrs. Kasabian, who lived with &ht hippie cult at the Spahn Ranch cqrnmune at the time of the five killings at the Tate home and two others at the home of grocer L e n o LaBiance has b e e n (See MANSON, P ... I ) LSD Sends Baby To Hospital; Brother Held A 211-month<lld boy ·who 1llegedly fli<I· ed hiJ teenqe brother's staah-of LSD and other drugs is home today 1fter a weekend In the hospital, but the older boy isn't as lucky. Thomas D. McKnight, 20 montha, old, was taken first to Coata Mesa Memoria l Hsopital Friday night and .ent home from another medic8J facility, Sunday after treatment for the overdole of drugs. . The lad apparently suffered no permanent effl!Ctl from tbt incident'. Hit !~year-old b_, wu queidoned at the family home ail • Denver Ave., and then taken to Onnge Counly Juvenile Hall to await action on charges of furniahlng dllt&erous druCI to a minor. The Incident featured tbe !DOil dram&Uc rescue llnce COit.a Meu.'1 new police helicopter patrol took to tbe air, a.. pilot Cart Jacksoa landed npt tn front of the toddler's home. Ollictr Ron Palmer. hia obltrver, ad· ministered mouth-to-mouth re1Uacitltion en route to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. Treatment ln the emergency room w11 followed by a patrol car run to Hoag Memorial Hospital tn Newport ·Beach, where speciallJed treatment w • 1 available. , ' • • Dnntingto~ M~Q!) ... . -. San CleJU·en·tean • . Die • ID • . . DAIL .,.,.ILOT PIM19 n Rk~ ICMl,IW . ' ANGELS OWNER .GENE AUTRY PLAYS HOST TO .NATION'S NO. 1, BAsEMLL FAN .· After Trovell ng'Wo1t, Pieildent. W1tchH Wild and Woolly, Contut With Formor Cowboy Stu ' . Nixon Summons Pitehe.r Tries Catching~, Defense Leaders For Top· Meeting GuardsNixonFromFou"ls SAN CLEMENTE ·-President NixiJn summoned Delenae1 Secretary· Melvin R'. • hllrd and Deputy Secretary ·David Packard to meet with ." him today to conslder •restfutfting the rPehtagon, now· under fire f« .helvy coot . .....,,.,,.. 1be 0011ference is one of a string ol meeilllp 1t the Weottrn While House duiPed to· reshape thEI masstv'e Defense4 Depirtment . ind aet · prlortlies'. (0< ~. 1m budget. · · · Dr. · Henry A. : Kissinger, • n&Jional- security affairs adylser, also,' will &it · in on• ~e m~Ungs. , Nl1<11 and his advisers will have before them a far-reachioi r!port 6y· a b\ue ribbon pone! on Defehie Di!parli\ient· reorganization healsed by .'Gilbert W. 1 Fitzhu~t ·¢'airman· ol. Ole board , of · Metropoutan L l f e Insurance Co. The · yeor-long 1tudy will be m1de j>ublic Tues·' d1y, I ' 0 The President also was ex.~ted to· discuss strategy for obtaining Senate approval. of the $19.$ .billion defense, prOcurement bill and the.. nut stage· of the anU-baillsUc miasile syatern..-.. SelUnr the stage for dtftnse · buda:et' talks Tuesdly and a domestic budfet review ,Wedne.da)'1 Nixoo ~scbeduled a oecond lllOllil!c ilo the naU~l tcOllOlllY .. P earson Gets Surg~ry OTIAWA (All) -I.oater B. Pea,...,, ,..._ prime mlnbt« ol Clnada, left 5"ndll7 the hoQilll where hb right eye '!•• rtmOVtd last 1'ee.k bec1uae of 1 tumor. • ' The Sercet Service had IOD\e proo feasional, If neivous, assistance, In · guarding the President at the Sunday buebalt tlugfest In Angell · Stadium, Anahetm. Pat Rogan, Angels' batting practice pitcher, wu aeated in front or; tht Pres!· dent to guard against the , PQUlbillty 1 of a foul ball beaning the nation's most Important baseball fan. ''When ~ asked ·me to alt I~ ffont ol the President," said Rogan, "I toldi them they. )¥ere 1 ta~I~ ·a ·1trem~f¥1ous chaJICC wjth my hand. '. 'I't\c . l l~lnnlnf · game, with ,the Wlllllj!~ Senator• , whlch lhe Angels won 11·10,.laated three houri .and 56 mlnul'4 and Nixon~went 1 the distance. . . "&gin said ~e was a~ at the ~.retldent'1 knowledge ol the players and the game. . 1 • "He talked to me quite a bit during t.Oe game," said the pitcher. "He uked me aome questions and • dllcusaect 'the ' atratea:Y, things like · that. It wu quite _anJ>onor." • ,.. · • 1 l r Rolan ulc1 !he President told him he never leaves before the end of ·1 game. The guardian piCcher seenied relieved when. il was all over and there . hid been no fouls 'hit In · the dlredioo of I.he Pre1ldent. . 1A aidelight of the 32-hlt game Was , a mad dash by younj!:iters each half lnnln& to the Presidential box to have Nixon auto1raph programs, baaeball gloves and rented seat cushion11. Service bodyguards would shoo 1w11 younistUa1untll three m6re baiten'wtrt ' ' out. \ I 1Nixon arrived by helic:opter~ oranp golf cart and ljoined:Mr. and Mn. Gene Autry. The lormer, ~w)>oy inovle atar . !See. NIXON ,IP I! ' . ' Weather The ·coaatllne •may for up durlna the morning hours, but Tuesday's weaUler picture should be pretty bright otherwill! with UtUe tem1>- erature , chan1e. ~ INSWE TODA. 'Y I A Wit to Microgrophic& Jnt, in Nf1DP<>rt •Beacl& revtClla iM t111cU, s"'4l4 world of 1nicro- scopic plioeography. ·See .o pitce oj petrified polttn f!I09fll/itd 2,000 timtl., Set #Oflt 18. ~ Tbt 1millng President kept obliging • unUt play wu resumed. Then Secrtt • ..._ __________ _.. ( ( ( I DAJl.Y PILOT s Natec Ousts President in Big toss •• An °"'1ge County-ba!ed corporation which deals ln lJquor, health roods and 1biopltala hal dumped lta pruldeut and itl selling' subsidiaries in an erfort to ~ debta totaling more than$% million. •. •The National Environment Corporation, ~ offk:es 1n Union Bank Square, <>range, may tuffer IOMea as high u •. 5 million for the fiscal year ending 1t$ Marth. • OperaUng under the acronym Natec, J.he company officers met throughout ~ut week wlth representatives of lta bankers and creditors in an unsuccessful llUempt to work out difficulties. A fonnal announcement Friday revW. ed fonner Insurance man Henry D. Clarke Jr., had been ousted as president of Natec and replaced by Elmer C. Sproul, chainnan of the board. Cluke roctnUy pledged 1100,000 from the company to Harbor ma Girl Scoota, but a company apokeSDl&D said today the effect on that donation was uncertaln. The main subaidiary disposal Is that of a meat-packing firm, Virg DavldJODo Chudo<ofl Company for IU mllllon, a N'atec purchase m.1de one year ago for 1.U million. Preliminary negotiatlons,are alto under way to sell Gilmore & Company. a Na~wned distilling company, while the «ganizatlon also plans to get rid of Milford Company, a liquor distributing firm. Virtually all of the Natec organlzaUon't holdings In the field ol hospital are wUI also go, following announcement lalt month that II.I 25 convalescent hospltala: would be 90ld. Swillte MedJcal Center1 Inc .• a Natec IUblld.lary. wu to coaU.oue operating, !j>em under !be _.le roorganlaatlon, tiJt the .company now wants to tell that finn u well. Beaides those organizations, Natec also owns the Uncle John'• Pancake House restaurants, operating under the title Envlrolood Inc., Blum'• Candies, Or~e County Bmlnesll macblnea: and a variety of other erUrprlaer. Natec wu organized In early 198tl by Clarh and lta llock akyroCketed in volue unW bltllng financial proble,.. that have Jed to ouster of the president and two other olllcera. Belldel Clarke, vJce chairman John A. Cllfu and executive vice president John L. Holleran were removed from their poota during the ahakeup. Tile form.al statement by the company llWUll"nlfllt aalO that while Nalec Is having Ila problema, all Ill oubcldlary holdlnp are <xmf.lnulnc to operate u lllllal. l't'Ollt P.,.e I MANSON ••• laolaled from !be other delendull and kepi under 1peclal guild pending h e r 1eat1mon1. Deputy Dlatrlcl Attorney Vincent T. Jlu(Uooi aald In hla opening atate:nent that Mrs. Kaaablan actuaJly 11w three killfn48 at the estate rented by1loman Polanski, the movie director husband cl the blonde actress. Jlu(Uool .. Id she wltnesaed the kllllnga of coffee heiress Abigail Folger, Polish writer Voltych Frykowskl and IS.year-old Steven , Parent, who had been vi.siting youna Garret.son. Their bodies were found outside the home. Miss Tate and hair 1tyllst Jay Sebring were tilled inside the rambling ranch home. Mrl. Kasablan wu said by the 1tate to have driven members of the "family" the nen night to tbe LaBianca home and acl.ed as a lookout there. Bugliosl said Manson ordered her and others of his cult to carry out a killing at a third home that same night of Aug. 9 tn the beach front community of Venice, but, he said, Mrs. Kasabian deliberately thwarted it by knocking on the wrong apartnent door. On trial with Manson are Susan Atkins, Patricia Krenwinkel and Leslie Van Houten. DAILY PILOT "'..,... .... ""'""''" .... ~ ... le•cll F•1et9'11 Yellitf c .. M Mn• s .. c""'" t)lt4NIJI COAIT l"UIL"HING COM,AN'f" le'o•rt N. w • .-4 '"llet<ll •NI J>\lblls"- J 1t\ l . C111l1! Ykl 1'n1ifffll 11\d Grl\ll"I Ml""'fM' lh11W•t K11vil r ldli.r Th•"''' A. M111,hi~1 M..,..lnl f.d!lltr llth•~ '· Nill ""''~ °' ..... ,_,'I fdltw ...... C•I• Mitt.11 a» W.•1 l1y ''""'' H""""' ''"'" nn w..1 111t1o, ...,,,.,,,, U ....... lhlH'lo1 ttt F-tl ... .....,.,. N1,111llftt;I ... fl4'fdl; 1n11 lttcll '""""''' 1oM Cltt-11: JOI N1t1• ll Clll'llflt llMI • • OAtLY PILOT Sl1lt ""'to lunior Guards in Action ' .Furious Dogli1ilat " 2 Egypt MIGs Downed by Israel By Ua.lted. Prt1s llternaUonal Israeli jet fighters shot down two EgypUan MIG17 jets today in an air battle over the Suez Canal, a military ispokesman said in Tel Aviv. The brief but furious dogfight came as each side sent planes across the canal in a new escalation of the conflict. Israel's hawkish Cahal Party met lhrooghout the day to try to find some way of agreei11.g on the U.S. Mideast peace proposal a11.d Israel's reply - expected to be e sharply conditional acceptance -was expected later in the week. The Arab world divided sharply on the issue and 15,000 Palestinian guer· riUas, some of them a r m e d , demonstrated in the streets of Amman against a cease-fire and agalna:t Presi· dent Gama! Abdel Nasser and King Hu1sei11:. Israel 's reply to the U.S. peace proposal but Tel Aviv dispatches indicated it would be a qualified acceptance. Jordan accepted It but Syria, Jraq and the Arab guerrilla organizations rejected 11 as some sort of surreader. Israel was reported willing to accept the U.S. plan for peace talks provided there is a guarantee that Egypt will not use the three-month cease-fire to build up its Suez Canal line. The ~s:aeU cabinet met Sunday but was too d1v1ded to make a public statement. Another cabinet meeting was called for Tuesday. The Arab guerrillas were so angry they paraded through Amman and shouted slogans against Egyptian Presi- dent Gama! Abdel Nasser and King Hussein of Jordan. It was the first Arab demonst ration against t he American proposals. Among the crowd were guerrillas wear· Ing anns in contravention of a July 10 agreement banriing arms~arrying in the city. Group of Huntington Beach Junior Llleguards pound out of the water after completing swim race -part of their eight-week summer training program under the direction of city lifeguards. About 260 boys are involved in the daily program, designed to teach boys 9 to 15 basic elements of water safety and emergency procedure. Program has been going for seven years. Many of the boys have graduated to ranks of regular lifeguards. An Israeli military spokesman said Israeli antiaircraft gunners hit a thlrd MIG17 but did not see it era.sh. He said the dogfight developed when Egypt tried to raid targets on the Israeli side of the canal for the second time today. The interceptors swarmed in and quickly downed two of the raiders, he said. All Israeli pla11es returned safely, he said. The demontsrators chanted .. Abdel Nassar, the coward" and carried • placard reading, "We will change the area into hell if a settlement is imposed." Another said, ;'The ·guns of our fighters will determine the fate of the Palestinian people." Weekend Crashes Claim Four in Orange CQunty A Costa Mesa man was fatally injured early today when his car crossed a busy boulevard and smashed Into a steel pole. Three other penlOns died In other weekend accidents. James D. Null, rt, of 2176 Placentia Ave., died at Co.st.a Meu Memorial Hoopltal about two hours after the I a.m. accident, according to nursing of. ficlals. A HunUngtoit Beach welder who burned to death early saturdey when his flat bed truck smashed into a Pole on the Garden Grove Freeway was also ideD- tllled. . He was Jesse Y. Trusty, 45, of Sll.2 Sparrow Drive, and he was pronounced dead at the scene on the freeway near the Fairview Avenue offramp, according to lhe Calllorni. Highway Pa111>1. Aull1ilrlU" In Stanton alao old a S. year-old girl who eaw her mother an~ started to run acro1s the street to meet her was fatally injured when lhe ran into the path oC a car. * * * Husband Watches As Wife Fatally Injured by Cycle A husband crossing Laguna's darkened Coast Highway with his wife watched in shock as a motorcycle slammed into her Friday night. 'nle injury was fatal. Shirley Jean Hunt, 32, a Wichita secretary, died Sunday morning at Soulh Coast Community Hospital. She and her husband Jack were visiting Laguna Beach . Police said the coople attempted to cross the major artery In the 300 block of North c.oast Highway shorlly before midnight Officers said they were not in a crosswalk. Hunt told police he saw the motorcycle coming and yelled for it to stop. The southbound vehicle swerved and avoided him but struck his wife as Hunt watched. The driver, Billy Frank Mitcham, Jr., 22, of 521 S. Coast Highway, a bartender, was taken to the hospital and released. A police. report indicated he was not at fault In the accident. Oil Lease Bills Still Tied Up In Sacramento Two bills designed to free properties lied up by oil leases failed to gel out of committee in Sacramento this week. The bills were inlroduced by Sen. George Deukmejian (R·l.ong Beach) and pushed by representatives from Newport Beach, Huntington Beach, Torrance •nd Signal llill. They had been in the Senate Judiciary Committee stnee thelr In· troduction early In April. The measures did not receive the seven votes needed to get them out of com· mlttCfl and Tuf5day were sent to the Rules C.Ommlltee for Interim study. "The oil interests didn 't like the bills the way they were and now they &!'ft being asked to come up with amendment11," Herb Day, Huntington Beach's oil field superintendent, reported. Day, who attcndtd Tuesda.y'a hearing, said the bills provide for methods to terminate ccrtatn oil Iea!;Cs. Spec:lllcally, these would be lcalK':s that lorbid pro- perty owners surface use of lheir pr<>- ptMy even though royalties a.re Jess than the property tax the owner Is required IO (>Of. Erin Toplikar of 7671 Cody Drive died at Orange County Medical Center Sunday at 4 p.m., following the tragic accident whldl occurred in front of her home. PoUce said the car waa driven by a 17-year-old Buena Park boy who had no chance to stop and will not. be charged with any crime as 1 result of the fatal accident. Police were still Investigating the 2 1.m. acctdent which killed Ute COit.a Mesa man whose car c::rC5Sed the center line tn the 2300 block ol Harbor Boulevard. Hitchhiking Girl Mo'lested Near Emerald Bay A teenage girl hitchhiker wa1 molested at lcnlfe point near an Emerald Bay entrance Frlday night and wu struck on the mouth when she protested. Laguna Police Lt. John Zelko said the 19-year~ld Garden Grove girl wu given a ride In Newport Beach by a man about is years old. His sun visor bore the words "hot atuff." He purchaaed a aoft drink for her tn the vicinity of Scotchman's Cove and later stopped near the main gate at Emerald Bay claiming he was going to check his car. Zelko said the man put a knife against the girl's neck and told her 1'be a nice girl and move over." When she protested, the man struck her in the face, released her and dro ve away. 'Ille incident was the latest of several In which men have molested girls who were hitchhiking ln the area. Santa Anan Held Following Brawl At Mesa Tavern A Santa Ana man was arrested Sunday night and a resident of the same apart- ment complex was given 22 stitches in his forehead after a Costa Mesa tavern fight following a pool game. RonaJd J. Onken of 20341 S. W. Cypress Ave. was treated at Costa Me,,a Memorial Hospital after being struck in the head with a broken pool cue. Police arrested Jamu B. Forguson, 47, of the same S. W. Cypress Ave. address, on suspicion of twalllt with a deadly weapon, Jnveatigators said Uie men were playing pool at the Tin Lizzie, 752 St. Clair St., when an argument developed and Onken was smashed in the heod. The victim said he had helped break up a fight earller and took away one haU of a broken pool cue away from one of the combatants. Unfortunately, pollce said, he didn't get the other halt. Tyrone Power's Kin Weds Italian Singer CEl.L!NO SAN MARCO, llaly (AP) -Romlna Power, daughter of the: late American actor Tyl'Ol'le Power and ac- tress Linda ChrlsUan, haa married Al Bano, one of Italy's top pop singer!!. "nte Roman Catholic ctremany took place Sunday Jn thlt southem Italian town which was Bano'a birthplace. Ml.u Power 11 It, Sano 27. The brlde'a m~er altended lhe weddlnl. \ Youth's Bodv • Found; Friend Raped, Shot SOUTH BEND, Jnd. (UPI) -The body of a Detroit youttl, shot, beaten and bound hand and foot, was found in a creek near South Bend today . Police said he was apparenUy the victim of two men who abducted him and his girl friend from a downtown Detroit theater and raped and shot the girl. , The body was found in Grapevine Creek aOOut two and a half miles west of South Bend after the 17-year-old girl staggered into the rural home of Daniel Nowicki and sobbed out a story of rape and murder. Volunteer firemen dragged the stream near the point where the girl uid the youth was &hot, beaten and thrown into the water. The youth was identified hours after the body was found as Harold Nabor1, 18, Detroit. The girl was not identified by authorities. Police launched a broad search r o r two white men the girl said escaped in the youth's 1964 tan Dodge convertible. Authorities said the girl told the:n the two attended the Grand Circus Theater in downtown Detroit Sunday nigh I. Dr. Stanley M. Kosclelski, deputy cor· oner of St. Joseph County, said NaOOrs died of a severe skull fracture and drowning. His watch had stopped at 5:35 o'clock a.m. The girl came to Nowlcki's home at aOOut 5:30. The girl was released after hospital trealment and was taken to the sheriff's office for questioning . The bullet which hit her In the head, identified as from a small-caliber weapon, did not penetrate the skull. The kidnap suspects were identified as about 30 years old. The girl gave police a detailed description of each, including sideburns, tattoos and clothing. Sheriff's officers said the Federal Bureau of Investigation had entered the case. The Israeli raids against Egypt marked the S7th co11secutJve day of strikes against Egyptian artillery altes and mbsile bases. Israel said "several" Egyptian planes raided on the east side of the canal in the mornlng In the flnt such EgypUan attack tn weeks. Four Israeli aoldlers were reported woun- ded. With the Arab world sharply split on the U.S. peace propoxals, Baghdad radio a11nou11ced that Sldam Hussein TakritJ, vice chairman of the ruling Revolution Command Council, had been invited to Moscow. PollUcal sources said Russia may be trying to quotll Iraq'• vociferous opposiUon to the peace plan. The Arab world was ttlll awaJUna: British Royalty Marriage Weak Says Magazine NEW YORK (UPI) -Britain's Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon do not have a completely happy mar- riage, according to the Ladles' Home Journal. The magazine's current iSsue has an arUcle by a "well·placed Br i ti s It aristocrat" writing under an assumed name who calls tbe r o y a 1 couple what is known in England as a "reluctant couple." The article said that on formal oc- casions, Prince53 Margaret and Snowdon put on a show, but at inform~! gather- ings, "the unfortunate situation is anly too clear." They had a disagreement, somewhat heated for royalty, over art on a recent visit to a London gallery. Snowdon was admiring a painting of a nude male said to be "slightly pornographic." Snowdon is quoted as saying, "I think we should buy it -what do you think?" "I'm not so sure. Isn't it a bit ... much?" she was quoted . And the article says Snowdon replied, "A bit much indeed . What in hell do you know aOOut art anyway?" The magazine reports that at a party, Snowdon. a photographer was discu~ing a work problem with his host. The princess interrupted them, aceording to the magazine, "demanding that he return to the p a r t y because she wanted to dan ce." , Snowdon ls quoted as saying, "Oh, go away, you bore me." How there could be a cease-fire tn the face of the Palestbtlan opposition remained to be seen. Jordan's aeceptaJJce of the U.S. peace plan specifically ex· eluded the guerrillas who have vowed to fight forever to "liberate" Palestine. The natio11s supporting Nasser were Jordan, Kuwait, Suda• and Lebanon. Syria and Iraq not only rejected the proposal but filled the airwaves today with anti·American, anti·lsrael and by implication, 80me anti-Egyptiu. blasts. Coast Taxpayers Face Increase Despite Cut . Many Orange County taxpayers face an increase in their tax bills in spitt of the fact county supervisors have cut three cents from the county tax rate. The estimated 197G-7l budget. approved Friday, would require a tax rate of $1.64 per $100 assessed valuation. Last year's rate was $1.67. But the total tu bill increase. is an· ticipated because County Assessor Andrew Hinshaw increased assessments an average of 17.6 percent. A series of last minute cuts -mostly in capital projects -whittled the new budget down to an estimated $212,420,748. That figure is some $7 million below the initial budget submitted by County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas, and some 21 percent higher than the previous year's budget. In addition to nearly $4 million worth of cuts in the capital projects program, supervisors told the welfare department to reduce its personnel budget by 31 positions and the probation department by 16 positions. From Page I NIXON ... is one of the major owners of the Angels. The President told him he was "torn between the two teams but tried to remain neutral." The President threw balls out to the catchers of the Senators and Angels and then threw a couple of balls to fans who scrambled after them. BUY WHERE IT'S MADE SAVE UP TO 50°/o TRADE-IN YOUR OLD FURN!TUH ON NEW LlllRAL ALLOWANCES Your Ord1r ALSO CUSTOM REUPHOLSTERING • Announcing a new breakthru in UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE Ruff•ll'1 m1nuf1ctur11 +h• fin11t furnltur• you 'Will find •ni~hire. You s11 i+ •nd select it right in our showroom. P1y up +o 50 Y.I le11 +h•n ret1il, Choo•• from •n unlimit•d s1l1c .. +ion of fabric1. Custom ch1n911 •r• •lso po1sible. e ALL WOii •U.t.lANTllD POl THI L1•n1M1 o• •.t.lllC 1922 HARBOR BLVD, e COSTA MESA OR CALL FOR APPOINTMENT e 548.0259 J I I I - - •n "' ca •• pl'> Fr pa ' T< P; Sec1 Sec1 him rest for Tl of r: desi Dep 1972 [} "" in o N: ther. ribb reor rit:z: Met yea1 day , Tt disc app1 proc of ti Se 1'11k re vi ""' F, E: F• leas llos1 day• atta1 Sh after Valh Th an ' wh• 811 NI exp I· finar wind Am< = • Bunti~.gton Bea~ EDITIO • vor. 63, NO. '178; 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANG~ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY 27, '1970 • ' . Key Vote Nearing on Freeway • Bill By THOMAS FORTUNE Of tM Dilly Pl .. 1 1t11t SACRA.MENTO -Spokesmen for city and county government, homeowner and landowner interests we re in the slate capitol today for what was shaping up as pertiaps . the key vole on a bill to prevent construction of Pacific Coast Freeway 'through Newport Beach and part or HUntington Beach. A· hearing before the S e n a t e Tr~Uon Qmmlttee wq set for ' later today. Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R· Newport Beach), the author of the bill , said this morning prospects looked good but he wasn't outri1ht predicting the senale committee woold recom:nend the bill for passage. He said the ' vote would not be unanimous. The bill, which ~re,vioUsly passed the slate assembly 46 to 6, would delete from the state freeway system the Pacific Coast Freeway route between Beach Boulevard ~ Huntington Beach and the ea.stem Newport Beach city limits at Corona. del Mar. Badham said, "lialf of Orange Counly is up here lobbying in the rear of the senate right now." Indeed there were many de legations both for and against the freeway but they appeared lo be doing more apec. tating than IQbbfing. Pre~nt to argue against the freeway route Wert Newport Beach Vice Mayor ANGELS OWNER GENE.AUTRY PLAYS HOST TO NATION 'S NO. I BASEBALL FAN Afttr Tr1v11Jng W11t, Pr11ldent W1tch11 Wil~ •nd Woolly Contest With Former Cowboy Star Nixon Summons Defense Leaders For Top Mee~g President Nixon aummoned Defense Secretary Melvin R Laird and Deputy Secretary David Packard lo meet with him in San Cleme nte today to cons.ider reshuffling the Pentagon, now. under fire for heavy cost overruns. The conference Is ooe of a string of meetings at the Western White House designed to reshape tht massive Defense Department and set priorities for the 19n budget. • Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, national 1ecurity affairs adviser, also will ait in on the meetings. Nixon and his advisers will have before them a far·reaching report by a blue ribbon panel on Defense Department reorganization headed by Gilbert W. Fitzhugh, chalrman of the boatd of Metropolitan L i f e Insurance Co. Tbe , year.long study will be made public Tue_s. day, The President also was expected to discuss strategy for obtaining Senate approval of lhe $19.S billion defense procurement bill and t.he next stage of the anti·ballistic miss ile system. Seltlf18 the stage for defense budget talks Tuesday and a domestic budgtl review Wednesday, Nixon sc,heduled a seoond meeting on the national, ecoaomy. Former Actress E.Qds Treatment Former fiim star Mary Astor was re-- leuect. from Huntington lntercommunlty Hoe:plb.1 SatUrday after wukrgoin1 three days of medical treatment (or a heart attack. She wu hospitalized Wednesd•Y night aft.er she wa.s alricken in her Fountain Valley home. · _ The actres! aod authortu has be'9 an Orange C.Ounty resident since 191& when llhe mC>ved here from Malibu. Small Bomb Explodes NEW YORK (UPI) -A 1m1ll bomb exploded in the heart of Manhattan '• fin1nci1I district earl y tod1y sh1tter1ng windows of a br1ncll of tbt Bank or America. Pitcher Tries Catching- Guards NixonFromF ouls The Sercet Service had some pro- (essional, if nervous, a.1Sistance, in guatdlng the Presld!nt at the · Sunday baseball slugfest In Angels Stadium, Anaheim. P~t Rogan, Angels' batting practice pitcher, was seated in front of the Presi. dent to guard against the possibility of a foul ball beaning the na tion's most iqlportant baseball fin. Alcohol Alleged Cause of Beach Infant Death Homicide detecttves today revealed that alcoholism was Involved in the death ot a year-old Huntington Beach child which brought murder charges againsl a Marine and a barm1id. The inla:it had been given rum and coke drinks, orncers said. The death, according to invesUgalors, was caused by peritonitis and pleurltls, l~·o diseases whlch can be ·Induced throogh ingesUon of excessive amounls of alcohol. Coroner's investigators said an autop11y revealed a .12 percent alcohol level al the tlme of death on July 10. Adult.11 are coosidered lntoxlc1led if they &how a .IS percent leve l.. The boy, Myron L, Reynolds, was pronounced de.ad on arrival at Huntington lntercommunJty Hospital sborOy after he rtcelved undete'rmined amounta of alcohol, officers ' aald. His mother, Carmellla L. Reynolds, 21, a Beach BoUlevard barmaid, and her 21·year-old Marine boyfriend Gary W. Rapp, well taken Into custody at lhelr home at zm 'Delaware St. early Friday ntgbL Rapp Is currently held In Huntington Beach City Jail while the Reynolds woman ls •t Orange County Jail. Both are held oo suspicion of murder with no bail fees Ht 11 of this morntna. the couple wu arrested on child neglect char1u Au1. 20 and had bffn free on M,250 ball when they wt.re rear. rated on the new charae1, detecUvta Nld. I "When they asked me to ail in front of the President,'' said Rogan , '"I told them they were tlking a trtmendous chance with my hand." The ll·lnnihg game, with the Washington Senators which the Angels won 11·10, lasted three hours and 56 minutes and Nixon went the di stance. Rogan said he WP.! amazed at the President's knowledge 'of the players and the game . "He talked to me quite a bit during the game," said the 'pitcher. "He aSked 1ne some questions and dlsCussed the strategy. things like that. It wu quite an honor." Rogan said the PresJdent told him he never leaves betore the end of a game. The guardian pitcher seemed relieved when It was all over and there had been no fouls hit in the direction of the Presidenl. A sidelight of the 32-hlt game was a mad da sh by youngsters each hair Inning to the Presidential box to ha ve Nixon autograph ,programs, baseball gloves and rented seat cushions. The smiling President kept obllging until play was resumed . Then Secret Service bodyguards would shoo away youngsters until three more batters were out. • Nixon arrived by helicopter and orange golf cart and joined Mr. and Mrs. Gene Autry. The former cowboy movie 1tar ls .one of the major owners of the Angels. The President told him he was "tom between the two teams but lried to remain neutral ." The President threw balls out lo the catchers of the Senators and Angels and then threw a couple of balls to fans who scrambled after them. Korea Army ~pda~g To Precede Phllout SEOUL (AP I -Thf llnlte~ States has agreed th11t the modernization of South korea's 1rmed forces will ~ any withdr1wal of Americ•n troops, Defense Pi.flnlster Jun& Nae-hluk llid today In 1 report on h11 mettlrtP in ' Honolulu lasl week w\th PeDUU' DiftMe Secretary David Pack&td. ' • ' -· Howard Ro1ers; Marshall Duffield, Paul Gruber and John MacFadea; Robert Curtl and John Store of the Corona del Mar United Homeowners Asaoclalion. Reidy to testify in f1vor of retaining the route were Jim Wheeler, Huritlngton Beach Chr.nber of Commerce's transportation oommittee; Gordon Jones and Dr. Thomas Ashley or the Irvine Company; Hancock "Bill Banninr Ill and John Haskell of ~ Ltd., tarp landowner ln the West Newport 1rea. • Scheduled to· spe.lt In opposition Wer today were Loguna Beach City Manqer J11nes Wheaton, plus Coal• Mesa M•yor Robert M. Wilson Ind City Attorney Roy June. The llneue pits Newport Beach ln- terest.s standing alone again.st the com- bined opposition of rtpresenlaUves of Coll> Me .. , Huntlnclon Boa<:h. Founteln Vllllty, I:aguna Beocb, Ind the county o!Orllll'. Chllrman ol lbe Senote Tr1111portation Nude Films Told Caretaker Tells Tate Hom .e Tales . order to properly crou examine her," said Flbgerald. at a hearing on his su~na ol Mrs. KaS1blan'1 attorney, Gary Fleischman. "The pnisecuUon bu been using the subterfuge of sayina: abe ls still a defendant, not a witness." LOS ANGELES (AP ) - A caretaker tesUfied today that he once saw ooe of the victims of the Sharon Tate murders take home mov ies of .a nude wa:nan by the swimming pool of the Tate estate. William Garretson, 20, said under cross examination that he saw Voitych Frykowsi, Polish playboy friend of Miss Tate's husband, using a home movie camera. "Where there women with him?" asked defense attorney Ronald Hughes. "Yes," said Garretson. Headon Crash at B1idge Injures Two Countians "Was one of them a young W-Oman?" "Yes." ''Was she nude~" Two persons were hospitalized following a head-on crash e1rly Sunday morning 0 Yes." Hughes asked if the woman was awl':n-on Coast Highway at the bridge oYer ming nude while Frykowski took pie· the Saata Ana River. tures. Garretson answered, "I didn't John D. Conlin, 21, Anaheim, is 'listed notlet." The woman was not ldentllie:d. in serious oon!\ltlpn today ·at Oranr Garr~'• comments came after. County Medical ~ntv wltlt 1 ~b}e defense attorneys repe1tedly q\JestiQfied comwund '"tract.Ure ol the left le& and him about whether he Ud teen . any numerous. facial cub:. or the victims under the Influence 'bf-.... • Leslie' Marte Sm.Ith~ 20, o( 4812 Suite alcohol or drUp. Drive, HuntlngtOn 1 Buch It lilted In He said he had not, but the judge IOOd coridition tC>daY at HOii Memortal . struck both queation and 1ruwer from ffospJtal . the record as immaterial and irrelevant. Callfomla H..i&:hway Patralmen &bl Previously, defense attorneys asked Conlin was traveling aoutllbouDd on ())alt a maid several times whether she hid Highw1y when be apParenUy lolt control seen home movies being taken at the of his car. lt crossed the c en I er estate or whether she had noticed • lines and smashed into the northbound large oolleclion of film cans and auto driven by Mis.s Smllh. videotapes In the home. She said she The impact smashed the front of had seen neither. Qinlin's foreign compact car ao badly, ·Miss Tate's husband, Roman Polanski. that he had to be pried from the Is a Polish direcor aoted for his macabre wreckage with crowbars by Newport movies. peach firemen. Earlier a defense attorney asked lhe Both Qinlln and Miu Smith were a1one • judge for all "statements, cnnfessions in their vehicles. OUlcer1 1ald the exact and admissions" the slate's star witness cause of the accident l!: aUU under has made to authorities. Investigation. Paul Fitzgerald, attorney for defendant A Garden Grove teenager and a Costa Patricia K r e n w i n k e I said he felt Mesa woman were also hospltallt.ed in statements by Linda Kasa"bian, 21, who two separate accidents In NeWport Buch is set to testi fy lhis afternoon, are not over the weekend. "privileged", or con f Iden t I a 1 at.TI· Wendy Olk, 15, of t!d Stanford Ave. muni catioos because a district attorney received multiple fractures and a con. was present when she talked to her cusslon Friday when the motorcycle on attorney. which ahe was riding swerved to avoid "We need to see her statements in hitting a car at Balboa Boulevard and Huntington Arrests 90 On Weel{end Narco Raps Undercover officers from the Hun- tington Beach Police Dep•rtment 1tepped up their war against narcotics by ar- resting 90 persons on charges ranging from possession lo sales during the weekend. The sweep, conducted· largely by of· ficers from the Special Enforcement Detail {SEO), netted eight persons on the possession for sale and narcotics sales charges. Officers raided an apartment at 40.~ 7lh St., Thursday evening after receiving a tip that the occupants Wete holding narcotics. • Arrested there on charges of posaession for sale or marlju.ana and dang!rous drugs were Brian WQhschlager, 18, and Ferman L. Thompson, 19, both of the 7th Stteet address. Also token 11\to custody there on the same charges were one juvenile and Joseph F. Toome, 19, ol 110 Sth St. Also arrested Ttiursd1y for selling drugs lo an undercover officer was ·Guy D. Wandel, 19, of 611 Walnut St. . Sa.lea: chatges were entered aga!JlSl Kenneth H. Hughley, 21, and Barry L. Blakely, 21, both of Long Beach, and' Dennis and Bonnie Bedford Of 17040 No. Pacific Ave., Sunset Beach. At the Bedford home, officers said they confiscated four pounds of mari· juana and an ounce of hashish. A Police department. 1pokesman said moat of the 90 arrestees were taken into cll$tody for u1in1 narcqtlcs on the beach. In four , cases, however, citizens called ln SEO oll~ers to tell them about neljhbors using dru15, he said. · Oil Lea.~e Bills Stalled . . • Two bill• dealgned to free properties ' , I I ' ' tied ~P b~ oil leases flile~ In set .O\lt 01 committee ln Sac::ramento th11 •~k .. The bllla were tntroi::luced 1ly 1 Stn. George Deukmejian (R·j,onl(B .. ch)· Ind pushed by rtpreaelllatlve• from Newport Beach, HunUn&ton Beach, Torrance and Signal HJll. They had been In the ~note Judiciary Commlllee oinc:e their Jn. troductlon early In April i The. me.elUJ'U did not receive lbe 1ev1q i 1olet ~d to gel them out or co111· . 111ltlee and T\lelCIOy were tlflll \o tho~ <l -.. ... . -. . . ' Rul.,·COmmittee for Interim lludy, · ''The OU intertsts didn't like. the billa, lht wa.v '\hey were ·•nd aow they are 6ilng asked to eome ~YP wilb anlendmentJ," llerb Day, Huntlpgton Beoch'1 olJ field 1uperlntendent, repOrted. Day, who attended Tuolday'1 bearl!ll, aald the bll~ provide for methods lo. tent)lnt1te ctrtaln oll le1se1. Spedflcally. thele would be le15eo that forbid PfOo peJ'.lY owoel"I surface use of their pro, perty ••~n thoolh roy1IUe1 are less than , the ptQperty tu tho own<( II requlrect to p11.-- • t . . ' . . . ..... . . _ ... _ Mcinturff received minor cuts and bruises In the mbhap and the driver of the car received no injuries. Sherry Gocldicksen, 23, of lll E. 15lh St., Costa Mesa, Is Usted in good con- dition at Hoag today after a crub Satur- day at the ~ lnt.enection. sht WU I ~ .in I vehicle driven by ponald J. llrUil, II. or 1111 M1rgor<t Drive; N~ Beadl wl!jiil!. coUld~ In the ln)Ao-llon with a ell' «rtvtn by ~wrence Y. Blmel, SI, Pomona. 171Ji Street. Police Aid Van R. Goddard, U, Riverside wd drlvifie the car. Thi motorcycle was driven by Richard Mcinturff, II, Anaheim. Miu Dlk IP. parently fell into the car when the bl.it .1werved, acoordlna to officers .. Two Countians Killed in Crash Of DC8 Plane Two Orange Coast residents wen .among fQur crewmen killed today la the crash of a Flying 'nger AlrllM1 DC8 transport plane In Okinawa. Officials at the llne'a beadquartera In Los Angeles identified the victims .i1 Capt. Cleo M. Treft, SI, of 15936 Mariner Driev, Huntington Beach, and First Of. fleer Robert Foley, S9, of 611 Avenlda Teresa. San Clemente. Foley's survivors include bis wile, Mrs. Elizabeth Flj)ley, of Ill Avl!nlda Teresa. San Clemente. Trett was not married and his neit of kin reside In Iowa, accordinl to a Flying Tiger spokesman. Thelr plane crashed while approachin& the U.S. Kadena Air Base on Okin1w1. U.S. military authorities said the plane. carrying milit.ry carao and malls, broki Into plecea when It hit 1 coral reef as It approached for a lancllq. High tide m1de lrrunedlate recovery of the bodies diHlcult, b\Jt a rescue team later recovered them .. AJSo killed were 2nd Ofiicer WIWara A. George, 49, of Canoga Park, Calif., and Navigator Willer M. Robert, .a1 of Upland, Calif. Oraaie C.aat . Weaaller The coastline may fog up durinf the m<>rntng hours, bul Tuelday,'1 weather pJcture should be pretty bright otherwiie wilh UtUe temp- erature change. INSIDE TODAY A vistt to Micrographicl 1nc. ~n Newpon Beach rtvtali the 1mnU, .maU workl of m~ .copk pl\Ologruphv. S•• • ·~ bf, f)flrifird poll•• magnified 2,000 times. See Page 18. .. I .... .,. ,. " • I ... ... .. • ·- ,. • r • 4 4 MARCINE DUTY, 5, GETS INTRODUCED TO KINDERGARTEN THROUGH TOY CUPBOARD Summer· Pre·'IChool Program Tried In Huntington Beac::h'1 Oc11n View School District Girlfriend Tells Terror Tragedy- Boy Found Dead SOUTII BEND, Ind. (UPI) -'The b>dy of a Detroit youth, shot. beaten and bound hand and foot, was found in a creek near South Bend today. Police said he wu apparently the victim of two men who abducted him and his girl friend from a downtown Detroit theater and raped and shot the girl. 1be body was fm.md 1n Grapevine Creek about two and a half miles west ol Soulh Bend after the 17-year'1ld girl staggered into the rural home of Daniel Nowicki and aobbed out a story of rape and murder. Vohmteer firemen dragged the stream near the point where the girl said the yiouth was llhot1 beaten and thrown into the water. The youth wu ldenUfied hours ~ter tbt body was found as Harold Nabors, II, Detroit. The girl was not identified by author!Uee. · Police loundlod a broad rearch r or two white men the girt aald escaped In the youth's 1964 tan Dodge convertJble. Authorities said the girl told the:n the two attended the Grand Circus Theater in downtown Detroll Sunday nlghL Dr. Stanley M. Kosciel.skl, deputy cor· oner or St. Joseph County, said Nabors died of a severe skull fracture and drowning. His watch had stopped al 5:SS o'clock a.m. The girl came to Nowicki'• home 1t about 5:30. The girl was released after hospital treatment and was taken to the she.riff's office for questioning. The bullet which hit her in the bead, Identified as from a amaU-eaUber weapon, did not penetrate the skull. The kidnap suspects were identified u 1bol.rt 30 years old. The girl gave police a detailed description of each, including sidtbums, tattoos and clothing. Sheriff's officers said the Federal Bureau of Investigation bad entered tbe ..... Leaves Hospital O'ITAWA (AP) -Lester B. Pearson, former prime minister of Canada, left Sunday the hospital where his right eye was removed last week because of a tumor. DAILY PILOT ORANCil COAST P'UILlitllNCi C0M'AHY ~ Rolt•fi H. W•o .. i P'rn!Hflt -l'llO<•l- J1ck R, Curley Vice f'mlolotflt oNl<lll '--11 M-ltf 1liom11 k1owil E.oaor lfto,,.11 A. Murphi11e ,,.,.,, •• "" l!doftlf Wut o. •• c-•v lfltor · Alborl W. l1h1 "'MK'-10 i:dllOI H1 .. lllfhill .._, Office 11115 1,1c!. lo~low••• M1lli111 AStl!-.11 ,,o. 1111 790, t2b41 OtMl' OHie." Ll9llM •••di? ,,, ..,_, ............. C..111 "'-t; UO wut ••t S!rnt Iii-I ltHfH 11'11 W"I lt(llOI lltlllfVI~ .._. C""-llfi "6 Horii! II c;.,,.ine JINI DAILY "!LOT, ..:111....,, • _...,lflff llllr H-"·""-· " llUIMI~ -.nv ""'•' ,.,.,.. Illy Ill .... •11C Cllllllll lw Ltl-l"tll, ,,......,., .. Jodi, CMll Mno, HvnUntll " l#dl Ofllf "-"'" Vlllt,, tilnl "J!ll \WI t•llMI .. ltl9nl. Or..... C..Jtl ""':t1111nt c~' "'"""' "''"h o,.. 01 nu wn1 h!Mf ·~~ ,,......,.,, '""" .... Pl Y..'til 111 .. ,,..,, (otlf Mal. T...,.." 17141 641°4JJI ,., .. w.....-., c.u 140°1121 c....HW ~ .. •42·1•11 ClrlfiWM, ''"-ar-1111• cont 1t11t1i.1111<t ~ .. ,. '"' -.. •*'•· llllll!rlllon.•. dl!Ot'lll IM"" ... ld_,IH~l• ......... 1'111'( I» """"'""" wll'*'I .,otllll ,.,. MIMlofl .. (#yflfllt .... !>fl'. ~ cllll ,.. .... N lf 11 N-' •t1tll .,. .. C-11 ~. (lllfwlll•, Slltlle•lf'lllifl IY 4:11'rW'etM ... '11111'\1'1 11 ~11 tt.• mt11l!tlJ'1 '""'•,, •tlMlitt!l. u• ,,_1111r. 'Not All Frills' Ocean View Youngsters Learn How to Work Fast When It comes to kindergarten, play really means "work." And in the Ocean View School District, work began a little early this yeti:· for a team of teachers who have bef: busy preparing children and their parent!. for that first big step Into tbe classroom. The half-day sessions have been pro- vided at each of lhe district's 22 schools so that the kids can see what goes on in school while their parents watch from the sidelines. "We'd like to dispel the myth that kindergarten is au frills and fun, .. said Pen')' Chapman, a prlndpal at one of the scbools. "It's fun, yes, and t)lere are great blocks or Ume 1p<nt In slnaing. stocy .. u. ing, art and the like. But the world of childhood is an nclting, curious. ollmulatlng period or 1rowth and thne • 1,fl'" ' activities are the means." In addition, Chapman and hill team of veteran teachers -Helene McClish, VI Redding, and Virginia Ellis -are hoping to eliminate some of the fears about school that are common to the kindergarten set and often hamper their ability to learn. Each ~sion Includes time for the youngsters to paint,. work puzzles, hear stories, cut and paste. While the kids are busy, tbe teachers explain a little kindergarten philosophy and offer tips to parents to prepare their youngsters for school througb guided activities in the home. "The transition from mother to school ls a big one," says Chapman. "It look! like our pre-kindergarten programs are golna to help make this transition a happf oae." Huntington Surf's Up; Swimmers Get Warning Ttle surf was up In Huntington Beach this morn!Tig. Waves that built up steadi- ly over the weekend were cresUng from fiw to si.J: feet today. "It would have been a Uttle different for us if it had been as high as thi s yesterday." city lifeguard dispatcher Gary Read commented. Today swimmers were warned to stay clear of the pier because ol a side current. Crowds reached 104,000 on th fl municipal beach over the weekend with 49,000 on Saturday and 55,000 Sunday. There were only seven rescues Saturday but 32 on Sunday. "The su rf rose from one to three feet on Saturday to three to four feet on Sunday," Read reported. "Now it's breaking consistently at five feet and sometimes reaching six." The water temperature today was down from Sunday '1 63 degrees to sa degrees. From P•ge l FREEWAY •.. Monica city line. "Ecological and environmental factors are being studied now Jn relation to scenic freeways ," Badham said. He said bills to delete portions of Freeways are not without precedent, that coast freeway through Redondo Beach and Manhattan Beach was deleted several years ago, and that four other freeway deletion bills are pending tn this session of the legislaturt. The worry of the opposition ts that passage or the Badham blU would cau11e Indefinite postponement of constnsctlon of any segment of the coast freew1y and also that it could result in the freeway realignment through other cities. The present route, adopted by the State Highway Commission in 1913, i;weeps from an inland Huntington Beaclt alignmenl to the coast through Newport Beach just inland of Pacific Coast Freeway and along 5th Avenue in Corona del ~far before bending back lnland of Laguna Beach. The Badham blU docs not call tor rerouting or spcclfy an alternative route. But by cutting oot Just that segment from Beach Boulevard to Coron a del Mar JI suggesi. the possibility of adding extr1 !ants to the fu ture route h freeway (paralleling Beach Bouleverd) and the San Diego Freeway past Cost• Mesi, with tht future Corona del Mar Freeway along MacArthur Boulevtrd to be bent eastward toward 8 lie In with the Coast Freeway toward Lagunt Beach. The beaches were' less crowded but the guards were kept busier at the state strands. The Huntington State Park attracted 44,000 over the two days while at Bolsa Chica State Beach there wa! a throng of 21,000 on the sands on Saturday and 23,000 on Sunday . "We had 100 rescues but no serious i'ncidents," Ranger Samuel Bitting said. "1lle surf was pretty high." Hitchhiking Girl Molested Near Emerald Bay A teenage girl hitchhiker was molested at knife point near an EmeraJd Bay entrance Friday night and was struck on the mouth when she protested. Laguna Police Lt. John Zelko said the 19-year.old Garden Gcove girl was given a ride in NE:wport Beach by a man about 25 years old. His !UD visor bore lhe words "hot stuff." He purchased a f')ft drink for her in the vicinity of Scotchman's Cove and later stopped near the main gate at E;nerald Bay' claiming he was going to check his car. Zelko said the man put a kni!e against the girl's neck and told her "be a nice girl and move over." When she protested, the man •truck her ln the face, released her and drove away. The incident was the latest of several In which' men have molested girls who were hltchbl.klng ln the area. Georgia Girl Wins Contest An.ANTA, Ga. (AP) -A Gtorgie girl has been named Miss World Queen of Posture and Phy:slcat Fitness, beating out rtprttentatlves fro:n 19 othtr atates and Puerto Rico. Susan Diane Perry, 11, 1 5-foot.f. l~ pound brunette from Atlanta, won the 18th 8nnual pageant Saturday .nlght. A 19-year-old Wlsconstn gtrl, 'Denise Linda Diessntr of Wt.at Aills, was the flm runner.up, f\.f\ss Perry ts A 1ophomore psycholop major at Wtsl Geor&i• COllege. I ::na:www 4 Two Egypt MIGs Hit 11 By Israelis By United Pre11 lnteruUonal Israeli Jet fighters shot down two Egyptian MIG17 jets today In an lit batUe over the Suez Canal, a military spokesman said ln Te! Aviv. The brief but furious dogfight c1me as each side sent planes across the canal in a new escalation of the conflict. Israel's hawkish Cahal Party met throughout the day to try lo find some way of agreelftg on the U.S. Mideast pea~ proposal and Israel's reply - expeeted to be a sharply conditional acceptance -was expected later in the week. The Arab world divided sharply on the issue and 15,000 Palestinian guer- rillas, some of them a rm e d , demonstrated in the streets of Amman agai nst a cease-fire and against Presi- dent Gamal Abdel Nasser and King Hussein. An Israeli military spokesman said Israeli antiaircrait gunners hit t third MIGt7 but did not see it crash. He said the dogfight developed when Egypt tried to raid targets on the Israeli side of the canal for the second time today. The Interceptors swarmed in and quickly downed two of tbe raiders, he said. All Israeli pla11es returned safely, he said. The Israeli raids against Egypt marked the 67th couecuUve day of strikes against Egyptian artillery sites and mWUe bases. Israel said "several'' Egyptian planes raided on the east side of the canal ln the morning in the first such Egyptian attack ln weeks. Four Israeli soldiers were reported woun· ded. With the Arab world sharply split on the U.S. peace proposals, Baghdad radio announced that Sidam Hussein Takrlti, vice .hairman of the ruling Revolution Command Council, had been invited to Moscow. Political sources said Russia may be trying to qu~ll Iraq's vociferous opposition to the peace plan. The Arab world was Still awaiting Israel's reply to the U.S. peace proposal but Tel Aviv dispatches indicated it would be a qualified acceptance . Jordan accept ed it but Syria, Iraq and tbe Arab guerrtlla orgaRizations rejected it as some sort of surrellder. Israel was reported willing to accept the U.S. plan for peace talks provided there is a guarantee that Egypt \Till not use the three-month cease-fire to build up Its Suez Canal line. Tbe Israeli cabinet met Sunday but was too ~~ lo make a public statement. ~r cabinet meeting was called for Tuesday. The Arab guerrillas were so angry they paraded through Amman and shouted sloga11s against Egyptian Presi· dent Carnal Abdel Nasser and King Hussein of Jordan. It was the first Arab demonstretion against the American proposals. Among the crowd were guerrillas wear· ing arms In contravention or a July JO agreement baruiing arms-carrying in the city . The demontsrators chanted "Abdel Nassar, the coward" and carried a placard reading, "We will chall8e the area into hell if a settlement is imposed." Another said, "The guns of our fighters will determine the fate of the Palestinian people." How there could be a rease-fire iA the face of the Palestinian opposition remained to be seen. Jordan's acceptance of the U.S. peace plan specifically ex- cluded the guerrillas who have vowed to fight forever to "liberate" Palestine. The nations supporting Nasser were Jordan, Kuwait, Suda" and Lebanon. Syria and 1raq not only rejected the proposal but filled the airwaves toda y with anti-American, anti-Isra el and by implication, some anti-Egyptian blasts. s :SO o * . --• • Held In Beac• Man Surrenders' On Rape Co.11nts Huntington Beach detectives have ar- rested a 23oyear-old Garden Grove man they suspect of commltting at least seven rapes tn various Orange County cities. The man, Gary H. Phoenix, walked into the Huntington Beach police station ·at 4:30 a.m. Saturday and offered himself for arrest if police thought they had sufficient groundl to charge him, ln· ve1tlg•tors said. DeL Ray Anderson, who had been . lnvestlgatlng the man's alleged off~naes took him up on the offer. Phoenix was booked on susplck>n of robbery, burglary and kldnaplng as well. He is currently In a HunUngton Beach City Jail cell awaiting arraignment. Still No Clues in Theft At Pendleton's Armory Federal agencies continued to seek leads today on sUSpecUl: and the location of a cache of weapons stolen from a Camp Pendleton armory ove.r the weekend. Spokesmen for the Marine Corps said no new information had been found on the theft on the Camp Margarita armory late Friday night when apparently three men clubbed a guard with a rifle butt then stole rifles, a grenade launcher and the guard's .45-caliber automatic. The incident, occurring within an hour of the arrival on the South Cout of President Richard Nixon, sparked an immediate responae from the Western White House Secret Service corps, who joined in the weekend invesUeation. But on Sunday White HOUie 1pokesmen played down that agency's role In the probe of the weaspons theft. Presidential Press Secretry R o n Ziegler said no extra security meuures involving the Chief Executive en11ued. The theft occurred at about 10:30 p.m. Friday night as Cpl. Kenneth D. Roberts was on sentry duty outside the arms storehouse. The assailants, reportedly blacks dress- ed in Marine fatigues, clubbed the guard unconscious, then took nine M-16 combat rifles , a grenade launcher and the guard's sidearm. The huge base's exits we r e Im· mediately sealed off and intensivfl Drugged Baby . Returned Home, But Kin Held A 20-month.old boy who allegedly raid- ed his teenage brother'• stash of LSD and other drugs is home today after a weekend in the hospital, but the older boy isn't as lucky. Thomas D. McKnight, 20 months, old, was taken first lo Costa Mesa Memorial Hsopilal Frlda,Y night and sent home from another medical facility, Sunday after treatment for the ovetdose of drugs. The lad apparently suffered no permanent effects from the incident. His IS.year-0Jd brother was queationed at the family home at 967 Denver Ave., and then taken to Orange. County Juvenile Hall to await action on charges of furnishing dangerous drugs to a minor. The incident featured the most dramatic rescue since Costa Mesa's new police hellcopter patrol took to the air, as pilot Carl Jackson landed right in front of the toddler's home. Officer Ron Palmer, his observer, ad- ministered mouth-to-mouth resu scitation en route to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. Treatment in the emergency room was fo llowed by a patrol car run lo Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach, where specialized treatment was available. searches by Marine authorities, the FBI and the Secret Service were launched. The assailants and the arms are bellev· ed to be still on base, spokesmen said. The cache of arms may posslbly have been stolen for use by mlli tanll, some source's said over the weekend, but Lt. Col. Ed Schultze, spokesman for the base, said thaL without specialized am- munition (which was not kept in the the armory) the guns and launcher would be useless. The M-16s fire a speclal round of ammunition which can not be purchued on the open market. The grenade launcher, he added, firer only 4G-mlllimeter specialized grenades which are alto dilllcult to obtain. The theft of one of several reported aboard milllar)' inaW)aUons in Calllomla this year -a string of crimes attracting strong attention by officials, Including Charles O'Brien. California's chief deputy attorney general. Last week before the Camp Pendleton Incident, O'Brien told a Senate rub- commlftee in Washington, D.C., that an "astoni&hing amount" of weapons and explosi ves bound for Indochina have been taken from milltary compou nds in Ca!Uomla. • Included in the deadly loot are 94 one-pound bricks of C-4 plastic explosive, dozens of hand grenades, 10 bazookas and nearly 200 pistols, machine: runs and rifles. The ammunition which O'Brien said is missing amounts to 65,000 round! for sevtral types of weapons. Valley Tennis Tourney Slated Fountain Valley tennis players are In- vited to sign up now for the city's fifth annual championship tournament, Aug. 1-2, at Fountain Valley High School. Sepa rate competition will be held for boys 15 and under: boys 18 and under singles and doubles; girls 18 and under: men's singles and doubles; women's sin111les, and mixed doubles. Entry fees range rrom $2 for junior division singles to $.1.50 for senior division doubles. Players must register by 5 p.m., Thurs- day, at the cashier's office, Fountain Valley City Hall, 10200 Slater Ave . TCnniii balls will be supplied, but players must bring their own rackets. Matches will start at 9 a.m. each day. Inflation Talk Set "Inflation and Recent Monetary Trend s" is the topic that John H. Owens, assistant vice president or Security Pacific National Bank. will discus~ at the 8 a.m. breakfast meeting of the Hun- tington Beach-Fountain Valley Board of Realtors at Huntington Seacliff Wed- nesday. BUY WHERE IT'S MADE SAVE UP TO Wlo TRADE-IN Announcing o new breakthru in UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE YOUR OLD PURNITURI ·ON NEW LllHAL AUOWANCIS "'-Ov• Show Roam, 0. We'll Cu.tom Build To Your Ord•r • ALSO CUSTOM REUPHOLSTERING- Ruffell'• mel'luf•ctur" ffi• fil'last furni tur1 you will fil'IG •l'lywher•. You t•• it el'IG ••l•ct it right il'I ou r 1howroom. P•y up to 50 Y.: 1•11 tkan r1+•il. Choose from en unlimited 1elec• t iort of f•brics. Cu1torn ck•rtges •r• •110 po11ibl .. e •U WO RK CUAIANTll E' itoR TH[ LIFnlMI OF FA Dr IC 1922 HARBOR BLVD. e COSTA MESA OR CALL FOR APPOINTMENT • 548..0259 \ ' - , I n ai ex a: of ta ·~ 1 A wl co pe th• L< af· Pc co oil gr of g(I in de ., ., po du s s ! bn qu d• ty I SL .... to to '"" -. I I I I ' •• * - H DAILY '11.0T :J NaJ~c Fac~s Big Loss Coun·ty Firm Dumps Chiefs, Sells Holdings DAILY PILOT 119ff ..._ IT'S A CAR -BUT NOT JUST ANY CAR. IT'S AN EXCALIBUR SS ($20,llOO) . Everyone et th• We1t1rn Whitt House H11 T•k•n It for 1 Spin -E'xcept the Pr11idtnt ... An Otanp COwlly·baaed corponllqn whlcl> deall Jn liquor. beal lb fOO<js and hoepltals has dumped Ila P«11dent and is se1IinB , auboldlaries in an el!Crt to pay debta lotalJn& 11\"'" than I! ml!llon. Tiie Nallonal Envl-1 Corporation. with 'offices m Unlcin Bank Squtro, Oranp. •ma,y IRlfter loolea aa hllh as 123.$ mllllcin !or the Oocal yw-· andlnil lut·Marcll. ~ Ullder the 1Cr011YD1 Nale<:, the company · oflletrs met tbroulhout lut week With nprtsentaUves of Jt.s bankers and crediton in an unsucceasfut atlempt to work 'out dHDculUes. A formal anoouocement Frklay nvea1· ed fonner tnauraoce man lb!nry D. Clarke Jr:, had been ouated u lftlldent ol Natec and replaced by Elmer C. Sprvul, chalrnwt of the board. Clarke ,_,Uy Piedced •tOO,GllO 1n>m Ille company to Blrbor Area Girl Sooutl, but a company spot_. aid lodiy the eHecl on lhal donation WU Uncertain. Tbe main llllioldlory 4-1 .. that of a mea~peeklng firm, Vlri Davklaon- Ch~( CoQlpany ,fOT '1..1 million, a Natec putchue made 'one year aio for ·IU >nllllG\. · •Trinket~ Ti~kles ·VIPs Weekend Crashes CUiim Preliminary neiottaUona u. also under way to Mil G't"'-& Compeny, a Na-od dfsWlln( compeny. while the -orsllllrallon .... plans to fel rid of Mlllord Compeny, a liqu« dillrlbutlnf llnn. Virtually all of the Natec organlaa1Jon'1 holdings In the field of bolpital care will also go, following announcement laat month Iba! JI& 25 conval-nt hosplials would be sold. ' Expensive Wheels For Summer White House 'Wheels' Four in Orange County Sqnlite Medical Ctnter1 ~ a Natec aubaid!ary, wu .to coatJnue opie:rattng them under lbe corporate reorpnlzallon, but the company now wanta: to sell the! firm u . well. By JOHN VALTERZA Of Ill O.Uy riatt Stiff When Richard Nixon comes to town, flags, banners and an occasional welcome aign emerge in San Clemente -that's common knowledge by now. But anolber Je3&.known tradition hu also been eet here since the purchase of the Western White House last year. It bu four W'heels, a whopping price tag and will "take off right tmder you", Jts proud owner says. It's a car. But not just any car. The trinket -put lorth at the disposal Time Bomb Set At Paper in LA LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A Bomti which police said could have caused considerable damage 1and killed any persons close to it was found during the wee.tend in the main lobby of the Los Angeles Times. The device was disarmed 45 minutes after it wa s set to go off Saturday. Police said the foot.Jo"g length of pipe containing black powder could have gone off at any time. Officers evacuated 40 employes on the grou nd floor of the six.floor main buildii1g of the newspaper and cordoned off the street outside. The bomb, which was three inches in diameter and had a stopwatch timiPlg device, was discovered in a pluter by a gardener, Joaquin Ontiveros. He caUed a securitY guard w~ in turn summoned police. An investigation was being eon· duded. 11' Surgery Changes Sex of Brothers ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) -Two hall· brothers who tired of "playing a ma&-' querade11 are now 6isten after un- dergoing transseiual surgery at Universi4 ty of Mlnneaota Hospitals. In a copyrlcbled story In Sunday's St. Paul Pioneer Preas, Lauraine, who used lo be Ctry, and Lenette, who used to be Bart, l8Jcf they believed themselves to be the finl blood brotbm to bave · undergone the sex-change 1Urge:ry. or the President's entourage and even the President himself -is an Excalibur SS custom-built modem classic with a current value of about $211,000. , It's the 0 baby" of a man well known to the Wblte House staff, the President andtheworkingpms. Pa1;1I Presley, owner of the San Clemente Inn where the White House Staff takes up, residence during the "working vacations" of tbelr boss, shines up his Excalibur before each Presidential visit. Then he parks the reproduction of a 1927 Mercedes.Benz roadster near the front door of the hostelry where Nixon's staff members fight over who gets to drive it next. The burgundy roadster has had some Important drivers in San Clemente since its inauguration as staff mascot last year. "Everybody but the President has . driven the car," aald Presley, "but for some reason he hasn't taken it out yeL" Its top speed is 160 milel per hour. Perhaps that's why. Mr. Nixon, it has become apparent, isn't as much of a speed demon as his predecessor in tbe White House. Mr. Johnson's exploib behind the wheel of a Lincoln Continent.al some years back along the banks of the Pedemales are legendary. But the NiJon style isn't that daring. About the biggest mobile charge the President gels in San Clemente is at the wheel of "President Richard Nlmn" -his light green golf cart with the fringe on top. He even trusts his wife and daughter at the wheel in shuttle trips about the Western White House compound. Although the cart jg no Excalibur SS -nor a Mercedes Benz -Mr. Nixon gets a kick out of jt just the same. He even loans it out. When the Rumanian Forti_., Minister paid a prenoon visit here earlier this month, he got his chance at the wheel in a buziing ride from the office door to a waiting belicopter, His crusty, proper attitude cracked here and then u be bopped In. He smiled broadly during the jaunl So do the Euallbur molMllla when their turn for a drive comes up • And when the burgundy claallc jg Idle, dozens of Visitors a day walk up to it, look for an emblem, then puzlle over the make when they can't find a name. "I don't know what it is, but tt sure looks expensive," is a common comment. But the Excalibur'• expense is an intriguing point. One could buy an original 1927 Mercedes SSK for about tbe same price. Un-fairy Tale Snowdons CUUed ' 'Reluctant Couple' NEW YORK (UPI) -Britain's Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon do not have a completely happy mar- riage, according to the Ladies' Home Journal. The magazine's current lasue has an arUcle by a "well-ptaced B r l t f 1 h aristocrat" writing under an anumed name who calls' th'e r o y a I couple what is known in England as 1 "reluctant couple." The articl.e said that on fonnal OC· casions, Princess Margaret and Snowdon put oo a abow, but at informal gatber- tngs, 11tbe unf«tunate situation ii only too clear." They bad a dlaagmmen~ 101DtWhat heated for royalty, over art on 1 rectnl visit to a London 1.Uery. 8-don was admiring a paintlnc ot a nude male said to be •slightly pornographic.·• Snowdon is quoted u 11ying, "I think we should buy it -what do you think?" "I'm not so :rure. Ian't Jt a bit •.• much?" abe was quoted. And the artlcle saya Snowdon replied, "A b~ mud! .Indeed. Whal In hell do you know about art anyway?" The. mqulne reporll that at a party, Snowdon. a pho~grapber wu discussing a work problem with hil host. The prir>ee11 ~ them, according to the macufne, "demandlq that be return to the p a • t y becauae abe wonted to dance." . Snowdon II quoted ti llyin&, 110h, -awlf • you bore me." 5 per pound! 1111. ......... .. Lean ground beef I ••• H there la a aecret to be-1iamburren1 -El Rancho better beef is it! Fresh! A Costa Mesa man wu fatally hljured early today when his car crossed a busy bouleverd and sma.sbed Into a steel PQle, Three other penom: died In other weekend accidents . James D: Null, 27, of 2171S Placentia Ave., died at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospilal about two hours after the 2 a.m. accident, aceording to nursing of- ficials. * * * Husband Watches As Wife Fatally Injured by Cycle A huablnd mlllina Lquna'a darkened Coast Hlghway with his wife watched in shock u a motorcycle slammed into her Friday night. Tbe Injury was falal Shirley Jean Hun~ 32, a Kanaaa RCrttary, died SundAy morning a\ South Coast Community Hospital. She and her husband Jack were visiting Laguna Beach. Police said the couple attempted to cross the major artery in the 300 block of North Coast ljlghway shortly before midnight. Officers Wd they were not in a crosswalk. Hunt told police he uw Ule motorcycle coming and yelled for it to stop. The southbound vehicle :swerved and avoided bim but etruck biJ wife as Hunt watched. 'Mle driver, Billy Frank Mitcham, Jr., 22, of S21 S. Coast Highway, a bartender, was taken to the hospital and releued. A police report Indicated be WU DOI at fault ln tile accident. Antisecrecy Me11sure ,To Get House Vote WASHING TON (UPI) -'ll)e Hou•e votes today whether to end its Jong practice of secret voting. An antlsecrecy proposal, expected to be approved, is a feature ol a HOUl!le reorganization bill aimed at streamlining Congressional pro- cedure. The secrecy questioo involves llO-Cllfed teller voting where members line up to be counted on le&iJlaUon without bav· jng their names recorded. Burner Buns .................. 29' Relishes ............ 1011 o. , ........ 19' Lang;nf ort •.. package of eight at this low price! Cros!'e & Blackwell. Pickle, Burger, Hot Dog ! Potato Chips .. ~~.~~~~~ ....... 49c \Vhy settle !or less t;han the brand you know? •• .'Regul&r or dip style .... big 12-ounce bag ! Make it a Cheeseburger! American Slices.~~~:::.1 ~~~.~~ ••• 69' A HUnllnaton Bead! welder who burned lo death early Saturday wMn hla Oat bed truck •amashed Into a pole on the Garden Grove Freeway was also ideir tified. . He was Jesse L. Trusty, 45, of 5112: Sparrow Drive, and he wa s pronounced dead at the scene on the freeway near the Fairview Avenue offramp, according to the California Highway Patrol. Authorities in Stanton also said a 3- year-old girl who saw her mother and started to run across the slrttt to meet her was fatally injured when she ran into the path of a car. · Erin Toplikar of 7671 Cody Drive died al Orange COunty Medical Center Sunday at I p.m., following the tragic accident which occurred In front of her home. Police said the car was driven by 1 11-year-old Buena Park boy who bad no chance to stop and wUI not be charged with any crime u a result ol the fatal accident. Police were .till lnveatigallng the 2 a.m. accident which kllled the Costa Mesa ma.n whose car crossed the ceflter line In the 2300 block of Harbor Boulevard. Ousted Sultan Shot in Muscat W NDON (UPI) -The ousted sultan of the Persian Gulf state of Muscat and Oman, Said Bin Taimur, has been hospitalized in London with a bullet wound appmnUy llQfferoil In hia oon 'a takeover last Tburlday. Hia condlllon ..... deacrlhe!I .. not eerlous. 'lbere were no ~alls on how he was wounded, or where the wound waa on hiJ body. fJ; .. Diplomatic '°"'""" who repo'1ed thO coup Sunday -Kuwait radio sald tbe sultan had abdicated in favor Of his British-educated aon -said Bin Tat:nur flew to Britain aboard a Royal Air Force transport Saturday actompinted by four servants. · He had ruled Muscat and Oman wtth an iron hand for 38 years, eurvlving one auassinatlon attempt, in 1968. Bin Ta1mur'1 son, Said Bin Qabus, 30, pledged in a message to the people of the llUltanate followtng the lalteover that tie would establlih 1 new regime or modern government, diplomatic IOUl'c- es said. Be~des those organlzalions, Natec a11o owns the Uncle John's Pancake Roue res~urants, operetlng, under ~ tide Env1t0food Inc., Blum's Candfes, Orange County Business maChtnes and a variety of other enterprises. · Natec was organized in early 1961 by Clarke and II& stock skyrocketed in value until tutting financial problems that have led to ouster of the president and two other officers. Besides Clarke, vice chairman John A. Calfas and executive ,\'Jee president John L. Holleran were removed from their posts during the ahal<eup. Tbe formal 1tatement by, the company management said that while · Natec ls having its problems, all ita Ill~ holdings are continuing to operate as usual. Macco, Parent Firm Meeting Officials of Great Southwest Corp. and its wholly owned sublidiary, Macco, the Newport Beach development company, have conlcuded their meetings with. representatives of some banks and len- ding institutiona in an effort to solve cash problems. They did not hold conferences with. all their creditors as indicated In a story published in Fridey's Daily Pllot. Both Macco and Great Southwest have had problems obtaining loans since their• parent ·corporation,' Penn C e·n tr a I Transportation Co. filed bankrputey ~ Cffiiings, according to Angu.s G. Wynne Jr., pmident of Great Soullnreat. I> 1 l I I I• NiXon Lauds Walsh For Long Sacrifice HONG KONG (AP) -Blahop Jam• ,E. Walsh has received a letter from· President Ni.Jon saying his "sacrifice• and courage will always be remembered by men who cherl!h peace and wbo' work for peace." · The Roman Catholic mlsaJonary, 'It, was released earlier this month liter JI yeara In a Red Chin ... prlaon. Of· llclall at Maryknoll Hooplta~ wllm the bishop 1' recuperating, !lid the Wbl~ House Jetter wu dated July 11. , 19c hamb1'rgers? ••• make th.Mn. for kas, a.t home •• ;. bigger, better! ••• and tn;(tj/ the fun of a. ham.burger fry ••• 01' th& patio, a.t ths bea.ch., or in the kitcMn.J Each slice individually wrapped r ••• use what you need, and the remaining 1licea keep in their own &leeveat R;d"'O:i~Patch! --~I Pri<:u i• •ff•ot J(,,.., Tuu., IVt c!., Ju!v t7, ti, t9. No •alto lo dtaltra. ARCADIA: ns .............................. 10 Cut big cris p slices for your liambu,.... ••• and be d eliJhted with the aweet mild flavor I For early-in-the week menu variety ! B~f Rouladen ................ S14! Beef Braccioli ................. S14! Tinn sliced beef, rolled with broad droaaing filllnrl Slicee of alrloin, rolled and filled with ground J>Ork! _ SUnut Ind Holllinllo<t Dr. (!I Rlndto Cenllrl PASADENA: 320 Wtst Col0!1do Blri • . sount PASADENA: Fremont 1nd·Huntlnston Or. HUNTINGTON BEAClll W1rn«.1nd AJ1onqulo (8ol1dwlll Cettlt~ NEWPORf BEACH: 27%7 Niwpott B~~ ond 2sss·wtblulf Dr. (Enlbluff Vill111 Cetttar) I 4 DAILY PILOT """""" W .. OtNr Pl... t'9fl) A would·be robber got an unex· pected reaction in Columbus, Ob10 when be walked up to an unidenti- fied. woman and demanded . her purse. The woman ground a light· ed. cigarette into bis arm. The man jumped back in pain and ran away empty handed. • When a GI named Bob $colt Jell Ft. Jackson. S.C. Army trainll)g camp 17 years ago, be swore he d never return. Bui he broke that promise Monday. He's ttow goyer- nor of North Carolina and visited ~is state's reservists. "I . nev~r thought I'd be coming back m thIS capatity," he said. • Despite a news reltase that JOO Indians wou!d take to_ the Puyallum and Nisqually Rivers ,Jn lVashtngton in protest recent· lJI, the state fisheri~s depart· mnt !<lid it could find no Jn.- dim! ilUgally f ishing. Th< de· partmcnt od,dtd that ft hadn't bten too wanUd anyway bf!· couae th.ere weren't an11 fUh in tM riom. 0 Gordon C•nt believes he has be. come Britain's youngest grand- father at the age of 33. His eldest daughter Mrs. Rosanna Kava- nagh. 17,' gave birth to a girl, Wen- dy. Cant and his wife, Anne, 34, have six other children. • Eight rm.ptoyea of tht Darl- ington and Sim.p.sona: Steel Mill tn Durham, England walked off their ;obs We:dntsday beccu.se th.ell aaid thttt saw a. ghost dur- big the ttight shift, a. compon11 spoktsman said. • Ten ·years ago Lynne Stevenaon, then 9 years old, wore a harmer proclaiming her ••Miss Nicollet of 1970" as she rode a parade float in a civic celebration. This week Miss Stevenson was named Miss Nicol· let in the community's annual Friendship Days Festival. • A local Athens,· Ohio attorney drove into the rough oU the first tee at the Ohio University golf course Wednesday and found some marijuana. Police Capt. Charles Cochran said four marijuana plants, each about eight feet tali, were found in a ~rove of Ever· greens near the first hole. Police confiscated the crop. 8 Boise. Idaho Sheriff Gii Wright has written off a 16-cent expense item in the line of duty. As.part of a sobriety check on a woman driv· er. he dropped a dime, nickel and penny on th e pavement to check her ability to pick them up. She passed that portion of the test, and slipped the three coins dawn her blouse. "The 16 cents wu never returned to me by the sumect." Wri~ht wrote in his report of the in· cident. · . ---· .. r ..... idiq, J..it1 21. i1t.i.1 Portugal'·s Pre~ier Salazar, 81, Succumbs ·"''' ....... SUCCUMBS A;T 11 Dictator Salaur ' ' IJSBON ,(AP) -Anionlo de Oliveira naUoo of poverty, he paid him.ell 11!0 to $eOO mllllon, lllllaracy In the Khool lie w11 a pro!-ol economics at SUzar, premier and dictator of Portugal a week and spent Illa vacatJooa ln a populaUOD hid dropped to almost zero the University of O:>imbra until 1928, !or u -N died at hi born i -~~ -"••• in tho v"'·•e where lrofD 'It --nt and !bat pn>ductloo w11tn Gen. Antooio Orear de Fragoso .,., .... a.VJ s e n v.-1 ~ ~ ,,_...,,. "'A-o·•, the ""-1·vor ola 1-m1n•·~· Lisbon today alter a long illness. He be wu born. was up. • \AlllU .... _. • --:r was 81 and Europe's longest a'i'"ivin& But from the day he took over as If the people of Portugal stemed coup, called ~ io the m.Jnlltry of aov<rnmen\ chief in ~ W.... premier In 11131, he held Portugal and aallalltd, if wu not so with the blacks finance to atralgblan Olli Portupl"s 1be government ~ of Jn-ita Atrlcan fiefs In an. iron grip. of Angola, Mownblque and Guinea. Cop-snarled fmances. Four yeara later formaUon aaid Salazar died at 9:45 a.m: Rebellions developed but did not prevail Ing with mowttl.ng at:Nggles for i~ Sa.Wat became premier and llf 1933 Amon& tho8e at bis becbide was Dona dutlng bis liletime in the African ter-dependence ate deeply into the careCully ushered in. the "New State" constitution Marla de Je1111S ca.taoo FreU., his rltorie! of Angola, Mozambiqut and nurtured~ U.asury. which oet the legal bas~ for his die· bouekeeper for, lbe put.40 ye~. Guinea. The nation wu forced to matntaib tatonhl.p~ President Amerlco Thomaz, the a(!· EUorU: to stir his people to uprising an army of more than 100,000 men mJral Salazer elevated In· 11151, was tour· came to naught. ovenea.s. About 40 percent or the nalional · Union Wage Demands Jng Portuguese provinces in Africa and Saluar'a technique wu paternaJ, budgets of recent years haa been spent waa immedlately notified of the death., He samet.iznes even benevolent But be con-on defense. il B • • was expected to return to Lisbon Im· !roiled polio and preSI and permitted There has been a boom In tourism, Rejecte " in r1tam mediat.ely. token o~ition for only 40 days before with an important Influx of fore ign ex- Tbe ba':helor pre!Jtier suffered. a stroke electioru: every four years. change. But the trade balance showed LONDON (UPI} - A court of inquiry In September 1M8 which left him With a reputation for f 1 nan c i a I a deficit of more than $371 million in rejected the wage demands of 47,000 partially paralyr.ed and forced bis retire-wi.r.ardry, Salazar kept Portugal's budget 1967. Foreign investments in Portugal striking Britlsh Lo!J8shonmen today and inenl He developed a kidney infection balanced .when other European nations bave dropped sharply. Industrialists say reca:nmended thef temporarily ae<:ept 12 days ago, and since then bis c:oodltlon were deep in debt. But he did so at many sectors of the economy are in the increase offered them by employers. bad steadily worsened. Salazar died the expense of the workers, who are trouble as a result. The findings of the three-man court ,. without knowtag bis political position among the lowest paid, worst fed and ' Salazar was born April Z3, 1889, of • were handed to union leaders and port bad been Wrested from blm. most illiterate ln Europe. • peasant stock in Santa Comba Dao. At employers at the Department of Employ- A bashful dictator, Salazar loved Yet Portugal's·Yoters lhowed political his mother's behest, he entered a ment and Productivity. Officials im- power but shunned its trappings. Ruler unconcern and made no serioUJ move seminary to study for the priesthood mediately expressed strong doubts the of the world/a last great Victori1D-8tyle to replace him. In 1966 Salazar declared but soon changed his mind and took unions or rank-and.file longshoremen overseas .empf,re, be liv~ like an ob.scure the p\lblic revenue had jpcreased tz..fold up economics. would accept the court's findings. clerk. Simplicity, frugality and austerity •--'-------'------------------------------ marked his personal life. . A shy, scholarly e<.'Onomist, he was rarely se;en by his own people. In a 5 Americans Die, 3 Hurt In Overnight Shellings You Work Less You Save MQney Keeps thi ngs cleaner without effort, eliminates ba th tub rin gs SAIGON (IJPI) -U.S. lroo!I" suffered their heaviest losses in overnight sbelllug attacks in two months Sunday night and early today -five men killed and three wuwxled. Another four Gia died In fighting described by mlllitary spokesmen as light and scattered. The fOCWI of the war in Southeast Asia centered ill Cambodia, where South Vietnamese troops killed 58 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Sunday in t h e f irst day of a new 2.500-man drive inlo Cambodia to clear Highway 1 between Rescued Sailors Say One Ship Passed Them By SEPT ISLES, Que. (UPI) -Three New Jersey fisbermen, rescued arter being adrift in the AUantic Ocean, sat up In a llorpital here and told or their ordeal. They told not only a familiar story Sunday of the horror of being alone against the sea but o( rescuen being eo near and passing them by deliberately. '!be three were adrUt for seven days without food or water after their 46-foot trawler, 1be Sea Starn, sprang a leak and sank in shark-infested waters. The flSbermen, Tom Ellis, 38, Joseph Pottle, 61, and Joseph Davidoff, 37, all of Allan. tic City, were picked up by a Swedish ship the day after a cargo ship allegedly passed them up. They were brought here Saturday night and were reported in "pretty good con- diUon" at Sept hies Hospital where they were treated for erposure and ex- haustion. The tbra declined to name the cargo ship because of their plan to make a formal complaint to authorities . They !'!lid it swept so near their life raft that they could read the name. Tiley saw a man come out of the pilot house, look at them and then go inside. The ahip continued l1n its journey, the men aaid. Davidoff said the ship passed by on the sixth day they were adrift. "They were practically on top of us," he said. Davidoff reported that while the weather was not really clear, it was not foggy. "They seen us all right," Pattie Saigon and Phnom Penh. Informed we.stem sources in the Cam- bodian capllal said Allied warplanes have begun bombing missions against the an- cient ruins at Angkor Wat, where Com- munist troops are hiding out. Three civilians were reparted wounded. Most of the American casua1tie! in the overnight sbelllngs in Vietnam were attributed to a 20-round mortar barrage late Sunday into lhe U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division's base camp at Phuoc Vinh, 36 miles north of Saigon. The losses were the heaviest sinee May 24 . Three other U.S. Gts died in brief skirmishes ill the northern war zone and along the Cambodian border. Another was killed a11d two were wounded in a booby trap explosion on the northem coast. No guerrilla losses were reparted in these clashes .. The biggest battle in the Vietnam war zone saw Communist attackers kill Pipnwoa't Comod• Landry 11 °'~' Soap and clothing last longer Diapers ArcCk••cr. Ft'dFfftt: '"'"'" Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans FREE Estimates! Phone Sears Today ! I sears I . ....., __ _ So . Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol St. Phone 540-3333 three South Vietname6e troops and wound '':"ioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;iiiiiiii-,. JZ at an ootpost deep in the Mekoog I~ Delta. Spokesmen said the bodies of two guerrillas were fOUDd after the fight. Military souces said the level of com- bat in Vietnam has hit a "very low level," especiallf-:jl.long the Cambodian border. There are signs, however, that the guer- rillas are beginning to return to these areas after their retreat di.ring the cr05s- border allied drive of May and June. El· ements of three Communlst regimeots are said to have been sighted there. Lawson Quints Now in School AUCKLAND, New Zealand (APl Near-pandemonhr:n reigned at Hobson· ville primary school today when the Lawson quintuplets, on their fifth birth- day, arrived for their first school day. Accompanied by their mother, Shirley Lawson, the four girls and one boy, with school satchels in hand, were trailed by scores of wildly excited pupils as they made their way to the headmaster's study, where they were enrolled . "I had VfrY mind emotions when the time came for them to go," said Mrs. Lawson. "I had thought : 'Gosh, l '11 be glad to get ycu litUe devils off to school; but when they had gone I felt deed.'' ' The crafty •hopper. he watchH and wails and cal· culote1. When ho does buy, ho always seems to got tho best produd for tho best price. Right now, the crafty buyor is buying Sylvania discontinued models. These 11ts, which have to be moved out 10 tho! they can be replaced by nowor ones, have all !he quality that makes Sylvania the expert's choice. In fad, Sylvania discontinued models are better than moat other people's continued models. You, too, can be foxy. Warmer Weather Hits U.S. A Jot o! entertainment at a budget price. Giant 295 sq. in. viewing area color TV. Has the highly reliable Sylvania Gibraltar"' chassiS and color bright· 85• picture tube. Alk for Sy!vania model CF600. Sfiowers Dot N ori,.t Central Plains and Rockies C•llfornla Tht .itlNI coetl -• owrc11I tod1v •lllf rrw. w11 loul dl'"fftt.. Sl<Jl1 w1r1 ..... INMd uttttt for cl-1 cvt r !IW '°"'"*"' $ltrr1 Jlw.O.. A ...... IDw Prut41re 1ru "11th' tlltionwy ""' Vlll(OllYllf' b lt lld wt• tlt11l119 lllc,.._11119 tffkt on C1!1tor"l1 '"""*'· If 11 el(P«ftd hi Cl llH I~ I~ Iii co.lltl owrce1f 1nd t1rru 11. Tiw. lwlll lie 11/tll cloulh; O\ler 11111 ~ ,..rt of !fie •!•It wlltl • cti~ " .........,.. ,..., °'"°" tl'lrw.11 T-. II wfll tie CllOltr -JM -1Mri'I Ill .... todfy ,,_. all!lllllY tm1w -• tllt ~fnlt lnM!'IOr TllMdly, Hltll t-. -.ltl!'tf t111tM toc1n wm be t'°'" ,.. .... '°' ., ttoe low "" '" ,.. tlllrtll ... '"'" ,,.. ,.,. Ill ..... .,,,.. '°' '" Wll .,._ Alollt tllt melt rMdl"" Mii M Ill tN ... Ill .... Nrt11 llld 1111• 1111 ,. "' "" -"'-.... 50IJTMEA:N CALll"OllNIA -#AMI,, "" ..,...... w......... but llMf'tt •ftll Mrt¥ """""" "" doUdt ....... ""' (#!If. v.,,..,.. '*"' _. .... llld ......, wfttl ftw '"'"""" ,,,.,.,..._ ... .....-11111111111 .. "lo--. LHIM ......... °"""· LOI AlfGILll AMO VICINITY - ·-,,,,., MfW """''"' ....... '*"' ........... -"" cottt • .,..... wt1e !MIW Wlltl!IN ltl•ovtll Twtdty. Utftl """"'°""" dllMt, HJtlll IL ow.1lliltlf .... -u. l"OtWT COfrtCll"TION TO MEXICAN IOtlOl:Jt -lltM Ylfi.biit llltlll ..... ""'111111t ~ -.,,1111 aou""-MMFIY .. ~ .. ,, -llOf• ttl.,_t ,...,,. T"""", N1911f end ""'"'"' kPw t loudt lfld llul fol wlffl 1111' wmlllftf •llW• -. Llt!le tlmMr1lur. ~­ CO.UTAL VAU.l"V' -Mollf' l1lr """""" TUllOIY aiut -lilt 11ltllf 11111 ..,.., _,iifM low t.IOo.tCl'I •lld lot. Little ~ Ill """"'""r.' <Mr· llltM ............. IM'l. ca .. t.i Hk'I' _..,..,.. todn, Lltlll V1rleble wllllll lllf'I! 11'1111 """""" """' '**""' IN ...,...,..,., .. 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"'-" ~It lllcfl deo.I ... Mlt1t1t11101ll 1"4t A:oc:l\ttter, Ml1111 .• 11'1111 M.tlOll Cl!!', IOWI , '"'°"' ft\flfl -·NU l11tll or tlhl 1111 t>tm lM, N.M,. .. rlr t'oOllv. Tentperatures .. " Albuol-U. '2 61 ti.m.n::tt. U SJ tot.. '2 l"lt Botlofl .. 70 ll~ff1l1 Cllerloti. Cl'lk •ff Cl111:lllfl1lf c1-11nct ...... Dell Mol11n 0.lnt!I l<1lrMM1 Fort Worlll Hll--· llldi.n.POlh. J~llle X111M&Cll'f L•A-' .. Laullvlllll M-• """" Mltw.W.11 Ml.._ill-St. Ptllt N-Yorll ctl~CllY .... ... ""'~ -· Plttllluttll ....,...,.., °"'' llt11lillCltt ·-$1.L.M IMt Llll•Cllv S.11 OIMe .. " ,..,_lsct SH II It TlmN W•lhl"tlOll WIM,_ • " .. " 14 .. " " " .. ,, .. .., .. 11 .... " " •• 1l 11 J1 .. " " n .. " .. " ... .... " . " .. . " " .. u " .... " " " " "' .. .. " n " .. " .. " '' ,, .... " .. .. ... .... ,, 11 .. " " .. ·" .. ... .., NOW ONLY '39995 '.IV RECEPTION SIMULATED TM-11"-i. s.,t..,r, E!.utlc ,..,.,.,. .. Jw. Portable •tereo record piayerwith FM/AM and FM. 11teteo radio. Sylvania model EXP460has100 watts peak music power and Sylvania ),jr Suspension speaken. '129" Your Sylvania headquarters 411 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa OalCy 9-4, Monday & Friday 9.9 Phone 646-16&4 ------------·----- I I I I I I • F AI m B< fn DE wrlla to •bc .... , Wei(, IV!i give did t grad< tel>)>I not"" • Cllr Jet u E11t111 diplm I a thrOll over t Wh< I ' • . . . . . .. . .. .. ' •' I'' ,.,.•,.,. -I -· ' . ' ·~ J . . .. :1 1• JODEAN -HASTINGS, 642-4321 Mmll•Ji ,. .. 27, lflt N , ... 11 . ., • ' .. .l.· ~ .. Thrifty 'Moms ·I • •' • • . I 'j I .' " Although ,summer's fun is nowhere. ne~'.tlY gone, it's al· most" time for mothers to f>e thinkihg about back·lo-school cloth· ing for their children. - To assist Huntington Valley mothers In making the chore of shopping an easy one, Huntington Beach Assistance League will sponsor its annual Operation School Bell sale Friday, Aug. 17, through Friday, Aug. 28. • Th~ sale items, including suitable school , clotlies for boys and girls of all .ages, will ·be 'offered' in· the league's -new, larger . quarters at 22.'J'Main St., Huntington ~ch. >. _ On \be shelves also will be-items for the home llnd ~lolhing" for other members of the family.. . . ~airmen of the thrift shop, lllrs. Millon BroWn and Mrs. William "-Russell, were ,assisted. by committee members, p~ visional members. of the league and other league volunteers in preparing for,1the ·annual event. . Ii; . . The thrift shop ·Is open from 10 a.m. to 'Z p.m. Mondays, Wednesd':,\b 11 :d Fridays. Area re.sidents wis~g to donate out· grown cl · or any useful items may call the thrift shop, 536-3222, or bring them during. the sale. . -. . .. · .~_.. ~ ..... ··-. -~--.. • • . . All proceeds from thrift shop sales are returned to the com- munity through the many philan~ropic endeavors of the Assist· a.oce League. · SCHOOL BELlS R-ING-Tbe surf will be'UP for several more weeks of fun but lt's time for surfers' mothers to begin thinking . -·-, al>oµt -clothes for.-scbool. Mrs. William Ward (left) and Mrs. Al .. -. . . . . Will remind their sons, Andy Ward .7, and Tony Witt, 8, !left to right) that it's time to head for the Huntington Beach A1s1stance League Operation School Bell sale . ' • Full Crew Neec/etf fo r. -V-oyoge .fo · Luau ' All"hands will be on-deck when Seal Beach yachts· l a band-will lilJ the rolling waves with music. Con- men •set sail for Catalina Island. Saturday, Aug. 8. '•1 vincing a landlubl>Ol<,lilrit. Amold ·YareheVel'c(.-ighl) Barbecued chicken and spare ribs, rice, rolls, fresh 1 that her ship 'won't be a sinking one are· Mr. and fruit and mai tais will tempt the hµngry crews, and ,~ Mrs. Donald Stewart, co-chairmen of the Cl-uise.: I ' .Surf ·Sound ·s: Yal-l~yites Roam IT w~~lln Joan and Norman Warner were there Wt week. J oan (ex· ecutive secretary for the Hnntington Beach Chamber of Commerce) wrote home that they are havll!g a .marvelou1 time. Tbey>ve nen France's Eiffel Tow.er, Notre Dame, Versailles a nd Montmartre and are 11v!ry impressed b y everything." 1 ALSO 1TMVEL~,,"1! noJ,.Ollli.. u far will be about a tiundred Hlinlmf!On iTar1lWr residents and guests. The contingent will 1et s8il for Harbor Islaad in San Diego and uae that as a home base for -albacore fi1bing. Some boats . wilt go . to Ensenada and some will fish arouhd the CdronadOs • . . or wherever the c~tcb Is the biggest. Members of the Huntington H a r b o u r Pbilbarmonic Commlllej! who will be departing with the &1'!>!JP:Del!l Saturday fo<"·tlle,-.ireek's fishing are • Gabriel and Gini Felix, Al and Virginia Herbola, Kay and Paul Weeger, Valera and Frank Buckner, Clifford and Louise Bick, Belly and John· Silver, Dorothy and Ja~k Leary, Dor~en and Earle Colee, Don and Madlyn Goodwin 'and Polly and Mace Mason. NEW NAMES on the roster of the Seal Beach Yacht Club are Fred A. M"iltayl<> Jr. or Huntington Beach, with a Lid<rl4, Red Baron, and David H. Smith of Fountain Valley with a sabot. IT WILL BE A BUSY year for committee chairmen of the F9"ntain Valley Woman's Club, ~s-llreill'i' ;r}c;b· 'for-· evefyUiie." Doiiiia " BOOUl~­ dt!an of chairmen, has 'named some of the new c~alrmen: Betty Jean Venning, bowling; Pat ~mine, bridge; Hazel Courrege1, California history-and landmarks, and Marilyn Huber, com· munlty Improvement. • More are Donna Allen, comervaUon; Bell le Kjellin, crafts; Blanche Weaver, health and welfare; Shirley •Pulford, ltiatorlan; Corrine Sig!, family living; Shirley Corriveau, Indian affairs; Diddy Lammers, ·international bostes1; Hootie Miller, law observation; Doris Dick, library; Judy Geising, menial be'a'lth; Marilyn Erilpfing, public education .. Still others are Arlene Wells, religion · ~arge ~lle~~er, _..te.a!s, and emblems; Nancy Mowery, leWiiif, iiiia ·caror HeffDer, youtb. · · · , . ' " . •' " Students Arrive AFS Hello Huntington Valley's six American Flel~ Service foreign students will be' welcom~ to Orange County during the month or Aug· ust. They Will soon have more than 3,000 stu· dents from all over the world in a Yf!"Br of 'I study in the United States. , Atteriding Fountain Valley High School will be Maria Cristina Alzate-Posada from B<r gota, who will be hosted by Mr. 'and Mrs. R<>bert J.-Carponter-0!-FOUl)laln. Valley .. - Marina High School's stud~nt will be J~an Jaques Bras from Ille et Vilaine, Fra'nce~ who will reside with the Eugehe B. Zwick family in Huntington Beach. Greeting Akiko Nakayama dC Tokyo will be students at Westminster High SChool and hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Clilford E. Thompson of Westminster. · '· · -Llfra"G. ·Danielsioii or Halmslad, SWtden will enroll at Edison High School and reside with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Reeves of Hunt· · ingtpn Beach. • Attending Huntington Beach High School will be Ermelinda Salvatierra MMuel ol Quezon City, Philippines, residing with Mr. and jl!n. William Geiger, and Geraldo de Souza Fillto of Natal, Brazil, who will be hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Norman Worthy. Major lng .red~~nts -Missing · in :·Parents' Recipe for Success . DEAR' -~~it-~t;; 'i":;.:;;-, ;;;:~_.;:,'' • 'j ·~ once be< 1crtdll ralin( -.Id be Ille lad lllal Liie e1ec11.ie _... I rtplled, "WOO .. .,. )!00 Cllllnc?". write this letter In June but deci""" ~ jeopordlsed. ... .. -flt -.... ,.. ...,_t The party relled, "Gel Oil -~ line -r· ' ' u -n ~-·~ .i-. u -.. 1 •-~---Witt. """' •%@ + t,t llliif <Ao'!?.?,'' io ·hokl oU and see il I '!ell the same !._thizod w1Ch the wmion becauso : to ;;:,.7"...:..;:"" ...i 'I.-,.; -iii;,, went the receiv..-, rl&ht doll!I way alter a !ew weeks o1 CO(ltatlon. I had ·a llmllar ,uperleoce when I tried ..-mu. -..,... of ,_ e.,. 0n mr ear. wep, I do, oo here's mr letter., , 1o· cancel a credit can!. It had llllCb ...,-to tM -pater. Write al• Why should the part; be mad' at ME? Whr -do lclds •ipec\ their parents to a ' devastajlnC e!llct on me th1t my to l'nlldftl N-'• Committee ,. 1 .,.., th< -w11o wu • .,..-out gtve them graduation pre!jeDJs? Where. " Wf'I , ... 1... ~.. -..__ ulcers came back. CoueaMr b&ereltl, W..Wape, D.C. of a sound'lleep. Why would a penan did the Idea come !rom! Qir' tlghtli ~ r· -• ..--.~··~~ 10 tralJl)ed! lld-' to talk. it'• alee -,.,_ Please inlonn the public as to the AM keep ,_ cool ,.., cool ,.., cool behave that ""11 -BAFrt.ED IN BUF· grade "graduate" requested her own II wooJd make more se111e It the lcick ca. slYt Lllelr ddldno nlral -,..v1ded belt coone of action mid tber 1>econ>e .,_ Olli ,_ cool. F ALO · tel~-Our high school bl/¥ oerved l••e_ lhelr par~nts .Ull !or 1etllni Ille.a ~ ''*'""' -itlfenl, tliOa ·-lllo caught In the -ls ol "progrw" and DEAR BAIT: ·ne dnK "'""" notice (._. 1 oophomore) that he eipected through, Pl..,. repfy , -THE VICTIMS Udo app<edate I~ le,_ case, I oupecl driven nut& as I wu. (P.S. Ftnallr DEAR ANN LANDERS : What's hap-loll Ills he. · a cir upon graduation. Our college girl DEAR VJCJ'IMS: Poor )*pie doa.'t tome tmpertut illsrecDtoU are mllllli. my husband htred 1 lawyer.) _ peotnc to people anywl)'f Have they let us know lbe expected a trip lo 11•• 1111 grade" ldepbooeo, •Ii-ocllool SCARSDALE SCREAM HEARD ROUND 11"111 been IO rude and ~iderate! How w!ll you know when the real Europe the day after she received her •tnitw'I cars -nor di tMr tend Utetr DEAN. ANN LANDERS: You printed THE WORLD Here'• a aample or :-Mt Im talkiJ'll thing ccmea alq? Ask AM Lanc1era.. diploma. collqe gllllaates '9 Earepe. 11 fact. a letter a while back front 1 teader · DEAR BCR.EAM: One wM ftDU •bcM.ll 1 Send for her booklet "Love or Sex and I am ashamed to con!esa we came: .1omeRICHpeop~M1tdolk•tbllp. who w11 driven out of her mind ;by ...... ""ed la'~·~·~ a 'Ille ttl~ne woke me up ... aL .1!11d·~ l:{l>w. to Tell the Dtffertoce." Send 3S thr"'gh on all three count&. It cost Obvk>u1tr you reel blackmailed. Your compurer billing. Aller .countless !>h9n< ..O.pa1e1-....,.. 8 &lit' lil!Owr.,: )I;· 'bljtlf. i"Nld, "Hello'." ' · c:enta In coin and a Iona. 1ell-addr....ci, over $5,000 -and we are not r1ch. kids Uve probably beta 9'tUng you calls and Jett.en , she recelvf(I a telearam after 1 pltoM call aid 1 letter' tt u.e The party on tbt other end asked, stamped envelope with your req\ltSt tn Whit do poor people do! How and llJI for Liie clobber,,_ 1i-Llle7 wer• sarln1 that II lhe dldn'l ·poy her" bUJ _,..,, 1"' pl 11 llllllactllo, ....,, "WOO ls this!" '"e ol the DAILY PILOI', , I • ' J .. .14 DAILY PILOT Monday, Julr 21, 19-n. Horoscope Aries: Stress Original Ideas TUESDAY JULY 28 By SYDNEY OMARll G•elbe be1I•• lilli aa ttblo1rapilJ 011 •• •atrolotfcal Dltt, 1taUa1 lbt be wu -. ulldtr tbe iodllcal alp of C 1 11 c e r . Sbabspun:11 worb are fUled wllll "*'lockal refettllCff, A5trfiio0 Ml always played a premt.mt nle la llteral1u·t ....... -..... ARIES (Milch 21·Aprtl 19): You set what you need, but short trip may be necusary. ThOle lo Poli.Dom or authori- ty I!"• apt tO be Intrigued by your ldeu. Slress ... 1g1na1, dynamic approocb. . TAURUS (April :io.May 20): A.,_ on opeclal collectloos, obtallling genu!ne . bargain!. You galn added recognition. One at a cllllanoe ma1res effort to -your talents. Get what's COlllhll tO you -and get it in wrllin(. GEMINI (May 21..Iune lG): Streu tbe new; cli!card out· moded. Jhetbodr, concepts. Be independent, daring. Ha v e GLORIA MYRICK Sett Date Myrfcks Tell News Of Troth Mr. and Mrs. Ivan M. Myrick of Santa Ana Helghla have announced lhe wedding plans of their daughter, Gloria Jean Myrick and James Daniel Pedel'!On of Costa Mesa. The news was revealed dur- ing a family dinner party hosted by the brid6<!1ecl'• parents. Miss Myrick is a graduate of. Corm& de! Mar High School aod Orange Coast filth In )'OW' creative fbillUes. Accept u n u Ill l J invitiltioo. Fu,ture plans -crystallise. CANCER (June JI.July 21): Whal you feel lJ • certalnt7 could be more of an Ult1llon. Realile thll and proceed • ao- cordincJy. Not -to take situations, individuals for granled. Something ls ,olng on behind scenes. LEO (July 23-Aug. 21): Good lunar aspect spotlighta friends, hopes, wishes. Social activity quickens pace. You meet people, go places, do inreresting things. Be Oj)el1 to ideas, suggestlons. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 21): II thorough, superiors are im- pressed. Key is to be famlllar with rule!, regulations. Emphasis is oo ambition, how to achieve goal SUive to be realistic. Show that you mean business. UBllA (Sept. ~. 22): Advertise, express thoughts. Let others know you b a v e something <;. value to offer. Much cherlk~ .b featured. Keep open miltd. What seems oot of reach 1is 'closer than you might imagine. SCOllPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Your ability to deiect secrets comes to fore. You gain by capltall!ing on in!ormatioo come upon by surprise. Be ~dy to act 111 knowledge. Don't twsitlte -you have what ,..·-.i. 8AG11TAl\lllS (Nov. n. Doc. S!): You may not ha .. all facts. Wail Avoid l'Ulblnl. Some are making planl wbidi coold o!fec:t yoor strai.iY. Gome 1J anything but over. Know this and a c t ac-- cordingly. CAPllJOORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 11): Buie .issues, work, bow you relate to lbme who perform services -these are emphasized. A void the spec- tacular. Jn.Uead, concentrate on !leady progress. Reunion is indicated. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Opportunity knocks : answer witb vigor •. Be en- thusiastic : welcome young ideas. Creatmty ta t n spotlight, Y cu an win with swift, W10f1bodcJs mtthods. PISC!3 (Feb. 19-March lG): Practical· matters continue to command attention. lmpoosi· hie to skip details without paying price. Know this and ewnine methods witb care. You have chance-to pull of£ a coup. • r STEVE SMITH ADDS FINISHING TOUCHES .'Nimble Fingers' ~reduced By JACKIE COMBS ot !tit O.Uy l"ilfl II.ti The romantic musical of pathetic Don Quixote begins a four-day run at Orange Coast College Wednesday, July 29. It's the culmination of five months of intensive pre- parations. AB the curtains open and jbe actors take their ,cues, JoAnn (Mrs. Hayden) Williams and .her costume crew will give a sigh of re- lief. They have prepared a parade of fash· ions that takes the audience deep into the Inquisition. "Dur costumes range from Harem girls MARK TYLER LENDS SHINE to Moorish ~aptains and to peasants -all from the 16th century," noted 11-frs. Williams, laboratory instructor for the OCC summer prodqctloo. .. The crew' of 'seven has produced. 56 cos- tumes ahd five suits of. armor. "This is the f~1!!"'.• we attempted to do so much," she aammeo, ''bul the students have been so enthusiastic, we've bad few major cata· strophes.'' A summer production such as Man of La Mancha is on a tight schedule. HWe have one week of casting, four of preparation-and one of production. We want to involve as m'any students as possible and asked on1y that they know how to sew," she noted. Costwning for a historical period ls a detailed operation. ''In order for the students · .to costume the cast, they have to have a good understanding of the lives and times they're dealing with," Mrs. Williams ex- plained.. The first meetings were devoted to history and a study of the characters. With a knowledge of the people of that day, the crew gains an understanding of the styles worn and the types of materials which were available to different classes. More im- portant, the students learn which modem materials will sub&Utute. For example, • wash and wear butcher fabric is similar to the peasant's natural weave in appearanct.1 A session with the tedmical director pro- vides lnfonna~on on the~ set design. "If It is subdued, brtgbt patchea al color are added through the costuming like cran- berry or a vibrant blue," she sai,d. The crew did its own pattem making, shopping, cutting and sewing while the cast memorized its parts. 'fAs for the armor we ordered plutic sheell from Michigan but we had to do the modellng, buml•binJ and painting for the right effect,'' eiplaliied Stanley Tudor, Siu· dent asststant to Mrs. Williams. AB the )gjlght emmt attempt. to draw the audience Into his Impractical world1 JoAnn Wllllams and her crew will stana !inn. They know the practical side al his existence. College. Her liance, the son ol Mrs. LolTa1ne Pedenm ol Costa IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are preparin& for eventful time -a period which features added responsibility and reward.. U single, marriage may be in not.-too-dlrtant future . Ir mar- ried, business or financial areas ~ put Qll more solid base. You have plenty going fer you, but more people believe in you than you do conOdeoce. Ignore recent set-inyoursell.Meansgaiilmore 1 .. ,.. .... ..., ....... 'jj~;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 back. It was only temporary. Mesa, also · graduated from C•clu• Soci'ely CdMH$ 8Dd ()CC, T• find ootl lllM'I ludtY for fll.I 111 g The brid&elect ts wearing =.·~S::t ~ s~ ,!:"'~~ Orange County Cactus and heirloom diamonds, worn by Women ... s..i bli'tllMte -i· !t ~· Succulent Society meets the to en.rr "''"''"" Seu'tb. 111e r•~ Wednesd t . her mother and grandmother DAlt.'f PIL.OT. eo. 31140, Or'1nd c'"1,,1 u a~ ay a noon Jn in their wedding rings. l.:;;;';;;'";;;'-;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;Y;;;"';;;·;;;";;;·v·;;;';;;"';;;"~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Od;;;d;;;F;;;e;;;llo;;;w;;;s;;;Ha_.;ill,;;iCo;i;>'li;;;ai;;;M;,;es~a. The ceremony will take11 place Sept. 19 In Calvary <Jitl Cl!ape' santa An•. Crowning ~lory State Leader Takes Podium Mmibm ol lbe Fountain Valley Republican Women's Club will gatller in the Jolly O:I: restaurant, Huntington Bead>, tw a luncheoo meeting at U:30 a.m. oo Wedneld1y, July 29. Guest opeaker wiH be Mi• Angela Lanbardl, past atale president of Republican Women's Clubs' Federated. Further information o r reservations may be obtained by calling Mrs. James M. JOOnson, 847-1510, Dance Club 1"" flnl, third and fiflh Fridays of the mmt.h are the dlll1<:0 dales eelected by Lace '(l Leatbtr Square Dance Club ,,,.,,,...,.., Tbe music sW1I aj I p.m. in !be RecmUon Cenler, IDmllnctoa Beach. • -lllklog.-1 .... 1"9 IM e Pf'Dlmll tfllt WOfb. 1M -~AllNUIOJ beauty sawns HAIR FASHION SAYINGS! ·------·---· SHA MM.,T-...w-. i ... , w.- MPOO.sn ----·-.. --$2.H $3.45 HAIRCUT ---·----·-··-·-$1.50 $2.00 OILIOHT NIM WrTJI TOUll •• ::r.:: ::: = lli911tr $20 M09lc Curt $12.50 $15 W_,.,. Cllrf $9.'5 .. ·.::: .. ~ •• ~ •• ~.~ .. ::>."' WILCOMI SllT NOT ALWAYS NI CIEllAlli'f q<dJUUd BUDGET PERM II CROWNING GLORY lftnNttr "11rl<• c.tf._.) 2611. 17th ST., COSTA MllA SOUTH COAIT PLAZA PHOHI 141-tttt L...t Lnwl -Nnt" s .. n PHOHI 146·7116 OJ1111 lw1~i119• l SuMrr 0,111 1••1111191 FABRIC SALE ' "PACK 'N GO" FABRICS Island bright designs for fun and sun vacation wearing OUR REGULAR 89c 100~. cotton guar. wa1h1ble 36" wid• t71'7J@ . {J, {J, YD. SLINKY KNIT PRINTS Colorful, care free knits in rnod. look for summer travel 100% •t•t•t• 1u.r. w11h1blt 44n/4S11 wldt fl@@ L\ YD. HOUSE OF FllBRICS 5-tli CMlt rs..-er11tol •I 5111 Dl190 Fwy H..., ,.__17tft •t l rl1t1I C:.... M--541°1116 S.... A111 142•1111 o,_,.,., M•ll·-.Or11191tkro,1 •11~ H11~or ...... hrt C.111 l• '•llfl• •t St•11to11 ,...._11: 126-2234 ..._ Paofl-IJNIJI H1tttl ..... C.11 ... -E~i"t•t et h•ch '''''· H•llttllftM .......... ,7 .. 011 --------~--- 7 ~1 •·.,-.. ....... ~.--.,.-,,,, Newport S,effing Evening Rite Links Couple in Marriage An e•IY evening cerrmony In Newport Harbor Lutheran a....n linked Wendy Joan Nilsaon. and Roy Ne 1 son Heumann in marriage. 'Ibe Rev. Ronald White of. flclated for tbe daughter of the S. B. NUssons of Costa Meu and the son of the Henry HeumlDJll of Bell Gardens. Mrs. Patricia Orr w a s matron of honor. The bride asked the Misses Becky Hiser, Donna Soderblom and Donna Causey ol BriUsb Columbia to be attendants. Ouiaty Hewn~ w a s flower girl while her brother Jeffrey was rlngbearer. Best man was Ralph Hinds. Jeff Thcmpson ol British Columbia, the bride's brother, Diet Heumann and Robert Anderson were ushers. Al30 tn.veling from British MRS. R. N. HEUMANN Takt Vows Columbia for the wedding --------- were Mr. and Mrs. George Causey, Mrs. Jeffrey Cross and Mrs. Thompaon. Plants Potted 1be bride is a graduate of Newport Harlior High School and a beauty college. Her hus- band is a student at Cerritos Collere and a graduate of Bell G....reas High School. Topsoil of f!Olted planfs should be stir~ once. a week with an oranie stick to admit air to the rootJ. B' na i B' rith Group Forms In Irvine A new University Chapter is being fonned by B'nai B'ritb Women. Serving coffee on Tuesday, , July 21, at a p.m. to those interested in membership will be Mn. Harold Spivoct of Irvine. Further in£onnatlon may be obtained by calling Mrs. Spivock, 833-0507, or Mrs. Gerald Birn baum , mem· bersbip chairman, 833-1342. ASK FOR NANC'( Th•t'1 whit •" the l~it+.rt do wh•ll th1y 'need help! Kt'lllT WIT South ·coast Pl1111 LOWER MALL. COSTA MES.A Ph. US.2tl! LAST 5 DAYS!. Your child'~ piwtograph .can win. fl-~pectacular >J . $~~500.00 SHOPPING SPREE IN OUR STORE! . ' ' \ And thal's just Oii<! of the hundredJ of valoobk prizes and gifts toial.ling •2s,ooo.oci' ih tlu! 3(jth Natwnal Children's PHOTOGRAPH CONTEST! YOU CAii Wiii ONE OF THESE NATIOllAL PRIZES: Fin• Priu • . • 12,soo.oo Slwpping Spre• Stcond Prize • • 11,soo.oo Slwpping Spree ThW Prizt • . 1 l ,000.00 Slwpping Spree Fourih Pri=t . . . •500.00 Slwpping Sprtt 30 Fifth Prizes, ea . •100.00 Shopping Sprees 01 ON£ OF HUNDREDS OF U.S. SAYINGS BOftDS AS HOftOltAIL( MENTION PltlllS I Have youl'Mllf a Shopping Spree ••. yes, a paid· up charge account that Jcte you buy whim-er you want! It'• a 1nap to •ttr and euy tO win. Let u1 photograph your child and we'll enter a duplicate . in the Conteat at no extra c:huge. Complde de-r. tallt and rule1 in our Photograph Studio 111ow. ;: Big balloon will be gi•en to ·n-ery comc.tanL tr I ~ _._ _____ ..... _ . • Special prica on l'lltlll .W. ud pholofrapll MM. Tor eJ: .. pl~t : . CONTUT 7 41s Oot 8110 f.oronet INClALI portraits ud W: w.Uet•iie (TUn •HE THU Ya Off THI ltGUWt ~I) "\J3RClADWAY 192.JJJl IXT, 21J ,hot•tr•ph Studlo I tt Floor • • • I I I an la ca •• 1"' Fr pa ' Tr N: D1 F< Pr Secf'I Seer• him res h1 for t Th of m desi1 Depi 1972 Dr secu1 in on Nb them ribbo reor( F'itzh P.fetr year· day. Th• discu a ppr( P'"" 11r lh• SeL talks re vie· seron F< E1 FOi lease H09Pi days att.ac.t She after Valle) The an O when Sm NEI !XplOC finai'Jc wi.ndo Amer. l • ,oont~.i•• Valley Teuy'• Fblal EDITION • VO~. 63, NO. 178,' 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . . ' MONDAY, JULY 27, 1970 TEN ceNtS l(ey Vote ' ' . . Nearing Freeway Bill. By THOMAS FOR'tUN! 0t tM Dtf.,.. PMlt llett SACRAMENTO -Spokesmen for ·City and county government, homeowner and landowner inte~ts w e re •1n 1.ht state capitol tl>(iay for what was Shaping up as perhaps the key vote on a biU to prevent ccnstruction of Pacific Q>ast Fre6way . thri>ugh Newjlort Beach a and part of Huntington Beach. A· hearing before the S e n a t e Tr~gpJ1ation Committ~ wai set. for • later today. · Assemblyman .Robe.rt Badham <R·· Newport Beach), the author of the bill, said lhis morning prospects looked good but he wasn't outrieht predjcting the senate committee would recam:nend the bill for passage. He said the vote would' not be unanimous. The blll,. which pceviously .pas,,ect ll!e slate assembly . 46 to 6, would d~lele from the-state freew1y ,system the Pacific CoaJt -F~11 ·route between Be:ach Boulevard . in }flmtington Beach and the eastern Newport Beach city Jimil!I at Corona de! Mar. · Badham Slld, "Half oI Orange· County is up hue lobbying 1n lhe rear. of the senate right no\IP.". , Indeed there were 'many deleiaUons both for arid agaUist · the frttWay bUt they appeared to be doing more spec· tating than lobbying.· · . Present to argue. against tt\e .freeway route were NewPQ!'.1 Beach Vice Mayor .. ' • I<, ·: l,', ., ~ 1 , .l t ;'! · ~ • i r 1 : a.1LY•t\.OT,lltliM_.~..,.,. ANGELS OWNER GINE AtfrRV !'LAYS ftbST ·TQ. NATION'S NO. I BASEBALL FAN After Tr1v1lini·"Wtit, President ·V'•tc1Ni1. WJlcl .,nCI Wo011.y Contest With Formtr~Cowboy Stir Nixon Summons Defense Leaders For Top ~eeting President Nixon summoped tDefense Secretary Melvin R Laird and Deputy Secretary David Packard to meet with him in San Clemente today to consider reshuffling the Pentagon, now under fire for heavy cost overruns. The conference is one of a string of meetlngs at the Western White House ' designed to reshape tht ~assive Defense Department and set priorities for the 1972 blldget. Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, na"tional security affaits ·adviser, also will sit in on the meetings. Nixon and his advisers will have before them a far-reaching report by a blue ribbon panel on Defense Department reorganization headed by Gilbert W. Fitzhugh, -chainnan of the board of ' Metropolitan LI £ii Thsurancf Co. The year.long study will be made public Tues· day. The President also was expected to discuss strategy for obtaining Senate approval of the '19.5 bi~ion defense procurement bill and the next stage fi. the anti·ballistic missile system . Setting the stage for defense ,budget talks Tuesday and a dome!Uc budget review. Wednesday, Nixon 11Cheduled a 1econd meeting on the national economy. Former Actress . Ends Treatment · Former rum 11tar Mary·.A!tor was l'fo- leased from Huntirigton lntercornmunltJ HQIPitAI Satu~ay alter .undergoing three days of medi,c111I treatment for a heart attack. , She was hoilpitallied Wednesday nlilhl after she wa.! stricken· in her Fountala Valley home. The actress and authores11 has been an Ol'1nge County reskte:nt since llM- whtn she moved heft from Malibu. Small Bomb Explod~. NEW YORK !UPll -A Mlldl 1!""\b exploded In the heart d M211hattan • fina'i1cial disU'lc:L tarly today shattering windows of 1 branch iJf the Bank of Amerlc.1. . ' . . P·itcher Tries Catching- Guards N ixonFrom F·ouls The. . Sereet Service had IOllle pro- f!ssional, If nervou11. assistance, in guarding the Pre8ident at. the Sunday baseball . slugfest. in Angels Stadium, Anaheim. 'rat Rogan, Angels" batting practice pitcher, w_a11 stated in front of the Presi- dent to guard against the possibility of a foul ball beaning the nation's most impOrtant baseball <fan. Alcohol Alleged Cause of Beach . . ' Inf ant Death Homicide deteclive11 today revtalM that alcoholism wa11 invo\ve;f tn the ~ath o( a yea'r-old Huntington: Beach child which brought murder cha[ges agaiilst a Marine and a bannald. o The infant had ~ given nun and CQ.ke drinks, officers said. The death, acco~ to 'investlgators, was caused by peritonitis and ple\Jrilis, lwo disease11 which ~an be Induced through ingestion of excessive 1 amourlts of alcohol. Coroner's invesligalors said an i:ut.opsy . revealed. 1 .12 percent alcohol level At the time of death on July JO. Adults are considered intoxicated if they show i .15 percent level.· · • , The. boy, Myron ~· Reynolds, Jwas pronounced dead on aH.fVil at Huntiri"gton lnlercommun,ity Aospltal~ tborily~l< he received undeterm{n~ ·amounts alcohol, officers said. "When they asked me to 11t· 111 froDt of ·the President," 1aid Rogan,"! told them they were tqing. a tr,emendous chance with· my · haod ." T~e ll·lnnlog game, with the Washin'glDn. Senators which the Angels won 'tt-10. lasted three hour11 and 56 · minutes· and Nixon went the distance: Rogan said he was amazed al the President's knowledge of the players and Vie game. ·''He talked to· me ·quite a bit during the game," said the pitcher. ·"He asked me some questions · and di8Cllssed the 8trategy, things like that. It wa9 C['Jile an honor." Rogan said the President told him he never Jeavea before tbe ·end of a game. The guardian pllcher l'leemed rtlleved when it was all over and there ¥f1 been no fouls hit in the direction o1 the President. At •idelight of the 32-hit -.same wall . A mad dash by youngsters ,each half inning to the Pr.eaidential box to ~ave Nixon aulOgraph programs. bueball gloves and rented seat cushions. The smiling President kept obliging until play wall resumed. Then Secret Se'rvice . bodyguard! would shoo away youngsters unUI three more batters were oot. Nixon arrived by helicopter and orange golt cart and joined Mr. and Mrs. Gtne Autry, The· fortner. Cowboy movie star Is one of the major owners of the Angels. The President told hilfl he wall "tom between the two teams !but tried to remain neutral." The President threw balls out to l~ catchers of the Stnatort and Angel11 and then threw a couple -of1 b'.alll to fans who acrambled after them. ' His motber, Carmelita! L. Reynolds, 21 , a Beach BouJev.atd bannakl, aud her 21-year-old Marine ' boyfriend Gaey W. Rapp. were taken 1 lpto culltody at K · Arm U d . their home al 22iz Dtiaware Sl. early Orea Y p atmg Friday night. Rapp i. currently held in .HunUnglon. To Precede Pul~out Beach Cily Jail wllli< Ult Reynolds • • woman l11t Oraqe County Jail. Both are SEOUL (API -'I'.ht Un.Jtect St.ates held on l!UIJ>icl"!' o1 11\Urder with 'no , bas ai{J'~ ilrat lhe modemiuUOll o~ blll feel! set~~·~~ morniqg. • .. South J:'orea:11 inned ~o~ces wUI frlcede The couple was arrested on child any withdrawal of American trOOps, neglect charges Aug. JO and had been Defense. Minister Jung ... Nae-hiuk said free on 11,2$0 ball when they were rear-lOday in a report orr\.Mi1 meeun11 in reeted on the new charges, detectives Honolulu last week with Deputy Dtlense said. Sttretary Da vid Pack1td. I ' • Howard Rogen: Matshall Duffield, Paul Gruber and John MacFaden ; Robert Curci and John Store of the Corona del Mir UnJted Homeowners QIOclatioh. Ready to testify in favor of retaining lhe roilte were Jim Wheeler,~ Beach c'hr.nber of Co in mer c~' 1 transportation commUtee; Gordon Jones and Dr. Thomas Ashley of the Irvine Company; Hancock "Bill Banning Ill and John Haskell of Beeco Ltd., large landown;er in the West Newport area • Schecluled lo 1peak In opposlllon lat.r today were Laguna Beach City Manaaer ... Jamea Wheaton, plua Costa Mesa Mayor Robert M. Wlboa and City Attorney Roy June. 1'he lineup pits Newport Beach in· tei-est.s 1landing alone against the com- bined opposition or representatives of Costa Mell, Huntington Beach, Fountain Vall,y, Lquna Beach, and the county of Orance . Chairman ol the Senate Transporlltion CommlU.. Sen. Rudolph -Colllor (!). Yreka) wli ,not availlble (or comment prior lo the ~ bul la !mown lo oppoae lnlervtnllon by the ie&lalabn In freeway alfsnmenll adopted by the ' highw1y commluion. However, the Senlte Tr11UJportltion CommlU.. just-week qo WWlimclus- ly r«Ommended delallon of • oegmenl o! lhe coaal freeway lilrough Venice, between Marini Del Rey and the Santa (See FREEWAY, Piiio Ii Nude Films Told Caretaker Tells Tate Home Tales . ~ . order to properly cross examine. her, '1 said Fitzgerald, at a hearing on his subpoena of Mrs. Kasablan'1 attorney, Gary Fleischman. 4''The prosecution bu been using the subterf41e of uyin1 abe is still a defendant, not a witness." LOS ANGELES (AP ) -A caretaker testified today that he once saw one of the victims of the Sharon Tate murders take home movies of a nude WO';l\an by the swimming pool of the Tate estate. 'William 'Garretson, 20, said under cross examination that he uw Voitych Frykowsi, Polish playboy friend of Miss Tate's husband, ... using a home movie camera. Headon Crash at B1·idge "Where there women with him?" asked defense attorney Ronald Hughes. , "Yes," said Garrel!on. Injures Two Countians "Was one or them a young woman'?'' "Yes." "Was she nude~" "Ye!.'' Hughes asked if the woman was swi'::n· ming nude while Frykowikl took pie- ~res. Garretson answered, ••t didn't. notice."' The woman was "not Identified. ·Garret.sbn 's comments· 'came after · defense attorneys repeated.Ir queslioned hiUJ. 1 ~holit. whether he.1;,d tHe1 , any 1 • of the ·v1ictirni under the lnbUenoe Qf 1 alcohol or dfUC5. He said he had not, but the Judge struck both question and answer from the record as uinnaterlal Bncflrrele:vanl. Previously,' defense att6rney1 · a!ked a maid several times whether she had seen home movies being taken at the estate or whether she had noticed. a large collecUon of film cans and videotapes In th·e h9me. Sbe said She had seen neither. Milla Tate's husband, Roman Polanski, l11 a Polish direcor noted for hi11 maCabre movies. Earlier a defense attorney asked the judge for all "statements, confe1Siori!'I and admissions'' the st.at!'s star witness hall made to 8Uthorities. · Paul Fitzgerald. attorney for de'.fendant Patricia Kr en wink e I said' he felt statements by Linda Kas3bian, 21, wtio is 11et to testify Lhis afternoon~ are not , "privileged", or c o n f I d e n t 1 a I ro:n4 municalions because a district attorney was present when she talked to her attorney. "We need to see· her statements in Two persons were boapitalized following a head-on cruh early Surtday morning oa Coast Highwi.y at. lM bridge over the Saa ta Ana River. John D. Conlin, 21, Aiiahelm, is listed in serlou~ condition · tqday .at Orange County Medical Center wjth a double· c:ompound. fracture of ~ 1left l~g ,act. ftt*nfro,t ~pcial CllU, ; I I I,. , •• ; I I • Le>lle Marie Smllh. :211, of 4611 &ult< Drive, Huntington Beach Is~ lia&td in good c:ondlllon today al Hoag M"l"'rial HOlpltal. . · ' · . Cllllomil Highway Patrolmen· uid COnlin was traveling·aouthbound on Coaft- Highway when tie apparenUy lost control of his ear. It crossed the center '.lines and smashed into the northbound autO dtiv!n by MW Smith. The impact amuhed the front of Conlin's foreign compact car so bidly, that he had to be pried from the *"reckage · with crowbin by Newpol1 Beach . nre.men. Both Conlin and Miu Smith were alone in thE:lr vehicles. Officers said the exact cause of ' the aocident Lr still under investigation. A Garden Grove teenager and a Costa Mesa wqman were also hospitalized in two separate accident.; in Newport'lleach over the weekend. · Wendy Dik. 15, or 9990 Stanford Ave. rcceiv.ed multiple fractures and a con- cussion Friday when the motorcycle on which she was riding swerved to lvold hitting a car at Balboa Boulevard and Huntington Arrests 90 On W eel{ end N arco Raps Undercover offlcer1 from the Hun· tington Beach Police Department 1tepped up their war again11t narcotics by ar· rf;itlng 90 persons, on ch arges ranging Crom possession to s~le11 during the week~d .. The sweep, conducted largely by of· Heers frbm the Speci81 ·Enfotcement Detail (SED), netted eight persons· on the ~ssion for aale and narcotiCll 1ale11 charges. Officers raided an apartment at 405 7th St., Thursday evening aftel' rece'.lvirig a tip that the occupants ~ere h6lding narcotics. · . Arrested there ,OJI charges ol possession . for sale or mafljuana and dangerotls drugs were Brian Y.'ohsch11$er, 18. and· Ferman L. Thompson, 19, both of. the· 7th Street address. Also taken into custody there on the same charg~ were . one juvenile and Joseph 'F, Toome, 19, of 110 50. Sl. Also arrested Thursday . fo:r selling drugs to an undercover o·fficef wa·s Guy O. Waridel , 19, of 616 walnut St. ' Sales charge11 were . entered ag1;inst Kenneth H. Hughley, 21, and Barty L. Blakely, 21, both of ~g •Beacl'I, 'and Dennis and Bonnie Bedford of 17040 No. Pacific Ave., Sunset Belch. At ttle Bedford home, ofti<:ers said they confiscated four · pourids Of marl· juana and an ourK:t: of hashish. . A. poJ\c~ departmen~ · si:ioktsman , uid' most of the ,90 lrrelltee:i were taken Into c'ustody· for usln& naicotica on the beach. In (our 'caEes, however.' cjtitens c::alled In SED , offi~trs lo 1 le}! them about nelghbor11 ·using dru&s, he .slid. Oil Lea.~e Bills Stalled Two billi designed to free· properties tied up by oil leases failed to gtt out · of commiUee In Sacramento this weell·. , The · bills ' were 1'1~uce,il, .~· ~· • Gecr~e.Deukmejlan (R·WOi Beac)I) and ' purM<J by .represen(aUvei.lrom l'je'fpoj-l. ·Beach,, HunUngtoq Beath, 't'orrapce 1nd •Signal HiU:They had been In lhC Sfn'ale Judiciary C.mmlU.. since. lhe~ ln- lroduction early in April. . Tbt measures did·nol receive the seven votes. needed to ,get them Olr't or com· 'millet .and Tu<ldey were oeill' to lb< . ' Ru1es Committee for Interim study. · , ''The oil. interesll didn't like the bDls ' the way thef we~ and now they are , beilfg aske,d to c<1n)e up w1tth. amcndmer!ll,", Herb bay, Hdnlhilton Be8cli's ol! ftefd superintendent, repor\eit. Day, l\'flO allencjeil fyesday'1 hetJ;lng,: spid .1.he. 'bills provide for ' methodl to · terrTiinate. Certain oil leases. Speclficlllr.' these would be leaSes that forbid ,pro.: petty owners surface upe of their Pr~ pcrty eve'n t?)<>ugh royalties an )ess ' thart the · property tat 1 the Olfner ' ls 1 required to pay. ' · • .:..j Mclnturff received minor cuts and bruises in the mishap and the driver of the car received I!-O. b\juriell. Sherry Goddlcl<aen, 23, ol tlO E. !Slh · St., c.oata Mpa, ii listed in aood con- dition at Hoa8: today atter a cruh Satur .. day at the aame intersection. She was , a pasaenger in a vehlcll driven by t>onuVJ'. l!rtzsl' n, of 2:11 Margaret Drive, Newport . Be1ch which CoUicled In U\e intenetttan with • car driven by Lawreace Y. Bamea, 51, -· l1UI Slreel. ·Police aaid Van R. Goddard, 470 Rivertide was driving the car. '?be motorcycle was driven by RI~ Mcinturff, 18; ·Anaheim. Min Dik. ~1>" parently fell into ~ car when the bike awerved, 1ccordin( to officers. Two Countians Killed in Crash Of DC8 Plane Two Oranp c.out resident. were among four crewmen killed today in the crash of a Flying Tiger Airlines DC8 transport plane in Okinawa. Officials at the line's headquarters ln Los Angeles identified the vlctims u Capt. Cleo M. Tre.ft, 58, of 15936 Mariner Driev, Huntington Beacli. and First Of· lieu Robert Foley, 59, of 611 Avenldi Teresa, San Clemente. Foley's surVivors include his wife, Mr11, EUubeth Foley, of 111 4Pn1da· Teresa, San Clemente. Treft was nOt married and his next Of k1n reside in Iowa, accordinf to a Flying Tiger spokesman. . Their plane crashed while approachinf the U.S. Kadena Air Base on Okinawa. U.S. military authorities Aid the plane; carrying military c::argo and mails, broke intc. pieces when ·it hit ~ a coral reef as It approached for a landing. High tide made immediate recoverY or the bodies difficult, but a rescue team later recovered them. AISo killed were 2nd Officer William A. George, 49, of Canoga Parle:, Calif., and Navigator Walter M. Robert, 45, or Upland, €alll. Orange Ceut we.titer 1The coastline m1y fog up during Uie morning hours, but Tuuday'a weather plcturt: should be pretty bright ·otherwise wllh little temp- erature change. INSIDE TODAY A. Wit to MicrogTaphfc:s 1-ne. ir Newport Beach rtvtali tht amalt, amaU world of micro- 1coplc pholoQ"'Ph~. Ste a ¢•co of ~trl/i<d .J>Oll'" magnifi<4 2.0\)0 'lime~ Set l'pgc JB. o' ,.•I\'•, "./1 .\"'P'-1::: .. · \ , ~ =..~ , .. 1: CIMidrllll Ufll ' a ,.., ... ,,.... U Cit....... 174' or.,. c...rt M CM!ln ti .,..,. fl• a..--' ,., ............ ,..,, ~ ...... fl T....... II .......... ....... • n.twl "'" ·~ , .. ,,....... 4 ........ , .. ,, .,_ ... '"""' 1•11 "",._,. 14 ...,. .... .. ,I ------~-..... _.__ _ .. __ DAILY PILOT H ' MARCINE DUTY, 5, GETS INTRODUCED TO KINDERGARTEN THROUGH TOY CUPBOARD Summer Pr .. lichool Progr1m Tri.d In Huntington Be1dt'1 Ocean View School District Girlfriend Tells Terror Tragedy- Boy Found Dead SOUTII BEND, Ind. (UPI) -The body of a Detroit youtll, shot, beaten and bound hand and foot, was found in a creek near South Bend today. Police said he was apparenUy the victim of two men who abducted him and his girl friend from a downtown Detroit theater and raped and shot the girl. The body was found In Grapevine Creek about two and a half mlles west of South Bend after the 11.year-old girl 1taggered into the rural home of Daniel Nowicki and sobbed out. a story of rape and murder. Volunteer firemen dragged the stream near the point where the girl said the yooth wu shot, beaten and thrown into tbe water. The youth wu Identified houn after the body wu found as Harold Nabon, 11, Dttrolt. The l(irl was not identified by authorities. Police launched a broad search f o r two white men the girl said escaped tn the youth'1 l?6f tan Dodge convertible. Authorities said the girl told the".ll the two attended the Grand Circus T"eater ln downtown Detroit Sunday night. Dr. Stanley M. Koscielskl, deputy col'- oner of St. Joseph County, said Nabors died of a aevere skull fracture and drowning, His watch had stopped at 5:35 o'clock a.rn . The girl came to Nowicki'a borne at about 5:30. The girl was released after hospllal treatment and was taken to the sheriff's office for questioning. The bullet which hit her in the head, Identified as from a small-caliber weapon, did not penetrate the skull. The kidnap suspects were identified as about 30 years old. The girl gave poUce a detailed description of each, lncllJding sideburns, tattoos and clothing. Sheriff's officers said the Federal Bureau ol Inve.stigalion had entered Ula ..... Leaves Hospital CYI'TAWA (AP) -Lester B. Pearson. fcnner prime minister of Canada, left Sunday the hospital where his right eye wu removed Jut week because of a tumor. DAILY PILOT OltAlolG!: COAST !'UILliHING COM!'ANY ~•lttrt N. w,,4 '°"'IHnt Wiii !'w11111tr J•clr ~. Cwrl•Y Viet Jtrmldtnt Miii ,,.....,,1 Mllllftl' l!•if91' lhom•t A. Mur phillt M811111ttt Etorw >.t11n Dir\i11 Wat O•tl!Ot C°""IY Edit~ ' ... lbt •t W. l1t11 Aloocltlt !Odl1or Hntl-."91 IMcll Offlt1 I 7t7S lttth l t ult vt fll M1ili11t >.4411,1 : P.O. It• 7t0, 926~1 Ott.r Otflc .. t...,.... ltK~: tu For••' "'~""u•, Colt. Mn•: m W!.I •• , '""1 H.....,i l ttdll :n11 ""'" l•lllOI 11u1cv• .... S1~ Clotnltr\lr. '°' N•rn1 IJ CtmlllO It••! o.t.rt.Y ~11.ClT, wlfll -°' • ~d tilt tcew•·l"r .. , ii 111111w.a ••llr ••<llPI ,_ .,, M ..,,llfl ttfH ..... l9f' UI-l•t~. M.-t kldl;. c.tll M-, HVO'l1 .... :0ll ... di ,,,. l'~lfl V1llty, 1!'"' wM~ l•t ,...,.1 llfl!llN, °''"" Ctr•t M:...,..,. ~' ""'"'..,. ~ .,. 11 nn Wto• ....... tM., N....,.n IMdl. .-I'll UO w .. 1 ltY lfl'MI. C-...M '°""'' T .. ,t1M 17141 142-4J 21 ;,... w ... .-_. C.tl 140·122t c ......... ~ 142·1671 ~ .. ,.. Or.,... (9111 ~llltlhlllllt ~ NI -· tltrlft, lllUttr.itoM. Nllwi.I • fftlft.,. tt 1.ttv1r1 .......... t1 ..-1111r M ....,..111:M wl,....,, 111«1tt ,..... lf!IMllfl ti ..,.,.WY! ew-. s-flll dnl ...... fll)tf Ii N""'"'1 ..,do MAI C.I• ,,.. ... , C1rw-11, $11tllul"llll IW utt11r a• -"''¥'' w -11 n.a ,_1111y1 fl'lllttry -llMI..,._ UM ,_1111r, 'Not All Frills' . Ocean View Youngsters Learn How to Work Fast When lt comes to kindergarten, play really n_'Jeans "work." And in the Ocean View School District, work began a little early thia year for a team of teachers who ha ve been buay preparing children and their parenl5 for that first big step into the claasroom. The half-day sessions have been pro- vided at each or the district's 22 schools so that the kids can see what goes on in school while their parents watch from the sidelines. "We'd like to dispel the myth that kindergarten is all frills and run," aald Perry Chapman, a principal at one of the schools. "lt's fun, yes, and there are great blocks of time spent In singing, storytell- ing, art and the like. But the workl of childhood Is an e1cUlng, curious, llt.imulating period of growth and these ac:tivilles are the means." In addition, Chapman and his team of veteran teachers -Helene McClish, Vi Redding, and Virginia Ellis -are hoping to eliminate some of the fears about school that are common to the klndergarten set and often hamper thelr ability to learn. Each session lncludes Ume for the youngsters to paint, work puzzle!, hear stories, cut and paste. While the kids are busy, the teachers e1 plain a little kindergarten philosophy and offer tips· to parenta to prepare their youngsters for school through guided activities in the home. '11le transition from motber to school ls a big one," says Qapman. "It looks like our pre-kindergarten programs are going to help make thla transition a happy one." Huntington Surf's Up; Swimmers Get Warning The surf was up Jn Huntington Beach this mornMg. Waves that built up steadi- ly over the weekend were cresUng from five to six feet today. "It would have been a little different for us if it had been as high as this yesterday," city lifeguard dispatcher Gary Read commented. Today swimmers were warned to stay clear of the pier because of 1 side current Crowds reached 104,000 <1n t he municipal beach over the weekend with 49,000 on Saturday and 55,000 Sunday. There were only seven rescues Saturday but 32 on Sunday. "The surf rose from one to three feet on Saturday to three to four feet on Sunday," Read reported. "Now it's ·breaking consistently at five feet and sometimes reaching six ," The water temperature today was down from Sunday's 63 degrees to SB degrees. .Fro1n Page 1 FREEWAY ... 11-fonlca city line. "Ecological and environmerltaJ factors are being studied now in relatiOll to scenic freeways ," Badham .said. He Wd ..bills to delete portions of freeways are not without precedent, that coast freeway through Redondo Beach and Manhattan Beach was deleted several years ago, and that four other freeway deletion bills are pendlng In this session of the legislature. The worry of the opposition Is that passage of the Badham bill would cause indefinite postponement of construction of any segment of the: coast freeway and also that it could result in the freeway realignment through other cities. The present route, adopted by 1he Slate Highway Commission in 1963, sweeps from an Inland Hunt ington Beach alignment to the coast through Newport Beach just inland of PacUic Coast Freeway and along Sth Avenue in Corona del Mar before bendl.ng back inJand of Laguna Beach . The Badham bill does not cell for rerouting or specify an alternative route. But by cutUng out just that segment from Beach Boulevard to Corona de.I Mar It suggests the possibility of adding extra lanes to the future route 39 freeway (paralleling Beach Boulevard) and tht. San Diego Freeway p&!t Costa Me:sa, with the future Corona de! ,_1ar Freeway along MacArthur Boulevard to be bent e.utward toward a tie In with the Coast Frttway toward Laguna Be:ach. The beaches were less crowded but the guards were kept busier at the state strands. The Huntington State Park attracted 44,000 over the two days while at Boba Chica State Beach there }VBS a throng of 21.000 on the sands on Saturday and 23.000 on Sunday. "We had 100 rescues but no serious Incidents." Ranger Samuel BitUn1 said. "The surf wa.s pretty hllh." Hitchhiking Girl Molested Near EmeraUl Bay A teenage girl hitchhiker was molested at knUe point near an Emerald B1y entrance Friday night and was struck on the mouth when she protested . Laguna Police Lt. John Zelko said the 19-year-old Carden Grove girl was: given a ride In N£wport Beach by a man about 25 years old. Hls sun visor bore the words "hot stuff." He purchased a !Oft drink for her tn the vicinity of Scotchman's Cove and later stopped near the main gate at F.hlerald Bay claiming he was: going to check his car. Zelko said the man put a knife against the girl's neck and told her ''be a nice girl and move over." When she protested, the min struck her in the face, released her and drove away. The Incident was the latest of several In which men have molested girls who were hitchhiking in the area. Georgia Girl Wins Contest ATLANTA, Oo. (AP) - A Oeol'Jla girl has been named Mist World Queen o( Posture and Physical Fitness, beating out representatives fro:n 19 other statts and Puerto Rico. Suu.n Diane Perry, 19, a $-foot·ll, 130- pound brunette from Atlanta, won the lath annual pageant Saturdl,y night. A 19-year-old Wlaconsin girl, Denise t .• lnda Dltssn~r of West AIJls, wu the first runncr·up. Miss Perry Is a sophomOTe psychology m,Yor 1t We•t Georsla COiiege. 'Two Egypt MIGs Hit ' . By Israelis By UJ>ffed ·...,,,.· ~te(aau .. 11 Jsraell jet fighters shot down two EgypUan MJGl7 jets today In an air battle over the Suei Canal, a military spokesman said in fe! Aviv. The brief but furloua dogfight came as each side sent planes across the canal in a new escalation of the confiJct Israel's hawkish Gahal Party met throughout the day to try to find some way of agreeing on the U.S. Mideast peace proposal and Israel's reply - expected to be a sharply conditional acceptance -was ei:pected later in the week. The Arab world divided sharply on the issue and 15,000 Palestin11n guer• rillas, some of them a r m e d 1 demonstrated Jn the streeta of Amman against a cease-fire and against Presi- dent Gamal Abdel Nasser and Kb1g Hussein. An Israeli military spokesman said Israeli antiaircraft gunners hit a third MIG17 but did not see it crash. He said the dogfight developed when Egypt tried to raid targets on the Israeli side of the canal for the second time today. The interceptors rwanned in and quickly downed two or the raiders, he said. All Israeli planes returned safely, he said. The Israeli raids against Egypt marked the 67th coasecutive day of atrikes against Egyptian artillery sites and missile bases. Israel said "several" Egyptian planes raided on the east side of the canal in the mornlng in the first such Egyptian attack in weeks. Four Israeli soldiers were reported woun- ded. With the Arab world sharply split on the U.S. peace proposals, Baghdad radio aMounced that Sldam Hussein TakritJ, vice ·.hairman or the ruling Revolution Command Council, had been invited to Moscow. Political sources said Russia may be trying to qu~u Iraq's vociferous opposition to the peace plan. The Arab world was still awaiting Israel 's reply t.o the U.S. peace proposal but Tel Aviv dispatches ~ indicated it would be a qualified accephlnce. Jordan accepted It but Syria, Iraq and the Arab guerrilla orgaaliaUons rejected it as some 80rt of sun ender. Israel was reported willing to accept the U.S. plan for peace talks provided there Is . a guarantee that Egypt will not use the three-month cease-fire to build up tts Suez Canal line. The Israeli cabinet met Sunday but was too divided to make a public statement. Another cabinet meeting was called for Tuesday. The Arab guerrilla.a were 50 angry they paraded through Amman and shouted sloga1s against Egyptian Presi- dent Gamal Abdel Nasser and King Hussein of Jordan. It was the first Arab demonstration against t h e American proposals. Among the crowd were guerrillas wear- ing arms in contravention of a July 10 agreement baJ111ing arms-earrying in the city. The demonts rators chanted "Abdel Nassar, the coward" and carried a placard reading, "We will change the area into hell If a settlement i!i1 imposed." Another said , "The guns of our fighters will determine the fate of the Palestinian people." How there could be a rease-fire i11 the face of the Palestlllian opposition remained lo be seen. Jordan's acceptance of the U.S. peace plan specifically e1· eluded the guerrillas who have vowed to fight forever to "liberate" Palestine. The nations supporting Nasser were Jordan, Kuwait, Suda11 and Lebanon. Syria and Iraq not only rejected the proposal but fill ed the airwaves today with anll·American, anti·lsrael and by implication, some anti·Egyptla11 blasts. Deld In Beacla ~ Man s ·urrenders On Rape Counts Hunlinaton Beach detecllves have a!'- rtsted a JB.yearo(Jld Garden Grove man they suspect of committing at least seven rapes in variow Orange County cltle11. 1"' man, Gary H. Phoenix, walked into Ule HunUnaton Beach police station 1t 4:30 a.m. Saturday Ind offered him.self for arrest if police thoulbt the)' had sutnclenl lll'O•nda to char&• him. ln- vestl&•tor• said. Del. Ray Andel'fOn , who had been lnveati1atlng the man's alleged offenses took him up on the offer. Phoenix was booked on suspicion of robbery, burglary and tldnaping 11 well. He is currently in a Huntlngtcn Beach City Jail cell awllting arralanment. Still No Clues in Theft At Pendleton's Armory Federal agencies continued to seek leads today on suspect. and the locallon of a cache of weapons stolen from a Camp Pendleton armory <1ver the weekend. Spokesmen for the Marine Corps said no new information had been found on the theft on the Camp Margarita armory late Friday night when apparently three men clubbed a guard with 1 rlne butt then stole rifles, a grenade launcher and the guard's .45-caliber automatic. The incident, occurring within an hour of the arrival on the South Coast of President Richard Nl1.on, sparked an immediate . response from the Western· White Hollie Secret Service corps, who joined in the weekend invem,atlon. But on Sunday While House spokesmen played down that agency's role in the probe of the weupons theft. Presidential Presa Secretry R o n Ziegler said no el.tr• aecurlty me1S11tts involving the Chief E1.ecutive ensued. The theft OCCUJTed at about 10:30 p.m. Friday nlght as Cpl. Kenneth D. Roberts was on sentry duty outside the arms storehouse. The assailants, rtportedly blacks dress- ed in Marine fatigues, clubbed the 11Jard unconscious, then took nine M-16 combat rifles, a grenade launcher and the guard's sidearm. The huge base's e1.its we r e Im· mediately sealed off and Intensive Drugged Baby Returned Home, But Kin HeUl A 20-montho(Jld boy who 1llegedly raid· ed hi11 teenage brother'• stash of LSD . and other drugs is home today a!er a weekend in the hO!pital, but the older boy isn't as lucky. Thomas D. McKnight, 20 months, old, was taken first lo Costa Mesa Memorial Hsopilal Friday nig ht and sent home from another medical facility, Sunday after treatment for the overdose or drugs. The lad apparently suffered no permanent effects from the Incident. His IS-year-old brother was questioned at the family home at 967 Denver Ave., and then taken to Orange County Juvenile Hall to await action on charges of furnishing dangerous drugs to a minor. The incident featured the most dramatic rescue since Costa Mesa's new police helicopter patrol took to the air, as pilot Carl Jackson landed right in front of the toddler's home. Officer Ron Palmer, his observer, ad- ministered mouth-to-mouth resuscitation en route to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. Treatment in the emergency room was foll owed by a patrol car run to Hoag Memorial Hospita l in Newport Stach, where specialited treatment w a s available. searches by Marine authorities, the FBI and the Secret Service were launched. The assailants and the arms-an beUev. ed to be still on base, spokesmen sald. The cache of arms may possibly have been stolen for use by militants, some sources said over the weekend , but Lt. ~I. Ed sChultze, spokesman for the base, said tha\ wilhout rpeclalized am- munition (which was .riot kept in U!ie the armory) the guns 1hd launcher would be useless. The M·l6s fire a special round ·of ammunition which can not be purchued on the open market. The grenade Jaunc~, he added, fires onlf 41)..milllmetu specialized grenades which are also difficult to obta.in. The theft of one ol several reported aboard military inst.allaUons in California this year -a string of crimes attracting strong attention by officials, including Charles O'Brien. Clalifornia's chief deputy attorney general. Last week before the Camp Pendleton l~~ent, ,O'Brien told a Senate su~ committee in Washington, D.C., that an "a1tonlshlng ' amount" or weapons and e1.plosives bound for Indochina have been taken from military compounds in California. Included in the deadly loot are 94 one.pound bricks of c-4 plastic explogive, dozens ol hand grenades, 10 bazookas and nearly 200 pistols, machine gwu and rifles. The ammunition which O'Brien said Is missing amounts to 65,000 rounds for several types of weapons. Valley Tennis Tourney Slated Fountain Valley tennis players aie In· vited to sign up now for the city'1 filth annual championship tournament, Aug. J-2, at Fountain Valley High School. Separate competition will be held for boys 15 and under ; boys 18 and under singles and doub les; girls 18 and under : men's singles and doµbles ; women'• single~. and mixed doubles. Entry fees range from $2 for junior di vision singles to '3.50 for senior division doubles. Players must register by 5 p.m., Thurs- day, at the cashier's office, Fountain Valley City Hall, 10200 Slater Ave. TeMis balls will be supplied, but players must bring their own rackets. Matches will start at 9 a.m. each day. Inflation Talk Set "Inflation and Recent Monetary Trends" is the topic that John H. Owens, assistant vice president· of Security Ptclfie National Bank. will discuss at the 8 a.m. breakfast meeting of the Hun· tlngton Beach·Fountain Valley B<lard of Realtors at Huntington Seacliff Wed- nesday, IUY WHERE IT'S MADE SAVE UP TO 58°/o TRADE-IN Announcing a new breokthru 1n UPHOLSTERED FURNIT'UAE TOUI OLD l'UINITUU ON NEW UlllAL AUOWANC!S Ft.m Our Show Room, 0. Wo'll Cu1tom Builcl To Yovr Order • ALSO CUSTOM RIUl'HOLSTERING Ruffell's men ufaeture1 th• fin11t furniturt you will find anywh•r1. You ••• It ancl 1•/1,t it right in our 1hcwroom. Pty UP, to 50 J.: le11 th•n r1ttU. Chco1• from t n unlimit1d 1111,. t lon of ftbrics. Custcrn 'htng•1 trt also po11iblL e AU WO•I •UA•ANTlll' POii THI Lt•n1MI o• fAlllC 1922 HARIOR ILVD. e COST'A MESA OR CALL FOR APPOINTMENT • 548..0259 ,I I • I I I , r 1 1 s s h ,, le 0 d D II " ir u ri " F N Y• d d a: p ol II " " I • fl s~ N M M cl Ne rt Beaeh VO~. 63 , NO. 178, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE ~OUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY 27, '1970 TEN CENTS Key Vote Nearing on Freeway Bill By ·THOMAS FOBTVNE Of .. OllllY '"" ·'"" SACRAMENTO -Spokesmen for city and county government, homeowner and landowner interests w e re in, the state capitol today for what was shaping up as perhaps the key vote on a bill to prevent constructi6n of Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Beach and part·o!.,Hunti.Dgtoo Beach. A hearing,. before the S e n:a t e Tnipsporta~11-.Committee -was set for later today. Assemblyman !Jlobert Bailbam IR· Newport Beach), the author of the bill, said this morning prospects looked good btlt he wasn't outright predicting the senate CQtnmit~e would recom:nend the , blll for passage . .He ·slid the vote woµld not be unanhiious. The bill, which previously passed the state assembly 46 to 6, would delete from ·the state freeway system the ,Pac!fic CoMt.*·F~eew_ay route between Beach Boulevard In Huntington Beach and the eastern Newport Beach city limits at Corona de! ;Mar. Badham said, "Half of Orange County is· up he.re lobbying in lhe rear of the senate right now." Indeed there .were many delegations both for and against the freeway but they . appeared to be doing more spec~ tating than lobbying. Present to .argue against I.he freeway ·route were . Newport~ntach ·Vice Mayor ANGELS OWNER •GENE AUTR\'f PLAYS1HOST TO NATION'S NO. I BASEBALL FAN · After Tr•v11in1 W11t,~Prnident Wttch11. WIJd •nd Woolly .contest With Former COWboy ,Star Nixon Summons Defense Leaders For Top Meeting President Nixon summoned Defens~ Secretary Melvin R Laird and ~p~~ Secretary David Packard to meet w1 him in San Clemente today to -consider reshuffling the Pentagon, now under fire for heavy cost overruns. The conference is one of a string of meetings at the Western White House designed to reshape the massive Defense Department and set priorities for the 1972 budget. Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, national security affairs adviser, also wilf sit in on the meetings. Nixon and his advisers ,will have be[ore them a far-reaching report by a blue ribbon panel on Defen.se Department reorganization headed by Gilbert W. Fitzhugh, chairman o{ the· boafd of Metropolitan· L I f e rhsurance 'Co. The year.long study will be made public 'fues· day. The' Presidenl also was expected to discuss strategy for· obtaining Senate approval of the $19.5 billion defense procurement bill .~nl:I the next stage of the anti-ballislic missile system. Pitcher Tries ·Catching- Guards NixonFromF ouls ' The se~i 'setvi~ had some pr~ fe&sionaJ,, if nervous , a:.sistance, in ·guarding . the President at the Sunday ti,a~eba)l slugf!lsl in Angels Stadium, 'Anaheim. Pat Rogan, Angels' batting practice ·pitcher, Wa!J seated in l'ront of the Presi- dent to guard ' against the possibility of a foul ball beaning the nation 's most important baseball fan. "Wben they asked me to sit in front of tbe Presiden!," said Rogan. "I told them they were taking a tremendous chance with my hand." The II-inning game, .with the Washington Senators \\.'hich ~he Arigels won 11·10, lasted three hours and 56 .minute& and _Nixon went the distance. · Rogan said he was ama zed at the President's knowledge , of the players and tbe game. "He talked to me quite a bit during the game,(• said· the pitcher. "He asked me some questions and ·disc~ the strategy, things like that. It waa quite an honor." . . ' Rogan said• the President· told ,him be never Je!veS be.foi-e , the end ;of a game. The guardian pitcher iiee,ned rel ieved when it was all o.ver and. ther.e had been n<1 fouls hit in the direction of Lhe President. A sidelight of the 32-hit game was a mad dash by youngsters each half inning to the Presidential bOx to have Nixon autograph programs, baseball gloves and rented seat cushivns. The smiling President kept obliging un til play was resumed. Then Secret Service bodyguards would shoo away youngsters until three more batters were out. Nixon arrived by helicopter and ·or1µ1ge golf cart and;joined Mr. and 1Mrs. Gene Autry. The former cowboy movie a tar ' is one of the major owners of the Angels. The Pmideat. told him he was "!orn between the two team1 but tried to remain neutral." The President threw baJ15 out to the catchers of the Senators and Angels and then threw a couple of balls to fans "'ho scrambled alter them. ' Howard &gers;·Marshall Duffield, Paul Gruber and John MacFaden; Robert Curci and John Store of the Corona de! Mar Unltedi.f{omeowners Association. Ready to testily in favor of retaining the route were Jim Wheeler, Hunt.ington Beach Cha:nber of Commerce's transportation committee; Gordon Jones and Dr. Thomas Ash ley of the Irvine · Company: Hancock "Bill Banning Ill and John Haskell of Beeco Ltd.. large landowner in the West Newport area. ' Scheduled In speak In opposition later today were Laguna Beach City Manaaer James Wheaton, plm C:OSta Mesa Mayor Robert M. Wilson and City Attorney Roy June. • The lineup pits Newport Beach Jn. ter~ts standing alone against the com- bined opposition of representatives of Costa Mesa , Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley,_ Laguna Beach, and the county of Orange. Chainna n of the Senate Transportation Committee Sen. Randolph Collier (0: Yreka} wu not available for comment prior to the bearing. but ii ~ to: oppooe Intervention by the 1eam- ln frttway. alignments adopted by °"I higbw1y commllslon. HmJever, the Senate Tranaportation Committee just ... w,.k ago 1J111J11mou>- ly recommended deletion of a segment ot the cout f,.....~y lhroagh Venice, between Marina Del Rey and the Slnta (Se< FREEWAY, Pap I) Nude Films Told ' Caretaker Tells Tate Home Tales LOS ANGELES (AP) -A caretaker testified today that he once saw one of the victims of the Sharon Tate murders take home movies of a nude wcr.nan by the swimming pool· of the Tate estate. William Garretson, 20, said under cross examination that he saw Voitych Frykowsi. Polish pl~yboy friend of Mi.ss Tate's husband, using a home mov.1e camera. "Where there women with him?" asked defense attorney Ronald Hughes. "Yes,'' said Garretson. •·was one of them a young woman?" "Yes." "We need to see her statemeo.'5 in order to properly crou examine her," said Fitzgerald, at a hearing on his subpoena of Mrs. Kasablan's attorney, Gary Fleischman. "The prosecution bas been using the subterfuge of saying she ls still a defendant, not a witness." Fitzgerald, heading the defense team for fOur persons accused of the slayings of Miss Tate and six others, said 'he and ·the attorney for Charles M. Manson tried .to visit Mrs. Kasabian in jail Sunday; but her attorneys wouldn 'l let us see her." Superior. Court Judge Charles Olde~ said he would entertain ·Fit:tg«rald'1 mo-. lion only after Mrs. · Kasabtan takes the stand and is sworn u a witness. "The judge says he wor(t . knoW th~ she's a prosecuUon wJtness until the takes the stand," said Fitzgerald. He added that Mrs. Kasablan's at: torileys feel that her statements ari covered by the attomey-cliept privileae. "However," said Fitzgerald, "we say that a district attorney was present on five occasions when she made these statement:i and thus the privilege b.i.s ~n waived." "Was she nude?" "Yes." Hughes asked if the woman was swhl· ming nude while Fryk_pwski took pic- tures. Garretson answered, "I didn't notice." The wdman was not identified. Heado.n Crash at B1~idge Garretson'• comments came after dirente ""attotne.ys repa:Wdly qil~ltifll;led him about wbethet he ha\d1 seen any of the victin'IS under the . influence of ' I -InjID'~!'. Two: Countia~s · alcohol or drugs. ' He said l'le had not, but the judge struck both question • and answer from the record as immtlterial and•irrelevant. Previously,. defense attorneys, asked a maid several times whether she .had seen home movies being taken at the estate or whether she had ooticed a large collection of film cans and videotapes in the · home. She said she had seen neither. Miss Tate's husband, Roman Polanski, Is a Polish direcor noted for his macabre movies. Earlier' a Pefe'nse attorney asked the judge fol'· .aJl "sta tements, confessions and admissions" the state's star witness hail rriade, to authorities. Paul Fitzgerald, attofn.ey for defendant Patricia K r e n .w i n k e 1 . said he felt slalement.s by Linda Kas'S:blan, 21, who is set to testify this afternoon, are not "privileged",-0r co nf i d ent I a I co:n- munications because a district attorney was present when she talked to her auomey. Tw6 persOn• wtre'holpilallud'fOllowlnf a head;0n crasp earl~ Swl~•r. ·l"<>mtpg on Cfa8l ffighWay' at Ole brl~J, over the Santa Ana River, , · 1 ~ John· D. Conlin, 21, Aniheim, ·tf listed in serious condition · tod•Y' at Orange County' Medical cf:nter ' with a . double compound fractu~ of the left 1eg and nUq;erous facial cuts. Leslie Marie Smith, 2:1), of ~12 Suite Drive,· Huntington Bea~h i! lif:ted in good . condition today at f:loag ~moriaJ Hospital. California High1f~y fftrolmen said Conlin was traveling· soi.rthho!Jnd OI), Coast Highway when he apparently lost control of his car. It crossed the c e.n t er· lines and am.a.shed · into ijle northbound auto' driven ,by· Miss; Smith. ' The impact smas,hed the froot of Co nlin's fore ign compact car so badly, that he had to be pried frorµ the wreckage with crowbars by Newport Beach firemen . Coast Preservation Bill Deadlocked in Assembly SACRAMENTO -The state assembly this morning deadlocked 31·31 on a bill . to create regional agencies thri;iughout the state lhat would have authority over coastline development. A cell went out to poll the members of the assembly who were not present in the chamber for the vote just before noon. The coastline preservation bill by As- semblyman Pete Wilson (ft..San Diego I got a 31-30 favorable vote in the first roll call, but then Assemblyman Robut Badham (R·Newpart Bea'ch) returned from a Pacific Coast Freeway dis<!Ullsion and cast a deadlocking no vote. · Assemblyman Wilson argued that 90 percent of the population of California lives on eight percent of the land along a coastal 'zone. He said that ".gisnt firms" not in business ten years ago are in the business of developing the coastline. He called· coordinated management that will take into accpunt competing public and private needs and establish Both Colllln and Mill SD1ith _. alo_. In tl>eir vehicles, ptt;,:era, aald. U. ,eu<il' cause of the'-accident ii· .. stilk' undef. investigation. A'·Garden GroVe teenQer and• Cosia Mesa woman were· a1sb :hospitalized in two separate accidents·in Newport Belch over the weekend. . wendy Dik, 15, of 9900 Stanford Ave. received multiple fractures and a con- cussion Friday when the motorcycle on which, she was riding swerved ·to avoid hitting a car at BJ)boa Boulevard and 17th Street. Mcinturff received minor cut.s and bruises in the mishap and the driver of the car received no in]uries. · Sherry Goddicksen, 23, or 180 E. 15th St., Costa Mesa, is listed in good coo,. dition· at HOlig today.after a crilh Satur .. day at the same intersection. s~· waa a passenger 1.n a vehkle- driven, by· Donald J. Brlzzi, 22, of 2219 Margaret Drive, Newport Bellch which' collided in the iritersectio'n . with a car driven by Lawrence Y. Barnes, ilt Pomona. 17th Street. Police said Van R. Goddard, · 47, Riverside was driving ttie caJ\ The' motorcycle was driven by Richard Mcinturff, 18, Anaheim. Miss Dik ap- parently fell into the ·car when the bike' swerved, according to officers. Army .Updating Due SEOUL (AP) -The United si.1 .. has agreed that the modernlz.aUon of South Korea's armed forces will prtcedt any -withdrawal of -American troop~ Defense Minister Jung t'ae-hiuk said ' today in a report on hU meetings in Uonolulu last week. o,yith Deputy Delenst Secretary David Paekard,' Orange Coast Setting the stage for. defense budget talks Tuesday and a domestic budget review \Vednesd:.iy, Nixon scheduled a second meeting on the national economy. Drugged Baby Recoveri~g • priorities most urgent · Wilson said Mf one wants to . see the coastline developed with "all housing,· all marin'as, all po'wer plants, all wildlife prese'rves, Mt e v e n all beaches and parks." Weather School Budget Hearing Slated A publi c hearing prior to final adop· tion or a budget for the Newport·M~ 8Chool district has been set for Aug. 4 at 7:·30 p.m. in the Costa Mesa High School Lyceum . The proposed 1970-71 budget calls for a 62.<ent increase in the district'• tax. rate. Taxpayers in Costa ~1esa would pay $5.31 per $100 assess.eel valuation, while Newpcirt Beach taxpayers w o u J d pay $4.96 per $100 assessed vaJuaUon, U the $42.4 million budget is 1dopted without changes. I Parents Praise Police, Firemen Over Rescue The parents of two boys -one recover· ing from a dose of LSD taken when he di!Covered his big brolber's Illicit drug stash -today praised God and Cotta Mc.sa p o 11 c e and firemen !or his re- covery. Thomas D. McKnight, 20 mon ths, was released froth'· the hospital ·sunday, ~P. parently suffertng no lasting effects from his unfortunate and unexpected LSD trip. He was raced first to Costa MIYla Me· morial Hospital and then to Hoag Memor· ial Hospital in Newport Beach Friday night, by police helicopter and then patrol car. 'iOur main concern now Is for our IS. year-old boy and for all our young i>'<>'. •\ pie Jn Costa Mesa and in Americ1, who are erperimenting with drugs or thinking or It," said Mrs. John S. McKnight. The older son was questi?Oed at the fam ily home, 967 Denver Ave.~ after the incident and taken to Orange County Juvenile Hall, charged with furnishing dangerous dtuga to a minor. • His little brOther stumbled onto I.he hidden pills and apparently thought they were candy. Hospital authorities at first listed young Tommy McKnight !rt critical coridltlon from the LSD and whatever else be had swallowed, but he made a rapid recOvery. "It seemed miraculous," said Mrs. McKnight. "We especially want to thank the Police and firemen for their fast, efficient ac .. lion . , . al!O the doctors and nurm at both COsta Mesa and Hoag hospitals." "Because of the teamwork of all, Tom- my is wiUJ us today in both mind and body." Mrs .. McKnight said Jn, ber leUcr t¥t the family }}as discov(lted a new dimen· slon in faith and prayer during Ule crlShi of the weekend. She also said she hopes the power of prayer can be used to provide new strength and courage to face the drug problem which Is affecting AmeriCJ's young people. "God willing, there won't be any tnort cases Uke TomJ111'•," &he said. " He said t h e Reagan administration supports the bill and has promised ' to attempt to find the funding . Former Acti:ess Ends Treatment, . Focmer ufm· atar MarY Astor was re· leased from Huntington lntercon\lllunltY Hospital Saturday after' undera:oinl three days of medical treatment for a heart attaCk. · She w" bospli.llzed Wednesday night alter she was stricken In her Fountain Valley home. The actress and authoress has been an Orange County resident 1lnce 1961 when ahe moved here from Malibu. The coa&tline may fog up durtna the. morning bours, but Tueidaf'I weather picture sttould be ptetty bright otherwise with litUe temp- eralure change. INSWE TOD-'Y A vi.sit , to Micrographic1 .. 1m. in Newport Beach rtveab tlit l!Mll, .imoll world ot micro- 1copic photograpliy. Set ,ac piecr of petrified pollen "'411"~· 2,000 time&. Sti Page 16. r {\ u ' • '"" .. .. " ' , .. ,. 1•11 " ( ' 1 • DAILY I'll.OT Sii" P,..19 MAYORS WILSON OF MESA (LEFT) HIRTH OF NEWPORT PLUNGE INTO FUNO RAISING EFFORT Drive Started With a Splash, but MotMy for New Olympic Pool Is Just Trickling In Swimathon Nets $550 in 2 Days For Pool Fund 'lbe swiin.atbon kicked off Saturday by Mayors Ed Hlrlh d Newport Beach and Jlobert WUaon of Costa Mesa continues today, ll bourll older aod !550 richer. The event at the Newport Beach Swim Club la being held to raise $87,500, ooe- fourth of the COit of a 50 mete.-Olympic. llze pool to be built at Newport Harbor High School. Th• l550,000 project ta 75 Percent funded by th e Newport-Mesa School blatrict and the City of Newport Beach. Vo1unteers are S»1'imming to draw the attention of the community to t h e i r cause. Tax-deductible donations may be maUed to Olympic Pool Fouodatioo. P.O. ilo1 000, c.ta Meaa. (;.oast T~i;tyers Face Increase Despite Cut Many Orlllge c.ounty tupayers face 111 tncreue .In their tax bills in spite ol. the fact eounty supervisors have cut t!lree cents lrom the county tu: rate. •The estimated 11170-71 budget, approved P'rlday, would require a tu rate of $1.M per $100 assessed vaJuation. Last year's rate wu fl.fl. But the total w bill increase is an. ticipated because County A s 1 e s 1 o r Andrew Hin.shaw incrtased assessments an average of 17.6 percent. A aeries ti Jut minute cuts -mostly in capital projects -whittled the nf:w budget down to an estimated $212,420,748. That figure ls some f7 million below tlle in!Ual budget submitted by County Administrative Of!icer Robert Thomas, and eome 21 percent higher than the previous year's budget. In addition to nearly $4 milllon worth al cul.a in the capital projects program, Slpervisors told the weUtre department to reduce its peraonnel budget by 31 positions and the prob1Uon department by II positions. DAILY PILOT C•ANGI COAST P'Val..ISHING COMl'ANY l•l>•tf H. w •• ; PmW.-il •lld Pullll.ew J,, .. I.. C11rl•'f' \lb ...... , tlllll 0-tl Mof\tftF ThtMI• kto'fif ...... T\tM•• A. Murp~int M-olnt ldoltr I TltoMt• Fort~~• Nt;...,..., kodt CH'#' llf"' "...,.., '"*' Offltt 2111 Wfff ltllt•• l•~l..,1rd Mtllhit Mldl'Mlt ,.0. lt1 1175, t264J ---C.fl ~I at Woft hy S'-' U.-IMdl: m ~I A-~tlf'lli.<1 .. Oii ,,,,, l otdl ........ .,. .... ~; .. '4"111 El ComlM l.•I \, Sheriff.Coroner Setup Not Answer, Jury Says United operation of tbe offices of sheriff and county coroner is on I y a "aatisfactory temporary measure" and is not a permanent solution to the coun· ty's problems in this area, the Orange County Grand Jury statod today. 1be ·panel urged county supervisors in a special midterm reorl to 1'cootlnue to consider this an unsolved problem." It urged the J>06Sibility of either ap- pointing a medical examiner "or seeking legislation permitting the appointment of a capable administrator as coroner, independent of the sherifrs office. "I would be helpful but not essential for this person to be a medical doctor," the grand jury report states. James C. Musick became Orange Coun· ty's first sheriff<oroner with a con- vincing victory over one opponent in the June 2 primary election. He had previously served for 23 years as Orange County sheriff. In other recommendations, the grand jury urged the Board of SUpervisors to quickly establish a c e n t r a I county morgue. "The jury realizes that such action would involve the expense or building end equipping the fa cility but feels that in the interest of long term economy and efficient coordination a central morgue for Orange County is a necessi· ty ," the report states. Motor Coach Meeting Br.ings 3,000 to Mesa WKh Qie arrival of the Family Motor Coach Convention, thi.!I weekend, the population of Costa Mesa increased by more thaa 2,000 peOple and another 1,000 are expected today. The "1uburb" at the Orange County Fairgrounds is made up of about l ,000 homes-on-wheels. They range in she from campers to full·size buses, and C"Ost as much a.!! $100,000. The owners have lined their homes up in rows, named the streets in between and settled back for three day1 of Calilornla living, after coming from as far away as Maine and Florida. But they don't live in conventional homes. Some of them are converted school buses, some are no bigger than campers and some are custom·bullt mansions-on-wheels. They are all practically self<ontained homes, complete with generators for power and tw~way radios for com· municatlon. Many of the owners art retired people who spend their time traveling around the country. though there are many young owners who use their coaches only for vacations. The members have come to the con· vention to trade travel stories and to see some of the new developments in motor coaching. Hundreds ol new From Page 1 FREEWAY •.. Monica city Une. "Ecological and environmental factors are being studied now in relaUon to scenic lreeways," Badham said. He said bills to delete portions of rreeways are not without precedent, that coast freeway through Redondo Beach and Manhattan Beach was deleted several y~ars ago, and that lour other freeway deleUon bills are pending in this session of the legislature. The worry o( the .opposition is that passage of the Badham bill would cause indefinite postponement of construction of any segment of the coast freeway and also that it could result in the freeway realignment through other cities. The present route, adopted by the State llighway Commission in 1963. sweeps from an inland Huntington Beach alignment to the coast through Newport Beach just inland of Pacific Coast Freeway and along 5th Avenue in Corona del Mar before bending back Inland of Laguna Beach. The Badham bill docs not call ror rerouting or specify an alternative route. But by cutting out just that aegment from Beach Boulevard to Corona del Mar It suggests the possibility of adding extra lanes to the future route 39 freeway (paralleling Bettch Boulevard) and the San Diego Freeway past Costs Mesa, wilh lhe future Corona del Mar Frteway along MacArthur Boulevard to be bent eutward toward a tie in with the Coast Freeway toward Laguna Beach. coaches will be on dMplay, and the area will be open to the public Monday through Wednesday from 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. Suspect's Name In Check Fraud Being Probed Newport Beach. police today are trying to pinpoint the identity of a woman ar· rested Friday afternoon on suspicion of attempting to cash a stolen check. Ra Eva Gold, is the name the woman was booked under, but Detective Sue Race sald the su!J)ect h.as given in- vestigators three different names. She was arrested at the Bank of Amer· ica, 615 E. Bal boa Blvd. Wh.en she re- portedly tried to cast\ an $1800 Board of Equalization check using allegedly forged and stolen identi!lcation. "The check is one of about 250 that was stolen from the board's Pasadena office on July 17," Det. Race explained. The detective said investigaLion of the case would continue in order to establish the woman's true identity and to check the possibility of her complicity in the theft of the checks from Pasad'ena. Democrats Get Deficit Blame WASHINGTON (APl -Se n ate Republican Leader Hugh Scott said today if the federaJ budget shows a substantial deficit this year, the administration will have to propose new taxes in 1971 - and Congressional Democrats will be to blame. ;Scott said a budget deficit of 16 billion or more would surely lead to a tax requeat "Both the Congress and the President would have to face that - but it would be the fault of the Congress.'' he said. The Senate is to consider Tuesday an education appropriations bill Ms3 million over Prtsident Nixon's budget. Tyrone Power's Kin Weds Italian Singer CELLINO SAN MARCO, Italy (Al') -Romina Power, daughter of the late American <1ctor Tyrone Power and a<:· Cress Llnda Chrilltlan, has married Al lJano, one ol Italy's top pop singers. The Roman Catholic ceremony took place Sunday in this southern !talian town which was Bano's birthplace. Miss Power is 19, Sano 27, The bride'• mother attended the wedding . • DOgfight .Over ' Israeli Jet,s Shoot Down Egyptian MIGs By Umled Pn1t lt&eraaUonal braeli je& licbt.efa 1hot down two Egyptian MIG1'1 jets today 'in an air batUe over the Suez Canal, a military spokesman aald In Tel Aviv. The brief but furious dogfight came as each side sent planes acro.ss the canal in a new escalation of the conflict. Israel's hawkish Gahal Party met lhrqughout the day to try to find some way of aareeilla: on the U.S. Mideast peace proposal and Israel's reply - expected to be a sharply conditional acceptance -was expecled later in the week. 1houted slogaris agaJ.ut EapUan Prt•I· dent Gamal Abdel Nuser and King ~Hussein of Jord~. Jt was the first Arab demonstration against t h e American proposals. Among the crowd were guerrillas wear· ing arm.!! in contravention of a July 10 agreement bauing arms-carrying in the city. The demontsrators chanted "Abdel Nassar, the coward" and carried a Placard reading, "We will change the area into hell if a setUement is lmpased." Another said, "The guns of our fighters wlll determine the fate of the Palestinian people." How there could 1 be a reas~fire i1 the face of the PalesUftian oppasitlon remained to be seen. Jordan's acceptance ot lhe U.S. peace plan specifically ex· eluded the guerrillas who have vowed to fight forever to "liberate" Palestine. The nations supporting Nasser ·were Jordan, Kuwait, Sudan and Leba.Don. Syria and Iraq not only rejected the proposal but lilied the airwaves today with anli·American, a.nti·lsrael and by implication, some anti·Egyptiu blasts, The Arab world divided sharply on the issue and 15,000 Palestinian guer· rillas, some of them a rm e d , demonstrated in the streets of Amman against a cease-fire and against Presi· dent Gama! Abdel Nasser and Ki.Jig Hussein. An Israeli military spokesman said Israeli antiaircraft gwnners hit a third MIG17 but did n<lt see It crash. He said the dogfight developed when Egypt tried to raid targets on the Israeli side of the canal for the second time today. The interceptors swarmed in and quickly downed two of the raiders, he said. All Israeli planes returned safely, he Upper Bay Land Exchange Battle Renewed in Court said. • Tbe lsr~li raids against Egypt.marked the 67th • conse'c:uUve day of 1trikes against Egyptian ~ery slt'es and mis.sile bases. Israel said "several" Egyptian planes raided on the east side of the canal in the morning in the first such Egyptian attack in weeks. Four Israeli soldiers were reported woun- ded. With the Arab world 'sharply split on the U.S. peace proposals, Baghdad radio aanou11.ced that Sidam Hussein Takriti~ vice .hairman of· the ruling Revolution Command Council, had been invited to Moscow. Political sources said Russia may be trying to qutllt Iraq's vociferous opposition to the peace plan. The Arab world was still -awaiting Israel's reply to the U.S. peace proposal but Tel Aviv dispatches indicated it would be a qualified acceptance. Jordan accepted it but Syria, Iraq and the Arab guerrilla organizations rejected it as some sort of surrender. Israel was rejXlrted willing to accept the U.S. plan for peace talks provided , there is a guarantee that Egypt will not use the three-month cease-fire to build up its Suez Canal line. The Israell cabinet met Sunday but was too divided to make a public statement. Anothe r cabinet meeting was called for Tuesday. 'Mle Arab guerrillas were ·so angry they paraded through Amman and Hitchhiking Girl Molested Near Emerald Bay A teenage girl hitchhiker was molested at knife point near an Emerald Bay entrance Friday night and was struck on the mouth when she Protested. Laguna Police Lt. John Zelko said the 19-year-old Garden Grove girl was given a ride in Newport Beach by a man about 25 years old. His sun viso r bore the words "hot stuff. .. He purchased a !!oft drink (or her in the vicinity of Scotctlman's Cove and later stopped near the main gate at E;nerald Bay claiming he was going to check his car. ZeJko said the man put a,. knife against the girl's neck and told her "be a nice girl and move over." When she protested, the man struck her in the face, released her and drove away. The incident was the latest of several in which men have mOlested girls who were hitchhiking in the area. By THOMAS BARLEY Of "" Diiiy ,11•1 ''lfl Claims that nearly 6,000 feet of ocean frontage will be Jost to the public if the Upper Newport Bay land swap goes through were renewed in court today as the Superior Court trial ol the land ez:. change issue resumed after a two-week Jay off. Attorney Philip Berry asked Orange County Harbor Dlitrict -engineer James Ballinger to confirm a statement that became a battle of semantics between the witness and a Newpqrt Beach home- owners' representaUve. • Ballinger insi!ted upon defining front. age as beach property which has "support areas and is capable of being developed .'" Berry asked the engineer to offer his testimony in the light of lrontage as de- fined by Webster's dictionary. Ballinger conceded, using Berry's def· lnition, that the Irvine Company did not list "a minimum of 5,600 feet of public access" when it applied to the State Lands Commission for endorsement ol the Upper Bay land swap. And BallinJt:er confirmed Berry's state- ment that the seven areai of Upper· Newport Bay which make up the 5,600 feet "will be forever lost to public use" , if the land trade ls confirmed by the courts. At issue as the trial enters its third week is the trade of 450 acres of Irvine uplands for 157 acres of county-owned tidelands and the conltiUonality of the proposed exchange. The Irvine-Orange County dea1 was endorsed by the State Lands Commission in November, 1967 alter approval by the county board of supervisors. It was chalJenged by agreement be-- tween the county and the Irvine Company when Uiey $U¢ county ~udltor Vic Heim for hls agreed refusal t~ pay a dredJ(ing bill submitted t.o him by the Irvine Com· pany. But the lawsuit became an adversary action when a group of homeowners led by Newport Beach engineer Frank Rob- inson joined the complaint as intervenors and accused the Irvine Compan.v of omit· ting vital data pertaining to public access when the company made its represe nts· lions before the State Lands Commission. In any event. Berry ariues. the land swap is unconstitutional since it involves the trading to a private corporation or tidelands which became permanent public property when the 1iate of California deeded them to Orange County 40 years ago. An attempt to authorize new litigation against the Irvine Company in connection with the land swap failed Friday when the board of supervisors voted 3 to 2 to reject that suggestion from the county counsel's office. Three members of the board refused to further consider County Counsel Adrian Kuyper's suggestion "that there probably are public prescriptive r ights over much of the privately owned land adjacent to the Upper Bay and including the two' northerly islands in the bay." Kuyper submitted his request for (ur. ther titgatlon against the Irvine Company after Newport Beach residents were asked to supply hls office with 111 In· formation in their possession regarding public access to the land swap area. Rejection Friday led to the charge by Supervisor Robert Battin that the Irvine Company had committed "a fraud on the public of $1,200,000." Battin put that cash value on what he said was a misrepresentation by the Jr. vine ·Company ol about U acrei of land in the three U,.pper Bay islands. He put a cash value of $100,000 an acre on that terrain. 'Woman of Year' Services Set Mrs. Ethel McHugh Cunningham, a long-time resident of Newport Beach and fonner "Woman of the Year," died Fri· day at Hoag MemotiaJ Hospital. She WU 66, Fune.raJ services will be held for Mrs. Cunningham on Wednesday at 11 a.m . at , St. Andrews Presbyterian Church. Rev. Raymond I. Brahams will officiate. Burial will follow at Fairhaven Cemetery in Santa Ana. Mrs. Cunningham, who lived at 1700 E. 16th St., is survived by her daughter, Mrs. Betty Jean Chapelle; four sisters; Mrs. Maude Shaw, Mrs. Grace Black, Mrs. Edna Ketcham and Mrs. Billie Gilbert ; two grandchildren, and two great.gran<khlldren. Mrs. CuMingham came to CaJifomia with her parents when she was an 'infant. She moved to Newport Beach 18 years ago from North Hollywood. In 1969, she was named "Woman of the Year" by the Newport Beach Ebel! Club. She was also a member of the New. port .Harbo1 Civic League, Newport Har· bor Einblem Club, Hoag Hospital Auxil· 1ary and the National Assistance League. Sen. Kennedy Probation Ends EDGARTOWN, Mass. (AP) -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (0-Mass.), has end· ed his year of probation for leaving the scene of the Mary Jo Kopechne: accident. Kennedy, 38, was released from pro- bation Saturday. The probation, and a two month suspended sentence, was given Kennedy last July 25 following the death of Miss Kopechne. 28, a Washington secretary. Miss Kopechne drowned when Kennedy's car plunged off a bridge on Chap- paquiddick Island. Kennedy, whose driver's license was suspended during the p r o b a t i o n a r y period, now is eligible to reapply. If he chooses oo do so, he m u s t pass an oral examination, eye test and road test. BUY WHERE IT'S MADE SAVE UP TO 58°/o • I TRADE-IN .YOUR OLD FURNITUll ON NEW LIRRAL ALLOWANCIS ALSO CUSTOM REUPHOLSTERING Announcing a new breakthru in UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE Ruffell'1 manufecturas the fine1t furniture you "W ill find enywhere. Ycu ••• it end select it right in our showroom. Pe y up to SO 'l •. 1011 then retoil. Choo1e from en unlimited 1elec· tion of febricL Cu1tom chen9e1 •re al10 po11ibl .. • All woa1 •UAlANnlt 'Oa THI LIPITIMI OP ••••1c 1922 HARBOR BLVD ,e COSTA MESA OR CALL FOR APPOINTMENT • 548-0259 I I I -, ··~···t · • CoO L $ELECTION - Pteviewing scenes of Christmas as the sum- mer surf pounds below are (top, left to right) Mrs. John Holcomb and Mrs. J a m e s Bridges of the Cinder- ella Guild, who will take charge of greet- ing cards sales and be- low, left to right) Mrs. Phillip M. Cobolao, Mrs. Paul C. Gorman and Mrs. R<>bert D. Woodward. Who will BS· sist in coffee hour showings of · Christmas cards for the benefit of Newi>ort Harbor · Spas- tic League. ' --. ~me.n. • • • ' l • ,.i. . I BEA.ANDER SON, Editor ~. hllY U, 1'11 i. .... If r· ,, ' • Alliust -tbe •lazy· -tb for -ol 111 -Is a boly .-II anllclpotloc ~ lor ,..mben al four Harbor Am·pbllantllroplc -Pl· ,... tbe btoellt 0( many ,Will> be tbe ~ card Ales planned by tho Amlllary ,of,"""' M<lnorlol lfotpHal, Presbyt<lr,ian, tbe Newport H 1.r·b or Sputic League, tbe Cinderolla Guild ll1d tbe Punch and Judy Guild "' Chlidr<n'• Hospllal of Onqe Counly. Selectloo ol-toowy bOuday cu:cts ~ tbe brigllt omnmer sun wlll be leisurely and mjoyable, u fl!'OUP memben ..,.. dlally oi><n "the _., 0( their - for callee houn ~ throughout ·tbe ..... Hoag Auxiliary members bolting Christmas card !hoppers will be Copa d~ Oro's Mrs. Burton Rombq:er of 1Jdo Isle, 10 a.m. to noon Aug. 11; .. Mrs. ,,.ul Kuhn of Dover Sllom, I 14 S p.m., Aug. I,; Mtll. Ralph E. Wllaan of Cc:ona, del Mar, 10 a.m. to nooo, Aug. 7; Mn. Robert L. -of Newport Beach, 10 a.m. to noon, Aug. 25, and Mrs. FAiker Pope ol Cmln1 del Mir, 10 a.m. to noon, Aug. 38 • . Fifty cord albums will. be on Jilspjay In the hospital lobby from 10· a.m. to 4 p.m. daily, and as in past years the ·Gift Box, for whom Mrs. Merlin Kastler Is card sales chairman, will offer a 20 percent discount on all cards ordered in August. Special .card sbowin&s also will" take place from 10 a.m. to noon in the Conterenct Center· ..,. Aug. 4, s, 11 and 12. Twg , amillory chapten, the Humera .nil , tbe· Candystrtpora will sponsor showings, when coffee and roils will be 5el'Ved. .• Hoag''! Santa Ana chapter will feature an open house and coffee hour for card sel~ in Mrl. Herbert 0 . Hyatt's home on 'lbur!lday evening from 6 to 9 and on Friday from ID a.m. to 3 p.m. . • Sizable discounts art being offered on August·Ouistmas card ordtrs placed wilh memben o( tbe ,Newport Harbor WREATH OF CHEER-The warmth o! Christ- Spastic Uaguf:.., Mn. Robert D . mas good will is reflected in the mJdsummer Woodward js cbalnnon o1 the preview scheduling of coffee hours to boost sales of sales, asslat"1 .'..by «><:halrma n M11~ bol!da~ grA!eling cards. Punch and Judy Gulld membi<rs (left to right) Mrs. Vaughn N. Red· ding, Mrs. David C. Davis and Mrs. Alvin C. Kingsley prepare for the August event. TereDce P. ~i •, .· " .... More than U!flO,._,ae\ec:Uons from card · , , , ~ ~ 1 companies are ,a~bJe, and although teeretarles ; · Goi:do!l McClellan,· Jr .• coffee hours are belng scheduled: In· patroDess chi.irmali;' Donald G. Langille, terested buyers also may phon, Mn. proVlsiooal cbainnan. YfOQdwai:d .to have selection books 11)()le wlllhing to view and · order brought ·to their homes. : " Qirlstmas cards from members of the All pr"!)Ceeds from the early-bird 9lle8 " Qin6eri:Ha Guild of the · Oilldren's will benefK ~e cerebral-palsied chlldre:n .. H<>1plial may can Mn. James C. and young adults of Orange County, ,. • B~idges. c~airman or Mrs. John Leaders of the ~c League include · ijoJcomb i:ssistant chairman of card the Mmes· Philip M. Cobolan, presidenl; ..... ' , _ W!~ L. ~. Paul G. GarmlD,,. teed .. tea and OOHee ,will· be served William E. Fisher, Gfiorge R. Jamen. by• thole who Open_ their hemes to card vie< . ~; Jlihmie W a·l k e r , li>apj>en, with a 20 pemlllt ~ dil- . ~i .. l!icf>ard E. Schumacher, count 1>$1 offered 00 card~. ~i .Woodward and Hmm•, "IC1 a'great feeling," aaid CindertDa's press chairman Mrs. Robert Hurtt, "lo knOw one's Oiristmas card greetlhg has served a happy 'pUrpose -and also filled a need, II Costa Me.sans will participate in another hard-working group's effort lo raise funds for the Children's Hospital ar Orange County. Punch and Judy Guild also is turning August into December with announced prtChristmas card selections available. Among those arranginc co!fee hours for the viewing of the cards are Mrs. Vaughn N. Redding, Mn. David C. Davis and Mn. Alvin C. Klngs~y. D•ily Pilot Photos by Rictiard Koehler . . • -- I BENEVOLENT CHOICE-For the benefit of Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian, Auxiliary mem- bel'!I will host cofiee hour previews of Cbriatmas card aeortments available at a discllunt during the month ot August. Shown glancing over some ol the 50 albums which will be available are (left to right) Mrs. Paul Kuhn, Mrs. Burton Romberger 1 and Mrs. Melvin Kastler. Maier Ingredients Missing • Parents' Reci .pe for Success DEAR ANN LANDERS: I started 14 wriie this letter in June but decided to hold off. and &ee-if I felt the same way after a few weeks " cOgitatiOn. Well, I do, ao here 's my letter. Why do kids expect their parents 14 give them graduation presents? Where did the idea come from? Out eighth gr:ade "graduate" requested her own telephone. Our high school boy ,.rved noUce (as a 90phomore) that he expected. a car upon graduation. <Xlr college girl let us know she expected a trip to Europe the day after she received her dlploma. I am ashamed to confeu we came through on all three counts. It cost over $5,000 -and we are t10l rich. Whit do poor people do? How and ANN LANDERS ~ , why did parents become ao trapped? It would make more sense if the kida gave their parents gifts for gettlne them through, Please reply. -'!'.HE VICTIMS DEAR VICl'IMS: Poor people do•'t give ltb graden telepbone1, 1U1b scbool 1ealon can -.nor do they tend lbelr college gradaa&e. to Europe~ la f1tt, some RICH people don'L do l.btse tblap. Obvlou1ty yoa fed blackmailed. Your kldt have probably been 1etUn1 yoa up for tbe clobber ever slice tbey were • old ....... ta tlft. !rt .... -...... each'• ____ ,..._ .. ,..... ... 111 .... ~ ..... lddl _..,tale IL 11,_ _,...,... tome tmportut lllgredlelb an milltle· DtAR ANN LANDERs: You printed a letter a white back from a reader who was driven out ·of her mind by computer billing. After countleu jlholle calls and letters, ahf received a teleirun saying tbat ll ahe didn't pa1 her bill at once her credit rating would be perman<11tly 'jeopardized. J 1ympitbized with the woman because I had a 1lmllar' erperience wben I tried lo cancel a credit card. It bad lllCh a d<vaalalln(I ellec! oo me that my Wea-a came back. Pleate l~orm tbe public u 14 the bis! coune of actloo should they become cM1gbt in the wheelJ of "progress1' and driven null u I was. (P .S. Finally my huaband hired a lawyer.) - SCARSDALE SCREAM HEARD ROUND THE WORLD DEAR SCREAM; OM wbo ffnd1 Mmtelf 'llvolved 11 • MUie wtlll a -polar 1boofd ,do tH fo0owla1:. 11, olt<r 1 phooe call and 1 leUer ta Ille C9$pu7, ft" pt ao n&lalacdta, .eeept tbe f•d lb•t tbe eleellhll montler W at eyes or un and yoa mJgbL u weu i.111: to Moot Rubmort. Write to )'tar leUllort: and &o yoar COD· areumu. Send eo,lft of yoa.r cor- rapondeece to Ute compaier. Write alto &o Preeldeat Nl1•'1 Committee oa CollllUMI' htereltl, W1Hiqloa1 D.C. Alld keel' ,_ ...r ,_ COii yoar cool fair ...i 7aor CODI. DEAR ANN LANDERS : What's hip. penlng 14 people acyway! Have tl>ey always betu • rude and lncohliderate? Here's a aample of whit I'm lalkini about. The telephone woke me up 1t rnid- nlibt. 1 aald, "Hello." The ptrty on the other end llked, "Who " th~!" - t replied, "Who were you calling?" The party yelled. "Gel off the llnft you •%@ + tt !!lt:tt: ~??? ?." Bang went the receiver, rt&bt c»wn on my ear. Why should the party be mad at MET I was the one who wu awakened JGUt of a sound aleep. Why -Id 1 - behave that way? -BAFFLED IN BU1' • FALO DEAR BAFF: Tiie dnmt '""NJ loll blJ dlme. How wlli you know when .the tul thing comes along! Ast AM Linden. Send lor her booklet "Loye or Se.t IDCI How to Tell the: Difference." Send JI cents in coin and a Jona, aelf-Addrtlled. atamped envelope with your l'lq1!'l'I In ,,,. of the DAILY PILOT. ' I' I l . J .f Do\11.)' PILOT Horoscope '1! ' Aries: Stress .Original Ide.as TUESDAY ,JULY 28 By SYDNEY OMARR Gte&he be1ln1 bl • ••ttbloJr•pky on an . . -.,ital ..... 1tatla1 Iba! W ftl bom under ~e lldllal llp of C1acer. 1'Uespeare'1 work1 are fWed wtlta utnlellcal ..,.,._, Attnlofy )u alway1 played o ....-1 role ta Utera1"" ... ltae tilea!ef. faith in your creatJve abiUUes. Accept u nu au a I invitation. Fulllre planl ~lu. · CANCER (June II.July II): What yoo !eel II a certainty could be mort of an illusion. Realize tbla and proceed ac- cordingly. Not wf• to take 11.tuations, individual! for granted. Sometllinr ts fOIJlf OD btlllnd -· .( Lt0 (July 13-Alls. II): Coocl' lunar aspecl opotll&hUI friendl, hopes, wtahel. Social acUvtty quicke111 pace. ·you wa' (March ll·April 19): meet -"'• IO places, do You tel ~t you ~. INl ill~ thlnp. Bt -to Jhort idp moy be n .... ury. ldeU, oug..UOlll. : ,,_ In posliloos of auihori-VIRGO (Aue. 23-&pt. II): ty are apt to be lnlrirued 'if lhoroull!, superion ¥" Im- . by )'Ollr Ideas. stress orlllnal, p<eued. Key 11 to be limlliar dynamic apprl)Kh With rules, re r 1J 1at1on1 . TAURUS (April ll.May :Ml): • !?°phchuisl IJ "'oa1~Slribltloa:.~ Accent on apeclal collecUons, "" a . eve I . ve w "" ~ aenutne borgliJll. realllli5. Sllow that yoo mun -•vou gain added recognlUOn. bullneai. Ooe at a dialallce mabt dfort IJBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. II): to Promote your talents. Get Advertise, erpress thoughts. what's C.'OmlDI to you _ and Let others know you ha v e 1ot it In wrillnJ. !Oll1ethlng of value to oiler. GEMINI (May 11.J..,. IO). Much chan(e is fealured . Stnos lhe new· clllcard out: Keep open mind. Whot oeems moded -~..,~· ~. Be out ol reach is clottt tj!an .. _, -~....... )'Oii mllbl lmqin< indopendeot, dorin(. H 1 v e llCOllPIO (oct. IS.Nov. 11): GLOlllA' MYRICK · • • 0Seb D•t• Myricks Tell News Or Troth Your ablllty to detect ...,... comes to fOle. You gain by capitalizing on tnfonnaUon come upon by llll'pllJ<. Be ready to act m lmowledp. Don't hesitate -yau hive what you need. SAGl'l'l'AIUUS (Nov. :JI. Dec. 21):~ You JJl•Y not have all lacta. Wait. Avoid rulhinf. Some are making planl whidt could afiect your strategy. Game is anything but over. Know tllil and a c t 1c- coftiingly. CAPRICORN (Dec. II.Jan. 19): Basic issues, work. how you re1ate to those who perform arvices -theee are .,.phuized, Avoid the spec- tacular. lllltesd, concentrate on steady progress. Reunion b tndlcated. AQUARIUS (Jan. ID-Feb. IS): Opportunity kn o ck s ; answer with vipr. Be en- thu~astic : ftlcome )'Ollnl ldeaa. CnaUvtty IJ I n spotllghl. Y'ru ean win wiih swift, tmQrtbodox m,etbods. PISCES (Feb. Iii-March :Ml): Practical mailers -to command -· 1-1-ble to skip clebt!s wtthoot paying price. Know this and eu.mine methodl wllb c ... You have chance to pull otl Mr. and Mn. Ivan M. • coup. · Myrick' Of Bania Ana Hett; IF -DAY IS . h ... 1_,_ the W9d •u YOUR .BIRTBDAY )'Oii art preparJna !Ila Of tllllr da1l(btor, Glorla . for eventful time -a period Jean llJrk:k and J am e • which f e at u r e 1 added Doniel 'Podenon Of Costa respomiblllfy and mrarda. If Meu. ·• i. ... 1.. marrtqe In Tbe-. wu revetled dur-~-i:W:Yu ":,... IOI • family dinner party rled, """-or flnanclal holted . by the bride-elect'• areas a~ put on more ~ parenw.~llla Myrick ts a bue. Yoo have plenty ,iii., frl.duate ol Corona del Mar for you, but more People • ·----;-••• c:::;. - STEVE SMITH ADDS FINISHING TOUCHES 'Nimble Fingers' Produced By JACKIE COMllS CH 99 Dall'r ;1111 Stiff The romantic musical of path e~i~ ·n on Quixote begins a four-day run at Mange Coast College Wednesday, July 29. It's the culmination of five months of intensive pre- parations. As the curtains open and the actors take their cues, JoAnn (Mrs. Hayden) Williams and her costume crew will give a sigh of re· lief. They have prepared a parade of fash· tons that takes the audience deep into the lnqui.sition. "Our costumes range from Harem girls MARK TYLER LENOS SHINE •' to Moorish captains and to peasants -all from the 16th Century," noted Mrs. Williams, laboratory instructor for the OCC summer production. The crew of seven has produced 56 cos- tUmes and five suits of armor. '!This is the tint time we attempted to do so much," she admitted, "but the students have been so enthusiastic, we've had few major cata- strophes." A summer production such as Man of La Mancha is on a tight schedule. "We have ol]fweek of casting, four of preparation and , 'fie of production. We want to involve aa many students as possible and asked only that they know how to sew," she noted. ' Costuming for a historical period is a detailed operation. "In order for the students to costume the cast, they have to have a good understanding of the lives and times they're dealing with," Mrs. Williams ex- plained. The first meetings were devoted to hi story and a study of the characters. With a knowledge of the people of that day, the crew gains.an understanding of the styles worn and the types of materials which were available to different classes. More im- portant, the students learn which modem materials will substitute. For example, a wash and wear butcher fabric is similar to the peasant's natural weave in appearance. 'A session with the technlcal'Gfrector pro- vides information 011 the set design. "If It Is subdued. brtght patdles of color are added through the costuming like Cl'ID· berry or a vibrant blue," she said. The crew did its own pattern making, shopping, cutting and sewing while the cast memorized its parts. "As for th e armor we ordered plastic sheets from Michigan but we had to do the modeling, burnishing and painting for the right effect," explained Stanley Tudor, stu- dent assistant to Mrs. Williams. . As the knl4ht errant attempts to draw the audience into his Impractical world,. JoAnn Wllllama and her crew will atana firm. They know the practical side of bis existence. l!!f1 ~ ~ Oranle Coast believe in )'Oii than ;.. ·do ColJece Jnyour1eli.Metn1galbmoiello.:'" .... ~ ...... ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;~~11 lier flance, the IOll ol Mrs. confidence. Ignore -oel- Lorralne Pedersen of Ceola back. Ii wu only lemp<l'ary. M .. , alao graduated from Cactus Soc'oety CdMllS and QCC To find wt WIW• llldrl for ,,.... 111 ' monl"I' •rid loYt, .,_. SJ'f""' Orftlrr'1 Qr Count C ctus and 'Ibe brkfe.elect ls wearing 11oot1tt, "s.cr.t "'"" for Ntffft .., qe Y 1 beirklom diamonds, worn by w-. .. hrlCI t11rt11Mi. w • C9fttl Succulent Society meet.I the "' O!Mrr Atfl"olOW Sectlta. ..,. flnt w~-·. al In her mother and grandmother DAILY l'ILOT, ..... Orlfld C..tr•I QU-y noon in their W!dd1ng rh14s. l;;i';i;"""';i;i;;;i;-;i;;;iv;i;""ii;i;i"·;;:v·ii'ii"'i;i'·--;mi;Oddiii;;Fi;ieii;Ilowliii;i;;iHaiiiii:U,iiCo~sliiai;M~eaa. The ctrtmony will tU.e II place Sept. lt in Cal vary • Cl>apel. Santa Ana. Crownmg ~lory State Leader beauty salons Takes Podium Members of the Fountain ValleJ Republican Women'1 Club will 1ather in the Jolly Os reltaw'ant, Huntington Beach. for a luncheoo. meeUn.a llt 11:30 a.m. oo Wednelday, July 29. Guest speaker will be M;ss Ancel• Lombardi, past state preaident o( R epu b l i c an Women'• Clubs' Federated. Further infonnation o r reservations may be oblained by c:allini Mn. James M. J-. 847-1510. Dance Club The llnot, llllrd and filth Fridayo of tho lll<lllh are the dance dates eelected by Lace 'n Leather Square Dance Club members. The mlllic atartl at I p.m. in the Recreation Center, Hontln .... Beach. • Jomt 11lkl1W. iirM lltttnlnt ind 1 progr11n thft work1. ,. 11m -..cAU Nl-llOS ' . I HAIR FASHION SAVINGS I Sfretc• Y••r 11M9tf H4flt -•fef • ft~ 1r,te. SHAMroo~sn ,,...,rT-.,.w• -1''*' ..... _ ................ -.. _ $2.tl $).45 HAIRCUT ......................... _ ........... $1.IO $J.00 ·---··-••o M OIL10MT HIM WITH TOUa .vic1t11111• ,,. •• LOOKI .. 09ic Cu~ $12.50 $15 W-Cllll $9.'5 .Vl'Ot!lllTMlllllTS waLCOMI IUT llllOT ALWAYS flll ltltlAIY CJomo.d BUDGE T PER IVI D CROWNING GLORY tho'"""' C1,,.kt CtlU•rt U 267 I , 17 .. IT .. COSTA MUA SOU'l'H COAST Pl.AU. PHONI 14a.t,1 t Lt ... Lrnl -Ntxt M , .. ,. PHONI 146·71 II o,,,. r ..... 1.19• a S1111•.., o, ... 1,.."1119, - FABRIC SALE "PACK 'N GO" FABRICS Island bright designs for fun and sun vacation wearing OUR REGULAR 89c 36" wide t71'7J@ u, u, YD. 100% cotton gu1r. w11hable SLINKY KNIT PRINTS Colorful, care free knit.I in mod look for summer travel lOOY. acet•t• gu1r. w11h1ble 44"/45" wide 11@@ l.l YD. HOUSE OF F•BRICS S.lltlt C..tt P1--ar11t•I 1t S•fll Dl•t• Fw, H...,. "--17tfi •t l rltt•I C.-111..-.141°1116 s.te A--'4J·lln 0,_11ral1 M.tt-Or•11,1thr•r• •Ml H•rll•r 1 ... P.ti C.....--L• '''"'' •f Sl•11t.11 hllerte1 126·2114 ..._ hft-IJMJIJ Melttl""" CHftt-E4i1191r •t l•1ch l h·4. Htlttl ..... .._.._.t7·1011 Newport Setting Evening Rite links Couple in Marriage An -b evlllinJ ceremony In Nowport Jlart>or i.rtheran OU<:b linked Wendy Joan NU-, and Roy Ne hoo HlllllllUUI In marria ... Tho Rev. -Whlte of. ltclalod for the dal,llhter of the S. B. Ni1-o of Cotta M-and the.., of tbe Btniy HlullWllll ol Beq Gardens. Mrt. Palrlcla •Orr w 1 1 matron ol boner. 'Jbe bride ul:e<I tho -Becky lllatr, Doma Soderblom and Donna Cauoey of Britiab Columbia • to be allendants . Ozrilty HeumaM w o1 s ,_ tPrl while ber brother J"1rfty wu r~r. Belt man. WU Ralph Hinds. Jiff Tbompoon of BriUah 'Oolumbia, the bride~ brother, Dick Hemnann and Robert Anderm were usben. A1ao lnveilnl from BriUoh MRS. R. N. HEUMANN T1ke VttWs Columbia for the wedding --------- wtn· Mr. and Mrs. George Cauoey, Mn. Jeffrey Cros.s and Mn. Tbompoon. Plants Potted 1be bride ii a &raduate or Newport Harbor High School and a beauty college. Her hus- bOnd is • -.. Cerrltoa Collep and a graduate ol Bell Gordem 111ib School • Topsoil of potted plants should be stirred once a week with an orange 1tick to ldmit air to the root.I. B'nai B'rith Group Forms In Irvine A new University Chapter ls belna: fonn<d by B'nai B'rlth Women. Servin& coffee on Tuesday, July 18, at I p.m. to those interested in membership will be Mrs. Harold Spivock of Irvine. Further jnfonnation may be obtained by calling M-rs. Splvoc.k, 833-0007, or Mrs . Gerald Birnbaum , mem- bership chainnan, 83J.1342. ASK FOR NANCY Tli•t'1 wh•t 111 t~• ~nitttri Ille wh•l'I tk•v "'" ilelpl KNIT WIT . . Acr111.1 from WCllllM rtll .. COSTA MESA Pll. 1-d-UIJ LAST 5 DAYS! Your child's plwtograph can win a specta.cul.ar ~2,5 00.00 SHOPPING SPREE 'IN OUR STORE! And tluu'> ju.t one of tk hundred. • of valuable prizes and gift• wtalling •2s,ooo.oa ii!-the 36•h Natwnal Children's PHOTOGRAPH CONTEST! YOU CAii WIN OllE OF TIIESE NATIONAL PRIZES: Finl Prize . • • •2,100.00 SlwppinG Sprtt Second Prize • • t 1,500.00 Slwppmg Sprtt T1Wd PIVe . . • l ,000.00 SlwppinG Spree Fourth Prize . . . •500.00 S/Wpping Spree ~O FifU. PIVu, ea. •100.00 S/wpping Sprees 01 Ofll Of' MUMDRE.DS OF U. $. SAYHIQS IONDS AS llONOltAIU ilomoN l'WIZUI Have younelf a Shopping Spree , •• yes, a paid. up charge account that lets you buy wb11.eTer you want! It'• a anap to enter and eaey to win. Let u1 photograph your child and we'll en I er a duplicate in the Contest at no extra charge. Complete de- ta ila and rules in our Photograph Studio now. Big balloon will be given to eYCry contest ant. .. •. • .. ·'. • ' JllGIS: lWH Crfftl4, .... afff1a, W. .... _.......... t; Sp.:ial pricfAI 011 1no1t Wes and pbotopwpb biabee. For tt1mpl~r COMTllT 7 411 Otie hlO Corontt INCIALI portrai.u .. d li1 w&lltt4iM (TllAT't -11WI Y. Off 111[ HOUUR PlllClf) '\13ROADWA V ltJ.JJJI EXT. 211 l"llo+•tt•,h Stu4io lit Floor • ~ ' .. I I' I 11 I I I - • • an la ca .. pr F'1 pa Tr - • 1 ( . ' r .. SU· ha An pit d" of Im of th• ch: ga: wh ho1 lh• I p, ... th< m• &Ir an I be ga: re: ha• s Ii , Uo acl at lid , • "' $5. Ne 14. Ill Chi • . . • •• • • • ... • • ~<?£. .63, N0.171, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES , . -... ,... :. ~ ,:._ • .. " . • • • ---- ORA'.NGE ·COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ... , f _..,,._._ ___ -- N.'Y. St•ek• . ~ONOAY, JULY 27, '1970 K~y ·vote Nearing on Freeway -Bill . - By TirO!W-P01$'1'UNE " later toda)I.• , ' 1 • I -~ OI' .. ... .... .... " Aaemtilyman -Rotierf. .... Badhani Jl. SACR¥fENTO -Spokesmen far city .Nf!wporl Beach), the-" author of the bill, and county gM'erntnerit1 hOmeowner and sakt this mornlng prospects looked good lalfdowner i,PJ~ ?: e re ln the~ state but he wasn'trolitri~ht predicting Uie capJta ttxll)'rtar ~ w1!l-i6Apiftg up -wte~tW~wa.Jdi reooncneM. the ai perha-ps"'tbe--tey-vo~-on a 61:11 to ' ·bill for!passage?He said the vote would prevent constiuctloa of -Pacific· Qoast not· be unanimous. · FreeWay ·~~gh .-~~wpOtt. Beach and The biU, w)tidl_RftViousl,y pfssed the pa~ Ol llifnll~'l!<iicl!.-'· slate ...emblt' 48 to 8, wi>ttld deJei. .\~ ~C-Mfore ' the 'S e·n ate from 'the itate· fiteWay· system the Tr~O!I 'Qoillm)ltee w!J; tel. fot Pacific .Coait..Fi.e•ay ·roulle between ~----• -~ 1•·· ·~-· ,, >'' ., I• Beacli BOulevaro 1n· Huntinetoe Beach and the 'eastern Ne!JXlrt Beach , city limtts at Oornna :lel Mar. Badham said, "Half of Orange County ls up ; bere lobbying ino. the · rear of the senate right now." · Indeed lhere were many delegat.iona both for and..,against. the freeway but they . appeared 'lo b~ doing mofe•apec- tating than lobbying, Present to ar,gue egainst the fret)t'ay route were ~ewport, ~ Vice . Mayor ' . . ' . . -· ' Howard Roi""; MmlWI lluflieldr P•ul Gruber ud John Md'odea; Robert Curci and John Store ol tbe· Corona del /"tr ·united llo-Wnen "°"!ci'llon. ROody to teatlfy In II,.. <i i;etatalnC. lite route "'" Jim ~· Hoatinilm Beach C'hr.nber of Comm etc e ... s transpartotlnn comml\tee; ~ J°"'\S, and Dr. Thomas ~y ot the Irvine Company; ·Hancock "Bill.\ Baanin&: m and John Haskell of Beeco J,.td., large landowner In the West Newport area. • Scheduled lo 1peak In oppoalllon later today """ Lalfllll• Beach City M- Jamea Whe•ton, plus Costa M<aa M•yer Rober\ ,M. Wllsoo ud City Attorney Roy J\tne. . Tiie lineup pita Newport Bell<JI In- .tereall standing alone qainlt the com- bined oppoalUon of representaUvea of , dolta Meaa, Huntinaton Beach, Fountain Valley, Lquno -· ud lite OOWlly of ()ran1e. Chairman of the Senate Tran!portatioo Ccimmiltee Sen. lludolJll Colller (JI- Yreka) wal:not -av~ tor NMDINint prior to the bw1Jia' 11a1--1o -. ta -Interve-by ... Jqillo-lo freeway alipmentl IClaptld ~ tbt highway_.,...,. ·• H-..r, the· Senate Tr._- COmmitlee jult -week qo 1mm .... Jy rtcommeDcled deleUoa of a ._t of the eout freeway lhnluP V-. between Marina Dtl,Rey ud the SUllo !Seo FREEWAY, P ... I) • • " ~ \\' .. ' I Nude Films TOld Caretaker Tells Tate Home Ta,les LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Cllretaker testified today that he once saw one of the vicUms of the Sharon Tate murders take home movies of a· nude wa:nan. by the swlmming _poo_t of .... the Tate estate. ' · William Garretson, 20, said under cross examinaUon .that he saw . Voltych Frykowal, Poliab play.boy friend of Ml~s Tate's husband, usina: a borne movie camera. . "Whe~ there women w~tb hlm?'1-asked defense 11ttorney Rona.kl Huabes. "Ye1,•t said G•f1etson. "Wai one of them 111 youn&.won,vm?" •"Yes." "Was she nude?" "Yes." r Hughe.I asked ·If the wOman wu swim- ming nude while Frykowtkl took pic- t.ures. Garretson ansWered, "I didn't aotice." The 'l\'Ol1lln 1'U DOI ldeatifitd, Gai'M110n'1 fllDUllerits~ came aftlr defeme attorney• repeakdly, qllelji.MeCI him abc.l.it wbetller he l\ld,;aeep any or the vldims under the influence of "We· need to see her at.atemeots in order to prpperly cross ezamine her," uld FJlq:erald, at a hearing on h1s subpoena of Mrs. Kua~l4n's attorney, Gary Fleischman. "The proaecution baa been ·using the subterfuge of aaylng 1he ls stUI a defendant, not a witness." FIU:gerald, heading the defense team for four ptr90l'ls accused of the alayinp- of Miii' Tate and alx others, 11ld be and the 'attorney for Charles Mr MaMOn tried llf visit . Mr1. Kasablan in jail Sunday, but her attorneys wouldn't let us aee her." superior Court Judie cbaries 'o~ said he would entert.Jn !';"-llld:s moo tion only after Mrs. J\IUbiM tuu the stand and ii sworn u a wJtneal! , .• • "The Judge saY• be won'~ 'kDOw tha she's ~a~·wJ-unil1'-abo takes I.be stand,'.' uid' FlU&erakl. · ~ He added lbat Mn. Ka~blaD'• atJ. tomeys fed that her atat.ementi u1 covered by1 the atton.,y-cllent privU.,.. "However," said FllzP,fald, "we~ MY I.bat a district' attorney wu praent . on Hve occaaiona when ahe made tbele statements lllld thus the privilege bU been waived." -· Headon Crash at Bridge · · . . ~ Jnjm:~s. Two Couniians .... -alcohol or drop. ". "' .. ur he hod· !191;: but ·the Judp atruck both question· and anJWet from the record as lmmaterlal and irrelevant. ;,.0 pel'10llS Wfft hotpltouJc ~Int a head-On 'crHh eirlf • simdi1 ..Oridni on, Cout Highway at tht bri~ttl over the·Santa Ana River. .•• ii;:~ 'l'!l.oii~""'l,b ~ *'' In t1N1r ·veblclis. lcert wd Iha """ caUee of U'ie accident is· still undir " t 11 I I • John o. Conlin ,.21, Anaheim, 11 Jilted . . Pitcher Tries C·itttjhing- GunrdsNixonFromFouls NiX.011· Summons ' Defense .Leaders ' ' . ' F9t T:op, M~ting Previously, defense ·attorneys . as~ed a maid several times whether she had seen 'home. 'movies being taken ·at ihe estate or whether she had noticed a large collection Of film cans and videotapC!s fn ttie home. She said she had 1een neilh~r. · Miss Tate's husband, Roman Polanski, ls a Polish dlrecor noted for his macabre movies. Eirlii:r a defense attorney asked the judge for all "statements, c:onfessklns· and admiulons" the state's star witness haa, made. to authorities. · In serious cond!Uon today at Ora.,ge Couilty Medical Certter. with a ·double compound fracture of the left leg and numerous racial cuts. Leslie ltjarle Smith, 20, of 4612 Suite Drive, Huntington Bea<!h Is listed in good condition today at Ho•& Memorial Hospital. ·calirorftta HJghway Patrolmen said Coolin WU travelln1 IOU~bound °Ii' Cout Highway when he,apJ>l!'nUy lost control of his car. It croaiid the cf n t er Une1 and smashed into the oorthbound auto driv.en by; Mias Smllb. . The Sereet Service ·had some pr~ fessiona1, if nervous, aMillanc(, in guarding the President at the · Sunday baseball _1lugf~st in Angels S~lfium, Anaheim. , · Pat Rogan, Angels' batting practice pitcher, was seated in front of the Presi- dent to euard against the possibility of a foul ball beaning the nation'• ·most important baseball fan. "When they asked me to sit in front of .the President," said Rogan, "1 told them they were taking a tremendoJs chance with • .my hand." '.lbe ll·inni:nl . • ' ~ ·-h .. , game, with. the Washington senators which the Angels won 11·10, luted three hours and 56 minutes ind Ni1bn went the distance: Rogan said he was amazed at 'the President's knowledge of the plJlyers . and the game. ' "He talked to me quile a bit during the game," said the pitcher. "He asked me SO)Jle questions and, d~ssed , the strategy, things like' tbal It was quite an bonor." ~ Rog8n saiQ, tile ' Presldeht toltl him ' ' he never leaves before the end of a game. The guardlan gJtcher Seemed ' .. relieved when ii was all over and there had been l)O fouls hit in the direct.ion SChool ·Budget Hearing Slated A pubUc hearing prior to final adop. tlon of a budg-et ror the Newport.Mesa 1ebool district has been 5el for Aug. 4 at 7:3o p.m. In the C..taJleaa Hl&h School Lyceum. Tiie proposed lll'IQ.71 budget calls for a U.Cent increase In the diatrlct'1 tax rate. Taxpayers In Costa Mell would l)ly • $5:31 per $100 assessed valuation. while Newport Beach t.;rpayen w o u I d pay $4.9& per--i100 allellf!d lalu,tiOn, If the $42.t million budget 11. •dor>!ed without Chlfliel.. • ' ' of the President. : ~ liil!Df!t 'ol lhii 32-hlt ~ame was a mad duh by youngsters each ha1f inrilng to the Presidential box to have Nixon autograph programs. baseball ~resident Ni1on · suinmoned Defense Secretary Melvin R Laird and Deputy Secretary David Packard to meet with him in 'San Cleinente tooa'y to cbnl!ider re:5huffling !lie Pentagon; now under fire for he"avy cost overruru. ' The conferenc'e is one of a string gloves and ren(ed seat ·cushions. of meeUngs -at the Weste.in White House Paul Fitzgerald, attorney for defendant Patricia K r e n w I n k e I. said he felt statements by Linda Kasabian, 21, who Is set to testify th!J afternoon, are not "privileged", or c o n f I d e n l I a I w;n. munications because a district attorney was present when she talked to her attorney. The impact smashed the front-of Conlin'• foreign compact car 10 badly, that he had to t>e pried from the wreCkage with cro"bar1 by Newport Beach fire.men. · 'f.be smiling President kept tibliging designed to re$ape the .massive Defense until play was re3umed. Then Secret Department and set priorities for the 'Service bodyguards would shoo awiiy 1972 budget. youngsters until three more b.Btters were Dr.~ Henry A. Kissinger, national • 1 security affairs adviser, also will 1Jt out. . h . • . in on t e meeUngs. ,Nuon arrived b~-hehcopter an;.orange Nlxoo and hla -adviilts will have before ~olf ,Cl[l and joined Mr. aijd ,Mrs~.~ '\~-~Ql a far-re.aching report by a blue Au~. The form v coWboy· movie 1tar'; ri~n ..... ...:a on Defeme Department Motor 'Coach Meeting Brings 3,000 to Mesa . • -., ~ '!i"-i With the' arri•al of the FamUY Motor between and setUed back for three da)'I Coach Convention,' thl! weekend, the of CaUfomiA living, after comin1 from i~ one of the major ""'*" <( • . -ianjza,_,t»n lluded by Gilbert W. ~~els The Presidenttt0ld 'bim'M -" ri~, «i>iicdian of the ~ of "torn between the twG ~-bUt~.'f M~tan J ~i.fe1 1nlUflnee Co. The populaUon of Costa Mesa increased by u far away as Maine and Florida. more than 2,(XXI people and another L.000 But they don't live ln oonvenlional. to · tr 1 .. ~ • • ' • • ye6!<,JDai slud1 .!"ill be made public Tues- are expecte~ today. , hoinf:s. , Some of ·them ·are: conver\ed The "suburb" at the Orange County .chool busel, · IOme . are no bigger tttan remam neu a . .,• ,,. • d ' ay: _The President threw balls out to the The President also was expected to Fairgrounds Is made up of about t,000 camper1 and soi;ne art CUJlOm"built homes-on-wt.eels. They range tn size mansions..on-wbeel1. catchers of the . Senators and Angeli discuss ·strategy for obtaining Senate from campers to run.size buses· and They 'are all practlcally sell-contained cost as much as $100,000. · ' homes, complete with g~ncrator1 .fo~ abd then threw a coiiple of ball! to approval of the $19.5 billion defense procurement bill and the next 1tage fans who scrambled after them. of the anti-ballistic missile system. he h I. . • • power ·and two-way radios for com· T owners ave med their homes munlcatlon Many of the ownert: are up · In row1, named the &tree~ in retired pe~ple who ~ their Ume traveling • around the ·country, though. there are many young owners who use Dr.ugged· ;B~hy Recovering, I • ' , ' ' . . 1 1 Par(mt,s Praise Porice, Firemen Over Rescite . . . . . pie Jn Costa Meq .0., in America, who "We eapeclaUy wanl lo thank lhe police are erperijnenf.inC •1'11 drop or thinkin& 8:nd firt'.men f9r their fut, effi~t ·•o- of It,'' Sllld Mn. -Jim S. McKnight. -.. tion • • · aJ90 the doctors and n~ at The patenta of two boys -one recJ~. ing from.; a dose of LSD taken when be discovered his big' brother's illicit dr:ua: 5la!h -today praiaed God and c~ Mesa po I i c e and ftremen for h.is rt- covery. T•· ·~-both C..to Mesa and rloag lloopltoh." =-~ ,~ o-.-, toll wu qtiesUOned at the ''Jletause Of tbe t.eamwOrk of all, Tom. family·~. M7 ll<llver Av!., after the my ls with u1 loday In both mind ud Thom.a.a D. Mc.Knight, 20 months, wa1 released from the hospital Sunday. a~ parenUy !tlffering no lasting effects from hlJ unlortunaie and uoupecled um trip. He was raced first to Costa Mt!a Me· mOrtal Hospitfl and then to Hoag Memor- ial Hospital Jn Newport Beach Friday night, by police helicopter and then patrol car. ' "Our main concern now is for our I~ )'ear~d boy and for all our young peo- Incident ind tak~ 1o Orange County body." Juv011lle Hali, charged wltlt lutnilhlng Mrs. McKnight said In her le!W lhot dafllf:rous drugs to a minor. the famUy bas discovered a neW dimen.- His little brother .. a tumbled onto \he slon ln faith and prayer durint the crlsia hl6den pill1 and apparenUy thooght they of the weekend. were candy, She alao ukl ahe hopes the power of Rosjiital autborltles at first listed young prayer c.an be ll.lied to provide new Tammy McKnight in critical eOndition alren&Ut and courage to face the drug from the I.so and whatever elll he had , probJCi\ which Is affecting America '• 1wali0wed1 but he made a rapld recovery. young people. "It seemed miraculous," uld Mrs. '"God wllllng, thtre won't be any more Mc.Knight. · cases like Tommy'11 11 she 1ald. • theit coaches only for vacatlocs. ~ The members have come to the con- vention to trade travel stories and to see some of the new'; developmen.ts in motor coachlng . Hundreds. of new coaches will be on display, and the area will be open to the publlc 'Monday through Wedaead•Y from I p.m. to · I p.m. I , ' ' Vet A~ks Equal Time ,Against 'Ohio' Soqg LAKE CHARLES, La (AP)-The pro- test ""'g"'Oblo," which deail wltlt the !hooting of four i tudents at Kent State Univer1lty, annoys Sam T a r e I t o n, _ Americanism chairman· of a Vetenna of Foreign Wan post here. Tarleton telegraphed a loc1l radio 1ta· Uon .Sunday that ~ery time lt play1 "Ohio'' It should provide equal time by follow ing Immediately with "The Star1 and-Stripes Forever.'' .l in"<estiga,tion. . • · : A' Ga'.rden ·Grove teenager kid a Costa Mesa, worn:an were also hos~ )a two aeparate accidents pi N:ewport Beac.b over ,the weekend. Wendy Dile, 15, of llOO stanfdn!. AvL received multiple fractu:rllll and a cop-· cussion Fri4ay when the motorcycle oe Which she wu riding swerved to avoid h!Wng a car at Balboa Boulevard ud 17tlt street. ' ' . Mcinturff · received rilibor cuts arid bruises In the mtabap UICI tho drivly of the car received no injuries. • Sherry Goddick!en, 23, of 11111 E. isl!. St., Costa 'Mesa, i1 listod 'In good C<\P' dition at Hoag today alter a crash Salt.Ir· day at the aame intersection. · . She wu a passenger in a vehlole driven by Donald J. Briu.i, 22, of 22.11 Margaret Drive, Newport Bea~ which collided in the intersection with a car driven by La~nce Y. Barnea,. ~. Pomona. .. .. Police sald Vin R. Goddard, 47, Riverside was driving the car. Tbe motorcyCle was driven ,by Rlcb&rd MclntUrff, 18, Anaheim. Miss llil< •P. patently fell into the car w:bep \be billa awerved, according 'to officers. 1 , Army Updating DW: SEOUL (AP) -The United Stat8 has ·agreed that the modemlzaUon <i South Korea'! arined forces .will pnictdi any withdrawal of AmeriCan-~ ·Defense Minister •Jone 'Nae-hluk uid today in a ·report on · hia meettnp ~tn Honolulu last week with ~puty Delen11 Secretary David PllCkud. ' Oruge: .. ~ . · ' ' .c.an ' . The coaltline may fog up durint1 · lite niom!nfliour•. but Tlle'.lla~'i' weather pictur~ should be prettY. . bright otherwise wltlt little temp-' erature change. ~SIDE TOD~l' ·: , • A ,,;.,;i ~· MitroOmphic; 1~1 1 in Newport Beach f'tvtals ~ 1 amau, .mall world oJ, miet0t 1<oplc photogrophv. See a pjcql. of v<lrifi<d pollen !114fl!lififd 2,000 tim.ti. Ste Pag• 1~. .. . • • ' ' ~YORS WILSON OF MESA (LEFT) HIRTH OF NEWPORT PLUNGE INTO FUND RAISING EFFORT Drive St1rttd With • Splash, but Money for New Olympic Pool Is Just Trickllnv In Swimathon Nets $550 in 2 Days For Pool Fund !... 'lbe nlmathon kJcked off Saturday by Mayors Ed Hirth of Newport Beach and Robert Wilm of Colla Mesa contlnue1 today, 41 boon older and IS50 richer. The eveDt at the Newport Beach Swim -~Clllh-.Js.beblg_bold to rabe 1.17,500, one- fourlh of the cost of a 50 meter Olympic- sir..e pool to be built It Newport Harbor lllgb School. The !350,000 project Is 75 perOent funded by th e Newport-Mesa School District and lhe City of Newport l!ach. . Volunt.een are swimming to draw the iiitenu.n of lhe community to t h e 1 r Ci.uie. Tu-deductible donaUons may be 1]ll.iled to Olympic Pool Foundation, P.O. lo.I: I)(), Calta Mesa. C of C Honors Mesa Citizerts . . . \ ~ ' The Costa Mesa Cllamber of Com- merce hu honored three Costa Mesa citizens for their serv1oes to the com- munlly. They we~ awarded special pll· quet at the recent chamber Board of Directors meeUng by prftidenl Gordon Martin. Robert Whitacre, co-owner of Orange Coast Nursery and chamber member, f ,11 cited for his "anlst.ance t.o a fellow ~torllt in distress." Whitacre came (9. the aid of Howard T. Clark of ~and. California, after Clark was Qi.volved in a 011te-car accident. ' The board honored JI.large and Joe ~ of 151 Georgeanne Place, Costa 1*sa, for their parts as co.chairmen of tht Chamber or Commerce booth ft the Orange County £air. The booth -flnl prlu and a cbeck or 125<>. Tyrone Power's Kin Weds Italian Singer CELLINO SAN MARCO, Italy (AP) -Romlna Power, daughter of the late American actor Tyrone Power and ac· tress Linda Christian, has married Al Bano, one 0£ Italy's top pop singers. 'Cle Roman Catholic ceremony took place Sunday in this southern Italian town which was Bano's birthplace. Miss Power Is 19, Bano 27. The bride's mother attended the wedding. ' DAILY PILOT R•9trl N. w ••• '"'tii.trll INI l"YllolhMI" ,J ,,k •. c,,,,. vi. ,.,.....,,_, .... o.M!'•I /ril.....,. Tliero1e1 A. Murpl.i111 M_,lnf l!"lor C..N M ... OHke )JO Weit l1v 5tr11f M•il;q A44r•;•n~O, 101 15•0, •262l r OtW Offtc" ,,........,, IMdi; tl'll Well lelbo1 ,...,._.,,,. Lt""* IMdll m fl"orftl ........... """'""*' l&ldl1 11111 l u cll l•lwt ,. .... t....-i.: ., """"1:1 CMfllN llHI l)All 'I PU.OT. "'1111 Wllldl II Uo'lblM:d "" ..... _,,,_, "' ~.,.... .. .,, t •(OJI! kon- .. , Ill _.,.._ 11'11111111 "" l ...,... l•K"' ........,. a.di. Qol... ~. """'Wot:•~ ~ ... f-Mlfl Vt1"1, ....... •H-1,.. ........ ..ltlloM. °'-C..Jtl """"lt.l'llnf ' ~ ~ "'6tl 1.-. 11 1111 Wttl ...... ,....._ ,.,_, tftOI. ..,. u. w .. 1 ..., llr'Wfl, (MM #.nol, tlll,. Pl f7141 64J.AJ11 ,......., .....,.,.. .. "41·1671 ~ ltllo °"""' c.... Ntllt~lrll '*"""'""' -. -•"''"' IHutttll-....,i.t IN!fW er MMrt!.-" !lttt llll _, .. ... •llCtll 1#1!""1! .,.r.i.t ,.,. ,.... ...... ~ltlll .-. ....... ( .............. ti N....,. ... di .... c.. .. ..,._, c..u ....... , lueK•.-ilM ..., Cffl'IW .... """!Illy/ •r OMll ,, .. '"""'"'''' "'111ttol'f ••Intl..,., n.• -1~1y. City Planners to Delay Land Rezoning Petition A rezoning petition for la..ct on which a 100-unit apartmellt complez is en- visioned goes berore the Costa Mesa Planning Comml~IOR tonight, but a delay will be imposed on a permit for the Btructure it.self. Planning commissioners will convene at 7:30 p.m. to consider recommer.dlng action on the project at 140 W. WilMln St., but the city staff wull them to hold oU on the zone exception permit. The 2.40 acre project is proposed by L.B. Frederick.sand L. C. Miller. A total of 11 it.ems -mostly zone exceptioR permit applications such as lhat submitted by Fredericks and Miller -are on the agenda for tonight's meeting. One sought by Michael D. Kay o( 400 N. Newport Blvd., Newport Beach, would allow construction o( a com- bination office building and storage garage at 1648 to 1652 Newport Blvd., in lhe downtown area. Another requested by Molll'Oe E. Bounds of 19001 Summerfield Lane, Hun-· tlngton Beach, would allow a temporary bumper car ride to be set up in Costa Mess's Harbor Shopping center. The promotional venture to be located at 2300 Harbor Blvd., would be limited to a 90-day period. ~esa 'Eagle Food' Tanks Approved by Councilmen A negotiated contract for a 10,0l)O. eaHoo fuel tank at the new Costa Mesa Police Department heliport, cuWng the bull< coet of fu<l by a large saving. was approved Monday by lhe clly toon· di. 'Ibe low bid cl $8,275 was submitted by Donald F. Bortman, after dty officials From Pqe 1 FREiWAY .•. Monica city line. "Ecological and enviroMlental factors are being studied now in relation to scenic lreeways," Badham said. He said bills to delete portions of freeways are not without precedent, that coast freeway through Redondo Beach and Manhattan Beach was deleted several years ago, and that four other freeway deletion bills are pending in this session "Of the legislature. The worry of the oppos\lion Js that passage of the Badham blll would cause indefinite postponement of construcUon of any segment of the coast freeway and also that it could result in the freeway realignmeni through other cities. The present route, adopted by the St3te Highway Commission in 1963, sweeps from an inland Huntington Beach alignment to the coast through Newport Beach just in1and o( Pacilic Coast Freeway and along 5th Avenue in Corona del Mar before bending back inland of Laguna Beach. The Badham bill does not call for rerouting or specify an altemaUve route. But by cutting out just that segment from Beach Boulevard to Corona del Mar It suggests the possibility of adding extra lanes to the future route 39 freeway (paralleling Beach Boulevard) and the San Diego Freeway past Costa Mesa, with the future Corona del Mar Freeway along MacArthur Boulevard to be bent eastward toward a tie In with the Coast Freeway toward Laguna Beach. French Fries Get Girl in Dutch French fried potaloe."i nonnally cost about 2S cent! per order, but a Costa Mesa teenager's recipe ran up to about SJ ,200 Saturday when it caught her kitchen on fire. Chris Ryan. 14, ol. 3352 Alabama Circle, escaped injury wben fat she was usinit ignited and names spread trom the stove to lhe kitchen cablnets. COSta Me!a Flrt Department Baltallon Chief Ron Coleman uJd the girl was iryin,g potatoes About 1 p.m. Saturday when the accident occurred. Fire damage was confined to the ldtchen area, but smoke 1pread through· out the home causing damage to the othtr rooma as well, firemen uld. appn>adled his !inn and one other when no one applied for the assignment the first time around. Originally a ~,000.gallon facility, doubl- ing the size will cut the cost of fuel delivery by about 11 cents per gallm. The larger tank will hold. eoough to keep the two new ~ Mesa police helicopters supplied ror three moot.hs at a time and Chief Roier Neth slr~ water condemation would be no problem. Councilman Willard T. Jordan had ex· p~ concern that the larger tank might. lead lo dropl~ o( water in the 20-gaUon heU"°""'r tanks and possible engine failure . · A contract for the helipad illel! was awarded two weeks ago and the two choppers will J>e Sllfted to a home ba,,e at 99 Fair Drive from Orange County Airport when it is all completed. 'Welc ome Mat' May Be Put Out In Costa Mesa Costa Mesa may be getting a set of welcome mats at the city's main entrances. nie Costa Mesa Chamber of Com· merce established a Front Door Com· mlttee at the &:>ant of Dirtctors' Thurs. day meeting to study costs and possible sites for enlrance markers. They could be anything from a "We.lcome to Costa Mesa" sian to an elaborate dr\VNay Ot fountains and flowers. The city engineer's office classifies 12 streets as being main entrances to the city. City Planning Director William Dunn reporl.I lhat_a_ study was onct undertaken to build Something for the city entrance, but "it never got past the artist's conception stage. ·'The whole matter will have to be brought before the city Council again," Dunn said. Board member Mrs. Lucy Pinkley in- troduced lhe mo!ioa":!o set up the com· mittee. She showed the board a sketch of an elaborate enlran<:t once proposed by former city manafer Robert Unaer. The 00.rd tel up the ad hoc committee to work on a proposal for 11.1bmisaion to the city council. S1nall Bomb Explodes NEW YORK (UPI) -A small bomb czploded In the heart of Manhattan'& llnanclel district early today sllatterlng windows of a branch of the Bank of America. . . (.,.. Dogfigbt Over Suez Israeli Jet,s Shoot pown ~gyp~!f:n MIGs BJ UolW Pnll Jollni-,ohouted 1lopol qllul Em>tfm Pr.al-wlU ctti<m\bii. the fif.i cl lht Pa!<JUnl1n llraell jel fllh...., allot down ·two .dent Cami! Abdel Nwer and King people." • . ' Eaptian MIG17 jell today m an aJr .Hussein of Jord~ lt was the first How there ~could be a "tase-fire lR battle over the Suez Canal a military Arab· demon.tration •g•imt t h e the face of the Palestlnlan opposiUon ,apokmnan said ln Tel AvtV: The brief American propo.sala:. remaine<J. to be :see.I\. .1ordan's acceptance but furious 'dogfight came as each 'iide Among~ crowd were guerrlllat wea,. of the U.S. peace plan specifically ex· sent planes across the canal In a new lng a.nm in contrayel)Uoa of • .July eluded the guerrllla.s who have vowed escalaUon of lhe confilct. ~ ~ment ballJlinC anns-c&rfYinl In to fight forever to "liberate" Palestine. Israel's hawkish Gahal Party met The nations supporting Nasser . '!'ere 1'le demontsratora cblnted "Abdel Jordan, Kuwait, Sudan and Lebanon . !hroughout the day to try to find some Na"' th rd" d 1 • r, e cowa an carr ed a· Syria and Iraq not only reject'4~ the way o( agreeillg on the U.S. Mideast placard r~ading, ".We will ch&n&e the proposal but filled Uae airwave.11 ti;ld.ay peace proposal al'ld Israel's reply -area into hell If a settlement la lrqpoae<I ." with anti-American, anti.Jarael and. b" upected to be a sharp!" CondiUonal Ano"·· 'd "The f •• ' J 1.nci-w , guns o our ~'llhters implication, some antl·EgypUa11 blasts. acceptance -was expected later in U:e week. The Arab world divided sharply on lhe issue and 15,000 Palestlnlan "1\ler· rillas, "Ome pl lhe.m armed, demonstrated in the 1treet1 of Amman agalmt a cease-rite and agalnat Presi· dent Gamal Abdel Nawr mi Kiag Hussein. An Israeli military spokesman said Israeli antiaircraft gunners hit a third MJG17 but dJd not see it crash. He saJd the dogfight developed When Egypt tried to raid targets on the Israeli side of the canal for the second lime today. The interceptors swarmed in and quickly downed two of the raiders, he said. All Israeli planes returned safe)y, :>e said. , The laraell raict, against ~typt fllltked the 67th couecutive day of strikes againat Egyptian artillery sites ~and missile bases. 1.sr.,ael· said 0 several" Egyptian planes ralded on the east side of the canal in the moinlng in the first such Egyptian attack in weeks. Four laraeli soldiers were re~ woun-ded. . -•. With the Arab world shaJ\'ly .split on the U.S. peace proposals, Jli'ihdad radio unowiced that Sldanl Huaeln TaJriU, vice .hairmsn or .U\e ruling Revolution Command c.oancil! 'ii.a 1>een invited to Moscow. Polllkal aohrce..said Rus~a may be tryln1 to ini-11,}l'aq's vociferous opposltioft.to tbe··~11»an. · The Arab work! w41 aill · '~aitirig Israel's reply to tlie q.s. ~:propo1al but Tel Aviv dispatches· ~ted it would be a qualified acct'ptanCe. ordan accepted It but Syria, Iraq indltlie Arab guerrllla orguh.a.tions fe.1e9ted it as some sort of llWTellder. ' ,. Israel was reporteit wW~ tp. accept the U.S. plan for peace ·t.&lb · provkled there is a guarantee that Egypt will not use the three--month ceaae-fire to build up Its Suez Canal line • .The Israeli cabinet met Sunday but was too divided to make a public statement. Another cabinet meeUng was called for Tu~y. The Arab guerrillu ""wen IO angry lhey paraded tbroulh An\man and Hi~hhik~1ig· Girl • Molested Near Emerald Bay A teenage girl hitchhiker was molested at knife point near an Emerald Bay entrance Friday night and was struck on the mouth when she protested. Laguna Police Lt. John Zelko said the 19-year-<ild Garden Grove girl was given a ride in Newport Beach by a man about 25 years old. His sun visor bore the worda "hot stuff." He purchased a !Qfl drink for her in the vicinity of Scotchman's Cove and later stopped near the main gate at E:nerald Bay claiming he was going to check his car. Zelko said the man put a knife against the girl's neck and told her "be a ni.ce girl and move over ." When she protested, the man struck her In the ·face, released her and drove away. The Incident was the latest of several In which men have molested girls who were hitchhiking in the area. Upper Bay Land Exchange Battle Renewed in Court Claims that nearly fl,000 feet of ocean frontage will be lost to the public II the Upper Newport Bay land· swap goes through were renewed in court today as the SuperJ.?r Court trill of the land e:s:· crum1e· i!llUe .resumed alter a twe>-Wtek lay off.i'" 1~., 1< AttorJi!Y" Philip , Berry uked Orange Coonly ,l!orbor District eqlneer James Ballinget to Coonrm a lt,itement that became ~ batUi~ of aemantici between the wi~. and a New~ Beach bome- ownen' representative. Bantoter lnslsted upon" definll>g front. age as beach property which has "support areas and is capable of being developed.'" Berry asked the en,uieer to offer bis ... testimony in the light of frontage as de- fined by Webster's dictionary. , Kuyper submitted his request for fur- lher UtgaUon against the ll'\line Company after Newport Beach residents were asked to supply 'his office with all in- formation in their possession regarding: public access to the land swap area. ReXction. F)'iday ~ to the charge by Supervisor R<!lieri BalUn· tl!l);lhe lrvfne Compaqy h8jf conl!•ilt°" "lo:;frou<f on the poblic oripoo;OQI).": · ~-· · it .. 'Battin P\11 !Mt c,fah value CID ~-he said wu a m.uvepr~ntation by t» Ir· ~ine Company ~ ~t 12 acres of land in the thrte UJ>Rtt ·Bay islands. He put a·.caah vatue of :SlOO,Mtl an acre ·oo tha t terrain. . .,....,. Santa Aoon ii e'ld ' F olJ-Owing Brawl t • ~ ') At ,Mesa Tavern Ballinger conceded, using Berry's def-· iniQon, that. the Itvine Company dJd not ·: list "a minimum of 5,600 feet of f>ublic A sa·nta Ada man was arrelted Sun,.day access" when It ap?lled to · the state nigh~ and ·.a reatde.nt o( the same apart· Lands Commission for endorMmeflt of the ~ent~ co~pl~ was given 22 sti\Cbes Upper Bay Janel swap. Jn his forehead after a Costa Mesa And Ballinger confirmed perry•s state-lavem fight following a pool game. ment that the seven areaa of Upper Ronald J. Onken of 20341 S. W. Cypress Newport Bay which make up the 5,600 Ave . was treated at Costa Mesa feet "will be forever lost 'lo public use" Memorial Hospital after being struck if the land trade Is conflnned by the in the head with a broken pool cue. courts. Police arrested James B. Forguson, At iasue as the trial enters its third 47, of the same S. W. Cypress Ave. week is the lrade of ~ acres of Irvine address, on suspicion of assault with uplands for 157 acres of county~wn.911 a deadly weapon. tidelands and the constldonality of the investigators said the men were proposed e.xchang~. ,~ • . pla~g ~I at the Tin L~ie, 752 St. ~~ Irv{n&:qrange Codnty deal was 4 ClaJr St; -when an argument develoPed endorled by lhe State Lands Commission ar'ld Onken was Smashed in the' heod. In November, 1917 after approval.by lhe 1be victim said he had helped break county board of 19pervison. up a · fjpt earlier and took away one It was challenged by agreement be-half or .a brok~n pool cue away from tween the ~nty and the Irvine Company one .o! ~-co~batant.s. wben they sued county auditor Vic ' Helm UnfOrtunately,•·pollce said, he didn't for his agreed refusal to pay s dred(ing get the other ball. bill submitted to him by the Irvine Com· pany. But the lawsuit became an adversary action when a group of homeowners Jed by Newport Beach engineer Frank Rolr inson joined' the complaint 'as intervtnors and accused the Irvine Company or omit- ting vital data pertaining to public access when the company made its represent a- tions before the State Lands Commlssion. In any event, Berry arguell, the land swap is unconstitutional aince it involves the trading to a private corporaUon of tidelands which becam~ permanent public 'J>roperty when the state of California deeded them to Orange County 40 years ago. An attempt to authorize new litigation against the Irvine Company in connection with the land swap fa iled Friday when the board of supervisors voted l to 2 to reject that suggestion from the county counsel's office. Three members of the board refused to further consider County Coumel Adrian Kuyper's suggestion "that there probably are public prescriptive rights over much of the privately owned land adjacent to the Upper Bay and including the two northerly islands in the bay." Dog in Vietnam Infecting Gls? · Pl'. MCPHERSON, Ga. (UPI) -A big dog that hung around a processinj: center in South Vietnam may have ex· posed to rabies 127 soldiers now stationed in the southeast, Third Army head· quarters warned today. The men went through the processina: center at Bien Hoa during the period from July 10-21. A "black-mouthed solid-tan colored, long-haired , collie-like dog'' hur'lg around the processing center during that time and if he licked any of the men who had a skin scratch or bite, he may have infected him with rabies, the Army said. , The dog died July 22 and laboratory tests confirmed that he had rabies. IUY WHERE 1rs MADE SAVE UP TO Wla TRADE-IN Announcing a new breakthru in UPHOLSTERED FUR N'I TUR E TOUR OLD FUlNITVll ON NEW LlllRAL ALLOWANCES Fram Ovr Show Room. o.. w.·11 Custom lulld Te ":(our Order • ALSO CUSTOM R!UPHOLSTUING RuffelJ '1 menufecture1 #!• finest furnitur• you will find anywh•r•. You 1ee it •nd 1elnct It ti9hf in aur 1howroom. Pey UP. lo so -;.: I••• ++inn reteil. Che><11• from •n unlimited ••lee• tion of f•bric1. Custom chenq•• ere •lso pos1ibl .. • ALL woa• •UAUNTlll' POI THI LIFITIMI O' ,AllUC 1'22 HARBOR BLVD. • COSTA MESA OR CALL FOR APPOINTMENT • 548.0259 : ..• 1. ..... ' ID f • .. • I .. l fl l ,. w. '" "' ,. • ~ • a a ii; fl ' Qj ' (l II 8 II l:U(3 po l " E 1: " ' ff 01 " •• Ci • " . .. At ~-a ' . ·: I[ i:. Ci ~· fl Ci (l .e *e :T II ~ e , .. " •• I I"";, G 6: • • I ; -I G Q ... • E ' • ' ;1 " • 1; c ;! • • ·= c ~:.I ·: . I I ,,., .. ' • • I • ' I I " • I ' ~ I I 1:915 l ;DO ..,. I . ' I L ( J8 tAJLV PILOT Mo~. July 27, 1970 • • MONDAY JULT r1 Ballet Director Sir -Ashton Retires · LONDON (AP) -S I r ~rick Ashton, who Is retiring as director of the Royal Ballet, made a personal reappearance as a dancer this week at Covent Garden. In Eduador In 1906. He saw London to prQduce many Anna Pavlova dance in tile ballets witb Dame Marie. Teatro MunicipaJ in Lima "Dame Marie wu always wben be was 11 years old there with her humor, her -and knew the baMet was enthusiasm . ., ber help," Albton to be the love of his life. says. ••These were my happy He tried his hand at com· days.·• Ashton recalls a merce when he left school, working ror a Britisb iron and ballerina named P e I g y steel export firm , but lost the Hookham, whom h e en· company a small contract, countered some time laler: andquit. "She was stubborn, Darr.~ Marie Rambert, one unyieJdln.g, but musical. She of the great figures 1n British ' , ... ,_ ............... -.. -----... IOlftlS SID9S ._., ....... it__.. ..... •1t·--- He apptared with Britain's other knight of the ballet, Sir Robert Helpmann, in ''Cin- derella," one of Ashton'• own ballets. Ashton wu t b e Pathetic Ugly Sister and Helpmann the Domineering Ugly Sisler. Ashton and Helpmann first dance these roles, wlgar but very runny, in IMS, and have -delighted audiences with them at intervals ever since. ballet, saw promise in Ashton, thought I was mad. Ooe di)' NO ONI UNDIR 11 ADMrTTID 5HOWN .t: 11JD -J :H -1:1t 7:ot -1:90 -11:4t and Jet him choreograph "A at rehearsal I had been ex- Tragedy or Fashion," a erting h~r too much. She rush-I'=:=:===:::=:=:=:=:=:==::=::=::==:=::=::=:::==::===! sophisticated revue ballet. .ed across the room and burstlr He joined the Ida Rubinstein into tean on my shoulder. . Fa5te5t in West company in Paris in 1927 and Buy IL Sell It. Try the fastest response In lhe'West against YOYf TECHMoot.Olt' _,.. 2 ACADIMY AWAlDI wtNNll "IT'S TOUGH TO BE A BIRD'' -"- TUESDAY m .... •.-1'""""''" -Eric Port11t1n, Grltl liJllf, Ot1111tt Price. 1 :00 8 '"rllt MM ii H.tf lllMfl S1rtlll"' (mysltlJ) '.(4 -Nill Asthtr, H• Wilker. DAmME MOVIES m 1., Hit" (mwiul comlQ) ·~ -Fred Mflire, liln1tr llorlrs. Edwlrd Ewtrltt tlortol. l'.JO D <tl .... ci.en.. W' Cwtll· 2·00 a.,,. .... .....-. <OOIMdf> •m) '5Z -Audi• M11rphf, 'hi«• ' 'Si -Slllll" 8ootll, Shil'ler M1to Dupy, 8mrtY l)lrtr. lamt. f:Cll 8 (C) "'Miik fil'I"' (mnicll) '51 m ..._ IWNf" (dr1111t) 'U -l°*!M Oitlrio, C.l1ol Tholnp--atadl bifta. Qloril ffollhn, IOfl, Riii Sam. 4~ 8 (C) ....,. 11 .. ...... 1:• l!l "IM .... (ltlftll) '50-Jld: (wtltm.1.: -FrM ltttcMtmr, ,_, Mtlion lrltldo. .Mt W JDllll ErbN. . . For Top Sports C.Overage Read the DAILY PIWT Ashton, who has 30melhi.ng ol the traditional Spanish grandee about him, was born toured European capitals for I realiud I had miSUDderstood .1 own clock. est Dime-a-Mn. Ads, whert the action ls, in Satun:la(s 1 year before returning to her. She was sensitive and DAILY PILOT. "SWISS fAMM.Y ROllNSON" ' CONTINUOUI Rod Serling Likes Being on .Sidelines proud, and unhappy not tol";;;=:=s================~ meet my !lightest re-1: DAll.Y'flOM 2 P.M. HOIL YWOOD (AP) -Rod Serling .says he is more or less on the sidelines of televJsion now, and prefers it that way, but : -He will be the author and host of a collection or eerie tales on ''NlgJ!t Gallery ," a segment al NBC's "Four-In-One." -He is adapting "A Storm in Summer," which won an Emmy as the best dramatic show last se:uont as a Broadway musical. S t e v e Allen is writing the music. -He is a much-in-demand voice and perfonner on com~ merclals. The day after this interview he new to San Frap. cisco to appear in a n automobile commercial. Serling, the most honored writer in television, says he likes being on the periphery because "yoc. don't have to worry about ratings. And every now and then I'm brought in off the shelf like a nasonably valuable an- tique." Serling, a smaU, thin man baked brown by the California sun, won five Emmys for original drama and a sixth for an adaptation of a John O'Hara short story. He also won the Peabody and Sylvania awards. "I used to be ooe of those Irascible, angry young men," he said, perennially com- plaining about the medium and the """""'1!p. "But I'm middle-aged now. I'm waiting for the neit generation of angry young men." Serllng said be regrets the passing of original drama. "In content it was a country mile higher than the present," he said. "We failed often, but we tried." In 1959 he created the highly successful ''Twiligbt Zone.'' which brought him two E~ mys, and later "The Loner,'' starring Lloyd Bridges, which did not last Jong. "I did the pilot for an ABC sbo·.~; last season, 'The New People,' which they carved up like beef," Serling s84d. "I'm not cut out for series television. J can't create anything except anthology. Which make s. me an anacronism since anthology is out now.'' In the new seasoD Serling will get some fraternal com· petition on "Four·ln-One." His brother, Bob, a well-known aviation writer and author of "'Ibe President's Plane ls Missing," is technical adviser to "San Francisco Interna- tional." "I ha~ a book coming out the same time as 'The President's Plane Is Missing," Rod said. "His sold 11,000 and mine,. 'A seaaon to be Wary,' sold 3,000. I said the iJI.. tellectual never"·wins." quirement. "From that day, there has been complete understandinc between us." fte .world knows Peggy Hookham now as Dame Margot Fonteyn, ln all, he created more than 40 ballets for it. Ashton's retirement from the company does not mean he plans a sedate life. He is creating l h e choreography for a film or Beatrix Potter n u r s e r y classics. Soon ht wUI go to Bonn to product! Beelhoven's only ballet, "Prometheus," as part of the Beethoven 200th birthday celebratioM. Toastmasters Fill Billets Newly elected officers of the Newport Beach chapter of T o astmasters International were recenUy tnstaJled at a banquet held at Huntington Harbor's Whistling 0 y s t er restaurant. Guiding the speech makers In 1970-71 will be K a r I Barnum, president: Dav I d Wells, administrative v l c e president; Bob J a nus k a, t!ducational vice pr6ident; Bill Gurr, treasurer. and Terry Montgomery, public relat- ions. All are residents of Newport Beach. The speaking "enthusiasts meet every Thursday at 7 a.m. in the Blue Dolphin restaurant. Mootgomery aaid guests are welcome. NOW PLAYING Only on Cablevision ffSon of the Sheik," starrilg Rudolph \{ilentino. t-EWPORT: Man.. Fri. at 9 PM; also Sat. Sn .t 6 PM. MISSION VE.JO: Mon,.~ Fri. at 9 PM. NMr before on Vkst Co.st TV: the orisiNI, lllOlt dmic. NOW !lAY1N0: "The GOkl Rush" w~h Cha~ie ChaPin e ..... -· c•1 ''"•• C4 HJ->t•t Installation · $14.95 Monthly S.rvico Char ... $6..50 Enjoy 20 Channel TV Fo• Only 22\ltc '°' l?•Y· "THERE 'S MORE TO SEE ON CAILE TVI" o ~ICJ\Jll,;... .#AJMN SfsERG ~!-~~--- DIRECT FROM ITS . EXCLUSIVE RESERVED-SEAT EJIGAQEMENT ••• CONTINUOUS PElfORMANCES AT POPIUll PRICES! "A Big Musical Hit-. In The Winner's Corner!" -.t.ACHU WINSTON. H•• ,._,. l'tlil "Hilarious And Entertaining. In 'The Stream Of 'Sound Of Music'!" °'-JOY'~ KU£1t, LM "" ...... TIMa ~· "A Big Bawdy Rip-Roaring Musical! Howlingly Funny! See It!" "I -WAHOA HAlC. II T ~Ill' N.- 1!1!11 ----.::::.-. -'-=== . . . • • ' I I Premie~e Ora119e County Enga~ement RATED Gp,__IT'I POI ALMOST' IVl•YIODY MATINEES DAILY Direct from -Its Sensotional Reserved Seat En9a9eritent ·NOW! AT B.OTH EDWARDS' CINEMAS At Popular Prices . EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT GRAND OPENING OF THI ALL NIW ILl6ANT • llAUTIFUL CINEMA WEST #2 Today's .Stocks Today I 13 • • • • • • MondQ, J111J 27, 1970 SC DAILY PILOT j f Monflay's Cl0sing Prie~Complete New York Stock' Excliange List American Stock Exchange List S.i.t Ntl (ltdf.) Hltll l tw C1'N Cll .. l ilt• "'' t...._J Mlflil' UW CllW CJlt. 11~ . , :JfJl~n'o0$t 11 -_.... WVlt L•ft '\to ..... Y•ftl llld UI """' Y•!tJ ll'd wt ln + ~ YoN. Rt~ .Ill 4 + \\ Zero Ml9 .JO l~-·:. ZlmrHom ,7f tV. + ,, Zion FooctJ lV. -t'< 10 ll'h ' "' ' . ,. ,." 10 t~ f!'o ... ,h 91' -'• '" • ~+ 1~ 1'\ + '• ,..., -'·" f'' + '• ,.. ,,; +·v. •\II -~. •v. .... 25 ••• ' ~-\~ 11:\.0 -\~ 1 + .• '" _,,, '™' -\~ ·~ -"" " 17 • • m + '·' 1 -·~ 7l _,., lt\(o -~. IN -•--.. 14 -'• 1~ + " !'> -I• ..... 5"' .. '• • ...., -\o H ~· (ft .... ""' -., ~-'' 11 -'• 1''> .+-., '""" ~ '•. •· 1 ·· .... ,,,. '• 5~ -'4 '" 1 " lN 111 .. ~ 314 + ·~ ll~ + (0 .... ' -V> .. ~h -'• I'°\ + ~ 11"'-... :i.i.,-~ 51.'J + '" lOV. -·~ 3i., + 1, l7Y. + "" ' -·· l'4 -·-· l H• + '• 51!; -'• l~~ +· .... 5\'J + lo 2114 -~· ll~• + '• . " 1} '"" ' 17'• ' ,. Disabled Man Runs Business WICHITA , Kan. (AP) Don "Taco Pele'' Peters never went to high school and st the age of 37 is so crippled by multi ple sclerosis that he can move nolhing but hi.I head. He might strike you as an unlikely prospect for 1uccts1 in lhe·business world, but his mot lo is 1• A guy can do anything he sets his mind to do" -and in his case , It works. Peters dropped out of school after the eighth grade, spent some time in the Anny and later went to work in lhe construction industry. By 1960 he had developed advanced symptoms or m u l tipl • sclerosis -a hardening of the tissues -and beca me totally disabled in 1965 al the age of 32. But with the help of his family and friends he ha~ developed a chain of Ll restaurants called ' ' T a c o Pete .'' The restaurants are in Wichita . Dodge City, Pittsburgh and Arkansas City, Kan .. and Tulsa. Okla. Peters opened the first in 1967 with an investment or only $10,000. .. We saved a lot oC money." he explains, "by do in c everything our s e l ves - designing our own places, building and renovating· equip- ment. even maki ng up our o"'n insignia and brochures.'' Peters depends on his wife, Marge. and friends to write down or sketch his ideB.S, to try out his new recipes, and even to bathe, dress, shave and feed him. Drug Firm R elocates To Ne,vport Shareholder.s o( Newport P b a r m aceuticals Internao tional, Inc. have approved relocation ol corporate head- quartt-rs to Newport Beach 1rom Salt Lake City, Ut.a~ a fon ·ard split o( common stock on a tw~for-one basis and a quAlified stock optlott plan lor th flrm's key per!On> nel. The company also att nounced it has reached agreements in principle wflll several major fore I gr p ha rmaceutlcal companll!f and reported on tut r~ull! of one of iu dru1 1, lsopM"°"lne (NPlll), t r ! t J J 0 ii 0 ti c g • h u p a ti 11'. l l ot eo on u gi• m1 bo I In lal l'l;J to pu tol ... •Ir IOI ~ In Wt • ...-.. .. -----• To••Y'• Final N.Y. Stoeb ·-. ' vot:. 63 , NO. 178, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAG ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY·27, '1970 TEN CENTS .. / Tate M.urders Witness Tie-up Tried LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Defense l1wyers for 1 Charles Manson and three female memberi of his "family" tried today to blOck lestbwny by the pro- secution's only alleged eyewitness to the Sharon Tate murdtrs. Prior to the opening of the morning &USion, Attorney Paul FiUgerald told newsmen that as soon as Unda Kasabian, 20, 'lakes the stand, he · would ask the judge to delay her testimony. Fltqen.ld said the defense would ask ,. ' the · judge to grant them acces!I to st.atementa Mts. Ku.abJan, a co-deleD- dant turned state's witness, had already made to the prosecuUon. He said the defense was unable to prepare its case without knowing what Mrs. Kasabian, who will be granted lmmunllf for telling her story, had told the district attorney's office in private meetings. · William Garretson, 19; told the jury in the trial'a.. opening testiipony that he was awakened at dawn but heard no shots, screa:ns, or loud noises in his buhgalow which .is lc:>Glted. on the other side · or the swimming pool from the main residence. Garretson said he first teamed or . the killings of Miss Tate and four olhers when police burst into his coll.age with drawn guns the nei:t morning. He was at first charged with suspicion of murder in the slayings but later released. Mrs. Kasabian, wbo lived with the ;". DAILY l'IL.OTj ..... ~ tlclllnl KMlli.r;• , ANGELS OWNER GENE AUTRY PLAYS 'HOST TO NATION'S NO., 1 BASEBA~L FAii After Tr•veling West. Pr~1ident ·W1tche1 Wild and Woolly Contest With FOrmtr Cowboy Star . Pitcher Tries Catching- Guards NixonFrom ·F ouls The Sercel Service· had Some prD- fessional, If nervous, assistance, in guarding the President at "the Sunday basebaD slug£est in Angels Stadium, Anaheim. Pat Rogan, Angels' batting practice pitcher, was seated in front of the PreSi· dent to guard against the possibility of a foul ball beaning the nation's most Important baseball fan. "When I.bey asked (Ile to sit in front of the President,'' said Rogan. "I told them they were taking a t~mendous chance with my hand ." The 11-lnning game. with the Washington Senators which the Angels won 11·10, lasted three hours and S6 minules and Ni.Ion went the distance~ -· Rogan said he was amazed al. the Presidenl's knowledge or the players and the game . "He talked to me quite a bit during the game ," sa.ld the pitcher. "He asked me some questions and discussed the strategy, lhitigs 11ike that. It was quite an honor." Rogan said the Pres ident told him he never leaves be1ore the end of a game. The guardian pitcher seemed re·· :·;ed when it 'Was all over and there had been no fouls hit in the direction of the President. A sidelight of the 32-hit game wa s a mad dash bY, youngsters each half inning to the Presidential box to have Nixon autograph programs, baseball gloves and rented seat cushions. The smiling President kept obligin" until play was resumed. Then Secrel Service bodyguards would shOQ away youngslcrs until lhree more batters were out. · Nii:on arrived by~helicopter and orange golf cart and joined Mr. and Mrs. Gene Autr y. The former cowboy movie star Is one of the major owners of the Angels. The President told him he was ''lorn between the two teams but tried to remain neutral." Nixon Summons' Defense Leaders For Top Meeting President Nixon · summoned Defense Secretary . Mel~in R. Laird and Deputy Secretary David Packard to meet with him in San Clemente today to consider reshuffling lhe Pentagon, now under fire for heavy cost overruns. . The conference is one or a string of meetings at the Western White House designed to reshape tbt massive Defense Department and -set priarities for the 1972 budget. . Dr. Henry A. Kioin1er, national security affairs advissr, also will sit in on the meetlngi;. Nixon and his advisers will have before them a far-reaching report by a blue ribbon panel on Defense Department reorgan ization headed by Gilbert W. Fitzhugh, Chairman oC lhe board of Atetropolitan L I f e Insurance Co. The year-long study will be made public Tues· day . The President also was expected to discuss strategy for obtaining , Senate approval or the $11:5 blllion defense !See NIXON; Par• I) County Firm • Ill • hippie C11tt al Ille SPIM Rond> commuoe at the time or the five kUUnp It the Tate home Incl two othehi at Ille boole or grocer L e n o LaBia!nce bu b e e n isolated from lhe oihn' defendants Ind kept under special guard pending b e r lestlmony. Deputy Dlstrlci Attorney Vincent T. Bugliosl said in his opening slatf!llent. that Mrs. Kasabian actually saw ttiree killings at the estate rented by Roman Polanski, the movie director husband ol tbe blonde actress. Buallosi uld she wilneued lhe killings of coffee heiress Abigail Folger, Polish writer Voltych Frykowski and 18-year-oJd Steven P1unt, who bad been vlsiUng young Garretson. Their bodies were found outside the home. Miss Tate and hair styllsl Jay Sebring wett killed inside the r,Blllbling ranch home. Mrs. Kasablan Wil said by the atate to have driven members of the "family" the DUI nllbt to the LaBlanca home and ected aa a lookout tbert. BuaJloal said Man.son ordered her and othen ol bi.s cult to carry out a killlnc at 1 third home that same Dilbl ol Aug. t in tbe beach front commuotty of Venice, bol, he aald, Mn. KWblln delibttately thwarted It by lmockinl on the Wr"Onl apartnent door. On trial with Minson are Sua&n Alkllis, Patricia Krenwlttkel and. Leslie Van Houten. Hair Appeal Due? Secret Saddleback · Session Set Saddleback C.Ollege trustees will hold a closed executive session at their meeUng tonight to discuss a recent court ruling that their long hair ban violates students' constitutional rights. A spokesman for the college said the issue "might come up~' during the public meeting, but would be discussed in detail during the executive session with Deputy County Counsel John Powell, who has represented ·the board during the ex· tended legal battle over the.hair length. Powell said last wetk, "there's a good chance trusteu will want to appeal" the decision handed down by U.S. Dist Judge Harry Pregerson. · The court decision held that rules against loag hali were arbitrary, and tha t the Constitution forbids elected representatives from malting . arbitary regulations. The ·meetlng begins at 7:45 p.m. In other matters, the board will be asked 1.9 approve a ,recommendation. from college Superintendent President Fred H. Bremer to cfirnge the ' nime of the dislrict · W>, Saddlebac). ·Commun It y College District. · Countians Flood Selt8te For Badham B .. ill Vote • .I ) j 'I ·-·-.... I ' '' • ~' ! J. I ~ ' I .fl ' Ii. I ' II)' THOMA! FOitTUNE Of .... .,..~ l'llft ...... ' S~ORAMENTO ;_ 'S1l9ires1t1!n for city ' ' and county government, hqmeowner and· .landowner interesti we re in ' tbe slete ~apitol today for whpt :<'fas shaping up as perhaps the key vote on a blll to i:irevent construction of Pacific Coal!lt Freeway through · NewpOrt Beach and part o( Huntington, Beach .. A hearing be fore the S e n a t e Transportation Committee was set for later today. Assemblyman Robert Badham (R~ Newport Beach), the author of the bill. said this morning prospects looked good but he wasn't outright predicting the seoete committee would reconr.nend the bill for passage. He said the vote would not be unanimous. The bill, which previously passed the ' state assembly 46 lo 6, would delete . from the state freeway system the Pacific Coast Freeway route ·between Beach Boulevard in Huntin¢.on Beach and the eastern Newport Beach city limits at Corona de! Mar. · · Badham said, "Half of Orange County is up here lobbying in tbe rear of the senate ri ght now.'' Indeed there were many delegation!! both for and against the freeway but they appeared to be doin~ more spec- tati"ng than lobbying. · Prl!sent to argue against the freeway route were Newport Beach Vice Mayor lfoward Rogers: Marshall Duffield , Paul Gruber and John MacFaden ; Robert Curci and John Store of the Corona del Mar United Homeowners As.!OCiation. Ready to testify in favor of retaining the route were Jim Wheeler, Huntington Beach Cha:TJbe of Commerce's transportation committee: -Gordon Jones and Dr. Thomas Ashley of . the Irvine Company; Hancock "Bill Banning 111 Trouble ' ' 'I ind .John . Haskell:'lol -'1.td.""i,rp' lando~er In the Weol NrtrpOrt ;4ft11 ' Schel!ul<d lo opeok ·Ii! oppoalilpn 'lAter !Oday w.re Lagwia· !llaCil C1t1 M11111er James,Whe~t911, plus,Cofita M~sa Mayor Robert M. Wllson mid ,l)Uy Ai\o'll•Y Roy June. ' · ·.. · l · • The lineup pit.s Newport Beach in· terest.s standing alone against the com· bined oppoait.ion of representaU\leS or . Costa Mesa, HuntVirton Beach, Fountain Valley, Laguna Beach, and the county of Orange. Chairman of the Senate Transportation Committee Sen. Randolph Colliir (D- Yreka) was not available for comment prior to the hearing bu.t is kno.wn to oppose int_erven~on by the legislature in freeway alignments adopted ·by the highway commission. However, the Senate · Transportation CommiUee just one week ago una11imous-- ly recommended deletioit of a segment of the coast freeway through Ventce, between ·Marina Del Rey an·d 'the Santa Monica city line. "Ecological and environmental factors are ~ing studied now in relation to scenic freeways," Badham said. He said ' bills to delete portions of freeways are not without precedent, that coast freeway through Redondo Beach and Manhattan Beach was . deleted several years ago, and that four . other freeway deletion' bills are pending in thls session of the legislature. The worry of the opposition Is that passage of the Badham bill would cause indefinite postponement of ~nstruction of any segment of the coast freeway and also that it could result in the Creeway.realignment through other cities, The present route, adopted by the State Highway Commission In 1963, sweeps from an inland Huntington lJeach alig nment to the coast through Newport Beach just inland of Pacific Coast Freeway and along 5th Averiue i'n Cotofl.a del Mar .before bending. back inland of Laguna Beach. The name has been Saddleback Junloi' College District, but under a new ata~e law, the name change can be made. The board will be given a report concerning acereditation of the college next fall . A group of accreditors from the state will evaluate tbe ·college for, three days and then report their findings. Accreditation spans one to three yeara. depending on the conclusions of the group. Trustees are et:pected to approve '3 parking fee per student per quarter for the 1970.71 academic year. Husband Watches As ,Wife Fatally Injut~d by C~cle A .husbaDd crossiDg i..qu..•, darkened Coaat Highway with his wife watched Jn lhock u a motorcycle slammed into her Friday nl&ll. The injury wu fatal. ShfrJey Jean Hunt, 32, a Kansas secretary, died Sunday morning at Soutb Coast Community Hospital. .. l!iht and her husband Jack were visiting Laguna Beach. Police said the couple a_ttempted to cross the major 'artery in the 300 block ol North Coast' Highway shortly before midnight. Officers said they were not in a crosswalk, Hunt told police he saw the motorcycle coming and . yelled tor it to stop, The soul!Jbound \lehicle swerved and avoided him but struck his wife as Hunt waiched. The di:iver, Billy !'"rank Mitcham, Jr., 22, ol 521 S. Coast Highway, 1 bartender, was taken to the hospital and released. A police report indicated he waa not at fault in the accident. Surgery Changes Sex of Brothers ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) -Two haU· brothers who tired of "playing a mas- querade" a~ now sisters after un- der&oin~ transsexual surgery at Universi· ty of Minnesota Hospitals. In a copyrighted story to Sunday's SL Paul Pioneei: Press, Lauraine, who used to be Cary, and Lenette, who used to be Burt, said they believed them.selve1 to be the first blood brothers to have undergone the sei:~hange surgery, Lauraine, an attracUve 28-year-old blande woman, underwent the surgery two years ago and Lenette, 23, was operate:d on slx months lafer. Orange Cout ff,it,chhiking Girl Mo'le sted N~ar Emerald Bay A 'teenage girl hitchhiker was molested at knife poin t near an Emerald Bay entrance Friday' night and was struck on the mou th when she protested. Natec Ousts Pres ident,. Faces $23 Million · Loss The Badham bill does not call for rerouting or specify an alterriaUve route. But by cutt.ing , out just that segment from Beach Boulevard to Corona del Mar It suggests the possibility of adding extra Janes to.the future route 39 freeway tp8ralleling Beach Boulevard) and, the San Diego Freeway past · Costa Mesa, with the future COrona d~l Mar Freeway along MacArthur Boulevard to be bent e·astward toward a tie in with the Cout \\'ea tiler Laguna Police Lt. John Zelko said the l9-ycar-0ld Garden Grove girl wa s 1iven a ride in New port Beach by a man about 25 yea rs old, His sun viso r bore the words ''hot stuff." He purchased a soft drink for he.r in the vicinity of Scotchman's Cove and later stopped near the main gate at E;nerald Bay claiming he was going to check his car. Zelko said the man put a knife against the girl's neck and told her "be a nice girl and move over." When the protested, the man 1lruck her In the face, relealed her 111"1d drove away. The illddent WIS the late.st of lf:Yer&I In which men have molested giril who were hltchhlkin& ln the area. • • • An Orange County-based corporation which deals in liquor, health foods and hospitals }\a.s dumped it& president and Is selling subsidla('les In an cffoft. to pay debll tolaling more than $2 million. The National Environment CorporaUon, with offices in Union Ba.nit Square, Orange, may suffer loMCs as high as $2.J.5 million for .the fiscal year ending last March. OperaUng under the acronym Natec, the company officers met throughout last wetk w1lh represencaUves oc· ita bankers and creditors in an unsuccessful auempt to work out di.fflcultie.s. A formal announcement Friday reve.al· ed former insurance man Henry D. Clarke Jr .• had betn ouated as president . of Natec and replaced by Elmer C. Sproul, chairman of the board. Clarke recently pledg!d $100.000 from the company to Harbor Area Girl Scout.I, but a company spokesman said today the effect on lhat donation was uncertain. The main subsidiary disposal Is that o( 1 meal-packing firm, Virg Davidson· Chudacoff Company for $1.5 mlUion, a Natec purchase made one y,ar ago for $3.2 million. Preliminary negotiations are also under way to sell Gilmore -"' qom~py, a Nat~wned dlsUlllng company, w~lle the organization also plans to get rid or Milford Company, a liquor distributing Ilrm. Virtually all or the Natec or1anliat.ion's holdings in the neld of hospital care wlU al.lo go, following announcement last month tllat Its 25 convalescent hospitals would be sold. Sunllte Medical Centen Inc .. a Nalec subsidiary. was to continue operating them under U>e corporate reor1a.niiat.lon, ' but the company now Wants to sell that firm as well. Besides those organlz.ations, Nalec abo owns the Uncle Jbhn'1 Pancake House · restaurants, operating under the title Envirofood Inc.1 Blum'• Candles, 'Oranp County Buslnesl!I machines ·and a variety Freeway toward Laguna Beach. · Nixon Lauds 'Walsh ' of other enterprises» • -v Lo S rif" ce Nattc was organized ,fh early 111111 .f· or . n,i;, ' ac J ' by Clarke and ils stock ikyrocl<eted · · in value unlll lillting llnaoclal ·problema . 'HON~ KONG (AP) -Bl1hop J1""'1 that have led to ouster ot the pJ"eSkknt . E. Walsh· h11 received a \letter from and two other officers. • • Presldtnt Nixon saying his "sacrlfJct Besides Clarke, vice chalnnan John and, eour,11ge "'.ill al"fays be rememberf:11 A. Callas and executive vice )X'ttidtnt by men who ' ch~ish peace ind who John L. Holleran were removed from work (or· pea ct." their posts during lhe sh-keup. The Roman Cathullc ml&Alon1ry, 71, Tbe formal statement ~Y the company was released e1rlier thh: mooth alt.er management 1atd that wl\lle Natee la lt yem in 1 Red Chinese prison. Of· having Its problems, all Its tubsldiary flclals at Maryknoll Hospl\11, where the h·otdlngs are continuing to Ol>'J'lte u · blshoP 11 recuperat.lna, aald the Wblte usual. House letter wu dated July 11. \ The coastline may (pg up during the morning hours, but Tuesday's weather picture should be pretty bright otherwise with liUle temp- erature change, INSIDE TOD.\ l' ' A vi'it to MICf'ograpllie& Inc. (n Newport 'Beach . rtwalr1 &he· •."'4lf.,mil world of' micro- 1copic photographv. See a. pifc• of {XtrijUd poUen magnlJltd a,ooo ttme1. Set P091 16. u ' I H.n " " • I , .. ,, 16oU " r OAll.Y PILOT DAILY PILOT Slaff PlltM CROWD LINES UP OUTSIDE FESTI VAL GROUNDS, WAITING FOR THE GAT ES TO OPEN Tourl1t1 Jam Festival of Arts Sunday, With N11rly 1,000 Adm itted In Firtt Hour 42,000 Visit Arts Festival Since opening a week ago Friday, llOrll.e '2,000 persons have mean- dered through Laguna's 3Sth annual Festival of the Art!. Of that "1 number, 17,000 have viewed the Pageant of the Masters "com- mand" performance -the best of the past 35 years. Lines Of persons usually are found on Sundays, waJUng to get lnto the Festival grounds when It opens at noon each day. Trams too, also report slow downs, due lo heavy traffic and lots or passengers. 'Ibough the pageant is sold out, tickets are aometimes available lhortly before the 8:30 p.m. curtain due to cancellatiOM, at the festival box office. Everything seems to be up at the Festival and sales are no ex- ception. From the report of sales llipt turned in lo festival oWclals, • artl.ta are finding it v er y W«lhwhlle lo uhlbil thla yeet. • 30,000 Visit Laguna Beaches Pleasant beach weather, __with air temperature hovering at 14).degrees and -.ater a comfortable 66, broua:ht crowds estlmated at 30,000 to lJaguna Beach sands on Saturday and again on Sunday. Two rescues were logged by lifeguards Saturday but th number i n c r e a s e d to 14 on Sunday as surf mounted slightly, producing occasional five-foot waves. First aid eases handled by the guards, 44 on Salurday and 28 on Sunday, in- cluded minor cuts and injuries. T yrone Power's Kin Weds Italian Singer CELLINO SAN MARCO, lla\y (AP) -Romina Power, daughter of the late American actor Tyrone Power and ac- tress Linda Christian, has married Al Bano, one of Italy's top pop singers. The Roman Catholic ceremony took place Sunday in this southern Italian town which was Bano's birlhplace. Miss Power Is 19, Bano 'J:7. The bride's mother attended the weddi.fla:. DAILY PILOT " ............. ........... , .. c.... ..... H••rl ......... ~ ............ .., ... c-.. QltANOa COAST PUILllHIHG COM,AHV \ Ro\Jo,t N. W1.4 p,,,illtnl 1!'1111 P\lbll ...... J1tk •. C1ul1y Vko Ptt1~1~r •NII 0.--11 Ml,...... n.,.,,, K ••• a fdllor TI!o"'•' A. M111phf111 MONt"'t EOl!or Aith1r4 P. Nill s..i,,111 0r-. c-1v &:d1111r °""" (Olio! MtMl :I» W<ll Ill' 51reet Ntwllo'•I ltK!li Dll Wftl l1M • '°"'l"I,. 1..IOVM I~! m l'-1 ......... IH Hl#llllllt*" lttell: !Jiit l11dt lllU~•td 1111 C._..,.tt;; '°' Ner1!I I I C1m1r1t llNI 'A Lot of Fun' Scuha-chutists Hit Water In Laguna Guards' Show Two Laguna Beach lifeguards and a veteran sky diver parachuted with..scuba gear on their backs, sailing 13,000 feet into the watel'1 off the beach as part of Saturday's lifeguard ''Demonstration Day." ''It was a lot of fun,'' .said guard Skip Conner, alter making the jump. "Contrary to what Pf¥1ple think it is not a feeling of faUing. It's more like Dying or floating." . Conner, along with gUJrd Dean Westgaa rd and sky diver Bill Mowan, left former guard Brerutan "Hevs" McClelland's Cessna 155, went thrugh the clear blue for one mtnut! )n free fall, then opened their parachutes, touch· ing down near a buoy off Main Beach. After landing 1n the water, the guards were picked up by boats that were on hand ror the demonstration. Jn the tr•diUon1 l relay races between the north, 1outh and rookie lifeguardt the north auard>, led by JeU Quam, &natdled victory, Each leg of the relay Wu 400 yards Jona:, but that dldn't bother the three teams who awam and paddle-boarded the course. Spectators also received a light spray of sea water during the demonstration of the Orange County Harbor Department Fire Boat. The huge pumps on the boat forced water through t h e nozzle several hundred feel toward the beach. Also popular at the demonstration was the JandUne rescue. Guary Jeremy Ked· dlest.on posed as the "victim" while John Slowaky padd1ed the line out from the beach via surfboard. After "res- cuing" Keddleston, the two were towed in by the remaining guards on the beach. beach. Such • resdue is used when heavy surf or riptides prevail cif Laguna's beaches. The public a:ot a look at the Lifeguards Unit 55-B, a boat powered by a 135- horoepower qlne and clj)llble or clip- ping along at 40 knot... Llfea:uards also demonstrated the use of their land truck, inflatable splints, emer1ency first aid, and regular rescues. Un-fairy Tale Snowdons Called 'Reluctant Couple' NEW YORK (UPI) -Britain's Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon do not have a completely happy mar· riage, according to the Ladies' Home Journal. The magazine's current issue has an article by a "well-placed B r i t i s h aristocrat" writing under an aaswned name who calls the To y a I couple what is known in England as a "reluctant couple.r The article said that on formal OC· casions, Prince!! Margaret and Snowdon put on a thow, but at informal gather· ings, "the unfortunate situation Is only too clear." They had a disagreement, somewhat heated for royalty, ove r art on a recent vi sit to a London gallery. Snowdon was admiring a painting of a nude male 1ald to be "slightly pornographic." Snowdon is quoted as saying, "I think Gas Main Struck By Bulldozer A large bulldozer clearing an orange grove in San Juan Capistrano punched a gaping hole in a major gas main early this morning near a rtsidential neighborhood. But sheriff's deputies said that other than Ure department stAndy·by and some gas shut-offs, no major safety efforts were needed while crews worked to patch the hole. The leak erupted at 8:20 a.m., spewing gas Into the air Al the intersection of Camino Capistrsno and Calle Chueca near the Caslta1 C apistrano neighborhood. Crews from Southern Counties Ga& Company were at the scene throu1h the morning making repairs, Lag1u1a11 Ge ts Bugged When 'Bug' Rolled Thomas Townsend , 877 Anita St., Lagu'l'la Beach. had a rlght to feel bu&aed Sat urday night. Someone rolled hls Volks wagen onto Its side. Police s11\d a witness saw five or six young men loitering sround the amall car. They were 11i>parently from a party. The roU did abouL $100 damaa:e. we should buy i: -what do you think?" "J'm not so sure. Isn't it a bit ••• much?" 1he was quoted . And the article says Snowdon replied, "A bl:t much indeed. What In hell do you know about e.rt anyway?" The magazine reports that at a party, Snowdon, a photographer was discussing , a w o r k problem with his host. T h e princes• Interrupted them, acC-Ording to the magazine, "demanding that he return to the p a r t y because ahe wanled to dance." Snowdon Is quoted as sayina:. "Oh, go away, you bore me." Coast Taxpayers Face Incr ease Despite Cut Many Orange County taxpayer1 face an increase in their tax bills in spite of the !act county supervisors have cut three cents from the rounty tax rate. The estimated 1970-71 budget , approved Friday , would require a tax rate of $1 .64 per $100 assessed valuation. Last year's rate was $1.67. But the total tax bill increase Is an· tic\pated because County A s s e s s o r Andrew Hinshaw Increased assessmen ts an average of 17.6 percent. A series ol last minute cuts -mostly in capital projects -whittled the new budget down to an esUmated $21 2,420.748. That figure is some $7 million below the initial buda:et submitted by County Administrative OfClcer Robert Thomas, and some 21 percent higher than the previous year'1 budget. Jn addition to nearly $4 mlllion worth ()f cuts In the capital projects prog ram, supervisors told the welfare department to reduce tts personnel budget by 31 posltions •nd the probation department by 16 poaltions. Pearson Gets Surgery OTIAWA {AP ) -Lester B • .Pearson. former prime minister of Canada, left Sunday the hospital where his right eye \\'as removed last week b!<:ause of a tumor. • Armory Theft Probed Federal Agencies Study Pendleton Crime Ftdtnil" .,...i.. <O<lilnued to ,..k leads todQ' on auapecta and the location or a cache· ot weapons stolen from • Can\p Pendleton anu.ory over the weekend. aboard mJIJJary IMtallaUons In C.Womla lhJ.s year -a strln1 ot crimes attracting strong attention by officials, including Charles O'Brien. Calllorffia's chief deputy attorney general. Last week before the Camp Pendleton Incident, O'Brien told a Senate aub- commlttee ln Washington, D.C., that an "astonishing amount" of weapons and explosives.bound for Indochina have been t.aken from milltary compounds tn -Callfornla. Included In the deadlY loot are M one-pound bricks of c:4 plistic explosive, dozens ol hand grenades, IO baz6okai and near ly 200 pistols, machine guns and rllles. The ammunition hich O'Brien said ·is missing amou,nls to 65,000 rounds for several types of weapoM. Spokesmen for the Marine Corps ~aid no new tnformauon had been found on the theft on lht Camp Margarita annory late Friday nf&ht when apparently three men clubbed a guard with a rifle butt then stole rUles, a grenade launcher and the guard's .45-caliber a utoma tic. The incident, occurring \\'ithi n an hour of the arrival on the South Coast of President Richard Nixon, sparked an immediate response from the Western White House Secret Service corps, who joined in the weekend lnvestla:ation. Israelis Claim Two MIGs But on Sunday White House spokesmen played down that agency's role in dte probe of the weaspons theft. In Furious Dogfighting Presidential Press Secretry R o n Ziegler said no extra security measures involving the Chief Executive ensued. The theft-occurred at about 10:30 p.m. Friday night as Cpl. Kenneth D. Roberts was on sentry duty outside the anns storehouse. The assailants, reportedly blacks dress· ed in Marine fatigues, dubbed the guard unco03Cious, then took nine M·l6 cOmbat rifles, a grenade launcher and lhe guard's sidearm. The huge base's exits were Im· medlately sealed off and inten!!lve searches by Marine authorities, the FBI and the Secret Seivice were launched. The assailants and the arms are believ. ed to be still on base, spokesmen said. The cache ol arnu may J>OSSibly have been stolen for u.se by militants, some sources said over the weekend, l;lut U . Col. Ed Schultze, spokesman for the base, said that without specialized am- munition (which was not kept Jn the the armory ) the guns and launcher would be useless. The M-16s fire a special round of ammunition which can not be purchased on the open market. The grenade la uncher, he added, fires only 40-mHJimeter specialized a:renades which are also dilficult to obtain. The theft of. one of. several reported This Painting Really a Steal As Festival of Arts sales continued briskly in Laguna Beach <lver the weekend, well known watercolorist C.D. Arul Raj found t h a t an admirer of one of his work had skipped the formality o1 paying for It. Police sald the orange landscape was taken Friday from Raj's Booth. Raj, 31629 Second Ave ., South Laguna, estimated the loss at $25. Jn another petty art theft, F(ancis Wlnllhip of Art & Fashions, 150 Laguna Ave., was distracted by a trio of women who tried on expensi ve dresses w h 11 e filching three s m a 11 paintings. The loss was $55. Ma cco, Parent Firm Meeting Officials of Grea t Southwest Corp. and its wholly owned subsidiary, Macco, the Newport Beach development company, have conlcuded their meelings with representatives of some banks and Jen· dirig Inst itutions In an effort to solve cash problems. They did not hold conferences wilh all their creditors as indicated in a story publi~!"ied in Friday's Daily Pilot. Both Macco anc! Great Southwest have had problem s obtaining loans since their parent corporation, Penn C e n t r a I Transportation Co. filed bankrputcy pro- ceedings. according to Angus G. Wynne Jr., president of Great Southwest. By United Prt11 Internauonal Israeli jet fighters shot down two Egyptian MIG17 jets today In an air battle over the Suez Canal, a military spokesman said in Tel Aviv. The brief but furious dogfight came as each side sent planes across the canal in a new escalation of the conflict. Israel's hawkish Gahal Party met throughout the day to try to find some way of agreeU.1 on the U.S. Mideast peace proposal and Israel's reply -• expected to be a sharply conditional acceptance -was expected later in the w~k. The Arab world Cllvlded sharply on the Issue and 15,000 Palestinian guer~ rlllas, some of them a r m e d , demonstrated in the streets of Amman against a cease-fire and againat Presi· dent Gama! Abdel Nasser and King Hussein. An Israeli military spokesman said Israeli antiaircraft gunners hit a third MIG17 but did not see it crash. He said the dogfight developed when Egypt tried to raid targets on the Israeli side of the canal for the second time today. The interceptors swanned in and quickly downed two of the raiders, he aald. All Israeli pla11.es returned safely, he said. The Israeli raids against Egypt marked the 67lh co11.secutive day of strikes agaiflst Egyptian artillery sites and missile bases. Israel saJd "several" Egyptian planes raided on the east side of the canal in the mcirning in the first such Egyptian attack in weeks. Four Israeli soldiers were reported woun- ded. With the Arab world sharply split <ln the U.S. peace pJ'.Ol)OSals, Baghdad radio aJlnoUJlced that Sidam Hussein TakriU, vice r.hairman of the ruling Revolution Command Council, had &een invited to Moscow. Political sources said Russia may be try ing ' to qut=ll Iraq's vociferous opposition to the peace plan. The Arab world was still awaiting Israel's reply to the U.S. peace proposal but Tel Aviv dispatches indlcated It would be a qualified acceptance. Jordan accepted it but Syria, Iraq and the Arab guerrilla organizations rejected it as some sort of surrender. Israel was reported· willing to accept the U.S. plan for peace talks provided there is a guarantee that Egypt will not use the three·month cease.fire to build up its Suez Cana l line. The Israeli cabinet met Sunday but was too divided to make a pubfic statement. Another cabinet meeting was called for Tuesday . The Arab guerrillas were so angry they paraded through Amman and From P age 1 NIXON ... procurement bill and the next stage of the anti·ballistic missile syste m. Setting the stage for defense budget talks Tuesday and a domestic budget review Wednesday, Nixon scheduled a second meeting on the nation al ecorlomy . shouted slogans agai.Jtst Egyptian Preai- dent Gama l Abdel Nasser. and King Hussein of Jordan. It was the £lrst Arab demonstration against t h e Ameri can proposals. Among the crowd were guerrillas wear- ing arms in contravention of a July IO agreement ba11ning anns-earrying in the city. The demontsrators chanted "Abdel Nassar, the coward" and carried a placard readlna:, "We, will change the area Into hell if a setUement is imposed." Another said, "The gunS of our fl1hters will de tennine the fate of the Palestinian people." How there could be a r.ease-fire 111 the face of the Palesu.tan opposition ~malned to be seen. Jordan's acceptance of the U.S. peace plan specifically ex· eluded the guerrilla$ who have vowed to fight forever to "liberate" Paleltine. The natlona supporting Nasser were Jordan, Kuwait, Sudan and Lebanon. Syria and Iraq not only rejected the proposal but filled the airwaves tod•Y with anU-AmericaA, anti·Ilf"ael and by Implication, 10me anU-Egyptiu bluta.. Two Countians Killed in Crash Of DC8 Plane Two Orange Coast residents were among four crewmen killed today In the crash <lf a Flying Tiger Airlines OC8 transport plane in Okinawa. Officials at the line's headquarters ln .Los Angeles Identified the victims as Capt. Cleo M. Treft, 58, of 15936 Mariner Drl'ev, Huntington Beach, and Firat Of. ficer Robert Foley, $9, of 611 Avenida Teresa, San Clemente. Foley's survivors include his wife, Mrs. Elizabeth Foley, of 611 Ave nida Teresa, San Clemente. ·Treft was not married and hls next of kin reside in Iowa, according to a Flying Tiger spokesman. . Their plane crashed while approaching the U.S. Kadena Air Base on Okinawa. U.S. military authorities said the plane, carry ing military cargo and mails, broke into pieces when It hit a coral reef as it approached for a landing. Hig h tide made immediate recovery of the bodies difficult. but a rescue team later recovered t.hem. Also killed were 2nd Officer William A. George, 49, of Canoga Park, Calif., R'l'ld Navigator Walter M. Robert, 45, of Upland, Calif. Small Bomb Explodes Ne ar NY ,Bank Officf! NEW YORK (UPI) -A small bomb exploded in the heart of Manha ttan's financial district early today shattering windows of a branch of the Bank of America. No one was injured and little other damage was reported as a result of the explosion. BUY WHERE IT'S MADE SAVE UP TO 58°/o TRADE-IN TOUR OLD FURNrTUU ON NEW LIBERAL ALLOWANCES From 'Our Show Room, Or W1'll C...•tom Build To .Your Ord1r • ALSO CUSTOM REUl'HOLST!IUN~ Announcing a new breakthru in UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE R.uff•ll'1 ~nufactur1s the fln1st fumitur1 you will find anywh1r•. You ••• it and •1l1ct It right in our 1howroom. Pay up to 50 'Y.: le11 th•n ret•il. Choo1e from •n unlim lt•cl 1el1c:- tion of f•bric:1. Cu1iom ch•n9•1 ar1 1lrfi po11ibl• e AU WOll •UAlANftllr POI THI U'ITIMI O' JAl lUC 1m HARBOR BLVD. e COSTA MESA OR CALL FO~ APPOINTMENT 1111 548-0259 • ' • y, , la re Jo .. St ' . . . Laguna Beaeh ED ITI ON To4ay's Fina) N.Y. St.oek8 VOL'.. 63, NO. 178, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA· MONDAY, JULY 2~. 1970 TEN CENTS • Tate · Murders Witness Tie-up Tried LOS AN~GELES (UPI} -Defense lawyers fOl' Charles Manson and three female members of his '"famlly'' tri~ today to block testbiony by the pro- &eeuUon's onl y alleged eyewitne.53 to the Sharon Tate murders. Prior to the oi>ening of the morning session, AtlQmey P..aul Fitzgerald told newsmen that as soon' as Unda Kasabian, 20, takes the stand, he would ask the judge to delay her testimony. l"ltza:erald said the defense would ask lhe Judie to grant them access to ilatemtnts Mrs. Xasabian, a co-dden- dant tumed state's witness, had already made to the prosecution. He said the defense was unable to prepare its case withou t knowing what Mrs. Kasablan, who will be granted inununity ·for teJling he~ storr, had told the district attorney's .of,fice . in private meetings. William Garretson, 19, told the jury tn the trial'• opening testimony 'that he was awakened at dawn but heard no shol!, screa:ns, or ·loud noises in his bungalow which Is located on the other side of the :wlmming pool from the main residence. Garretson said he first lea.med of the killings ot Miss Tate and four others when police burst Jnto his cottage with drawn guns the next morning. He was at tirst·char.ged with su.spicion af murder in the slayings but later released. Mrs. Kasahian , who lived with the ANGELS OWNER GENE AUTRY PLAYS HOST TO NATION'S NO. 1 BASEBALL FAN After Trev~lin9 Weit, Pre1icMnt Wetche1 Wiid end Woolly Cont•1t With FOrmer Cowboy Ster Pitcher Tries Catching- GuardsNixonFromFouls The Sercet Service had some pro. fessional, if nervou s, a~lstance, in guarding the President at the Sunday baseball slugfest in Angels Stadium, Anaheim. ' Pat .Rogan, Angels' batting practice pitcher, was seated in front of the Presi- dent to guard against the possibility oT a toul ball beaning the nation's most Important baseball fan . "When lhcy asked me to sit in front of the President," said Rogan, "I told them they were taking a tremendous chance wilh my hand." The 11·innlng game, with the Washington Senators which the Angels won 11-10, lasted three hours and 56 minutes and Nixon went the dlslance. Rogan said he wS:1 amazed at the President's knowledge of the players and t.he game. "He talked to me quite a bit during the game'' said the pitcher. ''He 1sked me some' questions and di1Cussed the strategy, things 1ike that. lt was quite an honor." Rogan said the President told him he never leaves before the end of a game. The guardian pitcher seemed relieved when It was all over and there had been no fouls hit in the direction of lhe President. A sidelight of the 32-hit game was a mad dash by youngsters each half inning to the ~idential box to have Nixon 1utograph programs, baseball gloves and rented seat cushions. The smilin& President kept obliginJl until play was resumed. Then Secret Service bodyguards would shoo awa y youngsters until three more batters were out. Nlxon arrived by helicopter and orange golf cart and joined Mr. and Mrs. Gene Autry. The former Cowboy movie star is one of the majcir owners of the Angels. The President told him he was "torn between the two )te&m1 but tried to remain neutral." Nixon Summons Defense Leaders For Top Meeting President Nixon summoned Defense Secretary Melvln R Laird and Deputy Secretary David ' P.ac;:kard to meet with him in San Clemente today to consider reshuffling the Penta gon, now under fire for heavy cost overruns. The conference is one of a string of meetings at the Western White House designed to reshape thE massive Defense Department and set prioritlt.S for the 1972 budget. Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, national security affairs adviser, also will sit in on the meetings. Nixon and his advisers will have before then1 a far-reaching report by a blue ribbon panel on Defense Department reorganization headed by Gilbert W. Fitzhugh, chalnnan ol the boprd of Metropolitan L l f e Insurance Co. The year-long 1tudy wUI be made public Tues- day, The President aliO was expected to discuss strategy for obtaining Senate approval of the $19.5 billion defeMe (See NIXON, Page %) County Firm • Ill hippie cult at the Spahn Ranch commune at the Ume of tbe five killings at the Tate home and two others at the home of grocer Le n o LaBiance has b e e n isolated from the other d_etendants .and kept under special guard pending h e r testimony. Deputy D~trlct Attorney Vlnoent T. Bugliosl &aid In his opening statenent that Mrs. Kasabian actually aaw lhree kllUngg 1t the estate rented by Roman Polanski, the movie dlrector husband of the blonde actress. Bugliosl aitd she will!!Sl<d Ille kllJlhp of coffee heiress Abigill Fot1er, Pollah writer Voltych Fry~oil and t~yt&Mld Steven PartJJt, wOO had been Visllln& young Garretson~ •Their • bodiel were fOUJld outside the home. Miss Tate and 'hair lfylist Jay Sebring were killed ilulde the rambling rlllCh home. Mn. Kuabian was Slid by the 1tate to have driven meriibers of the "family" the nm night to Ille Lalllanca home and JCted IS I lookout there. BualloaJ said Manson ordered her and otbtr1 ol his cult to carry out a tlllina at a third home that same nllht d Aug. I in the beach front community of Venice, but, he said, Mrs. Kasabian deliberately thwarted It by lmocldng on the wrong apart:nent door. On trial with Manson are SUNn Alkins, Patricia Krenwuikel IDd 'Lealie ,Van Houten. Hair Appeal Due? Secret Saddleback Session Set Saddleback College trustees will hold a closed executive session at their meeting tonight to discuss a recent court ruling that their long hair ban violates students' constitutional rights, A SJXlkesman for the college sald the issue "might come up" during the public meeting, but would be discussed In detail during the executive session with Deputy County Counsel John Powtll, who has represented the board during the ex- tended legal battle over the hair length. Powell said last week, "there's a good chance trustees will want to appeal" the decision banded down by U.S. Dist Judge Harry Pregerson. The court decision held that rules agajnst long hair were arbitrary, and that the Constitution forbids elected representatives from making arbitary regulations. The meeUng begins at 7:t5 p.m. In other matters, the board will be asked to approve • recommendation from college Superintendent President Fred H. Bremer to change the name of the district to Saddlebick C o m m u n I t y College District. Countians Flood Senate ·For Badham B:ill Vote · . By THOMAS FoRTUNE OI ... Diiiy PMftil .. " I SACllAMENTl> -. SpokeSJ11en lot city and county governinent, hoffieowner and landowner interest~ w e re in the state capitol today for what was shaping up as perhaps the key vote on a bill to prevent construction of Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Beach ·and part of Huntington Beach . A hearing before the S e n a t e Transportation Committee was set for. later today. Assembly'man Robert Bad ham ( R· Newport Beach), the author of the bill, said this morning prospects looked good but he wasn't outright predicting the senate committee would recom:nend the hill for passage. He said the vote would not be unanimous. The bill. which previously passed the state assembly 46 to 6, would delete from the state freeway system the Pacific Coast Freeway route between Beach Boulevard in HuntinRton Beach and the eastern Newport Beach city limits at Corona clel Mar. Badham said. "Half of Orange County is up here lobbying in the rear of the senate right now." Indeed there were many delegations both for and against the freeway but they appeared to be doing more spec· tating than lobbyi ng . Present to argue aR:alnst the freeway route were Newport Beach Vice Mayor Howard Rogers; Marshall Duffield. Paul Gruber and John MacFaden ; Robert Curcl and John Store of the Corona del Mar United Homeowner• Association. Ready to testify In favor of retaining- the route ,were Jim Wheeler, Hµntington Beach Chw:nber of Com m er c e's transportation committee: Gordon JoneJ and Dr. Thomas Ashley of the Irvine Company; Hancock "Bill Bannin&: Ill Trouble and John 11 .. kell or Mee. Lid., i.rse landowner In the w .. t N*"1>orl &ref. Scheduled to speak In Opposition later today were Laguna Beach City ' Mailllier James Wheaton, plus Costa Mesa Mayor Robert M. Wilson and City Attorney Roy June. The lineup pits Newport Beach in· !crests standlng alone again.rt the com- bined opposition ·of representatives of Costa Mesa, Huntjngton Beach, Fountain Valley, Laguna Beach, and the county of Orange. Chairman of the Senate Tr.ansportat:ion Committee Sen. Randol ph Collier (0- Yreka) waa not available for comment prior to the hearing but Is known to oppose lntervenUon by the. legislature In freeway allgnmenl! adopted by the highway commission. However, the Senate TransportaUon Committee just one week ago unanimous- ly recommended deletion of 1 segment of Uie coast freeway through Venice, between Marina Del Rey and · the Santa Monica city line. "Ecologlcal and environmental factors are being studied now in relation to scenic freeways," Badham said. He 'Said bllls to delete portions of freeways are not without precedent, that coast freeway through Redondo ~each and Manhattan Beach was deleted several years ago, ind that four other freeway deletion bills are pending In this session of the legislature. The worry or the opposition ls that pa$sage of the Badham bill would cause Indefinite JXlSlponement of construction of any segment of the coast freeway and also that It could result in the freeway realignment through other cities. The present route, adopted hy the State Highway Commission In 1963, sweeps frqm an 1nt·snd Huntington.Beach alignment to the coast through Newport Beach just Inland of Pacific Coast Freeway and along 5th Avcnu·e ln Corlina del Mar ' before bending back inland · of Laguna Beach. The name has been Saddleback Junior College District, but under a new ltate law, the name change can be made. The board will be given a repor:t concerning accreditation of the college next fall. A group of accredltors from the state will evaluat~ the college f~ three days and then report lheir findings. Accreditation spans one to three years, depending on the conclusions of th1 group. Trustees are expected lo approve 13 parking fee per student per quarter for the 1970-71 academic year. Husband Watches As Wife Fatally lnjm·ed by Cycle A ~uaband cros.sing Laguna's darkened Coast HJgbway with his wife watched Jn shock as a motorcycle slammed into her Friday D;ight. The lnjury was fatal Shirley Jean Hunt, 3%, a Kansai secretary, died Sunday morning at South Coast Community H"pltal. She and ber husband Jack were visiting Laguna Bea.ch. Police sl.id tl)e couple attempted to cross the major artery in the n block of North Coast Highway shortly before midnight. Officers said they were not In a crosswalk. Hunt told police he saw the motorcycle coming and yelled for it to slop. Thi southbound vehicle swerved and avoided him but struck his wife as Hunt watched. The driver, Billy Frank Mitcham, Jr., 22, of S21 S.,Coast Highway, a bartendu, was taken to Uie hospital and released. A police report indicated he wu not at fault in the aCcident. Surgery Changes Sex of Brothers ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) -Two tialf- brolhers who tired of "playing a mas- querade'" are now als ten 1fter uDo dergoing transsexual surgery at Unlversi· ty of Minnesota HO.!lpltals. 1n a copyrighted story in Sunday's St. Paul Pioneer Presa, Lauraine, who used to be Cary, and Lenette, who used to be Burt, said they believed themselves to be the first blood brothert1 to have undergone the scx~hange surgery. Lauraine, an attracUve 21-year-old blonde woman, underwent the surgery t'wo years ago and Lenette, 23. was operated on six months later. Oraage Coast Hi tc lili iking Girl Mole sted Near Emerald Bay A teenage air\ hitchhiker was molested at knife point near an Emerald Bay entrance Friday nigh t and was struck on the moulh when she protested. N atec Ousts Preside1tt, Face s $23 Million Loss The Badham bill does not call for rerouUng or specif)' an alternative route. But by cutting out ju•t t~1t segment from Beach Boulevard to Corona del lt1ar it suggests. the possibility of adding extra lanes to the future route 31 f~way CparalleUng 'Beach Boulevard) and the San Diego Freeway ,pasf Costa Mesa; w.lt~ the luture Corona dtl ~ar freeway along M4cArthur Botilevard t~ be bent eastward toward a tfe In with ttie Coast Freeway toward Laguna Beach. . · Weac•er iaguna Police Lt. John Zelko aaid the I~year-0ld Garden Grove girl was given a ride in .Newport Beach by a man about 2S years old. His 1un visor bore the words "hot stuff.'' He purcbased a sort drink for her \n the vicinity of Scotehman '1 Cove and later stopped near the main 11te at E:nerakt Bay claiming he was 10Jng to check his car. Zelko said the man pot a knife a1a irut the girl's neck and told her "be a nice girl and move over." When she protested, the man struck her In the face. rele11td her and drove 1way. Tbe Incident was the 11test of •veral In which men h11ve molested &iris who were hltchhlkln1 in the ma. An Orange County-baled corporaUon wh1ch deals in liquor, he11th foods and hospital• has dumped llJ president and is selling subsidiarie1 in an effon to pay debts totaling more thin $2 million. The National Enviroriment Corporation, with ofUces Jn Union Bank Square, Orange, may suffer losses as high as $23.5 mUUon for the fiscal year -tndlna last March. Operating under the acronym NRtec, the company officers met throughout l11t week with representatlve1 of Its banker1 and creditors In an unspcceuful attempt to work out difflcultlea. A formal announcement Friday reveal· ed former lnsur1nce man Henry 0. Cl1rke Jr., had betn ousted as president 'Of Natec and rt~loced by Elmer C. Sproul, cl!alnnan OI tht board. Clarke rteently pledled ltll0,000 from the comp&ny to Harbor Area Glrl Scout11 but a company spokesman ukl today the effect on that donation was uncertain. The main subsidiary disposal ts that of a meat-packlng firm, Virg Davidlon· Chudacof£ Company for $1 .5 million, a.. Natec purchue n;iade one year ago for 13.l million. Preliminary negotlatlons are 1190 under way to sell Gilmore & Company, a Natec-owned distilling company, while the organliallon al~ plans to get rid of Milford Company, a liquor diltrtbutJng firm . VlrtuaUy all of the Natec oraanltatJon's holdings In the neld of horpltal care will also go, following announcement list month that Ill 25 convalescent hospitals would be sold. Sunllte Medical Centers Tnc., a N1tcc subaldlary, w11 t.o conunue opcr1tlng them W>dtr the corporate reor1anlzaUon, but the company now want!: to aell that flf1l! as well. Besides those orsanlutlona, Natec abo owns the Uncle John's 'Pancake ' House restauraiits, operating under the title Enviro!Dod Inc,., Blum'• Candles, <>range County Bwine.91 machines and a variety of other enterprlsea. Natee wa1 organized in f!arly 1961 by Clarke and Ito 1tock skyrocketed In value unUI hllUng fln1ncl1l problem• that have led to ouster of the president ind two other officers. Be!ldes Clarke, vice chairman John A, Calfa1 and executive vice president John L. Holleran were removed from the~ J>ollo during the ohakeup. The formal statement by the company man&eement uid thlt while Natee ll hiving Ill problems, 111 Ill subsidiary holdlnp are contlnuln1 to operate a• . uaual. ... • ·Nixon Lauds Wa lsh For Lo ng Sacri fice HONG KONG (AP) -Bishop · James E. Walsh has received a letter rrom President NIXon uytne bis "sacrlMce and courage wJll always be remembered by men who cherish peace and who work for peace." The Romon Gatbollc mlulonary, 7t, was released earlier this month after 12 )'f.lr1 in 1 Red Chinese prlton. 01· flcials 1t Maryknoll HOllpital. wher• the hlshop Is recuperating, old the Ylhlt• House letter was dated J'uly 11. ·' The coastline may fog up during the morning hours, but Tuesday's weather picture should be pretty bright otherwite with little temp- erature chanae. INSIDE TOD"l' A visit to l'lficrographlc1 Inc. in Nttuport Beach tctVttll..s the 1mttlJ, smaU world of mlcro- 1copic photography. Stt a ,Mice o/ petrif~d poll•" magnified 2,000 timt1. Set Page JS. ' • DAILY P'ILOT Si.II l'lltM CROWD LINES UP OUTSIDE FESTIVAL GROUNDS, WAITING FOR THE GATES TO OPEN Touri1t1 J•m Fe1tlv•l of Arts Sunday, With Nt1rly 1,000 Adm itted In First Hour 42,000 Visit Arts Festi val Since opening a week ago Friday, tome 42,000 per:soru have mean- dered through Laguna's S5th &Mual Festival of the Arts. Of that number, 17,000 have viewed the Pageant of the Ma!ters "com· mand" performance -the best of the past 35 years. Llnes of persons usually are found on Sundays, waiting to get lnto the Feslival grounds when it opens at noon each day. Trams . too, also report slow downs, due to heavy traffic and loU of passengers. Though the pageant ls sold out, tickets are IOmetlmes available shortly before Ule 1:30 p.m. curtain due to cancellations, at the festival box office. Everything seems to be up at the Fe:stlval and sales are no U· cepUon. From the report of sales alips turned ln to fesUval oUlcials, art.lats are ftnding it very worthWblle to ezhiblt UUJ year. ' 30,000 Visit Laguna Beaches Pleasant beach weather, with air temperature hovering at 74 degrees and water a comfortable 66, brought crowds estimated at 30,000 to Laguna Beach Sand,, on Saturday and again on Sunday. Two rescues were Jogged by lifeguards Saturday but th number I n c r e a s e d to 14 on Sunday as surf mounted slightly, producing occasional five-root waves. First aid cases handled by the guards, 44 on Saturday and 28 on Sunday, in- cluded minor cub and injuries. Ty rone Power's Kin Weds Italian Singer CELLINO SAN MARCO, llaly (AP) -Romine Power, daughter of the late American actor Tyrone Power and ac- tress Linda Christian, has married Al Bano, one of Italy's top pop singers. The Roman Catholic ceremony took place Sunday in this southern Italian town wh.ich was Bano's birthplace. Miss Power is 19, Bano 27. 'The bride's mother attended the wedding. DAILY PILOT N..-,.t le•• H..tl .... ..... Let-•..... .. ..... ,.., c.... .... S.. Ck••• OllAX;I COAST P'USLISHING a>Ml'ANT l:•h•tt N. w,,, ,,.,~ .. , ..,.. l'~t~ J.,. I;, Cw•l•v Viet l'Nl~l.,I •!Ill G-11 Mfflllfll' 111''"'' l(,,.a E011or 111tfll•1 A. MM1plli11• M-tir.e eohltl' -icli•r' r. Nill lo>tlh OrMltll C-1y EdllW OHie" cni. MfM: ,. Wtll ••Y S!••I ,....,...1 h1c11: au W•t a11M1 lwlntN L ...... IHCllJ m , .... , olv ....... H"'ll ... ltlll IM(ll: IHll ltKll l:>ultvttill ..... (""*""I a6 HwWi1 II Ctfftfllf l•I 'A Lot of Fun' Scuha-chutists Hit Water In Laguna Guards' Show Two Laguna Beach lifeguards and a veteran sky diver parachuted with scuba gear on their backs, sailing 13,lm feet Into the waters off the beach u part of Saturday's Uleguard "Demonstration Day." ''ft was a lot ol fun," said guard Skip Conner, after making lhe jump. "Contrary to what people think it Is not a reeling of falling. Jt's more like flying or floating.'' Cooner, along with guard Dean Westgaard and sky diver Bill ?¥1owan, left former guard Brennan "Hevs" McClelland's Cesrna 155, went thrugh the clear blue for one minute In free fall, then opened their parachute!, touch- ing down near a buoy off Main Beacti. Alter landing in the water, the guards wero picked u~ by boats that were on hl!ld for the de!Mnllratioo. In the tradlUooal relay races between the north, soolb and rookie lifeguards, the north guards, led by · Jeff Quam, snatched victory. Each leg of the relay wu 400 yards long, but that didn't bother the three teams who swam and paddle-boarded 1he course. Spectators alJo received a light spray of sea water during the demonstration of the Orang County Harbor Department Fire Boat. The huge pumps on the boat forced water through t h e noule several hundred feet toward the beach. Also popular at the demonstration was the landllne rescue. Guary Jeremy Ked· dleston posed as the "victim" while John Slowsky paddled the line cut from the beach via surfboard. After "res. cuing" Keddlestoo. the two were towed in by the remaining guards on the beach. beach. Such a resdue ts used when heavy surf or riptides prevail elf Laguna's beaches. The public got ' look at the Lifeguards Unit 6$.B, a boot P9Wtuf bx a 13.> horsepower engine and capable of clip- ping along at 40 knots. ' Ll.feguards also demonstrated the use of thelr laild truck, tnnatable rplinb, ernera:ency first aid, and regular rescues. Un-fairy Tale Snowdons Called 'Reluctant Couple' NEW YORK (UPI) -Br(taln'1 Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon do not have a completely happy mar· riage, according to the Ladies' Home Journal. The magazine's current issue has an article by a .,well-placed B r t t I s h aristocrat" writing under an assumed name who calls the r o y a I couple what is known in England as a "reluctant coople." The article said that on fonnal oc- casions, Princess Margaret and Snowdon put on a show, but at informal gather4 ings, "the unfortunate situation is only too clear." They had o disagreement, somewhat heated for royalty, over art on a recent visit to a London gallery. Snowdon was admiring a painting of a nude male said to be "slightly pornographic." Snowdon is quoted as saying, •it Utlnk Gas M~in Struck By .Bulldozer A large bulldozer clearing an oranee grove in San Juan capistrano punched a gaping hole in a major gat maln early this morning near a residential neighborhood. But sheriff's deputies sald that other than fire department standy-by and some gas shut-offs, no major safety effort! were needed while crews worked tO patch the hole. The leak erupted at 8:20 a.m., spewl.n« gas into the alr at the lntersed.lon of Camino Capistrano and Calle O\ueca near the casitas Capistrano ntighborhood. Crews from Southern COWlties Gas Company were at the nne throulh the morning making repairs. Lagunan Ge ts Bugged Whe11 'Bug' Rolled Thomas Townsend, 177 Anlt• St., L..aR\l'(la Beach. had a right \0 feel bu.aaed Saturday nigh!. Someone rolled his Volksw agen onto \ts side. Police said a wltneu saw five or ab: young men loitering around the. small car. They were apparentl y from 1 party. The roll dki about flOO dam111e. I we should buy i• -what do you think ?" "I'm not so sure. Isn't it a bit ••• much?" lhe wa! quoted . And the article says· Snowdon replied, "A bk much indeed. What In hell do you know about art anyway?" The magazine reports that at a party, Snowdon, a photographer was discussing a w o r k: problem with his host. Th e princess interrupted them, aeeording to the magazine, "demanding that he return to the p a r t y because she wanted to dance." Snowdon Is quoted as saying, "Oh, go away, you bore me." Coast. Taxpayers Face Increase Despite Cut Many Orange County taxp1yers face an increase in the.Ir t.u bills in spite of the fact c:ounty supervisors have cul lhree cenl.I trom the counl_Y tu rale. The estimated 1970-71 budget. approved Friday, would require a tax rate of $1.M. per $100 BW!SSed valuation. Last year's rate waa $1.67. But the total tu bill increase is an· tlcipated because .County A s s e s s o r Andrew Hinshaw Increased assessments an average of' 17.6 percent. A series of last minute cuts -mostly In capital projects -whittled the new budget down to an estimated $212,420,748. That figure Is some f7 mlllion below the inlUal budget submitted by County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas, and !Onle 21 percent hlghe:r lhan the previous year's b\!<fael. In addition to nearly $4 million worth or cuts In the capital projects proiram, supervisors told the wellare department to reduce ilt r>fl'1<Mtl budget by St poslUons tnd lhe probaUoo departm•nI by II poslUms. Pearson Gets Sur gery OTIA\VA (AP ) -Lester 8. Pearson. former prime minister of canada, left Sunday lhe hosr,ital wtim bis right eyt was removed ast week because of a tumor. Armor-y-Theft Probed Federal Agencies Study Pendleton Crime Federal agenclee continued to-seek leadl today on ausptCU and the locatlon of a cache of weapom stolen from a Camp PendJeton armory over the weekend. aboanl mlfitary lnotallattons In Call/om!• t.bla year -a ltrlng of ,crimes attractlna: atrong attenUon by ol!k:ltlJ, Including Charles O'Brien. Califarnia'a chlef deputy attorney general. Last week before lhe Camp Pendleton incident, 0'8rien tOld a Senate 1ub- com.mlttee in Washington, D.C., that an "astonishing amOtltrt" of weapons and explosivei bound for Indochina have been taken from mWtary compounds In California. Included In the deadlY loot are 94 one-pound bricks ol C.!4 plllstic explosive, dozens oC hand grenades, 10 bawoku and nearly 200 pistols, machine guns and rifles. The ammunition which O'Brien said is missing amounts to 65,000 rowxill for 1evera1 types of weapons. Spokesmen for thF Marine CcJrps said no new information had been found on the theft on the Camp Margarita annory late Friday night when apparently three men clubbed a guard with a rine butt then stole r1nes, a grenade launcher and the guard's .4kaliber automatic. The incident, occurring within an hour of the arrival on the South Coast of President Richard Nixon: sparked an immediate response from the Western White House Secret Service corps, who joined in the weekend invv;tigation. Israelis Claim Two MIGs But on Sunday White House spokesme:n played down that agency's role in the probe of the weaspons theft In Furious Dogfighting Presidential Press Secretry R o n Ziegler said no extra security measures involvin' the Chief Executive ensued. Fri::y t~~!~r:~,~ K~~~t J~::O~~ was on sentry duty outside the arms storehouse. The assailants, reportedly blacks tfres5. ed in Marine fatigues, clubbed the guard unconscious, then took nine M-16 combat rifles, a grenade launcher and the guard's sidearm. The huge base·s exits were i m- mediately sealed off and intensive searches by Marine authorities, the FBI and the Secret Service were launched. '11le assailanb and the ann.s are believ· ed to be still on base, spokesmen said. The cache of arms may possibly have be£n slolen for use by militants, some sources said over the weekend, but Lt. Col. Ed Schultze, spokesman for the base, said that without specialized am· munition (which was not kept in the the armory) the guns and launcher would be useless . The M-16s fire a special round of ammunition which can not be purchased on the open market. The grenade launcher, he added, fires only 40-milllmeter specialh:ed grenades which are also difficult to obtain. The theft of one of sever~ reported This Painting Really a Steal As Festival of Arts sales continued briskly in Laguna Beach ove:r the weekend, well known watercolorist C.D. And Raj found t h a t an admirer of one of bi1 work had aklpptd the formality ol paying for it. Police said the orange landscape was taken Friday f r o m Raj's BooUt. Raj, 31629 Second Ave., South Leguna, estimated lhe loss al $25. In anolher petty art theft, Francis Winship of Art & FashioM, ISO Laguna Ave., was distracted by a trio of women who tried on expensive dresses w h i I e filching three s m a 11 paintings. The loss was $55. Macco, Parent Firm Meeting Officials cf Greal Southwest Ccrp. and its wholly owned subsidiary, P.1aCCG, the Newport Beach development company, have conlcuded their meetings with representaUves of scme banks and len· ding lnstitutlon!I In an effort to solve cash problems. They did not hold conferences with all their creditors as indicated in 11 story pubUshed in Friday's Daily Pilot. Both Macco anc! Great Southwest have had problems obtaining loans since their parent corporation, Penn Cent r a I Transportation Co. filed bankrputcy pro- ceedings, according to Angus G. Wynne Jr., president of Great Southwest. By United Preas IotunaUoaal Israeli jet fighters shot down two Egyptian MIG17 jets today In an air battle over the Suez Canal, a military spokesman aald in Tel Aviv. The brief but furious dogfight came as each side sent planes across the canal in a new escalation of the conflict. Israel's hawkish Gahal Party met throughout the day to try to find some way of agreeiJtg on the U.S. Mideast peace-proposal and Israel's reply - expected to be a sharply condiUonal acceptance -was expected late:r in the -k. The Arab world divided sharply on the Woe and 15,000 Palestinian guer· rillas, some of them a r m e d , demonstrated in the streets of Amman against a cease.fire and against Presi· dent Gamal Abdel Nasser and K1n1 Russel•. An Israeli military spokesman said Israeli antiaircraft gunner.a hit a third MIG17 but did not see it crash. He said the dogfight developed when Egypt tried to raid targeb on the Israeli stde or the canal for the second time today. The interceptors swarmed in and quickly downed two of the raiders, be said. All .-Israeli plaries returned safely, be said . The Israeli raids against Egypt marked the 67th co11.secutive day of strikes against Egyptian artillery sites and missile bases. Israel said "several" Egyptian planes raided on the east &ide of the canal in the morning in the first such Egyptian attack in weeks. Four Israeli soldiers were reported woun- ded . With the Arab world sharply split on the U.S. peace proposals, Baghdad radio aanoUJ1ced that Sldam Hussein Takriti, vlce chainnan of the ruling Revolution Command C:OUncll/"ha~ been invited to Moscow. PoUUcal 90urces said Russia may be trying to q~ll Iraq 's vociferous opposition to the peace plan. The Arab world was still awaiting Israel's reply to the U.S. peace proposal but Tel Aviv dispatches indicated it would be a qualified acceptance. Jordan accepted it but Syria , Iraq and the Arab guerrilla organizations rejected it as oome sort of surrender. Israel was reported willlng to accept the ll.S. plan for peace talks provided there is a guarantee that Egypt will not use the three-month cease-fire to build up its SUez Canal line. The Israeli cabinet met Sunday but was too divided to make a public statement. Another cabinet meeting was called for Tuesday. The Arab guerrillas were so angry they paraded through Amman and From PGfle I NIXON ... procurement bill and the next stage of the anti·ballistic missile system . Setting the stage for defense budget talks Tuesday and a domestic budget review Wednesday, Nixon scheduled a second meeting on the national economy. shouted slogaas agaillst Egyptian Prtsi· dent Gama! Abdel Nasser and King Hussein of Jordan. It was the first Arab demonstration against t h e American proposals. Among the crowd were guerrillas wear- ing arms in contravention of a July 10 agreement banning anns..carrying in the city . The demontsrators chanted "Abdel Nassar, the coward" and carried a placard reading, "We will change the area into hell if a settlement Is imposed." Another said, "The guns of our fighters will determine the fate of the Palestlnlan people." How there could be a cease-fire ta the face of the Palestiaian opposition remained to be seen. Jordan's acceptance ol the U.S. peace plan specilically ex- cluded the guerrillas who have vowed to fight forever to "liberate" Palestine. The nations supporting Nas.ser were Jordan, Kuwait, Sudan and Lebanon. Syria and Iraq not only rejected the proposal but filled the airwaves today with anti-American, anti·lsrael and by implication., some anll·Egyptiu bluta. Two Countians Killed in Crash Of DCB Plane Two Orange Ccast residents were .among four crewmen killed today In the crash of a Flying Tiger Alrllnes DC8 transport plane in Okinawa. Officials at the line's headquarters in Los Angeles identified lhe victims as Capt. Cleo M. Treft, 58, 0115931 Mariner Drlev1 ·H~Unri>\I J;Jeach f and ,fin~1 Of. ficer Robert FOiey, 59, or 611 . Avenlda Teresa, San Clemente. Foley's Survivors include his wife, Mrs. EUzabeth Foley, of 611 Avenida Teresa. San Clemente. Treft was not married and his next of kin reside.in Iowa, according to a Flying Tiger spo'kesman. Their plane crashed while approaching the U.S. Kadena Air Base on Okinawa. U.S. military authorities said the plane:, carrying military cargo and mails, broke into pieces when it hit a ccral reef as It approached for a landing. High tide made immediate recovery of the bodies difficult. but a rescue team later recovered them. Also killed were 2nd Officer William A. George, 49, or Canoga Park, Calif., and Navigator Walter M. Robert, 45, of Upland, Calif. Small Bomb Explodes Near NY Bank Office NEW YORK (UPI) -A small bomb exploded in the heart of Mlf'Ohattan·s financial disltict tarly today shattering windows of a branch of the Bank of America. No one was injured and tittle other damage was report~ as a result of the explosion. BUY WHERE IT'S MADE SAVE UP TO Wlo TRADE-IN YOUR OLD FURNITUU ON NEW Ll9HAL ALLOWANCES m... °"' Show Room, 0. Wo'll c..1 ... lulld To Your Order • ALSO CUSTOM REUl'HOLSTERING Announcing a new breakthru in UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE Ruffel1'1 nwi nuf•cture1 th• fine1t furniture you will find •nywh•r•. You 1ee a end 1elect It rii;ht In our 1howroom. P•y UP. to SO-;.; l•1• th•n reteil. Choo1• from en unlimlt•d ••lee• t iori of f•bric1. Cuitom ch•ni;e1 •re eho po11lbl .. e ALL WOii •UAlAN'Ttlr POI THI LIPnlMI OP PA l llC 1922 HARBOR BLVD. e COSTA ~.1ESA OR CALL FOR APPOINTMENT • 54B-0259 • ' f • • • • II It f( "' Cl st .. , u1 Vi • In ·~ dr im its ye • de .,, ye· I 1 A I wh , .. per the Lo! 1 alt. Pol con off 0 ll'O of · sin , L DAILY PILOT 3 Harvard Booted Dana Town's Namesake a Rebel Wlw ·went to Sea ' ' IT'S A CAR -BUT NOT JUST ANY CAR. IT'S AN EXCALIBUR SS ($10,llOOl Every~ •t th• Western White HouM H•a Taktn It for • Spin -E'xcept the Pre1ident •Trinket~ Ti~kles VIPs Expensive Wheels For Summer White House 'Wheels' By JOHN VALTERZA Of .. O.llt' Plitt Sl.tf When Richard Nixon comes to town, flags, banners and an occasional welcome sign emerge in San Clemente -that's common knowledge by now. ' But another less-known tradition has _ a1'o bee!! oet h«e since the pm<hase of the Western White House last year. It has four wbetls, a Whopping price tag and will "take off ~t under you" r jta· proud owntr says. It's a car. But not just any car. The trinket -put forth at the disposal of the President's entourage and even the President himseU -is an Excalibur SS custom.t>uilt modem classic with a current value cl about. "1!,00l. It's the "baby" of a man well known lo the White House staff, the President and the working press. Paul Presley, owner of the San Clemente Inn wll<"' the White eo ... ltaff takes up residence during the "working vacatiorui" of their boss, shines up his Excalibur before each Presidential visiL , , . Tben he parks the reproduction of a 19%7 Mercedes.Benz roadster near the front door of the hostelry wbert Nixon's staff members fight over who gets to drive it nert. The burgundy roadster has had some important drivers in San Clemente since its inauguration as staff mascot last year. "Everybody but the Prtsldent has driven the car," said Presley, "but for some reason he hasn't taken it out yet." Jb top speed ls 160 miles per hour. Time Bomb Set At Paper in LA LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A Bomb which Police said could have cawied coostderable damage and killed any persona close to it was found durin& lhe weekend in the main lobby of the Los Angeles Times. The device was disarmed 45 mllutes after it wu set to IO off Saturday. Police said tbe foot-loag length of pipe containin& black powder c;ould have gone olf 11 111Y time. Oftlcera evacuated 40 employes on the gmmd floor of the a!x-Ooor main building of the lleW!pllper Olld conlooed off the street outalde. Perhaps that's why. Mr. Nixon, it has become apparmt, isn't as much o! a speed demon ~ his predecessor in the White House. Mr. Jolwon's uploits behind the wlleel of a Lincoln Continenlal soine years l\ick along the banks of the P<dernales ...., legendary. But the Nilon style isn't that darin1. About the biggest mobile charge the Prili!Jent gets lo S.n Clemente Is at the wbeel of "President Richard Nixon" -his light green go!f cart with the fringe on top. He even trusls his wife and daughter at the wheel in shuttle trips about the Western White House compound. · Although the cart is oo Excalibur SS -nor a Mercedes Benz -Mr. Nilon gets a kick out of it just the same. He even loans it out. When the Rumanian Foreign Minister . paid a prenoon visit here earlier this month, he got his chance at the wheel in a buWng ride from the office door to a waiting helicopter. His crusty, proper attitude crachd here and there as he hopped in. He smiled broadly during the jaunt. So dQ the Excalibur motorists when their tum for a drive comes up. And when the burgundy classic ls Idle, doz.ens of visitors a day walk up to it, look for an emblem, then pun:le over the make when they can't find a name. "l don't know what It is, but it sure looks expensive," is a common comment. But the Excallbu:r's ~ b an Intriguing point. One could buy an original 1927 Merc«les SSK for about the aame price. Misswn Hospital Sets First Phase Completion Completion of the 12&-bed first phase of privately owned Mission Community Hospital is expected within 10 months. This was the announcement of Dr. Russell Hendrickson of Santa Ana, e1· ecutive committee chairman of MissloR Viejo Medical Company. The firm will own and build the facility that is even· lually lo be a 250-l>ed hospital. liendrlckson said construction ls under way at a 15-acre site at Crown Valley Parkway and the San Diego Freeway. It was announced that the medical complex is. to include a 138-bed con- valescent bospitaJ, a 100-bed manor house for care of the aged and a medical office building. Plans are for 12. obltetrica) beds, em~gency and dlapoetic center • radiological aervicu, u intensive care unit with electr"'1Jc bJo.medlcal nionltor- tng aids, surak:al centers and , a radioisotope prqcram. There is to be an outpatient clinic and a helicopter landing pad for emergencies. Plans abo ·Include a lecture hall, two classroom and audio-vilual aids aton, with cfooed.drcujt televbioo for teadUng purposes. Hendrickson said Saddlebock College officials e%pect to cooperate 1n in- struction ol paramedical field,, such as nursing and radiology. General Plan Study Goes On Laguna Beach plannl~ commlsllonm will continue their perusal of the a:enerat plan at a special study lelaion at 7:31) l<Mlight In clly hall council clwnbert. Up for discussioo will be the draft report on alternative dtvelopmeals for the central buslu,.. dlrbict, -ed by 1he planning learn from Dllllel, Mann, Jolmlon I< Mendel1hall (DMJM) and the commlsslonen' own .. pcr1a do the pre> posed. 1'mllltlpurp09e corridor.'' This ls the DMJM plan for development of Cout Highway IOUth of Laguna Avenue as a tcw1st-commercial center, with hotell, motels, shops, restaurant& . and aome mutUple residential facilities along a landlcaped portion ol hl&hway. Some otudy also will be given to plan- ned residential zone standards for tn- clumon in a revised zoning ordinance under the general plan. B7 PATRICK BOYUI: °'*°""'""""" When tQme famous peraooqe bas a hill oc a hlgil"1'Y named alter him, his name. ijves On after his dU~. But only his ~e. Who he was or what he ilid Is • ...., !o'rgottee by almost everyone outside of the historical IOdety. So it 1; with Dw Poi,n~ a beadlancl jutting out into the .. a betw ... Laguna Beach aod San Cl<meote. On Aug. 1, the to11n of Dana PoJ.nt will reralnd visitors of their namesake 's_ birthday with an alJ..day WebraUon, but lt1a likely few ot the celebrants will tnow inucb about him. 'lbe town and the polnt are named for Richard Henry Dana, a man who dropped out of Harvard to go to aea as a com.moo sailor and then wrote a book about bis adventures, "Two Yean Before the Mast." He described the point in his book. but since be had lost the journal be kept during t/M! two-year voyage, he had to write from memory, and the description was inaccurate. According to John H. Kemble, editor of an edition of "Two Years Before the Mast'' published by the Ward Ritchie Press in 1964, Richard Henry Dana Jr. was born Aug. 1, 1115, in Cambridce, Mass. His grandfather was the Chier Justice of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and his father was a poet and essayist Dana entered Harvard in 1831, but be- DAILY ,ILOT IWI ,._ .. FISHIN' AT SHAW'S COVE . El Rancho has the hottest price in town! ' 5 per pound! ~~~··········· Lean rround beef I ••• It !bent ia a aecret to better hambu!"l"n -El Rancho better beef is it! Fn!h ! Burner Buns .................. 29t Relishes ............ 1011 (IL 111 .•..•.• 1 tc Lan,;n~orf ••• package of eight at this low pricer CroMe & Blackwell. Pickle, Burger, Hot Dog! Potato Chips .. ~~~R~. ~~~~R~s .......• 4 9' \Vhy sctlle for le.s! than the brand you know? ••• Regular or dip style ••• big 12-ouncc bag! Make it a Cheeseburger! American · Slices.~:::.1 ~~~.~~ ••• 69' fon the end ol his -,..,., be was upended for a1x months for tUllll part in a student "~belllon. •· He caught the measles whlle 1Waltlaa the end of his suspension, caualJ>I blm ti-oub1e with bis eyesight, when be return- ed lo achoo!. His eye problem prollibited him from doing bis tcademJc won. ao be quit school and allfted u a commoo aeaman on tbe trading PP Plllrtm. The sbjp came to the Califomla cout. w}lere supplies were traded for cow llldes. Otl -sucll trading occasion, the ahlp anchor<d ·o11 of San Juan Point -now Dana Point -and Dana was -the party going ullore to bring bacll: the hides. In his ''Two Years Before the Mast," be describes the point u beln& more than 400 feel high aod be 1ay1 that be aaw the San Juan Capistrano Mia:slon !tom the top of the clll(s. The -ls not vblble lrom tbe top ol the cUll~ foe K ii more than -miles inland and hidden lrom tbe point by hllla. 'lbe clifUs at the point rise no more than 2$0 feet from lhe .... Dana had to remember the details, because al the end ol his voyage, be entrusted bis sea chest and journal to his cousin. • ho loot them. He did return to' Harvard, and in 1840, he was admitted to the bar in Massachusetts. While be was atudyin& for his law c\ecfle, bl wrote 16Two Years Befort the Mast," which be was finally able to aell lo Harpen Pllblilhlnl Co. foe '2IO and 21 copies of the book. Wben the bool: becilil< lllCCeallul, be tried to 1et more mooey from the publishers, but WU unsuccesstul. He got no further return lmn lta pulllicatlon unli1 1he copyrigllt reverted 1q· him In !• In his ilw pradlct, he specialflld In maritime la.•. trylnl iO Im_. the lot ci the common aeamen. Be a~ became Interested In poiitlcl. faundld tbe Free Soll Party aod became deeply lnvolved ln the anU-slavery movement But be wanted to go to sea qa!n, Olld In 11159, left on a trip arol!!ld the world. He tool: notes for what he hoped would be another book, but sa11ln( from San Francisco to Hong KOOi, a thipboard ' Dre destroyed his notes. \. Dana ran for conirtSI In 1• but was badly defeated. He was. ~ ap- pointed by President Grant aa Mlnimr to the r.ourt of St. James, the equivalent ol Ambassador to England. Bui tho Senate failed to coo.finn the appoinbnent because Dana refused ta appear befOl"I the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. When be died in 18SZ, be cODSidered binuelf a failure because he never achieved any major political office. Laguna's Former Mayor Spends Time Fishing Now r..i By FllEDERICK !'CH01"MEllL OI *' DMIY" '"" Stefl! Casting a long look towards the 1ea and taking a breath of frah ocean air, as he descended onto the beach at Shaw's Cove, former mayor GleM Vedder remarked, "There's a couple of sea gulls. lt's stran~. they hiven't been around lately. There are just too many people on the beach, scaring tbtm away." Vedder apends a lot of time al the cove below his house, now that he has retlr<d from the blgheJt poot in dy govmunml ~ dally, he pa down to the beacll wltll his Plt·wator l1Jbinl pole and tries his luck. "There's 1 lot of difference between fishing aod catchlni fl"1," be explalns. noting the! lately the"' are not too ml!IY !lib, but plenty ol people In the water. Vedder la allo having his catch challenged. by the many divers wbo spear fi.!h in the rocky underwater ai-us llW' Shaw's. . Vedder, deeply tanned from hla many hours on the und, recalls that h1I last good catch was five weeks ago. "Lately, all I've been gelUnl ts sharks. Oc· callionally I set a big one. Last week CJne shark was about three feet ion,. There art a lot ol otlni·raya out -., too. 1'l've filhed this area for SS yeva, aod yeara 1110 the fishing waa much better. Of courae, back then, we would fish moNI oil llhore. I've lilbed Imo Dana Point to El Mono, out off the kelp beds. Bui time daya are "'°"' I guess." As his wife Helen descends to the beach with ber san<I cbair and umbrella, the former mayor noted that "she used to f1'h out there wlth me, but now she's waiting for the flab to ccme back." Later be said. she "111 bo joined b..J many of their neighbors. and two brldge tables wlll start 101D1 strong for the 1 nolll of the day. For surl.ftshlng, Vedder qld, cme bait b as good u another, "Some people use mussels, ahtimp, squid, anchovies, or even 1 these aand crabs," be noted. . .. be polnta to the hundreds of 11111all crabs that lle oo the beach at the hl&h tide line. · "Bui I don~ think the ball maUt any difference." Vedder reporta that Shaw's is a px! place for perch ind corbina on a good day. If not down at the beach, Vedde Is often found busy at another of his favorite putJmes -keeping his 1arfe yard at t75 Cliff Drive in abape. It may be pulling a few weedl, or tblnnln& bil daisies, or pruning tome bulhes. "It's the flnl chance In JO years, that I'Ve had to catch up on all tbeae things." Fnim the ,.al wilh whlcb ho doea tt. Glenn Vodder ii iovlni mry moment of lt. · 19c hamburgera1 ••• ~ th.Im for lu1, at lt.omt ••• bigger, betttr!.,. aM ..,..io'll tho fun of a hamburg<r fr>J ••• 07' tile pa.t·io, at tM beacA, or in the kitchen/ Each 11ice individually wrapped! ••• uae what you need, and the remainini aliCCA keep in their own aleeves! From our Garden Patch ! I Price• i" effect Mon., T1te1., lVtd., Julv 11, ts, 19. No "''" lo doakrr. AlCADIA: ·Red Onions ........... J.0~!~.s!~: .. ~ ....... 10fb , Cut big cri•P slice& for_yo~r hamburpn ••• and bed eliahted with the iweet mild flavor I For early-in-the week menu variety ! Beef Rouladen S149 Beef Braccioli S149 .... ... .. .. . ... . .. . .. .. ....... .. ... .. Thin alicod beet, nilled with broad dreuinr fillina"l \ Sllcoe of olrloin, nilled and filled with ground Pork I ' l s.11111 ... Hlllliriilol Dr. (!I llndlo Ctllflll mADOIA: 3!0 w.t ColOllllo Blit .SOUTH PAMD£Jlk ft1"""l and·Hunt1nt10n Dr. HU11T1NGTOll llfACHl -.•• Alionquln (9*dw1lk C.nkr) NEWPOIT IUCH: 2127 = Bht Ind , rus · 11ff Dr. (tn1bNtl Vil!atl Cloll<l I • • • • r , Portugal's · Premier Salazar, 81, Succumbs ~ .... II* ...... lteft) A would-be robber got an unex• pected reaction in Columbus .. Ot11.o when he walked up to an urudent1· Oed woman and demanded . ber purse. 'Ibe woman ground a light· ed cigarette into bis arm. 'lb.e man jumped back In pain and ran away empty handed. • When a GI named Bob Scott J_eft Ft. Jackson, S.C. Army trammg camp 17 years ago, he swore he'd neVer return. But he broke that promise Monday. He's now gover· nor of North Carolina and visited his state's reservist&. "1 nev~r .lhought I'd be coming hack In 1h1S capacity," be said. • Dt:spite a news relea.!t that 100 Indians would take to tht Putltlltum and Nisqually Rivers in Wa&htngton in protest recent- ly, tht state fisheries depart- ment said it could ffnd no In- dian illegaUY fithing •. The de· partment addtd that -it hadn't been too worritd anyway be· cctue there Wef'en't anM fish in tM: ritiffl. • Gordon Cont believes he has be- come Britain's youngest grand· father at the age of 33. His eldest daughter Mrs. Rosanna Kava· nagh 17 'gave birth to a girl. Wen- dy.. Cani and his wife, Anne, 34, have six other children. • Eight emploues of the Da~l· ingtml and Simpsons Steel Mill fn Durham, England walked off their jobs Wednesdat1 because they said they aaw a ghost dur- ing the night shift, a company spokesman iaid. • Ten years ago LyMe Stevenson, then 9 years old, wore a banner proclaiming her •1Miss Nieollet of 1970" as she rode a parade float in a civic celebration. This week Miss Stevenson · was named Miss Nicol- let in the community's annual Friendship Days Festival. • A local Alhens, Ohio attorney drove into the rough off the first tee at the Ohio University golf course \Vednesday and found some marijuana. Police Capt. Charles Cochran said four marijuana plants, each about eight feet tall, were found in a grove of Ever- greens near the first hole. Police confiscated the crop. 8 Boise . Idaho Sheriff Gii Wright has written oH a 16-cent expense Item in the line of duty. As part of a sobriety check on a woman driv- er, he dropped a dime, nickel and penny on the pavement to check her ability to pick lhem up. She passed that portion of the test, and slipped the three coins down her blouse. "The 16 cents was never returned to me by the sumect." Wri~ht wrote in his report of the in- cident. iWITf ......... SUCCUMBS AT 11 Dictator Salazar LISBON (AP) -· Anlonlo de Oliveira Salazar', ~rtmier and dJctator of Portugal for 36 yeara, died at hit home in U.bon todoy oil« a loo& illness. He WU 81 and Ellrope'I ionpst surviviDI pvemme:nt chief iD modern times. The government · oecretaty of ln- fonnat.ion said sa1aJar died at t :t5 a.m. Among those at hil bedside was Dona Maria de Jesus Caetano Freire, bls llouek~per for the past 40 years. · Pres.ldent Amerlco Thomai, lhe ad- miral Salaur elevated in 1951, wu tour- ing Portuguese pn>vb1<:<'5 In Alrlco and wu !mmedlat.ely notified of the death. He was expected to return to Lisbon lm- medi&teJy.. · 'lbe b«hetor premiei' suffered a stroke In Septanber 1968 which Jett him partially paralyf.ed and forced his retirr? menl He developed a kidney infection tz days ago, and since then hb: condition had steadily worsened. Salazar died wllbout knowing his political pooition bad been wrested' from him. A bashful dictator, Salazar loved power but shunned its trappings. Ruler of the world's last great Victorian-style oveneu empU., be lived like an ®"""" clerk. Simplicity, frugalil)I and austerity marked his personal life. A shy, scholarly eq>nomist, he was rarely ~n by his own people. In a 5 Americans Die, 3 Hurt In Overnight Shellings _ SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. troops suffered their heaviest losses ln overnight shelling attacks in two months SUJlday night and early today -five men kUled and three wounded. Another four Gls died in fighting described by mlllilary spokesmen as light and scattered. 11le focus of the war in Southeast Asia centered 1n Cambodia, Where South Vietnamese troops killed 58 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese &µlday in th e first day of a new 2,500-mao drive into Cambodia to clear lUghway 1 between Rescued Sailors Say One Ship Passed Them By SEPT 15)4;8, Que. (UPI) -Three New Jeney fishermen, rescued after being adrift Jp the Atlantic Ocean, sat up In a holpilal bere and told of !heir ordeal. • ' Su~~ ~:d: t!~r a o:~~ !~:! against the sea but of ~rs being ao near and pa&!ing them by deliberately. The three were adrift for seven days without food or water after their 46-foot trawler, . The Sea Starn, sprang a leak and sank in shark-infested waters. The fishermen, Tom Ellis, 38, Joseph Pottie, 61, and Joseph Davidoff, 37, all of Atlan- tic Cil)I, were plded up by 1 Swedish shlp tbe day after a cargo ship allegedly passed them up. They were brought here Saturday night and were reported in "pretty good con- dition" at Sept Jslea Hospital where they were treated for exposure and ex- haustion. The thret. declined to name the cargo ship became of their plan to make a formal complaint to authorities. They said it swept so near their life raft that they could read the name. They saw a man come out of the pilot house, look at them and then go inside. The ship continued on its journey, the men said. Davidoff said the ship passed by on the sixth day they were adrift. ••They were pracUcaJly on top of us," he said. Davidoff reparted that while the weather was not really clear, it was not foggy. ''They seen us all rlgb~" Pottle Saigon and Phnom Penh. Informed western sources h1 the Cam· bodian capital said Allied warplanes have begun bombing missions agaillst the an· clent ruins at Angkor Wat, where Com- munist troops are hiding out. Three civilians were reported wounded. Most of the American casualties In the overnight shellings in Vietnam wet1! attributed to a 20-round mortar b81Tage late Sunday into the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division's base camp at Phuoc Vinh, 36 miles north of Saigon. The losses were the heaviest since May 24. Three other U.S. Gls died In brief skirmishes ill the northern war zone and along the CambOdian border. Another was killed and two were wounded in a booby trap explosion on the northern coast. No guenilla losses were reported in these clashes. The biggest battle in the Vietn am war mne saw Cmlmunist attackers kill three South Vietnamese troops and wound 12 at an outpost deep in the Mekong Delta. Spokesmen said the bodies of two guerrillas were found after the fight. Military souces said the level of com- bat in Vietnam has hit a "very low leyel," especially along the Cambodian border. There are slgns,.OOwever, that the guer- rillas are be,umtng to return to these areas after their retreat during the cross- border allied drive of'May and June. El- ements of three Communist regiments are said lo have beeo algbted there. Lawson Quints Now in School AUCKLAND, New Zealand (AP) Near.ipandetnoniu:n reigned at Hobson- ville primary school today when the Lawson quintuplets, on their fifth birth- day, arrived for their first school day. Aceompanled by their mother, Shirley Lawson, the four girls and one boy, with school satchels in hand. were trailed by scores or wildly excited puplls as they made their way to the headmaster's study, where they were enrolled. "I had very mixed emotions when the time came for them to go/' said Mrs. Lawson. "I ha d thought : 'Gosh , 1'11 be glad to get you little devils off lo llchool; but wben they had gone I !ell deed." Warmer Weather Hits U.S. -Showe rs Dot N or~.t Central Plains and Rock ies Cellternla Tiie 11111,. 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" " " " " " .. " " " • n " " .. .. • a • .. n .. • " .. .. .. M • " .. .. ... ,, ., .., ·" 1.M .. ... ... ·" "' nallcn o! poverty, he pOJd hl-U $lltl a week and ..,.m hll vacotlonl In a onwtory cottqe In the vWqe .,bent be WU born. ., But fmn the day lie took <Mr 11 premier In Im, be beld Portup! ond its African fiefs In on Iron pip. Rebellions developed but did not prevail during his li!etime In the A!rfcan ter- ritoriea: of Angola, Mozambique and Guinea. Efforts to stir hil people to uprising came to naught. Salazar's technique was paternal, sometimes even benevolent. But he con-tro'Ued polie arid press and pennitted token opposition for Only 40 days before elections every four years. With a reputation for f I n a n c J a 1 wizardry, Sa1azar kept Portugal's budget balanced when other European nations were deep in debl But he did so at the eipense of the workers, who are among the lowest paid, wont fed and most illiterate in Eµrope . Yet Portugal's voters shOwed PolitiCal unconcern and made no serious move to replace him. In 1966 Salazar declared the public revenue bad incrtued :U.fold lo l'Ot mllllon, Wlterocy In lhe llchool Pol>lllftlqn bad dropped lo almost ,.,. h'om 70 per«lll and Iha! production wuap. U the people of Portugal seemed aailsAed, il WU nol 10 wllb the blacks of ~lo, Mownblque and Guinea. Coi>- ·lng Witb mounting lltuggiea !or In- dependence ate deeply lnlo tbe care!ully • nurtured Portuguese treasury. 1be nation wu forced to maint&i.n an army of more than 100,000 men ove~ About 40 percent of the national budgets of recent years has been spent on defense. There has been a boom in tourism, with In important influx of forejgQ ex- change. But the trade balance showed a deficit of more than $371 million in 1967. Foreign investments in Portugal have dropped sharply. Industrialists ,.Y many sectors of the economy are in trouble as a result. • Salazar was born April 23, 18891 of peasant stock in Santa Comba Dao. At his mother's behest, he entered a seminary to study for the priesthood but soon changed bis mind and took up economics. He wu a profeuor of economics a the University of Coimbra unUl 1928. when C<n. Anlonlo Oscar de Fr•so c.,pnona, the IUr\'lvor of I J9le military coup, called blm to the minialry of finan<e lo stralpten out Portugal's snarled fiJiaooes , Four years later Saluar became prel11ier and In 1933 ushered in the "New State" COQ.!tltution which set f.tit legal basis for b1s dlc- talorahlp. Union Wage Demands Rej ected in Britain · WNDON (UPI) -A oourl of inquiry rejected the wage demands or 47 ,000 striking British Longshortmen today and reca:nmended they temporarily acctpt the increase offered them bf employers . 1be findings of the three-man court were handed to union leaders and port employers at the Department of Employ• ment and Productivity. Officials im· medlately eipressed strong doubts the unions or rank-.and file longshorrmen would accept lhe c:oorl's findings. I You Work Less You Save Money Keeps things clea~er wi thout effort , eliminates bath tub rings Soap and clothing last longer Di•~ .....,. FeelFrnll ...a ... Ask About Se ars Con venient Credit Plans F REE Estimates ! Phone Sears Today! I Sears I So. Coast Piasa, 3333 Bristol SI. ......, .......... __ Plione 540-3333 The crafty shopper: he watches and waits and cal- culate1. When he does buy, he always 1eem1 to get the best prod11d for the best price. Rl11ht now, the crafty ~uyer is buyl n11 Sylvania di1contlnutd models. These sets, which have to be moved out so that they can be n placod by newer on11, hove all tho quality that makes Sylvania the expert's choice. I!' fad, Sylvania dlsconttnuod models a re better than most other people's continued models. You, too, can be foxy. A Jot of entertainment at a budget price. Giant 295 sq. in. viewing area color TV. Hal the highly reliable Sylvania Gibraltar"' ch""is and color brliht 85• picture tube . Ask for Sy!~ model CF600. NOW ONLY $399'5 'TV RECEPTION SL\IULATED TM-T....rt_. $yt-1• El.c!M ~ ll!t. Portable stereo record player with FM/AM and FM 1tereo radio. Sylvania model EXP460has100 watts peak mualc power and Sy!vanla Air Suspension speakeni • NOW ONLY $12995 Your Sylvania headqu6rters 411 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa Dolly 9-6, Mond1y & Frid1y 9.9 CO.UTAL. VALLIYS -MOtflr 111, ""9111111 Tl.lffdily flUf -l1t1 n1th1 111111 _.,, '"°"'"" ..... clouds •nd '"· l.1"'9 -Ill ,.,,. .. ,.,"... O....· 114-.............. .,.. k<Olld 111911 • ' •....... ,,ill '""· t' SOConcl lo" .... , ••••• &1• '·"'· l.t Sun a 1 .... •:oo •·"'· hll 11• 11.111. Moo!! Ith , ... '""" ., ... ,.,., 11,11'1. Ir Ill ii'idl "'4 on Vtlfnllnt, Ntll .. Ind ...... ,, ,,...,. thffl .....,,.t, lncft ..,.... MIMfHO!ll llMI tllochnttt, Minn,. tnd Mtten Cir,., lowt. ~ l~n OM<Mll 111(11 ., rtlfl hll Otmlne, HM: .. ,,, .... ,. ktllt• ._ .. W1ll!lllll011 .. _ .. .. " " " " " .. "J,~~~~------------------1 _ Phone 646-1614 , • \ I ' l f ' • ~ • ' 2 J J j • • • San £1emenie ~apisirano voe. 63, NO. 178, 3 SECTIONS , ~2 PAGES EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY 27, '1970 TEN CENTS Tate Murders Witness Tie-lip Tried LOS ANGELES (UPll -DefenM! lawyers for Charles Manson and three female members of 'his "family'• tried today to block leslblony by the pro- secution'a only alleged eyewitness to the Sharon T.ale murders. ..Prior to the opening of the morning sesaioo.,. Attorney Paul Fitzgerald told newsnltn that as soon as Llnda Kasabian, 20: 'takes the stand, he would ' ask the judge to delay her testimony, Yilzterald uid the defense would ask the judge to grant them access to statements Mrs., Kuabian, a co-defen- dant turqed state's witness, had already made to the prosecution. He said Lhe defense was unable to prepare-its case without knowing what Mr~. Kaspblan, who will be granted immunity fiir te.Uing her ·story, had told ·the district attOmey's otflce in private meetings.• William Garretson, 19, told the jury in the trlaJ;,. opening testimony that he was awakened at dawn but heard no shots, screa:ns. or loud noi$es in his bungalow which is located oo the other side of the swlmmi!'lg pool from the main residence. Garret.son said he first learned or the killings of Miss Tate and four others when police burst into his cottage wit.h drawn guns lhe next morning. ·Ht was at first charged with suspicion of murder in the slayings but later released. · Mrs. Kasabian, who lived with the hippie cutt at the Spahn Rind! commune at lhe Ume of the five kWlnp at tbe Tate home and two others 1t the home of grocer Le n o LaBlance has b e f: n isolated from !he oil= defendants-and kept under special guard pending b e r testimony. Deputy District Attorney Vincent T. Bugllosl said ln his opeqlng atate:nent tlllt Mn. Kasablan 1Ctuilly saw tbrte klUlnp at 1be estate ,rented by Roman Polanstl, !he movie dlrector husband , ol the blonde aclrus. Buclioef aakl she witneued !he kllllni• of colfee heir.,. Abilall Folger, Polish writer Voltych Frykowskl and ti-year-old Sievert .Partnt, wbo had been vlslUng younc G1rretson. Their bOOif:t were found outside the home. Miss' Tate and halr slylbl Jay Sebring wm killed Inside the rambling ranch liOme. Mrs. Kulbiln was aald by the ttate to have driven members of the "family" I!>e nm nllbl lo the Lalliana home .. 111d acted ., a !<>olcout tbere. BuclJcol sald ManMllt ordered her and others ol hla cult to carry out a killina at a third home that same nlgbt ol A111.· t In-the beach Jront communlly of Venice, but, be said, Mn. llaalblan dellberately thwart..r ll ·by lalockllll on !he wning aport:nent door, On trial with MINIOll 1re Sllll.D Attlns, Patricil Krenwinkd llld Leslie Var. Houten. Hair Appeal Due? Secret Saddkback Session Set Saddleback Colle1e trustees will hold a closed" ei:ecuUve . session at their meeling tonlgh't to discuss a recent court ruUng that their long hair ban violates studenl.!I' constitutional rights. A spokesman for the college said the i1sue "might come up" during ,the public meeting, but would be discussed in detail during the exeCutive session with Deputy County Counsel John Powell. who has represented the board during tlie ex· tended legal battle over the .hair length. Powell aaid Jut wee):, "thete's a good ch~nce trustees will want to.appeal" the decis.lon banded down by U.S. Dist Judge Harry Pregerson. 1be court decision held that rules against · long hair were arbitrary,_ and that the Constitution forbids elected representatives from making arbitary regulations .. The ·met.tint begins·at 7:45 p.m. In other matters, the board will be asked ,to approve a recopunendaUon from college Superintendent President Fred H. Bremer to change the name of lhe district .to &Jddleback CO mm u n 1 t y College Diatrict. The name has been Saddleback Junlot College District, but under 1 new ltate law, the name change can be m1de. The board will be given a report concerning accreditation of the college next fall. A group of accred.iton from the state will evaluate the colle1• for: three days and then report their findina:s. Accreditation spans one to three years, depending on lhe conclusions of the group. ' Trustees are n.:pected to approve S3 parking fee per student per quarter for the 1970-71 academic year. Countians Flood Senate Husband Watches As ,Wife Fatally f_'J,r;,J}aq!yfi·m .tl;~!J '1'~k .... ·;, Injm;ed by. Cycle ~~;~~ :~ken-o11B..c..·w;~1¥-· >. hu.sbood·~aaf.-.a·· daru.ei . . . --&y ?ROMM,l'Oll1'lJNE · ' • 1 ,; • Of .. ,.., , .. ;ts,ff ' I ~ "~~ ;_ 'Spok....., for clff ahd ,county government,· Mm!Owner lnil. ' 1 , ti f Iandownef mter~ts We re In ~e state lan!lowner la 1lle Wat ~'at1a. Coast lli&bway with hls wife watched , "'*•led. In ;peat !in opp0111ion'~1er In "1oc.lt 11 a motorcycle sWnmtd 1n1n today,..;. Lal!Jlll .Beadl Clty,Iila11&ger lier Friday nllfll. 'l'IJe Injury waa falal. Jatnes1'#he1too,' Plus Goata Mesa Milyor Shirley Jean Hiuit, 3Z, a Klnau ' . , ' c~pitol. today f'f what was ahaping up as perhaps the key vote on a bllJ to prevent construction of Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Beach and part or Hu nµngton Beach. Robert' M. Wilion and' City Attorney •ecretary, dJed Sunday morning at'Soutb &y June. . Coast Community ilotpllal. She and her A~GEL'S<OWN!!;R 1GENI AUTRY'P l:AY~ HOST TO .NATION'S NO. 1 liASEBA(,L .FAN . After Tr1.veling~We1t,,Prtildent •W1tch11 1W1ld, ind W~lly Conttst With Farmer CoWboy Star The lineup pits Newpo-':1 Beach In· husband Jack were visiting Laguna . ter~sl! standing alone apmst. the com-B b bir\ed oPPoSition of representatives or eac · Colla Mesa, Huntil!ston Beach, FOW1lalR Poli<e said the COOple ,!tempted lo Pitcher Tries · Catc'hing-Nixon Summons . . · • . ' . . . ~Defense Leaders A hearing before tlie -S e n a t e Transportation Committee was set for later today. Assemblyman' Robert Badham (ft. ·Valley, Laguna Beach; and the county -croes the major artery in lhe xio block or Orange. or North Coast High.~ay ahortly before Chairman 0£ lhe Senate .Transportatio n mldni ht OUJ ·-1 C9mmittee Sen. Randolph Collier (0. g . cers NJd they were not Yreka) was not av&lllble for comment in a crosswalk. Gzw,rdsNixonF,romFoulS For Top Meeiing Newport Beach), the author of the bill. said this morning prospects looked good but .he wasn't outri1ht 11redlcting the senate committee would r~end th• hill for passage. He sakl the vote would nOt be unanirnouS. prior to the hearing but ii known to Hunt told polJce he saw the motorcycle oppe>se intervention by the l~il!lature cornJng and yelled for it to .stop. The In ~reeway all~~ents a<i>pte.d ·by the southbound vehicle swerved and a olded highway comm1.SS10n. . v The Sercet Service had Some pro- fessional, if nervous, assistance, in guarding the President at tbe Sunday baseball slugfest in Angels Stadium, Anaheim. · Pat Rogan, Angels' b3tting practice t>Ucber, was Seated In frorit of the Presi· dent to guard against ·the possibility or a foul ball beaning the nation's most important baseball fan. "When they asked me to sit ·in front Of the 'President.'' said Rogan , "I told them they were taking a tremendous chance with my hand." The 1 t ·inning 1ame, with the Washington Senators which the Angels won 11·10, lasted three hours and 56 minutes and Nixon wenl the distance. Rogan said he was amazed al the President's knowledge of the: players and the gaqie. "He talked to me quite a bit during the game,"~said the pitcher. "He asked me some questions and discussed the Hitchliiking Girl Molested Near Emerald Bay A teenage girl hitchhiker was molested at klllle pOlnt near an Eme.rakl Bay entrioce Friday nlght and was struck on tbt mouth wheri she -protested. LICM• Police Lt. John 7.e.lko said the J.9-year-old Gardtt'I Grove girl was given a ride _In Newport Beach i:lY a man about 2.S years old. Hls sun visor bore the •or~ '1hot stuff.'' HAI purehaoed a JOit drJnk for h<r 1n the vk:lnib' of SCOtchman's O>ve and later mopped· neat the tnain gale at E;nerald Bay cl1lmlng he WaJ Soin& to check his car. 1.elko said the man put 1 knife against lht girl's neck and tokl her ''be 'I nice girl and move over." When she prolest.ed. the man at.ruck her In the fact, releated her and drove away. TM lnc:idtnt wu lbt lat.est of ·1everal tn wh ich men have mo1uted &irla'wbo were hllchhlkinl In !he atta. strategy~ ·things like that. It was quite an honor." Rogan said the Presiden t told him he never leaves before the end of a game. The guardian pitcher: seemed relieved when• it was all over and th ere had been no foul~ hit in the direction of the Presidf:nt. A sidelight or the 32·hit ga me was a maO dash by youngsters each half inning to the Presidential box to ha ve Nixon autograph programs, baseball gloves and rented seat cushions. The smiling President kept ob liging until play. was resumed. Then Secret Service bodyguards would shoo away youngsters until three more batt ers were oul. Nixon arrived by helicopter and orange goU cart and joined Mr. ind Mrs. Gene Autry. The former cowboy movie star is one of the major o,mers of the Angels. The President told him he was "torn between Ure two teams but tried 1o remain neutral." President Nixon · SLJmmoned Dete.nse ~ecretary Melvin R Laird and Deputy Secretary David 'Packard · to meet-w\th him in San Clemente toCl.:iy to consider r~huffling the Pentagon, now under fire for heavy cost overruns. The conference is one of• a string of meetings at the Western , While House designed to reshape the· massive· Defense De partm ent and set priorities for lhe 1972 budgeL Dr. Hen ry A. Ki~inger, national security affairs ad viser, also will ail In on th e meeting~. Nixon and his adv isers will have before them a far-reaching report by a blue ribbon panel on Defense Department reorganization headed by Gilbert W. • Filthugh, chairman of the board of Metropolitan L I f e Insurance Co. The tyear-long study will be made public Tues· day. The Presidebt also was expected 1o discuss stratei)' for obtaining Senate approval of the •t9'.S billion defense (Set NIXON, Pa1e'I) The bill, which previou~ly passed the · state assembly 46 to e. would delete . from the state freeway system the Pacific Coast Freeway route between Beach Boulevard In Huntington Beach and the eastern New'J)Ort Beach city limits at Corona del Mar. · . · Badham said, "Half of Qrange County is up here kibbying in the rear or the senate right now." · , Indeed there were many delegations both for and against the freeway but they appeared to be doing more spec· tating than lobbying. Present to argue again9t the freeway route were Newport Beach Vice Mayor Howard Rogers ; Marshall Duffield, Paul Gruber and John MacFaden; Robert Curci and John Store of the Corona del Mar United Homeowners AMOCiaUon. Ready to testify In favor of retaining the route were Jim Wheeler, Huntington Beach Chr.nber of Comm etc e 's transportation committee; Gordon Jone,, and Dr. Thomas Ashley of the Irvine 9ompany; Hancock "Bili Banning U! . However, the Senate Trj!!ruiportalion hun but st.ruck hla wife as Hunt wak:bed. Committee just one week agd unal')lmoua-The driver, Billy Frank Mitcham, Jr .• ly ·recommended ·deletion of a segment 22, of 521 S. Coast !Ughway, a bartender, of the coast freew1y through Venice, was taken to the hospital and released. between Marjna Del Rey and the Santa A police report Indicated he wu not Monica city .lint. at fault in the accident. "Ecological and envirorunental factors are being studied now In relation to llCf:nic freeways," Bad ham said. He said bills to delete portjons ol freeways are not without precedent, that coast freeway through Redondo Beach and Manhattan Beach was deleted several yeai;-s ago, and that ·four other freeway deletion blUs are pendini in this session of tt>e legil!ature. ~ The worry of the opposition ls that passage of the Badham biU would cause indefinite postponement of construction of any segment of the coast freeway and also that it· could result in the freeway realignment through other cities. The present r.oute, adopte4 by the State Highway Commission In 196.1, sweeps from an Inland Huntington Beach alignment to the coast through Nf:Wport Beach just inland of Pticlfic Coast Freew.,y .and along 5th Avenue In Corona del Mar before bendine hick inland Surgery Changes Sex of Brothers ST. PAUL, Minn. CAP) -Two hall· brothers who tired (1f "playing a mas- querade" are now alatera alter un- dergoing transsexuai surgeZ.y at Universl• ty of Minnesota Hospitals. In a ct>pyrighted 1tory in Sunday'• St. Paul Pioneer Press, Lauraine, who used to be Cary, and Lenette, who used to be Burt, aaid they believed tbeJMelvet to be the first blood brothers to have undergone the sex<hange surgery. Lauraine, an attractive 23-year-old blonde woman, underwent the surgery two years ·ago and Lenette, 23, wu operated on siJ: months later. County Firm • Ill Trouble of Laguna Beach. . · The Badham . bill does not call for rerouUng or 111pecily an alternative route. But. by cuttJDg, out just that segment from Beach Boulevard 'to Corona de! Mar It suggesls !he pol!ibility ol adding Ora1111f e Natec Ousts PresU.lent, Faces $23 Million Lf)ss ixtr1 I~ to Ute future 'route 39 freeway <P.ralfelinf BeBdr Boul.Vard), aod the San Dltgo Freeway past Costa Mesa, "Ith the future Corona 'del Mar Freeway An Orange County·based corporatkln which deals Gi liquor, he.alth foods and hospitals }\all dumped lt.s president and is aellin.g su~idiarles in an effort to pay debts totallrig nlore lhu $2 million. The' National Environment Corporation, with offices Jn' Union Bank Square, Orange, may sufftr · 1osses as high as $23.5 million for tht fiscal year ending last March. Operating under the acronym Natcic, the company officers ttiet 1hrouahoUl last week with representativti 'of its bankers and creditors In an unsuccessful attempt to work out difficulties. A formal announcement Friday reveal· ed former Insurance man Henry D. Clarke Jr., had been ousted as president of NaLec ind replaced by Elmer C. Sproul. chairman of !he board. Clark! r<cenUy pl<died 1100,000 from the company lo Harbor Area Olrf Scouts, \ but a company •Pokesman said tod1y but the company now wanta to ll along MacArthUr Boulevard to be bent M eutward towird a tie in witb the Cout IPreewaY 'tO'R.'al'd Laguna Be~ch. the effect on that donation was uncertain. that finn as well. kl ~ 1 th BeJldea those organlzaUona, Natec 1llo The main subs iary u1s~a is at owrui the Uocle .John's Pancake House of a meat.packing firm , V!rg Davidson· restaurants; operating llflder the UUe Chudacoff Compaay for $1.5 million, • Envlrofood Inc., Blum's Candies, Orange Natec ~u~chase made one year ago for County Business machines and 1 variety IU !!Ullion. . . ' of other.ent...,..laoSJ • ' •• J. . • • For Long Sacrifice Preliminary negotj.aUons are a1"{under N1tec w" «(~ in l~IX ~ , , .1 • , •. w4y Io self Glfmore 4' Qnn~.J< 1 by Qillrke ind 111 li0c1~$E ' , " KO' ,.,.' • . • • ' NA!\lC,<l\\'ned ~1.0Ui1>1'q0111pa•y1 Wlllte1be ;, vakle .. 11/ilJjj!INf flnucl • . HQNO "" (llP)--BJSl!op '1ames organlutron· "111> plillll 'to ',.;i,'rlcl oi ' ith1M!lve' 1e.(ra" Oiiiier o(' ',. ' ' ~· );. ~lili''l\1~ .. roc,elved .•;tet1er from, Miiford ComfiaQY! ~ liquo~ ld~tribulf'ng and two other Olflc«!. ;· ~ • Presldtlll Nli<J)ll. saY1111• hi• • sactlfi!f firm. · Beside• Clark&. vice ~rmlJI 4obo and' cour~1e will ahft~s be remembered ' Virtually all of 11ii Nait<>1>rKanliaUon'1 ft,. Callas ant ezeciltift vict prulileo~ bf men llho .chedih peace and wlfo holdings in the 'fit:fd of· hospital c:are John L. Holleran Wtre .rentoVed from~ work for1peace,'" ' ,. , . will also go, foliowlnj announcement ]1st their posts dW"ing the tl\a.keup. ; Tbt .ftotl]an, ca~lc rnis»onary., 79, monl.h that Its U. co!\valeBCtnl• liOspitals The> formill atatemeot b1'Ute comptny waa released earhu. l;hla 1l'l~th after would be .old. , managem<11t 11ld that 'llllfo Natec II ~ yea11 In a Red Chinese pr,....10!· Sunllle Medical Ctnietl inc., li'Na~ )lavln1 Its prob!""', 1)1 lls aubsldlary flclals at Marylmolf Hoopital, wb~ tht 1ubsldlary, was ~to ObnUnue o~;tl" ·, hokting1 are conlln.tnr ,to opera\t ·11 bl.s~p, I~ recuper1Unl. •lid 'the White them under the COl'.por•le reorranlutlo~, ~uaL , H01111 Jiiter 1111 datad Ju11, 11. ' Nixon· Latids Wa-lsh • . . . = . Weadler The coasUine may fog up durinl the mornfnr hours, but Tuea:tay'1 weather picture should be pretty bright olherwlae with liUle temp- erature change. INSWE TO,DAY ..t t1~i£ to Micrographiu lne. In Nrwport Brach rev<all the nnalt, """" tDOtld of mlcro-lcopicJ>~bt9qt~)Jhp, ,5,. a P.ftca of ,,.tti/l<d 1JJOll<1> 1!\aglll/!<~ 2.000 times. See Paoe 16. u ' • ,,.,, u M " • 1•1t , .. ,, " ' DAILY ~ILOT SC M-, July 27, 1970 O,t,ILY PILOT Slfff l'lto .. CROWD LINES UP OUTSIDE FESTIVAL GROUNDS, WAITING FOR THE GATES TO OPEN Tourl1h J am Festival of Arts Sunday, With Nearly 1,000 Admitted in First Hour 42,000 Visit Arts Festival Since opening a week ago Friday, aome 42,000 persons have mean- dered through Laguna's 3Sth aMual j ' Festival I of. the Arts. or that number, 17,000 have viewed the Pag'eant ol the Masters "com- mand" performance -the best of the past 35 years. Lines of persons usually are found on Sundays, wailing to get into the Festival grounds when ii opens at ,noon each day. Trams too, also report slow downs, due to heavy tcaflic and Jots or passengers. Though lhe pageant is sold out, tickets are eomeUmelll available shortly berore tJle,8:30 p.m. curtain due to cancellations, at lhe festival bOJ: office. Everything seems to be up at the Festival and aales are no ex- ception. From tbe report ol aale1 slipo Jumed Jn to !..Uni officials, arWts are fioding It very worthwfille to d:hlbrt this year. 30,000 Visit Laguna Beaches Pleasant beach weather, with air temperature hovering at 74. degrees and wa ter a comfortable 66, brooght crowds estimated at 30,000 to Laguna Beacb sands on Saturday and again on Sunday. Two rescues were logged by lifeguards Saturday but th number I n c re a s e d to 14 on Sunday u surf mounted alightly, producing occasklnal five-foot waves. First aid cases handled by the guards, 44 on Saturday and 28 on Sunday, In- cluded minor cuts and injuries. Tyrone Power's Kin Weds Italian Singe r CELLINO SAN MARCO, lully (AP) -Romina Power, daughter of. the late American actor Tyrone Power and ac-. tress Linda Christian, has married Al Bano, one 0£ Italy's top pop singers. The Roman Catholic ceremony toot place Sunday in this soothern Italian town which was Bano'1 birthplace. MISll Power Is 19, Bano 27. The bride's mother attended the wedding. ·. DAILY PILOT N...,.n .. ... "'"" ....... h••Ni• Y.ilef .... _ i.eil•N ... C~ c ...... ... I OllANGI COAST ~Ua\.ISHINO. COMJIAN't l•ti•rt N. w,,4 ... Jlruld"'I .,.. '"'11tlt.hfr J 1ck I. Curl•v Vici 1''1i:O.,t atld ~11 MllllHW no,.,,11 K11,il EdllO!' Tlio11111 A, Mur,M111 Miiiet~ EdlttN' Ric~1r4 '· Nill ku!h ~ Cl\lfll1 Ed!IW Of!k" C..19 Mn.1: :a» Wc.11 111 llr .. t H""°'"t ltlcft: D11 Wiii at11101 811Wltvl ... \.lfUN ... Cft; :r2f l' .. 111 ... ...., ... HUl!tlnQIOrl IMdl: 1n11 lttcll 1111,oin1.-. S.ft C-le1 .S HOl"lft II C:MftlM ltHl 'A Lot of Fun' Scuha-chutists Hit Water In Laguna Guards' Show Two Laguna Beach lifeguards and a veteran sky diver parachuted with scuba gear on their backs, sailing 13,000 feet into the waters off the beach as part of Saturday's lifeguard "Demonstration Day." "It was a lot of fun," gaid guard Skip Conner, after making the jump. "Contrary to what people think it is not a feeling of falling. It's more like flying or floating." Cionntr, aloog with guard Dean Westgaard and sky diver Bill Mowan, left former guard BreMan "Hevs" McClelland's Cessna 155, went tbrngh the clear blue for one minute in free fall, then opened their parachutes, touch- ing down near a buoy o(( Main Beach. After landing in the water, the guards were picked up by boats that were on hand for tbe dtmonstration. Jn the traditional relay races betwetn the north, south and rookie llfeguard.!, the north guards, led by Je!f Quam, snatched victory. Each leg o! the relay was 400 yards loog, but that didn't bother the three teams who swam and paddle-boarded the course. Spectators also received a light spray of sea water during the demonstration of the Orange County Harbor Department Fire Boat. The huge pumps on the boat forced water through t h e nozzle several hundred feet toward the beach. Also popular al the demonstration was lhe landline rescue. Guary Jeremy Ked· dleston posed as the "victim" while John Slowsky paddled the line out from the beach via surfboard. After "res- cuing" Keddleston, the two were tDWed in by the remaining guards on the beach. beach. Such a resdue is used when heavy surf or riptldes prevail Uf Laguna's beadles. The public got a look at the Lifeguards Unit 55-B, a boat powered by a 13&- horaepower engine and capable of clip- ping along at «I knots. LUeguards al.!IO demonstrated the use of their land truck, inflatable splints, emer1ency first aid, and regular rescues. Un-fairy Tale Snoivdons Called 'Reluctant Couple' NEW YORK (UPI) ....:. Britain'• Princess Ma.igaret and Lord Snowdon do not have a completely happy mar- riage, according to the Ladies' Home Journal. The magazine's current issue has an article by a "well-pla~d B r l l i s h aristocrat" writing under an assumed name who calls the r o y a I couple what is known in England as a "reluctant couple." The article said that on formal oc- casions, Princess Margaret and Snowdon put on a show, but at info rmal gather- ings, "the unfortunate situaUon is only too clear." They had a disagreement, somewhat healed for royalty, over art on a recent visit to a London gallery. Snowdon was admiring a painting of a nude male said to be ''slightly pornographic." Snowdon is quoted as saying, 111 think Gas Main Struck By Bulldozer A large bulldozer clearing an orana:e grove in San Juan Capistrano punched a gaping hole in a major gas main early this morning near a residenUal neighborhood. But sheriff's depulies said thal other than fire department standy-by and some gas shut-offs, no major safety errorts were needed while crews worked to patch the hole. The leak erupted at 8:20 a.m., spewing gas into the air at the intersection of Cam ino Capistrano and Callt Chueca near the Casi.las Caplatrano neighborhood. Crews from Southern Counties Gas Company were at the scene through the morning malting repairs. Lagunan Gets Bugged When 'Bug' Rolled Thomu Townstnd , fin Anita SI., Laguna ~ach, had a r1ght to feel bua:ged Saturday nigh:. Someone rolled his Volkswagen onto lts stdt. Pollet said a wllntsS saw fi ve or six young men loiterin g around the amall car. Tiiey were Rpparent ly from 1 p11ty. The roll did about f100 dam111e. I we should buy I~ -what do you Utlnk?" "I'm not 60 sure. ·isn't it a bit •.• much?" she was quoted. And lhe article says Snowdon replied, "A bit much indeed. What in hell do you know about art anyway?" 'Ille magazine reports that at a party, Snowdon, a photographer was discussing a w o r k problem with his host. T h e princess interrupted them, according to the magazine, "demanding that he return to the p a r t y because she wanted to dance." Snowdon is quoted as saying, "Oh, go away, you bore me." Coast Taxpayers Face Increase Despite Cut Many Orange County taxpayers face an increase in their tax bills in spite of the fact county supervisors have cut three cents rrom the county tax rate. The estimated 1~71 budget; approved Friday, woukl require a tax rate of $1.64 per $100 assessed valuation. Last year's rate was $1.67. But the total tax bill increase is an- ticipated because County Assessor Andrew Hinshaw increased assessments an average of 17.6 percent A series of last minute cuts -mostly in capital projects -whittled the new budget down to an estimated $212,420,748. That figure is .some $7 million below the iniUal budget submitted by County Administrative Offi~r Robert Thomas, and 90llle 21 perctnt higher lhan the previous year's budget. In addition to nearly $4 milUon worth of cuts In the capital projects program, supervisors told lhe wellare department to reduee iU ~l budget by 31 l>O'iUons and the probltion department by 16 pos!Uom. Pearson Ge ts Surger y O'M' A WA (AP) -Letter B. Pe.arson, former prime minister of Canada, left Sonday tl>e hoopltal wh<,.. his right eye was removed last week because of a tumor. --------- Armory · Theft Probed Federal Agencies Study Pendleton Crime Federal agencie:t: continued to seek leadl loday on auspt<ts and tile location of a cache of weapons stolen from a Camp Pendleton annory over the weekend. Spokesmen for the Marine Corps aaid no new information had been found on the theft on the Camp Margarita armory late Friday night when apparently three men clubbed a guard with a rifle butt then stole rifles, a grenade launcher and the guard's .4S.Caliber automatic. The incident, occurring within an hour of the arrival on the South Coast of President Richard Nixon, sparked an immediate response from the Western White House Secret Service corps, who joined in the weekend Investigation. But on Sunday White House spokesmen played down that agency's role in d1e probe or the weaspons theft. Pre.9idential Press Secretry R o n Ziegler said no extra security measures involving the Chier Executive ensued. The theft occurred at about 10:30 p.m. Friday night as Cpl. Kenneth D. Roberts was on sentry duty outside the arms storehouse. The assailants, reportedly blacks dress- ed in Marine fatigues, clubbed the guard unconscious, then took nine M-16 combat rifles, a grenade launcher and the guard's sideann. · The huge base'1 exlta were i m • mediately sealed off and intensive searches by Marine aut.horiUes, the FBI and the Secret Service were launched. The as5ailanU and the arms are believ· ed to be still on base, spokesmen said. The cache of arms may possibly have been stolen for use by militants, some sources said over the weekend, but Lt. Col. Ed Schultze, spokesman for the base, saJd that without specialized am· munition (which was not kept in the the armory) the guns and launcher would be useless. The M-16s fire a special round of ammunition which can not be purchased on the open market. The grenade launcher, he added, fires only 40-mlllimeter specialized grenades which are also dlfflcult to obtain. The theft of one of several reported This Painting Really a Steal As Festival of Arts sales continued brUkly In Laguna Beach over the weekend, well known watercolorist C.D. Arul Raj found t h a t an admirer of one of his work had skipped the formality ol paying for it. Police said the orange landscape was taken Friday f r om Raj's Booth. Raj, 31629 Second Ave., South Laguna, estimated the Joss at $25. In another petty art theft, Francis Wlni;hJp of Art & Fashions, 150 Laguna Ave., was distracted by a trio of women who tried on expensive dresses w h i 1 e filching three s m a 11 paintings. The loss was $55. Macco, Parent Firm Meeting Officials of Great Southwest Corp. and its wholly owned subsidiary, Macco, the Newport Beach development company, have conlcuded their meetings with representatives or some banks and len- ding institutions In an effort to solve cash problems. They did not hold conferences with all their creditors as indicated in a story publi~hed In Friday's Daily Pilot. Both Macco anc! Great Southwest ha ve had problems obtaining loans since their parent corporation, Penn Cent r a I Transportation Co. filed bankrputcy pro- ceedings, according to Angus G. Wynne Jr., president of Great Southwest. aboard military Installations In Callfornla thls· year -a &trlna: of '1'lmes attractlng ~ng attention by otflc.ials, tnc ludlnc Charles O'Brien. California's chief deputy attorney general. Last week before the Camp Pendleton incident, O'Brien told a Sehate sub- committee in Washington,· D.C .. that an "astonish!ng amount" of weapons and explosives bound for Indochina have been taken from military compounds In California. Included in the deadl)i loot are 94 one-pound bricks or C-4 plastic explosive, dor.eru; Of hand grenades, 10 bazoo kas and nearly 200 pistols, machine guns and rllles. The ammunition which O'Brien said is missing amounts to 65,000 roundll for several types of weapons. Israelis Claim Two MIGs In Furious Dogfighting By Unit.eel Pre11 Internati onal Israeli jet fighters shot down lwo EgyP.U&n MIG17 jets today in an air battle over the Suez Canal, a military spokesman said In Tel Aviv. The brief but furious dogfight came as each side sent planes across the canal in a new escalation of the conruct. Israel's hawkish Gahal Party met thtoughoul the day to try to find some way of agreeiag on the U.S. Mideast peace proposal and Israel's reply - expected to be . a sharply condlUonal acceptance -was expected later in the week. The Arab world• divided sharply on the issue and 15,000 Palestinian guer· rillas, some of them a r m e d , demonstrated in the streets of Amman against a ~ase-fire and against Presi· dent Gamal Abdel Nasler and King Hussei11. An Israeli military spokesman s'ald Israeli antiaircraft gunners hit a third MIG17 but did not see it crash. He said the dogfight developed when Egypt tried to raid targets on the Israeli side of the canal for the second time today, The interceptors swarmed in and quickly downed two of the raiders, he aaid. All Israeli planes returned safely, he said. The Israeli raids against Egypt marked the 67th coMecuUve day of strikes against Egyptian artillery siM!s and missile bases. lsrael said "several" Egyptian planes raided on the east side ol the canal in the morning in the shouted slogaas agaiJlst Egyptian Presi- dent Gamal Abdel Nasser and King Hussein· or Jordan. It was the first Arab demonstration against t h e American proposals. Among the crowd were guerrillas wear- ing arms in contravention of a July 10 agreement banning anns-carrying in the city. The demontsrators chanted "Abdel Nassar, the coward" and carried a placard reading, "We will change the area into hell if a settlement ls imposed." Another said, "The guns of our fighters will determine the fate of the Palestinian people." How there could be a r.ease-fire iJI the face of the Palestinian oppoaltion remained to be seen. Jordan's acceptance of the U.S. peace plan specifically ex- cluded the guerrillu who have vowed to fight forever to "liberate" Palestine. The nations supporting Nasser were Jordan, Kuwait, Sudan and Lebanon. Syria and Iraq not only rejected the proposal but filled the airwaves today with anti-American, anti-Israel and by implication, some anU-Egyptio blut.L Two Countians Killed in Crash Of DC8 Plane first such Egyptian attack in weeks. Two Orange Coast residents were Four Israeli soldiers were reported woun-among four crewmen killed today in ded. the crash of a Flying Tiger Airlines With the Arab world sharply split OC:S transport plane in Okinawa. on the U.S. peace proposals, Baghdad Officials at the line 's headquarters in radio unouaced that Sidam Hussein Los Angeles identified the victims as TakritJ, vice chairman or the ruling Capt. Cleo M. Trett, 58, of 15936 Mariner Revolution Command Council, had been Drlev, Huntington Beach, and First Of. invited to Moscow. Political sources said fleer Robert Foley, 59, of 611 Avenida Russia may be trying to qut!ll Iraq 's Teresa, San Clemente. vociferous opposition to the peace plan. Foley's survivors include his wife, Mrs. The Arab world was still awaiting Elizabeth Foley, of 611 Avenida Teresa, Israel's reply to the U.S. peace proposal San Clemen!e. Treft was not married and but Tel Aviv dispatches indicated it his next of kin reside in Iowa, according 1 to a Flying Tiger spokesman. wou d be a qualified acceptance. Jordan Their plane crashed while approaching accep~~ it but .syr~a, Iraq .and the .Arab the U.S. Kadena Air Base on Okinawa. guerr a orga1uzat1ons rejected it as U.S. military authorities said the plane, some sort of surrender. . . carrying military cargo and mails, broke Israel was reported willing to ac~p~_jnto pieces when it hit a coral reef the U.~. plan for peace talks prov1d7<1 as it approached ror a landing. there 1s a guarantee that Egyp.t will · High tide made immediate recovery not use the three-month cease.fire jg, 9r t~ bodies difficult but a rescue buil~ up its Suez: Canal line. The lsr)ieU'Jtesm later recovered th~m. cabmet met Sunday but was too divided Also killed were 2nd Officer William to !flake a .public statement. Another A. Gearge, 49, of Canoga Park, Cali(., cabinet meeUng was called for Tuesday. and Navigator Walter M. Robert, 45. The Arab guerrillas were so angry of Upland, Calif. they paraded through Amman and From Page 1 NIXON ... procurement bill and the next stage of the anti-ballistic missile system. Setting the stage for defense budget talks Tuesday and a domestic budget review Wednesday, Nixon scheduled a seoond meeting on the national economy. S1naU Bomb Expl odes Nea r NY Bank Office NEW YORK (UP I) -A small bomb e1tploded in the heart of Mmha ttan's financial district early today shattering windows of a branch of the Bank of America. No one wa s injured and liUle other damage was reported as a result of the explosion. BUY WHERE IT'S MADE SAVE UP TO 58°/o TRADE-IN Announcing a new breakthru in UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE TOU• OLD FV•NITUltl ON NIW LllOAL ALLOWANCES From O ur Show Room, Or We'll Cu1tom luild To Your Order • ALSO CUSTOM llEUl'HOLSTERING Ruffell'• m•nufeeture1 the fine1t furniture you wJll find •nywhere. You ••• it end 1elect it right in our 1howroom. P•y up to 50 i" .. , le•• th•n ret•il. Choo'• from en unl imi+•cl ••lee· t iqn of f•bric1, Cu1tom ch•ng•s •re •lso possible. e All WOll OUAl ANTltf' POl THI UFrTIMI OF JAt llC 1922 HARBOR BLVD. e COSTA MESA OR CALL FOR APPOINTMENT • 548-0259 l I / Suited fo Maturi ty .@~ Q.).!u~ .~~ .. ~I ?. ' \ ' . I /.._..--;-, I ;A Mot"• '. 70930 ' I .. i Lachasse j A suit of becoming maturity by Lacbasse of London. Note the feminine sleeves, front frog clos- ings and A-line shaping. Suitable for silk, linen, shantung, silk and wor- sted, lightweight and medium-weight wool. 70930 cut in Mature sizes 16-44. • Size :Jj) requires ap~roximately 3 3/8 yar!ls of t54" fabric. This precut, preperforated Spadea De- i ilgner Pattern produces a better fit or money back. . Order 70930 j give size, name, address and zip. 4 EACH pattern '2 postpaid. Address SPADEA, Box ~N. Dept. CX-15, Milford, N.J . 08848. Expresso Club Aims Disclosed ' I M-, ~~ 'll, 1970 DAILY I'll.OT J 5 Doll Up to Date-Almost 'Mom' -Sees No .Lib Pin for Barbie . NEW YORK (AP) Plalmlng a fall fuld.nlalnc Barbie, lbe mod 1 .. n&ge project ..tiicb wt~ belietll laabloo cloU who lops lbe lOl kidney disoue aulleren are Jaduslry's besl-<ir<ssed lisf members ol Iba~ Cltlb wllb bet minis mazis and ol the Ha-Area. .llligb-bicb booto' bu oo Im- Barbie's molber say1. Mn Handler, a stocky con- lrU! lo the .um !of l!'fChed .,....1eggec1 .., ber desk. announced Mn. Handler. 111 lhlnlt she is overy little girl's dream ol wbal Ille wants lo A modern .. uc ol Mn . Handler'1 d>IWbood1 She I.I Mrs. Rulb -· prooldell& ol Mattel, Inc. (the , 1'11111 year lhe can talk, till her head, move her snkl<s, A.....,.,.: lo Barb~' ~ be." ''No, I 'tt'U a 10mb]oy," ahe aald aoltly.' "I never plaY<d wllb cloU... 'Ibeir niguJar m o D t1b l y • mediate plana ' to pln a meeting is scheduled Jor lG W«nen'ilJ.beratlon button on a.m. on 11:up'lday~ July 30,•,. her fake furs. In lbe Newport Beacb -Tha~ al least, i> wllal Loi Angele&-lwe<'. toy ..... pany lbal prodllcea Barbie whooe own II-year-old daughter Inspired Iba doll eleven years q:o. "Each year we brine Barbie JllOHI up to date, >t upllined twlsl al, lbe -· bend at ............... >& I'll I i~ic:u' post, lbe dreom --'billlles the arms." ......-. for today's Httle girls Include Buf Ibo cmnot, appareotly, being a ...iJ.dresaed yOW1g rudjllll her thlnklng to join mlu, a llewanleas, a teMis the currebt lllllfl of. new player:, a skller, a health fa~ femlnlrm. · disl (complete wllb .. erc1se Girl Scouts Flying· Flag ol Mn. Jooepb.Evana; ,., Also on lbe fall .iginda will be a menibenhlp tea to at- tract il>Ole tntere!ted in prevemlon Ind treatqlent of kidney di!{eues, as well as in preventton research. Particular aim of lbe club is f<> acquire borne lrailllng klla for pellenis now 1Wng dialysis macllines at Orange Couoty Hoopllal. • _ 1bose interested hJ 1 further tnformallon about tf.e group. may call Mrs.· ~vans'-at 64z.. 2111 or lbe dub pr,esldeot, Mrs. Harvey P~ase at 67J. ootf. Catchalls Combine When women shop for fall and -clod!es, there is one departmeri in wtllch they will have no problems at all -the handbag depar1ment. -, _,; "A dOll and a toy reflect machines) and a glamorous Girl •-• ,,..,,_ 118! rocelv· M M Ph · 1 Wed the world ar<M>d a cbUd," hostess. ~"'" ••""'I' a ry c a I Mri. Handler aald slowly, In the post, when Ken -eel an ~ flag from i,.ning back In a green swivel Barbie's male COW1terparl -Veterans ol Fotelps Wus In 'ft s ' · cbair In her Manhallan office, was dressed u a doctor, P and ..... ,.,,_ _11 of 'A ett" ng next door to the office of Barbie was a nurse. ost A...-.-., "' . ernoon I her b ... band-parlner, Elliott How about u Barbie were W-ter. ' . , Handier,, chairman ol Iba ftpl'Mellted M lbe doclor for Pmentlnl t1111 flag were 'Rev. R<lfler T. Walke of. In 1-'1 lbel'!'Pl'. She 'u board o1 Mallet ooce! · Commander Edward 81anear1 flclated during Iba arternoon allllialod wllb Sigma Alpha •we cen1 reflect W!rf facet Mta. Handler aald: "Wben of Pool rlll and Commander ceremony in the Unltarian-Iota. of life.:.;. only«lllle, tt. better tbere--are enough women doc-Jaell: Woolworib of <>ranee Universalist Church of Costa Her huaband ~ !¥tended fae;ets.'' ton· around, tben Barbie will County Councll. Mesa when . Richard Arnold P~arce College_ and UCLA. He She look~ down at the have a doctor ouWl When Accepting the flag were Freed claimed Mary Stewart will be a candidate ,(or a MA· shapely Barbie doll, II inches American llrls go up in space, . lits. Robert Palison, leader, McPhail for his bride. degree a\ San Fernando of white fur-trimmed coat. then ft'Jifbave a Pol space and Mn. William R. J1Ybur&, Parents of lbe newlyweils , Valley Slate College In Iba maldriar bat and boots, and doll." co..porisor, and memb<n of are lbe Angus McPballs of fall. 11 a .,_. ol red holr !bat lloWed In ..,. O<rDer ol her lbe troop. Newport Beach and Dr. snd Following a Ha" a an lredJ pul her -.. >paCi<l91 office, an Infant doll The g1ri. learned lbe - Mrs. Arnold Freed 01 honeymoon, lbe couple will "Barbie i. 111 IS.year-old wbeeled acroa Iba floor in ways to display, "1ow ""POCt Hollywood. 1 _,._slde __ 1n_eano...._ccga_Par_k. ___ c1r_.....r __ u_p_1o_ha_v_• _•_ba_u_,"_•_amillng_-'-_P_lnlt-'p'-lasllc __ ar_c_. _1o_and __ fo_ld_lh_e_lla--=g-. --- . The aole attendant was Phil Stein, lbe benedict's bl'Olber- in-law. The bride ls a graduate of Newport -lllgh School and holds BA and MA degteeS from San Diego State College . ! NEW BOOK: Tomorrow's Look T o d a y! -Spadea's collection of Midis and Maxis-the Long· I ~ uette nook -i1 postpaid. The National Handbag Association advises that for the longer skirts there are new elongated. b a n d b a g s suspended fr<lll long handles and little clutches, held in the hand. 1bere are even scme that <COmbine the two effects: llttJe dutclles wllb long skinny handes lbal can be wrapped around 1lie wrist ~ a short look fl slung over Ute shoulder f<r the eioogated llOl1il....,lb effect. I HAL AUllCHD HEARING AIDS ~ ...... ~ •'" MO SAL•SM•N ·3409 E. COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR hr Appalal ..... 675'3133 ' . New Earrings Prove Pearls A new type ol eanin!IB slays on without screws, clips or piercing, the manufacturer says. 'l11e earrings 'have a section that fits behind the ear and can be adjusted to any slf.e. 'Ibey come in simulated pearl wllb a gold finish. TUES. WED. 8''x10'' Living Color . ; ·' rOITIAIT onlr88c*. Plu .. 5o, F1lmF .. • 8.1bin -childt;en -1duftl -croups-1 Special .. of each person singly only 88-, plus 50¢ film fee. r' Croups ~1.00 pet person. • Seltct fl'Dftt finiohed pictures in tadiant black ind white and living color. • IHVI fl!Ullity #Guaranteed Satisfaction.'' • No h•+lli+c ar ..... , a ...... * f•lt ll1liv1ry -courfeous service. W. T. GRANT Top Drawers Panelled panlAl"ess carefree way to travel, clever way to stay at home! Has a Jean, low waisteline, front zipper and a flattering band neckline. Printed Pattern 9256: NEW Half Sizes lO'h:, 12%, 14\S , 16\\, 18\\, 20 \\. Size 14 (OOll 37) takes 3l0 yards 35-inch. POOKHUm • ADAMS HUNTIN•TON llEACH SEVENTY·FIVE CENTS for each potlem -add IS c<nis for each pattern for Air Mail and Special Handli n g; otherwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Senst to Marian Martin, 'lbe DAILY PILOT, 442 Pattern Dept., :132 West !Bib SL, New York; N.Y. lOOU, Pr i nt NAME, ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. -· ·- ... -CI UZ l L•t I y.r old ,,...._ Crvr, '"" " "" ............. Mritl. "c.evrt.hl11 til' lddW. F•ftlo ........... fWttllrad II\ ,,..... tllln pldllrt "Ala In WOndtf'lo loan4."' lrllldon Ml ~ «I 1rt 'T•kt I l'"*'dlMI. lnCI """ _..,.. ..,.. flt .... .,.._. !It• -ff¥t .,..r ~ ffKt Wlrll I ,,.,.. mol1--·-, .......... C"-1 C"-" '""''"'•• ............ HOLLYWOOD fALENT POOL CAN YOUR CHILD 9UAUFY7 FOl FlEE ON-CAME~ AUDITION CALL 547. 6251 • PUlllC ll:ELATIONS co. M•k•t prof,11io111I coftfach f•t .,., 1t M••i• t lMI TV 1htdlot TAKI I ·:~~.~~' All YOUTHS PRODUCftONI INC • The skinniest Washer/~er ever mide. • Saw time and mps. In- stall ;t where the wash b.. --anywhere you can 1et ad- equate wirin&. pl umbi ng and wintin1- • Family Size! 2 -Speed Washer cleans family·siH -at Rtcullr mcl Doi-cate Mttinp. • Dryer has Flowi!'I Helt tor sunshine tr.sh clorhu. • Permanent Pr1s1 Ca,. .lo·W•-ond Drye<. . ... • Ow Sld••:r .-i jrloo :C"· .. ' -"' -- ~-('\11' 1'~1'\\'\ 411 E. 17111 Si. Coste M••• 646 1614 Dally M , Mon A ''l 9-~ • . START NOW ••• YOU CAii LOSE 2 BllHlllG 'SUIT SIZES.:11 OllE IOinl Call us l'WW · ••• Our special summer "Speed Up" program takes only a few weeks. EXTRA LOW SUMMER RATES Gloria Marshall says: *.'1.U .. tlie ,,... ... ,.. _ .. _ ....... ... ,.. ..... _, •dlls ... ........ ...-.. - ... tliet ,.. .. .-Ii '"' .... ...... -1e1,.. .... Fm0f OIAlG£.., ........... -.... ,.. ... WE ARE NOT A &YI ID WEIGHTS OR STREllUOUS EXERCISE ... •• do it for you. • , • com• in comfortable co1uol clothet and without dinbing, enjoy.yow relox1ng .i1tt1 whUo •finnl"ll and tonillg" ond "lrim- •inl owaY-••••• wei9ht. "ll•n is" hr a FIEE Cotntn;TINltHtd . ' . ~ .. ,, ...... .,anisitl, ....... clnm rool1clng -hiMf, ioclHlot -pot...... "Circ.i.~· 1IMre II oo ... ,,_ fir oWigo!ioo. ' nn ,m.r. ployroo• locililits 1or ...a. , ... ,.... _,...ll_el._ -It tlNir Site -................. ,,., _.., ....... ....... .,.. .............. .. tlie .... ~ Soys SW.. "I ........ -"""' ""' "" .-el ., -........ ,.......11oo1 _. ...... _ .... ,_ ......... -,.... ... ii . liiiel eol I ~11 ff.• • So ...., ....., efttr ... "" • t.My ''" ., ii ... 'Nttto el tlie ti.Igo' ... t.t ... SI witll Mrs. ...,,.,,... s .. •writOlt What • 4iff«· '"'" lo ... .., I look ud lool! -b ""' ""'" t•lc •· tlirt•t •·•••·•id d It ........ ., ... -... ""' .., tfiet r. II lifld II I iMtft. • .M triecl ti throw •• llecl oo4 lortto. I -,.i o ..., .. ..._. _ -ly· I fife .,..,, If lllfriot1, iive -·--,,...,. t~lldr1•,, •1 i11s•••• is "'""""' " ........ ·~}//.~ '.EXTRA LOW SUMMER RATES . . . THIS .WEEK, SAYE July 27 t.h~~ ·Aug. 1st $ NEWPORT BEACH Al.SO IM A1•1fa. e..e... er..Mw, .......,, lhnf tfiT If i ll .. 1.-. .................... .....,_ .... N .... H.,wJ11il, 01t1J1111e. Pu1'1 , S. Dlttt, S.. AM, ._.. ....._ .......... ,.._. ,..,_._, WWttlet: 4JO PACl"C COAST HWY, .. _ ...... _..,_, SANTA ANA. IMO W. 17th St. J43.MS7 (c) Coprwrlghl Jg70 Gloria Mat1hoU Mgt Co. , ... • I • I I Je IWlY 1'11.0T SC MondlY, Jut) 21, 1970 LlllGAL NOl'lCE LEGAL N011CE NOTllC• INVITIJ .. llPf ' Mail Pail 75tb Year Of Service DETROIT (AP) 'lbe mall·fn:a-Ptll PoOl>I urvico began !ts 15th year 0 r deliveries Jut week 'to ships passing the city Oil the De- troit River. Known as the Detroit River Post Office, 1t corulsta ol a boat whlcll has llJ own zip code -48122 -and piles the waters 14: hours a day seven days a week. About 50 times a day, the mailboat J . J. Westcott JI leaves tt& doc.kakle station oo the Amertcan side ot the river for a rendeivous with ocean. gplhg or Great La k e 1 lreight<rs. When the W~tt com.es alongside a lr<lghter, a seaman on the larger ship lowers a pail containing mall to be l)06ted. When this is emptied, the pall b lllled with letters, nenpaper1 and packages for the ship's crew. Detroit Postmaster Edward L. Baker sald more than one million pieces of mail will be handled this....,.. in ..... 14,llOO deliverle!. About !,llOO of . these will go to foreien veuels. The firrt m a l l·bY·P al l delivery on the Detroit River WIS made June 17, 11195, by a man in a rowboat who was towed tnto the path of an oncoming ship by a small powerbqat.and left there until the delivery was completed. He had to use his oars to keep out of the way o{ the ship while $y~g c 1 o s e enough to make the mall ex· change. The pow1<boet lhen towed hhn back to shm<. "I don't envy that fellow Jn the rowboat, whoever he was," said Capt. Bill Adamek, a mailboat skipper for 22 years. The river postmen are free cA one of the hazards faced by their shorebound coun- terparts -being bitten by dogs -but, said Adamek, the winds often "stir up waves eight feet hlgil. ", Heavy fog is frequent, too. Also. the mailboat ha1 to mp lively when 'tt becomes involved with two freighters moving in opposite dlra-tlons in the same strttdl of river. The post oroc. b lltalfed by four persons and has mall boxes for about 1,000 ships. Adamek is one of three skip- pers in the mail run, operated by th< Westcott Co., founded in 1870 to provide marine reporis And other marine service. "lt!e company has been under government CODtract to pro- vide mail deliveries stnce 1948. Before that, the marine post ot'fiee was aboard the G. F. Becker. Police Get Cars PARTS (AP) -Officials said the French gendarmerie will be given five new cars, capable of doing 130 miles per hour to ertorce the na- tion 's traffic laws. LEGAL NOl'lCE • · . POLLEN MAGNIFIED 2,0IO TIMES Shop Talk Runs Small in Newport By PATRICK BOYLE Of tn. D•lly l"llel Sl•ff Small. 00 small, no one would ever know it was there. Yet a mlDute fracture in an electronic circuit can cause. a disaster in space or a set· back Oil th< launching ped. NASA keeps such things from happening by requiring that all micro-circuits be ex- amined by a scanning electron microscope. (SEM). But Dr. Norman Hodgkin ol. .Newport Beach has other uses for the SEM. The quiet, bearded scientist is the owner of a firm ca lled Micrographics, at 3855 Birch St. in Newport Beach, and he oolves problems in a mlc~ miniature world. On the TV-Ilke screen of his SEM, he can make a strand of a spider web appear four inches wide and then photograph it for the biologist. Or he can take pictures of pieces of air pollution that appear as big as gravel on the magnified strands or a filter. "The microscope, which magnifies from 20 to 100,000 times, works on the same prlodple as TV or radar,''. Dr. Hodgkin explains. ; "nte specimen to be tl· amlned is carefully moUnted on a small disk and placed in the microscope under Ute electron gun," he says. "The equipment is turned on, the gun sweeps across the disk , bombarding the particle wiUt a steady beam of electrons. The electrons strike the particle of pollen and cause secondary electrons to be emitted from the pollen. "The secondary electrons are picked up, amplified in the form of. light aorl they show up on a TV-like screen. The peaks of particle are bright and the valleys are dlm, giving a three dime.miona.l effect." The resulUng picture shows the ~million-year-old piece of pollen magnified 2,000 Umes. Jt is almost as big as a fist, and the triangular figure ap- pears to be covered witll worms. The pollen was part o( an ore sample brought in by an oil company, With the picture, their geologists will be able to determine what type of climate and plant life aisled where it was found . With this information, they can better weigh the posslblllties of fin- ding oil an the s.lte. "I don't rea11y understand NORMAN HOOGKIN' LOADS MICROSCOPE I Market ' Mondl1, J111J 27, 1970 SC DAILY PILOT Jl I American Stock Exchange List ~-- • J I DAILY PILOT -llM JULY 2' -"'LJl'.'Ot,I' JULY 21 For Top Sports Coverage Head the DAILY PIWT ------------------ Bal~t Direetor !!!!!!!!il!!!i' Sir Ashton Retires F=--OUTHCOAST UA i-L.ua THKATRK 'Soillllllo,_ ... _ •1148•2711 LONDON (AP) -SI r Frederick .Ashton, who Is . retiring as dinctor o/ Ille Royal Ballet, made a pel'IOllal reappearance as a dancer thil week at Covent Garden. He appeared wllh Britain's Oilier knight of the ballet, Sil' Robert Helpmano, in "Cin- derella," one of Ashton's own ballets. Ashton was th e Pathetic Ugly Sister and Helpmann the Domineering Ugly Sister. Ashton and Helpmann first dance these roles, wlgar btlt very funny, in UHi, and have delighted audiences with them at intervals ever since. • jo E.duador in 1906. He laW Anna _Pavlova .dance jo the Teatr'O MUnicipal in Lima when he waa: 11 yeai:s old -and kne• the batJet. WU to be the Jove or bis life. He· tried his band at com- merce when be left schooJ, working for a British iron and ste<I export firm, but lost the company a small contract, and quit Dame Marie RB.mbert, one ol. the great figurts in British ballet, saw ptunise in Ashton, and let him choreograph "A Tragedy of Fashioo," a sophisticated revue ballet. , Lendon . to pr"*'<e ~ balltts wllll Dame Marte. "Daiite Marie wu always there witiL. her humor, her enthusiasm, ,her help.'' Alhtoa, says. "These were my happy days." Ashtoo recalls a balltrlna named P e g I y Hookham, whom h e en- countered 80Dle time later:. "She was stub born, unyielding, but mU!k:al. She NO ~NI UNDll 11 ADM~ITTI; thought 1 was mad. One day · • SHOWH r. 1:H -J:H -1:11 at rehearsal I bad been el· 7:to -~l:H -10:41 erting ber too mudi. Slie nJ>1>.l'=;;;;;;;;;;;;;~=:;;;;=:;;;=:;,;:::=;;;;;=:; eel """" the room and 1>urs1lr - into tean 00 my -· Fastest in West _..,.. Ashton, who 1183 O)lllething o/ the traditional Spanish grandee about him, WU born He joined the Ida Rubinstein company in Paris in 1927 and toured European capit.a1s far a year before returning to I realized I had misunderstood Buy IL Sell IL Try the fa'.sttst rnpome In the W!St lgi}ltSl 10W her. She was sensitive and own clock. Ttst Dime-a-line Ads, where the actJon Is, '11\ SatllNlafs· DAll-Y·PILOT. proud, and uMappy not to meet my 1lJghtest re-j;:~~;;=;;=;;;j:=;;;:==;;;;:=:=:==':!;=:=:=:=::::!~ ''SWISS P:AMILY IOllNSON'" CONnMIOUS D~Y.lllOM J: P:M; Rod Serling Likes Being on Sidelines HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Rod Serling says he is more or less oo the sidelines of television now, and prefers it that way, but: -He will be the author and host or a collection of eerie tales on • • Ni g h t Gallery," a segment ol NBC's "Four-In-One." "But I'm middle.aged now. I'm waiting for the next generation of angry young men." Serling said he regrets the passing of original drama. "In cootent it was a country mile higher than tbe present," be &aid. ''We failed often, but we tried.'' · In 1959 he created the highly successful "Twilight Zone," which brought him two Em- mys, and later "'nle Loner," quirement. "From that day, Chere has been complete Wlderstandlng between us." The world knows Peggy Hookham Dow as Dame Margot Fonteyn. In all, he created more than 40 ballets f« it. AShloll's retirement from the company does not mean be plans a sedate life. He is creating t b e choreography for a film of Beatrix Potter n u r s • r 'I classics. Soon be will go to Bonn to product Beethoven's only ballet, 1'Promeiheus," as part ol the Beethoven 200th birthday celebrations. -He is adapting "A storm' in Summer," which woo an Emmy as the best dramatic show last sea90ll, as a Broadway musical. S t e v e Allen is writing the music. -He is a much-in-demand voice and performer on ..com- mercials. The day after this interview be flew to San Fran- cLsco to appear in an automobile commercial. ~~g;~"l':.~r1c1g • ., which Toastmasters "I did the pilot for an ABC ~~1;.~..J~~~~:; .Fill Billets Serling, the most honored writer in television, says he likes being on the periphery because "you doo't have to. worry about ratings. And every now and then I'm brought in off the shelf like a reasonably valuable an- tique." Serling, a small, thin man baked brown by the California sun, won five Emmys for original drama and a sixth for an adaptation « a John. O'Hara sll)rt story. He also won the Peabody and Sylvania awards. 1'I used to be one of those irascible, angry young men," be said, perennially com- plaininc about the medium and the Cf!ISOl'Ship. like beef," Serling said. "I'm not cut out for series television. I can't create anything except anthology. Which makes me an anacronism since anthology is out now.'' In the new season Serling will get some fraternal com- petition on "Four-In-One." Hts brother, Bob, a well-known aviation writer and author ol "The President's Plane Js Missing," is technical adviser" to "San Francisco Interna- tional." "1 bad a book coming out the same time as 'The President's Plane ls Missing," Rod said. 11His sold 11,000 and mine, 'A Season to be Wary," sold 3,000. I said the in- tellectual never wins." Newly elected ofiicers of the Newport Beach chapter of Toastmasters International were recently Installed at a banquet held at Huntington Harbor's Whistling Oys.ter restaurant. Guiding the speech makers in 1970.71 will be K a r I Barnum, president; D a v i d Wells, administrative vi c e president; Bob Jan u at a, educational vice president; BW Gurr, treasurer, and Terry Montgomery, public relat- ions. All are residents of Newport Beach. Tbe S(leaklng enlhusiaats meet ev~ Thursday at 7 a.m. in the Blue Dolphin restaurant. Montgomery said guests are welcome. NOW PLAYING Only on Cablevision "Son of the She~" starriig Rudolph Valentino. t-EWPORt Man. -Fri. et 9 PM; .Lo Sat., Sin et 6 PM . MISSION VEJO: Mon., Vkd., Fri. et 9 PM Ncwr ~fore on Vkst Co.st TV: the original, lllCUt classic. NCW llAYINS: "The Gil RL&li" with Charte Chapn IMl1ll1tlon • $14.95 Monthly Strvite Ch•rt•• $6.SO Enjoy 20 Ch1nnol TV For Only 22l1Jc Por Doy. '7HERE'$ MORE TO SEE ON CABLE TVI'' • DIREc'r FROM ITS • , EXCLUSIVE RESERVE&-SEAT ENGAGEMENT ... CONTINUOUS . 1PElfORllAllCES AT POPllAI PllCES! "A Big Musical Hit- In The Winner's Comer!'.' -.\ltCH[Jt W/H$TOH, HM Yott Jl9et '"Hilarious And Entertaining. In The Stream Of 'Sound Of Music'!" ·-.JO~ HAaE", lH ~ Tillln $pdlc.t. "A Big Bawdy Rip-Roaring .Musical! Howlingly Funny! See It!" '\ -WANDA HN..f.. y D'!f1 ..... Premiere Orange County Engagement RATED G'p1,_.IT'S FOR ALMOST EVERYIODY MATINEES DAILY , ' Direc:t from Its Sensational Reserved Seat Enga,gement NOW! AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS At Popular P.ric• • EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT GRAND OPENING or THI AU NIW llaANT I llAUTIAIL CINEMA WEST #2 Today's Stocks Today #2 l ~ flq slgr COil ) II ala< ol ti It tag Its I It B ~ or i tbe SS cun ll to I and p, Clei stal "we up I visi n a 1! Iron 1 staf driv n Imp its yeai "I driv som yel Jl p , M isn'I his; c D SI paic new I. n a!I< new will to c -- • ... "'1. July 21, 1'70 -s DAILY PILST 3 Ha_rvard Booted -Dana I Town's Namesake a Rebel Who Went to Sea ~IL Y PILOT Sllff ...... IT'S A CAR -BUT NO! JUST ANY CAR. IT'S AN EXCALIBUR ~S ($20,*l • Everyone 11t the Western Whrte House Has T•k•n ft for • Spin -E'xc..,t the President • •Trinket' Ti~kles VIPs Expensive Wheels For Summer White House -'Wheels' By JOHN VALTERZA Of lh1 1)1llJ' l'ilel Sl1!1 When Richard Nixon comes to town, flags, banners and an occasional welcome sign emerge in San Cle!QeDte -that's common knowledge by now. But aoother Jess-known tradition has also been · set here since the purchase ol. the Western White House last year. It his four wheels, a whopping price tag and will ''take off right tmder you", its proud owner says. ~ lt's a car. But not just any car. The trinket -put forth at the disposal of the President's entourage and even the President himseU -is an Excalibur SS custom-built modem classic with a current value of about $20,000. It's the "baby" of a man well known to the White-House staff, the President and the working press. Paul Presley, owner of the San Clemente Inn where the Whlte House staff takes up reskl.ence during the "working vacations" of their boss, shines up his Excalibur before each Presidential visit. Then he parks the reproduction of a 1927 Mercedes-Benz roadster near the front door of the hostelry where Nixon's staff members fight over who gets to drive it next. The burgundy roadster has had some 1mportant drivers in San Clemente since its inauguration as staff mascot last year. HEverybody but the President has driven the car," said Presley, "but for some reason he hasn't taken it out yet." Jts top speed is 160 miles per hour. Perhaps that's why:. Mr. Nixon, it has become apparent, isn't as much of a speed demon as his predecessor in the White House. Clemente Permit Deadline Nears 'Mr. Johnson's exploits behind the wheel of a Lincoln Continental &0me years back along the banks of the Pedemales are legendary. ... But the Nixon style isn~ that daring. About the biggest mobile charge the President gets in 5an Clemente is at the wheel of "President Richard Nixon" -his lig!lt green goli cart with the fringe on lop. He even tnlsts bis Wife and daughter at the wheel In :mutue trips about the Western White House compound. Although the cart is no Excalibur SS -nor a Mercedes Benz -Mr. Nlxon get.s a kick out of it just the same. He even loans it out. When the Rumanian Foreign Minister paid a prenoon visit here earlier thiS ' - month, he got his chance at the wheel in a buzzing ride from the office door to a waiting helicopter, His crusty, proper attitude cracked here and there as he bopped Jn. He smiled broadly during the jaunt. So do the Excalibur motorists ... when their turn for a drive comes up. Ana when the burgundy classic Js idle. dor.ens of visitors a day walk up to it. loot for an emblem, then puule over the make when they can't find a name. "I don't know what it ls, but it sure looks expensive," is a common comment. But the Excalibur's expense is an intriguing point. One could buy an original 1927 Mercedes SSK for about the same price. Earp-town Surfers Pella, Iowa Collegians Plan Clemente Junket Two-hundred students from a small Midwest college in the hometown of Wyatt Earp will be in San Clemente next weekend for an annual surf·in and beach excursion. Anl! they wouldn't mind a bit of Presi· dent Nixon were to drop by and •say beiio. Heralded as a living example of the Capo Councilmen OK Wat(lr Funds President's "new federalism" concept, Central College's prime goal ii to bring !tudents from urban areas into the rural way of life, And Pella, Iowa, (Pop. e,000) is indeed rura1. But as a resP!te from the fields and Wms of Pellir, 'the llludents each year schedule a weekend of IW\. and 15urf at San Clemente. 'Alumni, enrolled:students, parents, plua a delegation of 100 top scbolan in the Californla Scholarship Federation will start their activities On the 'Eai>lanade beach starting at 5 p.m. Saturday. Besides a treat for alatnni and Members of the San Juan Capistrano stude~b, the ~ctivity is a'·~ to City Council acUng as the Board of recrwt an estimated SO talented bigb Directors of '0range County Waterworks " ~I graduates as candidates for ' aQ. mission to Central College. · ~ District No. 4, have approved a $384,489 Frank c Kressen of ~ Clemente ~n Cl~m~ ~men who haven't budget for fiscal 1970.71. an official ~an for the small co~ By PATRICX BoYLl! .... .-........ Wben 30Dle famous penoniie has a · hill or a blgtntay named IJter him , his name lives on after his death. But only his name. wtiO tie w~ or what · he 'did Is ,... f9r1otlen by aimo1t evecyOne outside°' the historical society. Ile> ii is with Dana Poln~ a headland juUing out into tbe sea .between Laguna Beach and Su Clemente. On Aug. I, the town of Dana Polnt will remind visitors of their namesake's birthday with an an.day ceJebraUon, but it's likely few of the oelebrants ·will know much. about him. 'lbe town and Ule point are named for Richard Henry Dana, a man who dropped out of Harvard to 10 to sea as a c:omman sailor and theo wrote a book abotit his adventures, "Two Years Befu'e the Mast.•• He described the point in bis book, but since he had lost the journal be kept duripg the two-ye~yage, he had to WTlte frorn-.lm6nory1 and the description was inaccurate. According to John H. Kemble, editor of an edition of 0 Two Years BefOre the Mast" published by the Ward Rltchie Press In 1964, Richard Henry Dana Jr. was born Apg. J, 1815, in Cambridge, Mass. His grand£ather was the Chief Justice of the Commonwealth. of Massachusetts and his father was a poet and essayist. Dana entered Harvard in 1831, but be-- fore the end ol bis freaii_, ,.ar, he wu !USJ>'nded for als montha for taking part in a sb.tdent "rebellloo." 1 • He caught the mea~ while awliUng the end of his suspem{on, causing him !rouble with bis eyeslgil~ when he .. turn- ed lo ochool. His eye problem probibited him from doing his academic work, so he quit school and ligned as a common awn.an on the trading ship Pilgrim. 'Jbe ship came to the Callfomia coast, where supplies were traded for cow hldes. On one such trading ·occasion, the ship anchored off of San Suan Point -DOW DJ?l& P<int -and Dana was amoog the party going ashore lo bring bact the h!des. . [n h1s 11Two Years Delore the Mast," he describes the point as being more than 400 feet high and be says that he saw the San Juan Capistrano Miasl.on from the lop of the cllffs. The mission lll not visible from the lop of the cliffs, for it Is more than three miles inland and hidden from the point by hills. The clifffs at the point rise no more than 250 feet from the .... Dana had to remember the details, because at the end ol his voyag~. he entrusted his sea chest and journal to his cousin, who loK them.' He did return to Harvard, and in 1840, he was admitted to the bar in Massachusetts. While be · was rtud)'ing for bi3 law -decree. lie wrote ''Twb Ywa Before the Mast," which he was finally able lo ..U to ffi111*1 Pilbltshln( Co. for '2IO ancUS ®'"ea ol the book. When the boot became IUCCeSlllll, he tried to' get more money from the publishers, but was unsuccessful. He got no further retw'n from its publication until Ille copyright reverted lo him In 1868. In his law pracVce, he specialized In maritime law, trying lo improve the kit of the common seamen. He allO became interested in· polltlesi founded the Free Soll Party and became deeply involved in the anU-slavery movement. But he wanted to go to su again, and in 1859, left on a trit>. around ·~ world. He toot notes for what he hoped would be another booic, but aalllng fmn San Francisco to Hoog Kong, a shipboard fire destroyed his notes. Dana ran for congresa in 1881. but was badly defeated. He wa1 then ap- pointed by President Grant as MlnJJter to the Court of St. James, the equivalerit of Ambassador lo England. But the Senate failed lo eonfinn the appoinimeot because Dana refused to appear before the Senate Foreign R<iitiorul Committee. When he died Jn 1882, he considered himself a failure because be never achieved any major poUUcal office. DAILY 'n.GT Ii.ft,_ paid their business ·license !ea for the The 1 ~-1 d the • · new fiscal year will fall from grace Aug. argest Item on wn::: budget ts ege, sat school s mlssJon ~ to 1 $75,000, tbe ·estimated cost of a year's promote .the Jaeltlem~nt of America's ·The license liOlden: are given a month supply of "'.ater from the Metropolitan fll!al nudwest, reserv~. the flow of Getting Their Kicks after the start of each fiscal year to re-Water District (MWD). nugrants from fanns to cities. new ..the licenses. A 50 percent penalty Salaries total '58,714 and tnclude ~ It seems to be working, be SI.Id. wW be the price of being late, according vistom for overtime compensatlon for Last fall young California atudenla to city li~ inspector George Jackson. district clerks. swept the student elect!om. Soccer, one of the most popular sports in the world, usually takes a backseat to American.style football in this country. But the boys down at the South Coast Area Boys Club are getting their kicks out of 5 per pound! -. \ ~~~··········· Lean ground beef! ••• It there is •secret to better-hamburgers ~ El Rancho better beef is it! Fresh! Buroer Buns ·: ... : .. : .. ·:· .. -· 29' Relishes ............ 10% [IL, ........ 19t Lang~forf. ··package of eight at this low price! Cros!le & Blackwell. Pickle, Burger, Hot Dog! Potato Chips .. ~~~.~~~ ....... 4 9< Why settle for less than the brand you know? ••• Regular or dip .tyle ••• big 12-ounce bag! Make it a Cheeseburger! A"1.~rican Slices.~~'!'!~~::: .1 ~·~~·. ~6; ••• 69' Each shce ind1v1dually wrap}ledf ••• use what you need, and the remaining slices keep in the:r own sleeves! . From our Garden Patch ! I 1Red Onions ........... ~~.~~: .......... 10~ Cut big crisp slices for ynur hamburgers ... and be delighted with the sweet mild flavor I For early-in-the week menu variety ! - Beef Rouladen S149 Beef Braccioli S149 . . . .. .. .. . .. . ..... ,.. ..... .. .......... .. Thm sliced beef, rolled with bread dressing filling! Slices of alrloin, rolled and filled with ground pork! Prict1 in effect Mon., Tues., Wed., Julu t1, t8, t9. No 1alu to ckalerr. the sport this summer. Right now, the games ""' mosUy pick·UP contests. However, the club bopea to organize a league, if enough players shaw up. Everybody is welcome. 19c hamburgers? ••• make . thtm for les.s, a.t home ••• bigger, better!., . and eniov the fun of a "4mburoer frv ••• on the patio, a.t tM beach, or in the kit.hen/ Allf.ADIA: Su...t 11d HU>U~n Dr. (El Rlndio Cenltr) PASADENA: 320. Wiit Coiondo Blvd. .sount PASADENA: f<t""'l and ·HuntlnitO. Dr.' HUNTl"GTOll 8EACHl Wa,.... 1nd Alionqain (Bolrdw•lk Cenler) • -NEWPOllf BEACH: 2727 Newport Bi.d. Ind 2555 'EastbluH Dr. (Elllbluft Villap Centlr) • I ' I • ' 4 DAl\.Y PILOT . A woukl·be robber got an unex• lpocted reaction in Columbus, Ohio ;when he walked up to an unidenti· ; llocl . woman and demandocl her lpune. The woman ~routld a light· ·ed dgarette into his arm. The man •juniped back in pain and ran away empty banded. • When a GI-named Bob .Scott left ho;<.1wtay, Jul7 27, 1910 I -~ ·.Portugal's Premier Salazar, 81, Su·ccumhs USBON (AP) -Antonio de Oliveira nsUon of poverty, be psld hlmaell fUO to leOO mun.., lllltersci In tho schcior Si1azar. premier .nd dltjator of Portugal a week and spent his vacations ln a populaUon had dropped to almost sero toi 36 years, died at his home in one-stOry cottqe 1D Lbe village where from 70 percent and that~ prpductloo 1J1bon today after a Jmg illneu. He he wu born. was up. was 81 and Eurolle'• ·longest 1W'Yiving But from the day he toot over u It the peoele of PorUJcal seemed govern=nt chief In modern tJmes. premier In 19.12, ho held Portugal and sstisfi<d, it WU not so with the blacU The government secretary of in-its Afric1n fiefs in an iron grip. of Angola, Mozambique aod Guinea. Cop- formatiOn sald Salazar died at 9:45 a.m. Rebellions developed but did not prevail ing with mounting struggle1 for in. AmOng those at his bedside was Dona during his lifetime in the African ter· dependente ate deeply ibto the·cartfully Mula de Jesws caetano Freire, bis ritorilll of Angola, Mozambique and nurtu,ed i;tortugueae treaaury. housekeeper for the past 40 years. Cuir"•· The naUon was forced to maintain He wu 1 proftsaor of economlcs ,a the University of Colmbra unlll 1128, when Genn \nloolo O.C.. de Fraguo Carmona, Lbe survivor of a 1t2ll mllUary coop, called him to the minlltry of finance to -otrailbten ·out Porlap!'1 snar~ finaDceL Four )'tll'I lller Salazar became premier and in 1933 ushered in th& "New State11 consUtuUon which lle1 the legal balls ,for bla die· talorship. . Prtsldeot Americo Tbomaz. the ad-Effort.a to sUr his people to uprising an anny of more than 100,000 nien miral Salaur elevated in 11158, wu tour-came to naught. · overseas. About 40 percent of the natioa&l U • W D d ing Portuguese provinces in Africa and Salazar'• technique was paternal, budgets of recent yean bu been 'P'nl WOD age eJDSD S was immediately notified of the death. He sometimes even benevolent. But he con-on defe115e. wu expected to return to llibon Im· trolfed polio and press and permitted There has been a boom in tourism, Rejected in Britain mediately. token opposiUon for only 40 days be!ore with an important influx of foreign ex- -The bachelor premier tUffe!'M a stroke elections eyery: four yean. chang~. But the trade balance showed LONDON (UPI) -A court of inquiry ln September· 1968 which left him With a reputation for · f In an c i a I a deficit of more· than $371 million in rejected the wage demands of 47,000 partially paralyzed and forced his retire-wizardry, Salazar kept Portugal'l!I budget 1967. Foreign investments in Portugal striking British Longshoremen today and menl He developed a kidney infection balanced when other European nations have dropped sharply. Industrialists say reco:nmended they temparily acctpt 12 daya ago, and alnct then hi1 condi.lion were deep in ,debt.: But he did so at many sectors of the economy are in the increase offered them by employers. bad steadlly worsened. Saluar died . the expenae of the workera:, who are trouble as a result. '?be findings of the three-man court without knowing h1a political position among the lowest paid,· worst fed and Salm.ar was born April Z3, 1889, of were_ handed to union 1¢aders and P'rl had been WfeBted from him. JI)OSt illiterate in Europe, peasant stock in Santa Comba Dao. At employers at the Department of Employ· A bashful dictator, Salazar loved Yet Portugal'• vt>ter1 -showed political his mother's behest, he entered a ment and Productivity. Officials im· power but shunned Its trappings. Ruler unconcern anct made no serious move seminary to study for the priesthood med.lately expressed strong doubt.I the of the world'• last great Vidorian.fl)lle to replace' him. ln:1966 SaWar declared but soon changed his mind and took unions or rank-and.file }Ong!horemen ovtrseas empire, be lived like an ot.cure the ptibllc revenue had increased J.2.fold up eeonomics. would acctpt the court's findings. Ft. Jackson, S.C. Army 11"8in"!g caiilp 17 years ago, he swore he d never fttum. But he broke that prorDlse Monday. ~t'1 now goyer- nor of North Carolina and visited hb: state's reservists. "I never lhoo!&ht I'd be coming back in this "" •·-cap8city," be said. SUCCUMBS AT 81 clerk. Sqnpllclty, lrugalliy and austerity , _ _:. ___________ ...:. __ ~------------''------'--- marked hia penonal life. Dictator Sal11ur . -.~~~~~~~~~~ A shy, scholarly ~1st, be was - rarely seen by bJa own people. In a • OordOn ea..t bell..., be baa be- come Britain'• youngest grand· falber at tile age of 33. Ilia eldest daulbler, Mn. •Rosanne Kava· nap 17, gave birth to a girl, Wen- dy: cant and hi• wUe, AJ!De, 34, have alx other children. • 5 Americans Die, 3 Hurt ln'Overnight Shellings SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. troops llU!lered Saigon and Phnom P•nh. their heayiest louea in overnight lhellbig Informed western aources la the Cam- , att.acp in two months Samd_, night bodian capital said Allied warplanes have and esrly today -live men killed and begun bombing mlsaloos agalast the an· three wounded. Another four Glt died cient rulnl at Angkor Wat, where Com- In ltgbt!ng described by millltary muni.ot troops ar• bldlng oul TbrH ~ 11 light and scattered. civiliarui were reported wounded. The focus of the war in Southeast Most of the American casualties la Asia centered bl Cambodia, where South ,,_ the overnight shellinp in Vietnam were Vietnamese troops killed 58 Vlet Cong "' attributed to a 20-round mortar ban-age and North Vietnamese Sunday In the late Sunday inlo the U.S. 1st Atr Cavalry f.lnt day of a new 2,500-man drive Into Division's base ca m p at Phuoc Vinh, ('.ambodt1 1o clear Highway 1 .~ 311 miles north of Saigon. 1be losses were the heaviest slnco May :tf . Three other U.S. Gls died In brief skinniabel!I ill the northern war zone and along the Cambodian border. Another was killed aftd two were wounded in a booby trap explosion on the northern coast. No guerrilla lOS!eS were reparted in these clashes. · The biggest battle In the V~lnam war zone l8W' Communist attackers kill You Work Less You Save· Money Keeps things cleaner without effort, eliminates bath tub rings Soap and clothing last longer ....... AreQe..r J'etlfmti udOta• Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans FREE Estimates! Phone Sears Today! [Sears I ---So. Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol St. Plione 040-3333 • Rescued Sailors Say One Ship Passed Them By SEPT ISLES, Que. (UPI) --r&,.. New Jersey. tlahermen, reacued after being odrifl Jn lflo AUantlc Oc:Mn, ssl ap Jn a bolplliil Jim and told Of their -.!. three South Vietnamese troo])I and wound f ••iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9c 11 at an outpolt deep in the Mekong IC Delta. Spokesmen aid the bodies of two guenitls1 were fowicl after the fighl Ten yean ago Lyw ._.,, then I :veara old, wore a blnDet' proclaiming ·her "Ml11 Nicollet of- 1970" u she rode a parade float In a civic celebration. This week Mias Stevenson was named Mils Nicol· let In the community's annual Frlendsb!P Days Festival. •• A local AthenJ, Ohio attorney drove Into the rough off the lint tee at the Ohio University golf course Wednesday and found some marijuana. Police Capt. Charles Q>chran said four marijuana planl.'I, each aboUt eight feet tall, were found in a irove of Ever- greens near the first hole. Police confucated the crop. ·• Boise, Idaho Sheriff GU Wright has written off a liken! expense Item in the line of duty. As part of a sobriety check on a woman driv- er, be dropped a clime, nlcl:el and penny on the 'Pavement to check her ability to plcl: them up, She passed th11t 'portion of the test, and slipped the three coins down her blouse. t 4The 16 cents was never returned to me by the sumect." Wri~ht wrote in bis ftport of the In- cident. They taltl mt only a fomillar lllory Stmday Of the homir of being alope agalnlt the aea but ·Of rescuen being ., near ai>d l!Winc lhem by deliberately, The three were adrift for seven days wllbout food or water after their 46-foot trawSer, The Sea Starn, sprang a leak and sank 1n lhark·lnfested waters. The fuhermen, Tom Ellis, 38, Joseph Pottie, 61, and Joseph Davidoff, 37, all of Atlan· tlc City, were picked up by a Swedish ah1p the day after a cargo ship allegedly pused them up. 'They were brought here Saturday night and were reported in "pretty good con- ditlon" at Sept lslea Hospital where they were treated for exposure and e.1- ballltion. The three declloed to name the cargo lhlp becauae of their plan to make a formal complaint to authorities. They said it swept so near their life raft that they could read the name. They saw a man come out of the pilot house, klok at them and then go iruiide. The ship continued on Its journey, the men said. Davidoff said lhe ship passed by on the sixth day they were adrift. "They were practically on top of us," he said, Davidoff reported that while the wealher was not really clear, it wu: not foggy. "They eeen us all right." Pottie Military ......, said the level of com· bat in Vietnam bu hit ·A ''vf111 low levei,!' ~ aloor the Cambodian -· There are signs, however, that I!" guer. rillu m beginning to return. to •tllele areas after their retreat di.ring'-" cross- border allied drive of May·and ~Ji,fle. El- ements of three Communist _rtafmenta are said to have been slgbtod'there. Lawson Quints Now in School AUCKLAND, New Zealand (AP) Near-pandemonhcn reigned at Hob&>n- ville primary school today when the Lawson quintuplets, on their fifth birth- day, arrived for their first school day. Accompanied by their mother, Shi rley Lawson, the four girls and one boy, with school satchel~ in hand, were trailed by scores of wildly excited pupils as they made their way to the headmaster's study, where they were enrolled. "I had very mil!d emotions when the time came for them to go," sald Mrs. Lawson. "I bad thought: 'Gosh. I'll be glad to get you litUe devils oil to school; but wbea they bad gone I felt 'deed." I Warmer Weather Hits U.S. • Showers Dot Nor~.t Central Plains and Rockies • ..,..,..., rwa -.. . ""*" Miii ........... 1 S:M"''"' $.1 TUllDAY '""' """ ............ l:Qe.m. 1.1 ,.1"1 low ............ l;H t ,Pl'lo JJ 1«111111 Ill•~ .......... 111111.m. t.• S...W low ............ 1:• 1.m. '-' 11/n • It'* •:to t.m. Sett 71H ll.lft. .-.. ... 11'6•.m. .. tf:tl•.tn. • Widely 1t1llH_,j 1~ 11'1d ttiv"" ll~tn llol!t(I mutll ol !ht lllllon todl't, Clffor lie ... .._ ~ ll'l ttw Ner1'1\M1t, t11t Horlll tNI Clfllrtl .... ..... l 111'f1!a C111rlol!• Cllk1 .. Clnc~tl c1w.i111111 ..,_ ... ... _ ..... ,. F1lrtienlu Fort Wortll Mtl1t111 Manoj~J<.t ll!dl11111M1tl1 Jtdl-111• KIPIMI City LOIA""IM LD1.1l1vlll• M_,, Mlllll'll Mllwtul!M MlnPIM...ilt-Sl, P'IUI N-Y.tt P'l•IM ll'IO tlorll rlle Cellfornlll cotll, Oll11l'IOln• CltY Sl!oMn _, •IPOrttcl ,,_ t11t Ollle OmtN lllYW VII .... " Iha '°""' tf'ld SOUll\o t Pll!IMllJll\la ... " Kl'OM lilt Notlf\.CM!nil ....... ' "'-"'It to "" C:W!lttl llodclott. In "" l!\lef10t 1'111..,, ... flf tllt la.llftWint tlld •llnf #It W• l'Ol"llW. Ort. IM'ttfl •1'111 °"'90l'I COlll. =~ MM! rtll!ttll w11 lllht, Hwtlll1t St L9Ulil ralnl -. ~ ll'lt lllklllndl ......,. _,.. • ly •ft llldl fMI lift V1tan1i.,., H .. ., af1!1 ::: ~ C"" lflll!tlY '""' hfl .-1\tlf lllCll .,.... kn ,r111Cha MIMMftool1' ~ llOC: .... ttf, Minn., 11lt1 SHMl9 M&IOft Clt'I', !OWi. T•m .. Mor. lht11 _.llftl Ille/I If 1'1111 llH W11lllllt''- Olm!nt. NM. •rly toclt~. WIMllllt \ . . ffltfl i..w """ " .. " " " " " " .. " " .. " " .. II " " .. " " " " " ·" .. " .. " A .. II " " .. " .u .. " •• .. " .... .. " .. A .. .. .. .. • .. .. " " .. " .. ... " .. .. .. " • "' " ,. , .. .. " .. .. " .. " .. .. • " ,. .. .. " .. .. .. .. .. ,, " " " " II .. • The crafty ahappor. he watches and wait• and cal· culatea. When he doea buy, he alway1 Hems ta got the besl proclud for the best price. Right now, the crafty bvyer I~ buying Sylvania dl1<ontinued model1, These 1"'1, which haw to be moved out so that they can be ,.placed by newer onea, have all the quality that makes Sylvania the expert's choice. In fad, Sylvania discontinued! models are better than most other people's continued model•. You, too, can be foxy. A lot ot entertainment at a budget price. Giant 295 &q. in. viewing area color TV. Hss the highly reliable Sylvania Gibrslta:r "' chsssiJ and color bright8S"pictur. tube • .Ask "for Sylvania model CF600. NOW ONLY $399" ~RECEPTION SIMULATED TM-T..-... ~ !latwll P'lalu<lt 1.-to Portable stereo record player with FM/AM and FM stereo radio, Sylvaniamodel EXP460bss100 watt. peak music power and Sylvania Nr Suspension gpeskers . NOW ON LY $12995 Your Sylvania headquarters 411 E. 17th St • Costa Mesa Doily '-'· Monday & Friday 9·9 Phone 646-1684 I ' ' ' ' ' • ' • ' ' .. j .1 ' • • ' ' f I ' ' QUEENIE By Phil lntHlandl Houston GuIJFight Kills One to:1•m delighted you're a. dog lover-but. aorry, it's not my: dog." Cuba Sugar Crop Fails; · Castro Offers to Quit MIAMI (UPI) -Cuba n Premier Fidel Castro has of4 fered to resign if the Cuban people . are dissatisfied with hls government's failure to reach the goal of IO million tons or sugar in this year's harvest. In a speech over Havana Radio Sunday, Castro ac- cepted full responsibility for the failure or the crop and said if his people want another leader he would resign. The. government had ex- tended the sugar season .~ in an effort to harvest a record crop, but failed. The Cuban leader said this effort had a;trained Cuba 's economy and Bombs Rip N. Ireland Tavern .llELF.AST,.Nodhern Ireland (AP) -A tavern keeper and bis family escaped unhurt when two bomb explosions ohattered the1r inn today. 'lbe Grove Bar, n e ii r Aldegrove Airport, was target for the latest attack in strlfe- t.OCn Ulster.. but there was no apparent connection with the Roman Catholic-Protes- t.ant warfare which bas shaken N..-0 INiand. 'Ibe expk>siom, one beflind and one in hoot of the tavern, 1 caused extensive damage. 'l11e only injury was to a 9-year-old girl wbci cul her feet on brolcen glass afla' the blasts. 'nle 'ApPrenti ce Boys of Der- 1 ry, a Protestant group, plan to go ·Shead with a trad:ttlooal celebration Aug. 12 de61>ite a police ban on processions. ,. However, they have not yet decided wllether oo defy the ban by holding a parade or tD mark the day in some more legal way. led to discontent among the people. He warned that the Cuban people can expect five more lean years before economic conditions begin to improve. Castro's speech marked the 17th anniversary of t be abortive attack on Moncada Barracks in Santiag o Province. From thls attack, the Castro movement took its name -the 26th of July Movement. Castro also announced that the hands and death. mask of s lain guerrUia 1 e a d e r Ernesto "Che" Guevara now are in Cuba •. 'Ibey will be put on public display in Havana at a shrine to open in October. The premier did not reveal how or when Che's hands and death mask reached C.uba, but he said former Bolivian Jnterior Minister A n t o n i o Arguedas had risked his life several times to smuggle them and Che's campaign diary ·out of Bolivia. Kent Report Regret Told CLEVELAND (UPI) -At- torney General John N , Mitchell has expressed his regrets that the contents of a Justice Department report on Kent state Univeraity sent to the Portage County, Ohlo, prosecutor were leaked to the press. In a copyrighted article in the Sunday edition of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, the attorney general is quoted as saying the report "should have been held for proper use." The report is sald to con- c 1 u d e that Na ti o nal Guardsmen should not have opened fire on a group of demonstrators at Kent State on May f. Four students were tilled lh the gun fire • .1.t1.'B111evr. ~-=88th Semi-Annual Sale PASADENA POMONA Showcase your records • • showcase your home! .... It'• 11.lt time for a d!CO?ltor •Q' to sttal•htan ovt 10ur record collection .•• •rit.b tbe "Bom;:record cabinet Irom Helnn,ln_ "'Cam chest" 111 feelinJ, It addl the dea!ant 1 touch to 1117 room. In anr home! bart walnut finllb f)earu with elegance. Bra• hardware tor tbe cuatom look. Avallabl. with matchi.os two-drawer cbest. ltafularl1 $1115 ••••••••••• , ,. . Silo $99 K&l<hlq "'"'"'" chest, n:a. fl.35 -... -·-._·-····'•'•.., SANTA ANA -Main at Eleventh 547-1621 -S.nt1 Ano Store Open Mond1y Evenlnp ( M-. Jul1 27, 1970 DAILY PILOT $ Scuttle With Protesters Reds Ban .. Haxi 'Doesn't ·Fit Active Life' Hard Hats Mareh • a , EAST BERLIN (UPI) -Eal! Germany banlo!Jed !be maxl·111drt as workaday wear Sunday because ankle- Jengtb aldrts do not fit the "acUve atyle of living" o1 CommunJ.st women. Lucia Kiloickel, leader-of· !be Ealt German r.-!no at1tute, aaid 'In an interview with Ea.a Berlin'• ·.eerliner 1.eitung newspaper that f4 tbe day ot any apecla1 fa.5hlon length is put... ' East German fall and winter wear thit year will rea4 ture skirt lengths "above or just covering the bets," &he aald. "We proceed from !be principle lbat mreme lengths, for ezampte ankle-length, for professional actlvttia are incompaUble with the mobile, active style of living of the women and girls of our IOCiety," Mn. Knoeckel aaid. Maxl.·lengtb aklrts and dresses will later be allowed,- bowever,. fOI' leisure Ume wear, lhe said. of it. Nobody can use this Master Charge card but you. Because you can't forge a face. Should your FaceCard be lost or stolen, don'tworry. It's chem· lcally sealed in plastic. Any attempt to break the seal destroys the usefulness of the card. No credit card could be safer. Or more convenient for shopping. It provides quick, positive identification whenever and wher· ever you need it. Merchants glance at your FaceCard. Then at you. And quickly know you have a face to be trusted. There's no face like yours. And no credit card quite as secure as the FaceCard. Get the picture. Face up to the full-color Polaroid Land cam· era at any one of United States National Bank's 58 convenient offices. It's a snap. Takes just 60 seconds. If you already have a Master Charge, replace It with a new FaceCard. It's absolutely free, of course. If all this isn't enough, we give you· an added bonus. With our FaceCard, you get the option of our Bol)}Js Balance Check Plan. You'll never find a credit card that offers so much. Let's face it. You alone can get a charge out of It. UNITED 58 convenient /ocatl~ns S'l!A'11.ES ·NATIONAL Costa Me.a Office 1845 Newport Blvd. South Coast Plaza 3333 Bristol Street BANK ~· " • • . ' ---,- I < '' -• ' ---•· ' D AD ·Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ' 'Expand the Airport? -~ntro! present'"llOiSe and air pollulion -from jet planes flying In and out of Orange County Airport aulfered a sonic boom of sorts last week. An engineering consulting firm recommended that the airPort eventually triple the present number of jet flights, spend $16 million ori terminal and runway addi- . tlons and bt!liget multi·millions . more to acquire or soundproof 641 homes in the airport nois~ area. county airport, .... yet ·to be detennlnecl. Also In lint for ·study is what the potential for clvlUan· use ol pr .. sent military airfields might be. El TQro, Santa Alla and Los Alamitos are such sites. ' ' The consultants' report, directly or by inference, makes several things clear: -Buying or soundproofing hundreds of houses, mak- ing po"rtions of the Upper Bay unusable for recreation and expanding airport facilities Including runwa>'• would be extremely costly. . -. Tripling of ruihts would increase the average daily , nq.mber trqm the present 20 to 61 in seven:y~ars, a de-- -velopment no resident anywhere near the all'))Ort can bear to .thinl< about. And persons far from the airport who are eager to see Upper Newport Bay developed for public recrea- tional use would find a large area of the bay .sterilized and unusable under such rioise impact, danger and jet -OUter ways to serve 1cheduled air travel and private aviation must be found. The existing Meadow· lark, Fullerton and San Juan Capistrano airports are all In trouble In one way or &Dl!ther. II Orange County Airport . weren't in e;xistence1 another place would be found, or other systems used to provide service. The consultant's report again makes it apparent that attempting to expand the county airport for much more air tralflc·than-it ls-now handling-is-an unaccept,. able way to fly. 1tream pollution. . --Nor-is lt-lik,ly-that-lhe-number-olJiomes that.would. . have to be desiroyed or greaUy devalued and rebuUt · could lie held to the figure the consultants envision. Orange County Airport is a monument to both pul>- lic and bureaucratic unawareness of transportation needs in the air and Space age .. It is where it is by acci· ROTC Has Strong Support dent: · . -Used as a P-38 fignter plane training haseln World W8r II, the aiiport w.as turned over to the county to serve as a civilian airport when the war was over. For· general aviation (non-commercial airline) purpos", ·it wu handy and no great nuisance to its neighbors. .Th!. Rf!erve Olf:!~ Tra!J.!ing i:o!J!S apparently is more populu OJ) campuses t!i8n a few cliasident stu· dents 1u!d faculty would have u1 believe. Results ol student referundums at the 101 member institutions of the National Associ8tion of State Univer- sities and Land Grant Co!leg\' have ranged from firm to "overwhelming•· approval of the ROTC program. , The advent of COl1ll1ll'rtial jet flights ch anged ,.u lhal County government, torn between the skyrocket- ing dematl!i for commercial service in a fast-growing county and environmental damage, bas sought a middle road. · • The consulting firm has recommended considera .. tion of the Yorba Llnda Reservoir area tor a new air- port. Whether this would be a feasible site for a regional airport handling jet traffic now using the county aifa' port, or as a place to move general aviation from the Kent State, where fonr ·students·were killed in•defil-' onstrations, provjded the most di-amatic -endorsement. Three-fourths of tlie ·studeritS polled filvoied retentioi1 of ROTC courses, an<t·a solid majority further approved academic credit for them. There is clearer understanding of ROTC's roJe in maintaining a civilian influence in the military than had been evident from the mindless attacks of the tiny minority· of dissidents. Indignant Complaint_s, Misgivings Foot-dragging on Douglas· WASH!NGTON -lncreaaingly critical -are b<lng raised as In juBt bow llncet'e that !ipOClal House Judiciary suJ>. ccaunlttee. iS in making a thorough and torll1rlghl Investigation ol J u s t I e e 1!11!.;..;:..· .:=.aW'l WllllamSo f o .therellougislas.litll ind' t' ,._ ~t lrtsUtut• . 'a·•t Santa Barbara. Douglas ar, e !Ca ton .u;14\ ;i""i6;~ tbill outfit as a "direc- VtlfY much hu been done -if anything. tor.'' He is now bead of a newly created ln the three monU. the probe has execuUve committee at $75 per diem been. underway, the record is one of and expenses. It ls unknown bow much persistent loot dragging and dawdling h< has received under this airangmenL M a consequence, with the ln· + • .. 111ga1cn due to report to the full -NO SPECIAL COUNSEL bu been 11oooe 1n three ,...!IS (Aug. Ill), both emplnyed by the sub<cmmMt.e In direct their Intent and noncllalant pn>ceedlngs the mvestigam. Abo, no extra help are being bluntly questlOoed by fellow ha~ been bired. Chalnnan Celler has J.egislaton. '1bere ls c o n s id er a b 1 e irl51sted on. ~g ooly ~ regular st.a.fl evidence to auPPort these indignant com-of the Judiciary Committee -already p1a1nta and mlsgivinp as follows. overloaded with a large aceumulatlon -'!be aubconunlttee', headed bf Rep. of hnportant pending l e g i s l a Ii o n • Emanuel Celler, o.N.Y., 82, tw b<ld Nominally, sh staff m«nben were no bearings -private or public. ·~~ to the Douglas probe, but repOrtedly only half that number have -NO SUBPOENAS have been issued, worked on it at any one time -despite and no one haS been ~ under the fact that several hundred thousand oath. Last month three staff members documents have been submitted by the of the committee spent a day in Los ' Justice Department, lntemal Revenue Angeles talking to Albert Parvin, head Service and other government agencies. of. the folDldation by that name which This do-rlothing record explains why paid Douglas around $100,000 ostensibly irate House members are saying it is u a •'director." 1be foundation derives virtually certain the subcommittee will much of its income from Nevada gambl· have to ask for another 80-day extension tng interests. Parvin was not put under tu do its job. 'Ibat will be the second. oath, and np su)?poena was served on him for file! and. records.' 1be staf£men were content to eum.ine the documents betbowedtbem. -'M!e same casual procedure was followed In queotlnnlng Robert Hutchins and HarT)' Ashmore, Who run the leftist Ce-for. tbe Study of Democratic . . WHEN. THE invest.lgation was first announced by Celler, long-time 'chairman ol the full Judiciary Committee, in a divet"slonary move to prevent a probe by the full House, he solemnly promised to report in 60 days. But shortly before -deadline, be had tbe Judiciary Com· mlttee grant a IO-day extension. That expires Aug. 20 -when, uncltt preRDt plans, the House woo't even be tn ses.sioft. With the House well caught up with Its legislative calendar (thanks to no protracted "debates" over a meaningless Coope!'-Church anti.Cambodia ameftd.. ment, the Hat£ield-McGovem end-the-war resolution and other politics·inspired pro- posals), bipartisan leaders have decided to take a three-week summer recess -starting around Aug. 15. Under that arrangement, the House will be shut down when the subcommittee is supposed to submit its Jj.ndings -If any! 'I11at's why Jt 11 taken u a foregone conclusion that the probera will ask for -and the J udiciary Committee will approve -another &G-day ertension. And that isn't all HOUSE MEMBERS are openly voicing the strong suspicion that the secret aim of Celler and other subcommitteemen is to stall making a report until after the Nov. 3 congressional elections. By that time, Congress may have wound up its work and quit. That would mean nothing C<luld be done about Douglas until the new Congress convenes in January -when. under the rules, the investigating com- mit-tee would have to be reconstituted and the probe started all _ over again, assuming that ls demanded. In view of the fact that Celler set up the !p«:ial panel only when forced to do '°· it's highly conjectural what he will do in U'le next Congress. By Robert S. Allen 11111 Job A. Goldamltla The Death of Television 'l'be beginnlng cf the end ·of 1.elevision as we know Jt fias the launching in September,.tr10; of· the nI,P>Uy "Nlton at Nine" show. · For aome· time, whenever the PTesidtrit ' wa1 in trouble with Congress or the public, be ·.hid :r..Cted .bY-taking .In . the airwaves. A! his troubles: mounted that summer, so ,did b~ te;tevision ap-. peerance~· . Finally, it was decided the President ahould take ball . an bout each ·evening on all three net· warb to upJain to his fellow Americans what he had done that day. Nor could any of tbe networks brine them&elves to· deny the Pn!sldent of the United Stat.ii whatever free prhne Umt be wanted. So tbe ''Hixon at Nine" Jhow wu -N. Weed, Publl•her ' laµnched. Tt ,was kind of audio-visual education, the President being equipped with. maps, graphs, pointers and ·nhn clips. All over the N4tiofi, aevttal people watched. · WHILE THERE were the usual com- plaints from those who mjssed . their regular programs Jike "Guts 'n Blood" or "Alice· & ·Arnold" ·'(the story of a mischievous aardvark and the boy she Jbved J, · television would surely have survived. -if it hadn't been for the Deqiocrats. · The Democrats naturally demanded not only equal Ume, buf equal prime time. Thus the· show, "Larry O'Brien and His Friends," was given the' 8:30 p.m. slot so that the loyal' opposition could explain away the Pre!idents' explanations even before he explained them himselr. It proved the lnost popular ' stfow' tn Its time slot -It being the only show in Its time slot. From there things went ·steadily downhill. Every politician who tmaglned hlmseU maligned by either nightly show demanded, and got, equal .time. A TYPICAL OAIL Y television log might show "Gabbin& with Goldwater," '"McGovern at Mid-morning." "Happy flubert's Hatr 1 Comedy Hour" and "Nevef° Say Ole" with Harold Stassen. The crilia came when an angry George Walltce insisted on a nlghtly a. o'clock slot tor hls "WaUaai in Wonderland" obow. Al. erpected, the Supreme Co ruled under the Fair Play Doctrine lhat not only Wallace's American lndtpendent 1'1rty, but evtcy pollUcal party, mUBt \ be given equa1 time. By lhe following June, all television stations in the land were broadcasting nothing but poliUclans e1plalning things arotrnd the clock. The. Vegetarian Party's show, "You Are What You Eat -Be a Vegetable," attracted a small follow· ing. But otherwise, television viewing became a thing of the past. The effect on the American culture was startling. ClilLDREN ONCE again played out· doors with other children, learning to get along in the real world. Grown-ups once again went out to movies and plays with all the excitement such ac- tivities entail. The art of conversation. long though\ dead, was revived. People went for walks, even during prime time. Once again, they lived lhe.ir own lives instead of those of shadowy images on a little -glass screen. Unfortunately, in the 1972 campaign an unknown named Mervyn Murdhead ran· for President on the single pledge that, if elected, he would never-ever appear on television. Needless to say he won in a landslide. ' "Gut! 'n Blood," "Alice & Arnold'' and the other favorites returned to the air. And the country returned to normal. ~--B11 Geot'g~ ---1 Dear Gtorge: When I kiss my girl she giggles. Will you help me? FRUSTRATED Dear Frustrated: Well, I'll try -but, personally, I think she'll just gip;gle harder willl bolll of us kissing her. (Send yoor problems: to Ccorge, tht original designer of Sideway& Thinking) Coup in Egypt Still Casts a Long Shadoiu "" , , r l Editorial ·Research !. ~·q , I When a counlry has a hlstory as long as Egypt's, i.9olated incidents lend to lose their tignilicance. But the nearly bloodless coup of July 23, 1952, · that sent venal King Farouk into exile is · an event that sUll casts a long shadow. Ultimately, the putsch staged by a band of young army officers: was to bring Gamal ·Abdel Nasser to power -and enable the Russians to secure a foothold in the Middle East. Despite failures at home and abroad, the 52--year~ld President N a s s e r ' s popularity with his fellow Arab.s is bellev· ed to be only a little less than it was: a decade ago even though he 1uf· fered two massive military defeab by Israel. The reason is that Nasser holds a very special place in the Arab ltgend. To Egypt's fellahin -the peasants who make up two--thitds of the poJNlation -he is the heroic figure who gave them lheir place in the sun for the first time in modem history. Nasser has defied the power of the United States, Brijain and France -and gotten away with it. He has brought modem arms to the Arab world. And be is the undisputed leader of the area's strongest country. THE COUP TIIA T sent the 285--pound Farouk packing was ten years in the making. For several years. Nasser. a nationalistic anny officer whose father was a postal employe, had been distress- ed about conditions within the Egyptian armed forces and widespread govern- ment corruption. He hand-picked bis fellow conspirators and fonned them into a Free Officers Movement. Political disorganization, rioting, and· the King's attempt to name as Minister of War a relative unacceptable to t.he army provided the opportunity for the C<11,1p. Realizing that the public would be reluctant to accept a seizure of ·power by young, inexperienced officers, Nasser persuaded Maj. Gen. Mohammed Naguib to bcome premier. Nasser. then a lieutenant C<1lonel, took over control of internal security. Dispensing with Naguib, Nasser became premier on Feb. 22. 1954, and President on June 2.1, 1956. Nassrr·s revolution brought higher education and government jobs within reach of the middle class. He broke the power or the landlords and introduced agrarlan reform for the peasant. But his dream of beeoming a modem Saladin, the: 12th Century ruler who united the Moslems against the Christian crusaders, has been a failure. And a population o! 34 million increasing at a rate of 2.8 percent a year negated ma11y of his promised econnmlc Improvements. NASSER'S DECISION to accept more Soviet anna -$3.S billion since thfl Six-Day War -has again perched the volatile Middle East on the razor's edge of all-out war. This time it could drag ln the Soviet Union and the United Stites. Presktent Nlxon declared on July 3: "The aituation in the Mideast is more dangerous (than Vlttnam). more dangerous because it involve' -and this Is: not the case in Vietnam 1 colU.sk>n oI tpe superpower a." Stamping Out the Disease of War E verybody is •·against" war. The U.S. says it is against war. Stalin said he was against war. Even Hitler sa'id he was against war. ·What governments usually mean by this statement is that they are against war a1 long as they can get their own way by other means. ']f the other means fail, they will resort to war. But to be genuinely and meaningfully against war is to be against the preeon. . ditions that create war and make it IN- EVITABLE. These preconditons are an- archy among na· tions, the Jack of an international court, and the absence of an international IX>" lice force. UNTIL THE NATIONS are willing to give up some of their external authority -just as cities give up some to the states, and the states to the nation - then there is no way to resolv:e national disputes except by force and viole~. It is as simple, and as difficult, as that. First of all, we must get over the thought that war is a "natural" social phenomenon. when it is in truth a disease of mankind. In earlier eras, it was thought that.cannibalism was "natural"; later, it was believed that slavery was "natural.'' &th. these practices have been abandoned In the world, and there is no rational reason that war cannot ~be ·repudia~ed by the mass of mankind. IN l\fY VIEW, it will never voluntarily be repudiated by governments as such. Governments have too much of a stake in ruling ever to relinquish any part ot their authority -dubious as th a t authority is in this age of mass-retalia· lion and mutual destruction. Jt is the peoples 9f the world, acting in eoncert, who must persuade their governments to adopt "law and order'' in the international sphere, just as those governments urge us to follow Jaw and order in the domestic sphere. How absurd for a government to preach a doctrine or "non·violence" to its own citiz.ens, and to pract,ice ruthless violence abroad whenever it so desires. What an immoral contradiction! IN MY VIEW, also, the student protest movement · iS the most heartening sign of a moral revolution· in this area. The students are not merely objeeting to our involvement in Vietnam; thej want to stop war altogether, so that other Vietnams do not crop up yearly. This can be done by youth calling across the barriers oC nations; by students appealing to students in all other countries, by going over the heads of gov~n~. and arousing and mobilizing .YOWlg people everywhere. [ don't think that even the Russians or Chinese could control their own youth in the face of a worldwide movement to slamp out the papdemic disease of war that has for too long afflicted the best, the bravest and the youngest of mankind. Heaven Help Consumers Some of the proposals now before CongreSs, which would permit unlimited "class action" lawsuits against retailers aryd other businesses, allegedly g1.ilty of de!rauding their customers, are true. life legislative nightmares. ,Class action, as proposed by the more extreme con. sumer protectors, would open the way fGr massive group harassment in fed eral courts of virtually any business , in the land. Richard W. McLaren. Assistant Attorney General for The Antitrust Department, has ealled one class action proposal fin "Attorney's Enrlchmtnt Bill." He describes how it would work. "Suppose that a s m a I I group or con- sumers decide that a businessman who sold them a $10 product bad used ques- tionable sales pra~tices. SUPPOSE, TOO, that in the five years this product has been on the market, sales have averaged a million units an. nually. Under this pending legislation, the small consumer group could Ule a class action in federal eourt, claiming damages for themselves and for everyone else who has bought the product since tt came on the market . . • their suit could ask for as much a.s ~ million in damage -wlth the 11uomey collecting ~t ltaSt $5 million if lht suit is successful." Nnt the least of the evils of the clJIM action proposal is the fact that it would encourage suits, not against ny • by • night operators, but aitainst businesses be.st able to pay tht substan· tial damages. FURTllER, AS the Assistant Ailorney Gent!ral notes, It could cost 1 national manufacturer a miJllon dollars berore be co~ ever get llls case to tz1ali I ~-' l ,, ~1 Guest Et}itoiial ~--""' ~nd. even if the did and proved his innocence, the damage to his finn'• goodwill would be immeasurable. And finally, another overlooked feature l)f the class action proposal is the ·adverse impact it would have on consumers. The ultimate cost of class action lawsuits would be just another cost of doing business that would sooner or later be added on to every item we buy. Class action is the nearest thing to a lawmaking nightmare -a consumers' nightmare at that -ever to come before Congress. · lndustrlal News Review Dea r Gloomy Gus: We'll never know wbetbtr thf: tn- vaston of Cambodia as ordered by President Nixon convinced the Russians that they had better force the Arabs to sue for peace, but I • , -H. 8. McD. ,~.. INl•l"t l"tfltdt ... At"' 1'1tws. "" ~" .. '"' "'"* .. .,.. '""""'"""· '"' ., .. , "' ,.... ... ..,,., •111. Dtlr. l"lltl. ' A• Jc Gt bu we fo pl gc h• tr. lo W• (I w fh ec st ., cl nc la VI d• cc C< $< " sl Y' "' " rr bi ti Cl tc ti . SI Ii rr l:l " N IC b ho " ' v h rr c " d• w h v b " 'Crippling' Cutbacks Attaclied SACRAMENTO \AP) - Assembly Democratic leader " John J. Mlller has' charged Gov. Reagan through secret budget cuts has "crippled work and training programs for more than 16,000 poor peo- ple in 27 California counties." ?i.1iller (0.Berkeley) said the governor had cut almost in half funds needed f o r transportation and child care for persons taking part in the work incenUve pr o g r a m (WIN) designed tq make welfare recipients self-suf- ficient job-holders. A Reagan spokesman declin- ed commen t on . the Miller statement which included the asse rtion: .. With one stroke of his ~· Gov. Reagan has now condemned some 16,000 families who were on the verge of finan.cial in- dependence through WIN to continued dependency at a cost to the taxpayers of over $40 million a year." Miller said the child care and transportatitm f u n d i n g shrank from $2.2 million last year to $1. 7 million in the new fiscal year budget. "As a result," said Miller , "those people who show the most initiative in trying to break the Welfare cycle, get· ting off ihe welfare rolls and onto payrolls, are being tbld to just stay hQme and suspend their work training efforts." , Paul Beck, governor's press secretary, said he was not familiar with the Miller state· ment and had no comment. SF Police Office Hit By Blast SAN FRANCISCO (AP) A bomb exploded at the Arm. ed Forces Police office in downtown San Francisco ~ day, blowing a hole in the commanding officer's wall but causing no injuries, police reported. Bo.Uertender l .C. L e r o y Ruark, station supervisor, said a piece of clock was found by investigators, indicating the bomb was a time devtce. The device was in a steel trash bin in a garage, attached to I.he office. It blew out windows and the hold in the vacant office of the commander at 12 :50 a.m., Ruark said. The San Francisco police bomb squad was investigating. Debris w a s sprayed around the commander's o f f i c e through the five-inch hole in the concrete block wall. He. Wants More Hot Hike Over for Veteran DEATH VALLEY, Calif. I UPI). -Army S. Sgt. Jack Nelson was 20 pounds lighter today and his feet were a bit blistered but he maintained he wanted to come back for some more hiking following a 130-mile 'trek cross Death Valley. "Next time I would like to hike around the Valley's mountains,'' Nelson, 3 4 , Cleveland, Ohio, said after completing the final 35 miles during the weekend. •·1 rather liked it the're. It was absolutely spectacular," he added. Nelson, who ts on con· valescent Jeave because-. of a broken, elbow suffered in a helicopter accident in Viet· nam, began his jaunt last Monday at 5 a.m. and walked during the day. But he found the tern· per,atures of more than 120 degrees stifling and switched to hiking at night w.ben the temperature dropped to about 100. Despite the switch, he said the beat was still so searing at times that he had to wear asbestos gloves and three pairs of socks, insulated with petroleum jelly, for his feet. Nelson's brother, Arlen, ol Downey, calif., followed in a car with supplies. "Without Arlen, I couldn't have done the trip at all," he said. y~ -YES YES ""' . "Yes~' to 2,039 Joans every week! HoW -that! 2,039 happy cast_ get the money tlley need each week al Morris Plan. When you need money for bnl conaolldaUon, car repairs, any reaso1H:Oll your Mon1a Plan Manager. On approval you can borrow from $100 to $5,000, or more, with payments ached· uled the way you want them. Chances are you'R have your money the same day. That's how fast we can 88)' "ye$" al Morris Plan. And we say tt 2,ll39 tknes a week. Morris Plan 673-3700 Newport Beach -3700 Newport Boulevard MoncfaJ, .J\J~ %7, 1970 OAILV PILOT 7. ' GOP Senators Bnp Alternative ·Riot -Police .. Democrat Reform Said Short Term Raid Party; Sl"ECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT SACRAMENTO (AP) -'nle "Our property tax relier is sponsor. or Qoy!, Reagan's tax permanent.'' Bagley said in reform program today com· a press .statement. plan would mtan as much as a 267 pel'<!ent boost 1n the state personal income taxes of some families. Ai·1·est 24 JmT_e:d the D e mo c r a t s ' _ Hi~ comme nts came as· the alternative with a Chinese din-Republican governor's billion ner : • dollar election-year tax "Offers a little qu ick rellef, revision plan remained tem- prograrp's Republican sponsors in the Senate tried to sew up the votes needed tp get lt ihrougb the. -IJPJ>ef house unscathed. The big threat was that 1be example ht gave was Democrats, led by Sens. a married couple with no George Mo.scone or San Fran--children and an income of cisco and Stephen P. Teale . $6,800. That couple would have of West Point, would succeed . to pay $16 instead of $6. CRESTLINE (AP) -A San Bernardino County sherlff'J riot control squad arrested 24 persoos after raiding a party an a ranch in the mountains near here, a sheriff's depart· m-ent spokesman sai d. · Tht •Nttiontl A"t!.Smoki119 C111.111cll t11110J11ct1 •ti excltl119 11tw t1ullt ·¥h111I prof''"" tG htlp 1moktr1 lirttk tit. 1mtki119 htltlt. Thi• ''''''"' 11 fllfffll• t.ed to '"'"' VOil '" f'Jl'•lfflOll1r. Ct ll n:Ow for, '" l11hocluitory 1t11io11 11)(1 l11r11 how thi1 1111•1· i119 pro9r1m c111 \tip yo11. No obli91tior.. ·but it's not long lasting." porarily stalled in the Senate. Assemblyman William T. The program was set for Bag1ey (R-San ·Anselmo) said debate and a likely vote again the Democratic prop o s a I today but there was no cer- would last on!y· two or three tainty it would come off. years and then property ta.Jes The debate has bOOl delayed in amending their own pro-The Democrats contend that gram into the governof's two-the Reagan plan is hardest bill package. on the "little fellow" and Bagley said the Democratic easiest on . rich people The %% deputies were called in early Sunday after six' of. ficers answering a di sturbance complaint. were overpowered by about 220 youths, the spokesman added. Ctll 011r Office Nt•r11t You c .... M,.. M411 .. ,., ..... 642-416) t6l·llJI would aoar again. since last Thursday as the SAVE 51.95! PENNCREST® SIDE-BY-SIDE REFRIGERATOR SALE! SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY PENNCREST~ CUSTOM 21.3 CU. FT. WITH AUTOMATIC 'ICE MAKER REG. 509.95 NOW $458 • 236 lb. lreezerc opacit,y • 6 fuO .width refrigerator aoor shelves • 5 freezer door shelves • Completely lrostless • White, ovocado and hervest gold •.• cofor costs no more! Sa111e refrlgeratorwltheut automatic lee maker Reg. 469.95 NOW $411 BURBANIC CANOGA PARIC CARLSBAD CHUIAVISTA COLLEGE GROVE DOWNEY FULLERTON GRANADA HILLS HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON PARK LAKEWOOD LONG BEACI+ // ·-. PENNCREST' IMPERIAL 18.5 Cl,.I. FT. WITH AUTOMATIC l~E MAKER REG.469;95 NOW $418 • 213 lb. freezer capacity • Die cast chrome handles • 4 zinc finish steel cantilever shelves • Completely frost less • While, coppertone, avocado, horvest gold .•. color costs no more at Penneys. Same refrigerator without automatic Ice maker Reg . 429.95, NOW $378 CALL ... (714) 523·1401 r PENNCREST"'IMPERIAL 24 CU. FT. WITH AUTOMATIC ICE MAKE~ REG. 5.99.95 NOW $548 • 314 lb. freezer capacity • 4 contilever shelws •all frostless throughout • 5 fixed freezer shelves '9 · 5 doOr shelves and juice rack • Handy 'wheels ·· •• • White, coppertoQe and avocado •. LOS ALTOS MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTH HOLLYWOOD ORANGE "THE CllY" SAN FERNANDO ' - TORRANCE VAN NUYS VENTURA WESTCHESTER • • ' • f DAILY l'IU)T Mond'J, Ju~ 27, 1970 " San Francisco ·still Big Lure "" " . -•. t r r-_r ,7 ' .. -~ 117 L. M. BOYD TllAT TOWN wllottln lhe ....... -r ol U.S. cttt"'DI would i>refer to live, 111 the pollaten, ii San Fran- dleo. FJ,., place. What I like .t>out San Francisco ls when ;iou gtt !ired of walking around d)fJ'e you can stop IDd t ... against ll , ,OVER LtJNal this week, an old frieod said he had just hired • secretary whose v it a I stathUcs are 39-24-37.Q. 1 ask- ed him what 's the 62? '!bat, be said sadly, is ber l .Q. CHECKING lo be !he brlgbtHI youngmt ' / in all thebistoryoltbeworld. enne••J CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. :-. . e UP e -"How many of out organs • ALWAYS FIRST BUAUTY can be succtssfulry DO YOU KNOW when the Old w e s t • s cattle-kingdom days really ended? Not in the 1880s because of freeziag weather, as has been so often reported. But oo Ap'il 2, 11167. Exactly, That was the day Alphonso Dabb got his patent oo barbed wire .•• THE SALES MANAGERS are tb.ller lhan their salesmen, usually . Ex- ceptions crop up, sure enough. But mosUy, the taller men wind up in the management job!. Surveys show that. Matter o f sell-confidence, presumably. GENIUS -His name is Kim Ung-Yong. He was born seve n years ago in Seoul, South Korea. His motber and father ere university pro- fessors. (Our Planet man wishes to mention they both were born at exactly 11 a.m. on May 23, 1934.) By the time young Kim was S years old, he spoke Korean, English, German and Japanese, and was capable of doing integral calculus. Pretty swill, what? lAt of scholars think you can't measure intelligence quotients of more than 200 on the Tennan index. But Kim's score topped 210. He is thought tran911lanled at thts atage of the game?" A. Don't know how sll<.'Cessfully, but so far 17 such organs are be l n g switched from body to body. , • Q. "Are there Ugers In Russia?" A. Certainly ar~ '111al's where the blggesCT tigers survive, In fact ... Q. "Has anybody ever broken the bank at a LasL Vegas casino?" A. Nol so far. WHEN SEVERAL WOMEN meet in a bar, each tepds to order a different drink. Why is a mystery, but •such be the case ••. WERE YOU AW ARE more Alsatians are registered with the Kennel Club than any other breed of dog? .• ,THOSE BOOKS most often stolen from pOOllc libraries, it's said, are manuals on auto repair. OPEN QUESTION -In tenns of lll<lney, how much is a yard? It's Easy end Fun to Develop the Art of Conversation Students and adults alike can lOO's to improve their personal develop their conversational effectiveness. abilities wilh this remarkable Try It Free For 10 Daysi UPON BIS RETURN to Boston on a Sunday after three years at sea, Ship's Cap- tain Kemble, the historic record shows, kissed his wile oo their doorstep. Whereupon that pertinent Massachusetts court conv;cted him d. lewd and Jascivk>us behavior and put him in the stocks for two hours. The year was 1656 A.D. Our lAve and War man is appalled. Course in the Art ot C<15veru-PON'T $END M<*EY ••• JUST MAIL COUl'OMI lion. Authored by Ethel Collon COMl"Lli:TE COURIE. Your question! attd com- tnents art welcomed and Monahan. tamowi speech teach-er, conductor o1 Studio ot Ex- pression for celebrities or the stage and screen. consi5tA: or awird wirlnirut, red library~. l2 individual l essons, each con- :taining an Introductory Studio Talk, self-test questions, ex- amples ot conversation and hints for study and practice. Skills in conversation makes R•llllW'I Offlte • ~ ,...,_,, Ol9t. -..17, will be ustd •n Checking 011e-sio 1111r1o1s '°'1~ Up tohtreiier possibk. Ad- P1 .... send me CDnlflnlt'°" stu11i... d ieu-to L M B •"' Biii me only I-I.ff peor ll'IQl'lltt, for 1'eSS •i.c;rl • • 011..,., on1v 5 montttt CTot•I pra Slol.75>, 1 Box 1875, Newport Beach. wlll rem11 within 10 0-)'f er ffllll'n convw .. rloll :>IVdlef •nd owe no!ll-Calif. 92660. Ing, 11-;:;=========J :s.ve monev. 11 vw chtck Mr• •nd 111 .ncios. pa~!IM!ll 11'1 full $21,50, VOi.i .. v• U.ts. Jl:etunt guer'lnlM •PPllel .. ~- Who Cares? If eas1er to find b'lends. keep H•me ____ .......................... . No other ntw•p•p•t h1 tlle wor14 c•r•t •bout yo.wt commu- nity llke yeur community cl•ily 11•w•p•p•r clo••· lf1 th• DAILY. PILOT. the ones you have. Here, too, Addrtu ............................. "' are ti"" for keen obsen.'atlon ,,~ s--•• end ~king. Used by lOO's ot '' ............ ,., ... ··-.. . ... . Water Heater Sale! PriCe1 .... 21 .. Sil day -·-.,,.., ..... ....... :u ...... _,_.., :1...-.w111 .. _ ........ _....,. -l'lllWJS W PAI-nAH SAVE 9.07130 GAL. WATER HEATUI Reg. 77.95 NOW 68.88 • o.ii.-s 61.5 ~ of .. ... .. lint -.. 100" ... -s-d tank • Autmtattc gas CClllllrol ...... ..-;al Wgh t ,.. • • ... aff. SAVE 13.07! Cus,_ 40 gaL gas water heater, a.g.87.95NOW 74.88 • SAVE 15.07140 • GAL. WATER HEAnRI Reg. 99.95 NOW 84.88 • De&iislft 86.6 gotlon1 of hot wateor .. t.m Ii.ow at 100° rile • Double gk:IA ~ tonk • Automcdic ga1 ·COISlrol wit._ speciot high tempera· ... c.e-off. SAVE 7.071 Electric 42 gallon water heater. Reg.59.95NOW 52.88 SAVE 10.071· Electric 52 gallon water heater, Reg. 69.95, NOW 59.88 oUPlal MSTIWATIOH Al$0 AYAIUl,U AT PINNll'S LOW PWICES HOWi THESE VALUES AT ANYONE OF THESE PENNEY STORES! CANOGA PAU CARLSBAD DOWNEY FUll.Elmltl HUNTING TOH BEACH LAKEWOOD 1.0HG BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWl'ORT MACH OllANGE "l'!IE Cm" VENTURA I SHOPSUNDAYT0012to5P.M.I .. BEDROOM SETS •• PRICED ·TO CLEAR! .' I I Four piece Italian Provincial bedroom sat ••• • Thil exciting set featuresi dark 'Old World' finish on s•lect hardwoods and matched veneers; kiln dried hardwood frqmes; all drawers ore dovetailed, dustproofed and ftnter guided; antiqued solid bra• hardware. The set consish of: 6'• triple d1'9118r, 30x~"' mirror, 5 drawer chest ond full or queen si:re headboard with u .. , ••• ,. 11me..,. .......... _.,_ can bock 11yling. Orlg.•419,NOW $299 Night stand, Orig. •ao, NOW •55. Four piece Italian prDYinctal sat ••• with king size savings! The set consists of: a 72" triple dreuer, a pair of twin upright mirrors, a 5.cfrawer ch•t and a king sized headboard. Here, again, is the dark 'Old World' finish on selected hardwoods and matched veneers; kiln dried hardwood frames: all dtaw.rs dovetailed, dustproofed and center guidedr antiqued solid bross hardware; attradiYe can• bade headboard-. A tremendou1 value. Orig. '507, NOW Night stand. Orig. •ao, NOW •ss SPECIAL BUY! Don't sleep through this groat buy, SIHp on it. Both twin and full quilted mattress and box spring Hh have extra firm inner .. spring unit. Advance box spring design for additional support. Strong vertical stifthed prebuilt borders for years of wear • TWINSET $55 FULL SET Penneys priC"es include delivery within local deliyery area. NOWITHfSfVAl~U~E$~~!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::::::::::~ ATANYON£0• CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD DOWNEY FULLERTON -HUNTINGTON"8EACH SHOP SUNDAY, To"4- TH£S£ PENNEYSTOR!SI IAKEWOOD MONTCIAIR NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE CITY" VENTURA 210 5 P.M.I ' . -------------- -] -.. , ••• ~ M•. ' • M~ M~ M~ "' MVi M•. • Mo. 0 M•" " "' M~ "M M•. ,, Mo 0 M~j "'· M • M~ "'· • ... • M~ ... " M;j "'· " • •• ,, ... 3~:; ' Mv M: Mo. L "'" " • ~ "'· L M'it M~ "'" • "'· • M~ 0 "'t M~ M~ M• > • . , ' ., • ·~ "' c •1 ., ' M~ • . , . ' ' M~ ' .: I M~ . ' ., ' I I M~ ' .. > ' ' •1 •• I ' I M; •• ' I ' 'j ""( I M~ ••• • • •• ' ' •i t M. •i ., ' '"; •; I "' ' • •1 •1 ' iw. •• ,,~ ••• "'" - For The Record Births " Who Cora17 II~• •t+itt 11•wip•p•r It ftit werl4 ctre1 •Met yeut cerrul'lu• 111t., u~. ,,.,, .. .,,.'".11ltv ,,Jt., fili twtptptr 4tte. lf't fht DAILY 1---flU)L., Mond1y, July 27. lfl70 DAILY mor • Here are a few of the tremendous Dollar Days values you'll find at Penneys ••• hurry! Pants 'n sport shirts ~ Yo11a1 •••'• sl•ck1 ••. flar•d in the manner ~f the day , , , ttripM, ploid1 and solids. Penn Prest" never-iron with belt loop ond WeJtern pocket 1tyling. 28-36" woi1t, 20..33" inlo90tn (reg., lo"g and txtro long). Tenific~uel 4.99 Od•rtl ll•HM .... 1hlrts ••• never-iron Penn Pre1t*M% poly - eiter/3!1% cotton in a1K>tted •olid colon and plaida. Merl'• ai1e1 S·M·L·XL. 2.50 SPECIAL BUY! Our f•rllCMJI ~cuy car• Pe11111 Prftt* M"Nr-iro11dreu1him •• , Kingdof collar atyling ••• white or 1nedlv"' ton• colors •• , ahorttf""'9 iii rnen'ssii.u 14Y2-17. " SPECIAL BUY! NeJ1t ....... , .i ....... fer Wt eftd little 1trl1I N...., ~early ~start o broACI ...., '"'°"• not when the values .,. this terri.ficl Co"'9 Me °"' 1pecial collection of etisp fortrel• ,...,....,, c:otton1 and Orlon• acrylic kn ih with atay-neot batl1tng1 ef acetate tricot. fO¥Orit9 •tykr.-yowt and Mrs,-with ....-ything 1"at'1111ew IOI bock·fo.tchooll ..... a-6X. 2.99 si. .. 1.14, 3.99 • SPECIAL BUY! Cotto' ''"'I towol• at 1uch a fobulou1 pric:• yov'll KOOp th•• up in ~.,,•ry color. Gen•rou1 1i101, too. Pi11k, gold, moaa gr••"• lemon y•llow, P.y blue, white. Wa1h clo4h, S kr $1 Paco tow.I, 3 for $1 Penn Pres~ Ivy sport shirts ••• boy's special! Polyeiter/cotton Penn ""'•that ne~r ,._eds ironing .,. just machine ¥1101h in9., • tumble drying. In plaids and .olid colott. 1iltl 6-18. Stock up for hiM "°"' ot thi• •pecial price! 1.66 SPECIAL BUYI loy'1 hlgh crew net:lt knit lf!im, !50% Dacro'n• pol'ffll•r/.50% cotton, in o wide ouortment of 1lripe1. Size• 6-16. Scoop •P 1e.,,erol ot thi1 SfMCial pricol 1.66 SPECIAL BUYI lot/• Penn Prest9 CT9ated w • .-. ieon1. ht Cl tou9h bl•l'ld of .50"' forktl•polyeder/30% cottolt to.will tt.at -...-neecb ironiitg,.. loden,.bra. crMI Wve, 6-11. r-si., .Jim. 2.so ; Women's cardigans L 'n slipovers TM prico ta v~beli.Vablo, •• l>uf we'y• don• it ogoitt ••• cabl• and pointel knit acrylic c:ardig'an• and 1lipo...ers i111 yu•"'Y pottel•I Come •M thi1 1po<jal gnMlp in 1iz .. S-M·l, attd ca"1 away iterringt for the MenOn eh.di 3.99 CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE! • \ ·---·-·-. ·----' -. ~·--- J f DAILY PllaT The Asphalt Jungle Mo1n Geis ··Kids Eye Vie\\7.' GARDEN GROVE -The lniJ, and c:oncludes l h 1 t ------------------- County Has 115.5 Miles of Freeways SANTA ANA -With the completion ol. current Riva"- ~ and Orange Freeway projects th.is summer, Or· ange County will have 11 t.5 mile. of freewa)'! in opera· tioo, a~ half of the 247.6 miles planned for the county. The State Division o f Highways says that $17.7 million is authorized f o r freeway and highway con- struction in orange County, for fiscal 1m.11. Brief surumaries of future plans for the individual rout.es follow. SAN DIEGO FREEWAY : Wideni'lll to lZ lanes far about tw<l miles between It! junc· tions with the Garden Grove and San Gabriel Freeway• will begin in early 1971. Wkiening from 1.he Pacific Coe.st Freeway junction south to the San Diego Count)' line may be financed soon. Ana and Rivenide Freeways In Allabelm and FUllerton. Current construction ft«n the Newport Fr-ay lo the Riverside County lint, I.I miles, will be completed in lhe summer or 19'71. freeway south to an in· lBcbango with BNtol Street and Palbades Rold. Construc- tion is scheduled tlls su~er. ROUTE 90 FREEWAY (Imperial Highway): Widen- ing ol the half-mile stretch from Oragethorpe Ave. to the Santa Ana River will be com· pleltd In December. PACIFI C C OAST ________ _ HIGHWAY (Route 1): Pen- ding Paclfic Coast Freeway conetruction, the bridge over $4 5 "M"J]" UPP« Newport Bay is being .I IOll repaired. llUNTINGTON B EA c" Goal Slated FREEWAY (Root. 39): Beach Boulevard will be widened to sJ• 1anes trom Garden Gron By Chapman Boulevard t o Manchester Avenue. Work Is scheduled this summer. ORANGE -Ch a p m l:l n A route a,doption hearing: College has set a goal of $4.5 may be held late this year mlllion for its 1970 capital to determine a route from funding program, according to the proposed Pacific Coast J. S. Flour, chainnan of the Freeway in Huntington Beach development committee ol the to Lampson Avenue in Garden board o1 trustees. Grove. "The money will provide trlbute1 to mom come a little "behind tbe bwnor a n d late for Mother'• Day, but, sometJ.mes a o le m t1 pro- no mauter what Ume of the nounctments, . . • there is year the children spell them genulne lOYe .and great un- out, they're worth mom's derst:anding." hearing. A 10-year-old wrote of her There Is the first grader affection for her parent with who says, ''My mother Js the comment that she is "lhe going to turn 40 this year! neatest mother in the whole J love her anyway." wide world because she dleyed Or, the little girl who nld, -ber hair strawberry blou.nd." " .•• when she geta mad she A small boy scrawled, •·sne gCU mad. She ls &till a good gives me free money." Or mommy, velj good." a seven-year-old wrote, "I like These are excerpts from let. my mother. She pays all the ten In a book called "Mommy bills." 'Is Better 'Ibln a Blanket." "My mother has 12 children, Jls author Is Arvella sCbuller, I are adopted, 4 are her own , the wife of Rev. Robert ll and Z are foster," \vrote one SchuJler, pa:5tor of the Garden lad. "She Was with all of Grove CommunJty Oiurdt. us at Dianeyland. \Ye almost Mrs. Schuller, mother ot drove her crazy." five, said the book resulted And when the children got from her buabaDd's custom around to comments on dad of asking lhe church SlDlday alllO, the reactions were jurt school children to write about aa varied. A little girl said, their mothers. 'Ibeir writings "J like my mommy because then became part ol his she picked such a niCe daddy Mother's Day sennon. for me." Mrs. Schuller said t h e And how about this from WIS'llllN STATE UlillVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW In Orange County now acc•ptln9 men and wom•"'I who are elthen • •-11 •I• I JWI ef •1111..W. .-! .... ...U.o (IO),.,. ...... 11 ......... ......,"'........, ..... .. 11.ttllel .Wlll't .. ~ •f ..... (,.M•••w 1 •••rn•l 1'"° U,a. .. ,,. -M ...... loo 4 ...-1 M ,.., lllM el-l .i.-,.. -I;. J lltoro ., n-. Apply Now for September 10th DAY OR EVENING CLASSES • 100 S. llroolchunt Ano ... Im Phone 635-3454 IN.,_ M ll.I . ., J.O. wlll M _ ........ w-,,..._ 11WI•• I••• ~ 4 _. ., .. _ M 1M c..t .... ti l- _.loot w-r Ct.cwt.. •I Ille II-•I Golli..•!t . Gt.-. ~•t., .,. elltl~i. ,. leM the '9lllw•l1 5,.,. .., 1._!Ntlwl. Funds were aJlocated In the 1970-71 budKW!t for construction of a $2 million interchange near El Toro Road for the future 0so Parkway. Work: may gel underway in the sum- mer of 1970. ORANGE FREEWAY: Ex· tension to the Loi Angtles County line is scbeduled for completion In spring of 1971 and the Orange Freeway will reach ita sotJth junction with the Pomona Ffteway ntar Walnut in ~spring ol 1972. c o Ro N A DEL MAR financing for a new fine arts FREEWAY (Roote 73 ): a:implex, a new classroom Financing from J a m b 0 r e e building, furnishings for a new Boulevard north to the San . women's donnitory and ez- Diego Freeway is planned for tensive campus renewal," be children, ranging from six to a small boy : ''My mom is 12 years, came from all types a very good -kisser, because of backgrooods -I a r g e when my mom a:nd dad kis.1 famillea, small I am i Ii es, they never st.op! broken home1, we l 1-k nit•----------~------------------- NEWPORT FREEWAY: homes, IOllle well·to-do, .some not so well-lo-do. RIVERSIDE FREEWAY: It will be completed this summer lo a junctlon with the Santa The im.n bud(et aJJocated ll.2 mUlloo "' -the She put the book together, replete with all the miapell· the mld-1170'1. said. !------------------! From Industrial Associates UCI Gets $4,000 Study Fund IRVINE -UC! Industrial Crisis, Crimlnll J u 1 l f e e, -"To Complele o Boole Assoc:iatm has allocated a Counsetinc IDd En.vtn•••M!Otal on Uterary Cr It i cit JD, 1 1 U>tal ol $4,000 to help "-" Control," Prof...,, Arnold Prol,_. J.,.. M. Gellridl, a variety ol """"""' and Binder, dlrector ol the pr<> deportment ol English, $100. educational programs pro-gram in IOciel ecology, $500. -"Summer Salary for Mr. posed by faculty and students -"C.ocnpletioo o{ Typinl Teegavarapu Rao to continue during the J970..7t 11cademic of Book, 'F•scilln: 'lbe VieW Marine Research ror hl1 PhD yeer. 1 from America: Penpective1 Degree," Professor Howard Industrial Associatea is an on tM Rile IDd Fall of umotr, a90Clate d ea n , organiz.atioo of finm whose MussoHnl'a ltaly'i'' Prolemor achool of biologkal sciences, purpose is to foster a mutually John P. DiaOm: of the depart-$100. beneficial relatlooship between ment of hiltory, $100. _ "Purchase or Equipment the University of California, _ "Education Motivation needed to Traig. Teache~,'' Irvine campus and area in-Program and Opera t Ion Robert Let r o, supervisor, d~.._!nd1 ..... bl~-"'!'~...a..-"'""• Awareness" ( programs teacher education, tlOO. ~d:,. j,.:" n;:;.!D~Jd designed ID enroJl'age minori· -"R<Seardl and Salary ty high school student. lo Support for Several Graduai. lnduotries rx->ted the fwids enter college), Dennis llucoff, llJld Uod<l'graduate students lo <JIOllC<lllr Doniel G • --~~ ~-~-n pr-ram in du"-Summer It 7 0," Aldrich, Jr. ']be allocationl ....,.,..,,.. l.o-uui ' va ,.,. d aocial eoology, '500. Profeaaor WJlliam H. Parker, were ma e on recom· _ "Support of Speaker's department of physk:s, $500. :.e::.jjoogbyacampuscom· Bureau on Ecological -"PaoCRO (studenkom· Problems," Timothy Dl.m, munil)' ceder in Santa Ana) Followtng Is • partial list ol graduate sludeot, cteparlmft11 SUmrner Profram," Carolyn project titles, 1ward recipi· of population • n d en-Watanabe, Community Proj. enl! and amounts. ~ Of --"Lectutt Series In Urbon,_v_ironmentai ___ ,,......,_· ..=c.'_$ZSO_. ___ ec1a __ nce_, -"--·----! Defltla Notlees oow• Cr. (tyde C. ·-· $11,...lyld " dell .... IR!", M"-Pltfrkle W. J-Wltll 2 ,, ........ c:hil<lr..,. $«Ylces wm M II AM ,_. ""'"· P•clflc; vi-~I P•rll: Ch1pel. l11terrnent, V•lhtll1 ~Ill P1r1r, North Holl-811d. Mello-I-Ml!""' ,_.., HOft>I, dlr~IOrl. CUMMIMMAM Etlwl PMt'f C-ir..Nm. 111111 ••If 16111 St•ff!, NewllOl1 ••Kl\. #n. Saft• J .. ft Chl-41•. (911• MfMI 4 1l1tw1: Mra. Maudie Sftllw. N..,lodl (1171 M,,, GrlCt a 11d:1 M'1. Ellrw Kttdlum1 M11. lilll lo Gii~; 111 of Et MonllJ 2 1r.i1cldllklr..,; ' 11rffM1rancldllldnin. s.tv~ 11 AM • w.<1nnc1n:--f1. AlldrlWI 'Prn11rter11n owri:n. '""'""""'· J'11m ...... ~1.1 P1r1<. 11111 c.11 Miu Morlu•""· dlrK· tori. HUNT Sl>lr1.., JHn Hunt of :ion P1tllt , Wlchlt1, K1nw 1-Dalt of -!h. July 'H. S.UIVl"9d tw llui.IMNI, J1d1.1 motl>t'r. Mri. E11Mr Alhenle!IH, Wk!oll•, K•nwi; brolhlr, Robtrl KJ1111, H111,11\0I\, T11111 1l111r, Ciro! litMlllH . Wldl!!I, Kll\H i/ UllClt , Mtr11ft K1hr1, Cotti MIN. $1,...)t;H IN! l11urnrnenl, Wlc;lll11, K1nH1. 81tl llrOld• w1v Morti11ry, torw•rdll'>ll dl .. ctou. SAWY•R C1rollM l . S.WVtr. Oii• of .... lh, July 1S. Survlvt<! lw dluth!tr5; Thllmt Thom· I I/ Don>lhY J•M $1wvui Eltll\Of S.W· vtr: Mtl~ II.. Dnr!l\1 ; 2 .ant: E1rl G. ~1wver i nd Edm1md aur11.1; 111ttr, llw· lt l'> cap.i•lld; 1 t ru1dehllortn1 n t<Ht· 11r1ndchhdr'en. Prlv•ll -YICtl Wirt htld fOdl't" ti 1:JO PM •I the Jt-.. Hllll Mor· fu•<'t" Slum-A_,,. 1111.,....~1 followllll •I AOM Hlll1 Mitm0rl•I P1r1'., Whllfl1r. ARBUCl<LB A SON W-IUf Moelllary U7 E. 11tb St., Cotta Mell ~ • BALTZ MORTUARl&1 Corona dd Mu OR J.NSI Colt.I Meu Pill 1-UU • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Bn>adw11, Cotti Me11 u 14111 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY l'lti Lqau C..700 Rd. _l, • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PAR& c-ewy eM.-, -~~lew-"''""llW~C..... -• PEI!& FAMILY I Mon., Tues., Wed. onlyl Treat yourself to a glamorous tint or retouch NOW ONLY At your1 • service- another new HFC office in Huntington Beach r GRANTS PlAZA SHOPPING CENTER 19887 Brookhurst St. PHONE: 962-6633 Need up to $5000?~ When you need money to pay bllls. buy a better car or meet other Important money needs, you may arrange for It in your own hometown office of HFC,Household Anance. The HFC manager will explain everything you need to know about your loan. Whars more, he'll tell you what your loan wtll cost. in dollars and cents. before you borrow I And at Household, there's a convenient repayment plan for every budget. Each year, 1 more than 21(, million people trust their money needs to Household Finance. Why 1 don 't you? Stop In, call or apply by_ mall , to HFC's newest office today. HOUSE HO FINAN~E~ COLONIAL FUNERAL llOME mt-A ... ........ -.ms e USE TOUl l'fHNEY CH.uOl CAlll-HUNTINGTON BEACH-Five ,olnll Ctr ••• VI 7-3577 -·-"M'"l!'"R MClll'l\IAllT NO APPOlllTMlNT NlC1$SAIY COSTA MESA-1191 Hart-Blvd •• , ••• Ml <M416 ,....,.. 1teoc• · .,..1111 South Coast l'taza. , • , • , S<IG-9103 Su ae-1~ llMlW llr------------------11 NEW'°IT IEACH-2017 San Joaquin Hln1 Rd. Sltnfllll MORTUARY fVll•l'T• M\IJllTIN•tOlll •tACM MIWPOllT •IACN ........................................... 511 1t7 Malo II. ..,.,..,. '"""" ·~-'""" ''""" ''"" SANTA ANA-204 W. Foutlh St .• ,,., •. 547..5~91 11111i111i,._ 1ac11 w ,._,en~ .,_ ttw. m.1n1 w nw. Mt.U11 ..... OllAM•I "TH« C•tY'" 1M llotr1 .,...I -· -~ ..... ,""" ENTER NOW! Your child's plwtograph • can win a spectacular $2,500.00 SHOPPING SPREE in our store! And thal's ju't one oft/.,, hundreds of prize. and gifa toliJllin& •2&,0QO.OO in the 36th National CHILDREN'S PHOTOGRAPH CONTEST YOU CAN WIN ONE OF THESE NATIONAL PRIZES: Finl Prize • • • • • • , • •z,100.00 Slwpping Spree Second Prize ••••••• •1,soo.00 Shopping Spree Third Priu •• , ••••• •1,000.00 Slwpping Spree Fourth Prize •••••••• •soo.oo Sltopping Spree 50 Fifth Prizes •••• each •100.00 Sltopping Sprees GI 1*£ OF IUllDtllDS OF U. ~ UVlllU IOl9S AS llGllDUllJ: llllTIGll l'llZQI "Jl••e yourself a Sbopp111g Spreel Go Wlld...w&Lk away with •2,500.00 worth of youl' l1eart'a detire ••• y-, a paid.qp diargoe account thalletl JOit buy whatever you want! lt'a a sup lo enler ud euy to wla. Yoo zpJ.ghl have a winning child Al hOIH ri&ht now! Come in tod.ay. ld. 11 photo- groph 7ou r ohild ; ... i1 .. 1er 1 duplleate lo die Conis ot no mn clwg., , _ _.. ..... _ ... ___ .... __ COMplM• '*" -,.,. " .. flat~~ .. "" GU.lli'T JWJ..oOlf WILL U Clft1f TO EVDT COJnUTAlfT! Spoclol prlCOI on moot U.. ud photognph finlohaa. For mmple: CONTllT 7 . 49s o..a.ioc..-SPECIALf portraits ........ n .. .;. mtAT'• MORI THU % orr THI a1auua PMCIQ SpMMirM 1tJ tA. N.u.-1 A...O.li11• •/ /kpwWD11 5,._ P~ Slllli# ' ,IJLLlllfOM Or1n0t,•lr Ct!lttf N noor. Pl~ ;it,1NTIMlfOlll 1111.CM Huullft9• Ct111M w 11toot. m·nlt ••Wl!Olll t•ACM ,,.., ......... till "°"' U..:Ull OllAHO• "THE CH'Y" 2nci lllo,. 61"·1"1 • 1 Fo Jim artl an chw "I com f~st: or Gull 'M • i' Me> the mur "\ • C( "Wr help al re 'M on t Par and RJ the i DI 3 Tai sto pla har 'E Bi! en Jui j 3 I ' . ' Artists Souglit- To 'Build' Chm·ch Fountain Valley resident Jim Barts ls looking for artista to donate works for an auction to help bulld a church in Santa Ana. "It's to be an art auction combined with the annual festival Aug. 14, IS and 16 of the Poor Clare Sisters Guild ," Bartz explained. The Poor Clare Sisters are a group of Catholic nuns from Mexico who 1;re working with the Mexican-American com- munity in Santa Ana. auction, Bartz aaid. Such \.\Wks as painting, needle craft, and acu.lpture have been donated. Baru said art.Lsll who would like to donate workt may call him at 531--0195, or bring their work starting Aus. 1 to St. Barbara's Parrish. Midshipman Put On Dean's List Midshipman Kenneth Robert Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Fectera/ Offices to Serve You: IWN Ol'FICl:lth& Hiii, lo9 Anotlel• 823-1351 WLIHUll 11 GRAMERCY PUCE:3833 Wllahlrt Blvd.. LA.. 311-1296 LA CMC CDl'ml: 2nd & Brotdw1Y • S2'-1102 tfUNTtNQTOM IEACH: 81 Hun ling ton Center• (714)187-10<7 IAHTA ANA LOAN Sl!RVIC! AGENCY: 1905 N. Main SL • (714) 647-3257 UNTA llOtlCA: 711 Willhl!'t Blvd.• 393-0746 IAN PUA0:1oth a Paelflc• 131·2341 WUTCOYINA: EuUand Shopping Ctr.• 331-2201 PANOllAllACITY: 8816 Van Nuys Blvd. •8-92-11N TAlllZAHA: 11751 Ventura Boulev1rd • 345-1614 LONG llACH: 3td & Loeuat • 437-7'81 •""'1 . .MY rt, 1'10 CAil Y PILOT JJ Art Link/etter Shows You a New Way to Beat Inflation ... Just Join ~ Oub With a $2,SCXJ balance In your uvlnoa 1coount. you ,,.,llglblo 10 become • "*'""· Subltontlal avlnga ... mvallable when purch.aslng many Items Including automobiles -fumlture- appllanc•-1..,.elry, also discounts on lntam.tUOnll travel. Plus many tree services, money orders-safe deposit box11, etc. Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: COll"®NDID DALY Alm PAJD GIJM'Tm.Y,• • • 5.00""·5.13 "° ,,_-,No Minimum. 5.25 ""·5.39"° Three Month CeMlflcote: No Minimum. 5.75""·5.92"" On•Year Cenlftcale; t1 ,000 Minimum. 6.00°/o-6.18%- Two-Y•r C1rtillcat.; $5,000 Minimum. •Ett.ctlN AnltUf.I Eamlngs "We're trying to bulld them a convent now," Bartz added . "We hope this auction will help. About 40 artist! have aJready donated Items.'' Han! has been pllced on. tbe lt-------------~ dean's Ust for academic ea- The art auction will be held on the grounds of St. Barbara Parrish. McFadden Avenue and Euclid Street, Santa Ana. Ribbons will be given to the best works in the art ' • cellence at the California Maritime Academy in Vallejo. Hanf, son of Mr. and Mn. Philip Han! ol 430 E. 21st SL. Newport Beach, i! a senior at the academy and ls studying nautical acienoe. RESOURCES OVER $800 MILLION ~~~~~ .... ~~~~~ I Costa Mesa. Store Only!I ~ ~ DAILY 10. 10, SUNDAY 10 • 7 t~~1:~~'Wm!i!C:tt~I 7 ~ . ..... -....... DDUBEE a11·1:au 24" GRILLMASTER FOLDS DISCOUNT PRICE 3 DAYS ONLY ~.88 Take II anywhere! Steel tripod legs fold for easy storage or travel. Deep beaded·rim bowl, chrome.. plated grid, ratchet grid adjuster. Contour-grip lift handle. White wall wheels. Apple green. COTION TERRY BEACH TOWELS 3 DAYS ONLY 1K97 Big, thick 'n lhristy towels in whirls O( bright WOV· en color. Choice of patterns -S0160 inch size ·- Just say charge it! ADHESIVE CARPET TILES 3 DAYS ONLY 5 For 97¢ The popular 12" by 12" self-adhesive carpet tiles by Carp-il·AII. Comes in many pretty solid colors. Just peel and lay down . Luxurious, stain resislanl Save now! SAVE ON ROUND STEIL WALL SWIM POOLS 78.86 12'zS6", 8 vertical supports; lad· der, cartridge filter. 2537 gal. · capacity. 19.88 Green, yellow "square top" steel rails, verticals. 10'x24'. 1170 &al. capacity. 11.88 Square steel lop rail, 6 support!. Polyvinyl-coping. 8' x 20", 625 gal. capacity. IT'St,AllT-_UP IN OUR p TIME GARDEN GET GR~~G SHOP riM"-..--:.111"1.llil\'/l'litl/ ONE and flVE- GALLON S'HRUB SALE Tray Pack BEAUTIFUL l·Galon 57¢ I ,BEDDING PLANTS A. PANSY: llarcly annual growing 4 to 6-inche1 In hei&ht. Prefera rich lnost' 1011. mol11t 11hady location. S0 GaHon 2 & 8 8 I . STOCKS : Hardy rrowing from t to 1 %:-ff'et high. c. SNAl'DRAGON: Onf' of the bes t (M'rrnnlals sultable for fl owering and many olhf'n to choose from. VIOITAILl5 ALIO AVAILAILI 1 GAL. PLANTS: Choose from the JKlpUlar plants for your landscape needs. ?i1any to choose from. S GAL. PLANTI: For lh<Mle of you who want the larger aize plants for the 1pKlment look, litany others available at low prl~. 3 DAYS ONLY SUMMER TIME IS PAINT -UP TIME SALE! SEMI-GLOSS WHITE PAINT Kmart Semi-Gloss resists steam , moi s- ture, grease & scuffing. It dries to a hard, enduring finish overnight. KMART LATEX FUT WALL PAINT Dries In one hour to a flat matte finil'lhl Stays bright and fr .. h-looklng. Tools come clean in water. Dur Rog. S.97 3 DAYS DNLYI 3.97 Gal. Dur ~'I· 2.11 3 DAYS ONLY! 1.96 ~al. "CHARGE IT" at Kmart! ' • INSURANCE TO $20,000 SPECIALS FOR MONDAY I TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY I ONLY! ALUMINUM CHAISE LOUNGE WITH 2 INCH PADS 3 DAYS ONLY 7.88 Adjustable, 5 position chaise lounge with aluml· num tubing, styrene plastic arms, double aluminum straps in seat with helical springs. Thick tufted 2 inch pad has plastic top. #A-200. 5' ALUMINUM LADDER Dur Rog. 11 .H 3 DAYS ONLY 8.37 Five root 11tep ladder Is safety teated sturdy and <'I SY to hand.le, Buy now and save! COMPACT 18" STEEL TABLE-TOP GRILL For Outdoor Cooking . g&~~ 1.88 Handy barbecue irrlll with burn.rt'Slstant leg trlanal• is IK'rfecl for travel. In avocado green. Charae It at Kmart. LUMINUM FOLDING IED W/2" FOAM MATIRESS l DAYS 9.44 24x72" frame with 2 locking center le11. Striped cotton tlcklne. polyfoam pad. 2200 HARBOR BL VD. Cor ner of Wil son and Harbor COST A MESA Jj ' • • ' ---.. -.. -. --. ' ... . . •• Readers of this Newspaper: This INTRODUCTORY OFFER brings-you '1 per adult '1 for 111 chlldren 50c for Maternity Benefits -•1 covers you for the first month: ic Pays you extra cash at the-rate of $400.00 a month for each hospital stay ... even for life; If necessary I ' ic Pays In addition to any other companies' coverage you have-Including Medicare. ic Pays all cash direct to you (not to the doctor or hospital). Guaranteed Renewable for Life. We guarantee never to cancel your protection no matter how old you get or how _many claims you have. if No salesman will call-No medtcal examination required. ACT NOW-YOUR ENROLLMENT FORM MUST BE MAILED BY ~iDNIGHT, THURS., JULY 30, OR IT CANNOT BE ACCEPTED ONE out of two familie• will have aomeona in the ho1pital thi1 year! lt. could be you-or aoma beloved member of your f a1nily-t.omorrow ... next week ... next month. Sad to 11y, very few families have anfwhere near enough coverage to meet to· day'a aoaring hoapita c.osll. These coatl have doubled in juat a few 1hort years. They are expected t.o double o:ga.i11 in the few )'eart ahead. Stop for a moment. Think how much a lo!'.lr atay in the ho1· pittl will co11t you or a loved one. How would you ever pay /or costly, but neu1aary, X-rays, doctor bills, dr\lgaandmedicines1 What would you do if your pay chec:k atopped, but livi nic ex· wntel kept going on the 1ame a1 ever? The same rent, phone, fOod , all the day-to-day expen.e1 that never atop. What i1 the average breadwinner to do? We believe we have the anawer in tbi1 outltanding Plafl that •.• Pay• you $400.00·o·monfh faJt·free ca1h whenevel' you are ho5pl talf1ed, What a bleaaing it i1 when you know you have an extra 1400.00 cash C<Jming in every month when you go to the ho1r,ital. Now, thia low-co1t Plan frotn National Home enah ea you lo enj9y this prot.eetion at once. Your low introductory 6rst m1tnt h premium for 1ou and your entire family ia ahown above. Then, you may continue at National Home'• rer•dar low rate1. Jhe odded prolertfon you NEED! All benefits of thl1 $'400.00·A·MONTH Hospital Plan are paid direcUy to you, in ta.J-free caab, i11. odditW1t to whatever you may receive froni yoUr insurance with any other rompanr,! Spend the money u you tee fit-for hoapital or doctor bil 1, mortga~ payments, to ttplace 1aving1-or any neceas.ary, but co11tly, e.xtra111ot covered fully by u1utll hoapital pt:1liciea. Ever1thing coat.a more these d•r• (need wt tell you!) and hospital care is certainly no exceplion ! While 7 out of 8 Amer· icans have 1om1 hospital inaurance, moat have found it does not cover all bill a that pile up when aickne11 or accident 1trjku. That's why National Home develor:d low-cost extra-cash protection that helps you pil.y hospita coat.a or other upense1. You get your $400.00 per n1onth cash-TAX-FREE-aa Jong ••you are confined in the hospi tal. You are oovere,d from the. •ery first day for accidenta and sickness-for aa long as you are confined to the hoapital-avr11 for life, if necessary! (You are co•ered /or accidents, starting with the Effective Date of the Policy, and for aicknesa after 30 days from the Elfective Dale.} And remember, this National Home. Policy pays tax-free ca11h direct to you in addition to whatever you receive from any other protection you carry-Blue Cross, Blue Shield tven Medi- eareJ after you have reached age 65. Alld, when you and your inaured &pou!e are ho1pitalir.ed at th• 1om1 til'lt1 for 01t 11u ide ·11/a/ i11/·ur11, lhi1 NaUonal Health Plan ~ya you an EXTRAORD NAR Y DOUBLE CASH BENEFIT. Yow. receive not $400.00 but $800.00 a month. Ynur 1pou1 receivea not •400.00 but $800.00 a month. That'a II,100.00 i" all, i,.. coil pov111e11t1 ta 11011 ewrr "lll1ttl (when under are 66), i:tarlin' the day you enter the h~1pital for•• lonr u you both remain there. DAV$S400.00·A·MONTH CASH for each accident rl"\ I or illness-beginning the very first d1y in the hospital-and continuin& for life, II ntc1ss1ry. Coveraae for accidents starts with the Policy Effective Date: coveraae !or sickness sterts 30 days from the Effective Oat1. P'AVS$200.00·A·MONTH CASH tor the first three I'\ I months, alter you have reached aa• 65. And, 1 full $400.00·A·MONTH CASH th1reett1r-1v1n for life. P,Av5s240.00·A·MONTH CASH if. covered Child IS I'\ f hospitalized for injury or illness. And the bene·' fits continue for as long as necessary. P'AVS $400.00·A·MONTH CASH for each prean1ncy I'\ I 1equ!rina 1 hospital stay, when Coveraae fo r Children and Maternity 81n1fits 1r1 edded to the basic Plan. Coveraa• beain s th• very f1tst day in the hospital. P'A'YS $1 ,600.00·A·MONTH CASH when both hul· I'\ band and wife (under aae 65} ar1 hospital· 1zed at the sam1 t ime for accidtntal injury for as Iona as both remain in th• hosplt11-1ven for life, if nec11s1ry. 65 OR OVER? Write for complete information on our 1pecfal plan. Just drop ua a card, and we will tend complet.t detail• •• IOOh u we receive your inquiry. W• con never cancel your Policy I You. can count on tbi1 won.derful protection no matter how old you get or how many time& you collect from u1. Your Policy guarantees that we cannot cancel your protection alter you've made a l~ of clahna, or become old-or for anr. other reason what.soever. It ia Guaranteed Renewable for Ltfe! · And that's not all. Sufpoa you hav• a crOwing family- thia Plan (NH10-M9 Cal ••• , Pays Maternity Beneflf1, Ordinary h01pital Insurance may take care of part of your ex- pen1e1 when you go to the hoapital to have a baby. But now, tbie Plan can give you addit ional help when the new baby arrive•. If Coverage for Children and Maternity Beneftta art added to the ba'1c Plan, you get ••tra cash to un any way you want. If a P.rernan~y. childbirth or •v~n miacarriare puts you in the hospital for one day, ftve days, 10 daya-u lonr aa necu- 1ary-you are paid cash beneftta for •vtrv ct.r o/ vottr oonf.w•· "''"tat th• rate of '400.00 a montb. All tbeseoadderl cosh &eneflf1. Added cuh Maaell: t;l,000.00 ca11h for accidental 1011 of limb or tight of one eye, when th1 loaa occurs any time within 90 day• of the accident. Tbe lou of a lin:ib or eyeaieht ia terrible. Nothing can replace th1 loaj, but' a til,000.00 or $2,000.00 chtck helpa brinr peaet of mind during the·period of adjustment. Allftd c ... lleMlt: Choose Cover~ge for Children (with or without Maternity Benefit.) and all your dependent, unmar· ried cliildren from age one month through 18 years will be covered, too! This National Health Plan pays at the rale of $240.00 a month, when your youngster ia hoapitaliied .,. for removal of ton1il1, appendix or any other illnea1 or injury. Yea, you will receive $240.00-a·month ca1h, month after month for aa long a• the child i• In the hoapital. A44M c• ~•e:lil: Pay1 aa much aa l•.S00.00 caah for a Reria- tertd Nurae at home. You collect ex.tra btnefits at th• rate of 1400.00 A MONTH when your doctor haa you emiiloy a full. time Registered Nurse within fi days after you come h.ome, foUowinr a stay i~ tha ~01pital of five daya or more for which benefita were payable. Your beneftta continua for the tame number of covered day1 that you were in th• ho1pital -even uifto 12 full months. W•lve r of ''emlum·S.ncflf. Should you or your 1pou1e be ho1pit11iud for 8 ton11cutiv1 weeks or more, National Home WILL PAY ALL PREMIUMS THAT COME DUE FOR YOU AND ALL COVERED MEM- BERS OF YOUR FAMILY WHILE YOU ARE CONFINED TO THE HOSPITAL BEYOND THE INITIAL 8-WEEK PERIOD. And your protection continues juit the 11me .aa if you were paying the premiums youraelf. Then1 if you leave the hospital and mu1t return for the 14mt condition before you have re1umtd full norm..! activities tor go da_ya, we will again PAY ANY PREMIUMS WHILE YOU ARE IN THE HOS- PITAL-for the total confinement! This rnean1 you pay no pre- miums, yet your full protection r•main1 in force. These arc lhc ON&.'Y o>ccludun1I Your Nallqm1I Heallh Plaa Polky co,en ''''>' •t1d of lidl1te101 or accidtol eutpt coadlllou c•Ultd by: act of ••r; a.11y mtnl1I dlffue or fuaclioDal un-ous disordtr; prepucy, tsctpl u provided 11ader tbt Malere.ity Be•tfif provlsioo; and flptllNI multlq from ••Y 1kbe11 or Injury origlAstins before dM Elldl\'e Dale Of your Policy •• , duriag die tint 2 yean only, Thi1 111t item is a real help if you already have a health problem. If you are sick before rou taka out this Policy, you will even be covered for that condition after the Policy has been in effect for 2 years. Meanwhil e, of courae, every nt.w condition ia covered. l·lotionalty J,nown and respected. This it t he kind ol outstanding protection you have read about in R1ad1r'• V i(lll/,, Por•nlt'. Nrr.lional Gtogra-phir: and other leading publications. The spec ial plant offered by the National Liberty Corpor1tion ii:roup of companies are today htlpinii: po1icyownera in all 60 1late&-1nd m1ny foreign countrie!- paying benefit.a at the rate of more than ll,&00,000.00 a month. LICENSED IY THI STATE OF CALIFORNIA HERE'S ALL YOU DO TO R:CEIVE YOUR POLI CY: 1. Complete this brief \ 2. Cut out along I 3. Enclose Form in envelope with Introductory Enrollment Form. dotted line. Premium (shown above) and mail to : National Health Plan, Valley Forge Pa.19•81 ---------·----------------;, ' ' . . . . ~~~™~~~' Official En1ol!m enl Form for !he Hosp1tah1at1on Indemnity Pl1n ~I NATIONAL HOME LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY = I An Old line Legal Reserve Company of St. Louis, Missourf 1.0459.0-23 g I AOMINI STRATIVf OFFICE, VALLEY FORGE, PENNS YLVANIA g:I (P111st l"rlnt) "" NAME ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,.....,;::o:;;;:;-~~~~~--,,,,,~~~~~~~~-••t Mlddlt lnlllt 1 Lill Slr••t er RD# --------------STATE _____ ZIP ___ _ DATE OF BltTH ----,~c-----;:-:::----:::::AGE _____ 5EX Male 0 Menth D1y Yttr OCCUPATION ________________________ _ List 111 d!pendents to be covered under thil Pl1n: (00 NOT i~clude name that 1ppe1rs above. Use sep1r1tt sheet if necessary.) DATE OF BIRTH NAME Please Print RELATIONSHIP SEX MONTH DAY YEAR AGE I 2 3 4 5 D Cllecli: 11111 lf yeu w111t C1v1r111 for your Childr1n. D CHckfrltr1 ff 11u w11t Cov1r111 for Jtur Children 111d Mat1r11itJ l1nefits. I htrtby enroll in National Home 's Hospital Plan and am enclosina; the first month's premium to cover myself and all olhtr Cov1r1d MembersJisted above. To tht best of my knowleda;t and belief neither I nor ant person listed above has been r1fu11d or hid cancelled any health, hospit11 or lift insu1ance cover1a;e due to reasons of he1lth. I understand that this Pol- icy wili become effective when issued and that pre-eaisfin& conditions will bt covertd efttr two years. lla1tu .. X D1t11 ______ ~ NHl.10 NHI0·669 CAL. - - --------- 11 1: I i I I I I I I I I I I Oulttondlng American• flke theta r•commend lhl• coverog•. LT. GEN. W. X. HARRISON, U.S. Al"MJI (R•· tir1d): "People beneftt in many way1 when they pu.rchaae inaurance direct by mail from National Home Life Aaturance Company. They aava money through lower rates. No 1alesman calla. And no medical examination i1 required. I Con- 1ider it a aenalble, economical way to increaae one'a haalth protection in these day1 of ll!OUnt· inr ho1pitaJ and medical co1t.1." ;JEROME HINt.S, J.adi•1 lu1 witl tl• M1tro-polito" OparG CoMpo.llJI: .,It 1eema to me that tht conct@t of health insurance by mail ii a very Mllli~l\t one. It'• quick, euy and economical. Nobody makes 1urpri1e viaita lo your honie to ult personal que1tlon1. There's no medical ex- amination. And costly P.rocesaing charges are eliminated. Th• U.S. mail doea the work for you. This means more yrotection at le11 coat. f con- rratulate N ationa Home Life Aa1urance Com- pany for meeting a real need." DR. E. STANLEY JONES, iJttf"'catioJulllV bow. ·tu11w1e lilt, autll.or, MilrioMrw 1tatl•· '"4Jl: "In oft'arinr low-co1t health inaurance b7 mail, you &ra rendering a valuable terviC41 to ·thouaanda ot P.90ple who have no other oppor- tunity to aYad themaelvea of 1uch protection. It'• nuaurinr to know that policyowner1 in- 1ured by tha National Liberty rroup are re- ceivinr mora than •t,600,000.00 a month in bene· At.a." . OtafQful Pollcyowners \Yrfte ••• "ReceiYed your check for t880.00. I appreciate havin' the money tent directly to me 10 I could decide how to uae ii. ' NICHOLU CaJBTL, Green Bay, Wiac. "It waa wonderful to receive your check for '555.00. I'm very pleued. Itpaid real well.'' Mal. BESSIE GEJSJNGtR, Kana•• City, Mo. "Everyone ahould have your coverage. I know I wouldn't be without it.'' WALTER TUCKER, Fayetteville, N.C. Make your decision corelull1. Think how costly a hospital confinement will be. lm1gine pay- inc for those indi1pensable doctor, 1urgic1l and nursing serv- ices that ara not covered by your r,reaenl insurance. Would )'OU be abl1 to afford ate eph'mle to ~MP in touch with lo•ed one1t Or t he rental of a TV Mt to help paas the lonely hours! Who would pay your bills that keep cm coming in at home? Many folks have loat their life 1aving1, their cara, even their homei tryin; lo meet runaway hospital and medical coif.a. And no one knows whose turn it will ba next. Why you must utt hc.fgra Ille dafo .!'how•! 011 ynur fnrollmentform-j~ .. taf.;;\,dayifrom l.:id' y. Why do we five you ao little time to enroll in thia Plan-only e few day1! Because this i1 a limited Enrollment Period-and we 1nu1t receive your Enrollment Form ot th• •am• tim• 111 all t.lt.e otl1r1 in order to pass on to you the aavinga that come from proceaaing many policies at one time. This highly efficient "maas enrollment' method 111nable1 u1 to iive you broad cov- er1g1 at low cost W• mail you the Policy aa aoon aa we receive you r Enroll- ment Form. When the Policy arrives, examine· it in the pri vacy of your own home. Take all the time you need. lt'l a very abort document, and you'll be pleasantly surprised Lo diacover there i1 NO FINE PRINT. Then-ahow it, if you wi sh, to someone you tru1t. Perhaps your lawyer, accountant or doctor. Better •till -1how it to your own insurance man ... even though he may be working for another company! If he i1 a personal friendhhe haa y'our best intereata in'mind. So you can believe him w en he t.ell1 you that thi1 Plan oft'er1 truly out.at.anding value. ' Medical Costs S~<YrKhr.tint;! Sourea: Will Stf'Ht Journ•I ' l60 INDEX; 1957,59 -100 MEDICAL CARE COSTS roei In S.pter11btr, IKI, t.e llt.19' of the 1117-&t avera,. fro1t1 IH.I" a mo11.th tarli•r. t heae cdt ta arw components of the Go•amment COllS\llMr price inde1. HERC ARE YOUR LOW RLNC\l'.AL RATES. The followinr rate ch1rt 1how1 how little it ~01t1 altar the ft rat month to cover yourself, your 1pout e and any adult dtpendenta. Naturally, at these low ratea, we can issue you only one policy of thit type. Each adult, 16 or over, p1ys the rate. shown for his or her •rt· AIJe at Monthly Premium Enrollment p,r Adult 16·44 .••••• , • • • . . • . . . . . only $3.45 45.49 ••••••.. , .....•..•• only $3.95 50·54 . , ..... , ......... , ,only $4.45 55·64 ........ , .... , , . , , only $4.95 Only 11.00 more per month covers all your dependents from tha are of one month throuR'h 18 year1. Newborn children arc covered aulon111titall~ at the age of one month at no addi- tions\ coat. For lfaternity Benefits ju1l 11dd 91if monthly if both husband and wif• 1ra covered-or 11.60 montlttf if \he wife onl1 ie in1ured. NOTEr Th• ••sul1r -nthly p,..mlum •hfwn "4•• (ftr •p at ti,... tf •n,.~IM•llO 11 tile 11mt lew Pttmlum ''u wlll ctnllflu• t1 .. )'I It wffl Mt 1uttm•llc111, lnct•••• •• reu P••• from 1n1 .,.. IHKll•t ts the 111.rtl Onc;1 )'OU IMl11t 1nrell•d In Ull• N1tltntl H•1lth 1"1111. yeur r1I• dill ftt\lfr M CPl•l'l&td Mc1u11 If lltw much ••hew elltn )'Ou cottKI ftlM us-•r M· c1u•• flf •llll~•r<c1d •11 .. but .nlr If lh•r• 11 • .. n•rsl rtlt 111111111tmtM. 1111 1r flwn, •n tll ,..i1~1• tf Hiii !YPI In ,..ur lfltlr1 •lllt.1 1 Actt../OW-11Loler'' Moy Bo rooL.atcf TIME IS PRECIOUS! Act quickly. (No 11le1man will call.) Get your Enrollment Form into tht mall 'odow-becauM once. you sulftf an accid1nt or eickne11, it'• TOO LA TE to buy proWction at a11w cost. That'• wby we urge 70\1 to act today -l1/ore anythinr une1:pected happens·. j TH ESE 12 IMPORTANT QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS • , • tell you how thl1 Natfonal Home IXTRA CASH HOSPITAL l'LAH 9lves you '"e protection you neecf-af amaaln9ly low costl l. How miK:h will In)' Pollq p1y ..._ .._ I ao ta h i.p;uir Vou MOalvt ca1h benefits at tha r1to of $400.00 t ll'IOl'lth from the very fil'5l d_, you entiW th• h0splt1I. Your coY•r ... ballna wh1n we racalva your lntrodllCtOfY P1tm!um-thl1 11 tha dlj' )'OU era cowrad for Ill)' accidtnt. Sidlnoss cove1ap ~"' 30 dl')'t en.er th• Polley is l1JUacf. You coltact caMI not ult for yourstlf, but for •II Covered M•mbars of yoor t1mlly 11• th1y 1ra hup!lllliitd. Once you h•W. ra•clled 65 y11r5 of •a•. you eolltct i11 •d· dllion to eny Mtdiesrt benelih-$200.00 •month for tht first J mo11ths, •nd $400.00 monthly whllt you remain conli11u-ou1ly hospitalind 1ttarw1rd1. t . Do J'Ol.I p,y ma caah ....,_ my cfllklran II to tM hM-.+! Wll a"'I dllldr•n • 11ava In tlM tuwr. ba Pfotamd. toot You collect c11h banefita •t tha rete of $240.00 a monltl •::r. tim1 your child 1oe1 to the hospital, whtn Covttl .. for Chi • dr•11 11 add•d to tha balic Pl1n .. , ••ch time eny dtpandtnt, u11m11ritd child {111 l month throu'h 11 ye1r1) 11 111 the hospit11 for slckna11 or ln]ury. And 1f you hl't* 1 1rowin1 t1mlly-11 IOOll 11 ycN.1r ntwbom ehitd i1 ont month old. h•, too, 11cova.red-tu!om•lle•lly ... 11no1ddition1I cost to you. I . Will JOU ply ma I t lha rate of $400.00 • month -._ hw """'""' Yell Some h••lttr pl1n1 don'I cov•r Pf•1n1ncy. But we do, wlltn Co'ltr•a• for Childr1n end Met1rnity·Btnefit1•r•1ddld t<t th• b.lsle Pltn. You collect c1sh ba11ttit1 for tny pr1anancy, child birth or milCll'ri11• th1t results In a ho1pltsl 1t1y. 4. Ara tl'llra tim11 I milht oollect 11 mucll 01 $1,600.00 1 monlll, Thlr1 ertl A:•m•mber. we ~Y ush not just for you but for evtry Cover1;d Member of your f1mily. N1tion1t H111th Plan M•mbtra aet en EXTRAORDINARY DOUBLE CASH BENEFIT. If you ind your cov1red 51JOU'9 ••• both in 1n 1ecident and 10 to tftt hospil1/ 11 tft1 s1m• limt, you recaive $1.600.00·•· month tSl·lrH e1sh {whln undtr 1111 6~). This tmount 15 ~ld for 1s lo11a 11 both of yow rem1ln 111 the ho1pitel-evan for lift, II neee111ry. 1. Whan do I coiled t'rlrt u1h for 1ociclant11 Wt p1y you $1,000.00 tdrt t l lh for wmpl1tt 1ecidenttl lctss of 011• hind or on• foot or 1l1ht ol ont eye. and $2.000.00 •ttra c11h for 1011 ol both hinds or both feet or li1ht of both tY••-1.,,.n If th1 Iott occur• •• IOtli •• 3 1J10lith1 •ftor lht 1tcidt11I. I. How rnucll c6o I recatw for 1 fttflst.rad Nurse '' home? You collaci e15h bel!tfiti •t the r1t1 of $400.00 1 month IJ911 to $4.BOO.OO wh111 your doctor h11 yOIJ employ a full·time Rqisttrtd Nuru within 5 dsyt sfttr you return hom1. You n11d ~ly to """' be111 ho&pit1liied 5 dlY• or mor1 for which bantiliil werl p1y•bl1. Your Rt1i1ttr•d Nursa At Homa btn· efits c:Qn\inue durina tmpl•yment of the 11ursa for tha um1 num~r of 'eowrad dsy1 you were In the hospit1l-even tot '' 1on111 12 full months. 7. Am I ever slll>wt>d to .aop paJina: prlmiums durlnl • loftl m y In tl'tl holplllll-yet llitl ram1ln fully cowarN? Yes. you artl Should you or your.1pouM ba ho~pilllliud tor I con11-tutiva weeks or more, Net1onsl Hom• will P•Y •II pr•· mlums th•t com• du1 for you •nd 111 Covtrtd Mtmbtrs of your f1mily whil• you 1r• confined to th• ho1pit1I bt~on~ th• lnili1I 8·wttk P1riod. You 11tn't expected to PIY us btek 11th1r. I . Does this P!An pl)' ln a111 hospital? You wilt bt cov•rtd in any holpit•l of your cho!ca ••capt a U.S. Govtrn~1nt ho1pit1I or 1 nursln1 or conv11escent l1Cil1ty. t. Now tell me Whal'• tl'll "cateh"-wtl1tdoaln't m'Jtellcyco...r? Get rttfy for a welcome surprlM. Your Policy cov1r1 evary. lhllll llSaipl condltlona caulfo!I !Ir: ect of wer; eny manlal diMUO or funcllon1I ntntDUI dltonlor; pNlnsnq, IJcapl SI providad u•r Utt M1temlty lanefit pt"oviaion: 1ncl eny sltll· ne11 ., injury llriflnatlns IMfrot9 lha lffacti'le D1t• of yout Polley -bUt own this .. It "ncluliofl" 11 dona IWIY with •ftilr you've i;..an e po+lqownflf fOt only "'° yelft, Ewrrttalrc alsa ii Hllnltely ,...,H. 10. 'ft'tlM .,. 1ha ra11ulremanl:1 le enroll lfl ttli1 M1tion11 Hultll "•n? You must not h1va bMn refused or hid e1nc11t1d •nr h11ltll, ho1D1t1I or Illa i111ur1nc1 dut to r111on1 of h111th; tnd, to qu11ify durina thia Enrollm1nt Ptriod-~ou must tnro11 before mldnlaht ot th• dttt 1hown on thl E11rollm1rit form. l J, lalldn Nvinr money-ire thora 1ny othw Hv1nt1pt of jol,.. Inc thl1 Nttion11 Health PLan.dwrinc 11111 Enrollment Pariocl1' Yts. A vef)' lmPor11nt on• is ttlst you don't nt•d to complete e le nflhy. dettil•d •pplicstion-jult Ill• briel Enrollmtnt F(l rm in th• comtr Of this P•lt .• Alto, durina tl\11 E11rollmtnt P111od th1r1 1r• no •Urt requirem1nt1 for el i1ibility. ind no "waiy. 1rs·· or r11trittive endorsamtnts un bt put on your Policy! 12. How do I MrOllf Fill out Ille brief Enrollment Form ind mttl it with your Intro- ductory P.rtmium for tho fil'll month's proltcUon for your 1n- lir1 ftm1IJ. Mljl to: N•tlon1I Ht•lth P11n, V&ll'Y ror1e. P1. 19481. r.oNEY -BACl{ GUARANTEE We will send your National Home Policy by m1il. Exam int it, carefully in !ht privacy of your own home. Show it, if you wish, to your own insurance agent, doctor, lawyerorothertn.isted adviser. If you decide, for any reason, that you don't want to continua as a membar of this Plan. return the Policy within 15 daya of the date you receive it. and we will promptly re- fund your money. Me1nwhilt, you will be fully , protected while makin1 your dtcisionl I. IP riJ i•"4 l'ftEllDENT National Home Lif1 Assur1nct Company ll't41~ .,NAL J;l~TI{ a s•Mce ol Na1ional Libtrly Co1por1Uort ... ·auonol Rome Lite Aeaul'anoe Comp&QJ fftf Hcne•1!lf Wrl>,11!1 W, S'11"!0~, Cftl"'"f" er I/It loafi Adm. Or lice: Valley P'or1a, Pean•7lvanl& 1030-Firty Ytan ofS•nlc•-1870 This Polley Is underwritten by National t-lomt l ife As1urance C..,... pany, an old line legal reserve cotnpany of St. Louis, Misaourt. NttlonJI Home Is licensed by your stile 1nct t1rri1t full le111 ,. servtt for the protection of all pollcyowntrt. ' N11loul Li""'1CorporaU0111riap7 .. tlM WASHINGTONR&PORTOil10•1J •nn IU.8001i.lio111Wi-t1 R'd 1 • • t • \ E d ~ t• r • ,, f • 0 • .. ... . -. ----·--.-----.. ---..-------------~~~---·-------~ -• ------------ BARBARA DUARTE, 494.9466 MMArt .lv!Y U, lf1' I ,. ... II Thanks to Juniors Youn .gsters Can ·Swing Members of South Coast Club, Junior Section, re- cently elected officers for the coming year. Asswning official roles were the Mmes. Thomas Fortune, chairman; Charles Daly, secretary; Gerold Williams, treasurer, and 'Donald Feehrer and Larry Adams, program chairmen. Also on the board are tbe Mmes. Ranney Draper, community service; Gary Clarke, member~p;· Roh-. ert Parsons, telephone; David Travis and Dennis Bak· er, representatives to the Laguna Niguel Coordinating Council. South Coast Club Juniors meet on the third Thurs- day evening of each month, usually in a member's home. They schedule varied programs and a social hour. ' - Other activities during the year include social af .. fairs for husbands and guests and fund-raising projects. One of the club highlights of this past year was a do.. natipn of a jungle gym to the new children'i park in Laguna Niguel. · Young women interested in information concern .. Ing the club may call the Mme~. Clarke, 837-6615; Baum, 499-3845, or Fortune, 495-5981. Tiki Glow Sets Mood In Viejo Wann summer breezes will carry the sound ol ~Jynesian music across the blll.t of Mission Viejo on Saturday, Aug. 8, as members and guests ol. Las Margaritas ar- rive for a luau. "-The women's club of the Mission Viejo Rec re a t i on Center is elbow deep in papier mache flowers and tropical decor for the event which will officially begin at 7:30 p.m. For those iDtere.sted in afternoon activity, hostesses suggest an early dip in the , pool which will reflect tbe glow of Tiki torches as dusk arrives. Cocktails Will be serv- ed at poolside during the even· ing. A full course Polynesian din- ner will be followed by dancing to the strains of the Hllwailan Abe. Polynesian dancers also will entertain during the luau. •• JUNGLE JANES-South ~t Club Juniors (left to right), the Mmes. Tom Fortune, Oharles Day and Ranney Draper test the jungle gym their club donated to the children's park on La Her· mosa in Laguna Niguel. The park was made possible throug~ a combined efiort of civic clubs in the Laguna Niguel commumty. The Laguna Line Snapshots-Reprint Lasting Friendship EIGHT BIRTHDAYS were celebrated recently by members of the san Clemente Oil and Watercolor Society. Business was combined with pleasure as members ate cake and opened gifts in the patio g·arden of Lilian Finlay and Elizabeth Lacey. Follo'!Ving festivities, members elected officers and discussed weekly painting classes. Artist members Agnes Buckley, Lee Gorman, Edi1h Loustalet. Dorothy MacRae, Maisie Moth and Pauline Shehane are currently showing in the midi-gallery in Hutchens Optical building. OLD SNAPSHOTS were reviewed and new ones taken in the Table Rock garden of actress Madge Cleveland who gave a luncheon party for members of her junior high school class. Madge's husband Dick Washbume served cocktails as guests indulged in lots of chitchat. Those attending included Betty Bennett, Los Angeles artist who h·as recently done a series on an African safari; Hansena-Frederick· son, administrative .secretary to the former chancellor of UCLA and chronicler oi university history ; soprano Marian Collins and Be-mys Trefry of Dana Point, former music teacher for the Los Angeles school system. IT 'S A FOURTH grandchil~ for school board president Larry Taylor. Garth Michael Taylor, s~ond son in .the Jeff Taylor family, maQe his debut at South Coast Community Hospital. EVERYTHING came up roses for a gala reception honoring Margaret McDaniel, deputy grand matron of the 9lst district. Chair· men for the Laguna Beach Eastern Star event were M. Harriette Con· nell, Dorothea Kohls and Dorothy Stead. Members and guests dress- ed in casual or native attire are invited to join in on festivities. Limited reserva. tions are available and may be made with the recreation center at 8371050, utension 205. Cost is $11 per couple for members and $14-per cou- ple for non-members. Iii THE MOOD-Polynesian music and decor will fill Mission Viejo Recreation Center as members of Las Margaritas arrive for a' summer luau. Al· ready well supplied with exotic flowers are (left to right) Mrs. Richard Winnegrad and Mrs. Ronald Potts who are busy with plana for the Aug. 8 event. MRS, ALBERT CORNELIUS and Mrs. Kenneth Haas re~resenled Laguna's Soroptimist Club during the July biennial convention in St. Louis, Mo. Maier Ingredients Missing • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I started to write this letter m June but decided to hold off and see if r felt the same way after a few weeks of cogitation. ·Well, I do, so here's my letter. Why do kids expect their parents to give them graduation pruents? Where did the idea come from? Our eighth grade "graduate" requeited her own telephone. our high school boy served notice (as a sophomore) that he e1pected a car upon graduation. OUr college girl let us know she expected a, trip to Europe the day after she received her diploma. I am ashamed to confess ·we came throu gh on all three counts. ll· cost over $5,000 -and we are not ri ch. What do poor people do! How and A NN LANDE RS ~ why did parents become ao trapped? It would make more sense if the kidl gave their parents gifts for getting them through . .Please reply, -THE VICTIMS DEAR · VICl'IMS: Poor peeplt dOl't five Ith graden telephones, •11• IUOol 1enlot1 can -nor de Ibey send ttaeir college graduates to Europe. Ia fact, &ome RICH people doa1l do tlte&e UIU.11. Obvloaaly )'OU feel blackmailed. Your kJds have probably been setting )'OCI up tor the clobber ever 11.a.ce tlley •ere ' old enou.1b t1 talk. 1111 alee wllea partltl caa 1tve tkielr ~Wm extras -provided Ute part11t1 ea1 afford tltem and Uie kids apprecia&e It. h yoar caae, I ... fed 1tme lmporta1c lagredleat1 .,. ml11t11. DEAR ANN LANDERS : You prinled a letter a while back from a reader who was driven out of her mind by computer billing. After countless phone calls and letters, she received a telegram ..,ini lllal U she dldn 'I pay her blll Parents' Recipe for Success at once her credit rating wouJd be penna-ly jeopardized. I sympathized with the woman because I had a similar experience when I tried to cancel a credit card. Jt had such a devastating effect on me that my ulcers came back. Please inform the public as to the best course of action should they become caught in the wheels of 0 progreas" and dMven nuts as I was. (P.S. Finally my husband hired a lawyer.) - SCARSDALE SCREAM HEARD ROUND THE WORLD DEAR SCREAM: o.. wile llDda llm1eU tavolved Ii a batt&e wltll 1 compaler aboald do U.. followin1: U, after a phone call and a lettu to lbe company, )'OG &et at 11Ulfact100, accept tbe fact Uud lbe electronic monster ku Dt eyes or ears and you might as well &alk to Mounc Rushmore. Write &o )'OGJ' senators and io your con- peumu. Send copies of your cor· rapoDdence to tile computer. Write alao to Presktent Nli:on'1 Commlltee on Conamer Iateretts, Washington, D.C. Aad keep your cool your cool your cool )'oar cool your cool. DEAR ANN LANDERS : What's hap. pening to peopie anyway ? Have they always been eo rude and inconsiderate? Here's a aample of what f'm talking about. -,. The telephone woke me up at mid· nlaht. I aald, ''Hello." The party on Ule other end asked, "Who LI \his?" I replied, "Who were you calling?" The party yelled, "Get off the line you •%@ + It t!lt$-$-'°A??? t." Bang went the receiver, right down 0t1 my ear. Why should Ille party be mad at ME! l \Y_as the one who was awakened out cf a sound, deep. Why would a person behave lllat way ? -BAFFLED IN BUF· FALO DEAR BAFF: 1'be drunk probablf klst his clime. How will you know when the real thing comes along! Ask AnQ Landers. Send for her booklet '1Love 0:1 SeJ and How to Tell the Difference.•• Send 3S ce nt.I In coin and a long, self-address~ stamped envelope with your request-iq •\re ol the DAILY PILOT. -· . I --:-~----------............................................................................... --------------------~~~~~~~~~~· ..... . J4 DAILY fllOT Mondu, July 27, 1970 Horosco pe Aries : Stress Original Ideas TUESDAY :JULY 28 11J SYDNEY OMAllR Gtetlle be11·., •I• ••t·elMcra p~y oo aa utl •J•&kal BO&e, 1tatbl1 that M WM bin ude:r Ute .aacal lip tf Caaeer. D•h T pun's wwk1 att fWed -aalnloC1<a1 r.i ........ A.a.losY 1oas olways played a ,........,. hie la Jjtttature .......... !«. ARIES (March 2l·Aptil 19)' You get what you need, but !hol'\ trip may be necessary. 1'bose in pacitionll .of authori· ty are apt to be iotrigued by your ideas. Streu or iginal , dynamic aPP'"Ocb. TAURUS (Aprll 20-Moy 20): Aocent Oil special collections, ol>lainlng 1enuJne bargains. You pi.o added recogntUon. One al. -makes effort to .,.-. your \alenis. Get .,...,, comlng to yoo -and 1el It in writing. Gl!:lllNl (May 21-June 20): Stress the new; discard out· moded methods, concepta . .&e lndlpendent, daring. H a v e: GLORIA MYRICK S.t1 Date Myricks Tell News Of Troth faith in your creaUve abilities. Accept u nu• u al invitatlm. Future plans cty9tallize. CANCER (June 21-July 12): What yoo feel. is a certainty could be more of an illusion. Realize this and proce<d ... cordlngly. Not wise to take situations, individuals for granl<d. Something is going on behind scenes. LEO (July 13-Aug. 22): Good lunar aspect spotlig!its friends, hopes, wiabes. Social activity quickens pace. You meet people, go places, do Interesting things. Be open to ideu, suuestions. VIRGO (Aug. 13-Sept. 22): Ir thorough, superiors are im- pressed. Key is to be familiar with rules, regu la tions. Emphasis is oo ambition, bow to achieve goal Strive to be realistic. Show that you mean business. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Advertise, express thought!. Let others know you h a v e something of value to offer. Much dienge is featured. K'"p open mind. Whal seems out of reach is closer than you might Imagine. SCORPIO (Oct. 13-Nov. 21): Your abWty to detect secrets comes to fore. You pin by capitalizing on infonna~n. come upon by surpriR. Be ready to act <n knowledge. Don't hesitate -you have what you need. SAGl1TARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): You may not have all fact&. Walt. Avoid nulling. Some are making plans which could allect your stratqy. Game is anything but over. Know this and 1 c t ac- cordlngly. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Basic issues, work, how you relate to those who perform services -these are emphasized. Avoid the spec- tawlar. Inltead, concentrate on steady progress. Reunion is indicated. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Opportunity i: DOC k S; answer with vigor. Be en· thusiastic; welcome young ideas. ~ativity Is .i n spotlight. You can win with swift, unorthodos: methods. PISCES (Feb. !._March 20): Practical matters continue to command attention. Impo&Si· ble to skip details without paying price. Know this and es:amine methods with care. You have chance to pull off Mr. and Mrs. Ivan M. a coup. Myrick of Santa Ana Heights IF TODAY IS y O U R have announced the wedding BIRTHDAY you an preparing plans of their daughter, Gloria for evenUuJ time - a period Jean Myrick and J am e s which f e at u r e a added Daniel Pederson of Costa responsibility and rewards. If ~.Mesa. single, marriage may be in STEVE SMITH ADDS FINISHING TOUCHES 'Nimble Fingers' Produced By JACKIE COMBS 04 flle o~ Pllef llllff The romantic musical of pathetic Don Quiiote begins a four-day run at Orange Coast College Wednesday, July 29. It's the culmination of five months of intensive pre- parations. As the curtains open and lhe actors take their cues, JoAnn (Mrs. Hayden) Williams and her costume crew will give a sigh of re. lief. They have prepared a parade of fash· ions that takes the audience deep into the Inquisition. "Our costumes range from Harem girls MARK TYLl!R LENDS SHINE to Moorish captains and to peasants -all from the 16th Cen\wy," noted Mrs. Williams, laboratory instructor for the OCC summer production. The crew of seven has produced 56 cos· tu.mes and five suits of armor. "This is the first time we attempted to do so much," she admitted, "but the students have been so enthusiastic, we've had few major cata· strophes." A summer production such as Man of La Mancha is on a tight schedule . "We have one week of casting, four of preparation and one of production. \Ve want to involve as many students as possible and asked only that they know how to sew," she noted. Costuming for a historical period is a detailed operation. 11ln order for the students to costume the cast, they have to have a good understanding of the lives and times they're dealing with," Mrs. Williams ex· plained. The first meetings were devoted to history and a study of the characters. With a knowledge of the people of that day, the crew gains an understanding of the styles worn and the types of materials which were available to different classes. More im- portant, the students learn which modem materials will substitute. For example, a wash and wear butcher fabric is similar to the peasant's natural weave in appearance. A session with the technical director pro- vides information on the set design. "If it is subdued, brtght patdles of col.or are added through the costuming like cran- berry or a vibrant blue,'' she said. The crew did its own pattern making, shopping, cutting and sewing while the cast memorized its parts. ''& for the armor we ordered plastic sheets from Michigan but we had to do t he modeling, burnishing and painting for the right effect," explained Stanley Tudor, stu- dent assistant to Mrs. Williams. As the knight errant attempts to draw the audience into his impractica1 world, J oAnn Williams and her crew will stand firm. They know the practical side of his existence. The news was revealed dur· not-too-dlstan~ future. If mar· Ing a family dinner party ried, business or financial hosted by the brid&-elect's areas are put on more solid parents. Miss Myrick is a base. You have plenty going graduate of Corona del Mar for you, but more people High School and Orange Coast believe in you than you do College. in yourself. Means gain more jM _____ ...._ Her fiance, the son of Mrs. confidooce. Ignore recent set· 1.orntine Pedersen ol Costa baelc. It was only temporary. MCdesaMHS. ~~ occgr•d.••t<d from Cactus Society ~~ B1lic ~~LE d.IN TG find wf Wl'ICl'i h•d<'I' for YOU In J The bride-elect is wearing ::,,•~:,~ oi;:',:,sr;:v,,.:i-:~ Orange County Cactus and heirloom diamonds, wom by w_ ... Send ti1r1110ti. _, so nn11 Succulent Society meels the fo Ornerr 1\1.trvklt't s.c;,..)l, ,... first w~--sda at . her mother and -arulmother DAILY PILOT, eo.. :ruo, GI'.,. c.ntt•I l:U.IC y noo n Jn in their wedding ~gs. l.:;;';;";;"~iiii-iiii;;v"'iiii· ;;"·;;v.;;';;'"';;"iiiiiiiiiiiiOdiiiid;;F;;e;;llo;;w;;s;;Hiia;;lli;;, CoiiiiOstiia;;M;;e;;;;sa. The ceremony will take11 place Sept.. 19 In Calvary ti) aiapel, s. ... Ana. Crown1µg Glory State Leader beauty salons Takes Podium Members ol the Fountain Valley Republican Women's Club will gather in the Jolly Ox restaurant, Huntington Beach, for a luncheon meeUng at II :30 a.m. on Wednesday, July 29. Guest speaker will be Miss Angela Lombardi, past state president d. R e publican \Vomen's Clubs' Fedenlted. Further information o r reservations may be obtained by calling ~trs. James M. Johnson, 847·1510. Dance Club The first, third and firth Fridays ol the month are: the dance dates selected by Lace 'n Leather Square Dance Club members. The music start.I at I p.m. in the Recreation Center, Huntiniloo llocb.. "Why do I qain wright? , I never 1it down -~ lo eat." WEIGHTe WATCHERS. • SotM t1lktng, ao1111 llit111Jng ind 1 proar•m that worka. 1• flD lloattlU-<AU UHIOI HAIR FASHION SAYINGS! Stt .... , .. "-'1 ...... -....., • ....._ 1tyte. ,,....,.r-...w•. L11er •• SHAMPOO.sn ····-·······-······-$1.H $1.45 HAIRCUT ..............................•. $1.50 $2.0D lt"IM1tt l'ric" tllfllttr ll1t111r OfLIG"T HIM WITH YOU• llllCltlfl(G 'MIW LOOIC t $20 M"9i< Cull $12.50 $15 w .... ., Corl $t.'5 APPO!"TMINTI WILCOMI •UT HOT ALWAVI NICISIA•Y tfr.ma.d BUDGET PERM ii CROWNING GLORY ''°""""'"' c111tk• , .. '""'°"' I 267 I. 17 .. ST., COSTA MISA SOUTH COAST PLAU PHONI 141•tfl f L-1 L-1 -H1i1 i. I Mn PHONI 146·7116 Op111 fyo11h191 & S1111tl1y Op111 E ... 1111i1t1 "PACK 'N GO" FABRlCS Island bright designs for fun and su n vacation wearing OUR REGULAR 89c 100-/G catton 36" wide 7171@ u, u, YD. SLINKY KNIT PRINTS Colorful, care free knits in mod loo k for summer travel 100°/, •c•tat• 9u1r. w11habl• 44"/45" wide 11@@ U YD. HOUSE OF F•BRICS s. .. k C.-........_lrlttol ot $1 11 Ol191 fwy Cen M~41·1116 Or•11tef.Jr Melf..-o111191tkrGp1 i nti H11lio1 ..11.,..__12•·JJJ4 HMet Pt.,_17th it l ri1tel '-'• A-14:14111 111 ... Peril C.-.-L1 P1lt111 11 $11111111 ..... ••rll-121-'JJJ H11•fl1ttte1 C..re,._Etll11111 11 l11ch 11~11. H111tt..,.11 .._ll-tf7•111 J Newport Setting Evening Rite Links Couple 1n Marriage An early evening ceremony Jn Newport Harbor Lutheran Church linked Wendy Joan NUBson and Roy N e I s on Heumann ln maniage. '!be Rev. Ronald While of. (iclat.ed ror the daughter of. the S. B. Nllssons of Costa Mesa and the son ol the Henry Heumanns of Bell Gardens. Mrs. Patricia Orr w a s matron of honor. The bride asked the Misses Becky Hiser, DoMa Soderblom and Donna Causey ol British Colwnbia to be atteodantJ. Christy Heumann w a s ~r girl wh.ile her brother Jeffrey was rlngbearer. Best man was Ralph Hinds. J elf Thompson of British Columbia, the bride's brother, Dick Heumann and Robert Anderson were ushers. Also traveling from Brilish MRS . R. N. HEUMANN Tak• Vow1 Columbia for the wedding ---------- were Mr. and Mrs. George Causey, Mrs. Jeffrey Cross and Mrs. Thompson. Plants Potted The bride is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and a beauty coll ege. lier hus- band Is a student at Cerritos College and a graduate d Bell Gardem High School. Topsoil or potted plants should be stirred once a week with an orange stick to admit air to the roots. B' na i B' rith Group Forms In Irvine A new University Chapter is being fanned by B'nal B'rlth Women. Servtpg coffee on Tuesday, July 28, at 8 p.m. to those interested in membership will be Mn. Harold Spivock of Irvine. Further information may be obtained by calling Mrs. Spivock, 8J3.-0507, or Mrs. ~ Gerald B irn bau m, mem- bership chairman, 833-1342. ASK ,FO R NANCY Th•f, wh•i •II Iii• •nilfer1 d1 wh•n th1y nt1d h1lpl KNIT WIT South Coast Plaz• LOWER MALL COSl-, MESA. LAST 5 DAYS! Your child's photograph can win a speciacular s2,soo.oo SHOPPING SPREE IN OUR STORE! And thtu's just one of the hundreds of valuable prizes and gifts totalling •2s,ooo.oo in the 36"' National Children's PHOTOGRAPH CONTEST! YOU CAii WIN ONE OF THESE NATIONAL P111ZES: Fin• Prize .•• 12,soo.oo Shoppu•g Spree Second Prize , • •1,500.00 Slwpping Spree Third Prize • . 11,000,00 Slwpping Spree Fourth Prize . • . •500.00 Slwpping Spn:e 50 Fifth Prizes, ea. 1100.00 Slwpping Sprees 01 ON£ Of HUNDREDS OF U.S. SAVINGS BONDS AS HONOllAIU MENTION PllllfS I Have younel£ •Shopping Spree .,. yes, a p.id· up ch1rge account that Jell you buy whateYer you w1nt ! It'• a anap to enter and Olt6)' to win. Let UI photograph your child and we'll enter a duplicale in the Co ntest 1t no extra charge. Complete de- tails ind rule. in our Photograph S1udio now. Big b1lloon will be given lo every contestant. .-S:llnMll ........................... ..... ::ipkial price.• moat aM ud pboio~ph fini.htt. Fer eiiample1 COMTllT 7 495 One 8•10 Carone! SHCIALI portraits •nd lil wallt!t .. iM (lUT'I MOii THAN ~ OFF THE llC.ULAI PllCll) ~RDAD'WAY ltJ.lJJI UT. 211 ' ' ' Lon ing! sled cut ~ 54" sign 'EA< ·N, I ;Spa .. uett H c 34C Ct • t • • • • •N ____ ...,_,.~_,,, .. ...,. ____ , __ ,.. _________ _,....,...,;...,·.•,... ••.i~v~·u . " .:.. . --·. -· Ju~ "ti, 1970 DAILY PILOT J!J l ,_Su ited to Maturi ty Expresso Club Aims Disclosed Doll Up to Da te-Almost @'faA(ta ~t"r ~~ 'Mom·' Sees . No Lib Pin for Barbie ~l ~,.. ~ ~' ~ Planning • fall •fuad-ralslng project \Illich wlll behefil kidney dise.Ase suffere~ are members of the' ExprtSIJO Club of the Harbor Area. Thelr regular mo ,..t b I y meellng is. ~-· f0< 10 a.m. on Thursday, July 30, in the NewpOrt Beach home ol Mrs. Josepb Evana-.. NEW YOl\I( (AP) - Barbie, the mod teenage fashion doll who tops the toy lnduslty's hesklr.....i list wilh her minis, maxis and thlg!HUgh boots, has no Im· tnedlate platlS to pin a Women's Liberation button on w fake furs. 'nlat, at l8J:1_-t1 is wM.t -·· -11&)'1. She Is Mrs. RuJb Handler, presldelll of Mattel, Inc. (lbe Lps Angelesbue<: WY com- pany thal producoa Barbie whose own 28-year~otd daughter Inspired tbe doll eleven years ago. "Each year we bring Barbie more up to date," elplaiDed Jllrs. llandler, a slocky COi> ltul W tbe allm WY perched c_.1t!ped .., her desll. "'ftiil year she can talk, tilt her hta'd, move her ankles, twist at tile waist, bend at the arms." But sbe cmnot, apparently, roacijust. ber Uiinklng w join the current 1ur1e of new feminism. announced Mrs. Handler. 111 think she b every little glrl'a. dream ol what she wama to be." A modero ... ue ol Mn. Handler's childhood! "No, l was a tomboy," abe said aoitly. 0 1 never played wilb· dolls." Girl Scouts Flying Flag \ l l . Also on the fall agenda will be a membership ·tea to at- tract thQSe Interested i n prevention . and treatment of kidney diseases, as well as in prevention research. Particular aim of tbe club is to acquire borne training kits for patients DOW using dialysis machines at Orange County H9'1>itaL Mary McPhail Wed In Afternoon Setting "A doll and a wy reflect the workl arwnd a child," Mrs. Handler said slowly, leaning back in a green swivel chair In "'' Manhattan ollice, next door to the office of her hu,;band-partner, Elliott Handler, chairman Of the hoard ol Mattel. Acconllng to Barbit's recent past. the dream !)O&'lbililies for today's little girls illclude being a welJ.dr.....i )'Olnlg miss, a stewa.rots.., a tennis player, a skiler, a health fad- dist (complete wlth exercise machines) and a glamorous hostess. In the past, when Ken - Barbie's male counterpart - was dressed as a doctor, Barbie was a nurse. How about if Barbie were represented as the OOctor for once! Girl Seoul Troop 183 recdv· ed an American !Jas from Veterans of Foreigns Wars 1"'61 and Auxiliary '7141 ol w estminster. Presecting tile flag were Commander Edward Staneart of Post 9756 and Commander Jack Woolwoctn of Orange County Council. I Matur• l ' I 70930 I I .. ! Lachasse ' ' '! • I A suit of becoming maturity by Lachasse of London. Note the feminine sleeves, front frog clos· ings and A-line shaping. SUitable for silk, linen, shantung, silk and, wor. sted, lightweight and medium-weight wool. 70930 cut in Mature sizes 16-44. Size 20 requires approximately 3 3/8 yards of l: 5411 fabric. This precut, preperforated Spadea De- .signer Pattern produces a better fit or money back. • Order 70930 ; give size, name, address and zip. .~EACH pattern $2 postpaid. Address SPADEA, Box • N, Dept. CX·IS, Milford, N.J. 08848. .. NEW BOOK: Tomorrow's Look Tod a y! ;Spadea's collection of Midis and Maxis-the Long- r uette Book -$1 postpaid. . • HAL AEllSCHEl HEARING AIDS Cllltllm Aur•I Arn~llll(llti.n · 1110 SALESMEN 3409 E. COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR for Appoh1tn1e11t 675-3133 New Earrings Prove Pearls A new type ol eanings slO)'S on without screws, clips or piercing, the manufacturer says. 'Ille earrings have a section that fits behind the ear and can be adjusted to any size. They come in simulated ptarl with a gold finish. 8''x10'' Living Color P0111Al1 OftlJ 88 c *.Plus 50- Film Fee * Babies-children -adults -1rowp1 -1 Special • of each person singly only 88¢1 plus 50¢ film fee, " Croups $1.00 per person. * Select from finished pictures in radiant black and white and living color. $ Bon us quality "Guaranteed Satisfaction. u $ tt. hmdting m .mting cit.,,.., • F.tlt deli~ery -courteous service . W. T. GRANT IROOKHUIST I. ADAMS HUNTINGTON llACH Those interested in further tnfonnation about the group may call ){rs. Evans ·at 642- 2111 or the club preaident, Mrs. Harvey pease at 673- 034C. Catchalls Combine When women shop for fall and winter clothes. there is one department in which they will have no problems at all -Ille handbag department. The Na t io na l Handbag Association advises that for the longer skirts there are new _elongated h a n d b a g s swpended from long handles and little clutches, held in the hand. '111ere are even some that combine the two effects: litUe clutches with long skinny handles that can be wrapped around the wrist for a short look <r slung over the shoulder for the elongated north-south effect. Top Drawers Panelled ~ess carefree way to travel, clever way to stay at home! Has a lean, low waisteline, front zipper and a flattering band neckline. Printed Pattern 9256: NEW Half Sizes 1014, 12'h, 14th, 161>, 181>, 201'.. Size II (bust 37) takes 3% yards 35-inch. Rev. Roger T. Walke of. fieiated during the arternoon ceremony in the Unltarlan- Universallst: Church of Costa Mesa when Richard Arnold Freed claimed Mary Stewart McPhail for his bride. Parents of the newlyweds are the Angus McPhails of Newport Beach aOO Dr. and Mrs. Arnold Freed of Hollywood. The sole attendant was Phil Stein, the. benedict's brother- in-law. The bride is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and holds BA and MA degrees from San Diego state College The skinniest Washer /Dryer eyer made. SEVENTY -FIVE CENTS for each pattem -add 25 cents for each pattern for Air Mail · and Special Handling; otherwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Marian Martin, The DAILY PILOT, 442 Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York, N.Y. 10011. Pript NAME, ADDRF.SS with ZIP, Sl2E and STYLE NUMBER. • Save time and steps. ln- stall it where the wash is.. -anywhere you can get ad- eq uate wiring. pl um blnc and wnting. • Fa mily Size! 2·Speed Washer cleans family-sizt loads at Recular and Deli· cate settinas.. • Dryer has Flowina Heat for sunshine fresh ~hes. • Permanent Presa care In Washer a~..:i Dryer. -~ WANTED loyo i. Girl• •ue• 3 to 20 Our Skiaa7 Mini price lllANDON CI UZ T• AIMltt•• • Cl"9d Cltc•ft T ........ • _. llMlftrt.r HOLLYWOOD TALENT POOL TAKE 1 CAN YOUR CHILD 9UAUFY7 FOR FREE ON-CAMERA AUDITION CALL 547. 6251 PUll!C RELATIONS CO. M .. r •• ptoft1llo111I c•11t•&h for yo11 •t tno•it trtd TV th1dlo• PA•ENTS MUST ACCOMPANY ALL YOUTHS PRODUCTIONS INC. s35911 -"' --' 411 E. 17th St. Costo Moll-646-1684 Dolly 9-6, Mon & Fri 9-f In speech therapy. Sbe was affiliated wilh Sigma Alpha Iota. Her b""band llaa attend<d Pearce OJllege and UCLA. He will be a candidate for a MA degree at San Fernando Valley state College in the fall. Followlng a Hawaiian honeymoon, the couple will reside in Canoga Park. "We·caii.'t reflect very facet of life -only some, the better facets ... She look.. down at the shapely .Barbie doll, 11 inches of white fur-trimmed coat. matching hat and hoots, and a mane ol red hair Iha! flowed freely past bet shoulders. "Barbie is an 18-year-old dressed up to have a ball," START NOW ••• YOU CAN LOSE BATHING SUIT SIZES IN . DIE MOITH Call us now ••• Our special summer "Speed Up" program takes only a few weeks. EXTRA LOW SUMMER RATES Gloria llarshall says: *."J.U •• tM 4ms m. "' .... te wear U41 w'I tllll ,.. loow .. ., -~ .... toke •ad 1u1r•11tff M wrif.. ...... .,.. •• rM,..r 1..I et wo w;JI .,.. lot Y" ._ flEE Of CHAIGE .., .H oll "'""" ,;.m "ta Y" M. • WE ARE NOT A GYI NO WEIGHTS OR STRENUOUS EXERCISE ... we do it.for you. , •• com• in c;p.mfortabf• casual c&oth•• and-without dl1robJng, •njoy your relc:ud"QI •isltt whil• "firming and toning" and "trinto- tniftQ crway" exc .. 1 w•ig ht. Mrs. Handler said : "When there are enough women doc- tors around, then Barbie will have a doctor outfit. When American girls go up in space, then we'll have a girl space doll.'' In cxie corner of her spacious office, an Infant doll wheeled across the floor in a smiling pink plastic arc. SW.. Poll ii -ti ..... ...;s ii.._.., lat. tHfts ....... r....r • .....r.n.1 --... &.I .., .... .,.. wfli&t Al•klhMf CNll tloe .... ii. Sop Sho-. "I HM •• _., plNM4 .... the nwlts •f MJ Gloricl Menlloa prot1r•a. I Mel tUClll Mttv ... tMt I •• fUm.,. -swiinmMg ii • -•"' 1.Jile tt.• Accepting the Oag were Mrs. Robert Patlsoo, Ieader, and Mrs. William R. Jayburg, <»sponsor, and members of the troop. The girls learned tbe oomcl ways w display, show ...,peel to and fold the flag. S. .. .., .... ., •her rai5- itlf I fa11lly t i'Wt Ip ii .. 'IMrttlt ..... Milt•' ••• '9ut •ot M witli Mn. J•pptno•. SM •wriies: Whot t diff .... ff!C• ii tlllt woy I k.ak tnd feel! GoH is tltot pudgy, tlll ick· tlllro 119 Ji. tlll•· • idd\1 "''""· .. , lwo -.. • ..,. .., tMf r. IS ligJit It I fta~ • _. tried to ti.row M hock OH forlil. I - , ... ..., to llois. Ahor -ty· five JNn of -.--.-, fi.- cltiWr•· tlHI' tVte 1r1nd~ c~ildre n, •f h1sl.1 •4 is whiJtliftt iit "'' ....... ~}//.~ "C•U i1" fer• FllEE Court111 Tre•hlltlllt AclHlly .... ....... supemilo•,. -... • clvsive rtdocitg machito1t, ittc.ludittg oor potHlttl "Circ-1.a-Matic. • Tiiero Is oo charge or oWigotioe. EXTRA LOW SUMMER RATES THIS WEEK-SAVE FREE privlte playrooot locditlo1 for ....n chiltlroo. July 27 thru Aug. 1st $ ,... lrtalmo NEWPORT BEACH 430 PAC IPIC COAST HWY. 642~ fl __ _._..,_, SANTA ANA, 1140 W. 17th St. 543-9457 , ALIO IN .......... c."'-. c ....... hwy,.,........ ......... ~ ... ,_ .... ___ .. "°"""'--.. ....... S. DI ... , het9 AM, Sate ........, ......._ T---. l~ WWttW. (c) Cowwrlghl 1970 Gloria Mor1hofl Mgt Co. 1110. • ·11 ' ' , • JI DAILY PILOT 5 MOtlday, Jul)' 27, 1970 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Lil.AL MOTH;lf llOTICt tMYITH .. S IDI Ml'W'JOOllT MllA_ UNIPllt:D KMOOL DISTIKT Molle. Iii ,..,..., llMn hi trll ._.. N'"" IM'lt._ Silll 1111 Trv. .... tf ftMI Or.,.. C-1 Jlll'lor NOTICI! II Hlltl!IY GIYl!M .._, Cotltff blsMtt ., °'•,... c-ry • .,. ... ,.. " r1111u•• o1 "" "'"-'· ...... ..,.""' rtftl'ACI ,. 11 ftw ,,,.,,,,.,.,, 'MM Ullllltd SCNol ~slrlcl ol 0••1111 wtM r«tl.,.. "" to. bltll M 1ei.r '"-" coo.omv, c1urornl1, w ..c.•lw -Itel S:• ........ T_...,, Au1¥11 JS, ttNI, llldt .-. It 11 :00 A on 1t11 lOlll _... Wis ,., "" -•nl " «NltrKt ,.., ol AutlJ:ll, lt70, at ll'lt Offl« for lNTl!llCOlLIGlATt IOWtNG ANO d Mid kNol Ol1trk"' !Kil .. 11 ltl1 SAILING a.t,$(, Otlntl C 111,11 I y , ,.11<.,.ll• Avtn1,11, Giii• Mtw, C1"f0fnl1, Clllfaml .. TN <-11: Inc~ tM <-II wftldl llnle Mid Mo. wMI bl P\lblle~ ~ ti WlldlN .... •ttU 1ltt _,... Md rMCt ltf: • '-••r.w•lll'I"-. . LINEN $EllVICI: koch bl!b &11111 bl ~ 111 ttw All blft •t1 It bl 111 tc:cordlnct ol'lct ol h Owner. In "" Mmlnlatrttlon Wiii! Clllllllt-. IMtrudloN, I II 0 llulldlnt, 2101 Fii,...,.,. ROM!, COiii ~ ... IHc:Hlu"-wl'lldl •rto now, Oii fli. Cf>-C-1\', C1llf0f11la, 11\d .t11H In 1119 oft~ of tlW ""°f'dlllll'lt A1ilfll bl -"" Ind tvO!klY rNd l llM.id 1l of Hid Sd'll:lol Dlttrkt, 1&S7 ..Pll<.,.111 tti1 IOoott tl•i.I tl!M In 1111 brd A_.,., C..11 Mti.a, C•"loml•. Rom91 ol Ille Admlnlllr1tlo!I au11c11111 ,_ l!.""Kll blddtr llWll wbrf\jt • Old ftl<ll11 ' on form If I ttrllllld ... Utllllf"t hdl bid m111t C9!11°"" l<1d bl chldt or 1 010 )lollll """'' to 11,. .._.,.,. .. !hit lnvlt1llon. 1"'9 111111, ~ IKl ol "'-'"""'"' of !ht -lll~t'-W Ill °"*' tlo(umeni. 11111, 1111d9 MVION N l"'9 or61r ol t"-<Omllil't1I"' .,._ -11ntnt CO,. I' I C I "'-1-MtM U11ll.. ......._, Olltr'-doC.11....,.tt.. CO.It• ol ttw CorltrKt _ _, "" ~·• •• -• flit •lllf -A "~-tOlld m1Y be ""'"'lrld "' Hllitlc i-tlon 11'1 llte Mid olrlctt •I tlM db(re!lon I// !fie • Ol•lrkt. In 11 Wit ow.... .,.. ., Wnllo!ol Blufock tlM _, I// l•lklrw lo ontv '"" Midi • ' --• • ..,-... 1 0 -eMtrKt, tM 1roc.MOt ol !ht di.qi .,,.... .... , ,.., 1$1 IY wl" bl torltl1"d. ot In (I .. d I Df'IW., c_._ eel Mlor, C1Ulorftla, •NI boftd, !Ni IUll ......, !iierool •Ill bl _. bl abl•IMlll It 1flo Oftko ol fDNltod lo Mid so-! 01 -" -"" Ardlttld w ......,1,.,,. m• 1or ....... ... ..... Hdl "'" Ill -•I oleM llld ..-dfic. C-IY. tlonl.. Two 121 Mh "' bot luwd lo Ho Olddlr rMY w11!1df1w Ills llld tor ~t c:ontrodol'l l'llY Thlt ._It 1 -kid « forl\'4!¥1 14.!l d•l'I 11tef • ..... dalt Mt ""° the CIPffl1'll lfle!'eol. wltt ........... MtY H tl>I wh ••• Thi ... rd of Eduatloti o1 tf'll H-'- """'Nlf ~ °"" hi HOd (Olldftlon ~ U11lllt0 :khoot Olltrlct -MtlM tlYe Mn -""' till bid -11\o. ttw rill!! 11 "lt<t •nY or 111 bkh. ~ llld ilMN111ok eond 011111 1111111 not 111CttWrl1Y occ.eot t1M lowett ~ kftd w11 M A!llllrM of bid, iNM1 lo w•"" '"" 111,.,_llty ot n.. C""rtc:tor M6teled. lNetUl.tl'Y 111 ..,., llld ..ul_,, Eld! bid thtll M """* wt Oii tM Hl!Wl"OlltT"'°'IElA UNIFIED ..,,_ of P-.1" "°"""' loll fKft ul JCHOOI. OISTlllCT Ill -..C:lflut-. o1·0r11•oe C-h'. Ctllfwn .. lido Wd 111111 bl KC11111Nnl..:I 11'1' 9r Dofot"" .._......, Flllltr • °"1'lfllllr ., allll«"• d'loCk Nr1b1, Purcti»1111 Alle11t N tlllt OW!wf', or Mlllltc:!Or'I' l ld lloN:I .,U.11GD hi 1-ot fhl OW-, •1t<11l..t bf O.im J"°IY 23, lt111 tllo bldoer .. •rlMIMI ond O MlltflcforY P\lblldlod Or•Allt COlllt 0.1)' l"llol *""" c-Y H 1Urt1Y. 11'1 .,. 1ll'IOl.lnl JulY ti •nil Auc11nt J. lfJO 1»111 Mt .._ 11'11111 ""' "'"*" (IKI oll-----'--:c_::::_: __ _:=::1 .,_ Mel. Tiit dWet .,. ~d bond IMl1 bf ti-.. o 911111MM iti.t JM bLddtr LEGAL NOl'ICE wlll -vtl the CanlrKI ff II bl•-------------1 -•l'Oelll to him In r.on!omo ll'I' with •- ""' ColllrOC'I Doaimlnb •nil Wiii IH'OYllN P-Jml 1M! wrttY bond .,. bond• 11 IHCl!lftl CllltTlf'ICAT• OP •UllHllll. 11\efllll wtlfllll ffW dlYS •tt.f ..otltkltloll f'ICTITIOl.IS MAM• of llM ....n of tht OOl!trld to the Tiit Vfldtnlentel do arttty ""' 11'1 blclder. COllduct!IW • blnl-It nt Vktorl1 WAO• 11.A,Tl!.l • St., COiii Mau, Cll1tonii. n.'7, u'*r "-'"" to . 1M Llllor (Olk ot !flt Ille fklllkllll llrm ,..,.,. of HAllVl!Y'S lt•t1 of C1llfotnl1, """"9rn C1tlfotnt• MESA MARINI' ll!llVltl! •1111 lllot Nkl •uftdlflt ond C..tnKtloli Trldft (._II llr'r!I t. Olf'llllOMd ol the followl111 NnMI, el °'9n9f C-fY !hi Mid 9otrd ol WlloM Mll'lft 111 lull •11111 ple(lf ol T,,,...... Mi nc¥ti111tc1 llM -•I rtosldtllct .,._ .. followt, -911N r1N d -dlM'I •-tor 1u'!l~ A.~u111 Wld lrlM Tl'f' _,. a.rt .,. ,.,.. ,,, ~ ...... fornl ""'1 ~ c.n. to dlCVf9 "" antra<h Wllldo Wiit ., bl _..,. .... ~I ......,,J •nil 0.lld '"'"' la. ""' tt.M Pf'IY•Mlnll ,. ... ,. CMtalMll In Htrw'I' A. Tw Bush Id~..._ ~ W 1'111 BHnl I,_ T# BWi ...u ,,. .. 11__,. ""'9W' ' 1.tt o1 C1tlfornl1, Or•flH c-tr: • Oii JulY II. 1919.. ~ <M. 1 Hott'1' A,,, (llltlfl(lftltfl not 1ntk ... tld Ind Publle In •ncl '°' u kl Sl1to.-Nl'IONllY' btlow """' 11'1111 11<1 Hif •I lhl <UITOfll _,_., ~l'W:Y A. Tw '""" lllf .,.... rwNt .... 11M -4kall ITMI 1.--Tft' IWh --to ,,.. lo bl ond d191MlallM In wtfwel Wltlo Ille lllo ,..,._ .....,._ ""'* 1,.. ~ ..,.,,,. llttld T..... c-111. If ~ .. till wt!tllll lllttnl!l'llllt ...... ~1-­ ,.,. llllod ....... ll't ""' cvrnnt .,. .. 1111'1' .. ICUtld ,.. - 1r1 ,..,...., lw leblr ".........,." 1tvrt111 {OFFICIAi. IEAll tM Mddlllll "'"" ., ~ tlmt. .,...... I!. 0.¥19 ~ rwtti-IMlf bl c«Mlllttlid • No"ry l"vbllc. C.11~ 1111'1 9f fM bltfto lllfM r1t1L Am Prlnc:INI Oftb 111 111:11111, ~ ~ ..-rlMI or 0r-. COulllY °""' -...111 Wlr bl In lddlllOll hi My Commlnloft EUlf'lll tt1o ..iow n,,.., .... IK• .... A-.n•ktt Ju111 ,1, tt74 wn .. MIPloY.0 "' (MfonnllY wllll l"ubllllMcl Or•AH COii! 0.11, .. u,1. IKltorl 1m.5 ol ,,.. C1Utornla L•bcH' Juty 13. 20, 21 •!Id A1111u11 ), lt10 l27'o1'0 c-o.time 111111 bt -..1111 '°' won. LEGAL NOTICE wtorrMd In O'Jl(H• !If .,,. rl!'IUl••l-------------1 dlY'I _. 111d of tM rite ftor ll'<'•rllm1 P41ftf ot Tiii c:r•ll l11Yol\'9d. C•llTll'ICA.TI Oii' SVl!Nllt, ........... t"-11 M 11! holi.tn -nllllll l'ICTITIOUI HAMI fn 11'11 tollKll" ._,..11111111 "reemenl TN uncMniltMlll "--urtlW Ill 11 •••flull.. lo fM Nrtl<U .. r <=••"· eondlldlnt • blnl,_ .t flt o.f M•r. claufk.1111111 .,. ,.,.. el wort11n1n S.n CllfMfite, C.llfrwnl .. v""""" ltll flc- orn..iwtO Oii flll -I.ct. lltlou1 fir"' Mini Ill Pll""E"MINT l"ALACE •nd tllll Mid fll'tl'I I• tom"°'ld tt t11111 bt "'.,_'°" -"" c-o1 "" to11ow1.. .,.~ w11o1.o n.,,.. trodw ff Wfleltl • CCNlll'-.:f It •-nlld lfO IUfl 11111 'ltce ti ,,..,._ 11 II •nd llHlt •ti -..c:ontr.c:ten 111•icler tollowt: tilm. to "" flOt leu f!Wn Mid "'*II R•fllh G. f"uerlt, :ttllti CKt1 P! ltfW•llllll ''""' Ill _. 4111'11 •-Cotll 'Mu, C•llforllle ·• lo •11 _.,,.,... ... lend 1 .. fl'll .ucutlon 0.t.d JlllY "· 1f10 • ol IM COlth'-.:t. R1IPil G. FVH19 81UCIU . .AYI!." Sl1te el Ct ltlorl!l1, Or .... C_,.,.: F-n It It ? fNlll Ml Mu t11111 Ool J1111' lf, ltl't, ~ !M, 1 Hoterv 50c: -,.,, llliMi Jw"'""*' r1Ni. l"llllllC: In Ind for Mj(t S"ft.-,.,._lty fo<-11 It If ,,.,.,.1 llff ... ltlm _,_, R1hofl G. '"'rte kMwll lo 75c ,., hour ....,. ~ rotw "'' to be "" --...,.. n-F~ flWll' 11 fNlll net llH 111111 11 wbso'1'*' to tht wlffl~ lnllnm1111 SI .. -"911r 9l1ow Jwl'wl\"IMll r•tw. Ind •e~nowledMd ht~ W.. -8r\c*l•.,.... & si.. JM-•··•·• .. l .'5 !OFFICIAL SEALJ 8RICICTINDEll J°'""' E, Dwll llrldlfonder ····••·•••••••··••••••••·••·4" ,Nol•,.,. Publk • Cll!Wnla CAllt .. ENTl!lll •lll<IH I Oftlc1 111 c • .-ttf ........................ -.. •." ~·r etr'l!.i T•bllo-MW-•I•···• .,, •. t.• Y Ol'M>ll (ll,rra Mltlwrllflt ••f>••··••··· •••••••·••·····11 p bl1J:J1• lfl' H•I ..... u·~lkl ................. t.n u ....... COid 0.IW Piiot Forwl\lft 441c: W hwr l'fllll" 111111 11 ...... , July ll, 20, 27 •nd AutWI 3, 1'111 U~1'0 dttllllCtlloll w111rv1..C. 1 l ( • ' I LEGAL .,_11< 111111r. NOTICE CEMENT MASONS l------==------1 cemtl'lt ,,..._ "°'""' •11111 1-11111 "':inu mld'l1ne -r•tor ... · •· •• • ·••·•· f.Jl <8RTtl'tcATI OJ> C:OllPOlltATION c.....i ,,..._ .J411/rMYFMn •••.••••. S.H ro• TllAHl,t,CTION OP •UllN••• fllfWnlll 60c Pl' llollr ....... JoUrMYmlll UNO•ll PICTITIOVS NAM• e[~'b111CIANS rHE VNOER110NEO COlltl>ORATION .,_1 F0"9tNlll , •. ···••••••••••••• t.SO doe1 hlr1bY «rllfy th1I 11 11 ~u<tlne .......--• 1 tlullnllf loulld 11 ltstl ClmPlll F-n .......................... *·'3 O..lve, Stnt1 A111, C•lltornl.I IH'Cler tl'M! Jollr'lllrm1n Wlf'lll'I..,. ....... ., •.•.• 7.JJ llctlll-firm ,...,.. or AIRCllAFT F-111 C1blt Slltlttr •••••··••··• .. f ,Gl FLYING IEftVICE incl lh•t Mid fl"" C•Olt SpH(9f" ............ , .......... a.ll 11 tomtlOMIS DI !he lollo•lAll ~1t1Dn, Cerftlled W•ldtr .................... 7.7J wflol.I ,rlnc1NI PIKll el blnlnou II G\.AllEft •• fol1oW1: Gl1dlr .....••.•. , ..... , •••• , •••• ,,. S.71 A 1rld L l"lllll'f' Ent.~1n, !llC .. lltON WORl(eltS ffs. Wl111lon StrNI, AMhel<Y!. C1UfOl'nl1 ll""*"'tl'll ll'Ofl Wotltfl' ••··•••·••·· ·'·lJ 121G4. SlrYC'lvr1t Iron WotUr .... • • • · '·"' WITNESS 111 hlrd 11111 lotll MY 11 For'Ml•n •SC -hlur "'°"' t!Yn hlltlnl Julv. '"'· d -llk1ttan ..,.l"l'IMll. CCDr"°'lt• Sf:11J LATMER A I NI t. Fulllr Llllwr . ........... 5.,1 En1tr•rlsa, lllL Fo,.,.111 nol .... thin 10'!' Ptr hour A. l.. ,., • ..,. ,....... 111111 J~Oll rite. Vlc• Pruklent U.tlOltEllS STATE OF C-.LIFORNIA, Llblrf•~ 1-'ll -<Ollllrvcilon •-10 COUNTY OF ORANGE. 11. °""'•'"" 1NI toftdln of _...11k On lhll 10th dor ol JulY, A.O. l•JO, ~ electric IOOIS. .,.,,.,Ion m•(h!M1 ti.fore rn• • Nol•.., Publlc In 1nd oNI 111 ... 111r ll'IKl\llnlul tool1 not IPr uld County 1nd 511tt. rtoldlng -r.lttv (l1ulll<ld f'llNlll ....... •.HJ lhtreln, ""'" com"'l~1lonfod •NI 1worn, AJotwill ,.-_., 1rld Ir_, .••. ·• .... · •.UJ HnlOAOllY IPPfl•l<I A. l . Ful!o!r know11 C_,.hl (IH"tr • ltTINr'tlloul 1Mmb••ne lo ml lo ti. Ille \lie• Pr111dent of •11111 ktr1'I oiler • •·· .. · ·•••• '" ...... •.m It'll <OrJ>Or1tlon tl'loll ut<lllMI the wllllln i.l'ldlllttttr hwinlerMnl ............ A.ftJ lnslrumenr on t1H111f ot 11\t' cor.orotlon $1Nl&ll11tw lf'Ot Ml'odefl ............. •.US llllrt!n M mld. orld 1eklloWltdtfll 10 PIPO lower (--t•ll<l ..••• •••· · .4MJ ..,. 111•1 lud'I cor1>1,.lllon ••et:Vhd ,~, l"IH uwJ11;1r (-.-!1llkl • ·• ·••· · •·'·l" -· In Wll11111 Whortool, I Ill.,. h•reu,.. WI,,,.,.,.. Cl .. nll' ... ' ............... •.1.u la ... my lllnd 1NI 1tll~ld mY olfl(!lt W1td'l!""•n . ......... ·• • · • ·•· ··• l .4'1 lffl 11\t dlY 11!d '''' In lllla c1rlll!ctl1 for91911n JOt "' llolir ""',. ftltn nrst •bov. wr1111n. tilelll1I (l1utflc1tlon 1~1,vllld. (OFFICIAL Sl!ALI nPERATIHG l!NOINEERS llOIW L. Urbl" Gr-1 ...... ,, ..•••• ·•·••··•• .. ••··5,)3 Noll.., Publlc -C•llforn\1 Mail Pail · 75th Year Of Service DETMIT (AP) -'11>e mall·ln.a-pall )Xlll41 ICn'lce began '1ts 7Sth . year o f deliveries 'lut week to ahlps passing the city on the De- troit River. Known as the Detroit River Post OffJce, K oon.si!la oC a boat which has its own zip code -48222 -and plies ttie waters 24 houn a day seven days a week. Abcllt 50 times a day, the mallboat J. J. Westcott 11 leaves tts dock.side station oo the American side of the river for a rendezvous with oceaD- golng or dreat Lake 1 freightera. Wben the Weatcott comes alongside a freJghter, a seaman on the larger ship lowers a pall con'talning mall to be pooled. When this is emptied, the pall Jr filled with letlen, newapapera and packages for the lhlp's crew. Detroit Postmuter Edward .L. Baker said more than one mllUon pieces of mail will be handled this season ln 10m1 14,000 deliveries. About 2,000 ()( these will go to fordgn vessels. 'Ibe firat m al 1-by-p a 11 delivery on Lhe Delroil ru ver . WU mode June 17, 1115, by a man In a rowboat wbo was towed Into file path or an oncoming lhlp by a small Powerbotl and left there until the delivery was completed. He had to use his oars to keep out of the way of the ship while stayi11g c I o s e enough to make the ma ll e.t.· change. The poworbool then towed him back to ..,.,... "I don't envy that fellow in the rowboat, whoever he was," said Capt. Bill Adamek, a mallboat skipper for 22 years. 'Mle river postmen are free of one of the hazards faced by their l!ihorebound coun- terparts -belni bltten by dogs -but, said Adamek, the winds often ".Ur up waves eight feet high." Heavy fog la frequent, too. Alao, the mallboat haa to step llvely when It becomes involved with two freighters moving in opposite dlrectk>nl in the same stretoh ol. river • The post olflce Is stalled by four pe.r900S and has mall boxes for about t,000 ships. Adamek is one of three slti~ pers In the mall run, operated by the Westcott Co., founded in 1870 to provide marine reports and other marine service. -'ltle company has been under government contract. lo pro- vide mail dellvtrles since 1948. Before that, the marine post ofnce was aboard the G. F. Becker. Police Get Cars PARIS tAP) -Officials said the French gendarmerie will be given five new cars, capable of doing 130 miles per hour lo erloree the na· Uon 's traffic laW1. LEGAL NOTICE Groo" t ........................... S.71 Prlncl1>1I Olflc1 111 Gr0!,111 l ••••••••••······"'···-·······'·01 Or1119e C011nlv P·17"t GrOll"' ·····-····••••··•··· '·""'' t,17 Mw Commlulon fulrtt Cl!llTll'ICATI 01' SUltHlll G.-5 ................... . ......... Jl Ocl. I, 1t7l l'ICTIT10UI NAM• Gr-t .................... "... '·'1 "ublllhld Or•11H Cot1t Otlty Piiot, TM undtnlt"td clo ur11b IMV tr~ F-n tk Mr hOut l'flollrt 111111 11111\0tl Julv 13. 20. 11 111<1 A1111..,.1 3, lt1t 1211·1'1 condud!llll • bu1111011 11 UlO Marl~ c .. 11lllc1floll lllPll'Ylltd. CMll H!it1•1r, Ltlllftl l~Kll. C1Ulornf1, f'AINTEJtS LEGAL NOTICE .,NI•• IM llt!lllOul t1rm nomt ol FQl'lfl'\On • lk •bWt JOVf'lllYmln r1tw. LEISUllE TIM E FILM PROOUCTIONS R""tlir llnltll Nlnl1r • ·••" •• ·• '·'' lrld 11111 llld tlrm It <oml>OSM a! $lnc!Dllller ...................... &.H IUP•RIOll COUltT OP TMI lhe tottowl1>11 IM!rwrll, wholt rwimn In ,..,,.....,..,.n ur1' .................. 6.2' ITit.Tt 0, CALll'ORNIA 'OR lull •NI 111ct1 " rw1ldlrK• ... II Pt"E TRADES THE COUHTY Of' OIUIMI lol'°""': Ptlll'\Hni INI t1'ffmftllffl •• •• • '·'° it .. A~t Ger1ld 0. Llotll °''" """ Llotl1, c;.twril Mem1t1 • 20'Mo ..... trm.a NOTICll 01' MllAlllNCI 0,. PlrTITION lOI Norlll BivilOI t>rlv•, Nt__.. Jour""""" ,111. ,Oil PllOIAT• Of' WILL ANO f'<I• lk.U.. Cil!lofnli Fortt'Mn • '" llloVI irv.u JOU""'rMn L•TTIRI TllTAMtNTA•Y IN 0 Oi ttd July n, lJJO roM. •ONO llt l OUlll•D) Jt<lkl o L1ot11 lrrlplloll Ind I.•-Sprl"ki.f'I ••••• ,_Ill E•••ll ol v1o .. '· Niii-. OlcHHll. Ptnv Lloll• ~ 11111 Storm 01111 Pi..tlo'tf' ••··'.M NOTICE 15 HEREIY GIVEN tllll STATI OF CALIFORNIA, Pt.ASTEREllS SKvrtw .. K111t H•tlOMI .. nk Pitt lllld OllANGE COUNTY · P!i1ter FOf1m1n ................... 6.n Nrwln ' "'lllOll for "RllMIN flf Wiii Oii JlllY 11. lt11t,"ti.111r1 m1, t Nol1rv Plo.t.,.r • , , ...... , ... ,. .••. I.Ml 111111 1111' IUllOtiQI ol LttlwB Tetltmtftll.., .. lllllk Ill ond tor Mid 51111, NrsaMl!Y Pt.ASTER TENOElt lo "lltl'-!No lond lt_,lrftl), •-red Jirild o L"='tt• •noll p"..,. P l•ster Tl'lldlr ....................... J.'7$ ·~· lo wllkh la ,....,. ... fUrtlltt Llottt --M ...... lo bl tlle Nr'WO'll ROOl'ERS .. rtkVl1t&. •nd 11\11 tlle llml 1111111 Plo<t ~ ,...,.... trl lllblcrlbld lo 1M .JOur1'oM'm•n ...................... ,s:n o1 "-"'•l11t thl -"-• 111111 NI wlttilll 1n11..-1 tnd 1ctu.wleclltd ""' Sub ~Dft!Nn ....................... •.n lor AUii/ii J, lflil. 11 1130 •-"'·• In ocwMd IN umt F.-" ............ ,. ........... •.12 tlle mvrlr..n ol 0...~111 Ht, 3 ioFflCIAL SEALi SHEIT METAL of Mid <O<lr1. •I 11111 Cl¥k C1nltr Dr~ JOHttl II! De¥h WOllKEftJ Wnt. tn 11!1 CllY DI S.nll A,111, Cllllor· NQ!orv Piit.11<. C1!Uor11l1 Slieot M1t1t Wet kt' ................. •.27 nlo, Prlnc ... I Oftl<I In H11llM ln1l1ller -•·-·•••·-·•"'. '·'' 0.led Juht JO, lt111 Or•,... Count'/ Fo"""•n -10"" 11>crn Joutnl'J'nlln rtk. W. I ST JOHN, Mr comrnlnlon (;1111"1• 'TEAMSTEftS CO<lfllY Cltrti J.,,. 11 111• fDftl'lllll UC "'!lour lllDl'I IMn hit"'•' COlllll. (hltr ... Mm•..i l>ubl11hld 0r ... ~ COtll 01ltr Pltal, elnAln,•llon 1uPtrvllft. "4 Wttl TeRll> lfrttt, July JI. J, tlllil AWUll 3 la 19111 lnt-1'0 Or!Wf'I ol Oumt> IMICkl, Ifft tl\tll 4 1•111• A..-, Clllftl'll'-' ' ••· ............................. u Tth m41 ..... o LE~'L NOTIC .. OrlYflf' !If d\HNI lrvcb, 4 '""' ~ """'"'"' flt PlfltltW ~o 6 I~ thin t ro• .................. •·• Publlllltd Ortntt Ceut C.l!r Plto1 •• I ------------ Dr!Yffl !If ln.c:~s. '"" MYIMd <•Pl~ll'Y Julr 21, n, 11. 1t1'0 IUS.10 NOTIC• TO CllOITDllS !ell lll•n. ,.,. .... ... • ........ ··*' or IULK TRANll'lll Orlwen fl/ t,11<~1. lt911 M'f'Noll t""'!IY •w. t>H-Ul-11 """"""'•Mi 11 ton1 .......... ~ • LEGAL NOTICE '"''· t111 .. 111 u .c..c.t °'I-" d Trtf\111""111( tnld.I 111\tNr Holle• II l\frtbY ttwll IO Cl't'd1~ l ..,.,.,, ......... J,OI "I O C 11 J0$1!:"H l>ElllLLI lnleMN f'lniltror, °'l"°'" ot Trinitl.,,.I~ l<'llCIU 3 ydi IU Ill lit OUllT OP TNI wi-milll"" bu•lnni ..ioGrt•• l• )Ill& Ot """' s n STITI Of' CA\.lf'ORNt• f'OR ... ,.,IOI! Yi••· No. ,, O, c~·· Miu. W•IW 1,IO(li:• drl~ ..... ~~' ;-,00·1.1 .• 4.t! TNI COUNTY 01' ORAHOll C1llf0fnlt tHIG, lhll • blllk tr1n11tr w:: trvci: 111'1\'tt', 2Me H I. M :!": lfOTICI! O, ::.=OP PIT!TION ;'...:.'=.::.. '1:~~.1~ '!::rt! Elldlit ·.:.;.;e·~. Lti--~' ..... 111 PO• PlotATI o• WILL •MD l'OR 1111 In .....,,1 11: M.lltrlll, •-l!n, •1111 i""ll., """,.......Ill S.IU lllUAMCI OP LnTllU TESTAM•N-~I .. , Mlll-nt lwl l'lll'lllt\I", TILi SETTER ........ TAllY TO ••TITIONl l tllflllrn, tMwholcl L,,..!'0¥.....,.tt. ttow. 'THI llllw , ....... , .... , ....... I.II E.llltt "'WILM>M l!VGfNE LVTHlR, "'-lfMI 1111111 .-Wiil llf .,._, (W!•ln F..._,. • lllu 1111111 ll _, ~·· l ltl II-•f OIHI LVTHElt, Dtc:N .. bMW!Y ........ 1M1-1 ._.. .. PECLJI., -OIY tGew Mtttr. ttll. 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De ll¥ Pila!, JlllY tl o1111 AWUtl 1.1f1t 1,.,,.Jlt JlllY ti, t2, V , lt1t 1P,•1t J"°l?.._11, 1?1' l)U·1'D t -• • POl:LEN MAGNIFIED 2,000 TIMES Shop Talk Runs Small in Newport By PATRICK BOYLE 01 I"-Delly Plltl $l1ft Sma.11, ~ small, no one would ever know U was there. Yet a minute fractm'e in an electronic circuit can cause a disaster in space or a set- back oo the launcblng pad . NASA keeps such things fttm happening by requiring that all micro-drcuit.s be ex· a.mined by a scanning electron microscope. (SEMI. But Dr. Norman Hodgkin of Newport Beach hns other uses for the SEM. The quiet, bearded scientist is the owner of a firm ca l le d Micrographlcs, at 3M5 Birch St. in Newport Beach, and he solves problems in a micro- miniature world. whal they see In the pictures that is so good," says Herb Voss, the business manager or the two-man finn. ''Wben some of our aatomers gee what ls on the screen, they start jumping up and down and getting all U· cited. We never ask whit they see or what it means. We just take pictures." He adds that that the)' have many clients in the same business and looking for the answer lo the same problem. "We let Uwm analyze the results and we keep our mouths shut." Mlcrographlcs Is one of about 20 such firms in the On the TV.like screen of U.S. that does contract work hls SEM, he can make a for many customers. "Larger strand of a spider web appear companies such as Standard four inches wide and then Oil ha .'i... · t .....,_ h .1 r '"• b' 1 . 1 , ve.1.uoe:1r own eqwpmen ... """'IY ap J or ~ 10 oe1s • and do the! -~ ,. Or he can take pictures·~·lf ~~ r own w~., Voss pieces or air pollution that adm. appear aa big as gravel on "We have had a lot of tr""OU- the magnUJed strands or a ble trying to get people to filter. know we are here," says Voss. 0 The rnlcroscope, w h i c h magnifies from 20 to J00 ,000 times, works on the same principle as TV or radar," Dr. Hodikln explains. "The specimen to be ex- amined is carefully mounted on a small disk and placed in the mia'oscope under the electron gun," he says. "The equipment is turned on, the gun sweeps ncross the disk, bombarding the particle witp a steady beam of electron.., The electrons strike the particle of pollen and cause &eCOOdary electrons lo be emitted from the pollen. ''The secondary electrons are picked up, amplified in the fcnn ol light and they show up on a TV·like screen. 'Ille peaks o( particle are bright and the valleys are dim , giving a three dimensional effect.'' 'fhe resultlng picture shows the 63-million-year-old piece of pollen magnified 2,000 times. Jt is al.most as big as a fist, and the triangular figure a~ pears to ~ covered with worms. The pollen was parl of an ore sample brought in by an oil company. With the picture, their geologists will be able to determine whal t)'pe of climate and plant llfe existl'd where it was round. \Vith tttis information, they can better weigh the possibilities of fin· ding oil an the s.ite .. .. I don't really understand ''Many people in the area send their work to the east coast because they don 't realize there ls a firm in the area." But there aren't too many in the area, because the tmt o( the microscope -$200,000 -makes it a very expensive small business . And the coot of the service -$400 a day or $100 an hour -keeps the part·Ume botanist from having his pollen e1amlned. Companies looking fo r oil use the service, as well as 9Cientlsts looking for answers. "We get a Jot of business from the physics department at UC Irvine and from the biology department at UC Riverside," Voss e1plains. "We even get an occasional client trying to build a better mouse trap,'' he adds, showing a piece of paper that was developed through the use of the SE1'1. The special piece of paper can be cut with an ordinary pair of scissors, but it can not be torn by an ordinary pair of hands. "The paper is coated with clay, epoxy and resin," he says, "but that is all I know about ii, or care to know.'' The men at Micrographlcs a~ clMed-mouth about the big "·orld of industrial discoveries. but they are vocally proud of their ability to capture such a small world on film . NORMAN HODGKIN LOADS~ICROSCOPE I Disabled Mari Runs Business \\1CHJTA, Kan. (AP) - Don "Taco Pete" Peten never went lo high school and at lhe age ol 37 ls so crippled by multiple sclerosis that he can move nothing but his bead. He might strike you as an unlikely prospect for success in the business world, but his motto is "A guy can do anything he sets his mind to do" -and in his case, it works. Peters dropped oot of school alter the eJgbtb grade, spent some time in the Army and later went to work in the const.ructlon industry. By 1980 he had developed ad vanced symptoms of multiple sclerosis - a hardening of the tissues -and became totally disabled in l96S at the age of 32. But with the help ol his family and friends he has developed a chain of 13 restaurants called ' ' T a c o Pete." The restaurants are in Wichita, Dodge City, Pittsburgh and Arkansas City, Kan., and Tulsa, Okla. Peters opened the first in 1967 with an investment of only $10,000. "'We saved a lot of money,'' he explains, "by d o i n g everything ourselves - designing our own places, building and renovating equip- ment, even making up our own insignia and brochures." Peters depends on his wife, Marge, and friends lo write down or sketch hls ideas, to try out his new recipes, and even to bathe, dress, shave and feed him. llis specially designed home has ramps instead of stairs and other features to make movement for his wheel chair easier. He visits each restaurant regularly, traveling In a small van. Drug Firm Relocates To Newport Shareholders of Newport P ha r m aceutlcals lnterna· tional, Inc. have approved relocation rJ. corporate head· quarters lo Newport Beach from Salt Lake City, Utah, a forward split of common stock on a two-for-one basis and a qualified stock option plan for th nrm•s key ptl'\!On- nel. The company also an- nounced It has re ached agreements In principle with several major f o r e I g n p h a nnaceutical comparUes and reported on test re!Ults of one of its drues , Isoprinosine (NP113). Dale Holk er, president of N e w p o r t Pharmaceuticals International, Inc. to Id shareholders at the Newporter Inn that an agreement in prin- ciple was signed with a German concern for clinical testing of Newport's NPIOO series of drugs in Germany. Spain, Switzerland and several other countries. Upon exercise of tile exclusive option agree. ment and payment of an un- disclosed sum, the German concern and Newport Pharmaceuticals International would enter into a joint ven- tu re for supplying and marketing the anll·viral drugs. A verbal agreement in prin- C'iple similar to the German concord has bten reached with an l t a I I a n phannaceutlcal company for clinical testing of the drugs. Under this agree- ment, Newport Pharmaceu- ticals International would re- ceive an unspecified payment from the Italians upon dellv· ery of the drugs and would benellt from clink.al testing. No joint venture is involved here. The Italian company ,.,,ould receive m a r k e I i n g rights in Italy and some !\1ed- i1erranean countries. In conjunction with the an- nual meeting, Ne 'v port Ph a rm actuticals lnterna- tiooal, Inc. announced that tests conducted in P.1e1ico on a human paUenl sufftring from amyotrophlc 1 a I e r a I scltrosis (ALS) showed that a new drug, tsoprinoslne (NP l!S). caused the symptoms o( the usually fat.a.I disease to disappear within o ne week . Newport Pharmactutlcals International and Us parent compeny. N e w po r t Pharmaceultcals, Inc. ?law uelusl\111 d\stribu· UOifl'lll\ls 'to the NPIOO 1trles dnsp tn the United Salu and •lsewhm tllr<lolboul I h • woe Id. THE NEEDLE IS MIGHTIER THAN THE PEN A ftd th1 m c It U11l.o knoio1 fu.it h010 to him the phrase to get th• mo1t out of the barb it DAILY PILOT column- iit Sydnc11 Harris. He ha.I beim called tilt modem· da11 Henry Mc" ck• n. lf 1101&.,.1 rcad11 for his use of the acid adjcctioe and thought · proooklng prose to give 11ou tilt needle ... if you want to find 1omething to think about in what 11ou read ••. if you haw o &cm• of humor, I/OU b c ! o n g with readers who delight ill telling othn1 what .. Svd iaid .. ill OM of the nation'• ~c ~ quokd coltnrPU. Some Sample Barbs Recently Tllrown By Sydney Ha«is: -Ono of the h!ghott pold lobs In Am.,lco con1i1t1 of standing up in front of a mic· 1'ophone, tep•rating th• good record? from th. b&d ones -and pitying u<. ~on ... H "It'• sad but true that while alcoholics are the best argument for abstinence, so many abstainers are equally effective ar- IUllMID! fw a Utile drlnt now and thoo. • "Moot of tho 10><allod 1ncompotlblllty' In m1rrl1f1 sprlnp from the fact that to most men, MX 11 an act; while to all women, tt It an emotion. And this dlfhr- ence In attitude can be brid,.cl only by -·· "The sole dltference between 1 ·~ ted crusader' and a 'nosy reformer' con.. sists in our agreement or disagreement with his objectives." ..,..,,_ most exploslve combinltlon In the world con1l1t1 of sincerity added to lpranc:e. u "'\Vhenever I am the recipient of an ex· ces.sively hearty tiandshake, I 1uspect !Ir. Muscles is tryiftg to sell somethiD&.. hide aomething, or prove 1ometbiJl&," Ch.eek The E•itorial For This Sig1ature . ·~ -. . .... ·.,... ' ~. ,...!.· • : 'ot.A•1-.. '..,.Y. P11e It'll Help You Find Latest Q1otables Created By 'The Nee•ler' For His Col· A Regular Feature of The 1mn, the DAILY PILOT Your l:lomom!• Dtlly ..._,... • \ ) i ' • • ' ) • • • . ' ~~.::..::~~:=-o.' -~ ---~ --~ ·-·-.------.. .---.............. --_.,,...,...,,. ..... _ -------------· .. ~~~~~...,--~~_,.,.,..,,........,.'!rW9'!'t'Alll -·-.. • ·--4 • • -• • • • • • • • • • • • ~ -• -....... ' SO YOUR LITTLE RED · WAGON IS REALLY DRAGGIN' • ADD HORSEPOWER TO THE FAMILY BUDGET You can handle those bills. All you need are the dol· lars you'll (jet for all the stiU-9ood, but· nobody· uses • them items you'll find all over the house. Make a list of them today and decide to turn those unwant~d ar· ticles into extra cash. It won't cost you • . • it'll pay you. And you'll be surprised at how fast you can sell iust about anything with a DAILY PILOT classified ad. Jry it t~day. Every day is a good day to use DAILY PILOT WANT ADS (And You. Can Charge Them) PH. E 642-567 • : . . :: • . • • JI DAILY PILOT .. ,,. 11• MoodiY, Ju~ 27, 197~ For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PIWT Bal~t DfrectQr -- Sir Ashton Retires LONDON (AP) -S 1 r Frederick Ashton, who is retlrlnc as dirocl<lr ol the Royal Ballet, made a per!Oaal reappeMance aa a dancer this week -at Covent Garden. lie appeared ~th Brit.aln's ollltr lrnlght ol t!ie ballet, Sir Robert Helpmann, in "Cin- derella," one ol Ashton's own ballets. Ashton was th e Pathetic Ugly Sister and Helpmann the Domineering Ugly Sister. Ashloo and Helpmann fll'SI dance these roles, wlgar but very funny, in 1948, and have delighted audiences with them at intervals ever since. A*<>n, who bas something of the tradilional Spanish grandee about him, was born Rod Serling Likes • Being on Sidelines HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Rod Serling says be is more or less on the sideline! of television now, and prefers it that way, but: -He will be the author and host of a collectloo of eerie tales on • • N i g h t Gallery," a segment of NBC'a: "Four-In-One." -He is adapting ''A Storm in Summer," which woo an Emmy as the best dramatic show last season, u a Broadway mUsical. S t e v e Allen is writing the music. -He i! a much-in-demand voice and performer on com- mercials. The day after this Interview he flew to San Fran- cisco to appear in a n automobile commercial. Serling, the most honored writer in television, says he Jikes being ()D the periphery because ''yoo doo't have to worry about ratings. And evuy now and then I'm brought in off the shell like a reasonably valuable an· tique.'' Serling, a small, thin man baked brown by the California sun, won five Emmys for original drama and a sixth for an adaptation of a John O'Hara short story. He also won the Peabody and Sylvania awards. "I used to be one of those irascible, angry young men," he said, perennia1ly com- plaining about the medium and tile ceisorship. "But I'm middle-aged now. l 'm waiting for the next generation of angry young men." Serling said he regrets the passing cX original drama. "In content it was a country mile higher than the present," be said. "We failed often,. but we tried." In 1959 he created the highly successful "Twilight Zone," which brought him two Em- mys, and later ••'Jbe Loner." starring Lloyd Bridges, which· did not last long. "I did the pil()t for an ABC show last season, 'The New People.' which they carved up Jike beef," Serling sa id. "I'm not cut out for series television. I can't create anything except anthology. Which makes me an anacronism since anthology Is out now." In the new season Serling will get some fraternal com- petition on "Four-Jn-One." His brother, Bob, a well-known aviation writer and author of "'lbe President's Plane Js Mis.sing," is technical adviser to "Sau Francisco Jnterrur tional."1 "I bad a book coming out the same time as 'The President's Plane Is Missing,'' Rod said. 11His sold Bl,lm and mine, 'A Season to be Wary,' sold 3,000. I said the in- tellectual never wins." Toastmasters Fill Billets Newly elected o!fice1' ol lloe Newport Beach diap&er of To astmasters International \Yere recently lMtalled at a banquet held at Huntington Harbor's Whistling 0 y :st er restaurant. Guiding the speech makers in 19711-71 will be Kar I Barnum, president: D a v i d Wells, administrative v l c e president; Bob Janusta, ~ucationa1 vice president; Bill GWT' treasurer. and Teny Montgomery, public relat· ions. All are residents of Newport Beach. The speaking enthusiasts meet every Thursday at 7 a.m. in the Blue. Dolphin restaurant. Mmtgomery said guests are welcome. NOW PLAYING ' Only on Cablevision "Son of the Sheik," staimg Rudolph Wentino. 1'EWPORT: t.'.on. • Fri. at 9 PM; also Sat. Sin tt 6 PM MISSION VIEJO: Mon. \Ykd., Fri. et 9 PM. Ne-before on "West Coast TV: the original, in:ut dmic. ~PLAYIN0: . "The Gokl Rush" with Ch:irle Chapin ln1t•llllion • $14.9~ Monthly s.,..,;ce Ch•rto. $6..SO Enio.J-20 Ch1nnel _T_yJor_Only 21.'hc: Per Day. "THERE'S MORE TO SEE ON CABLE TVI" ' FD' 1 ,.,.SOUTH COAST !A .. LAZA THIEATRE $aoo ~ ,_ ot ·-• 148·2711 DIRECT FROM ITS txCl.USIVE RESERVED-SEAT ENGAGEMENT ••• CONTINUOUS PEIFORMAllCES AT POPUW PRICES! "A Big Musical Hit- In The Winner's Corner!" -ARCHER WJHSTOI'(, N-YM.t f"oat "Hilarious And Entertaining. In 7he Stream Of 'Sound Of Music'!" -JOYCE HA8£R, Lft Anplitt Timn Sy11dic•t• ..A Big Bawdy Rip-Roaring Musical! Howlingly Funny! See It!" ' -WANDA H"'-L II 'I' Oally ""'' Premiere Oran9e County Enga9ement RATED Gp'-•IT'S FOl ALMOST EVftYIODY MATINEES DAILY Direct from Its Sensational Reserved Seat En9a9ement NOW! AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS At Popular Prices ' . 20ll't Centvtr..,..o• f'ftt.ents GEORGEC.SOOIT/KARL JIAIJJl!N -· ... o..~-· "Tile epic American war movie that Hollywood has always wanted to make, IJut never had Ille guts lo do before:• ...... .,.,_ ··--·-.. ----ln"PllTl'ON" -· -· ""'-fi .. ,..lllCMWf~l ....... ~·rllllllllCM!lt·--llClllYllO 1!!£1-____ ,, -·----,._.,_~&-l.111111•""111:..._.W,_.. .. ~,..-'11tt.MrSS1'1r .. Mlll-.O·irm1ttts-!11 • .::. .. EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT GRAND OPENING Of THI ALL HIW ILl•ANT ~ llAUTIFUL CINEMA WEST #2 Today's Stocks Today 1 #2 " '--Mondl.1, July 27, 1~70 DAILY PILOT ~- 'Everybody's Talkin''· ........ Composer Harry Nilsson: A Nobody Who Made It . . . ;-;·:•'"°-:·:·!!:: and overall ablllty. Now;ifd?· season, his company will havt an animated J;Duaical r~ t'The Point " as a 90-mltiaft entry on ABc.TV's "Mo~,dr: '· By RICK DU BROW HO!LYWOOD (UPI) When I first Interviewed the young composer Harry Nllssoo, it was well over a year ago, and be was nobody. Un1ess, of. course, you listened to his muslc, in which case you knew he was definitely somebody and that time woujd prove it. So I wrote a piece about · him, making what I knew was a rather safe prediction about his future impact on the pop scene, and wondering t o myself again why t be television networks are so penny wise and pound foolish about geeking out Y<M\I talent that hasn't quite made It publicly. Harry told me at the lime that he really wanted to do a video special With two of. his young frieadt, boCh lblltrs and composers: Law-a Nyro and Randy Newman. But, he said, he didn't haft I chance because the three of them CURIOUS BEASTS -FOUR·LEGGED AND OTHERWISE -CREATE TRAFFIC JAM AT LION COUNTRY .iust w""1't well en ou gh ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-known. Ah , me. At the CUt'l'tflt time Currently, there is another girl who Is obviously a gem. Her name is Melba Moore, She was brilllant in "Hair " and was cited for ber Joyoi'..s work in the Broadway musical "Purlie." She stole the Tony Awards Show on NBC-TV, and lw been • frequent, wholly delightful guest on Johnny Canoo's "'Tonight" series. Yet. so far as I know, no network baa tied her up. lt is amazing because she is pure star quality, and eventually will cost a fortune. Jacksonville Go-Go Girl . Goes Bare irelevislan needs t a I e n t scoots as much •s statisti· clans. Much more, in ract. Take Newman's success, for example. In a rtcent period, h1s splendidly sardonic song, "Love Story,'' has be en highli ghte d 'by Harry Belafoote and Lena H«ne in their ABC.. TV hour, by Tom Smothers and Nancy Sinatra on ABC-TV's new Smothers Brothers Show ; by Newman himself on NBC-TV's Liza MinneJU special, and by Peggy Lee oil record. Yet Newman recorded ·it-a long time ago. Nilsson, who sang "Everybody's Talkin'" In the Oscar-winning film "Midnight Cowboy," has gained tremen· doos respect in the music business for his songs, albums The Week" senes. ; . : ;. 'l'tle story is by Nllllon;·he wUJ perform eight original songs he wrote for the' tllm, and lhe narrator will : be Dustin Hoffman, \'bor~: ol. course, stan-ed in '~cbWL'ht Co wboy '' and ''Tlie Graduate." Nilsson also sln(a the tllelne he wrote for ABCTV's ltPl.es "The Couruhip oi Eddie!• Father." There never Wi. ·a time you could get him::-- or Newman or Nyro -chN,p. But, from a oetw«t •- point, I venture the sugpctlon th~ wu a time they We more available. .. :•. .._,_ 0...-C-'Yf!:...,... .. .... .... s.t. c.t ...... Stirlll , ....... M. •4'00.lo001 1CIOO .... k. hlO, MQ.S.SO.MI • WllGI rM s.. "°'"'Cl.UI. 1.JQ, •... ,.. ---- Fifi D'Orsay Really Glad 1Shee's Old -and it is not that much later -Nilsson, Newman and Nyro are three ol the hottest and most admired talents in the music busineu, and tbey JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -A curvy go.go dllll<t1' says palice violated her right of free eip:esslon when they ar- rested her last tnO!lth as •be danced nude in a nightclub, and she wants an injunction to prevent them from ar- resting ber II she dances bot- tomless again. Lisa Hollman, 25, said In Circuit Court this w e e k 1 unir...rourt11s of the aongs and music today d e n o t e freedom. I like to be free ol. my clothes so I can move my body." HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Fifi D'Orsay, "French Bombshell" of 1930 movies, has a message titled "I'm Glad l'm Not Young Any More." Sti ll full of fiz.z and at 66 remarkably ·trim, Fifi now a lecturer, wows women's clubs with tines like: "People used Lo think I was temperamental. I never really lost my temper. 1 just kept it and used it over and over again!" "I was a true wife both times l wa s married. But THE LUXURIOUS NEW BALI$! THEATRE MOMI Of IOC'IUNll OIMI loan I 10'.I [AST BAt.IOA BLVO. ~IAl.SOA PUllNSllLA· 613·4G~I Now e Ends Tuesday Exclusive Harbor Area Showing between marriages -oh, la! la!" -with a wink and a gale of laughter. In youth, Fifi told an in· terviewe r, she was ''lmreasonable, foolish, vain, t e m peramental, tormented with so many temptations, always in a spin. Aren't we all when we are young. Youth can really do a woman in." Miss D'Orsay has been single since 1952 when she divorced George La Ricos, her buiiness manager and hus- band of five years. In 1933 she divorud actor George Hill after six years of maniage. Now, she said, she feels better than sbe did 2() years ago: "I take care of myself, live a good, adjusted life and don't wear myself out." ~-Rl CHARD BURTON GENEVI EVE BUJOLD .. '"~ HAL WALI.Js l'llOOl.'CllON &l1111tef tft, 1t/ousa~ :Dys ''THE OUT OF TOWN!RS'" IS SOMEHTING TO SEE. WE PIE- DICT THERE WON'T IE ROOM IN THE AISLES FOR ALL THOSE WHO WILL FALL OFF THEIR SUTS LAUGHING!" -RONA IAIRm wr..n as.,, toh ,.,u for.an outof.fowna, thcJl.r~..,,.~· JICK l.EMMOll SAIDY llElllS t-- 1111-ITilllf. I• TIE OUJ.GF"IDWB CCI.Oft BY MOVllAB!n ( ~-~' ,: .. .. 4th RECORD WEEK ~ 2nd TOP HIT ANTHONY QUINN INGRID BERGMAN Jl~Jr in the S~in Her basic advice to older women is: Keep too busy to feel .sorry for yourself. Don't hide your years: U3e them. She spices the seriousneu wiLh such sauciness as: "I used to be a sexpot. Now I'm a sexagenarian." And: "U you don't know who I am~ ask your rriother. Better yet, ask your father !'' Fifi D'Orsay is a Mont.real- born French-Canadian who earned $5,000 a week in vaudeville -and, she readily admits, spent $6,000 on in· dulgences like furs and $1,000 horse bets. Will Rogers saw "Mlle. F if i , ' ' comedienne-singer perform at the Palace in New York City and sent for her lo play a French girl in his first talking picture, "They Had to See Paris," in 1930. Vivacious and scintillating. she starred with AJ Jolson, Victor McLagle n, B i n g -~ ....... llD:aosJ•AMD.tft9 AN EXPLOSIVE MOTION PICTURE -IUIOOIE • "'"- Crosby, Maurice Chevalier. coot. a pretty penny. And, as Years advanctd and para I say, it dktn't take much dwindled to occasional film foresight to mow they would get there. and television roles. But nobody at 111y network RectmUy s h e ~rformed went after them before, and with other over 65 show· of course such a lack of a business veterans in "Sun City smoothly-func:tiooing, higbly- Scandals," a Johnny Canion developed farm l)'ltem con- Special filmed by NBC for tinues to cost the big broad- airing in October. casting organiutlons large Lecture fees pay her rent money. Ttiey waJt for stars and other bills. "I'm not rtch, to develop on their 9WD - but that's not my ambition." pa.ssing up the chance to tie Fifi, who tints her graying them up earlier -and it hair to its natural chestnut costs them fortwies. brown, eats sparingly, takes Barbra Streisand, for ex- walks aDcl shows off her figure ample, eventually aigned a wllh: multi-million-dollar contract "Look how nice it is." with CBS-TV. But she was -She lives alme in a modest on and arotmd television Hollywood apartment, studi~ shows befcre that, and no ooe Italian and art in night school, went after her wholebearted- painls flower.1 and portralls ly. and goes to daily Mass. f,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Judge Marion Goo d ing reserved a-decision. ·Miss Hoffman danced at a lounge which has featured topless dancers for some Ume but she was the first to s~ed the bottom of her costume. Paulson Stars In TV Segment HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Pat Paulsen, whose own show was canceled this year, w i 11 ap.. pear ln a guest star role of a segment of "Love, American Style." iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,,J "I have found such ha~ piness with religion. I have Tita MADI.IDT MAN A&.IYS-TAKas OM " WffOL• AllMY round peace or mind, int<rior CI.IHI' EASTWOOD~ S....,~ - tranquility, and there's a SllJBLEYMMJJAiJii ~ buoyancy in my step that w~~c:!tth~be~~· and keep l1\@lill4jt1l;1r11:.m•~1,;1if;J you. 1 can't afford it" -again 2nd llG WEEK-MA TINW DA LY the saucy wink. German Co-Star TOPAZ ... ...- WW..~ c....., f'lwll. Prn1 SB.LEIS 0.•711J PM Slll:l.-StiraW N '"·~ "I LOVE YOU, . AUCEL TOWS" HO!LYWOOD (UPI) Germany's Curt Jurgens trill co-star with Allen Alda and Barbara Parkins in 20th Oen· tury-Foz's '"The Me p bi s to Waltz." ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• EXCLUSIVE AREA SHOWING CALL 67J.6260 FOR SHOW TIMES The Deadliest Man Alive ·-Takes on a Whole Army.l . CUNT .t:ASTWOOD SllIRLEYMACIAoo: .. ---· HELD OVER! "THEMIND BLOWER OF ALL TIME!" Q tlMMl!OrlM SHOWING NOW! .. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 6:30 & 9:45 SAT. 3:4S, 7:1S, 10:30 SUN. 3:1S,6:30, 9:1S H• OM MmHt.11 u-., 11 u11 .... W1'11 , ....... LtPI o...-n11111 -,.,.., ff ..,,. lltllllllrtd lfEWPORT BEACH • OR.J.1!50 ········•······•··•··•·•·································•····· • music .. . .. ' . : ·.• • .. • ' • • • • . . .. ,, l ·I I . • • ~ ..-.----.-.....,.~...--.~r·---...--.-·~-~--~~~~~·,.--~~-----------------------_,._.., ____ _, ____ _, __ ~--- ..... • Moodq , Ju~ 27, 1970 • . • ... • • • .· . . . SHOP SE A RS SUNDAYS 12 Noon to 5 p.m •••.• Monday thro Satnrdav 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. ALLSTATE PASSENGER TIRE GUAR~F.E Guaranteed .Agains1: All tire fai lures from nor. 8 ,,.,,,- maJ road hnards or dcfccn in material or workmanship. For Bow Long: For the life of the original tread What Sean Will Do: In exchange for the tire, ~lace it charging: for the proportion of cu rrent selling price plus Federal Exci se Tax that rcprcscntll uead used. Repair nail punctures at no charge. Guaranteed Ag11inst: Tread w"r-out. For Bow Long: The number of months spcci· ficd. What Sean Will Do: Ia exchan&c for che tire, replace it charging the current M:iling price plus Federal Excir.c Tu: less 1he following H•,_Jt'> &I Iowa.nee: Ii ~lonlhly Cuarantte '1'""-4 ... 18 to 24 .27 ro39 40 ' .• . S·ears • • 21-Month Guarantee··' · .. ~ '· . ' 4-Ply Njrlon :~s·R ~IZE "'::!:.':'-r.u. Tabelem Blocbnll ....is .... L11 1.ss.t• ..... .... '7.7Sal4 ..... • 2.17 USs.1' 11'.. ~ 1.'7SdS 1531 • Tuhielen WW....0- "5QdJ ..... i: 1.ss.t• .... 7.?s.J' ..... 2.11 ....... ..... .... ' a.SS&••. ..... ~ . I . ' ' 6.50xl3 Tube! ... Bloekwall Plus L78 F.E.T • And Old Tue •New ea ii tour. broad •boulder for greater-u!ety . . •Now tread design for all-weather traction •New 6/10.inch white oidewaU to match the width o£ thewhiie •idewall of many new can SAVE •s .. to *1o! FUll:30-Month Guarantee . . . Guardsman 4-Ply Rayon · := .. .:z .. ' SIZE .... .... P.U. T11bel-Bloekwoll ........ 19.95 . .... UI 1.ss.t• ..... IUI .... 1.'75s.l4 ..... .... 2.17 Uhl• ..... 21.!IS .... Tube1-.Whltewall ....... ..... 11.93 L11 1.ss.i• ..... ..... ... 1."lkl' ..... 21.!IS ·~ 8.2Sd4 31.95 ...,.. ...... ....... ..... .... ii: l.ISsl6 37.95 -~ ..... .... us s ,..,, ..... w IJISalS 39.95 ..... 1.16 9.00ir.tS . ..... ..... .U'I Regular '19.95 Trade.in Price 93 6.SOxlS Tube! ... Bliekwall M111Si.78F.ll.T. AndOldTirO SAVE *6 to *10!· FUll 36-Month Guarantee . ' WIDE GUARJ) DYNAGLASS .. ..... :us 17.93 u.s ..... ...., 31.W us ..... 1.91 Regular •25.95 Trade-In Price 6.50xl3/C78-ll Tubel-. Blackwall Plbl S2 F.E. T • And Old Tue Pri.-EfFeetlTe Ihm July 31 fit . ' IUlNA PAIK TA 1-4400, s21 ... 1:ao ll MONn: Of Wf11 ..... IUCll • M1J1 ,.._M,N111 flCOWIMIO -,CO¥f1UZA14 ...... W~f42·1111 CANOGA PAlK :t40.ottt OUteAU CM a.10041 Q •-Mtt Ol.Ym'IC A to'fO M Wl1t (0MP10N NI t-21111 NI 2•1711 ttOU.T'#OOll MO NM1 ~ A74tol IANTA MIA m 7oU71 ~ UftANI!: ,....lf27 I ...icEAHDCO. (OVINA •••-0111 INOUWOOD oa aolltl ····--.. ,.,,,,, al1-Utt ' . .. =· ..., NII* -lhru kt. t.ao A.M. to 9130 P.M., Sund•J 12 N-to I P.M. "-1111111 ll•a a 111• • Y-M1117 ... •1 IANIA N ... Ill M4·I011 · , IANI'& llOlllCA a w111 """")o 14411, tl4·2220 -"" ilL ..... , t I I .... ...... .. . . . ..-..... . ~ . . . ' '. ... ~ .. ~ ...... ---· -... ~-· . '. • Monday, Jufy 21. 1970 DAILV '!LOT II A Stolen · S,ign ~nd Angels Finally Win One- • • • Boudreau Leads Faine Inductees COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) -Four new 'members move into baseball's Hall ol. Fame today aa 10,000 fans jam thi!: hi.storlc village to honor Loo Boudreau, Earle Combs, Jesse Haines and Ford Frick, and to watch a ball game. . Alter watching the formal induction ceremonies and the unveiling ol. the new · plaques, boosting the total mem- bership to 111 •. the fans . stroll down Main Street to Doubleday Field to tee the annual Hall of Fame ei:hibition 1ame. Because Montreal, one of last year's expansion clubs, is playing here for the first time, a planeload or 93 persons from Montreal will be on hand for the game between the Expos and the Olicago White Sox. Altflough both teams are bumping around in the lower reaches or their respective divisions, the annual 1ame attracts a sellout lhrong. The American League, which long aga lost its domination of the All.Star aeries, still holds a 15-11-t edge in this teries that means no more t h a n possession of the Hall of Fame Cup. Boudreau. 52, was voted into the Hall by the veteran baseball writers in Janu~ry with 232 of a po91ible 400 votes, or more thal) the rquired 75 percenL He played 15 big league seasons with Cleveland and Boston and had a carttr batting average of .295, leading the American League in 1944 with .327. In 1948 he hit two homers and two singles in the tie playof£ game in which Cleveland b~at Boston for-the pennant. and was voted the most valuable player in the league. Boudreau managed Cleveland, Boston, Kansas City and the Chicago cubs before moving into the radi~televlsion berth in Chicago. He is the fa lber·iii·Iaw of Denny McLain, controversial Detroit pitcher. Combs, 70, Haines, 76, and Frick, 75, were selected by the veterans committee in a special election. Combs spent 12 years in the majors with the New York YaQkee.!!1 as leadoff man and center fielder for the great teams fom 19%4 throu,gh 1935 and com- piled a .325 average. Haines, a 2f.game winner for St .. Louis in 1927, won 210 and lost 158 for the Cardinals. The knuckleball .pitcher broke in with Cincinnati in 1918 bwt bad no record and . came back with St. Llftris to stay from 1920 through 19.17. Frk:k, former cormnissioner and presi- dent of the National League, moved ·into the executive branch of the game after a career as a bueball writer. It was hi3 Jeadershlp that led to the establiSunent ol the Hall ot Fame in Cooperstown in 11139. Permanent Invitation For Nicklaus LIGONIER, Pa. (AP) -It was Palmer country and they were Amie"• Army. But Jack NicMaus eamed his thare of glory, too. ;Golf's most famous duo, pla ying together Instead of against each other, shot a final·round 67 Sunday in the National Four·Ball Championship for a three-stroke victory over three other teams. They finisbed wilh a 259 total. "There's never been a member·guest toornamenl that has bad this much at· tention ," the blond Nicklaus said . "I'll invite him back every year," 1aid Palmer. Their 25 under par aave -them the $40,000 first prize, $20,000 uch. lt al80 gave Palmer his ftrJt victory of the year -on his home course. Crampton and Moody were tied with Palmer and Nicklaus until the 12th hole when Arnie put it close to the pin and Jack hit • nine Iron about a foot and half away, then_(Ot the birdie. "That was the firsf"Teilly good Iron " we·d had all day and I think it 1ave us a lift," Jack said. Nicklaus got four of the team's six birdies and hit his secorxl M es- ceptiOD1lly well. Only his puttin1 bpt the final score from bein& even more decisive on this lush par 71 course in the hills of western Pennsylvania. T•"' sctor" 411111 INft'I rr-v wlnnloWt SunoH,. In 1'111 llM! roulld of ni. Nlllltnlll ,_.. .. fl ~~.,,=~'i..""'° ".f1-6447-Ctl!flOI~. Sl~.J» 47.f Dld<l!llOll>SIMlif, Sl'.ll) •7-41 tr:r:=.•u:= l'I~~ ifHl11. S7,31X1 '1 •~·Sllll, $1;300 • -,.,..°"""'· v.-!:f",.mf-1'S -lc!lelaefO«'·Ck.Oi .. , tJJOO -"" Celbfft·ltlff.m, U1J!O ......... 7-2'4 Lvnn·Slodi'llH'I. ••-47~llM ~~~~.;~·~-'r ............ M.... H M•nl-Elll-"'· U.IOO M1!'tl·lt:ftrn:n, u.-. ='.r.l' Ti..11"'" l:Y INNING RUN .THE HARD WAY -The:ADg~ls' l)W y Cowan slides safely back to first base (top photo) with two out in the 11th inning then Jeter scored to .give his mates ·an 11-10 tfiul))ph over Washing· ton. Cowan (below)·reflects exhaustioq.from his ordeal as he 's heltr Rosewall Rall y Sinks Richey In Net Duel CINCINNATI (AP) -Top....ted Ken R.o&ewall fOl!gtit'fl'.om behiDd in the thinl 11et and :·defeated Cliff Richey, 7-9, 9-7, U, to win · the men 's singles title in the l3rd armual Western ' tenni1 cbam-, pionships SuDciiy aJ'. the Cinclpnati Tennis .'_ Club. -· . Rich.ey, San Angelo, Texe, led 5-2, ln•the third 'aet but Rollewall came back when Richey double faulted' his game- point serve·in the eigiith game. Alter holding service, Rose.will won a love 1ame on Richey'• serve, then followed it µp with · anOthtr-love game on his .owtt.Aerve. A1ter Rosewall . went ahead, f.S, the two' players traded 1ames and then tht Aqstrali8.n •wrapped it up. ~ · match la~ tint hout1 and 10~.minutu. Rosewall, rnnnerup'to J<iln Newtombt at Wimbledon, picked up $5,000 for win- nl!)g. while Ridley, de!<nding Western ~·1;champion, won $500 as runnerup. In women '• play, 1.t c,o n d . 1 t •e d t d 11ooemary1c1oal•, knoeted o11 top.....ied Nftr Richey, 1-3, 1-3, to ·capture the women's singles crown. Miss Casals, _San Francisco, kept Miss Richey San Angelo, off .balance repeated- ly with Itron& overhand 11Daahes and her slashing-a<:khlnd drives. Miss Casab picked up $1,000 for her victory over Miu Richey, five time h>r:'ner Wel&em ·winner. In the other title match Sunday, Roma· nians Jon Tniac and Ilie. Nastase defeated South Africans Bob Hewitt and Frew McMillan, &-3, M, to capture the men'i doubles tile. DAILY ,ILDT ........ ._.. •klllol'll KN!lllr ed to the .dugout by Ray Oyler. Jim Fregosi leads the entourage while winning pitcher Greg Garrett extends a hand of congratula· tions. D,el~y Do_esn't H·urrt~~Stram .Angels Do It ·With Stolen Sig n . ' Physical Coml:irinn _No ,Longer Qiie stion Ma rk LIBERTY, Mo. (AP) -Coach Hank Str~ pronounced his Kansas City foot- ball team in good physical condition today for Friday night 's clash with the College All.Stars at Chicago'1 Soldier Field and said ht expeda the Chief1 to win it. ApparenUy not disturbed over the JI).. day delay in veterans reporting to training camp, Stram said: "The put is gone. As I've said so many times, football Is a game or now. N(!W Wt've got to set:Ue~down and win Frkl•Y night. We wouldn't be playi111 thi1 lam& ·11 I didn't think we could 11in it. I think we have ample time to .. reedy." 1"e ~Ch1ets• "Yet.eran1 were a1Mmbled here-huniedly Satunlay after the Na- tlonaf Football Leaiue Playe rs Associa· tlon flnal!y •ir<ed lo let . Kansu City -out•mL11l1)'1he A!Mltan. Vetetans on , t4'e other 25 clUbi are ltill,..gldefined-beclluse of-the stalt!mated contract dispute between the playe rs and clob owners. ;i•0µr 1..squad ,reported. in good •physical condition," Stram aaid after four . WOrkouts were held OVer the weekend . "t thought our concentration was ex· cellent and the execution was sharp." Only one problem arose as the 'Chiefs practiced twice Saturday, twice Sunday and faced three one-hoor sessions today. Stram found a shortage of veteran delensive tackles with the sudden retire- ment ot F.d Lothamer and the failure ol Ernie Ladd to show up. To remedy the situation, Stram shifted rookie Bob Liggett, Ule C!ilefs' 15th TOtlnd draft choice from Nebraska, from offen&e to def..,.., With the'" oqoacf:S physical condition • no· 'longer a question, Slram buckled right.~ to the business o{ his team's offettie and defense. The' Oiters, in addition to their aerial game, worked exte·nsively on erid-around plays which picked up Super Bowl yardage last January when Kansas City thrashed the Minnesota Vikings, 23.7, for the world championship. Len Dawson, his left leg taped as a result of a 1989 injury tha!_Cl!Used him to miss six games, was one of fi ve veteran qu arterbacks on the practice field . Dawson, 1laled to start In Chicago, said the squad . was relieved because I.he players association reversed an earlier llecision and decWed to let the Chiefs play even though they will break ca~p arter the ga'me if there still is no agreement. on tbe cooLra~ --·------·---_.....J.-..._. -· ---- WASHINGTON CALll'OINIA 1br~r111 1br~r111 lrlnltm1n, u $ 1 o o Atom••· 2tl $ I 1 1 M1y1. l'f ' 1 1 o Jol\1111111'11, cl ~ 1 t 0 F.Howtrd, If ' J 3 J Cowtn. II l 1 1 0 Ebsllln, lb ' J ' 1 F•ll'll•nl, IS T ' J ' A.ltOdrltue:t. Jb S l I A.JO!IMOn1 II J 1 0 0 ll.A!le1\, 1b ' 1 I J.lMtvm, 11 1 0 1 I Cu!ltn, 2tl O O 11 0 $pe<1tl r. lb S I J J l./llJ'tt', cl 1 O 1 O McM11(1t11, )b 1 1 1 J Gntnc11,p 000 0 Rtl)(ll,rl S1J 1 9UHOl/llhl, '*' I 0 0 0 Aleut, c ' 0 1 • J,Brvwn, p O 0 0 0 ll~l1. pll I 1 0 0 Pl~, 11 t o O O Eean, e 1 t ·1 O COfl'tr, pl! 0 0 o, I ' l'.M11rpl1y, o 1 0 0 0 llru,,.1, p fl• O o o L1R«h1, ., 1 O O O Grlew. pl\ 1 O O 1 1!1r1011y, o I O O O K1111w1H, ,, 2 0 0 0 IC.T1t11m. O 0 0 O 0 F~.c lll)Ooyl1,p 0000 C111110ve, c t 0 0 0 Ouet!n, p O i O O Co•.P OtOOUy11r,p11 0000 Co1ot1n1n . ., o o 0 0 E.l'!Jher, p o o o o lltMfboro, pl! e O O O ltt)"'IOldl, Jiii 1 I o o llttk:h•rdt, ct J 0 0 0 l.iarrtll, ., O 0 0 0 ro111\ "'10 11 10 To!alt M 11 u 11 T "'° out Wl'l!ll'I winning run 1cortd. W11hlngton OXI 001 OU 00 -10 c1111or11i. ltl 200 101 01 -11 E -l!tlnll;,,,_p, 01' -W01tllnt!Ofl I, Cllllor~I• 1, LO!I -Wlt.hlntlon IO, CllllOfl!lf IJ, ,. -Pr .. 9011, Mt't'f, J. Ttlll .... HI -MeMllll«! (11!, ... Mowtrf !211, AIOIMr 0). SI -A, ltlllllrlOllN. & -lpt11e ... , Oyl ... , AIO!Mr. II' -COrntr, ·----'·----- May Battles New York's Stottlernvre . .. Paul Casanova tipped hla mitt. So Jarvis Tatum Upped hfs cap ln Casanovi's dlrectioR. Even a' bevy of Secret Serviee men, escorting President Ntion to Anaheim Stadium Sunday, couldn't prevent Tatum, an outfielder for the 'caUfornl.a An1ets, from stealing a sip from the Waihington catcher. The theft paid haldsome dividends for the Angels because Tatum promptly lashed a run·scoring double .down thi rightlield line to lilt the Angela to a wild 11·10, ll·inning victory. The win moved lhe Angela back to within five games of the Minae!Ola Twln1 ln the AmerlcaA League West ,8l)d they resume their relenUess and tomeUmes frustrating pursuit tonight when they host the New York Yankees in lhe fir1t of a three-game series. Mel Stottlemyre, ace of the Yankee staff, makes bis first start of the season against the Angels, carrying· a t-9 record into battle against California left-hander Rudy May. May, 5-8, is comiag off a two-week stint with the Army Reserves. , "I saw Casanova move his mitt to the outside so I knew the n ex t pitch was going tD be away from ·mc/' Tatum explained after his gam~winnmg hit. "He did the same thing Friday night but I didn't piclr it up in time. This time I was ready ." Tatum rammed the ball into the right fi eld corner and it eaabled Billy Cowaa, who had singled off loser Darold Knowles, 1·9, to score all the way from first base. "You never IQlow how many runs it'1 going to take to win games these days.'' said Angel manager Lefty Phillipe, who watched his club blow a slx·run lead for the second time in three days, The President. sitting, with Angel OWll· ers Bob Reynolds and Gene Autry, stayed through the three-hour and 56-minqte marathon which saw 44 players see ac- tion, one short of the American League record. Mike Epstein homered twice for Washington and Frank Howard hit hla f8th and third ht three games· oU Alge! pitching. Ken McMullfn, Roger Repos and Sandy Alomar homered·for Callfar .. nia. 8-year Jinx " Cornes to End I' I For Brewer PHlLADELPmA (AP) -It's been .a bouncy season for Jim BreW«!f, mainstay of the Los Angeles Dodger bullpen. He's up again and the Dodgert hope. he'll stay there. Brewer pitched 1·213 innings of. shutout relief Sunday as the Dodgers hung on to defeat the Mets, 5-3, in New Yqrk. '11te left-hander feels the Mets are a jinx. Twice this month he was the losing Dodger Slcte All .. _ 9111 IC'I (641) J111v u DDc1Der1 •' l"tlllldtfl!l'l1• Julv 2t ~ .... •I Phll.cl1lptil1 July lD Dadtltr1 11 Monlr••I July ll 00Cluer1 •I Mon1r111 AW, 1 Oad .. rl It Mon!tell .-.1111. S ~r1 •t MIH'llr"I 4:30 •. 11'1. 4:30 ... ,.,. S:OO t .m. 5:00 p.m. J -·"'· 11 :10 1.m. pitcher against New York and h.18 lifetime worrlost record against the Mel! is l.S. It started. he recalled , the first time he pitched against them in 1962, giving up a pinch-hit grands lam · ho:ne run. H And I've been having trouble with them ever since ,'' he said. But not on Sunday, when he fefl hi.9 bread·a nd·butter pitch -the screwball -to pinch·hitter Tommie Agee, forcing the Mets' leading home run hitter to groond into a double play and preventing the Mets from tying the game in the eighth inning. Brewer's 14th save of the season wu good medicine for Dodger manager Walt Alston, who has been lamenting the work of his rel.levers in recent games. The vic tory went to starter Don Sutton, 12-7. who worked S.2/3 innings and gave up the Mets' run.s, all on two home~ by Wayne Garrett. Dodger left.hander Claude Osteen, 1117, will try to match Sutton's record tonight at Philade1pl1ia where the Philllea will counter with Woody Fryman, M . LOS ANO•L•s N•W vo,•,•, • ..:, •ll r llrlll ,.., G11~rlt'wl1J,u 4 l 1 0 H•rr1IJ0n, 11 5 t I 0 Mol1,11 $Olll'oy',Xt 4010 W.O.vl1, cl S I 1 0 Slng!t!Oll, It l O O O W,Plrl<tr, lD l 0 2 1 l'olllt rt,, p 0 0 t t Ltletr.or1, » 3 0 0 0 ~r, lll'I t O I t H•lltr, c l I 1 1 $e1vtr, itr O I t t S!r-•. 7b l 2 2 l sr..!Nlty, 10 t t 1 O 1tuu1J1,t1 2001Wf!J.20 lOtt Sutton.p 1000 (.J....,,ef t02t Limb. t O 0 t 0 Mll'INlll. rl S 1 1 t 11,.._,, 1101c1.m-,111111t G•rr1tt, 2tl J 2 2 J A .... cf 10 0 0 GtOlt. c • I t t Genlry,, 1 000 lt.l't~lor, 11 1 0 I I $""""'°", ,, ' ' 1 • -To!~ll JI $ f j Tot•I• JJ l 11 t Loi An1141lt, Git 111 001 -S fftw Yri 000 1\0 "° -J E -l tfltwrt. OP -Los -'111i!•I• 1, H ... Yor• I. LOI -Lot Ang1lft 1, Htw YOl1c 11.,n Mll'llltll, Sl'ltft'lllly, JI -Sl1tmort , Ht. -loll!lt<" (0, Glrr11t 2 Ill. St -Fl'(. S -Ltflbl'Yt, SP -SlJemort, 111.uu•U. ,, ......... so ~,,,,,,, J/Jttoo o 1.t/J)tt.1 1 •llJtJ111 2-J/ltlll 2 4 1 1 • • Tf!N -J:D. AtttMI~ - !!""!"'--------------------------------~------------~----· ~-·---··-. - R DAILV l'ILOT Isaac, Unser Romp By ASSOCIATED PRESS Wben Harry Hyde came a o u t h from the Northeast three years ago, tool bo.1 in hand, he vowed that one of his stock racing cars would win the NASCAR Grand Na· Uonal championship in fewer than four seasons. Hyde came close last year, when hUI driver Bobby lsaac captu~ a dozen events, ln- cludlng his first SOO.miJer In the final race of the season in Tesas. Isaac, a short-track specialist from Catawba, N.C., ls on the rampage again his ,year and his title chances grow better with each outing. Isaac, Jll'ith chief mechanic Hyde In the pits, easily won the nationally televised ~ mile Grand National at Nashville, Terin., Saturday. 1be win, worth $3,310, put the 3'-year-old driver in the lead for the 1970 cham- pioMhip, whK:h pays a bonus of about $50,000 at season'• end. It was Isaac's &iilh vic- tory. Elsewhere during the week- end, Al Unser padded h Is U.S. Auto Club championship lead by winning a 150-mile race for Indianapolis Speed· way can on a road coune at Indianapolis. Old pro Tiny Lund, still going strong at 43, won his 18th of the season i n NASCAR's Grand American aeries by beating 51-year-old Buck Baker across the finish line by an eyelash in a 300-lap ~vent at Ona, W. Va. Baker had woo two events Mon4aJ, July )7, l97<t \ Reds Ace Unloads 3 Homers Three.Bame rs fo r CeJH3da; AaronCompared toHorns by ClllCAGO (AP) -"Well, CINCINNATI (/Jl) -"No ll leut we don't have to doubt about It," said Reda look at Aaron and &p;.ii manager S p a r k y Anderton, again this yw'" moaned Leo Durocher, the Chicago CUbl' "JohMy"'Btnch is one.of the belabored manager. , rmest all-round athletes in Orlando Cepeda, enjoying the game of baseball today." probably h l 1 biggest d a Y. 1n Anderson, rookie manager baseball, a n d Hammeri.ng Hank Aaron were cause for who has played a lead role coostematlon Sunday even in Cincinnati's surge to a 12~ though the Cub• mana1ed to game lead in the Western NL, split a doubleheader with the has atouUy maintained that Atlanta Braves, losing the the versatile Beodl, ,,.Rf 22 first game 8-3 and winning 1-· the second 7-6 with Aaron years old, may develop into making the final out as a one of the all-time greats in plnch batter. the senior circuit. Cepe<la, who collected 11 And his words have never hits in the four-game aeries, slugged three home runs and carried more weight than Sun-a single in the flnt game da,y when Bench powered the as be drove in seven ,runs Red,, to a 13-5 victory over and then came back with two the st. Lauis Cards before ~gles and a double in the lll(htcap. a crowd of 40,202 at Riverfront Cepeda had htt solo homers Stadium here. in the second and fourth in- havt walked Aaron, too," sald Cepeda. "Aaron can hit the • ball out . of the park easier than J' Can. After all he'• the but borne run hitter in the rame today." "lt'1 ,...t to b<I playing while you're healthy," said Cepeda. "l played for about a Agajanian Enters Cars J . C. A(ajlJ1ian, an In- stitution at Indianapolis along with his famed No. 98 that bas won two races, ts among the latest to check into Ontario Motor Speedway for the inaugural California 500 Sept. 6. month earlier thiJ year when t s.houldn't have because ol bad ankles and other ailment.. It's tough to play when you're hurting." Cepeda seemed a I I l l I e caulioll8 before hitting h 1 s slam and he explained: "When they walk a man to get to you, you are eager. I was too eager on the first pi~h so I tried to relax by taking my Ume and talking to myself." Ctpeda, who hit only 22 home runs last season, crack- ed his 21st of the year. "I've never hJt three tn one game before," said Cepeda. "l hit two In a game about 17 times before." Durocher said he'd walk Aaron again to get to Cepeda if he had to do It over aeain. Bench's barrage, most of n.ings and in the fifth, with · it· at the expenae of St. Loois runners on second and third, starter, lefty Steve Carlton, Aaron came to bat. Agajanian, a member ol. the board of directors at Ontario, has been sending cars into the ·rndianapolls race longer than any other owner. He has entered two cars at Ontario along with his partner and mechanic, Leanord Faas. Both are Turbo-charged Of fenhauaers. "For years everytime I looked up Musial was beating me, Musial was beating me, Musial was beating me. Now everytlme J look up Aaron is. hitting a home rWI to beat me. I'm Ured of it. "He's the best rlghthanded hitter in baseball to d a y . Rogers Hornsby was the greatest I've ever seen and Aaron rank& right next to him." consisted ol Ure-drive home D.Jrocher ordered hlm walk· runs his first three trips to ed. Cepeda slugged his 21st the plate and a checked-swing homer or the year and his single that gave him a tot.II second gra,nd slam of the cl 1even runs batted in. seaSOl'l. By bombing the Cards, who "If I were Leo I would now have lost eight straightl------------------------------ games and dropped eight in a row to the Reds, Bench projected him1ell Into the Ma- jor League leadership in both homers with 33 and RBI 15. Area Team Faces Top Polo Forces l\nne111 AUTO C•Nftll 4PLYNYLON ·coRDTIRE! FOR EXTRA STRENGTH ON THE ROAD ~:~Ho .-:'"" .............. ... earlier in the week on a h • C fled Northern toor for t h e C ftt'fJIHfJ ft Southern-based ·sports sedans. Corona d e I Mar-lrvine- Newport Assn. (CINA) water polo team b ....i<d In the ~ra1~uF::p~t~i fORIMOSJ • Mll lAGlMAKIR II Denis Hulme won his second Although it appears that Marina's Mike Lacy is being fouled .on this play, a stralgbt victory in the rich referee saw differently. Lacy was cited for charging in recent Huntington CanAm 1erie1, leading new Beach Recreation Dept. summer basketball game. Marina finished the summer co-driver Pete Gethin to a slate with' a perfect 11-0 record. 1-2 finish in a 200-mihr at ___:::.:.:::...cc.:::..::..::..:.:.::=..=..:..::.:.::.:..::. _______ ~---------- Edmonton, Alberta. Gethin had replaced Dan Gurney as the No . 2 driver for team McLaren f:arlier in the week. McLaren cars now have won 17 in a row in the $) million. series, with Gumty setting the first two this year after taking over for the late Bruce McLaren, killed in a· testing accident June 8. Isaac, a mod-haired 150- pounder, now holds a f<>.point edge over fellow Dodge driver James Hylton at the midway point in the NASCAR season. Area Prep Grid Coaches Spend Summer Working By PHIL ROSS 01 llM O.ltr Pli.t Sti ff What do Orange Coast area prep football coaches do to ocaspy their 16ng hot sum- mers? h11 newly acquired Fountain Valley home while al90 he1ping Newport footliall hopefuls and Pop Warner players in a weight program at Newport. Beach's Belmont Plaza Olym- pie pool. Coach F.d Newland'• forces are rated behind heavily favored De Am.a ct Norttiern Cali!ornia and Phillips of Long Bead!. De Ania reecntiy won the Golden W e 1 t Invltatlonal, hammering CINA and Phlllipo en route to garnering the title. Phillips then outscored Corona del Mar, 8-6, to fl.nlJh second. However, coach Art Lambert of De A!l%a stlll rates CINA as his moil dangerous adversary. "Any team that bas worked out twice a day since February figmes to be tougti," he ex:· plaim. Newland's chaps open fire Frid a y at 11 a.m., tackling 16 .9 5 Blackwall Tubel°'s 650-13 P1us 1.78 Fed. Exe. Tax and old tire Six• Price , ... _ 69.S.14 17.95 1.94 735-1' 18.95 ._ .. 77.S.1 4 19.95 2.17 82.S.1-' 21.95 2.33 5~15 17.95 1.75 73.S.15 18.95 2.ll8 77>-15 19.9.5 2-19 24 MONTHS GUAl'AlllTEE He had finished second to Plymouth's Richard Petty in a 100-mile event at Maryville, TeM., Friday night and ran the Cl-laps over the steeply banked Nashville track after only three hours aleep. In most cases, the grid men- tors have been teadting sum- mer school at various loca· tions while finding time to supervise present and future gridiron prospects on strenuous weight pr6grams. but his biggest thrill of the summer has b e e n to participate in the Festival of Arts in Laguna. An BC· complished artist. Akins put some ol his masterpieces up for aale In a booth at. the festival. Jen')' Redman, who will be taking over the f0otball reins at new University Hlgh in the fall , spent five days with his family at Lake Havasu and is presently involved as an assistant coach for headman Ed Bain (Foothill) in the up- coming county North-South all-star grid classic. Just having completed a recent move from Whittler to Huntington Beach, Wheeler is playing a major role in getting Marina's first-ever gridiron booster program off t h e ground. the team which finl.shes run· .ao::tJ nerup in a special qualification tournament Wednesday and Thurdsay at Cypress College. WITM •MONTHS tOO.ALLO•AffC£ f_.,.,owllonO......Y_F_tft P'O'K'lloll ~--.IN For.,_,...,..... tW.. l••C9Pt ---hig""-1o ..... oc:. sn.I ·-•" nm N.z..:I ... °"'.., IM!uNa. You -pr01tc11d tor thl -n •ai:ld mo111/llollll*M!•- 11 YOU< lire l•;i.during tlll ....,_M P1tlod,11t .. ,. ii: to uo•rd-..,jft, 11-0Plion.""*"'l'OUll llrt,OI' fnlkt •" al~~ on Ille origlnlll pwdt- Pllcw. e•cludinQ lf'l)llqblt FDrM £•cits T1•, •-rd 1i. pwcham of • ..-1 1if1. W. ..;11 ...,_ 1001' ol 1Morifin1I pui~ priot.••dudl"lllOPI'" ablt Fld1t•I E•ci• T1•.duri"11llM1001'alio- •...,. ptoiod. Thltuher, -will MIOww50%D' 1!i"of Ille or;,1 ... I pul'Chioe price, t•dudirq 11P11hc.tl>lt Fldtr1t E•ci911 Ti•, !-.rd Ille Pl"C"-of • - lw•. 15.,. clwt bllowl. Flder.ll f:•O. Tn 8d1U9!· rn1111 1llow1nce .. ill be ....o. on 1M ~of 1lw ,_C ... I Ol Ille origi"il 11'.:l t....;.nintt. Bobby Allison, who also Is tn the race for the Grand National title, came in second at Nashville, but his Dodge trailed by two laps. Neil Castles was third In a Dodge and Cecil Gordon foorth in a Ford. Swim Sta rs Vie in LA The 12th annual Los Angeles Invitational swim meet, a prelude to the 1970 AA U Na- tiCl'lals, is slated for the Los Anceles Memorial Swim Stadium Friday, through Sun· day. Many of the top swimmers who C('lfnpeted recently al San- ta Clara will be on hand for the Invitational. De b b i e Meyer, America's top woman swimmer who also was voted the No. I female athlete ol 1919. is e1pected to add to her trophy case. The 17-year okl Sacramento girl captured three gold medals in tile 1961 ,Olympics at Mexico City. John Kinsella. who smashed meet record' at Santa Clara In U>e 400-meter freestyle, will have ruiied competition from the likes of world record holder Hans Fassnacht and Ol)WlpJan MJrk Spitz. Spitz was a double winner at Slnt.a Clara, nabbing the , 100 and 200-meter butterfly. Klftn Moe, ,another 17-year- old aquatic champ, whn broke the world reeord in the wornsi's zoo.meter butterfly with a 2:20.6, can again be apedld to batUe L y n n Colella, ll, a Univenity 0( Wllhlnflon 1tudent, who had held the Amttlcan re<anl cl 2:11.1. Tho -le calla for he•ll to be run In tbt morning with finail udl afternoon ol the -day event. Colt 11 II -day. Costa Mesa headman Max Miller is not engagi~ in such activities as teaching and supervising during the hot weather montM. He has betn selling~anct _perywhere from San~to Redding for his father-in-law's firm. Hal Akins ct Laguna Beach has been working with his players on a weight program Members of the leisurely set thl.s summer include Ernie Johnson (Newp«l Harbor), Leon Wheeler (Marina ), Bob Woods (Mater De.I ) and Biii 91il (Edison). Johnson is relaxin1 around Vail and Woods, meanwhile, have been taking it easy playing golf. The latter is visiting with relatives In Oklahoma and Louisiana. Tom Eads (San Clemente). Dave Holland (Coron.a de! Mar), Phil Brown (Estancia) and Ken Moats (Huntington Beach) are the grid members partaking in a combinaUon of summer school teaching and weight program supervision. Then CINA returns to the waters Friday evening at 7 to duel De Ania's B team. CINA's ma,,t apparent weakness seems to be general lack ol experience at goalie, with the team othe'f'wise show- ing superior cond'l.tioning and excellent field play. ClNA 's B squad will com- p«e in the tourney at Cypress. bracketed with R i v e r s Id e Recreation, Arth A q u at I c , Phillips C and De A!l%a D. Major League Standings DEAN LEWI$ NATIONAL LEAGUE Eut Dlvtsloa w L Pittsburgh 55 45 New York 52 45 Chicago 50 13 Philadelphia 45 51 Montreal 42 57 St. Louis 41 $7 West Division Cincinnati 70 30 DodJ:ers 56 41 Atlanta ' 13 51 San Francisco 46 50 Houston 45 54 San Diego «I 61 Sulllllr'• Jt11u1t1 Cl11el11111tl U. $1. Lou11 I A111nt1 1-4', CllltWioo 1-l Pct. .550 .SM .510 .139 .424 .418 .'100 .577 .485 .4'79 .455 .396 Houllon t. Pltlltlurvll •. 10 11111!"91 OH""' J, Ntw Yori!; l SMI 0"9e 1'. Plllledell>l'll 1 S111 il'•l llC IKo 6. Molllr11I I TMt1"1 ••- GB ti> 4 8 12 1~ 13 12 ,l 21 1.; 22 "" 301' !>111 Fr1nc:IKO IP•rrv l+.t ) I! New Vo"c !Se• \>ti' I~•. nlt hl °"'"'" /Os!..., 11·11 '' Phll!Mttk>fll• ur,.,.., ... W J, 1119111 SI. tour. 18rli.t ,.JI It ClnclrwllH (Mt,,IH IS. I), ni.ht Ofll' o•me1 idled111ed. TWtellr'I 0- SIM'I 05"" 11 Molll~al, 111,tll $•11 l't••ldKG II Ntw YOf'I<, 11Jtlll 09!te1r1 a! P~ll14tfohl1, 11i.hl Holn!On " c~1c-s1. L0<1!1 1t "'-111"!•, nlt~I Plll1burtll 11 (lll(lrtn.11, nl•M AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L B1ltlmore 62 37 Detroit 55 43 New York 5t 13 Boston 50 47 Cleveland 47 52 Washington 45 53 West Dlvlsron Minnesota 60 33 Angels 58 41 Oakland 54 « Kansas City 36 63 Milwaukee 36 ., Chicago 35 67 Sullll1r'1 ll11111t1 B•lllmort 11. Ml11ne10!1 1 Bos!Ofl n , Mllw111-ee s O.ktu 1d •· New Von I PcL .626 .561 .526 .515 .475 .459 .645 .586 .55t .364 .364 .34.1 """'' 11, W1tM"9lorl 10, 11 111111.,.t C/llcl !IG •. Detroit O C1~ttlllld W, K111111 Cllr M TM1¥'t G-t GB 6\! JO 11 15 16 ~-t 5 8\1 27 27 291> e1nlmor• {Pl llMr , ..... I t M1llMJOll IBl1'1n~ •.JI, ni.h> N-YOl1r !SIG>ll-¥"1! t-tl 11 Al!Mh !Ml¥ $- 6), """' °"'' •• ,,,., Khed111td, ,.,,, .... ., .• o- llotlon 11 0.-llncl, llltf\I N-Von. 11 All"lt, 11i.ht W1111!"910fl 1! Mllw•u-ff, 11i.11t 1C111111 Cltv 11 Dfo!..,11, 11i.M MFnne.ot• 11 Clnet111d. 11l1M C/llcl.O 11 81UlfnClf'9, 11i.hl DEAN L ·EWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD ., COSTA MESA S.rvlce and P1rt1 for All Import.cl C1rs Modern Body Shop for All Can 646-9303 Orange County's largest and Most Modern Toyota and Volvo Dealer AN Nlm SAlY SALi • SP ECIAL 1970 TOYOTA \YAGON ~~: $1817 All OtW M..,_ I• S..U M•rti lt-Hll•• Plcl•p- lAH Cnr""'-C- VOLVO 1970 DEMO $2699 142 2 Jr., r1tl i1, h•1l•r, 4•tP•ff-IS1r. ••1•01 !:;;~~ LWI :IO• --$1595 ~ -PENNEY 2 9 8 8 ••r4•• ... e Ch•vrol•t• CUSTOM BRAKE OVIRHAUL 3 DATS ONLTI MON., TUii., WED. fOAfMOST 'AOTfCTION GUAJIAHTEE CMART MEl'IE'S MOW YOUR GUARANTEE WOftKS: E11liN ........ , .. ptoood , •, • • •,,.,, 2°' _ ... 100'!'1llow..-p1riod ., ••·••••••·· 1.e-v. 50% ........ --l'l"od ••••••••••••• 7-ll_.,. 2S"Mlow...u ptfiad , , , , ••••• , • , 1,·1' -ltll T"ld Lit• l'rolftlion, Wel>llild 11110-y FotRMOll '"' ut1 If KT ion ina11;11otl. They llign•I whlll yQ\lf lite lhould bl <~. II Volll' lire_, out fttta111 lo• inco•N(I .r;g.nn.n1l -.. m .,.k• - •llow...ai blH'd 0 11 1lle originlil Pl>fch-Jlflct , n· dud1.., ~hctl>le Fllder;tl E•ciot T1•, towa•d the llUl'tn.•ol I -1if1. We win •I'°"' 1/JdUl'•rqllw llfll hill or 114 during Ille lftOl'd hell of"" ""Id -'°'of fUl'"'let. ffld"1!1 E •cilt TI• ldjUlttnenl 1 Uo .. 1nc. will bl ....ie on thl IMllil of 1he '*"*" ol '"'°';gi111I ,,.Id remti<1inQ, Th" ""''""' is l'IOI 1raml~le. h ii only tor pri¥111 ~ CIO'S Of ,....,,,... ttl'lioll ....... SERVICE We replace broke with new Forel'l'I01t• linings, "" oll aeob, new broke spri"g1, rebuild all wh•el cyli"de". COMPLITI fORIMOST• PREMIUM lllAKE SERVICE WITH 40,000 MILi GUARANTEE COMPLETE fOREMOS P DISC IRAKE OVERHAUL SPECIAL °"'complete broke Oftrhavl I".,..,., detoil, Including in1t0Uatlon af neW fore· mait• Premium lining1. Top quality materials and ••p9ff ""°'~ ship o ... the unbeotoble comblMrtiOft an Mit•f ~merlcon c•rt ..... vw. 47.88 our dl1e broke servie•. 79.88 AVAILAILI AT ANTONI Of THESE PENN fT AUTO CE NTIRS IUENA 'Alie' CANOGA ,ARK CAllSIAD CHULA VISTA I DOWNEY FUllEllTON HUNTINGTON IEACH MONTCLAlll NEWPORT IEACH1 ORANGE "THE Cf'TY"" VENTUllA 10rang•thorpe ot Valley Vit'# (C~OSED SUNDAY) SHOI' SUNDAY, TOO, 12 .. .s l'.M.I I Smith Credits WillUims, Do err for ln:iprov-em~nt .. I've bene!itted from good teaching by Ted Willams and Bobby Doerr .while l was In the minor leagues and Playing with Vaz (Carl Yastnemski) has also helped a lot," Reggie Stnith. the Oeet-footed center field· er fOI' the Bostoo Red Sox made this analysht of his hitting recently. WashlngiGn'1 Robert F. Kennedy Stldlunt bas W be the oldest new park In elCbf.r le1pe. U iJ already tltop worn and bat been in ulskltCe less &be It ytar1. .. We (Carl) have quite a bit in common. We both hold lhe bat higll and we both bat One ddllg -we not.iced. In the nattonts capt. tol. Tbe crowd ttmalm t:e the bitter end of every game reg8rdleP. et Ute seort. 'fttey come to see baseball and want to see all of dte acttoa. lelt-banded." . . Reggie oI course is a swJlCh hitter. Yankee Stadium brings about a fetllllr of revet;"tOCe for the game. Rettred nam.bert of Yan.kte Immortals are displayed OD the sLadJum duh walls and tnctude Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle. He teei.s he had the biggest break in hit HOWARD HANDY ID addition, there are monuments on 1be playing field in center honoring Gehrig, PIJil- ler Jluggbls and Ruth . Wall plaques •re al10 pl~d on the center field wall boaorfng DiMaggio. Mantle, Edward C. 8an9'f, Col, Jacob Ruppert and Pope Paul VI. MOW.a.AD MANDY career when he was drafted by the Red Sox in 1963 after signing with the Minnesota Boston bas the lniimacy of tbe old time baU park, a close feellng ud nolJe echoes tbtougboqt the stands coupled with the smell of bot dogs and peanuts. They also have Ute belt organist in either league and the music resoundl off the center field spe.aken ill old· Ume vaudeville theater eharm. Twins. · The former Centennial High shortstop. Pitcher doesn't think about the imposing waH In leJt field at Fenway Pii'k • • • "I can't think about hitting to left. I have Southland youngsters could take a tip from their counterparts in Yankee Stadium Sun- day. to concetrate in terms of base hits. . "I think the Red Sox have a chance at win· ning the Eastern Division ~t we have . to eliminate some of the stupid base ruruung mi!takes we have been making. • • • The Aagels vtaited dlret parks oa tbt re- cent road trip lg probably the most pleasant weather ever encouatered in the montll of J Illy on Ute t:ast coast. Humidity was low in aU three clUes and In Fenway Park, a genUe breeze was blow· Ing. Some 29,000 bats were distributed but no pounding of the wood on floors or seats was noticeable. Instead, the youngsters hand led the bats with an almost reverent attitude, not wanting to tarnish a bit of the varnish or to nick them in any manner. • • • Tom Egan's comment on Clyde Wright's pitching: "He's the kind Of pitcher that gives you a soft l}for..f and you come back to the dugout talkine to yourself." Saddlebaek 3·12·1 New Ne t Gauchos, Pirate s ' Drop Metro Tilts FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (AP) -In the most revoluUonary move in its ~year history, the U.S. Lawn Tennis Associa- tion will adopt a sudden-death scoring system in its Open Championabip · at th~ West Side Tennis Club Sept. l-13. Oranae Coast area nines went O • a in Metropolitan League baseball action Sun· day. 'lbe Cost.a Mesa Pirates, plo:rlng under tbe banner. ol Ward's Realty and featlring most of next season's Orange Coest College diamond stars. dl'Wd a M verdict to the Anaheim Hustlers on th~ losers' diamond. Saddleback, m e a n w h i I e lowered its season record to 3-U.l by dropping both ends ol a doubleheader. In the first half of the twin bill, Doug Fritz's Saddleback crew was blanked, 8-0, by the La Fonda Juniors. The Garden Grove Jets took the nightcap from Saddleback by a 4-tl count. Both contests were played at Santa Ana Memorial Park. . The Costa Mesa Pirates po.sted a brief, 2-1 edge after an tnnlni, but watched ADlheim tack up three lallies in the Cop of the second and llO home Ufltoodled. Pirate starter and loser Steve Schoettler, the former Newport Hartor High ace, was not u~ to his usual stuJf. allowing nine nms and seven hits going the route. Bob Leavy and Don Snyder banged out two hits each to lead coach Barry Wallace'S Pirate nine offenslvely. Costa Mesa is now 5-7-4 in Deep Sea Fi.sh Report M<!tro play. The two Orange Coast area foes -Costa Mesa and Sad· dleback -meet in a head-to. head clash SUnday night (7) at Shaffer Park in Orange. The Metropolitan League season will ~ topped oU Sun· day, Aug. 16 at Anaheim Stadium when the loop's team dlampions will take on a group ol all-stars serected from the rosters of the other circuit squads. COSTA MESA l"t•ATIS "' .. • • ... Piii, rf • ' ' ' tune, cl ' ' • • C!.rll, 2b • • ' ' "-''·lb ' ' ' • LHVV. lS ' • ' ' McNMly, !f • • • Snvotr, C· 1 b • ' ' • Crippen, lb ' • • • Motl•. c ' • • • Sctioeftll'I', p ' • • • Tottl1 " • ' • Sew. Ill' 11111111 .. An11'"I"' Hut;Off'J llCI 002 "~' 1 1 CMll M-l"lralts :ioa 001 001-4 1 ' Vallely Upset In Volley ball Tournament Willlam F. Talbert, the tournament dire c tor, an· nounced t b e ,br.eakthrough Saturday. It. marks years of effort on tbe part of some pcogressives to get rid ol. the involved and often dull scoring system in the game. 'nle U.S. open is the first of the major champiooshill" to adopt the new system . Earlier, it had been granted permission from the lntema· tional Lawn Tennis Feder&· tion. Under the new system, when the score of a set reaches 6-6, the set goes into "sudden death," with the playing of five addiUooal points. The player winning five or these points takes the set. To begin the tie-break se- quence, player A serves two points and then player B serves two points, one each side of the court. Then they change ends. Player A serves two points and player B then Defending champions John sel"\les tllree. The player win- Vallely and Ron Von Hagen ning five points takes the were upset Sunday in the first set 7-6. annual Dean H a r w 0 0 d Player A is permitted the Memorial VoUeyball Touma. first service in the egsuing ment at Corona del Mar State set, enabling him to have the extra service in case of Beach. another suddei death situa- The tourney has been known Uon. If there are four deuced as the Corona del Mar touma· sets, the racket is tossed to ment for the past 18 years. determine who gets the extra But the rea!nt passing of service in the fifth set. volleyball notable De an For years. scoring has Harwood prompted backers of followed the ancient fonnula the competition to rename the which made it necessary that tourney in his honor and to a pla yer be two points ahead initiate a ·perpetual trophy in every game and in every bearing hJs name. set. This resulted olten in pr1r This year's winners or the longed matclles that lasted for i*rpetuaJ trophy are the com. hours and even days. 00 of Ron Lang· (Santa James Van Alen d Newport, Monica) and Henry Bergman R.t .• 1ounder of the VASSS (Santa Barbara). scoring system, has been one The pair defeated Bob Clem of the most · militant cam- (San Diego) and Gene paigners for simplified scor· Pflueger (Santa Monica) in ing. the finals, 11-', a-11 and 11-4. AJastair B. Manin, presi- • The-Vallely· Von Hagen duo dent of the USL 'I' A, called sewed for tbird place ahead the move "a major step of Ku.rt Kilgour ('Manhattan forward for the game of ten-nis." Beach) and iButch May (Santa 'lilrimnTT:;:;rrriil;;;;;-ll Monica). t I 1 Attendance for S u n d a y afternoon's winners' bracket :wu estimated at 750. ""· 642-5250 141 L 1M If. COlfA mA ~-,,......, ,_ ....... ...,. ........ v .. IMAGINE HOW YOU WANT TO FEEL AT IMPACT Imagination plays a great role in the game of the successful golfer. Many, If not.most great players have developed the ability to vlsu1lil• th• fli&ht pattern of an intended shot. They subsequently produce a shot of a similar trajectory. This really isn't as compli· cated as it may appear. Simply imagine thetypeofshotyouw1sh to hit ••• high. loW, draw, fade, whatever. Then, as you address the ball, try to create in your hands and legs the feeling)'ou'll want at impact. Continue to imagine this de-- sired feeling as you swing. Sur· prisi ngly your mind will direct your body to perfor.m th~moves . that are needed for your return· ing to the impact position men- tally "requested." & 0 111' NAl'L. Mo-..,... Im LOW SCORES! HIGH POWER! G.t,pt.ntyoflfltfin1 htlpln Arnold Palml'f's tiookl•t, "T•• snots and F'aliway Woods,'" wrltt.n el-ciu5ivel~ tor readers of this column. A copy IS yours for 20• and a stamped, self-addresffd envelopt sent to ArftOld ,..m.,., c/O lhis new5p1per. Musial, Slaughter, Irvin To Play in Big A Tilt • ----. ----------· -----------------·-..... r. • MondaY, Ju~ 27, 1970 DllLY PIL01 !3 ! FV Po sts Forfeit Victory; • Finishes With 16-8 Mark With thet e1cep&ion of one r u n d 1 men t at r and as· oil Garden Grove In the flvt- forfelt win, Qrange Coa»t area • gresaiveness put us when we run filth. American Legion b a 1 e b a 11 · finally ended up." Hedrick wu the recipient conuncents spent a rather Fountain Vallty, which won of the Joa. IOW' SuMay. " 13 of Its last 15 gamea, enters El Model)a did not show the A n 1 be Im tournament San Clemente was bitten by . up !or Ju schedul.ed clash wilh Salurday 111 noon acainll Ille shulout bui agalnat UU. , Fowita.in Valley so the latter powerful Los Alamltoe. 1'he conteDder Santa Ana. But the outfit wrapped up its regular winner of tbe tourney will southernmost team bi the Nauonal . League campaign eventually go to Hawaii for county American Legion setup with a 7.0 forfeit decision. further com.petition. had plenty of chances lo make The Harbor Dod1ers were Despite a four-man pitching dumped to the tune or 5-1 parade which took to the hay. by the visiting Garden Grove mound for coach Lee Fisher's The kllen stranded a wbop- nine in a National loop tilt Dodgen, the Harborltes were ping total of lf baaerunners at· Colt.a Mesa Park. unable to muster a sultable and had numerous rallies ' wAmericao League action raUy· against the Invaders snulled out by the inability i..w Santa Ana blanking San from Garden Grove. Ste LEGION Pap U Clemente, 4-0, at Santa Ana The winners piled all Uieirlp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;""I Memorial Park and L o s runs together in the top ol Allmitos bushwhacking t h e the fifth while the: Dodgers Harbor Angels, 13-1, in a one· were able to score once in acJed affair on the winners' the bottom of the eighth diamond . frame . With the forfeit win over Orange Coast College dia· El Modena, FourUin Valley mond ace Blll Powell got finilittd its regular National aboard on a double and Ltque season with a 11-8 scooted home when his OCC thin! place record behind teamJllllte Bob Leavy IOCked Aifabeim Pearson and . arun-proclicingsingle. Anaheim Ruede. A Dodger pitching• quartet Coach Gene Marinacci of of Steve Hedrick, M i k e the Fountain Valley club McMinn, Denny Bean and Jim noted, "We dJdn't have much Watson held the winners to talent or organization when six hits and combined for 10 we first took the team over strikeouts and a single walk. this season. But working on But it was not enough to cool C:OMPLIT! TUNE· UP! ~ •AFECO IN•UFIANC• e HOME e AUTO e BOAT e LIFE Bob Paley and Associates INSURANCE Phone 642-6500 474 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA THE SILVERTOWN BELTED BFG's 1970 NEW CAR TIRE *9111-M._... .. ....... ... f"""' , .... -$lJ1 .. .. -, ....... ~-·-.. .. t..clM T•• """ .. ~. 878·14 (6.45-14) $2.07 $30.85 ... C78·14 (6.95-14) 2.15 3l.15 .. E7 .. 14 (7.l.5-14) 2.35 J4,45 " f78·14 .. JS (7.75•14•15) 2.55·2.61 36.45 .. G7S.14 & 15 (B.25-14 & 15) 2.67·2.77 39.95 .. H7S.14 &. 15 (9-55·14 • 15) 2.93·2.98 ...... " J78-IS (US·l5) 3.08 49.70 .. t7 .. IS (t.15·15) 3.22 51.60 .. l'rtt. .... ........ Wllilllllllll,..,.llf ltir-. FIBERGLASS BELTS PLUS POLYESTER CORD BODY make this t ire strong e r~ safer end longer wearing th11n ordinary tires. BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE BRAKE R·ELIN WHEEL $250 40,000 MILE GUARANTEE$249s .~::T • Expm W-lp • 9 1111ffty ,-0 '"1 Roploc'"'eftt ;arts • Spodol Low Ratn ~ I ••. QUAllANTll ti• .. lh)' 111'...i 11111"11 W.U119111 M ~ Clf -... t ... lM f9f _~r::'.'l' ............. 111 -..«r11111t~l9f.......,. eat M1YkL lllouN llt 11111111 ftM.,..., ............. ,._. '::'! bt rt11laclll It • '!:f:. 1't 11Pt IWnt ... Oll/J' • .... ..wlCti '*"' ,_ IMYI ....... ..... .. ftll1t or ttM ..... «lllMI 9"*t. ALIGNMENT Any Cor RECOULAR VALU E UP TO 12.so C:ALL FOR APPOINTMENT BFGoodrirh Dlll.V I'll.OT MOftd11, .M1 27, 1970 \ 60 Vie lor Finals Berth Baseball's In Kona Elims Tourney Top Te11 .... -tlf ., ..... AMllllCAM LIAOUI ll'a cul·lhroal time In the West Coast Match Gam@!I Elim• bowling tourney at Costa Meu.'s Kona Lanes. Tonight 60 bowlen who survived the first cut two weeks ago (from an original field of 120) will attempt to bowl their way into the finab:. The top 11 wUJ make it. 'Ibo8e leading IS will com- pete in the flnab: for four consecuUve weekl -with the field again reduced to the top four. The championship round is set for Aug. 31. Two atta bowlers 1 r e among the top 16 j-0ln1 Into tonight'• round -aod another pair are within otrik1ng dJslan. ce. Costa M...., Ni<I< SUgallo ls in seventh tpOt wlth S,361 total pins, 230 behind Doug Johnson of Loog Beach, the Elinu leader. Ano.ther Mep resident, Lar- ry Schoenfelder, b five pins behind Stlgailo in ninth posi- tion. Clyde Lacher or Dana Point (18th) and Bob Probert ol Comet Semipro Nine Nips W estminster,8-4. Campbell's double. Campbell tallied on a fielder'• Choice by Lee Ev ans alter rtealing third. · ~ Hunliqton Beach (IOlh) abo hope to make the final1. Lacher b •M plna oot el !Ith place whUe Probert is 27 blct. Joluloon, who has held U.. lead for seven weeks, aaw hil lead dwindle cooslderably last week. Johnson had a com- rortable .126-pin advantage of DOil Nordstrom (Anaheim) and J35 over Walt Block (Carson) going Into last Mon- day night's play. But when the firing was P•r• ci.. • 4• ll H Pd F, 11..,,_ a.ti 14 )U .ff 102 .JU A. JohntM Cal " JK » 1211 .l24 V1t!nHMkl a ... tJ SQ 1' 111 .JU AH;tltll Cltl ts i11 U 121 .324 011\'e M111 ,. ,.. » 11_t m Ht1"r. Mii " m n in .ltl J . Powell lei ,, M6 J1 Ill .111 Kllll'bnw Mll'I tf 311 '2 lOI .l14 ... _ C:ll • SJO .. lit •• C11tr N'f N 3tf .. 114 .JDt -·-KllltOfew, ,,..,_,,, '91 F. Howenl, W1Ml .. -. Jt1 Y11lfltl'llllllo a.fin, 211 J. ,_II, aa"llflMI· HI ...,..r, MllWtukH, ti. l:UM e1tfW !It J. P.w.11. ltlllllfort, 16; ICIUllH'ew, MlnNIOll, Id: f . HC11r1rt, '#111!lf1110rl, 1'1 011¥1, Ml...-11, 101 w. HOttOn. DtlroU. ff. over, Block, wjth a four-game .,11,111111 set of 844, jumped to 1econd , o.c11i- place, just 14 pin! behind McDowell, C:l1Y1111111. 1M, .~; C•ln, John5on. Nordstrom picked up D11ro11, N, .750; 1t. H111, ••rllrllon· I d d 1-l. .n11 P11!Mr, Sllflr'llOl"I, 1'"4. 22 pins on the ea er &'l ,"IQO; c11eu1r, s1111rnor1, 1w. JM. is now 104 back. 11Hd on 111 •t N11. NATIONAL LIAeUI Bowling begins at 9:15. Pi.ter Cid 0 Al ll N ,~ Tot 10: ~~A~I ""' :t tjt ~~ ltt :IU ,..._ ........ Cltf PIM Ptttl Cln ft W 11 lts .~1 1. Dou. Jifwltoll. L-lffdl ..,,. HIO'.m•n Clll .. 305 "' 1m :lll ' W '' ."'. • ·-<"' Ge11on SO " 11f U "' . I , .......... ' Grebrktwli. LA '2 )] .. 101 .:au 3. Oon NIN'dll,..,,.., Anelltlm '·"' Oltll $f' 16 2'2 .H N .ltt 4. J1• ltoblfll(lfl, S1nl1 SUMM i.q(I Cl!Mdl All tS Ml SI \1( ..l20 f, GtrYMldl-. 5111 hrnlrdlno ,,Jtt I . Wlllll'ml Chi H :l'2 If 125 .ltJ '· P1rrlll Hlnllll, L.,. Antlllll i.JN R-Cln ti Jll 10 12' .llf 1. Nick Stltllll. Cclll1 Mill •.W ~ a1 .. I. Ton... Grlnc:.rl, Olll11tl9 4..1'1 fllndl, ClntlMl!I, ti/ ... rtl, Cl ... '· L•rrv Scftol!lf ........ c.,...... •.Ml chwolt, •JO ; ..... WllUllTI.. fllk•""· 10. Frid lotrnel, T111lln , •.HI 2fl .R. Alltn. $1. Loul1, 21; H. Al"'"" Ollllf1: 11. Clfcll Llcller fOIM Al enf1, Jil. Pol111). 6,tt7; 211. kt •roblrt fHll!lt· •llKll. c~r:..:r."'=i 1",,,11, cln,. l""ton flff.clll, i.JM; ». Jtrl'Y .,..,. d11111!1, t4; I . Wlflllfl'I. Ulketo. Happy ·Golf Tourney Winners The two Orange C.OS.St area semipro baseball represen- tatives in the Southern California 'Baseball Al9ocia- tion met Sunday at Costa Mesa's TeWinkle Park with \be Costa Mesa Comets aveng- ing an earlier lw to Westminster by drubbing the Riek Gnagl got the win for Costa Mesa with late inning relief help from sidearm fireballer Mike Pherrin. latter group, M . WISTMINSTlll (0 t\111 fWntmJMltrl, i.JJD; lJ. '''° '7( Dlll1( Sen Fr1"'11C11, 0; II.. lllccltu IWt1lmlll111r), ,,Ut1 4 Kiii Allfl\. 51. oul1, II. OllMdlfl {F1111nt1l11 V1!11Yl, 6,1111 45. Pikfll11t Frid Oolrt'*'V CC1111t M ... ), ,,1071 t OldMMI Charles Jenkins (left) arid James Newquist are con- gratulated by Mrs. Stev"'8 Manning after winning the Stevens Manning lovitalional gol1 tournament recenUy at El Niguel Country Club. The pair, both from El Niguel, competed in the third &Mual event against 200 other golfers from clubs all over Cali· fornia. ~ /• .. ' Manager John Saint's Elder," s o Comets banged out onJu four MMney, 2'11 ,' ,' I H1-,lt hits, but made a golden op-Arfllll11, 11t 1 o portunitv out of six walks and °"llU"' d·• 1, •, J •• -..... jib four hit baUmen put on base c1.11111, • s o by Westminster pitching. ~=::;~· e ; : 11 Ail '4. Old! lr11Kh 1w111mtn1lt r), ,,1121 Jim,_, Clnc:lnn•ll.1. l.+-J, .t7i; Neill, 1 0 52. lud 111111 CHunUntlClll ltKllJ, 6.Gn1 ~1"'1E•~~J(t ·~:.e~;:1: ~!£~~ ' 0 li~·-· •""••"'•'•"'•'~'~•"•"'•u•'·•'•"•"·••"•····· •'•~.·-.. ··'•'•"'•········iiii••1 . ' ' ' : : DELTA SUPER QUALITY ! : Tires Cost Less Alamitos LEGION BOX SCORES .• I Turner w· The winners sewed things Tot.II COSTA MIUlt/'J (II' m s up with four runs in the first tit r ~ r9I MO.SCOW (AP) -Sprinter inning and three in the second. ~~~::~,'! : .: : : • • Cofl'lpl1t1 Li111 of Fib1rtl•1t l1lt1d Tir1t A•1i11ble Ptk• St.rt tit SZl .95 pl• P.l .T. M~ shared mound chores Willie Turner of the United LitUe Tim Farrell led off o.Hoo11, 11t 2 2 ,o o fl>{ ~ Jim Hagey'• Angels States · woo the 100.meter the Costa Mesa first by get-':.,'::::· ~ ! ! ~ : to score with runners on Fibertl•u Wid1 O•th -Suptr Prell'lium - RMi1 I -Sporb -S1nd luttY. - I ell Siu1 Tr11ck Tit•• ' Racing· Entries board. .. Typical ol the San Clemente woes was the third inning, when the squad had the ~ Joaded with no one out and with QuiRll'---'rectiplin" event in 10.2 seconds, hiS best ting hit by a pitc:h and ad· •Nd, "' 2 10 •, ,' _., -~ t•-D C1mP!ltlt, c ' ,for· the loss. time ever, at an informal U.S.· vanced twice on wa"" to an Ev .... , d ~ ' ' 1 BE Q'S DELTA TIRES 1 The American ·Legion all-Soviet track meet Sunday in DeHoog and Doog Wilaon. ~~.::,.."!~~· 11 ! : : : LM • ....,,._ o""'5 fw Tu.d9r, hlr 11, lfJI -Ultl *"· c ......... tMt. l'lrst ,., ,,,, ··"'· """"' ~ • u• a ,.. -. •net. .... ,_ Pl•ST ltACa. Ull V.rdt. Malckn t vur Didi. Cl•lmf,,., l"urN l ll'GO. c1e1m1 ... ..,kt UIOO. Tl111' l"i. ll!Tlltft) Roctry L-1car-.t Fe ...... Clt'I' {P-1 Dell'1 LM t .. (w.111) Tr\lly A Dtlllt (Aci.lrl T .... l1t1 (Welto11) POClll Pr~ !P-r) Glwernllett .._ (H•ttl Weld! Cllrt Gt (Llpf!1m! Trtllt'I ....,._ {Wlllon "*' ........ T-Grl't IP.,.,...,.l Pol'1 8•r kel' CStrllml w ..... 10._ ... 1 "' ,. ,. •• '" •• •• '" '" ,. "' "' •• SICOHO aACI. • yel'd1. 3 YHr ~ end ... Cl1lm""'· l"llrH 11600, ci.1m1.,. _.-Q Slflll. Gel•w•l' Jahn (Sir-.) "' failed toScore. The San Clemente nint end- ed its American L e a I u e schedule. with a 10-11 record and saw all-round star Glen Tsuma, the Cre.1tvlew League's Most Va I u a b I e Player at Siii Cl~ High last spring, put a temPoWY stop to his career. The gu.tty Tauma broke an ankle sliding into second base in the sizth inning, thus jeopardfz:ing his chances or making the USC freshman baseball team nezt spring. Robin Reschan bad the only exVa base blow for the losen with a finh I~ two.bagger. star game, pitting the Na-Mosrow. Fam.II ocored th• first o .. ~." ' • • • 141 E. '17th St .• Costa Mesa. 645-2010 tiooal League's top players Iris Davis ol Long -Bead\ Mesa run on a pwed ball 51;~c;:!· ct ~ : : : against the belt from the won the women's l~meter and the latter-pair followed lnr• 11Y llWll11t11 l1nk>.tn1rictr4 I0;1111te ..... lat leyl Mitf•r Q ert• A ri -:r.-·· w .. 1,,.11111... 001011--..1 1 JClll WD1 lftli. SANTA ANA-H14904 me can circuit, iJ-.scbeduled , ~d~a~sh~~in~ll~.3~5e<Oll~~ds~.--_ _;hi~·~m~~·=croo~s~~·~·-~R~u~s~s:._~<N~·~·~-~---"'~~·"!,!!"'~_.~,~'~!!'!!!'!!!'!""'!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!!!!!I!!!'!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!'!!!'!!!!!~ for Wednesday nllJit (7 ol0) I· « Anaheim's La Palma Park. HAltaotl ANOILS CO McK!ntev,· •• f'i.kW, Jb !( ....... ,, #....,..,,Cl .. ,..,..,, ., khh'oO\. :lb SamltlOtl. It Arthur. If ou1-..,,. Mltllnet. p Ttot1l1 fll r II .rlll ·~ .f I '1 I ' • 1 •,. • 4 ' • • • l • ' 41 • • • ' I I • I 4 I. 1 • 11 J I I 0 I I I 0 1 D I 0 ).c 1 J I Sctr9 "' IMll!ttl • Hll'bor A""'lil OOll llt 0011 -t s l l• Altmllm SIJ 000 JI• -U 11 1 SAM CLIMIMTI {II ... ' • • • • . "' , . • • "' Lefty Ruben P .1 r a m o "' Ton M•n tP1"l Hvl Hetllt !P...-1 T...,.,.,Jb< S.rtntm.11,. Sr.Iner, 211 • It. llfldl911, II """'· :it<f • • ' . • • ' . ' . • • • • ' . , . Mr. A""' Wlnp (Wll-) L"" o.tldl' .... {H1rt) ll•l'Wl'Wfl• fAtoodKal Tr1t>le Gh'9otr {Dr't't.r) Unc'9 El!Nr fWttlll llOl'llll!ltl Solo (AdelrJ S..S... W1lct1 IC1rt1ouJ 111 ablorbed the Joa, chucking T. lllldoell, rl G. &lllft. rf Kltr11111. 111 Mort .. tf Mlklool, c Ooutl••· ti Nl1l1111. If P1r111'111. I • • ::; eight innings UMil b eing n., rel.iewd by Ron Allen in the 111 last stanza. Paramo had eim.t 111 5" ' . ' . ' . ' . • • ' . • • • • • • HI :Whiffs, • • AIM Ill .... Pon 8M'9 !Li.Mnll Full ol' a.... t,..._l SWiii Tl'lplM IC.l'llOUI G\oo' a. IW11Sionl THlltO l:Atl. 350 v1r1". veoor old•. Puru llJ'Dll. ltll'l'll S.Vr IMll~UI Trvlr Pini!: IW•lloOl'I) Four 111d Movin !Petn«l DrlW' Pier tSmlthl Fl"' Win (Wlbonl TC1klfl'1 Chlc-fLlpheml 111r aau~ ICrolbYI o GOllh IC:..ckul air N-Jelmv 1w11111 MoOl'I a urnl !Nle!rl AIM llltl ... l old lrl1ll I 11,.11 "' "' "' •• Mlldtn J ,. "' "' "' '" •• ,. "' "' "' •• ,.OUllTM ltACl. 11'11 v1r1h . 1 YM• elOI 111d 111. Clllmlnt. Purtf S21Dll. Cl11!nl"" Ptkt dOO. Toit E•tle lCl"OltrYl ., ... Und (Hartl Tllnottte am 11t1nl1l Mr. AcHqu1l1 !Drwerl Mr. Per-Illy (5mltlll l •Hll Acct111nt ILll'll•m) Unct. Pttll" (lanli:I) Genii's 11-t (Str11r11I &Ill IHtH~lt 81Uer Tllln CW•llOl'I) T"-WOP (CJ'OlbYI Fo....-1rd f11tt1rY !Llpl\l'ml '" "' "' "' '" "' "' '" "' "' "' 'l'TM ltACI. CID f1rd1. J ¥Mr olds. Cl1lmlM. P11r"$9 111'!0. C11lmlftl ~kl Los Alamitos pounded out a doaen bits in sut;xtuing the Angela, who collected only five safeties. The Angels (10-10) picked up their lone run in the fifth when Tom SamP90n tripled and scored •on Glen McKinley's base hit . Kevin Morrow had a fourth- inning triple lor the Angels. Dan Quisenberry and Andy Women's Loop For Softball • • • • • • II. All"'-• Toll ls • • '-"! .... _ • • ' ' Sin Cl-111 OOl IOO llCICI -I S J Jiii!•..,.. 20I 100 ,,. -' 10 1 H&lllOll 00001!1:1 1111 Mlrtloo, ( ,_11,Jl:I LM¥V, tf .. ... "''·lb llont<lorl, 1b lell(IOrt. lb a11ncllenf, d H1klfl'>Mn, cl Fish, If Hertootrt, If a1tt11, rt flow111, rl a ..... • Wt'-. I Tol1!1 •• r ti rltl ' 1 J • J 1 I 0 $ 1 1 0 s 1 J 1 1 I o o . ' ' ' ' ' • • • ' ' ' ' . . ' . . ' . . ' ' ' ' . . )' 11 11 ' , • • • • • ' • ' kit•" 1111111111 l!.I DwldO 010 '10 000 - l 1 S H1rbot °""'"' 000 QI 2Jx -11 U 4 The Cmta Mesa Recreation MA1tso11: nono: .. 111 :n . ,. ' . ' . , . Department is .spomoring a ~:::,~ 111 : : women's softball league begin-"-It, 11 ~ 1 ning Sept. I at TeWinkle Park. ~:~;, ~ ~ : All teams ·and individuals s11nc111r<1. " ' o interested in the circuit are ::!"',rt : : requested to cootact Deanna v111tn, ft ' o ' , ' . • • , ~ ... Tlnr Toudl fK1n!1) Liii.-!LCll'l9011•l J111111le 8"" CW11t0fl) Lort'tl1 i..11t ltft111hl Miu Cul• Snltl (Aci.lrl 51.-.tcto P1Hotr IC1'9•b'f1 Tero Cou"t tLl:pharri) l>Kk.lllOl'I fDrev1rl J.l1Nn• air fWlliOfll Al'fl'Hllllll (Pfl'MI') Martin (834-5391). w.~. • 1 • llJ H«lr;ldl, I 1 I 111 An organitational meeting ~. rt , • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' • • ~;~ will be set up with those who Mr.":·• ' ,~ 1 111 respond. Deadline for entry 01,_ 0 ,!.wt"' '== •-•,, :::, ·i··-Se_pl_. ii2ii. ___ , ______ ... ___ .............................. -_ •• ·.·1 .. , .. l!lltllllt Se• v .. fWrlt/11) • llack •-lt1nkll•I Podl1I ltodl•I (IC1nl1l MIH Dllmond l!ua ICr~l 111! I '" "' "' ". "' "' SllCTH ltACI", 1511 y1rd1. J •tJr ek11 bf"ld Ill Cllltorfli., .AlklwtfK .. , PurH SltoO. Udlr ,,, l ld fl.}flfllm) 117 1¥V 11$ tJlrl\IU) !U TNI K•lll !Smllll) 117 M1le1llC MODll fP_r, 1'° Altn'lllOI Su1l1 IClrdo••) 1u °"''"' ,,,...., ,........ 117 i Mlu LIHll flld (APOdl'<ll lll Tirn' TICk IWtlMfl) UO • \ SIValffM llACI!. llf VII'••· l YMr oldl elld 111. Cl•Htned e ll-..,Ct1. Pun• sia. Dtlld"J "' om fH1t11 .., ..... 111w1i-1 ...,, l1r €IOd !Cent1N1I l"l\t Allln IP~I lt'UC'9'• llllla ttm!Tt11 Ole«"' Olli '""" (Llptittnl L11111111fti1• """ fk.11111) P.ttlb9~ (Mortl1111) •U•hl'1 Gold A~ tP111I "' •• "' "' "' "' "' '" '" '" "' "' "' '" "' "' ... •• ,. "' "' '" "' "' "' "' '" '" "' "' Leaving town on business and your wife needs the e1r?. Where d~ that leave you?.' . Close to home with your Ford Rent~ar dealer, that's where! Rent a new Ford,.Mustang, or Torino for a day, week or month. low rates ••• Insurance lnclllded,• FORD RENT·A:.CAR SYSTEM THEODORE ROBINS FORD 1060.._.. ..... c..... .... c.llf. 641 .. 11 WI LS ON FORD 11111 IMcll lml. H•"91•Hlw'-Cenf. .. , ... ,, 111·--------------------1 '·' ' ' r ... , ........... _,,..,.,.. , ....................... fC9 '""1n•·--··O .. i ....... -=~~ .. -~nO•>•>•<•<·Y'l4"'0"0'"0"&~----"·'""-dW"0"00$ .. 8"0•0~, ~·i~G~i>Y~•-•""7'1 •1°*<"+W+r"•-· i WO 4 OC ; fF#& D b F+ DC D hSi FOQ M ............. -~...,~--~~--~------............. '" Monday, July 27, 1970 DAILY PILOT j25 :p~ey Newton Still Controling Panthers Despite Jail SAN LUlS OBISPO. (AP) 0 l'm not very opt.hnistlc.'' -From behind the it.root Newton aald in an 1.nttrvlew. fences and steel ban of a "I have very little faith ln atJte prison, Huey P. Newton the lltate macblne. t don't ex· guides the tllllilanl Bliek peel justice. I'm .just being Panther party toward what •.-eallslic. he envisian1 as a reveluUon "But I am optlmlstic about within bis lifeUme. winning the flnal b a t t I e "I decide the filll;l j>ollcy · becaUJe the people always on everything in t.he party,'' win." • s a I d Newton, Panther co-M the Panthers' chief founder and mWster o r theoreUcian, Newton s a i d defense. "I COlf\municate with revolution has constantly oc- ~ party Uuvu&A vi.sits by cupied his mind at the my familY." California Men's Colony, a The s m 111 n g, soft-spoken sprawling medium security Newton, 28, has spent the past prboo at the foot of coastal i\2 years In prison ft>r killing hills near here. an Oak.land pollceman. He was FBI Director J. Edgar sentenced to 2 to 15 years Hoover .recently called the for the Oet. 28, 1967, shooting Black Panthers the .nation's of officer John Frey. most dangerous organization On May 21 the California and accused it of fomenting District Court ol Appeal tel'l'Of'ism in cities and on ordered a new trial on ground campuses. that the Superior C.OUrt omit· Newton commented: "The ted some required ln.!trudions most dangerowi: groups to the to the jury and made other people ol the world are the prejudicial errors. Pentagon, including the CIA, the U.S. military, the local ' makes me look like a about what he ca I J s ,"a Black Panther breakfast pro. a creek with tbe coocept ot 0 Ail Indications are that tt ~the 1 v 1 r1ci0 us monarch . We ha v _e a demOQralic society .1.ct• of grams ·and clinics in some b 1 a ck capltA!ism," Newton wUJ be a vlol~ot conruct judJ:· Politicians~ and the lying democratic party." rac.Lsm.." of the nation's big cities, said. ing from the activities of U1i& · "All are guilty ot crimes Newton said his primary He explained that llls pro-. NewtQo characterizes himself "Now they're trying to dupe fascist gov6rnment," he a(i.. against the people and the goals include the freedom of Jetted revolution would create as a revolutionary, not a us into investing In a country ded. •Verdict is death." Black Panther Chairman B~ ~~fY it!: 'rn~~u::,:eos!: reformer, exp13lnlng: that's already overexpanded The Cambodlan venture was A party poster picturing by Seale, charged with murder "A rtvolu.tioQary want s with an inflated economy." a lesSOfl in "U.S. imperiali!ITl'' Newton on an African wicker or a Panther ln New }laven, government ls 8 cooperative, complete change. because he·s Event u a 11 y , internal throne bearing a shotgun and Conn., and the safe ~turn and large privately owned cor-dissatisfied with a set of ex· discontent coupled with an in· to a broad cros ... secUm of a spear has been sold na-to the United Stales of poratloos become pubJtc en-J.a:Uog condlllons. H.e feels creasing nwnber of war fronts the public. Newton said. tlonally. But he said, "I1m Eldridge Cleaver, panth er titlt?· they're only changed through will weaken the United States "After the murders at Kent against violence. I'm not a minister of information who ''Eventually I he s e com-complete revolution.'' enough for a 5 u cc es sf u l State and Jack.son State, peo- violent man. A 1 l revolu-has been a fugiti ve since he panles will be absolutely "For blacks and other re~olution, he said. pie got involved," he said. tionarles are against violence. was declared a Ca lilornia socialized and turned over as minorities here a Socialist "It will be a v.·or ld revolu· "Berore becoming a revolu. "There's ad Is t t n ct lo n parole vlolalor. public enterprises," Newton government is the only snlva-Uon.'' the Panther leader de-Uonary, ooe has to get deeply between the violence of th e For 45 minutes, Newton a sak!. "There will be no profit tim because we've never gain-clared. involved.·• aggressor and th6 self-defdlSe solid 5 foot JO inches tan' in to any particular group and ed anything from capitalism," ··The p 0 I ice re.glme. the Newton es:pressed doubt of the attacked. his baggy prison b I u e 5 , the people themselves will be said . Pentagon, is too powerful far that white wcrklnc class "We must defend ourselves answered questions about the reap the benefit" "Nixon and his lackeys are it to Be defeated on a naLional Americans would iupport bis against poor housing, police Panthers' goal of bringing While he is proud of the attempting to lead blacks up level." revolution. brutaUty and all things that:J------=---~..:::'.'.~-~:.:_::~~~:.:_:::.::_:.::_:.:_:: __ _;___:c_ ____ _: ___________________ _ strip a man of his dignity." Ni for the poster, he said, laughing, "I don't think the party's image has changed since then, but I hope mine has. I don't like that particular pester, because it Marble- BigMoney And Peril Natural Habitat Zoo ' ·chdnging N.Y. Acres NEW YORK (AP) -Asia is moving to the Bronx. So SOUTii GATE (AP) -are Australia, South America people ln New York City never •!!iii,~!: see animals in the wild," he Marbles, anyone? -and a multi continent called Edmond B. Lohr deals in Holarctica. marbles, importing the They're all moving to th.! beauUful stones and fi nishing Bronx Zoo which has begun thm. He's been at it In a a major development plan plant here fer 35 years. .. that ollicifl.Js · hope w i I J He handles not the round transrorm the 252 acres in 1 little jobs that kids play with the middle; of New York City -they aren't really marble, into a virtual map of the anyway -but great chunks world. of lustrous, mottled stone that is quarried in Ila1y, Belgium, The idea behind the deyet~ Portugal, Greece, MeJ..ico and ment ls to show animiils in France. their natural habitat instead There's big money fn marble of in small. barred.cages. • , . and peril, too, Lohr says. The ZOO already has an area 11More money has been lost -called tbe Alrlcan Plains - ln marble than in gold mines,'' a large open area in which he says. "Some losses were lions., birds and nyalas -deer~ due to speculators. They would like animals -roam at will, discover a promising deposit separated only by deep moats, and sell quarry stock before hidden from viewers · b y making p r e p a r a t i on s to hedges and hillsides. This area remo'VI! the marble. is being expanded into another "Removal often presents a grassy, moated region ·which problem. A!!, in gold mines, William Conway, dlfector of sometlines a soft cushion is the New York Zoological re.ached and the expense of Society, sakt the zoo hoped digging proves prohibitive or to open nes:t year. the vein is ina~eq~~t~ and In the planning stages Is ~~ up to ,expectation. . a :JO..aae section that will There s marble galore ~-. simulate (be geography and the UnHed States."Jtilh• 11ys-' efhlbH ·anbrlals of tropical the Rocky Mountains havt . . more marble than anywhere. A~1a. lnc.luded, ~1d Conway, But quality generally is not w1U be tigers, rttinos, orang- the finest. Lohr does some utans, deer,. ~ucks and buying from California and elephant&. The Vmcent Astor Arizona, obtaining a delicately F~oa has · pledged $5 colored travertine from the million of the $10 million latter. estimated construction cost. He tells al a man in Palos Other areas will represent Verdes Estates, a Lo5 Angeles Australia, South America and suburb, who hit black and HolarcUca -North America, beige marble or good quality northern Europe and northern while digging a garage site, Asia. but couldn't get equipment in "".il!i the new ~eographic to ~move it. exhibits, Conway said, the zoo Lohr says his clients have will 8Wl.tch its emphasis from Included many a movie star showing lots of dilferent and other notables who like species to showing fewer kinds marble. He sells a lot, too, better. The change will come to churdtes, theaters, hotels. gradually throlfgh the natural In his office is a striking process of attrition a n d white marble fireplace. The through giving aw~y to other sto~ came from Oaxaca, zoos extra species. MeZJCO, where a craftsman "We're specializing our ef· cut Sa'Olls to Lobr's design. forts to fit the zoo to the From mantel to ceiling is an animal rather than make the e,xpense of rust.-colored mar· animal flt the zoo " said ble. E~ed into it is a poem. Conway. ' Lohr s staff ~ts the stone For example, he s 4 i d , to size with diamond saws, animals like lions and most polishes it with a, s~clal of the great apes "need an abrasive putty, then is finally 1.un·t for social jn--tailed to fi~ the dimemlons oppor l ~. . . or the floor or walls where terchange, particularly if tt is destined to go. ~are to breed succes.!fully. Any particular problems With all the great apes, even these days? mating is ,,large!~ a learned Says Lohr, who admits to procedure, h.e said. . ••pushing 80": "It's expensive Conway said the zoo will to finish marble. Workmen try to stress the danger to have a bonanza, e8rntng $5.50 animaJs, not only f r om an hour. But It's hard to hunters, but from destroction secuR: dillgent worken." of their natural habitat. "Most stated, "but it's the votes or these people that w i 11 determine w h e t h e r we preserve things like t h e Florida "Everglades." Not all the SO<&Ued habitat exhJblts will be o u ts I d e • Already open is the World Qf Darkness. a $660,000 building wth about 3 0 0 creatures in 30 exhibit s designed to show the living habits ol. animals nonnally ac- tive at night and twlllghl Similar things are planned for the World of Birds, due to open in 1971. The building does not contain a single bar· red or wire cage. t does coo- tain a two--st.cwy rmn forest and a barren dessert. rier or wire cage. It does ~ cemed with animals facing ,ptinclion. The Pere David deer, he said, already is extinct in the wild in its native China. 1bere are only 497 o( these deer in zoos in the entire world. Jn contrast, Conway said, there are 750 known painUngs by R.mbrandt. "People need a reordering of values," Conway aald, "when they're willing to pay $2.3 million fCJt a Rembrandt to hang on the wall o( a museum and they won't apeod that amount ol money to save a whole specie. of living thing." D.C. Interns Called Hippy Students WASHINGTON (UPI) -An Iowa Congressman says the 236 young summer interns hired by the Office of Educa-- tlon are hippies who are "Nothing but a bunch of militants, a bunch of revolu- tionaries." Rep. William J . Scher le, (R· Iowa), said his criticism is based on a tour of the offices Wednesday by an aide, during which the aide said students walked around in hippie garb, displayed mtlltant posters and used obscenities. Scherle said be wouJd make a personal tour ol the olfice$ to see for himseH, and "I may just recommend that we abolish the whole Intern pro- gram." HELP US BUILD THE NEW 50' MUIR OLYMPIC POOL '~SWIMATHON'' NEWPORT IEACH llNNIS & SWIM CLUn Swum lo· Datei •• ~ ••• yards . Amount stlll to be raised $ • • •••• Who Wiii Come In First . • • ...... .,.n~ ,,;c. FREE ''" 700.13 $39.60 $118.80 41b Tire FR.EE C7S-14 $39.75 $119.25 4th Tire FREE $2.15 E7S-14 $41.30 $123.90 4th Tirt FREE $2.35 • 1tl Serim 1lu with low profile for F71-14 $43.75 $131.25 41b Tirt FREE ''"' 1tead1 ride, steering G7S-14 $47.85 $143.55 4th Tirw FREE """ • Broader footprint trecUon contact H7S-14 $52.50 $157.50 •Ub Tirw FREE $2.93 thin comparable c onvenllone l J71-14 $59.60 $178.80 4th Tlrw FREE $2.88 size lirea. Two Polyester cord F7S-15 $43.75 $131.25 4th Titt FREE $2.61 body piles, no n·flat spotting. lwo G78-l5 $47.85 $143.55 4th Tire FREE 12.n llbergla11 belta suppren tnied· H7S·l5 $52.!IO $157.50 4th Tire FREE $2.'8 11q11lnnlng weu •nd maint..tn trac· J78-15 $59.60 $178.80 4th Tire FREE " lion eHectlvenen 900-15 $60.55 SlSl.65 4th Titl FREE ,,,., HURRY! SALE ENDS 915--15 $6L75 $115.25 41h Tire FREE $3.06 SATURDAY NIGHT FREE MOUNTING ON ALL TIRES USl OUlll lllAIN CHECk l"llOQUllll &ec:euse of~ e.xpect9d .._...,. cMrul'ld for GoodYtM" lirM ... m•)' Nn out of -tiziRS durirt1 !hit oft.r, but -wlll ~ hlPO'f to order )'OW alnt•t the ad\'e.rtlMd price •lld is-JOU • r.ln cMct lor Mur. deli'ltfY of the ,,_,;;handlM. YOU SAVE $490 Nylon Cord Tires for PANELS, PICK-UPS, VANS and CAMPERS. ..... ,. HI-MILi"'' TlftllS • 1JIO a 15 Tuba; f1pe; t~.plvtl~ Ftd. EL fl1< WAS •32ss •. 1'•1f_ ........ -ta .• , ......... ......... •.• t .. -.... 1"' ... SP.ti -·lo.._ ••a'PJ.21 •.• •2395 • llAll •lll•. 'llll ...... ••> ... IWl/lll..,, ....., ...... "'..,., PRICED LOW TO MOVE FAST 4flJllYUlll CGllD 'Al·Wuthsll°lhl $' I 95 . :;:.::;,:·~:;;:~ ' 6.~ 1 11 d;1r1 1 oo.1houldeT" I lt•~~w•ll •Your bf:ll lll"t' ltur ~ lub!tltH phrt . it , ) 11.11 ttO. £<-1-11 'pnce nm9e 11• Mid old lore ""' .. IM~ l.-1fl" Sins-l,15 115 l.15 r \4 IJS I 14 ~:~ •"6'5 ff?!j~~~::: PRICE 'I BLACKWALL ruaruss BUY NOW AT EVERYDAY LOW PRICES Liberal Budget Terms- Low Monthly Payments oruee. your , , , " • The•• LCHI~ Do Nett H•-..... Credft C.N•. K>'<•''''I~ ~~ GOODYEAR -THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAs• TIRES '111• Swimmers .qr The CommunifY 7 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• WE NEED YOUR. DONATION o~ PLEDGE-NOW! ' J Det1tch ind MIA 1'fo: Olympl• Pool -Box BOO, c,.11 Mesi 92627 Namt ..••.•.•.•.•••.•..•.........•..•.••••••••••••••••.•••••... Addrns ... , .... , ........... , .•..... , .... , .•••.. , ..•...•.• , , ..•. Amount Enclo1ed .....•.... , .•...•.....• , , .•.• , .• , , ••.••.. , • , , •• SVPPORT YOVR YOV'l'H ·······················································~ : YOUNG & LANE TIR·E CO. INC. ~ • • • • CO.STA MESA LAGUNA BEACH 1596 NEWPORT BLVD. 8 Phono 549.9313 482 OCEAN AVE . • Phone 494-6666 : ALSO THEODORE ROBINS FORD-2060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 642·0010 • • • • • , .......................................................• ' .. DAll.V PILOT DICK 1UCY TUMBLEWEEDS NO t\?IJS1 A900f ITLl!f.l!QY::. YOU HAV!O ALI-1H!O .:>YIV'l'i(.11'\S OF m APVANCeO o.sr= OF AClJre NUllOW11'15 ! ts rr CATC+llNti? MUTI AND JEFF 0 ACROSS 1 E111ilttd SIP S Bow~'s conCern 10 llalzt 14 las bomt I 1s ~nlon 16 Sitt! 111ill I product: ~ 2 words 17 Mlnt entrance JI Tr~porta• lion l!f'd it11a 20 Reserve: 2 words 22 AHracllvt to the eye 21 Nuc ltlJS 24 Swiss ffro ZS ''Py g1111lion'' author: 3 words 28 Ertraordln· ari1y bold 112 Stale: Abbr, 33 Of less Intense color 35 Doc:tor's assistant 31i Coffi11 JI 8i1Jl'I 40 In !ht near • lulurt 41 Brought to a conolus~n 43 So!Mthin; s pecial I 4'5 Cuckoo 146 Havtng 11101t precipitation: 2 W1>1'dS ' 41 l inter clothing l tCtSSory SO Count1y of Asl1 51 ·Nlmblt 52 HOfSt that h1sn't won SS lllosl e1pensivt 59 Kind of agent fil ldt1: Prtflx fi2 BtlUsh wtapon 63 Ft111inlnt llllllt 64 Obst1tlt 65 Dead - 6& Giver 67 Infor mal fa rewell DOWN I Gar1111~nl s: lnf0tmal 2 Mlneral deposit 3 Do post· Production movie work 4 Diseno•i• S lfrans o golng up and down fl E•cesslvely 111odesl per!On 7 Not 011 schedule I Wedding 'fesponse: 2 words ' Particular Stitt Of 111ind 10 "Finlandla" composrr ' ' 'i' ,. . IS 17 i • ,., " :~ -~ . • In ' -... • -~ ~ " " ' -. -., ,, ,, N •• 1-I " u ·1-" ' P • G II A • u. 0 ' • A (H0 (0 1nJn o 11 Sfftall 37 One who quanlitv: lives fn 2 wo1ds a pl ace 12 Brrwf'r 's 39 One who nrcessfly 111rdd1f's 13 \llclim 42 Challrn~r 19 Synthrtic 44 Gas rnalrrial station 21 Supermark et product itr111 47 Rant, 24 Briel and unpleasant pithy and stale 25 Comrdian 49 Office Gr0tge ···-workrr 21i Sall solution 51 Shr takes 27 Does a shorthand f1r111in11 52 Breakfast chorr Food: 28 Prrcrivrd lnfOflllll by thr ear 53 Pitt 111oney 21J Europran in ttie pot 30 "Two flrar\s 54 TIK>ught that bf'al 55 SwHlsh 2 words 31 Noted Marxist 34 Allow I •• ~ entr111cr : 2 words " 1.\ " n s n .. " • " ... - " 61 " " 111an's n1mr S!i ·-Frrbrr 57 Members hip 58 Roman garb &O Span ish gold " .. ., " - . " " " -- '· I ..--..1.21 WELL, O.K •..• USE llrf -HANKY! PERKINS MISS PEACH M IKE's LACI.' OF ENTHUSIASM FOil MA1AIMONY l«f NCOME 7tlO C4HCllS' RJ/t E~ All Al>Otf!NG ,IANC'EE 7D 16NOltE,' PEANUTS ly _ Cliesttr Gould By Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith I JUSTCAN'T STAND SE!OING MY 8EST FRIEND Cr<Y/r--11 By Harold Le Dou Ll'l: ABNER We-Jf. MAO£ $\000 ... R'.lR '°'-1 l!tf INVES/'1NG "fOlJR. SIUIER DOU.AR~ A PHONE. CALL.I!' SALLY ' BANANAS ' Wl.\aT QRe YoUOOiNG? ih~\/i. MOON MUWNS . 'ANIMAL CRACKERS :t'M f'l..~</l '-!GA COM6AIJD ·, . 11ssoe, .· WA~l.l- By John Miles By Mtl .. • ly ll"'il!'"-. ... ~ __ . ·---·-By Charin '.llanotti _, THI 5TIAHGl WORl.O MR.MUM ... ' '~-"'---~ -. :..'Gr'~ By Ferd Jo1mson By ·Roger'. Bolen .~ i ' . " • ' ,, . . 'A~Y,MIST~! l'il!ICH 1114Yl0 IMOWIAA:lUS t• ~~ . -· . L. R bt •• l 33 an N< So 1 ~ y, dio l!f of ya to 111• bb de bo . ' ' ~ j J I I' :i' l~ o~ I ~ ~ :t I j ~ • F L t t • • I .--~•"'"''"•,,'! f~ .i ·~.,.,,,,...,..,...,...,.,,,..,., • .,.....,,,...,.,,....-,..."--~ ... 1•>•>•+• .. ••--,.._,.,,,...,.,,.,, ... 4;wt•f4•• ... ,.••••11;;Qi0fW Wf'•-.,,.. ... .,.__....,F••t••,,...•+o••••• ;wuew o t; ~-..--1 1,1, •••••• '"'""''"''+',_ ____ . ___ _ .l Mldnlmmer Regatta Harbor Skippers W~n Big lly AJMON LOCKABEY ........... Newport Harbor skippers '®red beavUy In tbe giant Southern California Yachting Association Midsummer Regatta which drew 423 en. tries in SI cluses on Santa Moolca Bay Satunlay and Sunday. . Loe.al skippers b r o u g b t home a dozen first and second place trophies. Newport Harbor Yacht Club skippers dominated the nire- boat Star fleet with Gerald Madigan taking first place and R. S. Elliott Ill secood. Other classes In which local skippers won trophies were: Morrie Kirk of BYC and Bob Poole of Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club co-sJPppered their Columbia~ Sanderling to se-whd place in PHRF -A. Tim Hogan and Roger Welsh, both of NHYC, placed first and second respectively in the highly competitive Sol- ing Class. .. ·~te Sawyer of NHYC 1 " • ~ • fint pl~ct victory t lni. Atoriante in the combined Oc:ean'Racln& A&B ~­ LATE5T FROM MULL~,,,.,Gary Mull-designtd Ranger.-33 is being produced.'in Costa, Mesa and can be seen ,sailing on Newport Harbor as:,.eU, a~ east ... ern sa.ilin4 cebters. Ba .. ger~ Here Muil Designs New Yacht 'lbe·flnt clooen ,_ 11ang.,.. · 1~ has a teal" cap rail;· an 33 sloops have be"'1 launched "!'11611al dodger molding on and can be seen sailing on • tre inain hatch cover, racing Newport Harbor, Long bland . wlncbes and adonize d Sound and-other maj« yacht: hardware, boot top and coo- ing ~nter_s. trasting non-skid f i n i s h , 1Ral:iger-33 11 'L Gary Mull carefully laid-o(lt c O c, k1> I t , d<siiln .,p.aauy for Raaker crowned deck and hand finlsll· YadltS ·anol roDows claoely oo , 'ed Interior. the heels « his ·successful '!be same attelllion t o ~ She Is 'the secood details is evideol below. Many of a C:ompJete line of fiberglass yacht appoiribnents .ar~, ~· )'11Cht:i. from 22 to 40 feet dard 00 the Rlqef,3.l. The tq be ·produced by, the Coota · interior is color Coor#.inatOO Mesa fin?. Ranger4 3 ~, . .with carpeting ahd d~ator blnes agility· and speed wlth • c:ushioos w· a In u t orl t:e a k delaili' n0t 'fOllnd ·in ·mmy paiieling' and ""'1raSiing silt- boot:i cl_ bef. llK. textu...t vinyls. ' She is a roomy. boat. with full st.anding hea~ and seven . full length bertbs, a State Race ~· ..,J.:-: 't'!! ' • • • ,, ! ro8tponed ' -~ ~erUble dinette 1hat aeats tj£ht:Jarge galley aft with sk.k and stove well, fun.size n&vigaior's table with chart jCalilornia Yacht Club lms Enced that tbe match between Pit Dougan's· ter Columbia and Geoj'g_e 0.'Brien's .. Endless Swrul1er (Dame Pattie) has beep Pl>stJ>O<led from Oct. 2-3-1 ' to ~-9-lB-IL . · ~ race between the two 12-meters Will be for alifomia Cup. umbla was the 1958 deteooer of·the America's Cup aAd the 1967 runner-up to the I Pi!!· stnrage, }ar&e ~walk-in head, har.ilnf locker •nit private forward statei:oom with bureau.1 . . 'Ibe boat· 11, powered, by : a ~ .. gasoline · ingfue wjdt n-gal~ f~l ~city and :tl.gallon w .. tanks. The Ranger-33 I S con- structed o( hand I a i d • u p fiberglass with laminations of woven roving, glass cloth and mat. She bas aluminum spars and stainJess and daa'Oll rig· gtng. ,\.lrlo of.co-skippers beaded by !>¢Y Ro!e of Ba)boa Y.acht Club were first in their Colum- bia-34 ·Traffic Stopper in £he OR c&D Class. , Dick Deaver of BYC ,J>1:aced second in the 5-0-S Class.• · ·Tim Muruon of Voyagers Yacht Chib won the fifst place · trophy in the 1nternauooa1.14 Cl885. Al Nelson of South Shore Sailing Club was rirst in the Finn Class and Robert Belden of NHYC was fourth. Paul Anen of BCYC won the .Pacific Catamaran Class. Frank Rice of NHYC won the ·MORF Class In his CaJ-29 Walnetto. Nina Nelson sailed away with top honors in the Sabot A&B Class. Carl Reinhart or VYC won the Sabot Senior division. Winds for the two.day event were a moderate 12-lS· knots . There were no mishaps. A light fog over Marina del Rey burned off Sunday soon after starUng signals were hoisted. The 423 boats was over 200 less than anUcipated for the regatta. FoUowing are the trophy winners in each class: O•L •RY Y ... CMT CLI* STA" {fl -(1) c1•11•hlrN, Gera!ct MaOl9•1'1o NHYC1 121 SllPrrt, R.5. Eltlolt Ill, NHYCr Ill sw1....-11. JoM Crim, save. CAL...» IMI -11) ShNme, Sid Renk-, DRYC1 Ul Solfl1lr., 8<111 YOl.ll!t, LAYC1 01 DclnNI J ,, John Ratierts. eve. .l;_IUCKSOH • '5 l•l -{lJ P1lrlof, Guur1n Fllnnl11n, PMYCJ U ) lt1rllr1, (1fph Flfdlel'". WVC. K-«1 t•J -(l ) Tl1111, Jldt llUtll" save. K·JI f') -D1vld1, DI~ F1ln1tf!ln, fJRVC. CAL·M ff! -111 81!clvth1, JoM Klnc1kt, cave, c11 L•-""' caml!f, 1100 Wll~rl, KHVC ; UI c1i.1rv. J1dl ROllPrltlef'li, DRVC. ERICSON.J2 (1) -!11 Anltrot, $ld Bll"*r• WYC1 (21 D1m1r1. D1vkt R01a. wYC. PH~F·A C131 -(1 ) Actverltur1, Jim FO¥er, WYC; (1) S.nd1r1!1111, K!/11: Poot1, I YC a. llCVC1 13) Wlndborne, How1rd Rv1n, CYC1 (0 Se• FIYer, E4 Knelfel, eve. PHRF·S (11 1 -(l) Mltlc, C1rl Rtduldl, PMYC1 UI Sundoll,' Guy lnvcllr, DRYC1 (3) Endtl'IOI", Johll HOl'I, PMYC. PHRF-C (t) -Ill Ocl'IWI" II, Anlllon)I Mul1e, SBSC1 Cll Dl!hlder, M11 W.1rner, CllVC; \J) Tth•nl, aru<.1 Au1uitu1. cave. ULIJIOl.NIA YACHT CLUa SOLING 117) -(l) Red Evt, Tim lioetn. HHYC1 Ul Gold Dinet, Roetr Wthll. NHVC; U) AU OU!, kb llurn1, CYC1 (4) Grey Fo1, aru<.e Ptl<lwno, SDYCI (SJ Lumel>ll, 800 Mc:Htll, L.AYC. CAL·• Ill} -(1) Holld1v Too, Nt'd Hill, LAVC1 \2l Ttlu1, Ari W•lktr, C8"<l1 UI Lvn11, J1clnon S<otl, CYC1 14) Ma<1r111111or, am Allen. CYC. OCEAN RACING A&B 1131 -fO Atorr1nle, 8ur1ie s..,... NHYCi Ul Glfn. Cl'llr~ H1111aw1v, eve, fll v.,...,.. Cl'llrlts H-. SOVCi l•l 8orbl, Miiin Colldl, CYC. OCEAN RACING C .. 0 Ul -111 Tr•lllc: StOC>Ptr, R01t/Pr1ntlc: " Olson, IVC1 IU Am.1n111, 8••btr $coll, LAVC1 Ul X-lynf, aud $h1nlr., PMYC. Kl"' Hll'llOr Y.IChl Club MERCURY CS) -(I) TUI, ~ti • P•lten,on, C8YC1 UJ Debout.111!e, A. &. Smith. cave: s · • · 5 en -Ml LvcH..-, c11r11 Mitrr, A6YC1 Ul f'kitblll, Clrcu1. Old: Delv11-. BYC, INTERNATIONAL·ll (5) -Cl) Na r'llnM,, Tllft Murison, VVC1 (l) Mot9.1n Ll'lly1, Robert Currv. Abyc. FINN IUl -(l) P'*111x . I, Al NtlW!n, ssscl en S1nt.1 M1r1.1 <h!I PtK•dtro. 8111 51"m•n, MBVC; Cl) 8wll $11111, Fm Gr1y, AllYC1 ('I Emba. Robert 114!1119rt, 1'IHYC1 01 Mlftfflo lmlff, Tom Nlebert•ll, Tiit ~. lluu Ptflt...,, SIVC, MaY(, TOR.ltlDD (•I -HI Saki'°"'" WIH'AllO SAIOT Jlt CS! -IU H•n'IY aruct, WYC. o.tnk. Mlchtlt TtJ"'1, WVC1 Ctl f'<AT (10 -Ill 81.1Ct1: Pow.-, liOIMIM Ut, Jiff Mllnlert'I, WYC. P1wl A.11111. llCVCI CU l ut'11e, llolllrt WtN'ARD SABOT Sii, (ti -111 liker, CaYC, UI 5-wttll. G .. tl C1t'n Crvndl, Ltft Slll'lcl.ln, f'MYCi Oum, MVC1 (41 Loki, E.-1 Tllof"~ , CJ) ·Ho. l'llftll•-•Jo.I Sl:ot.1,.. f'VY(r MYC1 ISi •I.ck FN, EJUOll oi-, t'J OtmMt.oo. Trvdte Llunlc, WYC. c~. : CAL·20 !•11 -CU llrl YIH"I• I/, IWfrM. f'VY~l U) o\"t•'I, hit, Att · w•11tniftw 81Prr, WY(, I · • VICTO.Y UI -All._. IV, Biii Mvl• door\, KHYC. INIPE" 113) -Ill A.1t1.11111, •Ix lllXtlv, Al.YC1 (2) C1mbrll, a011 HIJll, AIY.CJ U) Ghost, LI'"' Gr1y, l(HYC1 14) Ml' AnMrlu, Mil Wllll. CYC. Miiii_, YIClll CNS HOB!~ CAT Cll -Ill Chlqvll1, Miki L_.,.,111. SMYCI (2) &owdf Dut(t!es, L-Powtr1, SFVSA1 CU Cr-..11.11. Girt Str111u. MVC. PACIFIC MVLTIHULL C'I -Ill l'4obl1 C.t, ROl' SM"""' MYCi UI Cl.1u a C.11, Skip H1l1Y, MYC1 111 IW#lllf, Slttt 0.1.,..._, OllYC1 1.11111 M.llllcl Ytdlt CIW PC C!l -0) Fits! Flddte HllY.lrd Br-n, SMYC1 en l lVI Chip, PhH CMK. eve. CAL 1-30 (61 -111 Wlnd1wltl, Kiri T..-ibert. CYC1 121 s.,.0y 111, ArldY LKklon, CYC. I CAL.at (5) -fl) llttrHt II, kil Stnllll, PMYC; (2) llr1vld1, Okll Joh\IOrl, l(HYC, CAL·21 Ill -tn Pwlf. Gltft Tllontt. SMYC1 in Vkl1r1, J, H. Brown. PMYC1 t31 $Uvtr H•n, kb Hutl'ltt. $MYC. MOllF 171 -fl) W1tnetto, Frint Rice. NHYC1 ttl HunluM, 8111 Stnllll, K'"'vc. • COLUMBIA·" 141 -111 f'1n•c••· Oon.l!G Fr1nklln, PMYC. CAL-2S 111 -,111 Doi Locos, Nkll 8ow1to, WCVC I 111 Gl'fmlln, H111Y Arnold, f'M YC. ENSIGH·!LECTRA {5) -Ill Shrike, BIM Frevdlflsltln, SMYC; U) f'llffln, JllTll$ Moo...,1, SMYC. SANTANA·D fl) -111 squirrel C.191, Tom Lewtrt. CVC1 n1 GretcMn, Dkk Yin Ovttr, CYC. TEMPEST (4) -111 Zlt·h•, Dolnl Steele, SCCYC, VIENTUll:E-21 Cl) -Ill 5"und• Amor, Chuck ll:uuelJ, SFVSC1 en 1,,,....111 Thi"' 8 111 t1•ulmlfl, SFVSC1 U I LuHed °"9 U, Mitl'llllll Turner. SFVSC. Sllltll (NII CWilllfll.lll Y.IC-1 CW. NAPLES SABOT A " a · fU Ill F,.11, Nlr'll Nltltlfl, NHYC; 121 8r11llll111 Too, Jiff McOerm11cf, L5C1 41) No n111M, Mlrtr. Wlllllm1, CYC. NAPLES SABOT $R. U ) -en No nlml, C.rl Rtl~rt. VYC1 en , Y6dlt Cllllt CC>«Ofil~U 0)1 -Ill. SH ~; lrv6t iltMtlt, I I •YC1 Ul CVCJOM, llH Jenn. II avc1 UI """' f'fft, •rttt P-. KHVC1 l•l Odin'• Omer, WIV"ll Kl~ DllYC. OAY SAILER (1) -en M\l(JIO Gu110. Miki °"'""'lrti SFY:$(1 12) M.111, Allen lfflMll, SVJIM:, WINDMILL Ill -Ol 5ottn'llll, John Ell11, PVSA1 UI f'hllltr. J. ComPton. f'VV.. CONTENDER l'I -(I) No 111~. Old Chrv1tll, f'V$A. 11...0DES • lt I•! -Cl! GrN1 PlllT'Pltln. Kerold GllOt, SFVM:. LI00.14 !fl -Cl) P~ Mttlln 0.1Ym1t1, AllYC1 121 Ml1f't, MHo,e Hltim.n. SS.Ai Ul Gr1Hltt. Mike Fink. HHYC. OK DINGHY 04) -111 S.Wllff. Ken L1r1on, A8YC1 121 No rlitlMo Ste-.. Smith, AIYC1 Iii Whlr!wlnd, IC. Cllw"", lllYC1 l•H No Nlf!\t. "" cvrn. AllYC. FllllEllALL C7) -Ill H1r1 VI. R1IHI Mlddleloft. SFVSC1 (U t1e bttwllfl Brlslol, Ctltt 51ndtn. SFV$C IMI Y•Yo, $. L. J-. WYC. FLYING JUNIOR 141 -Ill KtH· Mettf", Tom Wl11on, AIVC. PKlllc Mlf"lllln Ykltt Clwl DONALDSON PRl!DICTEO LOG CLASS A U! -OJ C-1/flf, Dick aurrud. PMYCI n1 T1m11l•llon, Lou O.Nltlm.1n, ORYC1 U) c..-11, HlrrY P•llTllPr HHYC. CLASS I Id -Ill Sl>linu ll, Ron ar~ll, PMYCI C2J •111t Tkll, Pit arwdnft, f'MYC. Campbell, Hogan Win Team S(>Ots Hydroplane Skipp~r Dies in Race W reek Argyle Campbell and Tim Hogan of USC have . been selected on the collegiate All· American sailing team for the second consecutive year. Campbell Is from Balboa Yacht Club and Hogan is from Newport Harbor. Yacht Club. Both are Newport Beach residents and started their sailing careers in their respec.. tive yacht club junior sailing progrruru. YPSILANTI, Mich. (AP) - Frank Cassaw, 44, of Otlawa, Ill., was fatally injured Sun- day when his boat, Miss Qt. tawa, llipped over a n· d disintegrated during the 1970 National Limited J n board Hydroplane-t'hampionships at Ford Lake at YpsilanU. He was taken to the University of M i c h i g a n Medical Center at Ann Arbor, where he died. Cassow's boat was In the backstretch. about 113rds of a mile from tfle start of the last lap ol. the beat for five· liter boabi, when it blew apart. oSme spectators who were silting on top of a boat house said it appeared his engine just blew up. However, a driver in the race said that Cassow's boot . "porpoised" in that the snout dipped Into the water and "just broke into a roilllon pieces." A helicopter -used ex· pressly for the race -drop- ped down and a man jumped into the water and pulled Cassow out. The helicopter also poured out oranse smoke to temporarily halt the race. It took an hour to clean up the debris. Cassow -who also owned the· boat -was abdut 2/3rds or a mile behind the race leader a the time. Each lap was I 2/3 miles. Drivers escaped injury in two other spectacular crashes. Doug Boudan of Lacombe, t..a., defending national diam· pion in the ski boat class, was thrown out at the first turn as his boa<, Golden Girl rolled on Hs side, Another ski boat, the St1per Seado, driven by Jim DlllQll ol. Pryor Lake, Minn., flipped end over end. Miss Budweiser, driven by Farnk Byres . of Columbus, Ollio, had a speed of 89,508 miles per hour in winning the second and final five-mi le h!al Sunday to take the diam· pionshlp in the seven·llter class, which brought the largest boats in Sunday's events. CampQe]I and Hogan won the lntercollegtate yacht .Rae- .. ing 'Association of North America's dinghy cham- pionship for the Morss Trophy at Madison, Wis. last June. Campbell, who graduates from USC in 1971, is 21 years old and Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William P. Cnmpbell of Newport Beach. The elder Campben is a' staff com· modore at BYC. Young Campbell was a member of the 1967 runner.up and 19511 winning USC crew in the. DOuglas Cup, collegiate match 1 racing series; was Paciflc Cioast JYRA single. handed champion Jo 1968-69: skipper of the PCIYRU dinghy cf'lampionshlp team in 1963: skipper of the runner -up team ICYRA-NA team bt" 1969; third in the world junior championships at Bermuda in 1969, and. winner of the CongressM>nal Cup in lflO. WORLD CHAMPION W.OMAN WATER SKIER SALLY YOUNGER SHOWS FPRM SHE'LL USE IN GRAND NATIONAL CATALINA SKI RACE AUG. 9 ,·. ' IJost Rowe:rS f:up V~ctors · CataJhla Baee Sally See~s Ski Stardom CATIIElllNES, Ont. -· '.Jbe Maple Lea! went to st. Catha<lnes (or the IOUt Jtral~ Sally Younier ol Hacienda 14. at Skl·Land near Perris but the bolls bad to lleigbb, the dimpled bk>nde to eclipse her own mark <If the glory wllh a Qi•m, hlgh ocbool aJed who has 92.68 mph. She wUI bypass elcht crew"frOm the water skied faster than any 1 an attempt to surpa"8 that ty of Btltlsll Colllm-1 otlier WMW1 In blslory, wlll mark during !be sea •· • tie towed by West. Coast ocean Festival's Wol'ld Water Ski flbe: UBC e1ghtl won the racinr • champion Pe t er Drac Champlonshlps Aug. I ' event of the foar-day Rotl1"chlld of NeWptrt 'B<Bch "Rt 'Mailne stad!Utn in oiOer Royal Canadian Henley 'in' her bkt for tbe overall to coocentrate on htr attempt in stfllsh faohlon . f I n~t<>linlsb cbamploDlltlp to whip J10t only her distaff away to• ... ater Aog. 9 bl the Grand "NaUtnal rivals, but also the men racers vlOtory over CnlOn Boat Club Catalina Ski race. In the' annual ct09S-Channel ot· ~· the t•l)' paoriet· The non.stop nm from t.on:e marathon. tdfs. Beach to Cailalina Island and 1 Mia Younge.r provtd her £ Philodelpbl1 Veapen hack will be ooe of flvo otamlna and versaUllty the a clolinl thtrd with powubolt<Jrtmted atlractk>n1 week after her new women'a ter. N.Y., in fourtti, durinc the 17-evtnt 5th annual speed mark by capturing first • Ont., fUlh and the California lntemaUooal Se.a the girla' 1g..20 race and then Argonauta trailing. Festival at Long Beach, Aug. lhe ove.rall women's cham- co•!rtd tile 1,000.mcter l ·lf. ' pjonsblp In the Natinnal Ski O>Une ln fivt minutes, 2316 Curvaceous Sally reached Races at Lake liavasu. -10&.lt inlles per hour last June "With that bll wake Mr. I DAILY PILOT ff DAILY PILOT WANT ADS ~.._ ................... '""' .. .. HOUSES FOR SALE Gentr1I HOUSES ,OR SALi 1000 General , .. JUsr:tlSTED * TAY19R 1800 SQ. n. MESA VERDE Seldom homes avall1ble in this area, located dose to park, schools &: library, lfome has near' new carpet, huge master bedl'QOl1:I &: be11utiful large living room -\Vhen you see 1he back yard, the trees will make Yo\l think you're In the Red. '"ooda:. Owner v.·111 help fin. ance, only 10% down. Don't miss seeing thlB home -It'• probably yolll's at $34,950. Nichols Real Estate . 546-9521 : •1 J M. tllCllOl5 OCEANFRONT * CORONA DEL MAR MagnWcent oceaiitront home just listed In Exclusive Cameo Shorea With step9 down to private community beach S bedrooms, 6 bl.ths Formal view dining 1"00Tn Living .room, famllY room Pool & 3 Car garage A beautiful home in A fantastic location 1282.000 . Realton "Our· 25th Year· In the Harbor Area'' 673-4400 COSTA MESA CHEAPIE For S22,950, you get a doll house loaded wlth extru Uke deluxe wall to wall lh:ag carpeting fhrooghout, brand new tiled kitchen 1nd bath, 3 bedrooms, prlv1te back yard complete wUh patio. LOw, low down payment. You owe it. f9 )'OllfSelf to aee this one. . ' . --Far.-....-·- 2629 HARBOR Bl VD. 546 1640 OPEN EVES Till l::IO P'*•• S BEDROOMS Spllt·level with view oJ goll course, large family rm with !!replace & wet bar, Short skip to swim, teiinls & goU at 11-f.V.C.C. Priced to sell al $57,950. ''lll,sti\ 'inl< ~cat'tr 546-5990 SELLING?? CAU. US FOR AN APPRAISAL OF YOUR PROPERTY Comm•reial, Indu.strlaJ or Residential. VALUE.,P.ACKIDI Generous ' ft'lb:tion make• thi1 roomy Wntd.W' borne w/4 bdrm. A 3 be,, I ~ "best bu)'". See ... """"· . ' A REAL CLASSIC! NEW watft'frt S bdim bomt on exclutjve ~ Ille. Lh'· Ing " fun ..... $139,300 !Ml Und1 Ille °""\ dally. ''Our 25th Y e1f'' WESLEY 1!1. TAYLOR CO. Re•ltors NEWPORT CENTrn 2111 Sill Joaquin Hilla Rt.a 644-4911 PRIME DOVER SHORES VIEW Large 4 bedroom borne wUb 4 spacious baths: all ekc-o trlc kilchen. Dil'ling raom; marble fireplace I: httge living room. L&1Jd4Ciiped In a maMer to mamt&in an open f~ &: to allow maxlmllnl View ol ; ~ Bay: Only $89"°' .. Macnab-lrume Realty Compeny 675-3210 642.ail Yalu• Consciotll? If so,. dOn't miss tb1a ~ bedroom + dinme roam home. New cvpeting ht living room: hall and mu. ter bedroom. Co!"Mt lot. WA L K TO SHOPPmG. $25,950! Colesworthy & Co. REALTOR Newport Beach ot6oe 1028 Bayside 0t1Ve ~ ... FOUR UNITS MESA VERDE The right lnve1tment is equal to a lifellme ot toil. Here is your chance, and onl1 a short walk to ~ Check this Me• Verde four.. plex. Potential income of S600 per month, Priced et 15<.000. 1093 Baker, C.M. 5t6-SHO WHY RENT? Move in this 3 Bedroom, Family Room home lot i1515/month, includes tallltl, principal, interest: and tr.. a.mmce. Fenced 1n ti.de yard with fruit trees le-all the privacy ot Cllifomla living. Phone ~%Ill. 1-0 THt~ REAL '""-I:STl\TCHS Artistic Retreat $29,950 Rambling SPUT· • 1EVE1: charmer wtth INSPIRING OCEAN VIEW! BellMll ccllinp, nREPLACE. Nn- deck, utmost aeclUlkln. Something "rnlly urUczue"t Walker & Lee 2043 Westclitl Dr. NO CHARGE 646-nll Open ·tu 9:00 PM W1lls·McCardle, Rltr1. J ;;;iiii.0.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil"' 1810 N•wport Blvd., C.M. LIDO WAJERFRONT "48'1129 Ev ... 644-0684 APTS.-320 l I DO NORD Reliable Service Since l!H3 NOW REDUCED TO 'l!F'l!O'l!R'l!S'l!A~l:!'E'l!B~Y~O~W~N~E~R~I $l50,--Xlnt Term• 6 BeautUuJ units. S car p~ 3 Bedroom house. Very Iarre ra.ges &: uUllty room, lrith fenced yard, perfect tor chU. 80 ft. fronting on ~Uent drcn and pets, Paneled llv. llWimm1ng beaCh. Uniti'.:. tng room. How;e just fresh. newly fUmillhed. . Jy painted. Will sell VA or Biii Grundy, Jlultor fllA. $21,500. 833 Do Dr NB ·~ -ver ., .• -CALL EVENINGS AND WEEKENDS 673-4568 THREE UNITS $.1,500 PRICE REDUCTION. One 2 Bdnn unltt • 1 bdrm. uttit • bachelor .cottage, Dou· ble garage • Large laundry rm. Near school• and aho~ pJng. A bargaln at only 133,000. M. M. la BOrde, Rltr. 646.QS55 Evu. 637 -6116 LIDO'S BEST BUY! Fino Jemily home In move. In cOndTtion, .-·OR, 2 BA &; !!CPftr&.le dihina 'rm., onll' SGl.5001 PETE BARRm RLTY. 642-5200 . IT'S Belch bouae time. Bl&· a:est Rlectlon ever! See the DAILY PILOT Cl1uUled section nowt Assume &% Fill Wtstside ' BR • den ~ 2 ba., s car gar, .$)1,(Q) ·at ~ per mo,· fl~. Jncluda P.I.T.I. Costa Meta Investment 541-7711 . BEAUTIFUL I 4 BR., den, tam. ntt. Lea than t ,,.. old: fine West. mlilsler-area, Exbitbw YA. loan! Askins sss.ooo. --eo.....MAllTIN:'I 111·1110;Y.I TIRED of that old tumlturd It'1 rtally not that bull to replace. Jut watch ~ turnlture a mt1ctiw.- co1umns tn tho C!o"111od Section. ., ~· "1 t' J: S: : J4 j , ! ii 1, )V1T' J: "j if!' J! lj f ,\ j t) ,J;,t JI iC Ji J, 1'1f• It JI #% f..,.5'1 fi..1JJ i i ff •, Ji JJJj ftji 1 '" if 6 JU I i I e t _r. t t e ~-=---------------' ' I ta' DAJ\.Y PILOT Monda.r, Ju11 27, 1970 HOUSES F.OR SALE HOUSES FOR SAL E HOUSES FOR SAL& HOUSIS FOR SALE -HOUSES F OR SALi! ;.;H.;;.OU.;;.S;.;E;.;S_F_O'-R_SA_L_E __ H_o_u_s_E_s _.F_OR_-S_A_L;..E_·1 HOU_5E~ f O'R ~~e- ~0~111~-~~;11ii.iiiiiiiiiiii~t~O-~D-~OG~eno~r~e~I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~IOOO!ii. Gener1I 1000 Gener1I 1000 G1ntr•I 1000 Cott• Ml•• 1100 Coron1.d1I Mer 1150 Hunti"thln Beach 1400 ..,.--------- di .J. " Costa Mesa sELL " i, ... ,.,.,.., CAMEO LOOK • 'sn .. 2 ba. Pool HIGHLANDS tn a 6 e C~~irtner ;:;137::·='!50=·=0wne=r'=seo7===68'=i'"""1re about thlo oo~tand· LOTS OF STYLE PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES :.:.th':""$2";,500 ;;,;-verde 1110 1m: 3 bedroom tamuy room PLUS A POOL READ THIS I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I home with weU landscaped CUSTOM 4 TO 7 BEDROOM HOMES NO DOWN VA ,, ll'Ont yvd; 1o-.ty, W.. Ge . a lood o1 U>ete ...,..._ 'lf you ire In .the marltet for a new home, 1e1 ih•sa outstanding cus. tomiz•d hom•s, built by Fr•nk H. Ayr11 & Son loc•t•d 1n a prim• ar••• vety close to Huntin9ton St•t• Beach. The hom•s are priced : from $26,990 to $4 1,900 end very in size from 3 to 7 bedrooms, 1400 sq. ft. to JOOO 1q. ft., 2 end 3 ct r 9are9e1, 2 to 4 b•th1, with sh•k• or Mission tile roof, firepleces, un- derground utilities, concrete .cf riv•• ways, •II built-ins end basic c1r- petin9. There is VA, FHA and Con- ventional financing •vaile ble. F ROM .$1 15,000 TO $500.000 At thll price you can't go Republ1'c Home prrfect for entertaining, aide 17x36 htattd" l.llfttfd pool. wrong, It has a double &&r· yard. An exceptiona.Jzy 1.a.rp 25 ~ rumpus room with wet PRIME BUILDING LOTS age, tefrilic coveM patio, c:ompietely fenced rear pool bar, PoQl table & all equ.1~ FROM $60,000 TO $175,000 yards ate beautiful 3 bed. Large 4, Bedrm • famUy • ard "" """-' ,,_ ment, 4 -··t.r -•--~·. rooms, 2 batht. Seti yet, all ·fonnal dining • great pool Y · "'' excepUUlwu ou.:r· .,_.. .u.e .-.. For Informat ion on te--· av-"-ble VA-FHA. home. Immediate occu. lng at $58,SOO. Call 673-8550 roo~. Wall to waU carpet. All I & h II "'"' ""'° . •-'-'ing 1hruout plus <:Witom.ized oh °'"''' CJ : You. can quality to ovm thil pancy. Owner will uui.e low drapes, fireplace & equip. Bill GRUNDY, REAL TOR bOuse • $23,500, DON'T down pqment or leaae op. ment. AU electric built·in Dov1r Dr., Sult• ~, N .B. 642-4620 WAIT! don, pl\lS refrigerator, Submit J11311 Smith, Realtor *OPEN DAILY 1.s * S5000 down to • s11 per 4515 Roxbury Rd. cent VA loan. 138.500 or can 646.-S255 Ci11mt0 Shores be purchased VA with no 833 1000 G1n1ral 1000 4 Bedroom 2 Bath $25,950 HALE CREST JEWEL $26,700 3 bedroom, 2 baths Take over 6% loa.n. A home at this price In Costa Mesa is bard to lind, but ~ It ill and it's nice, lt bat •'8.11 tG wall carpet, all bullt·ln k1tchen, hardwood Ooors, double garage. forced air heat, corner lot, boat or 2629 HARBOR BLVD. 546 8640 OPEN EVES T ILL 1:30 !!!!!!!!!!!!!"![!!!~~~!!!!!""'I Tired of the conventional! money down, BY OWNER Then tee this beaut, rontem. Custom built. 4 bedrm. lam. porary 3 BR. conv. den 1Jy room. 2 big fireplaces, home! MAGNIFICENT Tbia beautitUJ. home over. VIEW + secluded&: private REAL ESTATE laocloo La Cuesta Ayl'ft Homes Slou 1'05 Modth at lrooldi-l Atlanta, Huntl1191ot1 _. Lncated on secluded cul-<Je. u.c street IN N 0 R T H COSTA MESA. $16,000 loan al 51'% fur anyone. Pay- ment.I $136 mo. 1Di-every. thin&! College Part Estate looks the 17th fair¥i'lly of pool ~ patio. Priced below HUNTINGTON BEACH OFC. Mesa Verde Goll c.oune. market., $76,&>0, lf4..S3t 3 4~7511 See thi• big corner lot home 6%. assumable loan. 3036 DeL•ncy R1i11 I E state ()pen 1 days _ 8:30 to 8:30 with pool & separate game Java Rd. 54()..4095, $62,900, 2828 E. Coruit Hwy,, CdM rbom, 3 Bedrms + dining BY owner, 3 Br. 1%. ba. J&m. 673.3770 HIGH ON A HIL L nn completely n:ctecorated rm .. tpl., bltns, din. rm. B/B Beautiful view, large 2 story model home. Vacant and $2!!,500. MG-0059. IRVINE <•I TERRACE Spar.ish Hacienda with red ready to move into. Quick tile root. 3 Car garage, enter --•k>n, 10% Down or N B h 1200 Day &: night ocean &: bay thru Sp&niah ...__.. ...... , iron :!:a·=· -~met~: 714: 968·2929 714: 968-1338 11 :00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M. (Open Eves. 'til 1:30) monthly payment Don't wait to see it. ..-~-1wport 1ac vlew. 3 BR. + den le tam. .. • ...._.. IBA·VA terms. $34,950, gate and carpeted court. ()pin for fnsptd ion lnv11tors Attention! rm. Only 4 yn, old.· $88,700 yard. Massive entry, 2 fire. Newport ' . ,. . SAT & SUN 12 to 5 Here'• a real 5leal near the places, fUnna1 living nn & ---------at f 1lrvi1w 646-8811 (anytime) ::Farrp'W-2526 Carne9l1, C.M. Cannery · 1n Old NeWJ)Ort. dining rm., big, big modern C-2 Lot w/good l·Br. plus kitchen, with connecting ----··--=== EASTSIDE SPECIAL 3·-. 2 bath "°""' with beam ceilinga &: modem ex. terlor. H11i1e Pla.Y yard and owner will sell no down to Veten.nsJ $26,850 (Open EvH . 'tll 1:30) Newport •t Fairvl1w 646-1111 (anyti me) $69,500 Spectacular 2 1tory with white water view _ walk to sandy bee.ch.. 2 Masalve lire- place1 and 2700 11<1. ft. of Immaculate llvin& area, Call 545-8'24. * * * * We have two open.lnp for an experienced proleulonitl man or woman. Exc:e¢ional benefits!! r Call 56-8424. 1000 POOL Go Skinny Dlppln" Indoors U )'OU want a pool • YoU must see thla home! Beautifully unique indoor twlmming pool -ht"ab!d and filtered and very private. The home 11- aett is in better than model home condition wtth 3 king. gir,e bedrool115, 2 tiled bath.'!, professionally landscaped and manicute<t front and rear yards. All.sume existing VA loan, Annual perci!ll~ rate of 6% Total monthly payment $1!l6 Incl-.... es. Hurry. Call today •.. ,.,... ... -~ arr:-~ W""'- MESA VERDE CREAM-PUFF 2629 HARBOR BLVD. S46-l640 OPEN EVES TILL 1:30 LEASE WITH OPTION 4 BDRM DR & FAM. JW.tEDIATE P'OSSraSION! · COATS' office. Priced at $24,000. family rm. Large private &. Owner needs ca.!h ot S'J,500, black leather den or office, WALLACE thus will sacrifice at a price 4 big bedrooms and gUeS.S REALTORS whi.cb. is at lea.st $6,000 un. MARVELOUS VI EW what! 6% ExUting Cl loan, -546-4141-der market value. Agt. 4001 Baysjde Dr. Beaut. S282 per mo incl taxes. · (Ope:n Ev1nln9s) 67S-4747; 61J...0060. shake roof 1 .. ty. 3 Br. 4 ha. If 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio EXEC's dream. Sale by waterfront home, xlnt swim. I' FHA LOAN owner. Being transfrd. 4 ming beach. Newly redccor. 762 •• 71 ( -i 546 llOJ BR, 31h BA, lam rm, 40x19 $175.00J SHOWN BY APPT. _.. ,.,.. ·• l Bednn home, 1%. baths. pool.. One nn detached con. Bill Grundy Realtor TAKE OVER hrdwd nn. crpts, drps, taining 600 sq, ft. Beaut 833 Dover Dr, N.B. &12-4620 s BEDROOM lrplc, forced air heat brick wall encl patio, w/w ' for only u:ioo down and as. $26,500. Asswnable FHA c:rptg, drps, Ideal loc. 316 NARCISSUS sume subject to 6% GI loan, loan Sl8,200, (5%~ int.) $67,001. Open 10 At'I Dally, V · h I , 3 11~ ~ mo th all payable $157, per mo. incl l724 Port Sheffield Pl., NB. acant • move rig t n. "" ..-.r n pays . G44-54S9 BR.. FA. hl?at, cpts. drps. Super size 15 x 18 family Prine, int, taxes, ins. Frpl. Util room off garage. room, used brick Jo'ffiE. W1ll1-McCardle, Rltrs. OPEN Sat. & Sun. J2.5 No. Asking $43950 PLACE, water soft ener, and 1810 Newport Blvd., C.lil. 5 Collins lsland. Spacious MO RGAN REAL TY all in a huge oversized cor. 548-7729 Eves. 644-0684 2-story ~rench ~ege~cy 67J..6642 675-6459 ner lot., $25,000 FULL 1llage Real Esta te Adult . occupied all Its life, LITTLE MONEY NEEDED beautllul 3 Bcdrm Cam-TO ftfOVE IN, Stunnin& 4 bridge hl»ne with oubtand-. huge bedrooms. Double fire. ing interior decoradon. Huge place. Built in desk. FOR.- used brick fireplace faces MAL DINING. Family an expansive picture win. room. c.ourmet kitchen with dow. Very attracUve land. built 1115, Move in lor option scaping completely sprink.. to buy money end reuon. ler t'Ontrolled. SIAi" Loan able rent, JUST LISTED. ... umable. 136,500. FOREST E. OLSON DUPLEX Close to ocean, Large 3 Br. overlooking tumUJg basin & PRICE. North Ba,y. 4 bnn, 3~ baths 328 POPPY AVENUE W lk & L & a """< room "' !Mge Charm"'8 2 br, v~w home. a er ee CO&ATS Call 645-0303. 2 beth.'!: trptcs .• dishwash- INC. REALTORS ers. $54,500. as all outdoors. Small swim· Llke new, close to beach. ming pool, pier, & sli p Owner 675-3428 Realtors 7682 Edinger $237,500. By owner. 8~164 -- or by appointment 673-9043'; Lido Isle WALLACE G1or91 Wllll1mson 2629 HARBOR BLVD. REALTORS Country Club Driv1 Rei11 ltor 546 1640 546 4141-40 Foot lanai added to this 67:J...4350 64S.1564 ev11. 54().5140 842-4455 1351 OPEN EVES TILL 1:30 (Open. Ennlng•), ~.::: ~-= ':'~;'..~! DELUXE ""°'0'" 3 BRU • 2 TRIPLEX "" DUPLEX DOCTOR SAYS SELLrl"ll""'l-ft"-.. -. ... -set UP for entertaining. Costa M1sa 1100 ~~~:.~ ~ e~ AND SEA ..,. 320 8th Street 54S9491 Open 'til 9 FiM ', Costa M:1i11 East side Across from a fairway of V.A •• NO DOWN s""belter property: $9,210 in. DELIGHTFUL BAYFRONT NEWOcSPANLiI~H 1-2%: block! Beautiful -4 bed:foom home $21,700 FULL PRICE for 4 Meilll Verde Country Club. FHA MIN. DOWN come, $75,000. $15,000 Down. Tw'O 2 Bedroom view units to ean. ve n 3 Bdrm • with $23,0CO worth of lm· bedroorp. home with a V.A. Owne1~ getting anxious fol' PICK YOUR PERRON 642-1 771 with fire places plus one bed· Rent 2 Bdrm. S46.SOO. provements includln& deluxe Loan with payments of deaL Vaclllt. OWN CARPET ""'"""!!!!!!0'!"'~~~-1 room unit over gllJllge -Th""E LINDBORG CO. 18 x 30 pool with Jacuzzi • $141.00. Where 'else but at (Open Evenings) Select location in Costa Me&a, P ANORAM IC View. Full price only SJ.15.000 - 1 ,..,..,..,,.5J6...,",.',.'..,..,..,,. 1 many many features. ALL WALKER & LEE could t.nt• Baytro-Apt Lux 2 Br LET'S TALK TERMS ~--Ov.-ner inves-ted pleni.y ol "' · ' · L-. this and NEAR the Beach. gel a BUY! Call WI for ap. ~ Ul·SllO money to·Mve you: 2 Ba. Boat dock. Temu PHONE NO\V -673-8550 3 BDRf\i ~ lor sale, lea.se Huge V.A. Loan Subject to pointment. (-dnnllhlllllt * 3 BR ..... 2 Baths or tn1.de for Hawaii prop. w/option or rent, Pacific 6%. % annual percent&ge w lk & L OlLEGE REALTY Realtor 646-0732 Sands. New shag rug, rate which can be usumed a er ee •15Cl:l ...... ltKlrblf,CM. * H11ge, warm den r ed ecorndlng. Tremend 's by anyone, CALL. * flr.t<;ceil. trpl. r .. ~~LOUSb Bayview: ....... ; value at $195000. Ph: 1\.ealton OLE' * Sep. guest Qtrs, '"'"tel>• Y owner. ~ ...... 1 -=====""'~= 536-43.31 or (213) 254.1761. Walker & Lee ~Harbor mva. at Adami (or your own hideawa1Y Ga.laxy Dr. or 204 Kings Spi11cious Lido Hom• ' 545--9491' Open "•tif 9 PM Have siesta a!ter fiesta on *Professional patio Place. 646-7994 Prime 3 Br. 2 ba. slngle l,.834iiiliiMii"ii""iii•riiDriii,iiHii.Bii.iiiiiil ReaJtort . POOL HOME =lut Spa.nish patio;:· There's nn. far camper, bcia!. 4 Br .. pool, Baycrest-llke story, l Sunny patios, On ROOM GALORE 1'!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!1!!!!"'!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!• I 1190 Harbor Blvd. at Adand Spatlls~g 4 =::. court & trailer. A real steal l!Jt new, Fee Utle._l::n1· -~· 1tr;;t 189to ~t corner lot Huge 4 Bedrm. Formal din. 1~ "'$2,726.00 TOTAL 545-0465 Open 'til 9 PM Yes, a b:autifUl Anthony yard, etc. "Red Tile Rool" just $24,500, gd loe.n. nr . .,....., a.11up I: 711. ,>Mi. Ing & family nn. 2 Fireplac. DOWN PAYMENT'' $29 950 pool • """t<d & filtered • Mod ldtch t -•· DAYTON EQUITIES 5'3-8281. Prime Lido Nord "· Lge rorncr lot. $32,9'0. • 11ets the stage for this 3 ern en, 8 et"""wn THEATRE OF HOMES DOVER Shores • Owner 5 S Br. 4'ii ha, nr. new water. Coi:ta Mesa back bay area. Wll'1 6_,_~ Loin 00 living room, SEE TODAY· 1 t ho Bea 1 d LEADERSHIP 842-4466 subject to a V.A Loan with .,.. bedroom. 2 th h:>me. Sale, Manana may ~ too late. =;;iiiiii9ii.16-iiil600iiiiiiiiiiiiiio br, bay w , imm. occ, rea•, ron me. u. ecor. Eves: 968-6800 61.t.d ·--··-• _ .... _ Reii.utitul family bmnl!, entry aeparate play yard for the Priced many p~ below • gd terms. 1712 Antigua Way. Deck, pier & Ooat. For ap.1 '!'"'!"~""""""!!!!!1"'"-"".'<"I ,.,,, ..,.,,..... ..---.. ._c hall,< bdnnL, h•-family children. New -1..1 .... _. ""0 2063 p't. Call: 1· ra e, · room. dining room, plush Kitchen completely redooe. ' · • ...-.... Ei.EGANT Home, 2650 sq Bill Grundy, Realtor _new 2 BR plU!I den, crpts, t Total payment $182 OD .... -6"""' ..... j'<'.. market at $35 900 CAU..1 s ""°"' OWNER must sell -$21,!0J ~ ~R~W~~~ shag~. quality buiJt-$29,950, ~ 5464l13. Walker & lee .......... ft. in pttstlge area, 3 br, 833 Dover Dr .. N.B. S.12-4631 drps, dishwa!iher, l biks noon, OOff.A HUGE WT ins. Parle-like yard, IPrink· FIXER UPPER by owner. $78.500. 642-558.1. LARGE HOME rrom bl'e.ch. 8482 Donca"lter with numeroua TOWERING lers, 6'4% annual rate loan Realtors Top location in Col!ta Mesa. BACK Bay 4 BR + pool, 5 Bedrm ., family rm., xlnt 536-8296 or aft. 7 Pli1 TREES. ~'Wmable. ~l~ 27tlO Harbor mvd. at Adams Full price $19, 750. 3 Bedrm, Shake roof. cul-de-sac. Cust street lG 11treet 45 ft. lot. 549--0209 Walker & Lee, • II • ome NEWPORT 2 bath, dble garage, bltill.'i blt. $48,950. 646-9528 Bkr. By app'l only. BY OWNER: 4 2-BR units ev1ry 27 mlnut11'' CORONA DEL MAR HEIGHTS & dlshwa1her, needs paint & EASI'BLUFF _ 3 br, 2 ba, $97,000 + lg 4 BR home. 2 yrs TARBELL 2955Hi11rbor clean up, Now vacant, For home. 907 Celtis Pl., N.B. Ownermaytrad~do\\'T!for 3 old. Clo~e to al l . Realtors open till 9 PM Bright & shiny: Lusk home, Sheer craflsmanship. Dis-details call 540..1151. 644-l379. Bdrm. home 1n TcITatts, $63,500/best. Yrly Inc $7800. '2790""54"~";.""""91iii0p..;B.,';'iii;til"·'.,t•.,~ .. ~ .. ~ms-l ,..DiiiR.i'•ii;iiHioliiD"Ei;A"wiiiiAiiYiiiii I !i:i;::~· ~~~~. ~~ ~;cl.~~v1:~!ing~~ s BLUFfs_ E-Plan. Great ~~~·o ~·~e~'!i'vvi:N·c. ~~~ Ash, lW7-81i91 after 1• ON SECLUDED PRIVATE sprinklers. Buy now, move home. 3 bedrooms, fa mily He.,r,,i!,a,,CJe water view. 3 Br, fam. rm. 3377 Via Lido 673-7300 VIEW DRIVE. ""a"t. -··tom mod. in before school start!. , Priv. yd. Xlras. 644-4561. 4 BR. Condo. Sale orb'-" °"' .._...., $48 900 room and large living room. LARGE HOME By owner. Elec !tns. EASTBLUFF ranch home. 4 B~. lam nn, r;;;Jl·!l'l!·'ftll"-'llll"""-... A real delight home $49,00J. N H I ht lllO 5 Bedrm famll 1 1 Refrig. Pools. Cibhse, FHi\ 4 Bdrm. 2 bath, charmlnr 2% baths on appx 1'.4 acres. ii~\' i~~-4 iwport 1 g s ·• Y rm .• x n appr. Avail Aug 15. 493-3418 home with character, Pro-Com air nd.'tioned love J' 6 \ ~..._ TO V1EW -646-1111 FHA R I street to 1'itreet 45 ft. lot. f-~'"· •-~·-ped .I! P. co 1 _._' rl . ~~ b "'"' ""d A rU eds~-~.. ENCHANTING VIEW By app't, only, BY OWNER: 3 br, 2 ha, .. ~...,,.......,. .............. Jy w/w carp &: U111pe e1 ttra ve 3 an ~•=Y rm. Of Bay & Ocean. 5parkllng $97•000 crpt, drapes & landscaped. decorated; sWt!epin&: vie• inCl,. 22 Avocado trtta. DI 133.0700 644-2430 with boat entrance, good li tes at nlte. Pregtigious Owner may trade down for 3 Assume Jo In terest 1 0 a n, from living room l f<mnal ft <'Otl'1lll, 2 horse barn &: ======~==~:/ 5% % FHA loan 10 ASSUme, CHU Dr. 3 BR., 2 Ba,, & Bdrm. home in Terraces, $31.0ll. ~U din. rm. Let m show you tack rm. May trade, $69,500. DUPLEX ..;;;;=~~~'="'---! walk to stores, school•, Only large guest rm. Court yard CdM, with 0ttan view. !hill. $48,SOO. MAIN =TY, REAL-Large bedrooll'IJ!l, l bath each, $24,000 $2S,950 ~ o~er, 1 patio. Vacant. $59,900, An· LIDO REAL TY INC. Fountain Va lley 1410 ti!fiti llJ.P < TORS · near Calta Mesa Park &: 4 Bdrm. 2 ba. .....,..n ven ngs xious for oUcr, 3377 Via LidG 673-7300 ---------d;iAfJil~ ....... W Clubhouse. $21,500. Shown Owru?r desperate? Prime ~ 545·5'80 WANTED ONT T RIPLEX 4 Bedrm + Pool! ~-·· -·--INCOME UNITS-by appt. area Dream 811 buUt·ln fMW~u.tlt) 3 BR Home In Newport BAY FR 18 x M heated & filtered 833-4700 644-2430 NEWPORT Lach1nmy1r R1o11ltor Jdtcben, dining room. entry WGE REALTY Heights under $35,COO Want· Lido l•le 3 Bdrm, 3 bdrm LOW JNTERE.ST GI LOAN! W.t'~·t trtple• with float Call 646-3928 or 545-3483 hall. Fim. time on marlcet. 1*,..attwti.,CM. ec'. by ready buyer & l·bdrm. 3 car garage. AM/FM ..,. to-m, wat•r ,.,_ 7 BEDROOMS •·uv.. " n.....n Eveni .. -530-1720 · Right on the beach. $ll5,000. ''"' 2 FAMILY rooms, 3 baths. for boat • nice patio • only .... ..,.. U'tfi'2 TARBELL 2955 H bo Brochure on Request tener. Lovely yard, sprink. $74,500. Four-plex, just ste.,. ar r FOR SALE BY OWNER Rea ltor 67' '562 len. Best area. /.1str. suite w/sl!Ung rm. .r.. &op. children's wi11& • all from great bay &: ocean WEST BAY AVE. DUPLEX l Bedroom Muse, Very large Howi11rd Lawson J r. HAFFDAL REAL TY lhe exlras, Beaut. 11ecluded beaches, $62,500. Charm1 .... new 3 bdrm, 2 ha. 2-2 Bdrm. -Eastslde fenced. yard. perfect Jor chiJ. 842--4405 ~ '"6 Al!lume 6%. % loan, $34,950 drm and -bl. Paneled Uv. 45' lot.$52,500 country 11etting In Newport f:t.~''!~.\~--._ Mediterranean style: Block .. ---· -~ rn:nn do 3 b 1u ba. Beach. Ideal, custom home • • 6 :.. ~...., FORTIN CO, 642·5000 Ing room, House just fresh-Dov1r Shor11 1227 "'""" wn. r, ~ for t,_ famUy. Cati 1,_ S: [! pt;M0.1Hiid from ocean• bay, Builder's ly painted. \VilJ sell VA or =..:.;.;;:....:=c.;.;;....___ 675-2643 or 497-1265 _0 _ .... -----·--home, top quality. DON'T JUsr WISH tor O WORLD * app't. 833.0700 ~2430 Biii G-•nd• Realtor fumlshln ... for .....,,.,. borne, FHA. $21.500. * LD H t' -n-h 1'00 PYR.Al\tID EXCHANGORS '.. '' find ~-;( buya,,..i: today'• CALL EVENINGS Exclusive Dover Shores ba.yl";;":";;;;'n~•~'"";;;;-;a;;c;;;;_" .. Ms.3652 Saturday -DIM&-A-J.JNESI 833 Oo'tW Dr., NB 642-4620 Claul.tled Ads. OR WEEKENDS & mt, view home. UniC[Ue &/~·----- S1a l B1ach 1450 ~~·~----1 OCEAN view-custom 2· 11ory 3 br, 2 ha. $39,900. Owner financing. Vacant 531-4239 TREES & SPACE 673-6561 different 5tyle. Built for Wa lk to th1 Beach GerMra l 1000 0."1r1I 1000 Geniral 1000 beauty & convenience. 41h Neat &. clean l & Fam cor. ~a."!! Ana ..!!_9ts. 1630 \Vooded 100'x125' IOI. Cozy 3 .. HOME + ha, 4 car gar, hi ceil'gs le ner home with ~hakt' roof, ;;,;~;,;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I llBST llOYSt c L A 5 5 I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 bdrm. 2 balh, dining rm., INCOME t f t 0 built-in kilchen with break· many ex r It. ea ures. boat gate. outside shOv.-er, p QL HOME fast area, Cow red patio and Rcttrlng OV.'J"ler wil l sell 7 BR. $1G9,0ll, 548-7249 etc., In lovely Newport \Vt'sl 3 Bcdrm, hwd Oooni. 16 x 34 __.-/ double garage. Priced h'.I sell 0..(';q'() J'\ '-.C: f)-C ~Q..9 2 BA -most furn ilure, Now honie. Owner moving out of Anthony pool, All on large _ No Flnana-problems!~? ~~ J."'QU ~ 1-.,... '4:J Jj (/' V tLwd as guest home lor agcd.1 ;;U;;n;;,iv;;a;;r;;s;;it;;;y;;P;;;a;;r;;;k;;;;;;l;;;2;;3;7/ area. Anxious. $32,SOO, 65' x 135' lot. Priced at the M. M. Le Borde, Rltr. The Pun le with ·th e Built-In Chuclle wo..,ertuJ "°""H•I. 130·000= I' 0 "'" Ev'"1"•' CI •P•'"'"t 125,500. Vots 00 646-0555 Eve1 : 6(2.7438 $5.000 dn, 646-8115 FULL OF CHARM ~ 545.5830 dn; FHA lo dn. MODE L HOME Q Reorrong11 lethit1 of ft.. COZY COTTAGE. Need• Live In it, Jove It, lock the fnnrclntmlthtltltl BRING $$ & SAVE $$ AvaU now • tbi5 spaclOUlll 4 four 1CrOmbl.d words beo 110me tender. loving c/ll"e. door & leave It while on that LLEGE REALTY FULLER RE AL TY B 3 Ba ho F tow to fOf'ftl lour simple words. 1 ·-2 BOOrm with heavy tong va cation. Cozy 2 BR. 2 J500AdamlatK1itof,Ciil ~14 r, me. am nn, I -•• "· f 1 128 000 lge din & llv an!1ot. w/view, 0 0 Y N E B 5hake rool and large lot. ot0 •• or on ':I • • I""""~'!"!'~~~'!'"~ ~"'!~!"'"':""!"~""!~I l.«e atrium, view kit, mmpl 1 1 1 Asking $23,500 or . 1ubmlt. e Red Hill Realty GI NO DOWN $250 tmL pd. 3 BR, RIO cp!d, drpd, wallPftpered, I 11. FHA· VA terms av1t.llable. Univ. Park Center. Irvine \\1Al..K TO BEACll, 4 Bednn, firpl, w/w. Avail now. •·-~ ~~ 000 n-J -• -· -• Call 545-8424 South Coast Call Anytime 833-0820 1-; B;\, MP famUy rm, elec Broker 5J4..09SO 1-'n...........a ... -... •''""'· • '"'y . 1 "'!!!'~~~~~~'l'J:':l:I Ward Realtor, 1430 Galaxy I Realtors 1 !.: klt., approx 2fKXl 11q. ft. De.. D" 616-1>.IO \Ope" D&ilyl. 1--H,.._E..,S_P .. E...,,,.-t ~ DOG OWNE RS NE EDS BUYER NOW ''"""' for hmily '"""''"' Laguna BHch 1705 STEPS TO OC EAN I I I ll .t 14. encl cement d~ run, 2 BR, townholllle. Low down! Ing. -~-------1 I Beaut landsc. -rd. Sprkll, Last call -?ilUST SELL! 847-8507 Eves: ~1178 CHARMER & VIEW 3 BR. 2 baths. Absolutely ';;~~~=~~~::!J '" S hml all u ~100 2 °~-m + •· hi 1-• ~te~::~ d: 1--.;;"1""~;:.,:lo::.,•"'"'"1"'1""1--il ~ 'N1ghttlubt<0ne,A•~l-r ~~:,~~~d,1;~ ~':7~~·~!~ •:zji!l%1 tj~~~;j~~~l:!llm••••••• CAYWOOD R EAL TV ,.,.-Pt.. C.M, · 1• w • • ••iln ":::'.::::::'.:='.:::'.::::-.fell dead durhig her ed. She ON BLUFFS .. _ deck,, Garage, Onty $.1.5,500 · ,._ W. Cout Hwy., N.B. ...-her&alfoff. • ' uo:aut o..~nn Eest bluff 1242 A SSUMABLE U ,.,., ' .. I -I ' I . ' • 541-1290 • I L A B T E L I vu, 3 BR. park<lke "" H~% LOAN ~,,.. n ft IQ Lowly , ea. •a.. ""'' 1--~~-.-~ ..... -1 a c-1oo. th• .i,.,.11. ~;!;'!,, yd,'""'· wm """''""right m.urrs, eor.do 3 •r. 211 11s<.,,.rmopoyuvell'lht"•· ../TO/an hame. Ny cptd. Din, rm.1 I I I I' I V ~!.!l~"j ln the lflfssln;3 .. ~_d_ :'~·1:019 Linden Pl., CM, ha, Split 1,,vel, choice51 Btau1Uul 3 Bednn w/large REAL ESTATE ~ J.. m I fe ._ • df':n ... kl lie OIN. Pl· - - . . . -. YI"'_._ tom step No. -t<>W. greenbelt. $38,500. By owntr kit, dlntrc •re•. CrplJ, drps ·~ n B ~=-ldtch. w/puio,>. .• "~~~\s~~~~slETTEU IN I' I~ ,, ~1a 1s r I A~=~~~~ b.~ Mt-4006 ~~sk.~~ly84~~~· m941ia90 Glenneyre ~·9-0316 F'QRTIN co. 642-5000 Tyler \Va,y, ~1970 Corona d1I Mar tl50 $33 PIJJOONG IO movef You·n G ·~=~N~~~f lfTlllS I I I I I I I WANT HELP? Advtr119@ in BUYER with Ctull wan~ • \Vnlk" ! Btn~~~X:. tcrm1' =: :=, ~ SCRAM·LETS ~NSWER IN"""CUSSIFICA TION -7000 ~·~,'J:I, «;';·~~°.:\~. ~';: ~ 1 ;~~~' PI.A,: ~~·~;, 111:;"00 I ""= W1 et TE fo " N w. d• ., 3' LI J!C t• "" L1 I.A "' ,, 00 " 'j" ., • Ad W1 Vi B . t• 3 I ' y ' ' . Bl "" V1 BY "' " .. r. - Lo B ;, " So " Lii D 0 Bil AV •• ,, c oc 2 fr .. B Pl " 7 1 A LI Kl. b· i. i &I' Wi ~ f. DI " S1 7 " s: Li ]I 'I Al w ~ i - • Mond01, .My 11, 1970 DAIL V PILOT It HOUSES FOR SALE -R!NTALS . RENTALS lt!NTALS _ -~ Unfumlahotl Aph. Furnlehtd ·Ap!L Unfurnl1htd , .L:;:.!l"'.!"!!:-::-:..:Bo=•=•:o• =~·-:I •~ <;onerol -"Goiilrol --rol ._ 9 'HANDY>!AN SPECIAL f 4 UN1T ..,.,, ocean side ol 2 Bectnn, tot&lpeb: OK"'UOS REMARKABLY NEW 1, 2. 3 Bc!drma. All hwy, •Pfll'Ol'. l!iO )'di. from 3 Bedrma uW pd tots OK $150 UNBElJEVABLY bhm ~t/dtp, pr. Nr So be&ch. G.-d l>,000 !alt 2 8edrm turn IDU/peb llSO EXTRAORDINARILY C.Ut Plua SI0-1973 , yr. Ndli, ~Int A cleanup 2 ~ Costa MtN. $135 BEAUTIFUL MS-2321 of 1nln . .Price $69,500 WILL 2 BR. 2 story totslprett $125 Vil O'fHre Oirdtft Aph I BR., l'ii bl.. atudio apt. TRADE, STAR * LET 547~ Pllttlng ...... wat"1all • c:rpt, ....... blU .... a ... RENTALS RENTALS REAL ESTATE lNNOUNCIMINTS ANNOUNCIMliitS Aph. Unfurnlahtd AplL u..fllml...... _!!,-'o"no"'r-"1'-I ----l-"ontl.;.;;...;.;NOT"-'-1;.;;C,;;;IS;;..... __ ..;•;.;.ntl.;;...;N.;..O;..T;.;l.;.Cl;;.S;__ 5411Huntlngton llMcli .. -locom.;f'NMrty TllE HICllWllER "Scottish Treat'' 161'1 Pork•ltlo Ln. Mgr. 141-19" CUSl'OMC ' unlll • 1'rim< Joe. Ownen C Br. dtn, 3 Ba + 5 lrs •tudkll; fplcl, -Not 1190.SOO. Owner -*NEW 6 UNIT* WANTED OVERWEIGHT LADIES 11 Mrss10N REALTY 494-0731 1rtrtarn, 1lowtn evtr)'Wber.. to abp $135. 347--9503 * OPEN HOUSE * <5' pool, r.c. room, bllltaMl, I ,C=0=,"'10""'Mo=,0===5=1=00 1IMl Oe111 """"'1"' LqunA RENTAL FINDERS 8BQ'1, Sauna, turn.-wWm, Homu & Buildlng Sitt• FrM To L•ndlords 1 a: 2 Br. a1IO StllaJet from U-p Nyes Pl. off Cout Hwy, $135. S@f U! DID Par1on1 Victoria Beach Area 64S.011'1 ltd., 642-8670. Between Har. PLACE REALTY 494-9704 4JSW.1t ri.C .... M ... bor&NewPOl't.2BltN.19th 29&& so. Oout lUway ...... --------------' FAIRWAY YlllA APTS. San ~KO Frwy to Beach Blvd, 4 btka So. to Holt, W, on Holl 1 blk. By Builder, Near ocean, H.B. Al9:», new II anlt • • Unit, * 347-3957 luolneu Rontol COSTA Mesa: 600 aq. ft. office, fD> sq, tt. 110re. 800 ... ft. ...... * awn.. J5<S.2l30 ' . . For welghl reducing program to eslablbjl slsUstlca for rapid permonent wel(ht IOM conducted by qualHied physical culturbls Must be 1 minimum of 20 pound! over- weight, ()ave transportation and not cur- rently under doctor's cue. All inquiries com pletely confidential. ::::=:::---~ "'fltom $38.50 Wk. ,L-• Nlguol 1707 Co1to-., 3100 Thim $16Wmo. Lw<ury Sin. 2 & 3 BR's Private petlo, pool • lncllv. laund.r)' tac. lA QUINTA HERMOSA ASK FOR MISS POWELL -537..5412 LAsr WEEK BY OWNER 31sR, 2 be, on cul-<le-sac, Lee ten'. lol Nr school, gle Apts. Complete-maid QUlET adult couple ~)'. service, housewares, linens, 2 Bt, no peta. drpa, crpb, aU utll healed pool ... whr, hid pool. 1125. ""' viLLAGE INN Pscihc Ave. 5(8..Q?S or Lquna Beach <l!M-9CJB Dano Point 1740 612-14'9 BALBOA INN Lake $2'1',900. 49r.;.4284 ------2 BR. Gar. Pado, crpts, Balboa • 675-8740 DOGS OR HORSE drpl. stove, relrlg. Quiet 1-"'f'~"l"'"'l'~~'l"'l~~ .usume $20.000, 6% ~ Joan. tropleal setting for adults Just for SfngS. Adults payab!o $173 PITI. FuU °""· 1 bile to "'°"'· l l5:l SOUTH BAY CLUB price $28,500. Submit on to Sl6S. M&-4430 or 54fi>4S2 APARTMENTS dovm payment. $250 ATI'RAC furnlunf. 3 N•wport Be•ch 20282 Riverskle Dr. BR 2 ba tnbse. Balcony, 880 Irvine Ave. E. on Orchard ott of Santa patio, pool. Avail Bil flnrine and l6thJ Ana, then turn ht atreet 963-2647 (714) 645-0550 rtgbt. Ai;ent 6'7>1657. E;XF.Ctn'lVE 3 bdmt, 2 ======== RENTALS bath, drapes, f i replace, Cost• M•t• 4100 disfiwaaher; dbl garage , Hou111 FumishH walled yard $250 S48-85.17. 1----· ---- Ront1l1 to Shore 2DOS $195 • 2 BR. -N•w erp.,, * SUNNY * REFINED lady to 1hr lovely fun in Bhdfs, NB. Prlv ba • all prlvil. $80/mo. 644-03£9 A•I Aug. 2. 21n 1<ura1. * ACRES * .,....,,, ..,, or belr noon * M I A * tor appt. ote • pts. t12S EAST side .2 BR Adults Studio & 1 IMdroom1 EMPLOY~ lady to share on!Y. 165 21st si. Pb: LO# RATES 2 BR apt wit& same. 758--0328 Day, Week or Month * 646--5!1J1 * • Color TV Air Cond. 2 BR. hse. Crpt & drapes. e Pool &: Phone Serv incl WILL share CdM home w/ Lg. fenced yn:I. .2658 G. e Mald Sentlce avail empl.. lady. Orange Ave. $175 mo. 1 S:JgnaI So. of O.C. Call 675-4854 4 BR, 2 BA. mtns, cpts, Fairgrounds --drpl, dishwsher. Sehl. sho~ 2376 Newport Blvd. N-port Booch ~-ping, --$290 mo. 531-9563 ~ "Mod.em Spanish" Near Orana:e Co. Airport Ir: ucr. Adults only, ~ Santa Ana Ave. 16211 Porkaldo Ln. (.;:.';.oc.,,~;; •Mgr. 117-5441 - FURNISHED MODELS NOW OPEN · Lush landscaping, cabana, covered court· ya.rds, sunken swim'g pools, BBQ's Ir: foun- STORE-OFFICE Newport Bch, 825 lfl It * Ervin 675-1601 • REAL ESTATE ======== O.ntr11 Offlco Rontol M701,_--"---- --------R.E. Exchongo '231 Mgr. Mn. Joachim, Apt J.A _1 MfRRTMAC A WOODS OFFICE Sl'ACE ~-~ "THE ULTIMATE IN APTS" HUNTINGTON ~,"' ~~;.;...~ ~ 1 BR's-From $150 2 BR's-From ,17().$175 HARBOUR clean oven, beam celllng, All utll, incl. Furn & Unfurn. 3 ail~• ava1l1,ble ln Hunt- d&hwr, prlv pr, elevators, lngton llarbour, Boardwalk therapy + swim pools, ... ___. Beach 5200 Huntington Bffch 5400 center. 270 sq. ft., SOD sq. ft., BBQ' a, saunas, clubhouse. "',....... • 600 sq. ft. Call Ron Bartlett Adults. From $140.. Ju.st -~-----2131592-1361 e n4/8f6.1361. Mognlflcont OCEAN VIEW Land 102'x120' l..quna Beach w/ 11rMt improvements under way. AdJ. 25' lot selling above SS.'*'. AaJdna $25,000. Trade eq, for clear auto or ! Bkr. 497-1210, 497-1021 eves East or 2600 Harbor near PARK NEWPORT • care H .1 .. -. Nabers Cadillac at 425 .free Uvg ovrlkg the water. ON BEACH! un ... ., .... n Harbour Cofll. R. E. Wanttcl 6240 Merrimac Way. MS-6300 7 poola', 7 tennla: cbl, $750,000 42'1 Warner Aw., H.B. ------- BAY MEADOW API'S Spa. From Sl75 to $450. e 1 BDRMS FROM 0» HILLGREN SQUARE CASH BUYER w~ts R-3, New exciting 1 BR, 140, Bach, 1 or 2 Br, Also 2 aty • 2 BR l'i» BA FROM S2lO ~ sq ft Delwte Offlce1 R-4 2-&ttes or more, Onn&e 2 BR, $165. Beam ceilings. Townhouses. Elec. ldt, pri • 2 BR 2 •• -_n M .. ~ Avail . .fur l.mmed leue in County, San Dieeo. Long baJ S b -Pa .1Lnv --1 1.. · Beach area. Bryda Inc., Wood pan'lg, shag Crptg, pat. or . u trn prkg, e S BR 2 BA FROM $360 one o cues busiest shop. R.E. Broker. (n4) MS-3888 priv. patio, llOD1e w/frplcs opt maid aer, cpta, drps. CarpetB-drape..alshwuher ping centen, WW · divide. or en•> 6?5-8555 eves and Pool, sand volley ball crt, Just N, ot Fu.hlon Ill at heated pool-tauna.ttnnil Alr-cond., music. paneling, wk ends rec bldg., pool tables put-Jambotte le San Joaquin rec roozn.oeee.n m.. crpts, drJ>I. Max. park'& &l;B°'U"s""ii'=,-,.,,.--tl~ green. Aduits, n<) pets. Hills Rd. 64.f.m!I tor le.. patlowmple p&t'kins. mairlt. 210 E. 17th St., C.M. INESS •nd 38'i w. Bay. Open HOU5e ing info. Secw:ity pards. MrBrarn213: ~1-2700collect FINANCIAL 12-7 pm daily. 646-0073. ~--~ FURN. a1IO AvalL Deluxe 1-Rm. olfiee Bualneoa *OPEN DAiLY 1:5'.* DELUXE 1 & 2 Br. Bltn HUNTINGTON . Nr. Ora,.. County Airport OnportunillH 6300 •tv &< dshwbr, "'°' encl n7 AMIGOS WAY A Irvtno lndaat.iall-'"•==:·.:;;:::.__::::= garage, all util pd. From 2 BR. 2 ba, wtl13, untam. PACIFIC Complox, Carpot, """"·AAA $135-flTO. Cblldm welcome. Outside living areu and music, air-condltlonina I CANDY SUPPL y 241 w. Wil.soo-, no, 5. doqble l&ftl&'H. $250 to $3(1(1. 7ll ~ S:.~ H.B. janitorlal arvice. $125 Mo. ROUTE l=-:'.=::-:c:-:---CHERS-Boat 0 w n er a for winter. 4 Bl!nn. frplcs, patio, dock, walk to Lido. No pets. $450. 673-4931 WATERFRONT -3 Br & den. 2 Ba, 1rpl, wzhr/dry, dshwhr, fncd yrd. Winter. 3513 Finley, N:B. 5<3-7<o5 ~ Ole. opon 10 .,._. pm Dolly BOB PETTIT, RealiDr (NO S>µING INVOLVED) Nowpnrt Beach 3200 SltJDIO apt. over gan.ge. NEW INDMDUAL HOUSE, M---~ by e 833-0101 e Plan One ........ $915.00 KI t c henette w/disposal, 2 B ~ d ._ 3 BR. 3 ba. Frplc, pool ...-.~ Pl two .._ · r, .... tn. crpts, rps, ""am 2 WILLIAM WALTERS 00. To RENT, sub-leue, fllm'd. an ...... $1625.00 ** VACANT ** ~"""" rm. •how.,. & tub. _., __ patio ~·~t living $2llS. Ba)>lmt 2 br, ba, Plan"--·-00 a.---• lling 1 ........ '6"• · ..... " · "'2M ·~ ........, '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!'!!!!!I ar unfurn'd, 2 or 3 nn. u .. ~ ...... ..-,, • .... ,""" ce ' crpt, frp c, Adults only, no pets. Refs. I -=-='::Art-::::=~=='~===-otlloe -·ue In Irvine Jnd. Cuh Required, Excellent in. E Blutt, 13'5. 3 B0 Pool RMer& IDd ... ·Bed, d1'he•, ~-so~" •·-ta •-·A 1· NOW RENTING, -· ... "----•••;,. • ......,. .3tUI n..... ve. Complex. $95. untum'd, $110 come for a few hout1 week- Clevidence Realtor, no~·· Immaculate. S12). 543-9412 or~. IRVINE 5231 BRAND NEW turn'd. """': st&-9085 bet 12-5 1y work. {r>tcys 4 Evt~i~-s). 675-6044 ~ cleanicg deposit. ..-u ,.,.'6 Renv-.nsible adul'· only $170 1 • 2 BEDROOMS PM. Refilling and collecting from 2 BR • den, 2 BA Harbor -..... "' ' NOW LEASING' I ted dill Viow horn.,, lux erptg & 5'3-4093. 1787 0rana-Ave . 3 Br., lli Ba, patio, bit-Ins, • FROM ONLY $155 CORONA DEL MAR '°" opera """"" in drps, clbha • pool, elec kit. MOTEL·APTS crpts, drps. Ask about our New, family and adult unlt1 Large Door plans Dix. ottiee a~. 2 Rms. Newport Beach and sur. 135 k · discount plan. 880 Center with total ~ation cluh Spacious ...,,.k like grndA Grnd flr Priv bath New roundine area. We estab. Lido l•lt 2351 Adults· no pets. $350. Leuc w le: up. Kits, hid pool, st. 642-8340. ..--.....,t Pu.k'r Util pd. .,1'.lc lillh route. (Handles name .JIOUSE wanted to ttnt or 833-0504 air-cond, queen beds, ph =-=-~==,--.,=== and pre-school. l, 2 le 3 Complete ~ facilities ..... • • • ..-brand _...a., _ _. ka) ''"' o" LldO I~• from 1't D HARBOR GREENS bdnm from 11'0. Nr. 1ho-M·' •· 1"7 da"" mo Ownor 673-6'1S7 -•N, ~·N '"'" · 3 BR, fam. nn, bltinl, 2% serv. ally &: Wkly rates. ,,. uue.,. open ~ HJ • • For penonal interview in •-::Sep"=::tom=be=r-=. =67>-0IS4==== ba. Lg. liv'nz rm. A: fenced 2080 Newport Blvd, at 2lat. GARDEN A STUDIO APTS ping, aolf, schools. Just VILLA ':VARNER DESK SPACE Newport Beach area, ''"d 1 · * 642-2611 * Bach. I,• 3 S1lO BOUth of San Dieiro Fwy. on 8600 Wamer (at Edwards~ yd. Nice area. $300 per/mo. ._ BR's. f:roQ\ , Cul Dr Irvi 833-3733 ]05 No. El Ctmlno Re•I name, address and phone LAG. Bch. Beaut. furn/or unf. 3 Br. hm, n r evenrthlng. $375 mo. on lse or summer S600 m o • 494-29'11 or 495-5480 Lease. 546-4421 B·Americard Master ChatEe 2700 Peterson Way, C.M. ver ., ne. · (n4) 842-0609 Sen Clemente numbtt to MULTI-STATE 4 BR. 2\ii Ba., bltns. Steps AVAIL Aug. 1. Will show 54&0370 PARK WEST Mnge'd by Wm Walters Co. 492-44JJ D!STRIBt.rt'ING. INC. 1681 to ocean. $350, Lease mw. Furn. Studk>s $115. OUIET adult cpl. only. 2 br. APARTMENTS NEAR Hunttncton Harbour Broadway. Anaheim, Calif., Caywood Realty 548-1290 A.l&o l BR apt. No no pets, drps, crpta, dshwhr Owned nnd Mana&:ed by New Triplexes. Qui.et &nL DESK SPACE 92802 {TI4l T18-S060. ""'===='====· chldrn/no pets. See Mer. &: htd/pool. $125. 2295 Paci-The lrvlne Company Lq: 1 BR's. Dishwaaher. !1 7875 Beech Blvd. Newport Heights 3210 Apt 6, 213.5 Elden, CM ~~ .. ~~'::·• C.M, 548-6878 of I ~~~~~~~~~ $150. Pet ok. <2U), 592-2623 $135/mo, Dix mob. home. ~ I· i ,;:":=m=•=>="""""'===== Huntington Beach *READ THIS BUSINESS ontl FINANCIAL Budn11e OpportunltlH ~ *CANDY SUPPLY I ROUTE* (PART OR FULL TIME VERY HIGH INCOME ''FR.EE BONUS ROUTE PLAN" ... ... for Now available In On. County. All locaUons cOmmercial or factory tum. !shed by UJ. Qual~ penon will become dlatrlbutDr Ian!. our candy (Nestles, P en, Tootaie Rolls, MDlc Duds, etc.). You mwit ha "" .... 2 ro 8 hn. per week • ti.me (d11$f or eves.}, $115D to $1950 In: CASH REQUIRED For more information wri ''ROU'l'E DEPARTMENT 23," P.O. Box 1739, Cov Call1. 91722. Include-pho no. or call collect l • Ina, .. ZIJ) 339-513:!. . Ji KOA9 ..... loin Iara- FAMILY CAMPGROUND Cash In on the boomlna veVrecreation buaine11. the nation's lirat and now ... est system of delUXe lamJly campgrounds. 1.nqulre while cbolee loc:atiorul In: OF &till available. Wri KAMPGROU~DS AMERICA, Mutual Be Llfe Bldg., Bllllnp, 59103, for full lnformallo Opportunllln lnv•stment nollt ML n. 6311 ./ 2 BR holu1 ./ 1 BR apt $140 1125 ennanent. Adults. Responsible Reta. 494-il.70 WIIlTE Water Panoramic View. Exclusive section. 3 Br, 2 Ba. Privacy. l yr le.ue. $350. ~-1627 2. BR Older .home. New paJnt Comp!. furn, htd /pool. :--.--,-~~~--I E•st Bluff 5242 1 • M2-ml. Ext 276 1n &: out Deluxe w/w, new Adults No peta 4 Seuons Gr•ciou1 Adult Living =;.;.."'-'"'----= S•nt• An• 5620 I -~~=--,.~~~-I '""" & rung .• gudener, Mob. E.t. ""9NowportBI. 'BR. w/w ..... drpo, bltn PRESTIGE LOCATION 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;\ DESK SPACE Givomo \i -o!yourtlme util. Reapons. working or 548-6332 RIO, aplr 1trcse, frplc. 145 For lease. deluxe 1888 1111. ft. I• and l'U prove to you or YWI' semi retired cpl. No child, · E. 18th. 557-6682, $100, 4 BR, 2in BA apt. Frplc, VILLA MARSEILLES 222 forest Avenue hP.nker thil ia thfl best money no dogs. Refer. $210. *SUS CASITAS drapes. crpu, wet ba:r, pri BRAND NEW Laguna .Beech makerlntheUS.Proveme 492-5037 Furn. l BR. Apt.. Adults *DELUXE l Ii: 2 BR Garden balconies, dbl proU kitchen SPACIOUS wrong and I'll pay you noo ILE 40 ACRES (ZONED MOB HOME) Dbl. 1L fron Next to $00 million De Sac suoo· per/ac. Terms 688-2COO, Ext. 9 day or ..... veil ! ..... -- n =====:====I ority, no peta. 2llO Newport ~~~ Blt·i;u, ~rv· ~tio, dshwbr, dbl oven. Pool. Conv 1 a 2 Bdrm. Apts. 494-!WiS cash for your ~ hour. Min. Money to L~ft 6320 Corona del MAr 3250 Blvd., C.M. * 642.9286. poo • c. ts. to 1hop'1 schl1 & recftation. Adult Liv.Int LIDO BAYFRONT tmum. lnveatment req'd S27SO . 2740 ---------MERRIMAC WOODS ..,., $145 mo. 51&51.63 From $325 mo/up ~um ... Urmom. DESK SPACE euh or $850 down w/-1st TD Loa $225 MO, rr· lease. 2 br, luxury 1.2 BR. air-cond; 425 NEWLY DECORATED 835 ~ Way, tlB Dbbwuher. colcr eoordfnat. $45 credit Secured by 1970 car stove, refrig, lrplc, lg. yan:I Merrimac Way. 545-6300 See 2 br le pr, wtr pd 6.16-412(1 MF. next dool' 865 Am.Ip. od lush •'-•• to be used in our rental sys. $% INTEREST ,D1n1 Point NEW HOMES .. $30,950 3 Bednn, 2 bath. 1520 sq. rt. Some ocean view. nr new Yacht Harllor. Small lots. 1 See at 34001 Aurelio Dr. &: grg. On Margverite, N. class 5100 2176 Placentia-D $125 Managed by appllaDeet • p -6'f5.8230 tern. Best program in US 2 d JD L ~~~~~~:,/pl~ owner. 2 BR. furn, very lrg. 25fi6 Orange • D Sll5 WJU.IAM WALTERS CO. :e; ~c:.~ 2 • = UtPSTt 2 ~ -trmt·lf&hvt~ 900 aqk ltoor$ll"oo"'Mstment1lacllaboCalwll t71h<5 n 0 LEASE •-·· T 2 Crpt/drps. l Child O.K. No 2 BR. unl. newly dee. Crpt, e NEW DELUXE e lbowen • m1mnd ward-· ., •• res 8' p PAT. cap · : an f!UILDER 642-4905 : .u·v1ne eJ:Taee. Pets! $145 mo. 673-7178 drps. Encl patios, Spac. 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lease. robe dOOl'I • 1ndirect lla'bt. Ing lot, convenient to bank, 835-254110 to 6 dally, Terms baaed on equl ty. II yn. BR, den, 2~ ba, bltne, $.100 grnds. Adulbi onl,y. S140 mo. ,..,. Jn kitchen • breaktut Pott Office. 673-4120 COIN LAUNDRIES 642-2171 54$..06 mo. Avail 8/1. 67J.5193 LG crptd 1 hr nr fairgrnds 2283 F'ountain Way E. Incl spac, muter JUlte, din b:, • hure pH.vat. fenc.d NEWPORT Beach deluxe of· FRIGIDAIRE Servlne Harbol' area 21 al!O new triplex $66,500 .. evefl/wknds. for yg manied cpl, Infant (Harbor, turn w. on Wilson) rm 4:: dbl prage, auto door patio • pl""" J·-·-•p•-• fices. Air-cond. Hid , Prtv, JET.ACTION S1ttl•r Mortg•ge C Vacation Rent•I• 2900 ok $125 646-8226 opener avail. Pool I: Rec. ..... -.,. 336 E 17th 8tree Larrt:· 3 ~1.2 toba, de 1 n, 2 B. R Furn. ~· ~t• ALMOST new 2 Bedrm, 2 area. brlck Bar-B-Q's. Wp beat. ba. 2400 W. Cout HWy. Costa Mesa choice Joc--nro:> • I BY Bay. 2 BR cottage 1).8. Bay1hore Parle. S7S week. 112 W. Pac. Cst. Hwy., NB. 642-Qi66 or Kl >1248 patio, .. .,c, tao . · • ..---....... ~..-• BA apt w/frplc. SlllS mo. e FROM $265 e ed pocila A lanai. --pe• mo net. Minimum 1torqe. Call 675.MOS Kids ok. Sl55 + dep, 1998 Adults only. No pets. Im-865 Amigos Way, NB 2101 So. Bristol St. . Property 60IO SlO,OCQ down payment, Trust D..aa Ul5 2 Br. Corner dupkx. $195 Maple, Apt. 1· 548-2808. mediate possession. A;;:ent Managed by· (%ML N. ol So. Cbaitt Plaza), Santa Ana, Alpha Beta major $1200 2nd TD needed WW yn. .... 12611 • •pot . er Lite vie. vie ••• w. vie. ""' mo. Furn or unturn. So. of BACHELOR APT: Gentle-546-4141 WILLIAM WALTERS CO. S1nt1 Ana LOTS shopping centu. Big volume pay 10% amortise in J Hwy. 675-3190, 675-5788 men pre!erd. Utilities pd. SPACIOUS 3 BR, 2 bath, PHONE: 557~ (2) $17,!XWI each on Produc-laundry-, $39,000. Reuonable 8 unit deluxe apt b Summer Rtnt1l1 2910 $110/mo. aft. 6 p.m. 642-3234 E. 18th st. Adu.Im, pvt yard, Coron• d•I Mir 5250 I ~~~~~~~~~ tion Place. 74 x 135 each. terms. comp! lsed. C&U 64.> LAGUNA BEACH Huntington IM1ch 3400 garage. $175. Cpl!, drps. ~~~;;iiiiiiilim~ii l$150 · LRG 2 BR./studio Will cOmider trade. 32 Wa.shen/1 Dryers, good or res. 615-5535 CONDOMINIUM 2 BR 2 ba Condo. 1 mi N1wport llHch 4200 516-3776 or 540--«ll • Apt. CTrlploxl. Family alu loi:ation. $8,1111 F/P, Small ANNOUNCEMENTS Lowly Blue Lagoon Villa. 2 to heh. Cpl/dry, fpl, bltns. A Naw W•y To Live 2 BR. among pines on cul«-~ ~~. w:i~:~· :i82 3000 to ~~i::.GfDr leue, down =~~TIC ind NOTICES ~~2 ~1A com~~~y f~ ~~~~ -~ t!nrua~· OAlnKWNo00wpoDrGI ABoRoDcEhN ~ ~· dnr;15'b~; k~~~~: ii: ·~· chlldttn ok. (Nr tchla) No lOc tt. EQUJPMENT, INC. Found (FrM Ads) '400 18 • nens, 18 s, e c. • • • Adults Mgr. at 124 E. 20th pet&. 2230 S. Center St., 5%>-7833 _..;.._:..-.;.=;._ Washer/dryer. Avail Aug 15-Call O:luck, 826-4ll0 8-S M· APARTMENTS ON TEN ACRES S.A. Nr Warner, 557-6502 Will build tD 1ult, 1 acre on ATTENTION FOUND: Mostly black, ma1 Sept 5. 499.2152 AM or F, 5:JO I: wknds, 962:-9522 On 161h Street btwn 2 BR. upstairs. Bltns, crpts, 1 a 2 BR. Furn A Unfunl Placentia.. INVENTORSI dog, brown face. White 837.m91 anytime. 4 BDRM, 2 Ba. Close to Irvine and Dover Dr. ~:~~:ts. 568 W. Wilson Ftreplaoes I priY. patlcl I Loguno Beach 5705 Well1-McC1rdl1, Rltrs. Your Ideas can rnake moJIE'y! on tall. Brttd unknown LIDO. LINDA Isle, Bayside beach&: schools. Avail Aug. (714) 642-1170 Poola. TeJmb.Contnt'1Bkfl'4 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. Our bullneas lg helping In-Flea collar. At Animal Dr. & Penin waterfronts. 1. $275 mo. 968-4153 -B~A~Y~C~L~l~FF~M~O~T~E~L-SPAC J Br. 1~ Ba Studio. 900 Sea Lane, CdM. 6U-2till 548-7'729 Eves. 644-0684 ventora develop their Ideas Shelter, N.B. OU-water Lido homes. HUNTINGTON HARBOUR Sl.50. 726 Joe.nn St., 846-l584. <MacArthur nr. O»st HwyJ * NORTH END * and convert them lnlo ca.ah. FOUND, female half·terri Bill Grundy RJlr. 642-4620 4 BR, 3 BA lease • or opt * LO\\' WEEKLY RATES * 2 children OK. No peta. I , ·t ou• world-wide clearl•g & hall_ Chihuahua (?) • 7 Bkr . _,. K"t·•-TV' Id ___ .. SPACIOUS 1 br. Adult& $160 One of those rare ovely c I I "-A•I' ....., • " AVAIL for 1. 2 or 3 weeks 84 -8553 . o;t.}*'0152 1 w"'n, "• ma ...,.-v•ce. * SPAC. 2 & 3 BR's. Crpts, BR 1 blockshop1..... omm•rc I _.,, house asaiat you in locating tan. Vic: F.V., Stardust at $225/week. 3 hr, 2 ba, Heated Pool. Drps. Pool. 2214 Colle-309 Fernll!8.f 675-0692 1 apts, p .. ,.,1-------~-968-6167 .~ 673--3127 beaches, private, encloeed 21% Return, San Clemente. a profitable market. Write fam. nn, 9-5wal~~beach. L•1un1 B••ch J705 646-3265 Ave., Apt 2, 646-0621 patio. $175. 2 Stores A 3 apta, Low down or ph. SM=-:wh=t-...i="'·--=,,,-. Call btwn • NEWER <I -Br. Bltns. Crpts 2 BR UPPER-walk to be~. 2 BR. Crpts. drps, pool. IGds Huntington Beech 5400 8.30-4237 or 49M488 NEW PRODUCT Balboa Id nr. Ferry land OCEANFRONT, beaut. view, d $295, T t w rid' $250 incl utll. Yrly avail ok. $140 + dep. 1998 Maple, 2 BR, Ocean view, 1 blk 14.~ Ret Balboa Blvd IA!u. DEVELOPMENT SERVICES Owner anxlou!. Ra 2 br, 1ba.406 E. Ocean-~792 . op 0 0 '~~_,. •• 3 nU75-7045, 213· Aptl.548--2808 OCEANFRONT, view, to heh., b.r crpts. $185. e-cttor:oi5yn.$96,000: SuJte~ 675-2.198 front. Balboa. 673-6801 B 3 ba f 1 dbl '1'f'f 2 BR apts, bltnl, cpts, drpl, sundeck, bch, Newer spac 49'-8188 fteoalonomlct Corp. U752 Garden Grove Blvd., KE=Y~S~F~o-und~-on~bo'"'a~cl>~ BEACON Bay -Modem 2 4. R. . p' . gar; $137.50 • UTlL pd. Bachelor Clean. Inquire 1552 "A" dlx 2 Br. bllns, crptl, drps. Commf!rcial Bkr. 67s.6700 Garden Grav& 6.16-5800 Island & Balboa. lnqufre cpl!:, drps. bltns. $325 Lae. """·-•-k bout d" 1~-· N ,~ • ~, n15 Br. apt. F?i>lc, Iri sundeck. Agt 499-2238 4!5-3403 rwn . .tUI a our IS· Coriander. 546-5268. • ..... .,.. r ,...,..,. Pn: • •• · REAL FSTATE 6FJS.698 w COFFEE at front counter, D Priv. bch. $22.;. (2 13) , , count. Seacllfl Manor, 152.l $135. LARGE 1 BR. Cpts, ~~·Adults, baby Dk. General 5i:~ ~~TOW!'fl ~ DISTRIBUTOR Pilot. 2211 Balboa, N.B _!'!>-WfBALBO. ~TIIISLANl 873-1'191D. •,ttnc_, 2 2 ~ksmo~~ ;~~~7 }Mi.= ~=·F:·r:;:2. furn. drps, bl tns, patio, pr. ADULTS only • 2 br, crpll, I---------ner. 5'8-1768 Aat. Opportunity far WJ.able per· FO~D Dent.al Reta . lntt . N.B. 1m ... ...... U, lnl ncla or - In '" 4:30 1 ... .M. .... JI. Ued .... .-.... ·r $D1 ............... • Adults, no pets. 646-1762 Rentili Wanted .5'90 514 w Hamilton. % a<n, !I01I to deliver coffee to In. 1369 . Galaxie Dr .• 1 Br. apt .. sips •. Avail . ~pptt. si,arqe. ~; l y Lrg 1 Br. Unfurn. ::· ·~"1.to1•or· near Harbor Blvd. S31.ROO d111trial Plants, otfiee build. =-=~=---- A\I&'. C&ll 67l-l503 Mission Viejo 37ot ease. mo. 998 El Camino Dr., C.M. At. ~0• ' ve, 00 YOU NEED A HOUSE WW subordinate. 548-TI71 lnp and other Ioc&tiona. BLUE Jeneea 1Ia1 Lklo 81yfront-2 Pools e WINTER RENT~ e * 546-0451 * P • SrrTElt.!1' For the month EXCEPTJONALLY HIGH Hawthorn and Elli& F Jtit.cbenettte auJte1 le. rooma 3 BR 2 ba, view, swim/ten-Rent NOW for Sept.! $l50-2 BR. 2 BA. Sunken WANT Manqer for 6 unlta, of Aug. while on your vac. Lott •100 EARNINGS. Investment of tain Valley. 9fl2-4 7 by day week or month nil club inc. All cptd, br!dc Abbey Realty 642-3850 drp bltnl Huntington Beach. W 111 Responsible: o J de r cpl. -----------! U995 to $3900 for an tmmed· !¥i8-5624 LIDO SHORES HOTEL patio, 00 be. 83'1-S648 * 1 BR. Sl.35 yrly, utll pd •. ~~ ;'~. ~~b ~ st.· ftduce rent on 2 br aiit. 548.2117. BAKER & late income. Write for more BEA=~UTlFU==L-male--Slame!e~ 61TUdoParkDrNB673-81DJ San .Cl-to 3710 AdultR. On penln1ula. 2 BR ~i. bl-Pool from~ to $70 mo. 2J.3:l,B~U~S~.-ma...:...,-.... --,-=:M"'"'Br'°"'hae,.. E,.TERPRISE lntormaUon. riving phone eat found Peninsula Po ...... , .-.c~i:'l'I • ....... • "''"'· • 657..J..lll Commercial corner In a numbrr&:addre&ftoQUICK M'l.'l<llello WEEKLY Rentals. 1·2 Br. --0 • ...-....... No children, no petJ. $1S5. tdrii ar apt, bch area. Pref. ~ ndo IST CO ll1l R b~ =",:,'~""°~-~~- from $100. Near Beach &: 5 BR. 2 Ba home, rnlgniti-325 E. 17th Pl. 646-6895. 2b~~ newnclly pe.lntedliso ·• , ~.,~m=·="-"''"'-' &<2--:-92'1!c-:,--,-boominr areal ~~-us KUhoodP Ds···.:.._ "eai ...,.!, ctffifEA Pia. vie. Esta )lay! (1), 683-8247, wknda cent ocean $275 mo. 601 Huntington Beadt 4400 Uns, e gar. . J:OD, i 4-6 BR by Sept J, yearly, expo1ure with lu1 '"t on ' ... ,..:1uun, • ...,.,.,. High, 1denti1y. 56-8129 i675-8077· Calle Real. 540-1810 2,!~: ~n~~b~~a~!. P;!fJ. lncl utll. Adults, no pets. nr achool1, up to $450 mo. Baker Ii: 101.5 feet on Enter. FRANCHISE. 54s..3580 DIX !Um Gard'" Cotllge, RENTALS l BR $l 35 • 2 BR $l5D -*~89=7=-<..,88~5,...,.=-,:-=:-ITraBEdeA~H~L~~~ :p'-:S11 Box M-t091 Dally Pilot e.·~ ~=:,,::.; VIVIANE WOODArtD SL\ME __ S_E_kl_tt_•_n_M_eaa-V • ~ from bch. Pvt patio, Apts. Fumlshed Fumlahed -0 ver100 kl n g ii' LRG 2 &: 3 BR. 2 Baths. e LANDLORDS e can • 546-2313. COSMETICS area. Please call n--~• .. w/util. 499-4307 beaut. gmien patlo &: hid nc1 Nf!w 2 Br. 2 Ba. Pool. ~to.,. .,_AL SERVI-,1 "_ ..,...1111 • ...., General 4000 pool. Adults. 1035 12th St. Frplc, bltna, cpts, drps, e Dshwht, patios. 1231 Elli.I. ~~ .ru:.i~i ••i _., '""""' A SUBSIDIARY OF' ~ ~i /•ON the wattt, BalOO. lsl. (&el'Ol!s from lAke Parle) c-""="~P~•"°=· ,,,516--,1034===• I 842-8477 or 847~7 l-=-:;iB;::t<>;,k;•.;,rc.-';;;;'---=;:;:; GENERAL FOODS 10 SPD Boy'a bike, w/, p;,,r. SIP' 8. Alli 1·15, RENT FURNITURE 536-4900. 2 BR. Aduli., midd!Hgrd A'ITRAC. 2 BR. $13S,.. 1149• e WANTED TO RENT No tranchl .. let. $SCIO minl· Balboa Island. S5(IO. 6T:>-6737 1.-'C:B=R,=,,.-w-,ha~g-cupe-~ting-. prel'd. No pm. Reis req'd. All extras. Pool. Kklt/pets. CAR.AGE FOR STORAGE. mum invtntot)'. Complete 673-S069 tID0 lale AIM • alps 6, DIRECT TO YOU swim pool. walk to beach. 2.'m Elden Ave. CM ok. 17431.C Ketllon Ln. I===*=~-=-:::-:*,.,.,= * $5,500 + tralnlns and continual rut-FOUND • Re-llgioul item lOO' from bnch. $200 wk. 24 Hr Dtr Adults, no peU:. $140 mo. 2 br, untul'f).$130/mo Want 847~ 847-1446 ELDERLY lady wants film. View-Levtl lots ~ tz Tenn• danceatnocost.CaUcoUect Newport Pitr lad l 91k. mtn. ~ lOO?fi PURCHAsk6moN Tradewlndl Realty 847-8511 O.K. no pets. Joann St. C.M. 2 BR, l~ BA, patio, pool. downtown H.B. Apt. Can PLACE REALTY $9704 ~O Van Sickle (213) restroom. 6flS..286T aft~r AVAIL. now thro Sopt, BBQ Compl•le 1 Bl< Apt., RENTALS ,51=0-343=='====== 11165 mo. MORA KAI AP"-pay l'O mo. max. 5.1Mm 2969 So Cout Hlway • undtt trtt1. Sleeps J or Low &J i22 Ptt mo. Apt.. UnfumllhM -EMt or ~ch Blvd, % bile • ucuNA VIEW LOT • LIQUOR •Ion. Old license Lost 640 ~ ~«<™· m--slrf _ .30.Jlly Mlmmum -----=-·IN-port Bolch 5200 oft Garti•ld R..,,.1 for lbnt 9"S ~ Cub Sale $81511 1265.1111 a ,...-. Alie far SIAMESE cat (CNS bl RENTALS WIDE VARIETY Gonoril 5DDI N~EW=1~8N>!k,...,,,,...,.1D..,boa-cl>"'"."'l13S=. 491-9741 Van Counldman, ~nn point • "" ~-t) male \;;;;;;;:~;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;; \ LRG, chttry 2 Br. 2 Ba. *"' PER w .. • up Bia ~· Hou111 Unfurnished Cuttom Fumltur• Prtv patio • QUl£Tl Gu. ..... • .. • Loll In tht vie. ntar Shu. delwte •Pt, 1.1pstllin w/ w/ldtchen. $35 ptt Wee~ •---.--1$ Vend-0-M tic _ _,.. a: Ooll c Rtnltl !IMP LI-LIITT trpl bltn •·M• baJ-•• Single adltl. couple. 212-A -·-•· • ~ non & 'I" Goilor_ •I 2000 517 W, •~• CM. 1tAe 'l•e. • . c, 8 « o111 '-"'03 14th. $36.1319, 673-1784 Apt.. MC1I'E.L. ~ ""==----'-·i 1nack machlon oo locatkm. Reward! DQ: 54'7--950T ......... ~ ovtrlk& Lido Isle le octan. VERY let for pl 5 AC, un(leveloptd. Lake new ln April. M&-3t09 54&-3708. • 111> • 2 BR. ,.._ gsr, fried 1563 W l.Jncoln. Anhm 771·2800 APARTMENT 2 en ll"· 1215 mu. Sorry, il'LOVEL Y NEW APTS n """' om • ....,.. 0..,... Han~ l~h.l,i;"=i:=;==:=:::::= 1,:;;,;;;:::::-,=:::--'::. Jtd, patio. Avail AIL Funl-HOLIDAY PL.\ZA FINDERS no chUd. or pets. F, KlfW· Near Ocean • park 1 A 2 man on da¥ ahitt. C.M. Call Take over Io dn $3> mo. BuilMll W<1nhd 6J05 LOST • Af&ban. ~ 11. welcome. ~ctlw, Bkr. DELUXE, •Pflcklul 1 Bl:lnn. Hundred• of AJ)arbMnts Jard, tualt«. M1 2--2222. BR's. 425 13th St. 847-3951' i6<2--=.'19>)=·====== ~ilrl~~~71~.,_-,...,..,--.,-\;;;"~-';::;;":;:;:7i ~~1~:~ 5M-Ct80 .rurn apt $135. Plut uUI. Ltated Now * 2 BR.. 2 BA (2 1tor)'). 1 lt 2 BR. New. Frplc. Near Matils, Triller BUSIEST marketplace In BUY or lAul •ma I 1 $liO. 2 BR. fncd yrd. RIO. Hf'ated pool, .\mple pt.tk-Cell 64~ ftltn11, priv. paUolt balcony. oetan. }!atlo. AdW.ts. Court• fff7 town. Thi DA.n.Y Prt.OT bmlnH1. MolTI, mobile LOST· Im.mature rtd·1• -.n SIL Child • pet tnc.. No children. no pets.1~~~~~~!.""!~""l lloag hosp, atta. Sl.85 mo. LINOBORG co. 536-2579 --------Cualfled 1eedon. save home park, retail hnchie. hawk w/csat on lt:tt ftlcome. Active, Bkr. !965 Pomona, c.M. DIALdlrect&fl..5lttl.Charre Appt. .only. 4247 Hilaria 1 BR. Near Ocun. Patio. I WEEKL"l ltattt, SEA money tlrnt A tUort by ONple wUl Invest 1().60 M. .,;-=~=B'=W=~==~-~ Ynur kle&I SUl)tl'-MllrtceL. )'OU!' ad, then sit btck and Way, N.B. 540-0093 Adulta. LARK MOTEL, lS01 1bopj,tn1 from )'0\.11' Box No. PlOTl, Dally Pilot THE QUICKER YOU SELL Pilm w~· ADS! 61>-1671 Dial 61>-&171 A cburt tL 1111'n to the -..,., Ota! 61""671 far RESULTS UNDBORG CO. 536-2"'11 Nowport Blvd, Costa M.,. umcllalr. DAILY PILOI' WANT AD. 1'HE QU10<J:$ YOU CALL. . . -I• .... ' ii ' I I I I ' \ ·- UJl,Y I'll.Of Monci.y, .ki!1 XI, 19711 liiiii~ili-11!11••1!111••!iiiilllilJffisf!E!~·~ .ICE DIRECTORY * * * :k 1c, 'It Conlroctor. "21 ~Ell.VICI DIRECTORY 1511RVICE DIRECTORY Houllng 6rio Sowing '"° I ;;;;~~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;:; ________ _.._ QUALITY you'v. • 1 w a 1 • CONTRACTORS T.N'T. Lawn Servlee. wantrd ~ GENERAL CO. ~ c~ps. hauling alterat.i6m. Key Sl,y, l~ AddiUont-RtmodeJ~ ~l-= ~. 548-S863, ~ Aff., C.M. fi.15.1292. R.c!l~n~~mi:-'d&I HAULQ>lf,, S:ll> A LOAD Tiie, C1remle -6974 U rwd .. _ __._.. Clean up. Tree Sctv. Gcn. J---------oe ~ Pruntnr 6t6-2528, S4J..SMJ * Verne, The 'nle Man • ~;El ··. -;. ' •nlE REMODEL!:RS• MOVING, G11.rage clean-up Cu$t .work. lllltall A repairs, Free e1tJ • 1009'-tlnanc1"a ~ Ute hauling, ReA1011ttble, NG JOb too sml. Pluter Pl\· Kitchens raraJH. carports Free e1tlmate1. &15-1602. do. LcS:~7~repa.ir, Complele Remode l lnr. YARD I/ Gar. Cleanup.I.;====='°"'== Quallb' Cotltracton.. Mi. Rtmove trees. lvy, truli. Topsoil 6977 .. .-._ Whaddyo W•nt? Whoddyo Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Specl1I R•te S lines -5 tlmn -5 bucks llUL•S -AD MUIT INCLUDI 3600 Grwde, backhoe, 962-8745. -''-------.;.:. ~tY \VAY. quality home HAULING* Jo,R.EE EST TOPSOIL, Nltroa:en Iortl.fled ttpalr. \Valls, ~llin&, Doors Ask tor Butch redwood added, 837-7000 ot t-lc. No job too small. St8-13i5 or 548-52-tO 495-4632. ~l-1494 TRASll i: prage clean-up. - ADDITIONS, L. T. con. Mon. thru Sun. $10 a load. Trw Service 69IO 1-'#11.i 'I'" ...... tt Mik >-WMt YM flllt .. tr_,. s-vou• .,.,._ ..,,,.,.,. .-.-. "-I 1r-t1 .-~trtlllfw. 1-#0'TMIN• f'Oa SALi -TllADlil OlllLTI To Place Your T rader's P a ra d l11 Ad PHONE 642-5671 struction, Qngle OI' 2 1tory, Ftee Eitimate. ~ BOB'S TREE stiRcERY l)lans. e1tlmata 6 la,youta. l&i acre& Lake Co., O~., $bll free & Clear • CX• change for So. Calif. Roy J. Arntson. llXXI N. O:last, La& ......... ,,,. 2% Ae. estate lot, under. ground utll., Gavillan Hills. nr. Riverside, Lake Mat. thews view, Trade for lne., trades, etc, Bkr. 547-6469 2,000+ Ac of Magni!. Utah land. Nr, Zlon Nat, Pk. Wtr, trees, road, nr. I a k e, $350,0Cl> eCJ. For trades: inc. or ?? Bkt. 547-M69. 1,s Acre Tustin. CUI-de.sac, tret?s, horses, private sl.reet. Trade for listed &eeurilies, Owner, after '1 PM, ... ...., Will trade equity in 4 hr home In Huntington Beach for travel trailer or truck & camper. 962-9651 P.1t. Chalet, Cm!Uine -St. Moritz. Fabuloul vw Lake Gregory. $35,IXO. Trd eq. $20M for prop. N.B., CdM. 1714} 64U339, 55-81186, 10 ar ~ A close to bi&: lake It river. ~hing, huntina-, camping. Nr W~nemucca., Nev. Trade car, camper, property in Hawaii or T 540-2333 Residential lot • Westcllf(, NB. F/C, $30,cro value. Trd far: land, boat, airplane, cw or ? • Writ. Daily Pl.lot Box M·l008. Wbl.t do )'OQ bave ID trade t, lJst tt bl-n -bl Oranp Q:iwlty'I 1&rlflll nad trad- tne post -aD'J make a draL. Gin' & COUNTRY STORE TERRIFIC LOCAnON! i-c.cro equity for comparable er What ha.Ve you? SiS-5383 s.t7-1Sll HouMCfeanJ-6735 Is back oUcrina the ume -..,,,=---o-=-.=--1-----·...:..·•---I Fine Quality ~ Servic<. Arlditlons * Remodel~ * 540-$798 * 1"red H. Gerwick. Uc. Housecleaning? 67HD41 * 549-2170 WE'RE THE TREES, fledge1, trim, cut, EXPERTS! stumps removed, hauled. 30 l..ge 4 BR, 3 ba Dovet" Shor· t~ ~ ~ui!:': d::'~!:: ~/ ·;~ DUTCH Maint Serv, crpt )ll'I. exp. ntlly ins. 6424030 cln.g, 1lr waxing, window DON'S 'I'R:EE SERVICE All wublJW. Harry van Beynen types, Lise &: lns, Free 537-1508 it no ans call aft 3. Estimates. 642-5584. &m. home, llarb>r ...._ CARPET * 540-2991 * STEAM CLEANED ~,~Room--.~,,=.,~..,-. "'tt~. ho,---me-.1 REASONABLE RATES BacK Bay, 4 Br. 3* Ba.. Abo Cl!J'Pet lnstallalloo gst apt., pool. Want duplex I -~=~6,014<0,6 °'5"97=1==-- CdM or smaller 001?'lf:. OWNERS SPECIAL Leon Vibert Rltr. 5484588 500 aq. ft. S20. Diamond Laundnunat • 26 washers, Carpet Cleaners. 187 21st 10 dry, Lakewood $8!0). St., Costa Mesa, 645-1317. Trade f<r car, boat. TD'a. REMARC Services. 3 rooms property out of area. $21.50. Fully guaranteed. 968-t904 Credit c:ards OK. 847-fi68S. LcveJy hiih desert home, 6 srEAM jet carpet cleaning, acres, $31),(Q) value. Ex· By . ClarKare, nation-wide change tor your propet1;y service. Frtt est. 642-4055 Newport, Laguna area. CARPET Cleaning. 10 yrs 494-4746 or 4!JS.l331 expel', lk'd, bonded. Free By Owner HB Unltll, Low interest assumable loan. \!Jill &ell or trade for 32 to 3S ft, Sailboat. est cau oo.-usc. 'carpet Loylng A Repair 6626 Mesa Oeening Service TREES &. shruhl: pruned, Carpets, windows, floors, etc. shaped, remo~ or replaDt. Res A. Comme'l. 543-4111 25 )'1'5 Joe, 8.18-2528 aft 6. JOE'S CLEAN SERV. Upholstery 6990 We dO Everything-Res A Comm, Froee Est. 642-1403 FABRIC SALE BA y & Beach Janitorial 2500 Blue Chlp 1 tamps Carpel! windows floors FREE. 2-pc divan & chair etc.~ & Commc·i. MS.140i ;69, includes fabric&: labor. All Work done in 5 days, EXP. Housecleaning ny .the Free estimate. 821-5474. day. Own transportation.\========= oc8J6."97====~--Job Wonlod, Mon 71IOO RES I DENTIAL , com·-· men:lal, ~ &: property CAPTAIN clean-up. 894-6103 Licen&l'd _ Radar • Loran, Janitorial Service 30 Yelµ"S exp, sail or power. Re! Comm • 64" .,..... Professional Sport Fishing • &: c I, ~ Gulde Mexican I: Central Ironing 675S American wa1ers • also --~------1 licenscd multi-eng, commer-* ffiONING * cial pilot, land & sea. Ad. My Home, $1 Hr. ministrative experience. ·-· I STU.L have the Best deal Pick Up &:: ~iv, 545--7641 Best of references, Write Will trade lrg 5 Br, 2 Ba home ln San Clemente; magnificent ocean view. FOR; Income property, Cf.I er Nwpt Bch. area. call 54().1810. 8 UNITS Inglewood plus c:lear commerc, income, for land, boll&! or beach prep. uly. Equity $103,0CO. Owner 6$-6259 Will tr ad e Gulbransen 11pinet piano for older car. ?ifust be in gd running cond. &. have gel ti.res. Call......,., in town ln C&rpet-Linoleum-J I I I I =-~=M~l060,..,;·~D-ail~· =-'~p;="°='"-·= c~~· 1;i;;i-~As W~~ Available:~= SCR1AM-l£JS CARPET! Fantastic Sav-kind of "''Ork. anytime, -="-==""·=Cail== ...... ==' .. ====I ~~:nng~ ~:ble~ ~: ANSWERS Electrical 6640 Ask !or John or Nicholas Beyond -Sheep -Humid - -------646-00'lS. Ballet -BUMPED ELECTRICIAN. Small Joba, SPARKLE ~anihrial & W~n· Night club scene: A strip. mainteMnCe&re p alr a:. dow dea~ng Serv. Wtn·perfelldcadduringheract. 548-5n1 dows, resid., come!, {.'Onst. She BillfPED herself off. Floors cleanup. Free est. 962-0672 6665 Treasurer/Cont roller -CA-RPE'l;.--VIN-YL--TILE--landscaping 6810 P•rt-Tlm• LIC CONTR. Jo,REE EST. MOBILE HOME OWNERS c~~· prov('n mll~eme~I ~ "'" ~ * Bo~ ·~ ill ho! s !ls, broad experience Jn "' .....,..,~., ,...,.,""""" w d your f'n · I and tru tio gravel tight. For in!".> •' 1~c1a . .,. 1'""'' ale " :..&J F I R I 548-'1265 M8-5240 Ask f.of e ""'• 1pec1 1s m re es--A * • * * w um ture estor ng Butch or tate development. Services l~!!!!!~!!'!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!J!!!!!!!!!J!!!!'!!!!!J!!!!'J!'!!!!!!'!!J!!!!'J!!~ I-& Refinishing 6675 available in L.A. and Orange ANNOUNCEMENTS SERVICE DIRECTORY FURNITURE Stripp""' • Pointing, Couoty ""'"· Cail BJ3.3402 and NOTICES Babysitting 6550 ruinl.M!~!ri75 * Paperha nging 6l50 J ob Wanted, Lost '401 WHITE female w h ippet, -)lice omall G..,,.,....,... Vic Balboa Blvd " 2lth St. 546--8.'m alter 3PM. Heartbroken! Personal• 1--------· WORRIED ABOUT RETIREMENT! U you don't want to llve with y o u r children or relatiws, here·1 a chance to do ~ about It. Our non-profit organization, for over 80 yrs, hu made retirement dttam! come true for thousands. U )'OU have 1S yn be.lore ~ plan to retire, )'Oll need not wor- ry, Send name, address A: phone number to P .O. Box 10332, Santa Ana. 92701 for Wonnallon MATURE WOMEN with own car PROFITABLE WORK 1n home of p&n!nts Parents Babysitting Agcy * 842.55.lT * BABYSITTING tn my home Inf.ant to 5 yrs. Da.y, eves &: wknds. Nr Victoria & Harbor C.M. 645--1473 WILL baby&it my borne any age. 6:30 to anytime artn. Behind Pomona Sehl. -Babyait 3 kid• in our home. Nr. Bushard It Banning ,.,_ COLLEGE student. daytime bab)'llitting. Licensed swim- ming instr. Pre!er beilch area. Own car. 548-1489 --METICULOUS PAINT. __ w_._m_•_• ___ .;.7;_02::;:_0 G•rdenl~ 6680 BLUE CHIP STAMPS INS. crew col. studenta, int-ext ~~x':om~~='. * LANDSCAPE * houles, Exp. Docks, 67S-5812 Will live in or out. 494-0475 * GARDENER * THE JOB You Want At The Malnt.-Residential. com1n1. Price y , W'illing T DAY worker. Honest, depc~ Clean-up, Lawn removal Ii: ~ tt 0 dable, neat. Call 541--0682 lru;taJI, Spn.nkll'!f, Weed kill-Pay, Special prices on apts. or 547-1843 Steve, 548-4549 '-========:::. ing, De&igna, Llc'd Contr., I • 12 yrs loc. exp. 536.-1225. TWO UCLA s~udent-. need Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 AL'S GARDENING mOIK'y. Exp d ho u 'e [;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. painters Free est. Ken for Ganlening k m:iall land. 5#-3074, scaplng servlce1 call 540-5198 --~~~~---1 abilities aalimiteb ageaciY Servi No Wasting "'N•wport. CdM, Coo. '*'WALLPAPER '* ta Mesa, Dover Shore• .., When )'Oil call ''!\lac" WestcllU. 548-l#i 646-4032 WE AIM TO PLEASE Complete gank-n service. Reliable expert cleanup &: minor land Rep, Call ''Ft'arless Fred" 9&2--t914 NEW Lawns, re-seeding. Complete lawn care. Clean up by job or month. Free eslimale!I. For Info call llOUSES. docks, boat s , SECRETARIES a n y th I n &-everything Lite bkkpng, SH, accur, typ. l'OalOO!lbl)I painted. For tree Ing. Some insurance bck· estimate &16-9T:.ll. grnd helpful/ Detail mind- PAlNTING -Ext.·lnt. 18 ed cart'Cr girl. yrs. ex per. IM. Lie. Free est. Accoutt. C«illnis, SEC'Y 543-6325. Attract. well gmomt'tl J:"irl * Alone? C1rpent1rin1 6590 897-2417 or 846--0932. -· -~---,..=--~-c-..~- INTERIOR/Exterior, avg, J w/IO(I SH, liO typing to \.\-"Qrk Br. apt. Labor & malcrial for mkt &: sales mgr's. Yes, It's your fault. For ~ airded message that will change )"Otlr life call, • 5'7....., l4 Hr. Recording *FULLY LICENsEDi"'"" Renowned llindu Spirituallat Advlce on all matters. Low, MaJTlage, Buslne111111 Readings given 1 daya a week, 9 AM·9 PM 213 N, El Camino "'"" San Oemente, 492-9136, 9U-0078 AL COJ!OlJCS AoonyrD011S Phone SU-7217 er write to P.O. Box 1233 Costa M~ CARPENTRY MINOR REPAIRS. No Job Too SnWl. C.binrt 1n pr- aae• A o t be r cablneta. Sf.5.1175, 11 no annver leave DllC at 6t6-2372. It O. A-.... CARPENTER: Re rn od e I , Patio work &: Cement work & P&inti~. No job too amall. Free estimat«, 536-194.f QUAUTY Woodcr&ft, sml gen'l constr. It carpentry. Ji'tte consultation & quote, Call Ken 645-IXIH, 548-42.15. REMODELING REPAIRS Announcements 6410 Apt. Maintenance RESUMES • Scriplll • , Hal 5'18-0"787 Don 494-5301 Reports Editing • Writing CARPENTRY: Ca bi n e ts• • RewritiDR" Fut Accurate-Room Additions, Patios, Service. Re a 1 on ab I e , An)I •ize job, Mike, &16-2576 Sr16-5445 REPAJ.RS * ALTERATIONS Annual Flea Mlrk•t Santu Ana Y\\'CA * CABINETS. Arty size JOb 25 yrs exper. 548-6713 Jill No, Broadway GEN. Repair, •dd, cab. Antiq1.)CS. boQks, jcwelr)', }"'ormlca, J')ll.neling ma.rllte. Ck>!la, coin11, collectables. Anything"! Dick, 673-4459 BARGAINS! Sna.ck·Bar A-1 Small job specialiJt. July 29 -31. Noon-9 PM Call Gon:lon. SERVICE DIRECTORY 846-6545 &.byafttlng '550 C•ment, Concr.te 6600 LA WN & Garden Care, beautification, weeding & c:leanup by college students. Reas. 543-7363, Callna Bros. AL'S Landscaping. Tree. removal. Yant remodeling, Trash hnuling, lot cleenu,p. RepaJr &prnklrs. 673-ll66 JAPANESE Garrlencr Mo. Rate. Gen'! Clean-Up. E:ic- per, Reils. Free t 1 t, 642-2239. LANDSCAPING, gardening, pnin.ing, trimming a n d renovating, Call after S p.m. 548-li>l9. GARDENJNG1 Land cleanups, Sprnkr syii, roto- ccment woril:. Y a n c e y -JAPANESE Gardening Service. Neat Wtlf'k. Oeanup yd. maint. 968-2303 E XPERIF.NCED Japanc~ Gardene r . Compl ete Service, Free est. MG--0724. CEN'L Clean Up, tree llttV, wf'ed kill, roto-till, &prlnkln rrpaired. 6f6...'">848 CLEAN UP SPECIALIST NI.'"' f('l'K"f' Kt repair. Odd .)obi!. Rl'as,. 54"955 Complete Y1rd C1r•I JIM ~ $57. 548-1546 PAINTING &: carpentry & S EC'Y all small n-pail'S. }"'roe To Gr~'\ Mgr, ~ Wlls. Dl- estimatcs. &IG-364j vers1t1!'d duties tncl. person. TRADE p · ti b 1. nel, securit)', mkt Ii: en.al· , am ng y 1cC'nS· lll"l!ri"" ed contractor for truck, . ...,. rum. or ? &U-4558 SEC'Y YOU Supply The Paint 3 ~1ust be llha.rp w/gd ability Br. Ll\! Rm & Kilchcn Painted, $50. Call 557-8638 INT, &: Ext, Paintin~. Local ref's, llc'd, ins .. tree est. to work v.'/peoplc. r..fkt bck· gmrl helpful, Skilli1 & ap. pearance lops. Call Clwck, 645-080!!. RECEPT. RETIRED Painter: 26 YTS Typing, hvy phonC's. Mu~t he expC'r, Nl'at &: honest. Non personahle & enjoy working c;rlnker. Call 536-6801. w/pcoplc. PROFESSIONAL, 30 yrs <'XP. ps-ng & paJ,ting, GEN'L OFC from England. !)GS.7461 Typing, fili~. mn11 rte. * PAPERHANGING Plea.'lllnt &f'OUP 10 work with, Ii: PAINTING. 1 968-2425 INS. CLERK Pl I p h tnrurana-PXJ>rr. req'd, Gd aster ng, •fc , knowledge or pollde!I Repair 6880 · * PATCH PLASTERING ORDER CLERK All t,ypeg. Free estimates Hvy. phones, Ille lyp~ng, 10 Call 540--6825 key addor. Prov. related ex. ========I ""'· , Plumblng 24 HR PL.UMBING & REMODEUJ.NG 557.9644 SAL ES Wknd!I a tnu~l. lnlrrior de· !<lgn bckgmd V'l!ry helpful, JOBS A EM,LOYMINT JOBS & IMPLOYMINT JOBS A i MPLOYMINT JOBS A IMl'LOYMINT J < Min w 7100 J ~ "-W 7100 Jobi Mon, w .... 7100 0111e ~ , om..ew ,...n., °""' ·JolM Men, Wem:-7100 DENTAL nceptiom.lt. exper As11t Accountant ne-cel&U')', 4W'l Sept 8. $.!S0.$600 Mo. Cdm; - Youns man to auilt head * DENTAL ASSJ~ANT * acct. or N.B, fln'ft. Familiar-Froat dnJc on.ly, Good hn, Uy w/qlW'ttd!y report¥ aaJ open, Oenl&l oper, nee. bclplul Btacb are1. C..U bet I am A • 9 pm, 846-3540, Newport OENTAL Assistant, J.8.25, P er10nMI Agency tnOltb' cbatr with .ome desk 833 Dov•r D r., NS 4 lab. Newport Btacb. '42·3170 .. .._ ~~~~~~--~ AUTO mechanic, li;bt for DETAIL SHOP mechan!CI AAA garn1:e, perm. Xi.NT wanted • butten. pollatierr, salary. Hunt's Texaco palnt~n, touch· Up , A~ ServiOt', 1404 N. Coast J)Uation I-lnterv\ewa Mon. lilghway, i..1. Bch.' & Tues, 9.u am. 1615 494-3000 . • Alabama St., HwiUnrton Beach Auistant TtaiMes ** HELP tt DESK CLERK. alt 1n!lta Ap- $3.55 .... r hr. p1y 9--6 PM, Mon thnl Sal r--SHERATON BEACH INN 12 men needed now 21.l12 Pacific Cout Hwy, Penn, le temp, em.ploymenl Hwit Bc:b. ~1421 'Delivery driven:, onier dept, .EXPERIENCED 9ilP with st~ TV Co. Must be CARPENTERS neat &r aggreasi~. and over 19 Company will train. MARINE PAINTERS &: • MARINE MECHANICS. Mr. Rull 956-2871 Apply in penon LI d a ARE YOU Sh;pyard 000 Lldo Park BEAUTIFUL?? :,;;,~;,_N';:'uc': ,....,,. n•1 all ln the eye of the tie.. stress. Apply 715 S, C.OUt holder, Cleek the TV eo~ Hwy. 12-5 Tues-Fri. RefJ. ml. you watch and if you Experienced PANTRY feel ;you're as pretl;y u WOMAN wanted, Spaa:hetti some or !hose people, c:all us, Bender, 620t w. C.O.st HW)', CALIF. CASTING .CO. N.B. Ph' 645-06.ll 11 contlnutni ft's search for EXPER'D. Lunch Waltreu, everyday people wbo '18-Ve 10-3pm, 5 days a wk. P h: a desire to work on TV er 839-6885 bef 10 am. modefuW jobs. S75 to $125 EX p E RI EN CED auto per day. No fee tu you ever. medla.nlc with own tool s. * FOR ON CAMERA Busy shop. 1747 Anaheim AUDITION * Ave, C.M. CA,.u. ..iin~ ~ ,_F_A_T_lr_U~G~L~Y=7~7=7 •"'•,-,B"'A"RMA="m=-. °'B"'ooru"·~._ "ru"u' lu you are, we probe.bJ,y can't or pt. time. Top pay. Apply: use you. S...y w.y. 2001 Harbor CALIF. CASTING CO. Blvd, C.M. ls continuing Its Ruch in BARMAIDS -Experitnced. Apply In pel"90fl, Vegas Room, 686 w. l!tth, C.M. BEAUTY operator, full or part time, Clasic Coiffure, C. M, 540-0550 Orange Co. for a val1et;y of types, for work in mag, mo. deling, TV comml'1, &: ind. films. Great pay, pl time. We are client paid, no tee. Not a school. FREE BEAUTY open.tor with TV SCREEN TEST ~ollowing, also 1 for manag-PH: (TI4) 8J5.-8282 1ng. Mesa Verrle. Write Box 10 AM to 6 PM M-1034, Deily Pilot, 2211 W.I==--~=~=~ Balboa Blvd, Newport FULL or PART TIME. Beach. EARN UP TO S5 PER HR. BOOKKEEPER F/C ~~~R BRUSH CO. $700 Up, Stabte eslab, New. GENERAL HELPtt port Beach Co. Very pleas-~ ant working conct. Top bcne-Full or part tlme! aie 19 _lo Iii.! Heavy constr exper 31 Lg expand.mg chain, Cati Alis..~ Betty, 0557-6122: $.1.85 per .hr. 6 1.tO's resi- Abigail A b b c t Per3Cnnel dency req d. Agency, 230 \V, warner, r.rn CLARK 956-2870 Suite 211, Santa Ana. Girl Friday Sec'y Have some good SH·&. typ. SOOK KEEPER· ing + bkkpng skills'!' GJ.am. SECT'Y. our job. To SSOO. If you Girl Friday for Real Estate want a ca~r. Call Gerti Management Loca.I, !ull White, 54Q.8JS5. chargt>, with Home Oflice COASTAL AGENCY .auistance. Reports, AIR • 7190 Harbor Bl, CM A/P _ postina-, rental income Other fee/free jobs avan. & ex~. Shorthand or CIRL l.UO, clerical writ, Speed.wnting. No payroll. some type &: gel at figures. Full time. Salary t· advance-Not fancy office-slacks OK. ment good. Major health 5 da~ 84&-3101 plan. 1 GIRL OUk:e. Dependable Coldwell, Banker & Co. exp. woman, prefer 35 )IJ"S Newport Beach 833-0700 &: over. G.O. w/bkltp Ir: REUBEN'S Cost" Mes" No1v Interviewing for BUSBOY Night time-over 18 Apply in P<'l'!IOn 1555 \V. ADAMS COSTA t-.1ESA dis-patching. Able to work without direction. 8:00 am -5:00 pm. Good salary. Call for appointment 642-9390, weekdays only. HELP YOUR HUSBAND You can earn up to $12.50 in an hr. taking orders trom your friends, neighbors and relative& for Studio Girl's beaut. Good Housekeeping approved WIGS. WIGLETS. F Al...L.S &. cosmetics! Top profil!:. No territory restrictions. AJ90 eel! where Ce ntral Service Tech you work. Fl time or !p(lrc \Viii train mature woman to houni. Side linf' OK. Ph 11terilize &: distribute equip. toll rree soo.621-40Cf; or write ment, 3-11 shift, Personnel S TUDIO GIRL Dept., lloag Ho&pilal, NB. 1-IOLLYWOOD. Dept. NC-71, CARPENTERS & Cenient 11461 Hart St.. No . Flnishl'n: wanted. Hollywood, Ca. 91605, for Call 962-69'1:i full info & free samples -~==-~~-~I by mail. No one will eall * CHEF * (Second) on you. All replles con· FULL TIME fidenti&I. Ph. today. ALLEY WEST 2106 \\1esl _ _ _ .-.. --~~-Ckt'anfronl, N.B. 675-1714 Here is our prei;enl list Cle Meal of job opportunities: INVENTORY CONTROL ANALYST Calcc~ator or addln.c macbint experience, Ml.lit be tamU. iu' ~th IDYtlltm)r • lll'.O;CIUC· Uon COfltrol proctdurea. Abll!ty O> road eJ1<i -'< with data proceuing tc· ports, Pftyt:IcaJ lm.-entol')' nquiftd, heavy Jiftina-Ui. eluded. Contact Pt>l'!Olftl ow~. L. M. Cox Mft. Co. 150.5 E. Warner, S.A. 546-2251 Equal opportunity employer INSURANCE Cu\lalty Agen- cy, eoroi._ del Mar. EX· PERrENCED, ~ hn per wk. Reply P.O. .Box No. !, Cd.\1 LADY OWT -40 refined w/~r».llt)'. exp'd in SaJes, 80me backgn:lund in dtcoratina:· Knowledge ef Boo""1>1c & typing. No '1'00klng. Steady position wl one of the finest decora~ studies in Nwpt Bch. Good aa.lary a: future. Give refs.: Write D&lly Pilot Box M·l.001" LVN, relief week ends, 7 to 1:30 llhl(t. PARK LIDO CONV At:ESC'ENT CENTER ........ LlVE-IN h..wkpr for elderly widow. H, Reh, F .Vly area, 962-0119 AfAN To aasist mer ot local appliance store. Ne•t ap. peannce. ~2383 Mr . Wrijht 9-10 am only. MAN or cpl, early AM newspaper de.livery · UCI- lrvine area. $250 mo. 962-4633 Maint, Forem•n • This co. needs a man capable NEWSBOYS tor DAILY Prt.OT . Need New C.rrlers tor • FOUNTAIN VALLEY ~" 1(1.lt 64>-4321 I NURSE AIDES • All PlftL Permanent lull t Im e . Personnel Dept., H o a & Hospital, NB. OFFERING xlnt ~ dation.s & am.all salary to college 1:.udenr ln exchanp for light hOURhold dutltL 675-0310 or 5'8-7197 Personnel Clerk To handle aU phale& o1 ptl'lo ~nnet work f~ manu~~ turlng firm in Newport Har- bor area. Expuienoe be.I~ ful but not euential.. If you dnlre this work, •nd a letter tellinc about )'OW'· r.df, be.clcaround; and wbal you'd like to do. MAIL TO: Per10nnel Man.,er Dept. Jl P.O. Box lCSI Newport S.eclt, Celli. 9'66.1 Equal opportunity employn- PBX/TWX OPERATOR High School edueatkln plU5 one year teletype •nd multiple autcmatle PBX switchbccd experi- ence. ~ SO wpm. of takina-charge of othtr , . people, Training period of APPLY IN PERSON 3333 Harbor Blvd. Costa Meaa. Calif. 2 wk5, Start at S2 per hr while in training, Call Salb Hert. "°"°'6. COASTAL AGENCY 2790 Harbor Bl, Of Other !et/free job1 avail. Mgr. Tr<1inu Looking for a gd job, but have no train\J1i"! Lr& firm needs mgr. + ua't rnir. WU! train at their expense. Start S450. Call Sally Hart, .......... COASTAL AGENCY 2790 Harbor Bl, CM Other fee/tree jobs avail. MATURE WOMEN with own car PROFITABLE WORK in home of puutll Parents B•by1lttlng Agy ... 842.5537 .. MECHANICAL Experie~ with hand I: power tool1, Capable of ·accurate work. 56-1177. TOPATRON, INC. Medic1I Frnt Ofc. Sec'y Doctor nei!d11 exper. right arm. Some bkkpng & typing. Beach area. Lovely ofrlces. J!~· Call Gmi \Vhite, CcilSTAL AGENCY 2190 Harbor Bl, CM Other lee/free job avail ~fEDJCAL TraruLC'riber • pathology Pxper pre!. Days, full lime. Penonnel Depl., Hoag Hospital, NB 1.Jen's wear sale1man Prr over 18 years. &17-0615 mijj lxec Agency for Career Girls Sec'y U!gal or R. E~tale bckrm<f, Xln't typist, SH 80. Beautl- !u.l offices, Fashion Jaland. Sec'y /Persn'I Typing 60, SH 80. 2 Y~. ex· per, major co. Orange Co. MlSSILF.: SYSTEMS DM SION ATLANTIC RESEARCH Corporation A Division of the su,.,,...,,.,. Corp. Equal cpportunlty employer PR.EClSION sheet metal I: steel fabrication company, in the proeeaa ot expansion, has: immediate openlnp tor experienced personnel, ASSISTANT FOREMAN • WELDINCP LEADMAN LAYOUT MICHANIC Job security -advancement potential. Send resume ar application 10 Box M 1033, Daily Pilot. Q U A LIFIED SALESMAN w /2-3 yrs exper in retail or direct u.le1. Became in- \'Olved with a rapidly lfOW-o lng Garden Center A I a n d 8 c a p e Dt'velopment Ccrp. in Oran1e Co. Technical eXllf!r. pret. but not mandatory. X1nt PIY with CO'll benefits I: opp for advancement into mrmt. Contact Mr. Wall <nil 642-8686 REUBEN E. LEE NOW INTERVIEWING DISHWASHER • APPLY * ljl E. COAST ltWV. NEWPORT BEAClt REAL Estate Sa lei me n ! \\lhy start al the bottom:" Investigate my sunatiom. ,.,,.....,, RELIABLE &itter lo ccrne RUTH RYAN Ofc. Mgr Stc'y in for 2 chldrn. El Toro Trail"K'c, military ovtr, hi:h area s ..... ~ k 837 .__ AGENCY schl grad, 1'YPf' 60, SH 90 up, 1vorking · W<Y "°' ' ........-. SPECIAL1ZJNG !or mkt director &. u.lea 1-•-ft._s_,_30 _____ _ Ca shier/Typist Xln and nr~AURANT IN ~ .. last nl.il'. 't I dev. co. ~· -Now taklne OFFICE PERSONNEi~ Cashitt ba.ck4• ..... , applicaOona for waitresees, J793 N t Bl d C~t lrJ!ISt. Recept. hos1esee1. &: di1hwuhen. e:.854 v ., Gen'I Ofc Frnt ofc. appeara~. public Apply Colony Kitchen, 3211 17931 Beach Blvd., HB P.lust have heaVy exper, oo contact, typing, phones, no Harbor Blvd., Costa Mea, 847.96ll phones. This i& rot telephone 1witchbJ'd. Real Estatt: Sale. "'~""'""'""'~""'""'""''I wliciting. s2.10 hr. COURTESY Real~ ill a pod COCl\TAIL \VAITRESS Trainee Sec'y Order Desk place to work ask Bob ""l\nled Dana Villa Cocktail ~11 ,or &pdwritina-80 w.p.m, 1·2 Yn: exper, heavy phonet, Edwards. 962--TJSI Speclali> Loonge, Dana ~Point 496-5771 Typing 50 id w/fi&ure:w. stat t)'pln:. · · H 8 F v mg m . •• . • area COFFEE SHOP WAITRESS, Credll Clerk experienced. Over 25. 4to12 Exper. $2.25 hr. P /Tlme Bkkper SALESLADY wanted, Exper shirt~ SHERATON BEACH A/P, 10 key adder. mf1 ell· only, Lllllan'1, So. Cout INN. 21U2 Pacific Coast INDEPENDENT per. Hour. fittxlble, _P_!-_,0C....-M_.=-,---- l.fwy. Hunt, Bch. PERSONNEL Sales Driver COOKS * * * AGENCY 410 W. Coos! H"Y· 1'ra;.,.,,, u you dnvo • tn>cl< BABYsrfrJNG My hom@ Ctlsta Mt'M ln'L Day or nighL Fmc<d yd. &Q..5299. atILD Can! m1" home, any qe. 1tfeM del Mar area. w.lk Sanon> Sehl. ~151 Olll.D C&n di.A tlYM • wlmdl. N8r Paularino A CONCRETE. All types. Free est Sawlrlg, brralrini", haW.. tne & sldploadtng, Service &r quaJ[ty, 548-8668 Bob. Ge ner•I Services 6612 PLUMBING REPAIR No job too sm111.1 EXPERlENCED lTI6 Ortlnge Ave., Sultl' C Newport Buch & are qgn:ssive lh11 co. TltlSH HOPKINS FULL TIME C.M. """"6. 5'5'l979 _,, wm 1n;, YDU. Mv oPpor. 488 E. 17th, Sul1c 224 C.M. ~ Start $450, Call Sally Hart, BN!d. -ONE ID 4 yra. Wk11 $ZI. My ....... '"""" ...... hot hlndJel.6'.._ CHD.D can. btJa.nctd lunch. !ncd ,.nl. ....... bioA np'd. J>Gna PL 4!16-636i> WILL care for l chUd my home eYff, tt>t worklna: mother. c.i1 &42-1793 CEMENT WORK. no job too Small, ~ J>oe Eatltn. II. Stulllck 5'M615 DF.CORATIVE O::>NCREl'E DR.JVEs.\V>J..KS.PATIO C/t1L OON, MUSJ4 CUSTOM CONCRETE PATIOS-DRIVES-ETC. 1'rH estimatr, fi~lS. * CONCRETE work: patio&, df'V'lfl.YSo etc. L 1 c e n 1 e d , Phfillpa ~mcnt. ~ MORE Concrrte patio for ICN mont)'. Artbtlc setting. Uc., call MU at G«-06B7 PILOT WAHr ADI &Q..YiTl Wall ClcaniQR By ~11ehlne },ast, low C'Olll, drip.lea Fr..-e Es!. B &: R QUJK KLEEN * 962-5404 .. APT Ct.EANING • Pain11ns: • RUIC Shampoolni;r It Lite Repa i rs. RF.1i1AR.C SERVICES. M7.$l88 110ME Repail'1 &: LI I e hlolnl~t'K'C. 8Albnl Tsland. Col! ~. '1>11198 FENCING. ttpaln. paintlna, gtoo.ral maJnt. 640.IM!) Ed'• Clrl'lnlng SC':rvi\'!' Ci:l'JX'IS • Ui>holMe.ry • \\rl~ dow' -rloor c"""· 545-0~Ja JOBS TODAY! 0.1111 7100 642·1470 SURF A: STRLOIN HOMEWORKERS WANTED P..IOTEL Desk Oerk (Malel 54()...6()5Q., WATER Ht'flters, disposen,1 ~~~~~~~~~ .. ~--H NB IEnVf.lopeAddrewn). tor n!atit ahltl only, with COASTAL AGENCY • 642-3128 • I ' a930 '". 'l.oUIUt . wy ., . . e x-· Appl Bo'IC p. -etc. $7.50 per hr. ACCOUNTING C LERK IApplY In per!llOn onlyl Ru~h ~tampi!'d. se lf-ad • .,m e ~· y: .,.,.,. Harbor Bl. Cl\I -==00.==271&===·=' =64=2-"""6==·='==JExpanding company, minu-.,.-,-==--=="'· =~· d res 1 e d ~ n ve 1 op. e . 1067 'Ibe Dally Pilot. C.M. I Othrr f~/f:ree jobs &\!Ill. -."O. --!~turing dnta prot'ffAhll ·~I~~. ::::i ~~!!.~.,o~O ~RitJ> -MOTEL MAIDS SILESLADY for dftss shop, Remodellng & equlpmf'nt, Ms lmm('dlate "~D r.. · _ .. A 1 ~ .... ....,, · • -\\'anted tor new 133 untt· part time, Mature. A-_Rep<1lr 6MO opening lor clerk to malch .... ., ..... pen<'ia.""-. pp Y-A7l. ~ Beach. C&lU.. mold tn Colta P..fesa.. Apply to mu. at 2'll Marine Aw~ reccivin~rcporn /in\'Ol~. BLUE DOLPHIN 90278 In "Titlna statin1 eir· Balbo&Lsl ROOM Add!Uof'll8., t:lta:ell, llSS Via Lido, N.B. llSKPRS Em"'"'--r . ......._ .._ •. ===--=~---rtmodel. J...owP.st Pri<"t In prepare VOU<'hen1, t y pr ....,.. pays et pcntilel!, vmv"' tuUJl.,,.., •. SERVICE St11tion Attndnt town. L1c. con t r a ct or . cheek.' (51) WP~1 + l, al te1111 • COOK * Expcrlencild. full Georae Alien Byh1nd >.gen-addroSL tnltrvlewa wW be Experienced f()f' full tl~' 642-29118 ()fit' yr coUegr llCCOUnt~ or time. Parii: L I do Con-cy 10&-B E. lilh. 5.A. held in Coeta Mt• July Top pay ror rood man. 990 ...,,===,..---,---~1 I ·-1 "' . h vale!K!l!Dt Hospital. 642-3)4-4 547...()3$. 30, Applkanll will be a(l.. E. ,,__!II H-N 8 ~n F1BERGLASS showcn It ~u;b ·:.x::...r; ~~p;:~·=~ CONSTR UCT IO N ac-• 1.fOUSEKEEPER • A.ct v1ted when to rome for Stll....... ~e1 ••• , ~"' pullmans, ~lS ask for N>r l'Ollnhlnl. exper. Comm'J 2().-Q, ~i.:pttlenced, must hr intervM:w. Wcric will btlin 1 ~"="'-'--------I l'ERTPllERAI. BUSJNESS medic1l. S.lary, age open. xlnl. Top salary. 3f6.0100 about Aug. 4, Write Box Gr.N'L n'modellni: A: maint. EQUlP~tENT. INC. N.8 . • 5$7·'1300 * or 846-1666 1'110.U 0.IJ.v Pilot No job too s ma 11 . 11112 Annstroni:: With }utt a call, you can HOTEL CASHIER. temllle. NURSES: Supe:rvlsor, LVN Uc'd/ln11umt. fii".>-818.1. Orvillt' lndlL,trl111 Complex) sell U all! Place ._ Dally NCR 4200 tXP<"r euential. or R.N, ll-1:30 Ahift, Park 11lE QUICKER YOO CA~ S.nt11 An"-Q\llf. 027!ii PllOI Clualfied Ad. c.alt 'T'H E NEWPORTER INN, l..ldl'.l Conviletce:nt Center. THE QUICK!Jl YOU SELL (114) ~4<1 dh'tcl 642,..S$78 TODAY! PH : tn'4) &14-l'ZOO Ph: fi.IUMt ·---~-----~~~~~~- SUM JIM D~tributor, ~ hC'lp lo dP'lflonstrate worlds No, 1 exertlser &. lnlroduc.J txcltlna. 11ew SU~f JtM J1'..,. BATH. No e)cper, nel'd- ed. ShlrlC'y GrM&m 897-19811 er 646-4sn • J JOI -Jo1' - """ "'" -: .,. will ... eU< T" ten: you ful '"• +· + +• + +• + + St ~ SM. w/1 out· typ .... SI Er *s M~ "'· *s .... SH *R Fn ""' *s Ex! "' ''° 500 Sult. .... VI PAf ... "' Jik1 typ "" pa; po; ""' r .. "°' Ce! *s Typ "" "' p!e •Pl ( SEC XI• ... LE SEF "" Gu C.I SU! 3 ' Co "' TE 3-IJ "' a ... •• St< 5" c 01 * I <N "' SU * '"' Co Co WA l2I m· Pl A• Sci D A w! TU St ilo "' .. I• .. l!lr '" '" sb A 6; ' . . -" -----... ,.,. . -.... -.. -.-·- Mond,y, J'IJ 27, 1970 Diii.( "1.0T 31 PETS ind LI VE STOCK TRANSPORT ATION,r=r"R0A;,..N,;,5;,Pr.Or.R;..T,..A""T"'JO"'Nc;--""""'"'r"RA=N;;;5"'P F:I'< A TION JOii A EMPLOYMENT JOBS I. EMPLOYMENT MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOil • FR EE TO YOU Sailboat• 9010 Mobile Homos 9200 Trucl<• '500 7900 SALE AND TRAD! SAL! AND TRACI Jobs-Men. Wom. 7100 Thutrlcal -------'"-MIKoll1--Ml1c1l11.,_. - FREE TO YOU Sal<t Dead End? Money Too Low? Bored? ACTING Beaut malt pure.bred am SAILBOAT _ Rhodti clau brted·M 1:lox1e 2 )"1'1. love1 FREE all bUc baby mitt No. 21 xlnl buy (bank pru1- Do you "Nant to be a full tlmo * * NEW LOCATION * * chUdren, All &boll. NHd rd \'fl')' tame. 6 male, 2 den t Joel Cralls itrid•l worktna profeu~? Do home w/fenced yd. l-63.l-&116a ftm•le. 646-21$9 11'11 Compus, wind A knol, you ha\'I!! the sell dlscipUl'IO • Cu1tom JeW91ry made to your t"'dtir. &:36-4493 ga.lley, W(:, dacron saJJa, lo IUbjtt:t yourself to a ri&· • Old Jewelry rep.1lred & modemlzed. NEED tpeclal home lor 8 P1t1, G1n1r1I 8800 s:rooo Cllh. Owntr ... Id Britl&h traininc coune & Custom cnting It . Wix p1tt1rn1 mo old male cat blk & wht Bro/'llOn, Benton, Ca I I f . U\e artistic humWty to ac. C11tlng Suppll11 • Gold/Sllvt>r precloua .ao mother Siamese female Poodks-from Sl5 · S50 Boat at &lip No. ~ Fleln cept minor rok1 until the and Mml·prec:lous cut I routh ttonu. &: mixed lh Slamt1e \dttens Siamese ldttent • $10 Brot, San P~ro. tralnlng P'riod is complete? Full llne of Rockhound & lapidary Supplies Be~ 4 5t6-3568, 548- 7 ,. 128 13 1 ====""'';;"";1;;'"'';;":::'=·959='= 24' Jolly Rorer ullboat --I wth It 80 THE LONDON LA· OPENING JULY "'th 1' bw.1-)'0U fin~h. i fll'n t1lflp up to t "le lf'O GUNA A C T .., R S WORK-.... ft...-1815 country whe~ the money FIVE M GEMS ADORABLE am. breed med. wvw• Betit (lffer. * 714 : 549-0541 COSTA MESA MODEL CLOSE-OUT 9 l'lew model mobile home1 are hl!.lnr otterf'd at nduc. ed prices, All are lift up In hf'.\ullflll Grft~af Park, 1 mlle lrom «t:an. Take Newp:irt 1'"\tly nr llnr. bor Blvd so. to 19th, tlM':n west to l?'A WhltUtt Ave. Coata Meaa 6f1.ll50 road and excitement ne~r $HO~ mlsh~ be able to help Joni hair mixed brr-ed OOBERtotAN male. 2 yr old, ---- end . You aet yoor own pace you_ o Pn! oua experience Monday thru Saturday, 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. female dor tbout 10 Jbs. ob ichool, £d blood llnt'. Powtr Crul1er1 9020 Motor Homes 9215 _ ~ur ()Wn .-. .. 1,_ Thli re-necet1tllll')', no age barrit:r, 270 E. 17th St.. #15, Co1la Me11 h 1 ho'· d , "~ -••M d .. 1 ·~ -------~v """" 1'.1em~ra o! thl1 exclusive ONI 64$.1909 ouse pt ' 1 ,., ntt ' gu vuvu ........ " og. -'"V"'" 2'6' O\VENS OUlstr, fft up -1pec1ed la.nd corporation ... n . ..1 .. be .__. PH home, fenctd yard. 837-3697 a lt. 5. for divin&i•port fish!""· CORTEZ '65, lmmac, Only -'II •how how ~· moy l:l'OIJ.P .. w o .. ..,_ accep-..:1·~~!!~!!~~!!!!!!!'~~~~!!!!'!!!~!!!!!!!!!! d "" "11 11-·• 31 -l's N · bo "' ,--"J t naJ -II.YI. '".,...,.. eves. •• GREAT Dane, malet, 6 m<1's. 5'\•im 1tcp, dopth rte & '""" m · e w 1um -och th•m w11h ., llltlo upon a aa ..... ac ory pel'IO 1· · ,,. '" l t · llh h di ior G S I I022 P1•nos & C,..•n1 1130 \'Ve are a variety o! ro.lored papers, cropped, $175, Call indlcalor, SJS, halt tnk, full ires, 8.ll', aarage ~PL Clto't •• po"lblc. n erview w t e r~ . a rage 1 • •• 6 .. _.~1 -Cal 494-f neuter cat1 \V))o owners Diane, 646-(2.JS <>r ~~521 cow. lots ()f extra equip. '" -· T ~ start, you will recei\'e ex. l or appt. ------======== MERCHANDISE FOR MUST tell houfftul o f PRIVATE PARTY have left us stranded. We :•c."..:';.·=~=~==-R!!placement cost ,o/$000Q. -tensive sales training. And be a, 111 u 1 ~t~itura.ne&n wantl to buy pt.no are well behaved & lonely AKC DOXIE PUPS $3750 CASH. 962-4981 Mini Blkts you'll be backed by a power. SALE AND TRADE for Cub 213: 461·1423 1 3 548-MIJ 836-4493 '275 • • 1970 TRUCKS TRAVELALLS SCOUTS AVAILABLE NOW IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Test Drive One Today A1 Kuslom Motors ful lead producing advtttls. -tum: 8' velvet &Ofa I: -========= -yrs. or A4dom~~!e~A~. ~-·..::'_ lr brn. s--· •kl Bo1t1 -30 -·--· ----- ing program _ plui: Fumlture 8000 loveseat. 2 Klr!i·d bdnn Television l205 Help..Please-Ownert Mo\-ed cue: r-v °"'' '""' r--nt Bonanu S HP Mini bike Harbor Area's only authariL +Draw Plan Available 5'tl, HI-back velvet left me behind. I'm a love-AKCGERMANSHEPHERDS16' RUNABOUT. lOO HP x,!..nt~S~ ai lntemaOonat H&rvffler + Y:ork Close 10 Home Ba rg a in Hunte rs! decorator chairs, rune tets, -• .,-Z-EN-111<--Col-.,-,,-.-. -,,,-able male doe ve7r friendly 6 wks<'hamplon aired. East-Chevy motor. p a r a ro n 1-========= Dealer, + Car Plan Available Living room set . Naugahyde pictures. lamps & eldtc. PvtAll oonaole. Xlnt cond. ;200. ~ rd home w fence yd. em bitch. shots. $75. 675-3237 hydraulic traos. Trtr. Sllp Motorcycles 9300 845 Baker, C.M, Ml).5915 + Be an 1WOCiate ol H. \'V, sata. matching tables & less Ul&n 3 mo. 0 · ~ Pomona, Ap!. 23. SM-6498 • ST. BERNARD A.KC * avaU. $895. 54S-fi6l!O, U (Next lo '-l'ifost Liquors) D1.)'ight, respected Cali.I. lamps. $60 takes all. 'ftA.'O :1 ~~crlfice. Pleue 5l3-s896 ew1. ADORABLE unusual CC1lor l n )Told & loves chldrn, 8-3765 nnl'l.rV1i BRAND NEW R.E. Broker. 10' Naug. sofas $15 ea. U .'°"'-"::.C'""----~= NEW&. USED TVs blk 4: tan female kitten 9 675-7108 12· MINI-SPORT: 40 hp · 1970 GM C ll TON + Group Jlealth Insurance metal stralghtback C'!hairs, Newport Shores until '1/31. For sale/rent. wks, mtd. lonr hair, needs OLD En&:lis h Sllff'P do&. 18 Evinru.det w/trailer, elec. THINK • , • 1A -$25.000 major medical, $2.50 ea, Occ. Naug, chairs 432.6nd St. 642-3123. J{ouse. Dunlap's, ms Newpori.,Of. gc' pennanent 1ovlng home, mo, fem . ~tovlng-No pets, start. $1200. Att. S: 00 HON,.. DA CAMPER TRUCK life and accident. S7.50-Sl0 ea. A..!lsorted size hold, toys, misc. Early A.mer SC8-778B 637-7382, 83&-4493 7/21 l2"0, -ld l400. 67>8994 --='=-=--~-I + U-llmll·' 0 -mpa•y Fin-.,,_,;,, 15 • "P. M"·ble dbl bed S75 ~tod dropleaf l=-..==-;.-c-o-,--.,.,-~ c " "'"'\..U " ,.... " ..., BEAUTIFUL kittens 4 m<l5. REGISTERED male red & 16' OONZ~. 225 hp 1/0, ''fRlfDUNDfR" anc:lng ()n Ail Sales, top coUee table w/ma1ch.ing seats 8 $S0 Other furn. Mex, 19" tENITH TV w/ remote oJd J female• ~ Slaml!s.:, • stereo, tniler & xtru. Very + Bonus Incentive Plan ) lamp table; small hi-ti w/ Haw, ~1od. control, must stll $40, Call 1 blk • 1 blk & wht • "'h. ;, yr old Basset hound. sharp _...a fut 592-1660 · -=='======= 557-9423. Make oUer. 64&-5790 .,,... · Step up now-Call ~ Intercom :iystem U'.>. Art.if, ~ • l gray striped, 137 Albt'rt 14• GLASSPAR ski boat, 35 MR. CHURCHILL decoratorplaAls Sl0-$15.Col-Appliances 1100 Mlscell•n.oui l600 Pl. C.l\1. 548-8910 11'11 YORKSHIRE PlJ1:'S. out of HP Evinrude.elM starter, (714) 13$..3233 or TV antenna $20; Niagara ----·-BEAGLE puppy, 3 mo. old, ~ .. ~~n, lnquU'e at -& t".8_il..:_r. $575. 962-4091 SM. office wants g i r I Relaxisizor chair ~· On PHILCO auto washer&. Pen· !affable, IQ<ld \v/Chlldren, ..,... - wJpleasant phone voice & u.le MonH J: zr;.l~ amh crest e!ec. dryer. Goo'! trained, also ~m. couch. l\1[N. Poodles. AKC, black Boat Tralltrl 9032 out-going personality. Lite 4 pnt. un gto.n rac cond. 'Both for $65. 847-8U5, 1 4!k>5688 7/27 fulT)', love11ble. J mos.1--------- 1...-. ~(}-968l Convalescent Hospital, 1879:l 546-8672. Champ blood, $50. 549--0844 HEAVY duty tandem with J,... Delaware, ll.B, tH Club. Future F11rmen -· h nd b ak Llk t.1AYTAG auto. wuhe.r, xlnt or Boys Club, rerislered S1''YE Terrier pups AKC, wine a r es. e SERVICE CENTER Employment Agency Free & Fee Posilions *Sec'y Persn'I $550 Mfg. exper, helpful. SH 80- 90. typing 60+. 20 PC. ''MADRID" rond. Late model $63. New Zealand ~ show 11.nd fluffy blk tipped, silvers & new. 592-l660 3 ROOM GROUP 847-8115. 546-8672. breedin&; doe and S bable~. creams. 549-2547 ~=======~- FROM MODEL HOMES USED appliances 4: TVs 515-4~ 7/28 SCHNAUZERS, miniature Marine Equip. 9035 Includes; Quilted sofa 6 All guaranteed. Dunlap's, • I I Part Schnauur, pan terrier A.KC. suptr Pa Per•· LARGEST discounts on all chair, 2 end tables & C()fll?i! 1815 Newprl, CM ~7788 • ' &: part ? ! Male dog abt 4 Re&S(lnable. Phone 962-9904 marine equipment. Radios, table, 2 lamps, dresser, mfr-~. sn•2312 ror headboard quilted box NORGE uprt freezer, $4!5; iJtt" mo'• old. Very lovable and LAB. PUPPIES AKC. 5 v.·ks, compasses depth sounders, spri.np & ma'ttretss, 5 pc No?"e rel~lrzr. dbl, dr, ~ gentle. 8364498 530-1!536 with aholll. $75, 54f.--9556 paiJ1ts, etc: • everything for dining room; table & 4 bi-Good runrun& cond. 548-5293 BEAUTlFUL Co c k a po o GREAT Dane AKC laun pow~r and Mii. back chain. KENMORE .,.,.a.sher. 3 yn, MOVING SALE mother to aood home. l!IS52 lemale. 8 v.•lr!. SOOw quali· Mann@ & Battery Shoppe, 11r• aaACM IMW'I'. "' NIW·USID-SHV. '"-n-n-n-1 LUC?.: new '69 Hodak& A.ce lOO &. Kawuaki 90. Both atrtt1 le dlrt equ lp 'd . Hodaka $400, Ka.,.,'1151.ki $300 Call 673-2527 350 V8, 4 1Pttd, power ateer. ing, custom mou1dlnp, heat. er. H.D. thocktl, H.O. springs, dual mlrron, alep bumper, 750xl6 split rim tube type d~. • (&431', $2499 Cwltb purchase of Truck & K'.ng ot Road camper. Saial #5315). UNIVERSITY OLDSMOllLE 2350 Harbor Blvd. *Sec'y SSOO Beaut. orc./x\n't benefits/ SH 90 type 60-70. *Recept. $450 F'Tnt ()!c./Gd typis t/lmowl- edge of electronics helpful. *Sec'y L19al $600 Exptr. In gen'! pra<'tic('/real estatenop. SH & cyplng skills. COMPARE AT $749.95 Excellent condition SlOO. Eve:rything roes.: ft. couch Lexlnaton Lane, H.B. ty. 962-4633 2l10 \'V, Cout Hwy., N. &h, $399 Will del iver. 830-4370 and malchin( love seat • 962-6795 7/27 DALMATION PUPS INBOARD transmission 1 to Cost.a Mesa 54G.9640 ./ *Ton '62 FORD PICKUP. Needs work. FIRST $100. Can be seen at 2lB1 Pacltic, Coeta Mesa. '70 K AW AS AK I 2:j(J :,c:: ,.-,='CC""'-~-~--1 S"d Ind Dirt & Stn-tt 62 CHEV \Y I T('ardrop Jr. crushed gold velvet chair, 1 drl p No down Pmll. On1y $16 mo COPPER TONE Retrig, 2 dr. coflee table and 2 matching 3 PRECIOUS kittens 6 wks AKC 646-6728 1M ''('vet bv,e. r °.!, 151 • 1 ew er. · Camper. $1200 or wUI sell 9,000 miles left on warranty at SSOO for truck, seD WELK'S WAREHOUSE top freezer 17 cu. ft . xlnt. old, we-~ ._ trai·--•, 2 I========; ercury, ca es, conuv I, end tables . dinette set and ... IC'\, "' '""' ._ .. h' Id •··•· u 600 W, 4th St., Santa Ana cond. soo. ~9964 att. 6 cal' H "30 WhlUS IC I, .......... ~.. Stll • $600. 714-ZlS.S camper. 54s-M9T '70 KAWA.SA1', 90 '65 OiEVY 'ii T itep aide six chain • wuher, dr)'er, ico, 1 or a n re kitty. orltl uv instrumen!Ji. etc. 549-0530 OVER STOCKED Antiqut1 8110 refrigerator; TV. 2 beauti-54~' 5li?-8800 ?/'17 HORSE corral available nca.r JOHNSON 9'N hp motor - MUST SELL ful tall table lamJ>I. Lots AFFECTIONATE 2 yr old Back Ba,y. brand new, never uSt'I'!. GOOD CONDITION $250 or ~st oUer. Pvt ply. 8e!';t o ffer . 646-4665 541~; eves 962-4981 500 Newpc1rt Center Dr, NB Suite 200, By Appl. 644·4981 or mlscellane<>US household black female cock-a-poo, 54~!75 $300. 646-!!SllO Twins $49.!)5, Fulls $59.95, SALE items, ~7772. w/r ed mustaches . Quttns $89.95, Kings $119.95, 642-4~ 7/27 Twin Size Headboards $7.95, Back Door Imports , . . . BEAlITIFUL Calico long· \VELCH pony for sa.le, 8 yrs old, 1v/tsck, Cati aft Bo•t Slip Mooring 6 pm. 847-4984 903& '68 BSA 441 Victory. Xlnt cond. Alao eyelet trlr, like new. Dralted-t..fu1t s e 11 ! 675-3071 Trundle Sets ~.95, Slee?-U@e Your BankAme rlcard · · · · haired IJPl.}'ed female cat NEW 11lip! avail for 32' lo SECRETARY cc~~:: s;:;,:." Up, Studio 1896 Herbor Blvd. CM to gd, home. Had ahot•. Livestock &140 38' &. 70' power ()r u.U. * YA.MAHA 100 c.c. t ...,J · · 543-0813 7/28 __ . --.. * 673-fi606 * Dirt Bikr. Gd Cond. VICE • PRoESIDENT SIESTA SLEEP SHOP 642-757& LEAVING t G 'DOCK S A II U 551-9457 ]!127 Harbor Blvd .. CM Park Jn Rear .. ADORABLE 2 mo. ()Id train· O\\'Jl. am pace va . P to --,,=====-;;--PART-Tl~1E. approx. ~ hrs. 645-2760 ed. pt Aby pt Persian female birds, Ring-neck Pheasanl<1 27', power only. C a 11 1969 BONNEVILLE "'eekly, bou" flexible. Must 3"!55 Csl. Hwy, Dana Pt. * ANTIQUE SHOP * kitten, had 11hotl, darlini: Olukan, all 11.~e1 S3 • $10. 67>1355. -XJnl cond, $900. take shorthitnd 100 "'Pm, 496-4552 MOVING SALE: Everyday BED type couch $10, fomuca penonality. 962.-2029 ':/28 548--0486 I========= 968-2822 like variety and figures, • ..,..,~..,~~~!'!'!! from S.9. Sale Ends tablet 2 chain SIO. 24" Bar-FOUND a sllver-rrey poodle CAL IFORNIA-LIVING-Boat Services 9037 '69 KAWASAKI 250 cc type 60 wpm ()r better. ~1any 17 PC. KING SIZE July 29. l30 W. 1st St. beque $10, h&nd lawn mov."tr vie: Harb<lr 1 hop p Ing --sidewinder, lots tit chrome. ho I. h T · ""0 gprinkJer $20 m e n ' 1 c Nur1erie1 8910 Fiberglass &: Gelcoat Xlnt cond. &42-86S7 company ne Its sue as BEDROOM uatin. o.l0"323J • center. .M. mom. only. ---------••R•pa'-** 'd · · k I Florshelm ihoes lO'iiB like uo9505 7 28 "' pal vacations, sic eave, ' .. -, 9 drawer-. mlr. NINE antique woodworking ~ I GIVE YOUR CI-ULD ACRE-Frt"e Estimates 548-1752 * * YA~fAHA lOO ** 'd _.,. -' _ .. Ill · ...... new $10, TV console $20, pal mniic .... Arru r. Insur--... 2 bedside atands, King planK.·Thtte 1t&ined &iau INTELLIGENT med, ~ ATIVE SU~1MER. Exp. -$100 -•1 · I C'~" '"' gold his and her wed.din' :!.!!f.s---~-9~5"-'tO LEAP tall buildings In com- fort in a '65 Jeep Wagoneer ,,., CC1mpl reblt 400 CI Mm: enr. bia tires, AM·FM,. OD, etc. 494-7182 Recre•t'n Vehicles 9515 GO-KART Make Offer Aft. 6:00 ~lJ af!Cf'. "'"""' 1 union.' c. "'"''"' size headboard, frame, quilt. windo\\'I. All In good con-bands $25 ee.ch. 548-0021 fem, Xlnt watch dog, lovl'1 leachen1. ofr. Arts & Crafts. Boat Rental• 9031 1 ===~"-"'~'~"-'~-~ resume c/o DAILY PILOT, ed mattress, lheelll, blank-ditlon. Call 673-4493 ~r chUdren, housebroken, obe· Class in mom Ages 5-8. ·-------'66 HONDA. 305 S, bc:lred to ~ .• J>0 __ ,_• _____ 9_5_20 Box # 1073, Costa l'.lcsa, ets, etc. 5 pr.,f * AUCTION * dient, 49f...t853 7/27 646-2'l911 • NE\V &lips avail tor 32' lo 350. New top el'd. $400 ~I Cali!. 92626· Otolce o! Spanish ---=>INT='°tQ'°U'°'E°"So---Flnt! Furniture BEAUTIFUL matched pail' TRANSPORTATION 3£' & 7o·:;~:;u. 64Z..7720 after 5 p.m. •SECRETARY $500* or Modern Style Roll-top ~la It 1tasswan. & Appliances of blk kittem. all 1hol1, NEW 1969 50 ce mot<>n:yclt, PERSONNEL ALL FOR $249 962-t606 Auction!! Friday 7;30 pm well dilclpltn¢. All you Boat1 & Y1cht1 9000 &;; Charter 9039 200· mile•, coat $300 1•11 Type 60, shnd. 80. 2 yrs. per-No down pmts. only S9 mo. -Windy's Auction Barn net'd ii love. 543--0813 7/28 for $150, 642-7786 aonnel f!Xp, 5 Yfl'! genC".ral ofc WELK'S WAREHOUSE S.wlng Mlchlne1 8120 2075~ Newport, CM 646-8686 AEED repair: Freezer, CCII· CAPTAIN 2'T' TROJAN tly bridge YAMAHA 1962 run,1 .,.,>ell,~ exp. Prestige Irvine Com. 600 W, 4th St., Santa Ana. -·-------Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'!. ()r TV, blk & wh TV, var-Licensed. Radar. l.J:lran, crull<!r·loaded-slps6$85day SG5. 2312 Fa.lrhlll Dr. N.B. plex Corporation. Great op.. Dally S.9 Sal 9-6 Sun 11-6 1970 Singer touch-o-matle, kius other Items. 494-3704 30 Yell.l'!I exp. sail or power. $450. wk. 646-9000 S48-49l0. ()pportunity -----~ zig-7.lg beaut w.inut con-PRIVATE U.S. mint stamp 1111 Professional Spc1rt Fishing .--~-~--~====~ l.==""'==,.-=-.,,,- FREE : *'"sP-AN-ISH-FURNifURE 110le, ~llke1 button holes, collecUon Singles blocks .-===~~----,, I Gu!d Mexican & Central B t St B11.11• 500 CC Matchless dirt bike, •· b 11 d ,---1•. •t.c. Fill _:._,, 65%0 3 ADORABLE 6 w'·· old e oa orao• ,,_ _ __ .. 1 1 ~~ MANY FEE overeu.. zeam1, n "'''' vn..: "" American waters • a.ISO ----~----•n:cuS m nor repa r .,...,,,. or &. FREE LISTINGS FACTORY hems, deslgm &: etc. Guar. Srott'g price. Send re· fluffy bl. & white klftP.nll. licensed multi-eng. commer. SAILBOAT OWNERS BesL OUerl M&-1731 COu R·TESY OPEN TO PUB LIC ~ !:!.h or amall pymbi. qulremenls P.O. Box l 097, 5C8-08l3 7128 clal pilot, land &: sea. Ad· Launching & dry storage. '70 Nor1on '150 Commando '".,....,...... N.8 . Will quote promptly. PRETTY whlle/ro!d male mlnlstr11tlve experience. 2602 Newport Blvd., NB Dunstall equipped, $1400 next 2 week• LA DIES diamond d Inn et k i t I en . Ver Y q u I~ I. Best of references. Write 673-6606 or Best offer. 545-0577 PERSONNEL Wholesale/Below Mu1lcal ring, 1et with 1% karat 646--0823 7/28 Box t.f 1060. Daily Pilot. 1970 KAWASAKl 350 cc 3724 \V. Chapman, Org, Tables $9 up; Wall shelves Instruments 1125 center diamond,~ diaroonds FREE puppy to E:ood Mme, 17. GULF-Stream 1966, Alrcreft 9100 1treet scrambler. 1SOJ mi. """'° $5 "p·.· Sofas $99 up. FENDER BASS AMPLt'E"'rt>n -· % karat ()11 each side. w a I ch do 1 ma 1 r . l'ho 1 150 h ~1 $550. 6~2!M SECT'Y, Brighi. S/H + " u•.c.n. Brilliant cut Sacrifice! Re-p.. 646-0lMB 7/28 1 .1'1 au,_ Id . p, ·~NEED Llc'd Pilot, male or '-'ll Sal DELUXE RICKENBACHER ly to &x P360, Dally Pilot. cruiser. in-OU nvr. fem . to act u qj'e-ty pllol BSA 650. Nice, $550. Xlnl typing Sou s, Ill')' G•lleria Fumlture BASS GUITAR .MALE A.mDALE dog, 1 yr, new, ~1ake offer. 84~ for IFR student. 54&-0llB Call 64>1725 open. Call A hf ER l CAN 2013 Placentia * 67s.6404 * SALE of the CENTI1RY GE AKC. Good with childttn. 2r SURFING OtrrRIGGER. anytime. LEARNING CORP. Stl--0606 642·7130 washer &: dryer $200. 494-5383 7/28 Custom buil t by Ph i l ='='======= SERVICE Station Slsm. l'X· ~Pianos & Ornans 11JO Painter's prof. color mach. FREE wood, f i repla ce Edv.·ards. $200. Needs work. Mobile Homes I A I G ant's RE 1 .. --• ~m • & elect 1haker.nt. It r al 00 61< "'30 per. ()n y. PP Y r FURNITU re w•""' uv ---.. lenrth. 2196 ~finer St,, C~1 1c.i~1~ot~1~'';.'~6,~p~m~.~~~~~I ;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. ---------Gulf, 1740 Newport BJvd.. display studies, model horn. SAVE NOW Sl50. 646-3679 c .M. 1171 .:: • '61 V'iV chusf1, complete C.~f. es, decorators cancellation. DURING SUMMER 1S'x~2" Dou&~ Boy Sunllne Sailboats 9010 Orange C(lunty's fronl-end .w/brakl!!, 1tecr- 9200 Auto Service & P•rt• 9400 SUPERVISOR, LVN or RN, Spanish & M,editerranea.n CLEARANCE SALE pool w/1tainlen ateel !ii-J A.DE 1ree1 Cl l ) Lar9e1t Selection \nr, m11ater cylinder, pedals 3 to 11:30 ~hifl. P11rk Lido R D FURNITURE \Ve ha~ trade-Ina, repo1, lcr,' acceu. $1!50, 548-8257 6424846 7l'l7 * New Clltalina 22' trailer. Of Furnl1htd &: cables. $100 or best offer. Convalescent Center. Ph: 1844 Newport Bl., C.M. rent returns & ooor models aft 4 2 ma.le ynr parakeets lor able w/retract.able keel Mobile Homes 646-4665 alt. 6 642-8M4. etvery nlte 'Hi 9 of every model Hammond Sl'ENQ,.YPE Machine ; rood home. 1 grn & 1 blue. rrom S2595. FORD 6 cyl. engine with ed Sat • S •t'I 6 o-B •-· 54()..3435 * New Koralle 12' tamlly Homes from •"-44• to oo~•· TELEPHONE OPERA.TOR \V .. • un. 1 .,..an. uy now "" receive. Court Reporte:r Model. New. ---------......,. ......,,,.. trans. C<>mpletely rebuilt. •. ll pm Sat & Sun -ill KING-SIZE bed, 3 metaJ extra discount . Other acce1s. 842-3028 Aft. 6 mo old puppy am mixed u.iling •loop, main & jib. 2.000 miles. Best ollu lakes .~ HAMMOND 5 30 b--' ,_ h I d I h'ld Sall 8"'8Y price only $514 Cl111I< Mobile Hom11 .,, """ 228 Forest, LagUna Beach bed frames. 2 matching : •=u 11 .. .,, c a r Ir w c I -'",,_.,,,,..,., stuffed-blue floral chain, ;2 In CORONA DEL MAR FENDER Bu s amptltier"' __ ,_.....,. __ ,_=~--comple!e. . 23 913 No. I-larbor, S.A. • V\'V '""• '-ns axle1, • Typist 2854 E Coa t H 67"' "°30 -* Balboa 20, 2'6, Aquanus 531-8571 ""'• pc. liv lng rm. curved sec·, · s wy: ....,., deluxet Rlckenbacher hus A lovea ble AKC Bassett * Hoblo ca•· ccloc•. Imm body parts. Great oppor. for typist \V/ · 1 & 12 Optn Mon Ir Fri eves "' Ch 64' "'43 I . k ledge Ilona.I; bone in co or · rultar lfound-2~ yr old w/dog Del. a pm an ......,. gen' insurance 00"'' IO""· 673-6032 Walnut Spino! P1'1no * "'"'404 + "°'" ~0•00 Mobile Home• s111.rt SJ60, cau Pal O'Brien, ..... ""'""'"' CAP'N EDS CUSTOM, all leather tide 8' SOFA, never used, quilted Major mf1, S399 inc bench, NICE retrig-fretzer S 7 S. Blk & Wht Terrler-Span!el 7 2200 \V. Cit . Hwy, NB 645-2244 1206 No5J~[~r, S.A.. door panels for '57, '58 5t6:~TAL AGENCY floral. scotchguarded $125; del., & lO yr warranty. Stove S2(), 8' gm 6' aid mo, &II shoti, trained. Leav. & Corvette. $25. 645--0466 mo H.',., Bl, c~f t.tatching loveseat $ 7 S. • • • • 110fa S75, Mbc. Aft. 5:00 in< area. IJl.26&4 CAL 25 -Bright, shiny 12331 Be11ch Blvd., G.G. __ IA) '' 530-8337 HAMMOND ORGAN 646--2752 well equipped for raclng &. 530-2930 T 11 T I 9425 Other lttl ll'l'e job~ 11.vait. I I-rare while slamer.e cal & 1 crulslng. Hard annodizM l:=====:::::::=::i:: i-~-r~'-:--'---BEAUTIFUL pecan formal 1 only, $199 lnc bench, de ., COMPLETE kitchen C'\IP-bu &. pedc~ mut k boom. RDF, sJi OPEN ROAD Manufacturers oJ America'• fi nest Luxury Recrtatlon Vebicle1. -·-• New Campen fmm $995 • Large Selection of New and Ul@d Camper• --OPEN ROAD &30 80, BAR.BO& BLVD. SA.VIA A.NA, C.lUP'. (5 miles so. ()f Disneyland) (714) 131-4'50 e Ul·llM '69 Chevy 112-Ton With camper, klw mUeap. Automatic, power steerln&, air cond. Dir. Will take car In trade or finance pri- vate party, Call 546-40$2 or 494-97'73. New '70 Datsun 1600 01-iC, Pickup with camp. er. Sale price $2099 dlr, ( • 67798) Will take car In trade, Will finance private party. C&ll 546-4052 or 494-9773. METRO VAN 1953, %-T bulltln campu. Stove, alnk, lcet box, carpeting, panelling, bed. XLNT cond . • S4S.7245 * * WA.ITRESS ·Coffee Shop, dining room set. 6 chairs. & "'an"AJ\ty. boards, Birch uppers Ir part nnesc '6'"" J 1969 '68 Nl~tROD Deluxe, tips over 21. *Cook-Lady Apply Pd I""" ·u GOULD MUSIC CO penian male cats 897-5480 radio, Dinette mode · THE MEADOWS 6, s!v, icebox, din tbl. $600. , K 1703 oval table. '""'• WI • lowt'rs, sink $!Ii. Good cond. fl e et c h amp ion & "''8-4l5' '66 VW Camper U ,000 ml'a, In person. r.tesa ..... nes, 88e $350. 64Ull5 Since l9U ~3-6590 alt S Kit1ens-Domeamese long hair Go~mor's Cup winner. '" new reblt eng. New tlre1 SUperior, C.M. Ovc 21 8' DAVENPORT & matching 2045 No. Main, S.A., cc:x~s""-RE~GC-ULA~=Tl~O~N-poo_,I .l thort all colon, 548-0813 $67&1. 644-5836. (lrvlnt) 20· SELF-c:tained Al Jo & paint. AU campinr equip. • WAITRESS • r ' Joveseat. Like new. $100. * 547-0681 * table CC1mplete with all ae-()r 8J6..4493 •2'1' ISLANDER Aux. llD. sleeps 6· ~ ... ..., + attachable tent. $2400. for lunch shift. Cost.a Mesa .,.,_2991 "~ PET "·bb ' /holl 1 .,_ ... _ '"--Ing vi.......-Call day• 838-<B!G "-··-· Club. 1701 Goll ,rot PIANOS & ORGANS ceAS()riea. Xlnt oond. -· n.a it w ow oi::. gall<'y, curtains, cushk>n1, no:servauuna ate now "" -===::'-:===== ....,.. .. u z NEW &. USED 646-3629 beforet 4 PM. Call 548-5448 7/27 carpet, full cov, pulpit. bilge taken 1n Oranre County's -True-ks 8' F'UU. cab.()ver ca_mpt:r, Course Rd , C.M. Office Fumlture I010 • Yamaha Pianos OrPN 2 CRAGAR S.S. cro~ RABBIT to good home with pump, alps t REDUCED finest & most complelet park ________ 9_5_oo fact, discontinued mol'l·J, WAITRESSES. exp'd. Apply. ..... ""' SI' 'I t i·~1 J If ·-·d rs "' ____ , d ,__ •Thomas Ora:ana re\"tl'M map; to t it nice hutch. 968-3168 7/,, $500 to 536.,.,, 1p av111 . a ....., e ery"""" ur. '63 OIEVY % T. Oeet aide Complete. $895. 869 Weit 1262 Pal11S11.des Rd., S.A. Refin'd Mx wuuu t!,.., e Ki '·'I ~--· Id M I U -Mll Exl ..,.,.,.. ....,u_..ed by Oran-Grove11) &"lo. Pvl p~y. •·•t o'·. 18th SI., "·-la •r.esa. * TIIE DERBY * $69.50 • ReJin'd Wt'IOd arm mucu ...... ..,. , Chrywler product 1 mo() . 9 WK Old Cocker mlx shot• us sc . o~•""W ""'""· "" ,..., .~ .. •• uc .. .....,. oo1 l ~~:,__:;:::~~~,-;c::-;;;5. I rotary cha1rs, S29.50 • We •Kohler &. Campbell $75. Aft. 5:00 842-7943 548-7561 7128 wltdys. in Irvine. For Information, Ml-6639: eves 962-4981 1969 Fiesta Camper $3'.lO WANTED: SKIPPER, lor 7 COAST MUSIC SABOT No. 3664 rigged for call 89.1-5730, 531-BSn ur ;--60 FORD tt t pick up. Pvt Abo mot'' Miler. Full tJme, havt? the large~! selection KlNG-al:ui 1prlng & mattreu % SIAMESE cata and their 5.1l-8l05 n Phone 1_713 585.(llJl L,A. or u.sed office fum in this NEWPORT 4: HARBOR set. Good condftion $30. kittens all gray 64S-Ol37 7/28 racing $200. John!()n 91,i hp I!!~~~·~~~~~.,. pr.rty, Be~! oUer, 541-6639, 3 Motorcycle trailer $125 Ask for Yacht Information. area. o:sta Me11& * 6G28Sl • 54.8-9865 * 3 KITTENS mixed breed all =ri~.t~~9;;,w, never RIVER SPECIALS 1,;";;':;',;962-4~;;98;:1;====-k==='",;'::·6006;:::,== _ -Mc MahAn Ofi8k n 10-6 Fri 10.9 Sun 12-5 COMPLETE SET OF colon. 54o-5886 7/28 ---~~-~--1Ncw 12' wide hOmes tll&htly 9520 Schoola-lnstructlon 7600 1800 Newpcirt Blvd. \\rEIGHTS Sl~. 4 MO Old Maltese Killen. 16' SNIPE frblg:1 n/plywooci. damaged. Perfect fcir the do. l iCfe~m~p~1~r1iii~~~~9~5~20~~~1~m~pe~r1~~~--., -===="=U<="'====-HAt.tMOND, Steinway, Yam-Call 67S.5535. &tS..1260 boutebtoken. 646-4376 7128 Trailer, cover. Fine cont!. lt-yourseller Orlglnal sell. Discover a Great New -S I ""22 Aha. New 4: used ptAM!I or KlNG •SIZE BED 1 FEMALE Welmaraner & ~~~~ ()fier. 673-U91 or Ing price sscioo-s1000. Reduc. "A COM. PLEJE SELECTION C.rHr With The Gtra"'• a t cav most make•. Best bu.YI In Complete Good CClndltlun ·-.:;:'-=~---°"'I _, tor cleara--••Nlft •4Nlft -'-'-"'-------SI) Calif. at Schmidt Mu1lc ·,,,., "1l6 • 1 maJe ~ Welmarane:r, 1-t "" 7 -.... e ... ..,.,.,,.....,.. BOY'S -G~l'1 b;k<, 115 ~ Lobrador. """'61 7121 BEAITT. '68 Focm'la 1 ' BAY HARBOR Of CAMPERS AT Old uprtrbt piano, ne~l! Co. 1907 N. Main, Santa J na FOR Sale: 1 Grandmother 100 hp Mt-re. !\lake ()tfer. 1425 Baker St., C.O.ta Meu. AIRLINES A natunil Jor )-'OUng people who want excilemcnl plual Tlckel aa-entf A.Ir trehlhl? Station " r e n I! Reaerva· tiom? Ra.mp or travtl a.gent? \Vn'll train YoU for tMse and more. day or nlte. \Ve Include pl•C"tment us1st· '-'·ed clock. New WHlmlnsl<r, 50 COPIES Jl .. d''' 0 ""' Tok• VW b"' " bur, part Ju" Soulh ol 11•-'"' Sa• TOTAL DISCOUNT PRICES" relln. S100 Chinese '"""" 1-;;;iiiiii~ ..... iiiiiiiiOi da"nr '··k 10 19 6 2 . 1 d '7' -0 Lo M ll1 E 1· ·•·-""\MU ~ """"' "' e ~· Diego ~.... (1141 •~9410 r\l~ St ts ore! . OROANS wc -~~;·"-;;:.i:,-'="'::.== 644--0259 7/'ll • ' .. ~ ,,_ 18th c M :-;MAGIC ~-r SI ... _ otw FLIPPER 8' t I b l!I r i I a Is 1-11,350 1-11."50 ' · • at ~ ovt, ......., ' FREE \I s1·amtl0 kllleno, ··•l~t ·~• • ood I bab """ ___,UV-• ""°"' l.f2,300. 1-$2,300 AU.. £ : _map e, Y. Dltcountl ......,, 3 blk, 3 lf'IY· 7 wks. ~~=646-114=~"· · 2 w/cabanu, 2 w/awnl""•. mucli morp_ Sal·M_on, 3131 WARD'S BALDWIN"S"MJDIO 847-5960 ·g.u.e799 71'11 -: ·- Alta l...qu.na. La& Bcb, Ul9 Ne _. CM "A" •A•~ Norcold bar retrigerater $35 14' BANSHEE: 1 yr., red Pi'lv. pa.rty. 640-2684 4M-2448 WJIO••, · · ....._._ Wutbencl electric K-Bob SlS COCK·A.·POO, female, 5 moa S700 -~~es all. 2 BR. unf\lf'Tl lOx~ dbl., ex- 432 62nd NB 642-312l old. sholl. Free to lQOd ""' '°"' pando. $6950 • Sp No. 86, GARAGE Sale · We have MAYTAGWuhe~-$50. $65, • homit. Cal\ 646-8n7 -:m SABOT * RACING SCltOCK 21462 Coast Jl'N)', •rs. Key everythlnr. 001 Celtis Place. $75, $90. AU ?Tbullt A FAMILY m t m be r 1 b IP KmENS . -·le ._ ad!'lrahle N ·~ ~ ~ CON D •·• (•·-tbl"'fl NB Sat l Sun 1~ r, d 1 ••• ~. n ... Cl b '"' ""' o, ...,.,. ,, ..... • ' '""' 11.t Sp. 32-1 atl. 3:00 pm. Liili .... • • auaran ~..... -n e . .,........,. ~ u . • box ,,.,·-·•. Gd homes .,.... .. ~As Dt 21 yn:, Ariprowd for 231.h &: 26th. 644.-0437 531~7. • 675--4!531 only, 831,; -?/'lt w/trailer, 0·~....., 12X60 2 BR or 10X50 1 BR. Veftr1f13. El\iiblt• Institution 2 BeautUUI Seal Point Sia. BALDWIN _.,,,. model 41• C.N"F.11=-=R°'T~"""-a"eh,..--:;T'=''""'nts l2' FIBERGLASS SNO\V-S star park, La I Un I · I I"' led'r·'ly •--u_.. w.,. .... , ·rv Do: ORPHAN kittens n e B d BIRD G d ·•1•~· B I ' uni er · ;u um'"" meae kitt<'M, fr male, $15 IJke ~·v, Fr. Provincial, Club family or 1 ln1le oo co,.., uu ... arga n~. itudent loan pro;:ram, ~ach, C.o1ta ti1esa 54.1-2538. Chen')' wood , Sl!Mt5. 6#-tm membtrshlp J450. C'fl..-6788. quallned home. MS.18Ui 7/'17 $350. Call 516-CllOt 49'J.J•l1-t *-~99-42S., - Afrlln• Schoola Pacific 1 BUFFET. vacuum cleaner. BALDWlN Spinet p I a,.. 0 . DIAtrealtd MAPLE-Jru=ra:i. "AZ.J~~E baby mice. 7128 F\bel'Jtlass It Gclcoat BARGAIN: Exel. 1.ltlo Park &10 E. 17th, S•nta An• table & chain & baby Like new, Sacrllict sooo. Good condlUon. &U-GU4 ~ ~ * * Repair•* + Tralll"r cab. 2 br., dln., 54M59' Items. Misc. 673"6625 Prlv. party. 642-<ISn i ..:":::':::":..:.:.SP::M:._ _____ 1 GRAY kltte111. 962---34)1 Tm Free F.atlmatea 548-1752 $7500. 673-3)24 ..... ... ------------------. --------~----------~-~--~~-..>..-~~~~-~-~~~~~-~~--~-~·-·~~-·· e ANGELUS • TEAR or.or e llARVEST e KING O.F THE ROAD •DJ 's e DISCOVERER e CliASSfS t.10UNTS NIW e HARVEST-VANS e CAt.tP KlNG VANS a ANGELUS·V ANS e DLX. CMt-PtR SHELLS e CA?.lP KING CAl\1 PERS . FULL CAIOVl l CAMPl ltS FROM $875 " EMPIRE CAMPER SALES So. Cit. Discount Center 1013 N. Horbor, S.A. e 13t·l772 .... ~·------ ' • • ;,. ----~------~~---------------------· ------~---------~------~----.--- ~l\!A!I~ fmJ>Cltt-',flO~ TRANSPORTATION c._.. '520 !.'!!."'"""" Cars -Import~ Caro - 'MVWbwl-NOw<Jll, RAT . ttrN. b&tltry. Xlnt cond. -------------=· -Mr.~~ ·;.::: :i.U:,E, ~: • "F~r· ~~ ~·'M6~ .... ci;e;;; !> '°" Xlnl """"· ''FRIEDL.A-" m new enc, cuetit/~lnt, Many nl1U1 \ x ..... $&95. 5.1&8492 ""' llACH I Hwy. Jtl 'FRIEDLANDER'" D,_ llutlllOI 9525 1 -·USID0SHV. NEW Mli?GET $1995 - - - - -1D aU.CM (ttWY. #) I - - - -• NIW·USID.SHV. MG ........... . TRANSPORTATION TllANSPORTATION -TRANll'ORTA'flON -TllANSPOllTATlON -TRANSPORTATION Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autoo 9600 AutH W..,lod 9700 UMCI Car_s:, _..__9900_ UMd Ct!'t VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN W I PAY TOP CADILLAC DODGE '67 vw Squareback Sunroof '63 VW BUCJ MECHANIC SPEClAL Uc. OKC-612 CASH '70 COUPE de V,ILLE Bt•UI, bf.Ybtn'y, leatber, , tor Uled ean • trucks ~t "Jnyl top, •lr. stereo/radio. ca.U \ll tor free etthute, Many Xtru. Pvt. pty, $6100. 'ST DODO& Ch1 r1 er ------AH-6__,, lutlw:k. CO.ded. A;r..,,"fl.. '67 MUST ' 440 m•a:. p\.IT, wtrn;klw11, atffr, d\ae brks. Lo. rnUe, Xlnt cond. 54~3985 Aft 7 FALCON ' $2'19 AM/FM radio, 1a,. '"''· •Ir CHICK IVERSON cond. lD.OOJ mUe1 on new VW tactory ena!ne. Uc, VEP4&4 S49o3031 Ext, fi6 or 67 Alk for Salet M&N.acr S1695. 1970 MAA.80R SLVD. l82lJ Beach Blvd. 9 other squ•re b•ck1 COSTA MESA Htlnttrcton Beach 1968 CAMARO HT~ C)'l, 3 1962 STATION Wagon -\'cry to choose from. ---,=..,..,==--' 841.6oe1 1('[ t-.1331 spd_, atk ahlt, Orirlnl owner. good CQl!d. tJ25. or oUt>r. C WANTED 3'- 000 mt. '""· """™ HICK IVERSON I'll pay top dolla· for >O\ll W£ PAY CASH 11~2491 " "' at 4152 -, .. -F-ALCO......:::::..:NFu=-,.-,,-, ---vw VOLKSWAGEN 'M••, ,.._:11 • Royce Rd,, lr'\llnt. ......_, .....u C.a. oond. VS, R/H, p.s., p.b., PM GROllt ~LET 1..::5(;:!-505::::; 1=== CAMARO AutamaHc, •ir cond., pDWl'!t litttring, (VfU 298J Will take-car in 1rade Cir finance. prlva.~e pt&tty, ~~ '1!'14·9773, '65 Mu11tang. 11tick 1hift, ~ dlo, hearer, Private ~ $750. 4!W-968J •• OLDSMOBILE • ---'64 VW--chatrll.J, complete front~ w/bRke1, stttr· in(, mutw cylinder, ~al1 & cables. $100 or best otter. 64&-4665 aft. ' '69 MEYER'S M1uuc Dune Buggy. custom built by Meyer's factory • oot 1 kit • LOADED. $1695 firm, Call '194.-1708 ariytime. '65 FIAT, red, ~. G(ll')(f ooixJ, Good interior. GOOD BUY! $3!1.5. ~ '69 Fiat 124 Sport Coupe, xlnt <.'Ond wi t.ape deck, 0 MAKE orrER. 49<1-3613 MG Saloo, Senllu ........ Immediate Delivery, All Modoll 54~3031 Ext. 66 or 67 aod .. ~ for llon PJJichot. FOR YOUR , CAR. CHEV maro '118. Only aub> trano. M&-<m •••3031 ..,..,,. "" --.-.. 11,000 milt's. XlJNT CONO, 1970 HARBOR BLVD. .,...... ~1. "°'°'· 1;1'""""""'· • COSTA MESA '67 VW. Lt Blue. <Rad.lo. XI.tit Sl.lm. '199-26.1.1 '67 vw Sedan _ Sunroof cond. Sl,200. Call a.ft 6 pm, ' CPftNELL '68 CAMARO 37111uto. XL.NT FORD '67 CUTLASS Suprem~ 41 Bf"IOW Blue '&>oK .. Be~ cond. Loaded, Anx ious ! MEYERS Manx, blue metal flakf" bumpeni, ak.id pls!e, etc. Nf'edl some work, $49.i 644-1618 Import.cf Cart AUSnN HEALEY AUSTIN AMERICA Sale•, Service, Parts ~iate Delivery NJModoll .!2rlllPOll 1lu1por1 ·~ 3100 W, O>aat Hwy., N.B. 642-9(!15 540-17'4 Aulhorlzed' MG Dealer DATSUN -$- "Leader in The Ceac:b Oties" ZIMMERMAN 2145 HARBOR BLVD. 540-6410 DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS 18835 Beach Blvd. HU11tin&;ton Beach itz...1781 or 5'!o.IM42 '66 1600 ROADSTER Silver finish w/black vinyl interior 4 spetd. Dir., rauc 851) "'ill take trade or fin- ancfl priv11te pat'ly call M640.52 or 494-97~. ,.. ENGLISH FORD - AU. NEW ENGLISH 1'0RDS NOW ""IN STOCIC DRASTlc;All..Y REDUCED 'JOCLEA11 LARGE SELECl'IOM TO CHOOSE FftOM Thoodore ROBINS FORD lll60 Harbor B!v<!. Cocta Mesa &42-0010 FERRARI FEllltAlll N ........ lmpolU Lid. 0. anse Cowlt)''I ~ aufbor. tzed de&ler. sALES-SEftVICE·PARTS 3100 W. Cout Hwy. Newport Beach 642-9405 5(0..1764 Authoriud Fmari Dealer FIAT mags, new tire&, brakes: 67r..560.1 . . CHEVROLET cond. New tires, brkl, shocks. Make oUer .. 6'15-1608 '66 FORD RANCHERO _l~l'llllJLll ! _1l111µLll l ~i JAGUAR shocks, battery. 1500 t'ng. '69 SQUAREBACK, 17,CXX> , 2828 Harbor Blvd. ---'--w/valve job. $1200. 675-5436 ml, beige, radio, Warranty! Costa· Mesa 546.1200 CHEVROLET 6 cyl Automatic, l2 dr 268). JAGUAR •69vw Bus-AM/f"M radio, Sl950. 642--27$3 CASH ---Will take car In trsde or H"' AD QUARTERS .. ~~:..,w. ~ Hwy ~-~.E.ll8' xlnt cond. S2500. '67 VW-Blue, r/h, Interior, yellow 70 VW bur ce.11 Cheryl '67 Mali"bu finance pr 1va 1e party. ~ -.......... .,..,. Call 673--8265 after 5 exrerior It eng. All in top 71'1: 6~1'192 art 6' PM S4&4052 1:>r '194-9773. The only authorized JAGUAR Authorfzed MG Oll!a.ler NEW VW BUG cond. Must see to aP-Bucket seat& automatic, Dlr., dealer in the ~tire Harbor 1---='""'""'""'"-'-"--I .;;•===:la:;l•::;:ll;;395:=:. 6:;7$-=::25::14::::N ·...;•.;.;w_C.;:.;c•r...;s ____ 9IOO J>OWer alffring, air oorict. rORD 6 cyl. engl~ with AreL '59 MGA $55 89 pr month I• -lraN. oompleloly .. builo. . Campi•"'·. • • A I G I ;--One owner CTPF 681) will 2,000 miles, Best off.er t onverlible, 3 speed, dlr, VOLVO Henton •• I take trade or fins.nee Pri· take•. 548-5.iso ' SALES clean car. C0x'Y!119) Will $147.71 down lnclud11 Thlnkln& of \>UyJng an auto-vale party. Ce.ll 546-4052 or, "63=FO::...:R.:::Dc=G:::A_LA_Xl_E_5CIO_ SERVICE ts.ke car in trade or finance tax & Lie. VOLVO mobile af~r"ttturnin.c from ~!H-9n3. PARTS · VW LEASING ,. w t Ba.rw' k --~==~--Auto, air cond. Xlnt. eond. pnvate party, Call 546-4052 AT ANNIVERSARY ovet'8e&S . ~ a IC '57 CHEVY SZ!I/ mo • finance. Pat BAUER. or 494-9773. Importa., would like !(! eXt.end 4 rtr., wa&0n. 567-ii981 BUICK CHICK IVERSON SALE our hoartled ro...-atulation. SACRIFJCl'J .:.;..,,,;,60,-:;;,.F•~l-con-, -w~h,·"'1.-JN MGB for a job well done. Let ~s $175 or best otfur aft 6:00, VW 1970 DEMO help select Your new car or 839-0ST.l $175. 673-2S67 COSTA MESA' ,65 MGB Roadster lJITO HARBOR BLVD. "142" ........... $2699 """aotomobile. c.11 1or ap. .. ~,:c,;;Mc;Pc.AL~A~Stn-w___ 1001 ECONOL!NE , VAN 23' E. 17th Street COSTA MESA t speed, radio & heater. • pointment._ M6--tt'W or gn, p.i., $300 541-7765 Like New! Owned by little '59 vw C.a.m-r ,65 -bit 4740. 1800 E Cpe, for de11v. 494-91'13 p.b., lac air, lugpge rack, S42-69al I ,.,.. , ''" • new palnl. 1 owner. $1200 ---C:...:-"''---THIS IS NOT o d school teacher fmm La-eng. Butane stove &: relrig, ery. Ovel'&eas dcl Sl)f'Cialiat. ---,57 FORD WAGON guna ·Beach, BJack lealher Bsl ofr 962 2638 DE AN LEWIS Auto Lt•slng M10 nr Best offer. &33-6138 A DEALER Interior, ·ronneau cover, · -· " . '-"""-===--.;..;..c; '68 ·CAPRICE 327-ps/pb, &ir. SlOO fl 548-7352 Private owner wlU sacrifice wire wheels, exce llent con. 1963 VW 1966 HM-bor; C.M. 6'1&-9303 •""" LEASI •""" Xlnt ooncl. Pvt. ply, =='="=',.:=.;:::== 1910 J qu.ar 2+2 for quick . . New paint & clean $600. ,,,-.,.... 5'18-9477 LINCOLN 11&.le, Like new with less d1t1on. Take small down 548-167'1 • ------......... •70 Chev, V8, Cl.atom El Ca.1--------- 541).54Rl. '60 01..DS RS Excellt>nt tranJj. car ' Make Offer 673-2135 OLDSMOBILE ' '66 Cutlass,-, • Full power plus alr C!Ond.~ ,. vin)fl top, Dir, {TIU' 305)' Will take car In trade or~ t ance private patty, 546-4Q5J or 494-9773. ' '65 OLDS Cutlass f~c a l r; .. iun pwr, bucket 'sea!a, •W. 1to tites & brk!, XI.flt w;dt c:ond, tmmac~ $950. Pvt plJ,. 644-1756 • '67 442 OLDS. Low m.ileaae.- Xlnt cond. Drafted ~ MUS'f. SELL! CaU 675-4683 ·~ 67f..3071, •• 1 --· ~l PLYMOUTH 1 h 5 -U will Jin. P vt. Pty. dlr. Call ==~~, ~.~=--~---m•-Pl•lrup •·•Jo ,.,.,L_ '57 Che\/)' Stn Wrn t 11n ,........, m es & factory J im aft 1D AM 4.94-?SOl or M~ST sell. li6 VW sunroof, THINI .... ... · nau • ... uu-vs, auw trans EXCEPTIONAL BUY '69 ROAD Runner. XJJrfT warranty, Hu 11uln. trans-54(}.3100. $9:,0 or best offer. Call ~ 'VOLVO' h,ydro, pwr steer, 3300 mi's, -$150 firm ** 545-0577 1006 Lincoln • Original own. cone!. ~tany extru. Cash J mission, Jl()Wf'r s~. shC1rl .'-'==-----Frank 11! 64~9 I $89SperOUmoH., Cp.OdAl"STbrakea. er, leavin1 U.S. Xlnt cond. deaJ only. 642-9737 ~ ! ~ wave AM-FM Tadio, fuli 1969 MGB-GT, B.R .G. T '6! CHEVY. 6 cyl, 3 spd '>'>No AM/FM, wire wheel s, im-* '67 BUG: IP CAR LEASING lr•n•. New tire•. bucket S.uw. 714-83..1-2497 Cir see at '68 PLYMOlITH GTX clean, leatl'll'?r,chro mewire Xl tnd ha.kM 4752R.o Rdl " · f wh 1 w/ I dlaJ f macuhtle. $2900 M best Cit· n oo ' new r es. ust ''FRIEDLANDER'' 300 W. Cit Hwy, NB. 1145--2182 seats. Good lran&PC1rtation Yee " rv1ne. i~~O hlgh per ormanc:e. fac~ air ~:ii~oning, ~'7ii fer. 545-4354 after 7 pm. sell $1150. 54.>-7S9t Evet k wkndi '496-!i695 SlOO firm. 544-3417 '64 C 0 NT IN ENT AL, 1 .;=======;;[ take trade. Call 644-1494. Larne Selection ,. d D --'10 EL CAMINO. 307 eng. owner, moving east, :dnt .. PORSCHE ., • r. emo. . rood, air, fWI pwr.491-162'1 1965 Jaguar 3.IS Of vw Cam-. * $2750 * u .. d c... 9900 Ml•t """"· R/H. T<ni.d Sedan. A transmission, power V K br:-· • glass. Disc brakes. 540-:6253 &leering, power brakes, air, '65 PORSCHE ans, om IS, .,., .. lllACll (MWY • .., CREDIT A '56 CHEVY conVt.-runs well, AM 'f'M r11dio, chrome wire Coupe. New engine, Must Buses, New & Used HIW·USID·SMY. PROBLEM? looks great. $200. wheels, radial tirt!'i, immac. see to appreclatt. PGX279. Immediate Delivery -NEED A CAR? ; 546-23.'l6 wa". Llo.$2~ 791· 53499 CHICK IVERSON '65 VOLVO 544 lJl59 c~ • • ' RUNS .,, CHICK IVERSON c.11 M"ll"•" - CHICK IVERSON VW VW '""'""· • '""" All original .,_ .. ;;;645-114!6&;;... ... ..,J,==='64=-~==-== ~· !RFW 6.Tl'J, Take 1mall vw 549-30.11 E•t ... or 61 i'9~"'~R66B;_'~ dowo. will flo. Pvt. Ply. dlr C~EDfT PROBLEMS? CHRYSLER 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA CaJJ Phil aft 10 am 494.1029 We C1rry Contracts -- 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ,63 VW Bus Cueto . 1 or !M-3100. Cars Fro~ $99 Ur. ·59 CHRYSLER Newport, 2 COSTA MESA '66 Porsche 912 extru 2 500 ;,,1 in rb~ e':a:· LATE '00 Mcxlel 142. 4 apeed Blue Chip Auto Sa•• dr, air. s2200. '62 XKE Roadsttr. R/H, 3 TO CHOOSE FROM $1000 0fi~r, celi 54~l9ll. . ractory aif. 'Excellent ca.tt 2145 Harbor Blvd., C.M. ___ 8:::4.:,7-.::500:::1:..,. __ Xlnt mecb. cond. Nu paint. Priced from .,.99 .,,5 VW JO 1 h $:MOO, 546-2994 642.9700 * 540-4392 '62 NEW Yorker Wat. R&:H. $1500. 968-2393, 547-M20 .-"' ~ n mec · cond. _ > a ir cond., full Pwr. 1 Own.r. 1966 J.I JAGU·AR SEDAN WDZ-92& ..:.~Y needs some YI06r~~2003 ,S ~.'-po_rt_C_1r_s ____ 96_10 $400. Call 494-&'.122 CHICK IVERSON -· -,. BUICK •tl:~'i"1 vw . ., vw . -...... Priool JAGUAR COMET fnr qulc.K u.le • SIG00.1 __________ '66 RIVIERA. air cone:!, -------- ·• 549-3031 Ext, 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD, COSTA ME.SA Porsche '64 fC l XL.NT CONDITION S.1000! * &45-0168 '62 l'onche S 54>7201 'M XKE stereo, m11.s:; wheels, Sharp~ '62 STA WAG, gd hl'>d)' & '60 VW Bus CONCOURSE CONDITION! 642-82861:30 to 5:30 6 d11.y11 new ttres. S250. 9' Plywood S400. 675-7496 Low low miles, J ust like '62 BUICK Special Skylark boat, gd rood. $45. 548-71'17 '61 VW S roof brand new. Phone me Al oonve11ible, good l.'Onditlon, un home &14-1J311 or at work $275. 644-21166 Llc NUF 315 540-5630. A!k for "Pettr the $599 Greek" CADILLAC CORV~IR '64 CORVAIR MONZA Reasonable * MZ.3826 MERCURY '67 Montclair run power pJUs air cond., Dir., vinyl top clean 11.11 you will find (V00049), Will !Ake car ln trade or finance pri. vate part,y, 546-4052 or '194-9773. 196'1 PARKLANE 2 dr H.T. Black top-interior. Low mileage. PIS. Air. Spotless, Must bt' !ll'!en to appreciate. '44-1191 -----" MUSTANG AT La.111! The best car in !own i11 for sale. Less than 4000 ml. In conco urse conrl, Bos~ '129 Mustang. Blk w/blk Interior. 251 E. Ba)' St., C.M. 642-4736 '66 MUSTANG, signal-(]11re red, auto. trans, 28.300 mi. Set to believe. $1550. Coupe, Absolutely concourse condition, Lie. SBN021. $2'" CHICK IVERSON Anllques, classics ffU vw * For lmmecfi1t1 54f...7685 s.1. * CORVETTE '68 CONVERT aqua blue. i:s 230 4dr, atr, aulo/tn.111, Xlnt c o n d. J25(llt. 837.SM2. CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext, 66 or 67 1970 HARB.OR BLVD. COSTA MESA 1938 ROU..~ Roy« 20/25 Spor t Sal. Vt>ry good cone!. 646-7543, 542-9787. 9700 1959 CADILLAC ll'ARTS I--------Sha,,,. Ooly 24.000 mi '" Alr conditioner '64 VE'rfE • New 327, '1 MUST SELL, 646--7301 Transmis•ion spd, AM/FM, MicheliM, '67 MUSTANG Convert, slit"k Brakes mags, :Z top11, $1500. '194-686.l shift, xlnt cond . Orig owntt PONTIAC '67 Le Mans Bucket seals automatic, pow.· er steering, sjr cond. Dir · (#288-479) will take trade finance private party 545-4052 or 4!K·97'73, '69 PONTIAC Bt>nnevllle t dr HT-air, ps/pb, AMl,J.f s!Preo, New lirtR, lo ml. Pvt. ply. $2995. 548-1342 '68 PONTIAC Le Manni, fully equip. Xlnt cond. $23:iJ ' or bst C1fr. ll30-t946. '• '60 PONTIAC * It runs SAS. afl 6:00 673-7490 1 '64 PONTIAC Grand P~, ) pl11, p/h, lo mi'.i;, l Clwntr. I xlnL $995. 549-3456. 642-73?8 , '67 GTO Conver\., R/li', crean1 c..'Olor. Pvt pl)', $1500. 837...,726. T-BIRD '57 T-BTRO. k '60 FanJ Sta.rllner $1800/both. ~ Cond, 526-251'1 or 54&-2Dll TEMl'EST "63 MERO!DES 23).5, steel rrey/red lthr. Good cood/ •xtra1. $1850. f15-fM77 549·3031 Ext. M or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. '60 VW. Newly upholstered Autos Want~- ,..,.._ Ma.,hl"I headliner to TQP DOLLAR '62 TEMPEST Convert. bue. Drum1 '63 CORVE'ITE hrdtop conv. $1 ,225. '194-2900 • scats $~. '6.l Chev, lmi>ala i RadiatC1r re-bit eng, new tirta, $1600 IT'S Beach house time. Big· SS Convert, buc scats, COD-' COSTA MESA $4900 for '69 .Polthe 912. Xlnt cond., lo mi. European METRO purchased without dealer. Saye to )'OU! 83J..2441 METRO VAN '69 PORSCH.E 912. '1 1pd, 1953 ,.,.T builtin camper. 15,000 ml, stereo, Like new. Stove, sink, ice box, $5150. '19&-1'108 c11rpeting, panellin1, beet ;::=,,:;:=::=:=== RENAULT Xlnt tond. + MS-72-45 * -- be installed. Engine &. transmission in very rtoorl condition, Niw tire1 $425. 774-2155 '68 VW Bug, Bf!ige, AM-FM. New fires, Swing-<Jut rear windows. Like new. $1395. for CLEAN USED CARS See George Riiy THEODORE ROBINS FORD John 833-l408 2060 Harbor Blvd. '68 VW l'ickup c,.1a Mesa Hard to find model ! VUH 126 ~~=64=2-00~I0===-$1899 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR Front and Rear Bumpen er bst C1fr. 968-796.'l <es! selecUCln ever! See the --1 PS PB "M ~--h · ...,., • .,....,... '-U Ol' Radio THE SUN NEVER SETS on DAILY PU.OT Classified \V{!Tade for truck, 4235· Dashboard Equipment DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! 1eetlon now! I College Dr. C.M. * MAKE OFFER * l"=======-=======.:-z==:=====:::: 12U South Rosi St. Santa Ana ~2-3120 Aller 5 p.m. '61 Cadillac Factory F...quipped. Full power. $2" -·- Used Cars 9900 Used Cars OUR SALESMEN ARE ON THE BALL! ~ r( MGB I nmaoa+MI -------- '62 DAUPHIN, good running cone!, $145. Call after 4 pm, IW-2526 CHICK IVERSON FOR 'JOP USED CARS If your cu 1$ extra clean, YW aeo us first. '6.1 Cadillac Full power, Air, 1799 NEWPORTER F I /A/T 1.%0 MG TC CLASSIC * VERY SHARP ** $9!f.i '194·9748 '00 MG. in good condition. ,,UtO •nnrt ltd Bla<k. lo""';.,,, m"'I "11. r-962-3582 Aft. 5 PM 9625 Garden Grove Blvd,T __ w-n_lho_"_Whl_to_E_l,-phan-i. 537-7777 893-7568 Jnto cub l.hnJ IL Daily Pilot Dime-a-line ad! I lmfOrl!" Autos -lmportod Autos NEW 1970 FIATS 68 to Choose From All Serviced & llHdy for Immediate Delivery 850 Spiders & Racers Choice of Color & Equipment 32 to ChooM From - ONLY $226260 (#DD7496l thla wMktnd Aho 124 Sports Coupe & Spiders Lare• S.lec,tlon Choice of Colora lqulppod As Y~u 'w1nl (SIR00117152) Low 11 .$3133 100'• rnor.• for yeur tr1dt In, foreign or do-- mestfc. T1ke th4t lhort moftty wvln1 drive to cool, tmot froo COSTA MESA. -. " SUNIEAM '63 ALPINE • xlnt cond, Burgundy, $475 or bst rifr. 833-1128 anytime or 827-2157 ** '65 v.w. ** 58,800 mi. $750. 64:'>-2525 1961 Sunbeam Alpine, JThuilt motor; mec:hanlcally xlnt. $595, '194-9848 TOYOTA !TIOMO!T!AI ANNIVERSARY SALE 1970 TOYOTA WAGON 637J Demo $1ll7 Toyota Mark II $2149 Lie. ZPB516 DEAN LEWIS 1966 Hlll"brJr, C.H. BILL MAXEY !flOJY(O!T!AJ 11111 ll!ACH BLVD. Hunt. leech 147 .. SSJ I mt N. al O'lalt HWy. on 8dl '68 TOYOTA CORONA Sedan, dlr, aulomaltr, 1.,w miles, radio, htt11er. t\VX'J'. 087) Take older car lnr down will Jin pvl Pl¥. Cllll PhU alt 10 Arll 540-3100. ''67 Corona n.td • lo°\111)' f11ctocy !"Quip~. (VLK927) \\'ill takt-car In trade er f'fnanr,e private par. ty, C.11 tor &ppointment, ~ 1'.11' '1lM.S7'T3. '69 Toyo1a Corolla \Va.gt)n Juaii:aat rack. 3 new lire•. Xlnt ('OOnontY et.r, a.ft s. 1'7M917 W~ !-OS SEW IWi..58711 BAUER BUICK 549-3031 Ext, fi4i or 67 2M E. 17th St. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Costa Mesa 548-7765 MOTORS COSTA MESA '61 Bus, By Owner $2100. Mll.-1876 '63 VW BUG Red beauty. ExCC!llent condi. tion, Nt>w valve job, small down will Jin. Pvt. Pty. dlr. Call Phil aft Io AM 540-3100 nr '194-1029. '6S GHIA. 54.IXXI miles. Good condition. MAKE OFFER1 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR For clean, used can JOHNSON & SON LINCOLN ?i"ERCURY 2626 Hlll'bor Blvd., C.M. IMPOR'J'S WANTED Oranp Counties TOP $ RUYER BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 2036 HArbor Blvd. 64Ul56 '611 COUPE de V\llt>, All power, slPl'E'I), air cond , El Dorado in1erior, low miles, 1 (l\.l•ner. $3/;i(l or best oUer. '199-4 198 '611 CADILLAC Coupe de Ville. Loaded! Immaculate! 211.000 mi. M11sl aell, Asking $.~!NG. &12~115 18881 Beach Blvd. DAILY PILOT \VANT AO. 673-67'17 or 542-l Uil R. Beach. Ph. 347~ Di.al 642--5678 & charre it. 1969 SQUARE Bk. Auto. ·,:;;:;;;,====='-.!..======== RadlC1. Lu&-rack. Drk hlut>, Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos New tires. $1895. 64!'>-2076 '68 VW BUS 7 pas11. Just llke br1LJ1d new •3600. $2595. CHICK IVERSON vw r14~1 Ext. 66 Cir n 1970 HARSOR BLVD, COSTA MESA '6.1 VW Bu~. Custom Int, exlnl.!! 2,500 mi. on reblt e.ng. SlOOOlolfer. Ca 11 54~911 '64 vw Convertible Orange with hrllnd new pal1- ley top & hrtnd new engine. Lie. OYJ798. $11" CHICK IVERSON vw 549-30.'l E,,f, 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR Bl.YD. COSTA MESA 'fi4 V\I/ RADIO. whll1t side w11.ll11, healer, mu~I aee. lo ap- prcciatt', $620. Jftrbnr American 1969 Hubor Blvd. f,6-021!1 ~ VW cha111~iJ1, e<1mplt1!c h'oot.--t-od ""'/brskrs. stH.r· lfll, ma8ltr cylinder. pl'dals It c.&hle.1. tlOO or be1t ofh!r. 646--f863 .n. s ·~.w COSTA MESA HONDA s::., 40 MW r!R GAUOll • front Dl1c lrHn e Full Carpsllftl e .75 MPH .e 4S ..... Trano. UNIVERSITY OLDIM091U 2150 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MISA 540-9640 ' . -· THEY HAVE TO BE I WE'VE GOT THE FINEST SELECTION O~ BMW'S IN ORANGE COUNTY! Stop In and •••the complete line , of BMW's, All colors, models, ready for lmmecfltt1 delivery. · j '62 PORSCHE 111 .. lo, ti1.t1r, •J1tr1 1p1t1•l cir• li1t h1•11 t•••11 willi 01!t h1•11lv. $11 I: dri•• lo •pp11ci1t1! !OS8,l, '68 vw $ ~!0:! llick tllift, $1595 F11tb1c•. r1d io, li1•t1r r11I 1595 1ti.up tittle cir. A·I r1dio, h11t1r, lookt 111d clriv11 Ii••• f1 ctory fr11h ' _'_•_••_·_1WT_•_0_"_1 ______ _ cir. !SElt99&1. '65-PORSCHE $ lt111d lllW l"fillt 11(11 I 2995 m;I• " HI R<d;o, "'"" l"'m1cul1l1 l~routlitlul. W!l1t1b1111ty! (002 11 . '69 vw t p1u111tor 'WIQOll, fl vo 1111r 111w rodi1I tlror. Thit t,..,, It f1tttlry •11d $AVE prlt•d 10 1., .. v•u wo11 't lt.li~1 /ti 147421 , '62 FIAT Co11•1rtibl1, P1rf1cl lr1111port1tio11 ci r, M1ch111lc1llv top1! fGFN.f64 l. '65 SUNBEAM "Ti91r" ?60 V.s, AM/FM. h1rdlop, 111 1y11er1 4°1p11d .. $11 ttih 01111 lllGZ·l'1?), Joe Berlottl'1 T&M MOTORS IOI! GARDEN GROVE BLVD. SALft OPIN SUNDAf PAIR, SlltYICI TUIS .. THUii. TILL 1:00 134•:1214 fV. tfti, L .t ..._"l "1·1111 • . . . • I ' • < I c t • • I c c ( I I l r c I t I c