Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-07-31 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa' * .. • :.A; !H'. • ·-. . ~ar.1ne_.· •' • •• ' ' ' -..•' I ' ' ~ • ' ' \' · · ·' " ' '• ,,_ 1 t .. • • .. ·• Girl Kidil~ped -11.s.r.im.·1 :Cilbi nei:Accepts In Newport, U.S. ·Peace Proposals Raped, Shot TEL Avr: (UPI) -Tile Isra•ll· Gahl! weul~ take any firm deci sinn A teenage girl from Pico Rivua who cabinet, hEdng an1 appeal from Pre1l· befOre .8unday, leavlng the country still 1 dent ~iton, today accept.ed -the U.S. teetering on the edge of a governmental h,a been raped and ahot after be n& Middle Eut ~ace proposals that include crisla.' ·The Gahal" bloc,· which has 2iS kldnaped in Newport Beach was 1 three-month cease-fire on the Egypt.Ian seats I~ the1120-seat> unlca.m~ral.parliJI· dl~vered by four camp Pendleton f front. Egypt bad accepted the pl'oposals m;ent, had decided~Tue!!day to walk out Ma1-ines ea rly this morning as she earlier. if the·cabinet said yes. wandered incoherently along the San The decision was· taken by the cabinet Despite the threat, the Gahl.I minislers Diego Freeway south of San Clemente. In the foorth crisis sesskln .... <if the week Were invited to sit on a mlnlsterlal The girl, 17·year~ld Susan Price, r&-despite 11\e thre.at of a walkout by th'e CG111mittet ·which will draft the official mained semiconscious through the morn-aix Gahal Party members -Of the National 1.!ir1el reply. ~. l. ing and under intensive care at South Unity Co1Utlon that Would imperil the The Israeli statement today said ~Israel Coast Community HOllpltal with· a bulle.t government ol Premier Golda,Melr. was prepared to sublcribe to the U.S. Jodg:ed In her neck. · -The sizi members of the ha•kish.iparty proposals lor a to-day ~ire· "•~ Preliminary report! lncilcated the &irl voted a11intt' aoceptinc the propoial, ac-least <in the Egyptian Jront.'!~Thl11ruled was left near the .Lu Pu11u 1at.e of cording ·io the Iaraell state radio. which out a' cease-fire now on the Jordanian the Marine base, suffering 'a lhtg1e woond saJd the vote In the cabinet was 17-6 front where Arab auerrtllas have in the neck ·aftei-a terrifylna jour.ney with no-abstentions. However, the1' did threatened' to con UnUe the o.yar1 from Ne~port Beich into North San not immediately walk out but caucu!ed 'Ille U.S. propo11als were vasuely wor~- , · Die10 County. ~ again to decide their course. td and Israel t1'8!1 forced repeatedly Miss Price. whose address wu Mt PaliUoal toUreea aaid It was unlikely (See MIDEAST, Pl&e I) tmmedialely available. appai:enUy was (See RAPE, Page t) '0rDf• Weedier U you 're looking for a change in the weather -don't. This weekend will be a good deel like other weekends with sunny skies and little change in temperature. INSm E TODAY , Rw1ia'1 Moiaeuev Ball11t rt· turM to Los Angtlt1 to thaw • out the cold war next Wl!!tk. Dt· tail.! In toda11'1 Weekender. l State VetoesMarineCorps' . Off er of Public -Coastline By FREDERICK SCHO!MEllL Of tllt DtllY l'li.t t .... An oUiclal spokeS'll'lan fur Camp Pendleton today confirmed that the Marine Corps llas oCfE!'ed 1.5 milea of virgin lhoreline for public .. use oo I ~year lMae. , llut !he Staie ti" ia l1'holding and qys the offer • director of Parks the coll of dtvelop- 111( the of unct for Milnl par be prohibitive. "The state would like 4.5 miles of beach with a ~year lease -then we'd have a fantastic park," be said. The Marine Corps proposal wu sent to the 1tatl nearly two weeks ago1 following ~ rejection by the state of onolher plan for the beadl. The Martneo \ . formerly offered 1.5 Jlliles of beach for !even yeare, with the lease revocable at any time. Alter Jen&thy negotiations. the longer- lerm plan was drawn up but the 1t1te woold 81111 like a longer 1lreU:b of ,beach aand. Meyer' said that negotiations for the 25-year lease will conUnue, but thl~ the !Ina\ deciaion will not be made by Camp Pendleton. , ''Th-_t final decision will rest wllh the Dej)lrtment of Defense," be noted. Director of Parks and Recreation, William Penn Mott, met with Col. A. c. Bowen at Camp Pendleton Thurlday morning, but the likelihood of a Marine Concession appeared unlikely. "The two men toured the are11 '4.it { imagine all they did WIS &el lftelr !Set Bl!l4q!, Pap I ) ' . . . .. NjXon:.8 .Jet: Just Missed ; : . '"' . ) . fu.AirC t a8h ' ' :~ r }~~!~~~1~~~~;; ·~: . one: ~M"'4 · -.,iPaJliloil wi\h. 11.,a.;~llCl.W midair Ill<~· tanker -down tho na>way ·at• . !:I Tori> Mir!ne Catpo Att.~tallan ,...,...'. day, flippe~ over and~~ In' flames. 1 • nie pilot, a ~~atfid Veterlrt o(.Vi•tnarn h~~er duty.'dled'ln the• blatfu&' wrkk•iet wJUchl C1me lot fest; onl~ IJoff yarp!· ·tm ·P;fttdent: NliOn'1: · paried Al~fQl'ceillne Jetltnir. · ' · • A i'nidfleld · crlali crtwt riced to the· ~~e and w~f prai~ ·ror• ilvtefg the. lives Ofl fol.Ir Jcrew> nlemlMrs; three ·lof 0.Mni wtte l>odJY :1njUredl ' . · . ' First, Lt. ft9(er w. Mlilllrta, 211 or: Hl\l>tiilglOll' l!Mcli,1 'perilhed. In the overtui'ne\I. fouNtilifte1 tu r b 0: p t 0 p aJrcrlift. . ,1 • • • •• , : · The injured crew tnemben were Jdtn. tlfle8 is:. · ~ , : · -Mtj. Wallet Cyll(ewics, 41, Mballll\ Vtejoi :'r1 1, . ~~l .. RoberliB. Walls Jr., 21. Tu1Un. -'Siii! Sgt. ·Kenneth C. Divis, 31, Santa Ana. · -q,1. Kenneth Metzdorf, 211 who livet on base.' · . All .wtre admltte<f to Otan1e County Medi.cal Center, whe,re all .but the major were' Ult~' In critical condition today f.rOm burn. mid lmOke inhalatioo. Two members of the resc1,1e crew - who carried out three victims -were also injured despite the fact one wore an 11sbestoa suit and oxyaen·muk. Sgt. Bob Tribett collapsed due to smoke Inhalation while \ inside the blazing; gkeJetal fuselage, .o.bl&t •WU helped dJt. of the wreckaae to safety. Medical CorpamAn Mike Shlpj>let IUI• fered burns ol'l' the hands while ad-., mln!Jteriiig aid lo !he Injured ,,.... · · Operations Officer €ol. Ken' Huntinaton' credited Sgt; Groyer ~I. Clair~ ,._ team with saving the sur.vlvor1, altbouah lhey haa to Wilt·for firemen .. • . The· fifefl1bters laldia blanket, of f<>1nr throu1h .th!, IJariies• 11 a lllety path and the crash crJ'W amuhtd ill way: into the plane • and had the men out' Vfithln t,fo mibutea. . , .• · -A column of amoke vlaib~ lot is mil,.·lhot Jnlo !he •ky from, Ifie -ne of the INpdy """ J!AmWay, ~. wblch ""''~•nori!Houlh ~ . ' A panel oi lnve1U1J1tors 'Ya• lm:;- mMilt#ly-ct)fl.vened to' probe_ the, first ~cdcleel ·.1nvolvil)i Marlnt Rllluellnl Squadron 352 in 11 ye ars. Built to .carey 10.000 gallOns <if hlahly voliUle fuel,· the KC130 wu not' loaded, Othtrwltt lhe crash -wltneued by hllndrfda --:ould have ~ far worae. . ,u. Mull~. holder of two Dl~gulshed , FIY\lli CrOltOS lljd 3a , Air MedaJs, WIS maldnc hla third loi/ch·a~·IO pracll<O lanclln1 about 3 p.m •• wllcin the plane crallhed. . • . Np:1mmec11a~ d«ermlnatlon ;. (actors Which led to the accident: wa1 offered~ l>Ut witne~ laid tbo KCilll .boul'Ced anif ae•ued the left win& wblch broke oil. ' CratH, ~alu.a and other debrb bowlc· ed into the air u the. .craft 1pun 180 degrees and Olpped over,' Its en&ines breaking away and •kldln1 dOWit the concrete, 1pewtn1 fire. Sat. SL Clair -.Id one ot the crew memben. hf! • fillhl oull In flamtt, !Ste CllASll, hp I) • • • ' ' . ~ ! t . : *" f;i * , . . " . . • ... ~·-' '' er, .. ' ' , -' Highligh.~ from , P~l~~ Nixon'•. first West '.Colst taltvl.!ed p'"reu.001;1ference :· 1 The President slkt the U.S, ~Pi>s~l ' ' ' lor1a cease-fire, In.the Middle hat would, be !IOOPled \Wjt~ ,a mJlitarn llllDlbll!I. He . lorec:IJ\ ~d· •orr the ceue. lire ~~~~~~~~~"--'-~-· , ' ' ' . DETAU.8 PH P.\GE·4' , ' J -I ": , ' r ' that' "Jsraer can .•ll'ff lo the c~ lite' and ailr.,. lo ntlO)llllons without fetr .'' ~UOn ii beina coo~ and will con- tinue to u11. The ecmomy will move forward In tht 'lo!!i term and the alack In 1111?.Ioymenl wlll lit lalten care or. ~ "Jf there 11 a war betWeen' the Soviet Union ud'tho Un!tOct ltatu. tliera will • • f. : l . • l ' •' I ' I • : ! , . : ·."ti: I I ·;~;. < ...... ~ '",;-• •• _ ... , ; . ' be no wlMer•." That II Why It.JI l!'t ,.rtanl that the Untie!! Sy!u not bi1 1raged Into a 1111Utary con!llcl In ay f"•S like the MiddM: Ei,st. ~ }"";• 1 'I'!'e ,theavyi blanket. of:amoftiol ttit ~ut COal ahowa> lhondan'I Dlld ~. 1ett'torithe1niUM to .ive lta aif ~ liro!.1"1"'· eon,-aiiouJct tau .,..;.Qt . lctfon on JtglalaUon .ht1 1Qbmltt¢ ilr monlha li!O lo .,.Dlblt>atr pollulloo. I Time b • m ' longer on lht ildo of !he Vitt Cong. '1 'btU.vo the J1R1P1C1a !or 1 -ll•ted peace ~ bt ·llf\tar now lbaD they "'"' bt""" · tM Ciiio-. . bodtan operation." t PuUiq the blame on ptrllll..t lat ~":""~:"~ :u.v: .:::•J~ ft ' ~ I • - s flldq, Ju~ 31, 1•7G 'if ate Defense -Hammers -at Drug Use • • ~ Drozta roPO -Linda K- ... tMtUlod today lhlt ahe bad been ~ ~·~w:~· :;·;,·= --.......... ·jolnod Charla •• ••tamny."-- l I I Cf'CIU ezaminatlon by Defense 'Atton!,q .Paul "-'1d. the ital<'• tumiDOlloa by lldemt Attorney Paul '~aid, the st.In's l'flme witness acknowledged that she had a cansklerable •mount_ of "~ cspirlence" bef9re. ahe Joined the hippie cu1t cbarpd with lhe Sharon Tate-LaBlanca llayb!p. Fi'-ald bu aald ·be wlD atlempt to ... tlillt-Mra. Jtephlan'• ICCOWl1I GI Ille Ulllnp ,.... a ''fanlaf' that came from a mind Impaired by the Jong usage of drugs. Mn. Kuablan said lbe had lived In communes from COlllt to oout from Ju~e Grants Sloc11m Ouster ·~~t\.ttomey An taaue Uiat became. court olllcla1a believe, almolt: as important to Dr. Wesley G. Slocum as the mmder charge M faces was ~ved in hiJ favor TOOrs- diy. Superior Coar! Judge James F. Judge a&NMCl to the firing of Costa Mesa trlal lawyer Paul Augusilne Jr, and ended a troubled asaoclaUon. Dr. Slocum bu i:epootedly tried to fire Augustb'le IP redent weekl, but the court ttluaed i>ennlls!on for him IO doao. .'Jbe action 'nrunday ·ended a troubled relaUoo.sblp which Augu.tine described a1 "bell on earth." ."I was ready, willing and able to proceed wllll the caee at any pollll," Alllmtine aal4 today .. OOurtcoom IOUfCel aid b'. Sloc:um'• dispute with Augualine -not COllDeclnd to the spedflc cm fer which he Is _... to ltand trial An=bu -.Uy repr-lnd Dr. IMiore, winD1nJ acqulUal on an atlempted murder chlrgea i... ~April !ISi 1J11111Ft with Santa Ano. . lie --1!>e IW'I-lo Superior Court f.,. a prelria1 beu!Jic on a ,IU mUUon damage suit atomrnlng from lhlt cpnfl'OlltatioD when Dr. Sloaun was last ...... ested. . The suit bas lince been dismissed. Judge Judge Thursday gave the Colla Ml!ll surgeon permlssiorl to make two tileimDe calls to other Jafvyers. Ills new attorney GI ncorcl for bis pretrial hearinc Aue. U II npecled to be MldJoel Gerl>oll, who bu oaraed lo -Ibo CIR.. ' I 1 • Dr. Slocum, "· fmnuly of Mesa Verde, 11 accul«I of Ibo killing GI bis :1-monll><>ld dauch!« Cynthia. Wllat b aliepcl' lo be the buldlered remaloa of Ibo lnflllll ••• fOllld. laat. Mardi fl lo i .liWor lblooeci 1iOil lbe Sb:uma' ¢oe1a ·lleei·hiime -117 IWUAuamovbe--1J"l'OL • won.. found 1!ie child'• re~ ofter 1!>ey noUced. a atrq odor emanallog from the ltffzer. S.Wal parts of the body all carefully •i'lll>l>Od ln butcher'• paper were dllcovered in the appliance. • Hearing Slated For Beach Man Gary H. l'bnenl., 28, h.u been ordered to appear fer a p~al hearing Aug. lS at Wet! Orqe County munldpal Court. He h.u been dwged -five counta of kidnap wlh greal bocHly lwm, seven counll GI armed robbery, five counts cl ford*! rape, five counts of. su pervenkm, airee -of cr1m .. ag-nature, and 1'<ir counla GI .,..ult with 1nte11t to commll rape. . DAILY PI LOT ............. " ........ .... ~...... ....... .. ....,_ C-. ..... S..Ci.-.te ol4NOI COAST ~•t.ISHING COMio.l.ilv lteMrt N. W.9' . l"ttlJCl"'I Af..cl PW!! ..... J•c.~ -· c..1 .... Vic• l"f'11:..n1 '"" Gentr•I M_,... , .. , .... , x,,.,n ...... 1\o111•• A. M11t,t.1111 Mlfll8lnl! Efl"" lticlri-' P. Nell leu111 °'"'" CMll'f l!diltr C..-. ~l UI Wfll ••'t' ltreet N....,.t Mldl1 Jiii _. .. 11111 eo...~ ~ 9-11: tt2 ~I A-...,,... .... a.di: 1111$ ••Kii .,..~,... S.. °""""'" .»5 MOrlll t:I C...,IM 11•1 -- I • the time &he left home In a amal1 town in New Hampshire and had a child when she was 15. Her !Int experience lo C<111111unal Dv- tog ,.., In l\flaml Beach. Fla., abe said. She ·nest lived '"With a .,..ip In Boston and then joined another commune in Greeawicb·Villa&e in New York City. From there she wenl to the Halght- Ashbury 6edlon of San Francisco where she lived with another commune and then went baa lo llolloo where abe lived with the "American PaycbedellO Circus." "What WQ that?" FllzCfl'aJd Wed. "We wanted to get bulel and •nlrn1J1 and travel all over Q1e counVy u a clrcua. I don't ~w enctly why ~ wa called psychedelic ... 0 Wu it drug oriented?" 11Yes, they took drug& ••• "What drup?" "Acid. Tbey llmOked weed." .. Extensive UM ol drup?" 111 wouldn'& a~,uleolive. It varied." Fmn BolloA 111!>. K1Pblaa lbea came witb-ber let'ODd bushlnd, Robert _Kua;_ btan, to Los Angeles and lived in a commune at Venice oc I.be ocean front west of Los Angeles. "We decided to go to New MWco. We went to a place out.slde of Tat11." "Did it bave a name?" 0 Yes, il was called Sons of the Eart2t Mother." "I was always movlnl: from ooe place to another, usuaUy WMb a group," aakt Mrs. Kasabian. "Would· you ay you were Im- pressionable when you joined the com- mune in New Mexico?" "I was aearchlng f<X' oomeUU,. I Airport Report Studred, But Choice Still Far Off Orange County airport co~ spent two bours pondering the Pal'IODI report on Orqe Cotmty Airport 'Ibun- day, and came to the conclusion that they may oat be able to make an "'educated recbmmendation" by Aug. 11, 1!>e daln Ibey are to report to the Boon! of Supervilon. Cormn1allon Oiainnan James Gilmore direded Aviation Director Robert B-""1 to lovestigaln the possibility GI mending tbe tenns GI Ibo coalrlct !rill> the Ralph Parsons Company. Under the $140,000 contract, the Board of Superviaors must make their choJce of suggested alternatives by Aug. 21 or face a penalty of $200 per day. The report ltsts eight d i ff ere n t alternatives for the future of the aJrpon -from cuU1ng -to ..... """" llll!'Clal fllal>ll • day to expondlnc to a fllallb a day by 1'77. '!be p;mlty clluae wu Included lo the contract becauae Ille Panons Olm- -did · not want to keep 111 team GI enctoeera and conaultanls In !he area and lnlc:Uve for more 1hln a moath. U Ibo airport aervlee 1,. to be cut back or kept 1t it.I present level, tbe P~ tam CID be disbanded. However, If a \IOCUIOll la made lo eapend, Parsons would 1llen prepere a llldter plan for tbe aJrport. j•1t· is unrealistic to expect us or the Board of Stipervbors to reach a decision in 30 dafl," chairman Gilmore said, "~ven U w~ !pent. all of our time on It' for the next three weeks." 'Ibunday;11 meeting wu called to dlacuu allernlllyea me and two GI tile ~ -cutt1n1 i.ct or malnlainlng ~ ....... !" but Ibo' Ume wai spent dlaculling ilolae . "We are being asked to bue our decllion on noise ltan<lanll tl>at di> not exist," Gilmore said. !We 1'oft_!l-kncrw what those atandanll J<ill be,iaillf they are adopted by the leglalature.•. • "At the ume time; we Clnnot, in my mind, linore the wliber ofOllit people whn live under 1!>e flipl' ~ becauae of t.chnlcal standanla 11 ; .~~ ..... Oommlaaicmr llonaKLA1Uim1..who aid be lived .ion the eit.inded oe:ater liDe From P .. e I CRASH ••• managed to stumble out of 111e blazing wreckage on bis own. One wilness was Bud HllDIKKl, a ranger at nearby Lion Country Salarl, who said the huge tanker had just pwed nve!l>ead and ill~ seemed ailenL "They allnlS mm a lot ol noise, even the cats look up,'1 said IWwon. Another rqer watdilng from a b1gh point In the park, John Pardue, said LL Mullin'• aircraft touched, lbea rose oU the l'\lnway a bit and nosed over at a steep ~le. ' Air Force One WU parked 00 an apron next to Iba • nmway pr<parlng for a routine pricllce fitllit and took off later. Ll Mullloa won Iba nation'• aecond· hlchest award for fllil>t berobm twice while wving In Vleb!n, -fn>m May .W November of 1968, and then was a Pensacola NAS D.lght Instructor. He .._ied for dllty at El Toro only six weeks ago and i! survived by a wife Wanda and 2-year-old daughter. Funeral services were pending ·today at Dilday Brothers M-ary lA Hun-Unatoo Beach. . Booby Trap Ki1ls La P alma Girl A 17-year~ld La Palma girl wu shot to deall1 Thursday night by a booby troP rifle trlli•red when she raised a blthroom window to enter ber boyfriend's apartment In Anaheim. A .n caliber bullet struck Me:Uta ·Jay Bonhlm. in the le.ft eye, police said. Neighbors who heard the shot shortly before I p.m. found her on the lawn beneath the window. She died an hour later at Anaheim Mtmoriat Hospllal. The boyfriend, Randy Eugene Actlea 18, WU taken into CU!tody by poUci when he returned to the apartment at 1:20 a.m. No chirget have bee.n filed. The rifle 1pparently wu rtued u a homemade buralary salegu.anfitovlct. The front door wu: locked and no one home at the 1partmuit whtn Mill llonham lcied lbt window. of the runway Jn Newport BMch,11 &lked Stanley Walah, Ibo Panooa _...... llUve, If the stain might adopt ttandanll more stringent than those the report are based on. Wa.lm replied that ft was "practical to consider the proposed standards as those that !he stain would adopt.'' :'lbe nat meetmg of the commission wtl1 be Tueoday at 7 p.m. In the SUperviaan bearing room at 515 N. Syc:aunore St. In Santa Ana. Alternatives one and two wtl1 be d-. ' Fr om Page 1 MIDEAST .•• to seek clarilicaUon from Wasfilngton on their meaning. Tha Rogers propoaalJ spoke specifically of a cea.fire on Iba St1e1 Cllllal front and bopefully of the othe.r fronts. But during the iO-day period the belllgenoll could berin preliminary dlscu:!sions which ""°Id aettle the pro. blem of a ce~f!re on other sectors with Ambassador GUMar V. Jarring ac- ting u mediator, and hopefully, to prepare for negotiations to write a formal end to tbe cmfliet. ' The hawkiah Gahal JJll'IY announced in advance d: the cabfnet IWioo they would leave the 1oVemment lf the reply was lo the alllnnaUve and deaplto Prall- -lflXOO'I -..cet Thuraday nJ&bl tbe American propooed · lbie.....,lb cease-tire would not be uaed f« a So91et· Egyptian buildup. The rlgh~wlng Gahal JJll'IY not only oppo.a: a , ceue-fire but Wifta that any terrltarY 'C!'!Jlut<o! from the Albs In the 1"7 u day. -remain . an Integral part ol Israel It feon ~lhlt any IJelllllated· P'"'"" could mean. tile looa of lbat lerrllorY. O!liciallx ~ Iaraell ·· pemment pnllcy b that aome of ·-laauea can be necotlatod. . . Presldenl Gama! Abdel Ii._ of tgypl *""Pied the AmerlcJn . co-.llre pfopooais M did Jordan. But hla .-, opllt lhe -An1>··world, .,;tjt<Syrl• and Iraq coodemnlng bis aeUon and with lniq lll!ertog ,IJ,1001rooP< lo tbe.Palatl- nlan Arab guerrillas who have •owod they wlll'll01 a<>cept a ..-Ore. lo , the mld&t • of. the p oil tic a I developments Israeli Phant<rn1 • and Skyhawb bc>nbed EOPltan Sues. Canal posltioos 111ro.iat>out tbe day in Ibo 7111 consecuUve day of· aucb attacb, and Israel 11e11t other planet iDto' Jordan to bit Jordiiian anny pi>alllons lo retaliatioo for attacb «1 llrMll border setUemenU!:. ""°"" P qe 1 RAPE ••• abducted In Newport. where abe had been vacaUoalng, police Mid •. The four Marlnea roportedly found the teenagir at 1:5S a.m. and drove her to San Clemente, where· they notified police. Miss Price.. then wu taken by azn. bulance to South Cout Hooplll~ where the bullet wound, hidden· by halt and blood, was dbcovered. Aide$ at the hospllal said !he girl has not yet undergone eurgery early ih~ morning. DeteCUvea from Newport Beach, ·San Clement<, and Ibo San •Diep Sberlll'a ofb we.re at the scene throup the morning" The loveallgatlon bu been jo!oad by lnvestlgators from Clmp Pendleton, reports said. The detectives through the morning probed the brush<ovmd bank 1loplrig coastward of the. San Diep Freeway, but Sen Dlet:o Sheriff's offlcera, who are in charge or the case, refuted to divulge details ol the investigation. Miss Price bu not been interviewed and pollet have yet to tpta1t With the four Marines who reporlnd the dLsc<Jvery. Mlaa Price apparenUy clawed her way up the steep embankment to the freeway after her aasallanll loft her. San Diego Investigators would not -1fy whell1er MID Price has made com.menu on the Identity of or the nwnber of the persons involved In the attack. PoUce In Newport Beach meanwhile were reporled to be P"'bing tile clrcumltances of the abduction In their city. It •ppa,.nUy occurred around mid· ni&jlL I ' wun't sure of, but I cot it together wtthln myself. When I joined Mamon's family I wu lmprwiooable and I wasn't 1o&etber," abe aakt. 1 "But you had bad -· ez. J><flm:e lo lfOUPJlvhll..l'!>!I ---a pioneer ln communal living weren't you?" 1Ftq:erald asked. 0 Yes." "So when you joined tile group at the Spohn Ranch you thooght you knew what J:,, were doing ad what kind of pclS you migllt ...,.,.,_ In conimimal llv!og?" med Fitzgerald. "Yet, ~ 1 just thought they wtre beautllul IOvtos people," lite aid. Pllq<nld took ...,. cram examination of Mn. Kaaablan '11111raday Ill on atlempt to nulllfy three cloys of tOatimony In wbk:ti abe gave an eyewitness ACCMmt of Ibo killings 1aat Aug. M. Fltzpnld told newsmen lhlt 111e defense for Manson and three female codefendan~ would be based 1n orl.nclple on the contention that Mn1. K'Uablan, • ll·y......,ld blonde wbo·llved -the' (amilJ ~montb, Wis not mentally competent ~ Under cross-examination, Mrs. KJ>a. blan ~tlnd taldng LSD, peyoln. methedrlne or "speed," mescaline, and mornlng glory seeds. "My sole purpoee for t • k t n g hallucinogens wu f<r realisation ' -God -realization," slit aaid. "And were you IUCC6Sful ln realizing God?" Fltzgerald asked. "I realized you don't have 'to take peyate or LSD la discover God," she replied. "Most ol. my u:perieocm while taking LSD~ with nature," al!e said, "in the oul..of<docn. Sometimea l would explore the bark ot a tree, or the pattern of a feather I'd picked up, or I'd ga ze at the stars and the moon." Mis. Kaaabian 'l"id lt.e had had delusloos while under Ibo Jolluence of dii:igs, but Insisted lhe did not suffer- frcm "flashbacks" after the drug bad wom off. "Has taking LSD aJtered you r personaUty?" Fitzgerald asked. "Yes, it bas altered it, I believe, to a cerjaln Qtlt, beca1'0 it Jiaa showed me a lot about~Ylttf," lhe replied. "Are yw. any M!fent than you were during July ·and ¥Fst. lilt (just prior to tbe Tate-L&Bi.Uwl 1I1y1qg1 ) ? '• Fibgerald questioded. "I sure am," she replied. "I've cpme to a lot of conclualona about reality and right and wrong.'' . Nixon Likes News Parleys Outside DC Ewction of Carpenter Now Vi~tlllllly Assured LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Preside91 Nizon is u:peded to have more news conferences outside of Washingt-On. He obviously was pleased with his own historic ••first" -a televised con-. fereaoe here with EarJ "Squire" Behrens, dean of the California preu corps ayiag, '"niant you, Mr. President." Bebrens, a polltJcaJ columnist for the Su Franciaoo Ol.roMcle, who received the l&dal ol Freedom fn:m Nixon. WU tnore aubdued tit c:Utt:i1'1 oU the, con- ferenee than 'W'fre tlervlce reparta's in Wa!bbt(ton who Shout "thank you" and make a mad dash for the telephone. The 57-year~ld chief u:ecutlve had been primed all day lo his plush penl- houae .wt. lo the Ceniury Plaza Holnl Oil ~ queadoaa be -1d be lllked, He -well prepand and seemed al eue before tbt ltand up mia........, I• !Ito botol'1 l!llferinl Santa -Room, U be WU quizzed Oil lllbjecll from fonlp pollC)' lo ,,.,.,.. He wu attired Ill bis c:mtomary blue suit, wlliln llhlrt.and blue tie. Ha bad a CJlifomla tan• and. allhoucb Ibo temperature ta tbe room was down he wlped beads of penplr1Uoo from bis face willl.a handkerchie/. Ha Wulnd to give the weatem half of thl m.mtry a chanoe-to see a p~ u~ news conference on pri!ne ume· - I p.m. PDT. When be wu asked for his vi~ about the -he '•'lbed and -bis """ llJ!bam -i.mc. al bla "Jut" prea c:mfe1ence in California 1o11ow1oc bis defeat ID the 11112 gubentatorlaI ,_, "I fast wllh rw .. "'°" · • as my wife h.u," be qu!ppod. •. ,.... But It -Oil hil' desire lo '"°""'1'ade. Washlncton u 1be natloaal--ll1al' be._....i Ille -.w..ilve. He aid be bu heard ••criUdsm" that he leaves tbe White House; too often. ' .. Orange 'Counly taxpayen will fool the biJ1 for a fll0,000 electkm with only one real candidate Aug. 18. y RepublicS:n leader Dennis Carpenter of Newport :Qeach wa.. assured of electibn to a state Senate seal in the special vote when bis only opponent, Douglas Irvine, withdrew Thursday. Irvine', a Santa Ana housing developer, talked to Carpenter Thursday night and threw·bis aupport to him. Carpenter, dlainnan pf the ,Republican State Central Commi~ thus virtually is auured -barring an unforseen writ~ in campaign -of election to fill out the unexpired term of John G. Schmitz. Schmitz has been elected to the late James B.1Jtt's former seat in Congress. Carpenter ,still faces~ cl)allenge from Democrat DwJlbt w. Miao lo the -piieral election for 1!>e full four.year state Senate term. The iJnconteated election of carpenter wlD cost the c00nty an · ellimalnd $UO,OOO. But by law the -lal election h.u to be held even If U.... only bad been .... candldaln 00 !he ballot. lrvlne's name will remain on the ¥Jot -It is too late for h1m to lrllbdraw bul he Is asking bis supporten to vol< for Carpenter. ~ Irvine said, he was 1n the rice to · apeak for "Uie but\lened property tax- payer" but after tilting to Carpenter b .......i Carpenter """"' tbe same concern. The eledlon GI Carpenter to fill out 1!>e tennl the -of the ym can accompl\lh,two lhinp lot llnpobllc ... : -It will.,,e Carposater mUorii1 cmr Miltr-DeWim 1 11tteded.JD ... ~· ber gmeral election: prov~ Caipooter defeals Mile for the fuU tirm u ex· pected bec•n• of a heavy Republican rtglstraUon edge. • · · ., -It coald pt Carpenter to Sacramento In time to provide tbe vol< needed to put Gov. RooaJd' Reagan's ft billion taz: reform prop:u.I over the top. The tar shift package was two votes shy of the 'rT needed to clear the Senate today with one supparter tempararily hospitalized. There was talk among Republican strategists of possibly shelving tbe measure until Carpenter's election on 1!>e 18th. Carpenter, who was off to northern Califomia today on a Republican Central Committee spealdpg tour was unavailable for commenl. But Phil Seltz, carpenter's campaign director, said he doesn't look for Carpenter to provide the tie-breaking vote. "I can't imagine them throwing in the towel and not trying to get it tbrough unlil the 18tb," be said. He said he believes bill --will try to pwh It through again today. From Page 1 BEACH ••.. .. respective vie.ws across to each other 1" Meyer said. Meyer noted that the property ls creating more than local attention. "C.ongressman Alfonzo Bell has talked with Defense Secretary Melvin Laird about opening up the beacti, under a loog·term lease. "We're optimi.!tic for help from the Defense Dept. We know also 1hat a lot of public ,......,.. la building up ...i. !hat the ¥Jrl'!" Corpe -·t need aU of t1ie 17 miles GI heacb that Ibey now have." ._ "The Marines have told us 11111 they cannot offer the 4.5 miles of beach south of San Onofre because they are planning to build a helicopter pad on the last mile. But it will only be temporary. DREXEL SALE FEATURING DREXEL'S ESPERANTO COLLECTION OCCASIONAL-DI NI NG-BEDROOM DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -~REXU -HERITAGE 7ed11111 INTERIORS NI WPORT BEACH Prol-lonal Interior LAGUNA BEACH 1727 Waotcllff Dr., 642·2050 Deslgnera Avallablo-AID-NSID 345 Nor!h Coal! Hwy. 494-6551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 I ...... , ... ,.... ....... ~ e.._,. 140.1162 • , I I \ i' ' Bunti ~gtoli-Beaeh EDIT ION l'oi!llty'S • I ~' -~.Y.S~ I • U 'liln'Dque· mu sic· and' baseball art !Jotb asi>ecta ,ot. cu1ture1 wbere do they tit in the CQnetpt of &r ~nlral library fbr Huntington Beach! A' variety of opinions w~s offered .Thursday as more than a do;en members of tt>e ·nbrlfy· board, parks C1lmmiss~. and ·city staff~~ with arch:ited Dion.• ·Neutr8, h ProPose<t library ahd Its function ta the-cmtra1 city park. "'lbe·' idea-of ii ii .to apPeal to · the humanibeing at more· levels than juM c:beCklng·oui a·book,'' Ne1i1tra said. S<>me' officials ba\J<ed al the term "cUltural resource ceoter" and. argued for a -classical· eonception of, 1 • libr-41!)': -prin\aftly book oriented.-: Oil Fh:m Filled .· $500 for Spilling Into Waterwa y A $500 rine was stapped ,,on. an. oil company this week for allowing .. oil to seep into ·Hunt.ington Harbour waterways Feb .. 24. The ·City of Huntington Beach --'ron• a criminal suit againsrthe Grover Collins Corp. of Compton, which Operates seven wells near Harbour View School. Judge Fenton Jones, of West Orange ! . . . Courity Municipal Court, levied the $500 fine, but suspended a possiJ;ile· jail sen· tenef! for Grover Collins Jr., president of th• corporation, on condition no ·sllch oil leakage occur ov'er the next ye·ar. "We expect the· successful prosecution of this ease will hav'e a beneficial impact on .other oil operators who should take. every precaution to avoid such oil spills," . City Attorney Don Bonfa said. Oil had seeped from one of the· Collin.s' well! Feb. 24. It.streaked across city ltreets, into a storm drain and-eve~ally ran into the Christiana Bay area of Huntington Harbour. Qillins paid for cleaning the oil from the water surtace, but !till ~aces lction by, the district attorney's office on behalf of the Califrrnia Fish and Game Qim- mission~ and perhaps a flurry of civil suits from angry boat owne rs. The well that leaked was located near Alaooquin SlreeL and Heil Avenue. The leakage was blamed on faulty main· tenance, said Huntington Beach officials. • -ORANGE ·COUhlTY; CiUFORNIA F.RIDAY, ~ULY 31, 1970 . I ) _lfN ~$, '.'We want 1tOmethln1 for everyone in. this location,'' Neatr1 • countered. "A chance to 'make the library an experience for the family." , · A few ideas offered .. by N'eulra and Qthers to !~plnd · lt.e lib~ary beyond its tradftion81 ~pt iDch.td~: , -An art,1llleey .and uhlbli area with a related •!mop·.~ where experienced artiYna mi•t work, plus. reproduction equipm~t, • • +· • --;· ---: •• ~ • • -~ORI · fQr :-Jl'OC)d_,!t'~kl:flg, elec- b'lcaJ crafts, unell1-!'0l'kinc ·and other types ol mariial .arta. acttvitim which either·caUH lioiH ot mess. -:.· - -~ al~rpil&e""Corrimilnit)t room. -A, blby-sittini arran(femenl with play 'are&..fOP> ... i.i.-.,. ---·-·.... -~ ·-,...';!'~.=...~1;.;.-:artiliri-zho,_ ~ .. '~ ... """"="·.._ .... ., ~ "" ~· -.... --~· . 7 •• --~ perh&Pf on .. 1 I~~ ~is: And with )Xlt!n- tial'lnstructio• !>Y. top .w;,ts. . . • A, fOOIJ.. tervlce 1area or small snack bar -perhaps a "holbl'au" of sorts. -A _ pla~~arium , witll · a S p I t 1 planetarium J'!>b)>m'!'f. •, -A communi.catk.!n cent~ for .amateur television, film makinc-and theaµ"ical productions.... , -.. · ... -'A· riaturil bWory areWnd a museum 'Vith ,a ·display of local · or interesting flora and faun·a. · · • -Book · stOre. _ -P.tovisiQns for spej!d.reading ~es:· Rot>ert Vasquez.~a member of the city's planning atlff, challenged , 1om" ()fNeutra'1 offerings. .•. _ • "I doo't think we Can offer so_.mcthjn.g f91" "every~e: and t ~ we~re :~l?· lluhtington Hero .Pilot . ' ' - · Dies in El Toro 'Crash ' . ' lly ARTHUR R. VINSEL • ' " f9f !'lit o.llY Jllltl 'Slttf One -wing, dr:ooping as. it landed with a -bounce, 1a giant KCI30 midair fueling tanker, cA1'eeoed~ down the runway at E1.Toro ifai'.in.e Q>rps Air Station Thurs- daY,, flipped over. and exploded in flames. The pilOt, a much-decorated veteran of Vietnam helicopter duty, died in I.he blazin(f .1freckage, which came to rest . only' 200'1 yards-J~om P.resident. Nixon's ·packed J.ir J'orct One jetliner. . · A ... mlilfield .crllh crew raced to the' .~ne'.Md 'waS :Pfaised for saving the U.ve.s .of tot.r crew 1rnember:;, three of whom were,badly injured. . . Fir11t, U. Roger W. M1J!ijm, 27, of H.Aitingfon Beach, perished in the overturned four-engine .t u r b o p r o p aircraft. The ini_ured crew ·members were iden· tiffed 9 : - -Maj;. Walter Cytkewtcz,. 41, Mission Viejo. i . . -Capt. Robert B.-Vfalla Jr., 23. Tuslin. -Staff, Sgt. ,Kenneth.-C. ,Da vis·, 31, Sant.a Ana. -Cpl. ·Ken~th l-fetzdorf0.ll, who lives on base. . All *'ere 'admit\e:d \to,·Orange. County , Medic11'Cente.r, whtre ·9ll•but the. major were. Jilted ' in cfiltal 1• cbi)dit.ion today from '°nis.~ .tmo•e. i.nhalation. Twe members of the rescue crew - who ~arried out tbr'.ee victims .-were al.so injured despite the fac,t one. wore. an asbestOI suit and o.rygen mask. Sg\.:Bob Tribett collapsed due to l!llOke inhalation while · inside the blazing, skeletal fuselage; but was helped · out of the wreckage. to safety. · MediCa l CorpSman Mike Shipplet suf· fered burns on the hands while ad· ministering aid to the injured men. ' Operations Officer Col. Ken Hunting(on credited Sgt. Grover St. Clair's rescue team with saving the survivors, although they ·had to wait for firemen . The. firefighters la id a blanket of foam through the flames as a safety path and the crash. crew smashed its way into the pl ane and had the men ou.t within two nUnutes: · · A column of emoke viSitile for 25 miles &hot into the sky from the. scene of the tragedy on Runway 34, which runs in;a..Jiortll-south direction. · A panel of inves~gators . was !m· mediat~ly convened to · probe the first accidenL involviiii: Marine. Refueling Squadron 352 in l l yeao. Built to carry 10,000 gallons of highly volatile fuel , the KC130 w~ not "loaded, otherwise the crash -witnessed , by hundreds -would have been far worse. · L~. Mullins, holder of two Di4tlnguill:le.d Flying Crosse~ and 3Z Air Medals~ was making )!is third tooch-and-go practice landing JI.bout 3 p.m: ~en the plioe crashed. No immediate determination of factors which Jed to Ole accident wai offered, but witnesses said the .KC130 bounced , and snagged the. left wing wh.lch broke off. -' . . · · • I. :-.. · "''q . + I .. ;.. · , ,·' I B ·aro q···lle ;·::u~· ·attd?. • ., • -f ' ' *. ·-.. .. ,_,, . ...,_,... " ... · .. · ., .. ./_•. ·' -.., -_, ' ' . . . . . merclal.Wng a. passive . park too much wi(h some of these. library additions." Vasquez Objected t,o the "ho£brau" and thought the conctpt of the library was being applied to many craft areu not necessarily belonging in it. "l consider baroque music and baseball boUt a parl of culture," replied DeMis Mangers, a member of the parks com· missinD. and principal of Harper School in Fountain Valley. "There ls no question lhat expansion o[ the library into a mulU·purpose. area Is desira~le.". Mangers, along with the majority of those present, did oppose the concept of in!truction in the library, while agree.. Inf that some provision for activities might be made. At one point Neutra suagested a pi1> Israel ' ' I ' • -• posed 10:000-square-foOt • multi·pm~' recreation ·hall , be plac~ 1 next 'to itl«· library rather thari 'on the ~le of·'Huq.: tington Lake. ... , · , "In this 1ense. we. could ·concentrate all the harder activities~ Jn ~one _aiea. and not spoil the paaslv"e.ness o(' ,the other J~e, ", Neutra eald. · · " . Mkiers qid, '!llJJ. :n1e lilnrY wiU have to 1tiJM1 on ill ~-W~ :ihou}dn't use the gimmick of placlnJ the - bui(diD{IS togother 10 lllOl'< people will tee 'the libraf¥." ~ _ · Severi! ipeaW. oppooea Ille Idell ol rock music · and· iquare · di.nCini nut to the library, • Tom Severns, cJ.ty devt!l-o~t~me n~l coordl111tor, remln\l!d eyeeyono tl)µ'the recreaijon ball hH •&en delayed~ ~IY 01\s~ . • :~· • t -·' · • r Pe:ace: ·. ! . ' ' • • ' • I • ·• ' ' t· Nixon's Mideast -* • '' •, ,, .._ • I -A.p~'-:~ff ~e~4 .. -.r TEI. AVIV (UPI ) -The lsraell cabinet, heeding an appeal from Pres!· dent Nilon, today accepted the. U.S. Middle East peace proposals that include a three-mmth cease-fire on the Egyptian !root. Egypt had accepted the proposall disc"'5ions which wou1d' ..ttle the P..o- hle.m of ·a ~ase-~e on .othir tedors wt th Ambassador Gunnar V·.· Janina ac- ting as me.di.a.tor, and hopefully, to prepari;Jor negoliatiom to_wrlte ~ tomial end to tie ClinflicL ~ • : .' : The· bawldab GUii· pirty.._- earlier, . : ·; · '•· The decision was taken by the.cabinet f)*e M :}1: ~ j.,_:,_ , .. :. \t ... -: • !. ~ • -: ;-1 - in the fourth crisis &eSsiOll. Qf the. Week • -·· ore .. '.. etlf'l. -• : -:-:;,,;_ ~ I ., ~I "' 1 1 ', despite the threat of a walkout by the ~. , t , '. : , , · 1 • / • • ~ six Gahal Party members of the. National Mr Sch • · . k 1 ·w.·' '. , 'ftlJ•, . . Unity Coalitioo that would Imperil the s. W ·!llfl nv:s •V .. ,, .. _1ns. 1o~ernm~ent of~Premolier.:o~~;~· ---! f . . :, f a : ~ -~, ;"' ~1;~~~·J ' ~ ....,, ; ' "W • 1\ ~fl f •;) fi It I ; t.I J-:ft.ti.. I'! ( · · · !hf-~ .... ,, ·~. ·e·.m. ~·\ , ..... s:... ,·c1 ~-::-. __ ftiiil· .. ·. ·m..'""'el· · eoilfi.'nr.1&0·'fHeC.'11taeli sta'ta..radio which ~· ~~P said the= vot.e f(in ' the cabinet 'w.as • 11-1 ·"' !,•(''~r'}··· 'I ~ witb no abstentions. However ... they .did: \·, ... J 1 • ,r. 1. l • !.. l . r ~et ~ · ~~ ftJ ~. , •.\: 1 . 1 • _ not immediately walk oot but caucused B'y TEii.RY co\tJLLE put t6i'ff rqGnth!, Aid tDdaJ:. ~ . , t .ilgain to decide thelr course. , Of ti!• 0.11, ,..., ltert , •. ...,. . r TM ttnidli ~ hf,uriy Ma When PolitleaJ sources said it was unlikely "I ·•till , hl've 1 a. job,"· ... ~ i ;ffW J Palilitl!' Of icMldten-ih :'UB&td. 1\JMr.ft. Sciiocit ~lo-ett,aboubl\ln. Gebal would take any !inn decblon <l!arloma SChwankovaty. ·sal~.thll . ~ Al·~ , , • . before Sun4ay, leaving the cOuntry still Ing all..-winning In court her fish! · .Molliitt' .. .:.: _',;; • • .;..:.: __ , .,_ .·.,x.... · teetering on the edge of a governmental lo remain a princi~ for a"botber ;eU uim · merell'-,...,... aa:1 ....... crisis, The Gaba! bloc, ·which has 24 · · --• · · .. • · _ail,y J siwioj1~,'~...i.O::~Jt!r~f<d seats in the 120-sea~ unicameral parlia-in Huntington Be--.:u, 1 \ \ • i• ·u • Jl'.lnCI.-IU" ~ • am •ere- h de 'd Tu sd -'" The .job WU· gl,v•• ••• hy10c,•••e fu-' bOtbc"""rt. • '-• ."' . ' ment, ad cl ~ e ay to WllU..ll. out ..... •-. -v. , ~. ;,·"' · if the. cabinet said yes. . · County Superior Court Jt1d(fe. Robe.rt 1..: . 10n1~May ·.~, ,ttle 1 ~\··.ipe,it ·all Despite the threat, the Gahal ministers Corfman. ··•-.... id Thurlday ·the ·Hun-bourt1~inl U\e 1 c•M> 'in ex,ffutive were Invited to · sit on• a ministeria l t:! · '""' <>¥-' -• • ' ' • ., • ' • MiiiMl ·,with dillthCt inlit.eesi and · ad· c'on\mltt.ee which 'will drift the ·offiCial Uogton Btach Clty .School ,District had -~~tor•.1 , . '.', ,' ( .. Israel rep,y . , , nOt 1iv,en· the ,J4lrd .. Scho01.~PIJ ·1't!lbe end of sir hours the LeBard The lsraefl statement today· said Isfael suf.ficient. warning · ~fore.·demotiPI: ~ Prh)clpll·atlll refused to accept tranlfer w8.s1prepai-ed to subscribe to the .U.S. ,to classroom teacher:May1113! • 1 1 Of"¥,lp1 teaiin,· IOvshe J.WU· aemoted to propqsals for a 90-day cease.fire "at Corlmait's· ·decision means · :M ,,,:. H"itl~ Of i. ClusrOoin teacher. · leaiflon tb'e Egyptian frOnt."' This ruled Schwankov11ky will·havt at•lWlt a=r ·~,!on trnateee _.,. Mn out a cease-fire now on the Jordaniail year in \he district~ a principal, thob .'sd;~--~fu.id.r to re;;i' wh.i front where Arab guerrillas h"aVe not necessarily 'at LeBard'.·School. wu ~in the eoecutl "' threatened to continue the war. S. A. Moffett, dl!tri..i. aiperlntendtn!, · ~-1 • · • 1 • 1; '(e aeu • .,.~"r ·~ Mofle\!, Hld the. 11 1uon bad ~ The U.S. proposals were vaguely word· said no decision. has. pe,i. r~clied ~n 'frQm coinplA.tn\s over~:yean. Mn. ed and Jsrael was forced repeatedly whether to appeal the cOurt. ·order or Sd ntarikoviky lald, .. ~ :aj:i.tmt her to seek clarification from Washingto·n Where .to place Mrs, SCbw~Ysif. '... ·hlH'!never lbl!ep eXplained. , ~ , on their meaning. The Rogers proposals "Tlie board ~~b)1$tee.& .11) •• 1\lesday : ' spoke. ·specificaUy of a · cease-fire on night. They'll <teclde. our .next tf.eplli," .After .trwUea:jbad' cteomoted0htr.i Mn: the Suez Canal front and hopefully of Moffett explalne<J. . · : ScbwWovsk'y we.nt ' to court to · keep the other fronts. "I .._,, think they. want.:JM .a.rooM 'her. pitloa on ·lf0Wldl"' lhe~had1 nof "'"' bee .• n ..iven advance notice of ...._.. But during the 90-day period the. here .very much,". Mrs. SdiwankOvsky, .. ~ belligerents could begin preliminary the centei of a atotmy controyer,y th1 tion~ · 1 • 1 , -'Judge COrfm1n; alter study!D{I the .... Taxation , ToR 'of p,;e:,.. Facing Beacli Cou'hcil , t4e put. two "'ay1, ir•m.4 •a wrtl ol . ~. forcing h>'r: retnstatO!lllpl ar principal, becaoae there wu inadequete· notice Of -the diatrict'• intention to ""' t!aalfy ~-' ' '"l·tholilbl: tlley ....,. "111D{I In -.!lat· 1they-'clld .llld tldoc!dld"1o flgbt them'," Mn..Sdnraalrovlkjo uplalnld .... ,, thlnli 11 -1d bl flOM for · the dlalrlct •lo hl:vt to • liw with ·me and' aee if 1 New tues and the controversial T9p of the Pier plan are expected to provide the liveliest action aL the Huntington Beach City Council meeting Monday evening. A notice 'has been sent . out to Ult 300 Huntington Beach members of the · , oift.:.bad_le ~,1r:.i ~ ... ?'~~tlonCoun~-~ ~tot ~~,U:E1~ .Tbt pilru!INI:llld 'lhe'S"ti<>f IUre what· ~ ura .. !6 .... em -1\1 1 'berplulari1toc"nixtye·ar ... meeting ...... to 1top a . ~ove · to1 ~ , · _ • •. -the .aMual tas on apartment.a in'. 1 "That ~1 on -what . the trulteitl city 1o 14, . . . c1o'l'ueldl1 Dilht."· .. I . The pr~t -ocale· fee "!'.the ,JO,~· . .. 1 · aparlments ·.In l!Ul\ll!itton ·Beac.h · ., __ _ averages ft ·· ·: ... ·-· · ....:.. ' ·' -..-... The -lil:-ur on · ·~ Ii 'bebic . • ' considerl!df'u a 1way:of 'lielpma .to, ra1le! Preliminarr, Hearing Set In Baby's Liqu~r. D ~aih Cra tes, bundles and olber debris bounc· ed into the air aa -the craft spun 180 degrees and flipped over, It.a encines breaking away and sk.idin(f down the concrete, spewinc fire. Booby Trap Kills La Palma Girl Sgt. St. Clair said one of the crew members, bill fiight suit in flam~s. managed to ·stumble' out of the blazing wreckage. on his own. One witness •'-11 Bud Hanson , a ranger A 17-year-old La Palma girl was shot al nearby Llon 'Country Safari, who said to death Thursday night by a booby the huge lanker had just passed overhead trap rine triggered when she raised and its engines !eemed silent. a bathroom window to enter her money to pay: for new '.elm facllUill, . 1 • .: • ' . ' including the civic center comJ>ks, "' W .. 1 ti - library, and fire. 1ta~. · . ' : . . ' ea er-' j The coUllcil w!ll IA~e 1119lher.1QC!~ ', )i ·yw'l'll J.;,1W11:1 i~;a 'cltahie al the. T9P of the Pier pion liir iedtve'-In ••--~-c1on~ Thl ment of a "five-block · Uea'.~~ ... 1¥.~wna---~. · ll Mondey evening. weekend will be 1 good deal llke' 'lbe city's econnlc c o.n • u.L.1-a<n t •' othtr wee.kends with IUMY skies: Economic Reeearch Auoclites .(ERA ) and tiltle,c~ln temperatun, A Huntingl.oo Beach. couple accused ol. ·mu rdering a L2-monUM>ld baby by (fivlng him alcoholic drinks will face a preli minary hearing Aug. 14 at West Orange County Municipal Court One of the accused, Carmelita ,L. Reyoolds, 21 . of 2222 Delaware. St .. is free on $6,2.50 bail. Her common-law husband: Gary W. Rapp, 21, of the same address, ts held at Oran1e County Jail in lieu of '62,500 bail. Detectives have. alleged that the ln!ant, Myron Reynolds , was given alcoholic bever ages -includln_j rum and Coke -which caused poi.soruna: ol liite.rnal I "They always make a Jot o( noise, boyfriend's apartment in Anaheim, organs. even the cab look up," said Hanson. A .22 ca llber 'bulle.t struck Melita Jay An autopsy conducted by the Orange Another ranger watching from I high B(}nham in the left eye, police said. Oxmfy Coroner'• office !bowed that the point in the park, ,John Pardue, .&ald' Neig_hbora. who heard the 11hot shortly child had corwumed exce11sive amounts Lt. Mullln's aircraft touched, then roge before 9 ·p.m.' found her on the · lawn of alcohol. · off the. runway a bit and DO!e.d over' , beneath, ~e-win4oi.r. ,She died an hQur Rapp, identified by pollCe u a Marine 1t a steep angle. later at Anaheim MemorJa' !fospital ltationed in Loni . Beach, and the Air Force One was parked on an The boyfriend:, .Randy EuJene Ackles, Reynolds woman, a local l>Jrmaid, were apron .next to the runway preparing 18, }"as taken into custody by p;>lice arrtsted•by police july 24.. for a rouUnc praCUce fll1h t and took when he returned to the apartmen"t at Both were orJ1inaUy Uken Into custody off later. 1:20 a.m. tio charges have been filed. on child neglect char1ea shortly after Lt. M'ulllns won the nation's JtCOnd· The rine. apparently was rigged as the baby',s ,de.alb but we.re. re-arresled highest award for flight heroi!m twice a homemade burglary safeguard device. when investigation yielded aul!Jcie.nt while servJng . In Vietnam. from May The front door wu tocked and no one evidence to warranl the mUrder cbar1e, to ?jove.mbe.t-ot-.il&I; and theo.-wal<-·home at the apartment when Miss actcrdfna: de.feCifves. - -1 Pensacola NAS flight Mst.ructor., ~ Bonham tried the window. • •• or Loo Angeles, hu updated Its it~dy '1Nsm1: TODA y • 1 on the reaslbllity of convertinc ·an.area from sixth Street to : Firit1 stre<t -into II) 1,800-spaceiparklna lol ;· , . • • ·I The extra ltttdY •waa.. or.dered .after the council lelrped' that the eeumattd • cost ol acqulaltlon of the Jiropeny lild · gone up over '" a mUUoii dollars lo $4,J00,000. . • • . ~ ! : . Brander CUt.le, 1111atant 'city adminJ .. atrator, aald thls -.Jn( ~t the ERA reported that th• pl1n woaJd 1Ull wort despite the one-third increase In -at> qui!itlon co~ta. . • . ' The council wlll"l)eot Iii 'lwO 1<. 1111>!'!. Monday, 1t 1::io p.m. Uld"T:lf'Jf.111. ( • ' • t .. I ' J I t I ' ' Defense ·11amme-rs~-;1 )~ug-Use -...... (llJ'I) -Lllldt - l111n W 11W ladllJ 1bM .... hid -llvtoa In aroup ."communu" ever since Ille left home at the age of 16 and -up WIW-the time die joined Charles Mamon'1 "famUy." . Uf!dlr er. ~-1nallon by Defense AUomey-P1uJ Fitzgerald, the state's e~Uoo by Defense Attorney Paul FUrcvald, the state's prime witness -loUed !hit obe had a ~·bl• amount rl "hwnan up;erieoce'' before oho 'Joined ,\lie )II""" ciilt chltged with the Sbariln Tat.Llllleea alaflnp. F.ltqerald bu· aid he wI1l allempt to show tbtt Mra. Kasabl an'a accounts· of the tlllln&a were a "fant.uy" that came from a mind impaired by the 1oor-ol <!nip. Mn. Kushlan said obe had lived In commUDU from coast to coast from the time she left home In • small lawn In Ne" Hampohlre and had a clllld -abe WU l6. Nixon likes News P-arleys Outside DC .. LOS . AliGEU:S (UPI) Pruldall Nlxoa la ·~ to have lllOl'I ..,.. rM1emce1 C!Utllde"li w~ " He ~ -j!I-with his . on h1ltoiiC .. flrlt'' -a teleY1led con. fereace here with Earl "Squire" Bebrena, dean of the Calltomla ptess corpt aayilg, ''Thank you, Mr. Pruldent." ~ Behrens, a pollUcal eofum.lst for the Saa Frandlco Chronicle who nctived the Medal ~ Freedom from NiJon, was molt <111bdu0d Ill cutting off the """ f.....,. lhaft' wire eerv!ce roportm 1n Wul\loi.t!in l'!» lliout "thank )'t!U" and mill a Diad duh for the telephone. ' Tbi · '1-)'W'Old d1lef executive lied -primed all dly In his oJusb pon~ -·suite In the Century -Piasa ·Hotel Oil possible questlom•he would be asked. He was well -prepared ·and seemed at ease · before the lland up mlcrophme la the botel'a ·1llttrrj.ng Santa Monica Room, .. he ,... qulzud Oil subject. from f(!ftfp policy to !!lllC!(. • He .... altired 1n his auiom.ry .blue eutt, .l'f!!!e ob!rt Ind blue Ue, He bad a Callfarnl& tan and althougb , the ~--la the room ,. .. down he .,tped belds ol penptr-fnllD bl1 filoe with • blftdterdllef. I He "aeted to lllve tll!e -hall ol thtl..ant>y a chance to-a pruiden- tial ..,.. COl!f""""' "'"· prime time -I p.m. PD?; When he ,... uked for hll views abcmtthe prell,,1;oe¥~ his. 0WD unbol!lil.Jf!ll'I I ,_,,i;--llia "'lut" press ~· ~ foI1olriac hll fO;'""""*'~ ' ' th~ 11\\'f";.tort:.i, 'T uii i ai' riood .. ix~ as my Wife hu," h6~. , ' But It WU 00 his d~.to .downifade Wublncton u the 111111\Dal power· c;enter that he 1ppeared the -defensive. He ml he hu helnl "c1'Iti~" that he leaves the White H-too oltin. . ' Muskie Urges Nixon To End :(:ar Pollution WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Edmund S. Mllllde, 0.llalne, hll ur8ed Prealdent Nl:&oo to U10 -he already bas to eeek an lmmMille· end to pollution from can; inctner8ton ·act other IOW'eet: alO!!J the 11:u1 coast. Mlilkle ,llld eons-In 11&1 gave the-!ec:retaty ol Health, Education and Welfare authority to seek a ba1t of "Arty emla!ona contributing to an im· mtnent and _.,..nt111 endangerment of the public beallb." l>tjltl4;• OUNG• COAl'T PUI~ COMl'NIY leli..i1 N. ~e.4 • ~ ,,...llliellt .... ,....,... -• Jeck R. ~rley - Ya,,.,...,. Mii ~·· ---;: ... n.,. ,, i,t..;1 ·-111 ...... A.~ Miilf;..JIM ,,,. __ ......,. ..., Alee Dirki1 W.t o...,.. C-IY h itor ~ ~ .AINrt"W, ~·~ ~Ill• i'dtfwr H_,_...._.Offlce 17•7i heoll l11111le•1f'lll Merll111 "44,.,,, r.o. ••• 790, 92641 --............... ,,....,Awn•. ee.n #Mil -W.t .. ., s,... ........, a.tdtl Jiii"""' 111119) ._...... •• a.ii °"'*'W. .. Nertll ll C1111N a.HI ' Linda: I Thouglit They Were Beautiful Loving People' ii,r f~lll expetleJJce In communal Uv-"E1d•-e uaeof dttJ&I!" -~-wltl!ln lllJlalf . .'rlhen I joined Manson's · fltzgerald __ told.....Mwanen-u.li-lhe- ing was in Miami BeaCli, Fla., she ~·1 W'OUldn!t say-extensive:1t-varled:-family l'lrl:rbnprMlkdble"iiii!TWim' • def- said, She -next lived with a group ln From Boston Mrs. Kasahlan then came toa:ether" 'he l&ld ense for Manson and three female Boston and thenJolned another commune wltti her second husband, Robert Kasa· "But You bid hac1 aimldirl.ble ej.. codefehdanta would be based in pfioclple in Greenwich Vi ageinNewYorkCity. bian, to Los Angeles and lived in a perleucelneroqplivtn.g. Youwerealmost on the contention that Mrs. Kaublan. From there she went to the Haight-commune at Venice on the ocean front a pioneer in communal living weren't a 21·year-ola b1onde wOO lived with the Asbbury section of San Francisco where west of Los Angeles. you?" iFtqera1d uted. family for one month was not mentally she lived with another commune and •·we decided to go to New Mexi co. "Yes." competent · · ' then went back to <Boston vb.ere she We went to a place outslde Of Taos." "So when you jolned the Jl'OUP at ... Under m-examlnatlon, Mra. Kua~ lived with tbe "Ameriran Psychedelic "Did it have a name?" the Spahn Raocb you. tbought yeu. b _ew blab adn:ilt~ t41tg LSI), peyote. Circus," "Yes, it was called Sons of the Earth what you were dotrig and ~bat t1n4 metbedrine or "speed" mecalfne and "What was that?" Fitzgerald asked. Mother." of problems you might enCOUDter tn · mOrnlng glory seeds · ' r: • "We wanted to get buses and animals "I was always moving from one place co:',11munal liv~ng?" aa~ed Fitzgerald. "My sole ~ for tak i ng and travel all over the country as a to another, usually with a group," said Y~s. I JUSt thought ~Y were hallucinogens was for realization _ God circus. J don't know exactly why it Mrs. Kasabian. bea~tiful loving people,'.' she ~d. -real.i.iaUon," she said. w• called psychedelic." "Would you say you were im· Fitzgerald toot"overcro81 examination "And were you successful in realizing "Was it drug oriented?'' pressionable when you joined the com· of Mrs. Kasabian Tburaday in an attempt God?" Fitzgerald uted. "Yes, they took drugs.'' mune in New Mexico?" to nullify three days of testlmoay in "I rea11ud you don't have to take. .. What drugs?'' "I was searching for somelhlng I which ~ gave an eyewitneu acount pe_r.ote or LSD to discover God," she "Acid. They smoked weed." wasn't sure of, but I got it ~ether of tbe t.llllnca last Aug, U. rePlled. 41Most ot. my~ while ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ . . U~IT...,.._ PRESIDENT FACES NEWSMEN AT CENTURY PLAZA Vietnam, th• .Economy, the Mideast •nd the Campus Girl Kidnaped In Newport, Raped, Shot A teenage girl from Pico Rivera who bad been raped and shot after being kidnaped in Newport Beach w a s dia::overed by lour Camp Pendleton l4>rlnel early Ws morning u lhe wandered lncoberently along the San Diego Freeway oouth of San Clemente. The glr~ 17-year-old Susan Price, ~ maiJ!ed oemlconadous through the morn- ing and under intensive care at South COut Community lloopltal with a bullet lodied 1n her neck. Prellmlnary "port& indicated the girl ~u left near the Lu Pulgu gate of the Marine baae, suffering a single wound in tbe neck after a ten'ifylng journey from Newport Beach Into North San Diego County. Mils Price, whoa address WU not immediately available, apparently wu abducted In Newport, where lhe had been vacationing, police said. The four Marlnea reportedly found the teenager at 1:55 a.m. and drove her to San Clemente, where they noti!Jed police. . Miss Price then waa tmn by am. bulance to South COut Hospital, where the buJlet tround, bidden by balr and blood, .... dbcoYered. *ides It the boopitaJ Aid the girl has not yet undergone IW'gf:ry early this momlng. Detectives from Newport Beach, San Clemente, and the San Diego Sheriff's office were at the scene through the morning. Rocket Rider taking LSD were with nature." she saki, "in the out-of-doon. SomeUmta I would explore the bark of a tree, or the pattern of a feather I'd picked up, or I'd .gaze at the stari and lhe moon." Mrs. Kasabian said st.e had had delll:Siiiu while under the influence of drugs, but insisted she did not suffer from "flashbacks" after the drug had worn olf. "1145 ta):inl · UD altered y Ou r pernooality?" Fitzgerald uked. "Yes, it tJa1 altered It, I believe, tb a certsin utent, because It has shewed me a lot about myself," she replied. "Are you any different than you we.re during July and August, 1969 {just prior to the Tat&LaBianca slaylngs ) ?'' Fitzgerald questioned. ''l sure am," she replied . "I've C1lme to a lot of conclusiohs about reality and right and Wl'Olli·'' Nixon Speech Highlights ,War, ~flation, P~llution The investigation has been joined by investigators from Camp Pendleton, reports Bald. Thursday was a bright, sunny day and Huntington Beach's Lake Park was full of youngsters running, j umping and climbing. And there was two-year-old Soren Mitchell of Long Beach. ' . Hlgbligbb from Preaidenl Nlxon's.!lrst West Coast televised p~ conruence: The President said the U·.S. prdposal for a cease-fire ln the Middle East would be coupled witb a military standstill. He forecast ahead of the cease fire DET.llLB ON PAGE 4 that "Israel can agree to the cease fire and agree ·to · iiegotiatlOrlJ without fear." lnflltlon it being cooled and will con- tinue to e~. 1be ecoabply will move forward in the long term and the slack in employment will be taken ca,re of. "If there. fl a war between-the1 Soviet Unioli and ·the UnJted States...thtre will be no winners.11 That it 'lt't\Y' lt is ·Im· portant that the United States not be dragged into a military c;:onfiict ln key are& like. the Middle East. The heavy blanket of smo1 on the East Coat shows there· isn't much time Jell for the nation to solve its air pollution Problems. Congress should t4ke prompt action on legislation he 1t1bmltted .al:r • Ice Fl0e Murder ' ' ' . -Suspect Ch~rg~ WAS!DNGTON (UPI) - A ~an· '·:American technician has been l:iieried with murder in the mystery slaytrig of e rF'rch t:eam commander oo a remote ice. island afloat in the Arctic Ocean aorile 300 miles from the Nocth Pole • Mario J. Escamllla, 32, of Santa Barbara. Ca.Hf., was arraigned Thursday before U.S. Magistrate Stanley King In suburban Alexandria, Va., In the shooting death of BeMie Lightly of Loul!ville. Ky. A prelimlnary hearing wu set for Aug. 5. The bearded Escamilla, in handcuffs and chains, was flown to Dulles Airport Thursday along with Llghtsy's body. He was accompanied by the four ln· vtsUgators v..'ho flew to the island Mon· day to try to unravel details of the death, ll1'!1ch had remained a mystery because or poor radio communlcitlons, .Escamilla was charged under maritime Jaw because the ice noe ts considered the same as a ship et sea flying the U.Scfla;. • months ago to ooi;nbat air polluUoa. Time , ill no longer on the aide of the Viet Cong. ''I-believe the p~ for a negotiated peace should be better now than they were before the cam. bodian opention." · Putting the' blame ·ao gov~t for student dissent is very sborUigbted. It is a problem ror College admlnl.lt.rators. Huck Finn Derby Opens at Pwr In Huntington That annual costume and fishing con· test known as the Huck Finn Fishing Derby will bob up again next. week In Huntington Beach. The 18th annual derby will begin al 9 a.m. Wednesday on \he municipal pier with youngsl.ers 6 throogti 14 Dsblng "' for" 8ho5t of prizis. · In addition to prlzes rar the biggest, most unusual and smal~ fish, awards wiµ be offered for the, best Ton;i Sawyer · _aJid Becky Thatcher costlimf!s. ~ eVent i1 co-sponsored by the Parks 1 aocf Recreation Department and Ron's Bait and Tackle Shop on the pier~ Registration is at the bait stand. Yowigsters may sign \Jp anytime: ' . Huge Transport Plane Crashes PIGGOIT, Ark. (UPI) -A huge Alr Fo~ ClSO transpcrt. plane crashed and burned at dusk Thurlday ln an isolated puture in far northeastun Arkansas killing all six persons aboard. The plane sheared two poles supporting power lines and cut ol:f electricity to many reaident.s in the area. Clay County SherUr Burne.53 W. Dalton sakl all but one of the bodies was severely burned. Witnesses said the plane "ju.st fell and blew up." Other witnesses said the plane appeared to be on fire. before it crashed Into the pasture and they said it gave out ''several loud bursts" before plunging into the ground near an abandoned railbed. 1 One of the plahe's burning wings l~ed SOO feet from a farm house but clused no damage . DREXEL SALE FEATl:IRING DREXEL'S ESPERANTO COLLECTION OCCASIONAL-DI NI NG-BEDROOM DEALERS EOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE 1ttJ11111 INTERIORS NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W11tcllff Dr., 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 LAGUNA BEACH Prof1s1lon1I Interior O.slgnort Av1l11blo-AID-NSID 345 No•th CoHI Hwy. 494-6551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 PH11e f•ft,,.. Mott •tor.,. c •• ..., 140·126J /. t I • Stra1tge Bedfellows "Charlie." the cat, likes rats, but not to eat, notes his master, Monte Iverson, 8, of 376 E. 22nd St., Costa Mesa. "Charlie," who has been a member of the Iverson family for seven years, first exhibited this unusual reaction to rats about two weeks ago when Monte acquired four of the rodents from a friend. And the rats apparently have no fear of "Charlie." Monte'; who likes science, is studyin~ the sl,range behavior patterns of the animals with greet interes_t. Subversive Acts Under Sc rutiny in Laguna Beach Possible subversive activity in Laguna Beach was under scrutiny this week as an investigator for the state Senate Fact-Finding Subcommittee on Unamerican Acli~ilies zeroed in -oo-Uie Art Colony. The subcommittee. headed by Sen. 1-lugh Burns. functions from the senator's onice in Fresno and has looked into activities of extremist groups ranging from the Communist party lo the Joha Birch Society. The investigator said he was in· terviewing a number of people in tow!'.. including news media per~! and city officials, about problem area! and .- prrsons reputed to having leanings ~o the left. He also sought opinions of residents: on the activities of some city and other public officials and employes and their associates. The investigator said Sen. Burns' com· mittee is engaged in a counly..t)y.county 11urvey of subversive activities, ranging from college campuses to local city governments and civic groups. He said the survey in Laguna was precipitated by security problems that have arisen as the result of establishment nf the Western White House in nearby San Clemente. Election of Carpenter Now Virtually Assured Orange County taxpayers will foot the bill for a $110,01)()' election with only one real candidate 'Aug. 18. Republican leader Dennis Calj>enter otNew.port.Beach wQJSSUN<{ of electlQ!I to a state Senate· seat in the special vote when his only opponent, Douglas Irvine, withdrew Thursday. Irvine, a Santa Ana housing developer. talked to c8rpenter Thursday night and threw his support lo him. Carpenter. chairman of the Republican State Central Committee, thus virtuall y is assured -barring an unforseen write· in campaign -of election to fill out the unexpired tenn of John G. Schmitz. Schmiti has been elected to the late Ames 8. Utt's former seat in Congress. ·Carpenter still faces a challenge from Democrat Dwight \Y. Mise in the November general election for the full four-year stile Senate term. The uncontested eleclion of Carpenter will cost the county an estimated SI 10,000. But by law the special election has to be held even if there only had been one candidate on the ballot. Irvine's name will remain on the ballot -it is too late for him to withdraw bul he is· asking his supporters to v-0te for Carpenter. lrvine said he was in the race lo speak for "the burdened property tax · payer" but after talking lo .Carpenter is a.s!ured Carpenter shares the same concern. 1'he election of Carpenter to fill out the term the rest of the year can accomplishJW-O things for Republicans : -It will give Carpenter seniority over -0ther new senators elected in the N-0vem· ber general electKin, provlded Carpenter defeats Mise for the full term as ex. peeled because of a heavy Republican registration edge. -It could get Carpenter lo Sacramento in time lo provide the vote needed to put Gov. Ronald Reagan's $1 billion tax reform proposal -0ver the lop. The tax shift package was two votes shy of the 27 needed to clear the Senate today with one supporter temporarily hospitaliied. There was talk among , Republican !!lrateglsts of possibly shelving the measure until Carpenter's election on the 18th. Carpenter. who was off to northern California today on a Republican Central Comm ittee speaking tour was unavailable for comment. But f'hil Seitz, Ca rpenter's campaign direclor. said he doesn't look for Carpenter to provide the tie--breaking vote. "I can't imagine them throwing in lhe towel and not trying to get it through until the 181.h," he said. Girls Super at Market San Cle rnente Distaff ers Ta king Over Boxboy Job s By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of t~t Otlll' "llo! Sleff Tt used to be thal when a high school bo.v wanted a job. he usually beg a n looking at tht: local supermarket to see about becoming a boxboy . But in San Clemente the guys aren't doing that so much any more. The girls arc. Now, in al least half of the San Clemente supermarkets. the kid behind the checker packing your sacks with vittles might very well be a pert, teenage girl . In two of the city 's four large food 11tore!. the help includes girls behind lhe checkslands and when the coeds aren 't sacking they sweep. stock shelves, .R"ather shopping carts, and even mop noors. And the ir bosses say the girls outdo their male friends 1n the demanding job . "The gals are getting a good reception from the customers, too." reports Leon Riiey. manager of the local Alpha Beta . "Especially the men ." The Alpha Beta market employs two boxgirls. although they have a more subtle name of "clerks' helpers." The store also employs eight boii:boys. The girl helpers are an outgrowth of hiring women to run the: checkstands. "Two or three years ago we couldn't )l:et boys with the draft calls so high Rnd the fact that everybody was in school. So we hired "'ives whose childrtn were In school during the day. Then "·e began to accept applications from the older teenage girls to work here.•· Riley notes that the girls, while being helpers now. can get the "feel" ot Lhe store and then move to the c1$b register. Bob Bersch. manager al the Albertson's Markel at 802 N. El Camino Real has one girl lo si1 boyt working as clerk·s helper$. "She's a good worker, ind tf she Wl!l!in't she wouldn't be he.re," Bersch declared . The ·'she " he refer~ 10 l!'I 11 recent ~radunlc of San Clemente Hlgh School, O.titl' "ILOl tttfl "flt" GROCERIES HER llAG Mar1'-tt Clerk Michaux Wendy Michaux. ··r love It here. It's really nice." she remarked, as she expertly loaded a sack with groceries of all St>rts. Wendy. 17. has been working for the store for the past two months. "I just came Jn. filled out. an .application and was hired -all in one day ." She is frequently told by some of the male market-goers that she is: "an awfully good.Jooking boii:boy," but Wendy is quick to add that the female shoppers like her, too. "One lady was happy with me a couple of weeks ago, because 1 didn't put the tomatoes in the bottom of the sack, like some other people will do."' Wendy sai4. While not backing up the checker \~ding sack.! and helpif\i custamers with lheir groceries, Wendy e<>llects shopping cartl and slocks shelves. Bersch said the first girl he employed came in ~llr'ing the winter months and wanted a job. "TM boys were non.ex· Jstent. and she was going to school at night, so I hired her. Now they all cotne in.·• "But not everyone qualifies for the job. It's really not that easy, especially pushing the shopping carts back into place .• You've really got 19 scra1nb\e." Bersch said that , while the slore has not hired too many young women to work, older wives have been at the store for a 1ong time. "We need them rluring the winter. All we can find are Lhcst surf bums and they're no good. So we go to the wtimen or the girls." Safeway Markets district office In Orange reports that the chain outlet has -Only tried the gal helpers In the Palos Verdes area, but not in Orange County. "We've always had boys who arc available for work," an official said. "You have to re alize that there are certain llmlllltlons on the girls , . . weight they can llft, hours they can work .•. " But then, 110me or lhe boii:glrls In S~n Clemente know better. They've been libe:r11ttd. I F'tidl)', July n, 1970 " H DAILY PILD: S 1.5 MiJ~s Not E:OOug ~ ~· • ' Marine Beach Offer Termed Unacceptabl.e An oUicial spokesruan for Camp Pendleton today conDrmed that tht Marine Corps has oflered 1.S miles of virgin shoreline for public use on a 25-year lease. Bµ:t th~ State of California ls holding out for more land and a.ays the -0(fer is unacceptable. Robert Meyer, deputy director of Parks and Recreation, said the cost of develop- ing the 1.5 miles of sand for surfing park would be prohibitive. "The sute woold like 4.5 miles of beach with a 2$-year lease -then we'd have a fantastic park," he said. The.Marine Corps proposal was sent to the state nearly two weeks ago, following the rejection by the state of another plan for the beach. The Marines formerly offered 1.5 miles of beach for seven y~ars. with the lease revocable al any lime. Judge Grants Slocu1n Ouster Of Attornev .; An issue that became, collrt. officials believe, almost as important to Dr. Wesley G. Slocum as the murder charge he faces was re.solved in bis favor Thurs· day. Superior Court Judge James F. Judge agreeed to I.he firing or Costa Mesa trial lawyer Paul Augustine Jr. and ended a troubled association. Dr . Slocum has repeatedly tried to fire Atigusfine in recent weeks, but the court refused permission for him to do so. The aclioo Thursday ended a troobled relationship which Augustine described as "hell on earth." "I was ready. willing and able t\\ proceed with ·the 'case at any paint," Augustine uid today, · Courtroom sources said Dr. Slocum's dispute with Auguatine was nol conneCted to the specific case for which be is scheduletl lo stand trial. Augustine has successfully represented Dr. Slocum before. winning acquittal on an attempted murder charges in· volvin& an April Ml66 gunfight with Santa Ana police. He was with the suraeon ln Superior COOrt for a pr<i>'liil hiarfiig on a IU million damage suit stemming from that confrontation when Dr. Slocum was las~ arrested. The suit has since been dismissed. SOmechefs After lengthy negotiations, the longer- term plan was drawn up but the state would still like a longer stretch of beach sand. Meyer said that negotiations for the 16-year leaae will continue, bqt that the final decisk>n will nol be 111ade by Camp Pendleton. "That final decision will rut with the Department -0f Defense," he noted. Director of Parks and Recreation, William Penn Motl, met with Col. A. C. Bowen at Camp Pendleton Thursday morning. but the llkellhoocl ot a Marine concession appeared unlikely. "lbe two men toured the area, but T imagine all they did was get their respective views acrO&S to each ·otber," ttfeyer said. Meyer noted that the property la creating more Lhan local attention. "Congressman Alfonzo Bell hu talked with Defense Secretary ~telvin Laird about opening up the beach, under a Jong-term lease. -· • t4 ''We're optim11ilc for help from the .: Defense _Dept. We know alao that a "• kii of j>Ulillc-pnoaure 11 building up : and thol the Marine Corps -·1 need '· all or the 17 mlla· of beach that they now· have." ~ 1 •1'Jbe Marines have told us that they .. cannot offer the 4.5 miles of beach IO\lth • of. San Onolte becaUJt U;ley are planning , to build a 'helicopter pad on the last • mile. But it will ooly be temporary. •. "We are also dilturbed by 1be feet that a private aurflng cluJ:t bu leaad · • year-by.year me mile of ~ ... on the · b<lse. ··u the Marines can 1eue the bNdl · land to a private club, lhey can leut some to the state," Meyer declared. Meyer menUoned that the land leue .. was discussed by President Nixon. Gov. • Ronald Reagan, and Sen. George Murphy when the three had dinner together at the Western White Hoose Monday even· ing. However, Meyer did not elaboralt on the discussions. Airport Report Studied, But Choice Still Far ·Off ,. Orange County 1irport commisstoners spent two hours pondering the Parsons report on Orange County Airport Thurs· day, and came to the conclusion that they may not be able to make an "educated recommendation" by Aug. 11, Ult date they are to report. to the Board of Super.visors. Commls.slon Chairman James Gilmore directed Aviation Director Robert Bresnahan to Investigate the poaslbiltty of extending the terms of the contract with the Ralph Parsons Compa,ny. Under the $140,000 contract, the Boarjf flf Supervisors must make lheir choice of suggested alternatives by Aug. 21 or face a penalty of $200 per day. The report' lists. eight d l ff ere n t alternatives for the futUre of the airport. -from cutting back to seve:.n COIT!· mercial flights a day ~ exj>4ftd\nc. to 62 fiights a day by 1977. ' The penalty clause ¥{as lnch~ed ln the contract because the Parsons .COm· pany dld nol. ,want to keep its t"elm of engineers and consultanlll In the area and inactive for more than a monlh . lf the airport aervice is to , be cut \>Bek.. or kept al ·its p-eaenLk~ ,the Par!Ons: tiain· can be d l'I b'i.11 d td. HOONever, if a decision Is made to eii:p&ld. Parsons would then prepart a master plan for the airport. "It ts unrealisUc to expect us or the Boai'd of Supervisor> lo l'OICh t ·h&lon in 30 days,'!.-chairm{Ul Giknorl tald, ''even if we spent au of our-time on it ~u=.;.:i :r:u:,•;~ ~u.ct to discUS! alternatives one and two t1 ~­ report -cutting: back or mainllJnin( present service -but tl!e time was spent., discussing noi.se. "We are being asked to blse our decision on nolae standards that do DOC exist," Gilmore said. "We won'' know whal those MandlJ"ds· will be until Ibey are adopted by the legislature. 1 "At the same tlme, we cannot, tn my mind, ignore the wishes of the people who UVe,under the filght pattern becaUR · of technical standards!' Commissioner Donald Killian, who aald he: lived "on · the el1ended q!nll!r line of the runway in Nf'WP.Jri Beach," .ulfd. Stariley Walsl'I, the P~ns repreteD-t. tatiVe, if the naie might adopt 'ttandarda more stringent than those the report are based on. Walsh repli"ed that it" wu "practical to Consider the: proposed standards as those that the state would ~---t. 1"" next meetlilg 'of tlle COoimllaloll' will be Tuesday at 7 p.m. in thi: Superyisora-hearing room at 515 N. Sycamore St in· Santa Ana. AlternlUvu. one-and two.will •be dilCUlled; " You're -not . • , ... are paid to cook over hot flames. So enjoy a flamde$ electric kitchen. A J1an1clcss, a.ll~elcctric kitchtn is one of the big benefits built into evtry Medallion Home or Apartment And that means a c.lcan, cool kitcht.n. AM edallion Home or Apartment can al•o mean fla.mcle ss electric heating. Clean heat. It doesn't dirty yoar curtains or upholsttty. And flam,Jess air conditioning that cools and cleans the air you :breathe. Pure comfort for the entire fimlly. And flameless wat<r heat- ing-without 'l pilot, without a flue, without wasted spice. Furthermore, a Medallion Home h" ample wiring for today's •lcctri- c1l :1ppll1nccs, plus provisions for -.. the cl•ctrical wonden cOllllag ap in the all-electric futuro. Med"""-' Homes and Apartments are 111ow available jn all price ranges. You can see why more md llKft people art choosinl! to Uve tlie ...,d dean bfe-el<c:trially.lncboliniclwfo, .. . I ' I -._.....,,.-- I ..... ~· • 4 ·~ 4 -twl Y i>iLOT Frtd.11. July 31, 1~70 Vows Stnog Fitilet 'Rockless' Nixon Assures Rock Fest Israel on Peace Rocks On In Neville's Cross, England, Timmy', the blue budgerigar- a small Australian parrot-is bac_k home again because be knew his phone number. His owner, Mrs. Enid Barnett, said the bird was returned to her after being mis~ ing for five days. "Obviously he has heard us answering the tele· phone with our number and has learned it by heart," Mrs. Bar· nett·said . "Tiiank goodness he's an intelligent bird." • Donald Olske11's father taktt no chances when he sends the 1l·11ear· old to plafl basebaU~i?i Astoria Parle. New York Citv. TM 11oungsttr sho.,,,,.· ed up at batting .practice Thursda11. wearing o gas ma.sk .becau~t oJ the alert-level air pollution in the city. • The Clifton, N.J. city council re· centlJ' approved a liquor license for T1mper•nc• A. Frank. • • • C~icago A-1ayOT Richard J. Dolt'11 rtvoktd the liquor license of th.t B&B lounge TecenUy, charging it wa.s aomethi11g of o clip ;oint. Police had reported that a man had been att.oc:ktd a.t tht B&B and hi.s head shavtd by other patrmu, and She own· ert gave him no pfotlc:tion. • A 40-year-old truck driver from Hugo, Okla., fell asleep at the wheel Tuesday and Injured four elephants. Robert D. Cline told po- lice he was about five miles east of Norwalk when the truck, owned by the Clyde Beatty.Cole Brothers Circus, overturned. The circus ele-- phants suffered scratches and bruises. • A Hali/ell, England weight· lifting club has hod to close be· cause a Jtrong arm 17ang ha.! "Lifted" all 3,000 pounds of its · equipment. • "When the first settlers arrived In early California," Gov. Ronald Reagan said recently at roll-out ceremonies of a new tri-jet, 4'1.hey found half-naked savages smoking the leaves of a native plant. You can still see the same thing on Sunset Boulevard every Saturday night/' the Governor added. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Only boors before lsraet accepted the U.S. 91)..day cease-fire, President fiixon a53ured the nation that il could accept the proposal without fear of giving a military ad- vantage to Arab nations. In a news conference Thursday nighl broadcast from a Los Angeles hotel, the first fulkiress meeting with reporters he had held outside the White House, the President also promised to press * * * Nixon Blames Disturbances On Faculties SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (UPI) President Nixon Thursday night accused Univeraity leaders o! blaming him for their own shortcomings. The problems of dissent mushrooming Into violence and student! shouting obscenitiea at visiting speakers are "noL problemt. for the government," Nixon said: The President obviously was chafing under recent criticism directed at his administration by Dr. Alexander Heard, the Vanderbilt University chancellor who recently ended two months as a special liaison for the academic community with the White House. In reports made public last week, Heard ,and his assistant, Dr. James C?,ee~ o( Howa;ct University, harshly critkized the N1xon Administration for Cailinc to communicate with young peo- ple. • Sbowin,gf some anger and considerable exuperation, the President chose his news cqnference in Los Angeles to reply. "Tbe problem of commllnicating with students and other groups is a perennial one. Jt existed in previous administra· tions. lt exists In this one," Nixon said, · He point.eel out that hi.! administration was moving toward an end to the war in Vietnam and the draft and dealing with problems of the environment. "Bµt ooce all those things are done, still the emptiness and the shallowness, the superficiality that many college students find in college curricula will still be there. ''We caMot solve it. It is a problem which coUege acltninislrators and college faculties must face up to. We share our part of the plame. I as1ume that responsibility. We will try to do better • But they have to do better also." Nerve Gas Dump Delay Aslied TALLAHASSEE, Fla. \UPI) -Gov. Claude Kirk demanded Thursday the anny abandon any immediate plaru to dump 2,675 tons of nerve gas into the AUantic ocean off the Southeastern Seaboard. And Rep. Paul Rogers ([).Fla.), asked tbe Pentagon to delay shipping the gas across the South, a move scheduled for Aug. 10, because of the "Potential of disaster." Kirk and Rogers, however. appeared to be lodging the only major official objections in Dixie to the plan to dispose of the World War II nerve gas by dumping it 282 miles east of Cape Ken- nedy, Fla. Authorities in the states through which the slow-moving train carrying the car10 of 418 desk«zed concrete "coffins" must travel seem assured that the Army is taking every precaution to avoid any danger to the populaUon. I~ the fight against pollution ln CongreSJ, MIDDLEFIELD, Conn. (AP) -Ynwi& in the government and throughout in-~continued to~ into the roc1de1s dustry. Pow<lir .Jlldie r<1Ct ftllivel ma today "This is an area where we cannot heedless of the fact that there was wait," he Jaid. noting the eye-stinging no muaic. But aa they did the productr pall that settled over major cities coast.-of the rock festJva1 announced he wu to-coast and overseas this week. trytng to rent Yankee Stadium for • two-day concert Aug. 22 and 23. He also served notice he might seek Ticketa sold for the Powdtr p1.1 ..... higher taxes if Congress does not curb ... ~ ilS spending. He hinted 'he might veto festival at '20 apiece would be honored two appropriations bills that exceed bis at the Stadium, producer Alan Sherr budget_requests by more than $1 billion. said. He said (.'O{ltracts to rent the Nixon insisted that "infiation is being stadium would be~silned within 1. few cooled" despite an upward surge in the days. 1be ball park bo1ds 65,000. wholesale price index in July. He said A feetive atmosphere was maintained he was ·more encouraged by the at Powder Rid1e meanwhile by 15,000 downward trend in the index -harbinger young persons already at the ski alope of a rise or fall in consumer prices site. -in the past si:r months. The newcomers urived today 1ina:ly On school desegregation, the President and in (f'OUJ>S, walking and hitchhikine added a condition to his plans for federal to a festival banned by the court.! as assistance to Southern school districts a nuisance. integrating this fall by saying that U.S. A few J!ept -along the roadside during officials would be sent only into districts the night but moat continued the two-mile which have requested them. trek on foot from the state police bar4 The President, relaxed and self-con-ricades set up on roads around the fitlent throughout the half-hour session site. that was delayed briefly by a microphone State Police Commissioner Leo J . failure, returned by helicopter to the ?\1ulcahy said he has no plans to force West.ern White Hoose at San Clement.e anyone to leave the ski resort. immediately afterwards. '"J'hey ca11 stay there till Thanksaiv· The President spoke before a na· ing." tionwide audience after the Israeli 0 .... " The young folk camping out there cabinet met for the third time this SIGN OF DISTRESS AT ROCK FEST? seemed undeterred by the lack of music week without a decision whether to ac.1 _____ Y:._oung:.c.-'..:.M.c•::•:.c..Hc:•::.•"g::.•..:F..cl.:•_,,g-'U::pc.•::id::.•:..:D:.:o:.:w:.:•.:...::•.:.I _:P_:•:.:w:.:d::•::•_:R::::id~g~• ____ _:°':_::lh:•:.:arr::::es:::t _:Of:_:th:•::ir_:hos.::ts:·:__ __ _ cept the American peace plan for the I middle east. Israel accepted the pla!I in the fourth crisis sessioo ol lhe week this morning. Nixon acknowledged that Israel was concerned that a cease-fire would result in a military buildup in the Arab coun- tries bordering on Israel. Nixon interrupted a IO-day working vacation at San Clemente to come to Lo.s Angeles for the natiooal}y televised and broadcast news conference. He held an informal news conference in his White House office a week ago Monday . Nixon also said he believed "inD1tion 1s being cooled ind will contJnue to be cooled" if the federal government keeps its budget under control. He e1· pressed his confidence that the coontry was "on the way" to an upward moving ecmomy in the la.st half of 1970. The President said he was nol too concerned with the increase in the preliminary July wholesale price indel:, because he was more interested in loqer range movements. The jndex showed a 0,3 percent ln- c;ease in July -the sharpest jump since January. Turning to Indochina. Nixon again said there is no disagreement between the U.S. posilion ,on the Paris negotiations and the position held by South Viet· namese President Nguyen Van 'I11ieu. He said 'Thieu's positioo "is on all fours with ours" and noted that the two coun- tries have consulted on wftat will be negotiated at Pari3. He noted that Ambassador David K. E. Bn.ice had met bl Saigon with Thieu to make sure thert! was no diaagreement. He told reporters he believed thal cllances for a negotiated peace on Viet- nam were better because m the Cam· bodian operation. On the sensitive Issue · of achoo! desegrecatioo, Nixon said no federal repreeentaitves would be sent to key southern IObool districts unless they were requ<sted by local governments. 1be President amplified on his recent denial that scores of federal aa:ents would be dispatched to the South this fall to bring about desegregation in holdout districts. Njxon said how many federal represen· tatives went into the South would depend on whether the districts "ask for the help" of Justice or Health, Education and Wellare Department e1perts. "We are not going to have forced policy in this area," Ni100. said ''Our policy will. be one of cooperation, raUw:r than coercion." • unt Q. What should a person do who is worried about inflation, the stock market, the future? A. Cut back on unnecessary spending. Protect your family's future by placing your savings and investment funds in an insured savings account. Q. Does it make any difference where I put my savings? A.Yes . An insured account with a savings and loan association will pay you more interest than banks and will be more certain than stocks. Q. Do all savings and loan associations in Southern California pay the same interest? A .Yes . Q. Then why &hould I put my savings with Mutual Savings · and Loan Association? ' Storms Soak Muggy U.S. A. We asked our own account holders for the answer to this 1 one. They have confidence in the knowledge of our employees. They can depend upon receiving accurate info?Dation, and are pleased will\. the efficient and courteous service. Sticky Weather Ranges From Midwest to East Coast Callfontl• Coastal Ht1r svn..-ilne lo&•Y· Lltht ~•r!tlll• wlftds nltM '""' mor,.1,., rwwrs tiKOmo I"' ._.tltrlr I hi IS II;"°!' l!I 111.-1 lod•Y ~ !•turcltY. Hit~ Miier ... COH!al '"""''"'"'' r1ntoe Ir"" ~2 lt 1J. l11l1M t.o'llPfl'tlur11 r1M1 trom fl hi ... Wtltr ,....,,...,1ur1 U. S1111, Moon, Tides ~llDAY 5eoi!lf tilth • . .. .•• s.' "'· • ' ieconcl fO'lll .. • ,,Q ,,m, 1.l SATUlOAY Fl,_! hitfl • . I~ M 1.m. •.0 l'trsl '°"' .. . . . .. • °' ,,,.., .0.1 $tOOllG n1t11 . , •.2t 1.m. • 1 Setonf loW , J llDM, 'J S\111 IUWI 6·01 1 M, '"' ''l~ ~ ''" Mooit ltlS"4.24t.,,,, Jth 1.1f pM, AIMU-UI Anc:hef1" ,1,1111111 ll•ktnll•ld •IJ1Nrcll 110111 '""" • .._,..,,m, Clllttte Clntl11nstl -.. °"' MolntS 0.1 ... 11 ,.,,,..,., ... 11100'! Wtrlh l'l"tlMI Mtl- IC.1ns11 C.llV L•s V"'' LM Arl9tlt• MlllllM..oll~ "lf*O~l .. ,.t NM'l'or\: Nol'llt ,.,, ... Otklt,_. Ok!tl\Omf City °"''"'' "'"" s.r!MIS ~ ...... ltl ""°""Is "1"1111,iNll Port11M •111111 tll'f llHll11H ·-'1K•tmw<'lhl Sf!t Ltkt CllY 5111 Oiffll St~ Frtntltto Sff!!lt SOOlol,.. T ... tmtl Wtitil,,.,IO~ Hltll """" ,,..<. t5 '' .sl " .Ol tt JJ ,, ,, '' 51 ,11 '' si " " •l 11 II ?O ,1\ "' 71 ,~, ., ~' .•1 t 5 ,, 80 ?0 .?I ., $& ·°' 100 '' ., u 11 A' 1e1 '' .01 1e• 1i .. '' .. JJ .01 •3 71 IJ 71 100 IS .. " 102 ,. •s ?J ,. 110 u •S S! 101 " '' ,. ·'' IS S1 " " •• 11 •• ti " .. ~ ., ·'' " .. ~ " ... '~ '1 111 '' t0 11 ,a, Q .How big is Mutual Savings? A.We're called "The Big M" because we have over 440 million dollars in assets. Q. Where are your offices? A.Mutual Savings.has offices in Pasadena (head office), Glendale, West Arcadia, Covina and Corona de! Mar. Robert D. A9tOn Vic• rrliil/•ltl 4 MlllUltw MUTUAL SAVINGS • COIONA D!L MAll • ll67 Elo1 c-t Hiah way • -~----- -. --------------------------------------~· ~rlday, July 31, 1970 . DAILY PILOT $ U.S. Bombers Pound Reds QUEENIE lly Phil lnterlancll • Raids Greet Retur11,ing Enemy Un its From Canibodia I, NE W YORK ER DONS SMOG MAS K Toni Brown Perodies 'Fun City' Tag New Yorkers· Choking; Traffic Curbs Urged By United Press International New York City seemed like the largest stuffy room in the world today. There were few signs a window would be ope;i· ed before late in the weekend. The City Department of Air Resources reported Thursday that the air pollution level was again unbealltiy and was expected ,to remain about the .same today. 'Ibe department explained there was no danger from short-tenn exposure, but added that this was the 58th day this year it had described the air as unhealthy. Mayor John V. Lindsay, who earlier in the week had con- sidered banning unessential automobile traffic in lower Manhattan, urged commuters to leave their cars at home and rely on mass transporta- tion. He 'followed his own sug~ gestion and rode the subway to City Hall Thursday_ Outside City Hall, 20 young people demonstrated to de- mand that the city be closed to all outside aut.omobile tt2.f4 fie. They wore black robes and hoods and six of. them had on gas masks. 1lLe demonstration was organized by "Environme~t_!." Danielle Frankenthal, descnb- ing herself as a full time worker for the group, said. "Why can't people just take a vacation for a coople of days, or if they have to come into the city why can't they use mass transport.ation1" Officials in Washington had barricades ready in case a full polluUon alert was called. The master plan · calls for a ban on all but es.sential traffic in the capital if the smog reaches the critical point. Washington, like most of the East C.oast, expected little relief. Thunderstorm activl~y in southeastern Pennsylvarua lowered the pollutant levels in Philadelphia, but th e outlook was for the situation to develop again before the weekend. A first-stage pollution watch in five soul.hem coimties 1Jf New J ersey was canceled. It had lasted t~·o days, the longest in the state's histor;. But smoke in northern New Jersey increased. West Virginia extended a pollution alert, begun Monday, through the weekend. Industry was told to curb smoke and residents were asked not to bum trasti. Heavy showers wasted away pollution in Georgia after two days". Guer1illas ' Kidna p U.S . Official M 0 NTEVIDEO, 1Jruguay (AP) -A·U.S. Embassy of· flciar waS ltidnaped today by left-wing u r b a n guerrillas. 'They also attempted to kidnap two other U.S. Embassy of- ficers, but failed, an embassy spokesman said. · Police reported the Brazilian consul, Aloisi Comitti, was kidnaped by the TuRamaro guerrilla organization moments after five terrori.rts seized Dan A. Mitrlobe, 50, a l)ublic safety adviser from Indiana. MUrione is attached to the Agency for Interna- tional Development. A news vendor was pie only witness to Mitrione's 1 kidnap, police said. The v en do r repi)rted five persons armed with pistols and automati~ weapons intercepted Mitrione's car this morning and forced him to get into their station wagon. Police reported Mitrione was found. apparently wound- SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. BS: bombers carried out their ·heaviest raids in six month! across Vietnam in a se.rt.es of mission.! ending today. The U.S. Command sakl Qther Amerlcan warplanes wen t arter gumilla supply line• in Laos and CamboWa. BSls dropped a\ 1 ... 1 lour million pounds of bombs in 19-raids over South Vietnam in the 48 hours ending at noon, military spoke 1me n said. The raids were the heaviest since the 20 missions nown Jan. 28-%9. Tbe bombers st.ruck at tarfett ranging from one mile IOUtb " the demilitarized zone (DMZ) dividing \be \WO Viet. nams to the U Minh Forest near the naUon'a aoutbern tJp. The raids followed r<porb that three veteran Communist regiment! had moved back in- to South Vietnam from .Cam· bodia. The strikes in the J10rlh pounded buildups in sectors near the Laotian border where allied troops engaged in heavy fighting with C o mmunist forces three weeks ago. Nine of the raids came in the 24 hours ending at noon • today, seven of them in moun· Bomb 8lasts Barracks In Saigon SAIGON (AP) -A bo1nb ripped through the ground floor of a U.S. enlisted men's billet in downtown Saigon tonight, c au sin g extensive da1nage to the building and a half dozen vehicles. First reports said there were no injuries. American demolition ex- perts said terrorists placed a 45-poond plastic charge ad· jacertt to the tt).story Ky Son enlisted men's billet. About 400 Americans left th e building and U.S. officers said all military men we re ac- counted for. The explosion hurled a 1¥ge ball or flame into the sky and fire swept through the billet. Some adjoining Vietnam~ frame buildings also were damaged, along with a half dozen military vehicles parked near the billet. Ambulances and fire trucks raced to the scene. Witnesses said flames shot into the sky after a diesel fuel engine running an out.side generator for the billet blew up. An American sentry m a concrete guard post 10 feet away escaped injury, although he was blown across the street. Shortly before the blast, some Vietnamese children were playing in the area, said U. John Pickett, Olicago, 111., who lives in an annex 200 feet away. A string of American billets in the section have been bombed in previous terrorist attacks. · ' Co nductor George Sze ll Dies at 73 · ed, an hour later, in a Mon- tevideo suburb. But a U.S. Embassy spokesman said he knew nothing about Mltrione having been found. Mitrione. a Navy offictr in World War 11, was a policeman in Indiana until 1960, the Embassy said. The bombing was the first major incident in Saigon since July 20 when Viet Cong gun- ners fired two rockets into the capital. A'!1 apartment house was hit but no one was hurt. Two days ago national police claimed to have broken up a Viet Cong terrorist ring in Saigon with the arrest of 12 cell members. CLEVELAND . (UPI) C.-eorge Siell, 73 conductor of the world-renowned Cleveland orchestra, died T h u r·s d a y night at Lakeside Hospital here. Szell had been confined to Keeping Se~ret British, Bari Mag 01i Meg the hospital after su£fering a LONOON (UPI) -Buck-asking them to reconsider heart attack upon return from ingham Palace said today whether this was an ap- 11n East Asian tour this sum-British magailne dealers have propriate article to publish mer. decided to withhold dist.rlbu· here,'' Griffin said. ''That is He was born June 7, 1897 tion of the current Ladles all I know of the matter." In Budapest and was a piano Home Journal suggesting the The current Jssue or the prodigy, appearing with the marriage of Princess Ladies Home Journal carries Vienna symphony at the age Margaret and Lord Snowdon an article by a "well-placed of 10. He was a guest. con-might be an unhappy one. BriUsb diplomat" c a 11 e d ductor with the Berlin Maj. John Griffin, press .. Lord X" who relen1 to Philhannonic at 17. secretary to the queen mother Snowdon and the princesa: as Szell was in America when and Princess Margaret, denled "a reluctant couple." World War JI broke out and there bad been pressure on The article said that on decided to remain. the American magai.lne from fonnal occasions, Princess His own piano composiUons the royal family. Margaret and her husband put Include Piano Quintet, Varia-''What hafpe:ned was that on a show of harmony but lions on an Original Theme an inforrna approach was that at informal ~atherina:s. for Orchestra and Ly r I c made to the British •'the unfortunate situation la Overture. distributors of this magazine, all too clear." ~ ................................ ~ : OLYMPIC POOL : I Tho "MARATHON SWIM" Is In Its 7th Doy. Tho Kids H1vo Swum I 513,386 Yanlt (291 Milos) lb Continuous Hourol • HAYE YOU BACKED THEM WITH YOUR I I DONATION? W. ,,. 1'% lun4o4-4on't lot uo down. Send your IS.00. I $10.00..SIOO.OO or 4on1tlon tM•Y· 1 NAM E -··-···············-··-·-·····-·-····~···--····-·--··--·-···---····----------···----8 ADDRESS ·······-·-·····-· ········•················-········---·-·····--··········-···--··--·--··-· .. •··• I O LY MPI A P OO L P.O. Box 100 • taln Junsle border regions of the northern provlnces of Quang Tri and Thu Thlen. TWo Olhe.rs lilt-wgels Wm three to four miles from the Cambodian border and 71 to '19 miles northwest of Saigon. Field reports from Phnom Penh said a Coll)JJ)uoist attack before dawn today on a Cam- bodJan atUJlery poslUon 40 miles west-southwest of the capital had blocked Highway * * Policy * Said 4, connecting lhe capital with tile port of Kompong Som. Cambodian af1lly units sent In reinforttmeDta: led , by armored cars to try to reopen the highway. The severing of the hlghway prevented Cambodian troopa from getUng reinforcements by road to the five-battalion unit moving up to assault the Kirirom Plateau. a few miles west of the roadblock. 'Aggressi ve' Military officers near the scene saki an armored bat. talion from 2nd Military Dlvl.lloo headquarters at Kom- pong Speu was rushed to the scene shortly afler dawn. Even with help from Cam· bodian air force T28 fighter- bombers, they failed to dbloclge tile Vie\ Cong. They reported five Cambodian troops were wounded. Hanoi Calls Nixon Talk 'Lie' I PARIS (UPI) -North Viet- nam said today President Nix- on was telling "lies" when he asserted prospects for peace in Vietnam were beUer and the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong were weaker. In a formal statement, the Ncrth Vietnamese delegation lo the peace talks condemned Nixon's Vietnamese policy sla(>!ment as "An aggressive, bellicose and colonialist policy" that had allegedly· ~ the 18-month-old peace t.;.lks into a deadlock. 1'he Hanoi statement said that at his news conference Nixon continued "to boast of imaginary u.s: victories in Cambodia and in South Viet- nam. Carried ffYtlay by these lies !':e claimed that the U.S. aggression against cambodia had 'weakened' the enemy and allowed to look forward to 'better prospects for peace negotiations.' 'l'his unfounded claim of Mr. Nixon· is slgnlfi· cant for the two aspects of his administration: ''-It has achieved ex. cellence in the art of tying, in the art of making defeats look like victories. It still clings to the illusion of scoring. a military victory on the bat- tlefield lilrely to lead to a position of strength at the neogtiatlng table." The statement 1Qffirmed Hanoi's demands, already re• jected by the United Stales and South Vietnam's President Nguyen Var:i Thieu, for the creation of a provisional coali- tion cabinet in Saigon that would prepare new general 21.4 CU. FT. SIDE-BY-SIDE REFRIGERATOR FREEZER • ·--.•. rr-hcfds Ill> .. 232""'14.8 ca. It. cf fi'esb food storage ill the refrigeratir secUM-a supermarket right in YoUr ll<lne.-Refrigerator roTls out on wheels f« c!eanlnt- 1:1 IDJISTAILE CAmt.ml SflELft"S let JOtf adjust heights qulclly and U!ily. ri 11MDY STOWE DOORS in both Sttlions pfus hotter arid thuse keepers, 7 city melt k!eper, egt drawer, and fresh fruit and Je&etable biris. 13 $£PARAT£ TIIPWTOIE toMJJIOLS let you ditl the exact de- 1re1 of cold yoa m ta bo1ll refrirerttor and treerer seej:lns. rJ !IE tum ILllT • • • Order n llOW (<p\imal, nln) O< add ~ > later f« a endless supply af Ice tobes atycur flnier tips. IN1952 Loosened Cap Not 'Air Ra id' DGWNEY (AP) -Paul Redwood thought somebody was bombing him when a red, disclike object crashed next to h im as he wa s quietly washing his car. Redwood, 45, ducked behind a wall, lhinking the five-inch- wlde thing might be a time bomb. It wasn't Investigating policemen said Sunday it was a fuel cap th at fell from a passing airplane. Nose Amp-wtee? . DETROfT (AP) -Mona Ille elepllanl is res~ quietly alter a surgical teamJrom Michigan S ta t e University sewed her noee back In place. She nearly lost her nose when he:r roommate, Mary, bit her Wednesday in a nasty mormmt. It took 30 sUtches to npair the eight-fool trunk. When it gets hot and humid, elephants get jll1l like people -crabby,'' said Dr. Robert F. Wilbon,, ~ of \be DeQ-olt Zoo. •• Anytl1ing mlght happen." A pow«fld tranquilizer was Mhed I<> Delroft Wednesday from Sandusky. Ohio, and wu used to quiet the ~year-old elepilanl during \be operallon. .Momenta a!ter the d!'lll wore off, Will!IOO said, Mona used tile trunk I<> comume four pounds of hay, a loaf <i bread, llx• apples ud gallons of water. BIG 16.6 CU. Ff. NO FROST 2 DOOR 95* REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER • C:O.plolt~ hi\ .... ~ bolll t'lfrfprlbil ""' -· ._..., __ op to154 k lf-- • r .. M1w11t11-, 1-111, I idjooblllo. • Stplrlle bmpntln eantrdc. •Twin Yl&oltblt allpos hold ap lo% """9f. • "' ... ., m<fJ -Add 1 _,.. _ Mf*29911• TV and. APPLIANCE . IN HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD. COST A MESA 540-7131 Daily 9 ."Iii 9; Sat. 9 "Iii ·6 1 F OU N D A Tl 0 N Coste -· C1llf. 92627 • 4 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ··'~----............................................................................................ _.; \ I r .. • < • • • DAD.Y P R OT EDITORIAL. P AGE Long-lerm Planning ·-. The Ume Is near for some hard decisions on th• llltlln! ot HUnttnRton Beach. On M.onday tbt1 city council wW go over another set of fiprea and a new fonnula £or raising revenue to pe.y for new faclUUes, such as th e civic center, library, fire stations, and corporation yard. lt will be anotJ1er step in a search for extra revenue that has lasted months. The aearch has touched many interests -the businessman, homeowner, oil operator, apartment resldeni and even anyone who uses a tele- phone or any othef utility. Unpleasantness has generally been avoided as each interest has presented its case. Nevertheless the months have brought a couple of points home to the city: First, the councilmen have learned that it may cost them some friend s, and votes, to support their dreams. Second, the staff has learned that a much better job of planning should ao into capital project s. The dilemma that the city is in could have been avoided -or at least eased -if it had drawn up earlier a long.range economic master plan. A call for 1uch a plan has been made by the Systems and Data Processing Committee. which studied methods of pay· Ing for the civic facil ities, and the Chamber of Com· merce. The recommendation has been endorsed by the city council and City Acjminlstrator Doyle Miller. It should be carried out. It would be useful in U1• analysis of tu ty.re city.financial needs and in ·considera... tion of annual budgets. What's mor~ the citizens have a right to have rea..,.ble .. Umates of what the city will be l])Olldlng ln five years and where the money will come from. larger and more complex than the city'1 and smaller and leH &table-than th .. city make such-plans• re!l'ln1- on the same kind of popu1ation, economic development and public requirement estimates available to th e clty. Fountain Va11ey hes a master economic plan, cov· ering the general fund and capital outlays for the next JO years. Flexibility is provided by basing it on p<>pula· lion growth and bringing it up to date every year. It avoids the crisis--Urc:risis existence of so many cities in the county. Huntington Beach needs a long-range financial plan. The . Honor Belo11gs to All Huntington Beach deserves congratulations for be- ing chosen as a finali st in the All-America Cities com· petition of the National Municipal League. It was one of two California cities -the other be· ing Mountain View -that placed among the 22 finalists that will be judged from presentations made at Port- land , Ore. Aug. 24. The honor in this case rightly ,e:oes to all of the citizens of Huntington Beach . The city was picked for the finals because of the community effort to· beautify the beachfront area·. The involvement of a cross·section of the citize nry has been particularly obvious in the creation of beach parking facilities , beautification of the Pacific Coast Highway and the Top of the Pier plan for downtown redevelopment. - I • j - What major projects must be funded In 1974? How J!lll!IY policemen will be required lo 1973? How big will the. parks staff be ln ,1972? What equipment is the pub- llc -1<1 department likely to need In 1975? Businesses Special recognition is due th e Citizens Steering Committee of the Urban Land Institute (ULI) which sparked these projects. H otMY ,}lQOK t>1SSOLVEI>." Red Sansei ls Playing Panther Role y-0 long-ha!Nd radlcala ahoOt up the comfortable mlddlHlua delegatel at tM J apane•American Cf I t l 1 e n a ~· Io Chicqo recenUy with ~ngry ~:!and a film on the wartime J!:locltlon of Wat Coast Japanese Jn 1114 Looming of -•vents, I could not help lieing Imp<-apln by the powtrful Impac\ that 'the N•gro luis )lad ... .AlqeticaD eulWA ~ the nation's llll!!«Y· Let me 0plain. From llavery dl)'I onward;NqrocW!ce and tta acaompany. ing mtllic have m.. n.-...,.,.t1on, of -. , minstrel shows and blaekface 1kit... Nea:ro ragtime .swtpt the country in the early years of this century. Rigl!t alt>r Worid War I came the Jau: Age and ill hugt lmpac\ Oil colieg• youth In tht ICl's. In the 30'• and fO's there 'fU the redlacovery of New Orleans style band music and Chicago style boogie woogie. More recently there bu been the conquest of American youth by traditional rhythm and blues. It is almost axiomatic that Americans. especially when young, derive an important part o[ their cult~ from the American Neif'O. THIS 'TIME AROUND the big sour« of inspiration for white youths it not Lead Belly or Ellington or cab Calloway or Charlie Parker, but the Black Pan. ther!. Look at the white radical! ·around Berkeley and UCLA. Many of them are simply playing Black Panther, with their &COWiing looks, clenched fist salute, obscene language. hair in a fuzzy mop, · the Afro print abirla, On< group calls liaell the Whill Panthers. 'Ibe ndica1s among the san!f:l (third gefitration Jlpal'le8t are sanse.i; the im· mtcrants are known as issei ; the tee0nd Pace of Change • n. PD• LIP~ publl""od b 1 W.Ubtllla Nataral Git Co.: ''Hang onto yt.r )Jato. The poc< of ch;qige in the 20ll C.Otmy is Without p<ecedent In hU!llall llistorY ••• llci<nce and technology ad:deved more between 1900 and 1950 thlD to tht wl!ol• pl"t\'ious history of lht human nee .•. Between 1950 and 1111 -. -..... progreas than in the firtt 50 yurs .. .lt haa been esUmated thol t-of all the trained ICitn• W&a thlt ever Uved are alive today and -"" hlrcl 111 dilooverlna ..,. tedmlques for eVftt furtller changes." l'llWlt Utll-F-lpllf: "In ad- dition to the feet tbtt cu J1 a convenient, dependabl< and -lcal fuel. It ol&n a vtry pooltl" contribution to the .,-. lni natiOOll couce1n about envtronmenL Natural po -not )Jave tho air '1f wo...-pofMion probiftns of -fu<ll, A1 to l<lthetlcl, 1u locllltles selckm ortend lbe e,e beca1lae the 19111000.mUe pipeline -~ II .-enUrely under.....,.i from wdllud to burner tlp." , .. ,., Dea r Gloomy Gus: Headline: "l>eoalUng Plant Okay· ed" "Pump. about 3 million gaJlonr dally into th~ ground." Ha! Ha! Who's craey now? Where will the ·electrtclty come from? -0. R. '1111 ...,_ ,.,,..,. .......... ....... -~ "'-' .............. ., ..... ,.., .. -............. D9llJ ...... faoeraUon u nisei} are typically from families of merchanta, uecutivea and professional men. Llke white youths or ·the same social class the radical or :;BPS-type sanJel•are verbally lflted, with a tremen&U! aenae of the ·importance of their opinions and even more of the ir moral judgments. They have no q~ aboyt racism or V~tnam. only ~rs. 7bey are ao fully asaimilated into tvhite culture that they do exactly what white youths of the aame social class do -they also play Black Panther. IN ONE RDPECI' I.he yellow Pan- thers have an advantage over the White Panther& Instead of simply protesting white racism, they can claim to be a victlm of it. This turns out to be a little difficult to do. Japane.se- America115 are in coUege in greater numbers relative to their population than any other ethnic group. In college they get most of the prizes and scholarships. On graduation they are eagerly sought by employers. Not being able to show that they themse:lvea are victims of white raciml, they work themselves into a rage about the 1942 relocation. If you try to tell them that it all happeoot long ago, they ·llower at you and iru:ist that it't liketY to happen again any minute. What infuriates the radical sansei most or all is his parents who, despite the raw injustice of the wartime relocation, lived through it patiently, fought with · honor for their country in World War II, and came home to study and work hard and prosper -!O that their children could go to college. It humiliates them to think that their parents submitted to the relocation instead of, a.s they imagine the Black Panthers would have done, shooting it out with the authorities. THIS EMOTION Act'OUNTS for the odd campaign of radical sansei to compel BUI Hosokawa of the Denver Post to change the title of his history of Japanese in America from "The Quiet Americans" to BOmetbinl more milltant-soUnding. The book reveals the courageous and dfplfied Vfaf in whkb Japaoese-Americans, call· ing on tt}g finest moral resources of their background culture, a=tJl<d their imJJOISlble situation and kept their faith in Americt durtng the whole savage war between the land of their adoptk>n and the land of their ancestors. So little do the radical sansei understand the Japanese cultural identity, which they claim they are asserting by their Black Panther behavior, that they are actually ashamed or their parents and grandparents! (Warning : I'm talking about radical lllWi, not all .samei.) The triumph of the Black Panthers is that they have done again what Negroes have done so suceessfully before. They have established a lifwtyle -a style of dres! and speech and gesture and aelf-dramatltation -for other Americtns, lrt:luding whites and Asians and Mexican-American Brown Bertta, to emu11te. Pity, therofo,., the little Oriental 1irl of the Asian-American Political Alliance It UCLA ot Son Frondsco State, Iookln; in &he mirror at her long and blact but hopel"aly strolght hair, rtallztng ndly th1t It just can't be arranged Afro 11tyle. Ri&ht on! By S. t. Hayakaw1 Prtt1de.al, Salt Fraacl1c1 Slale Colltp It• Prime Time, Half of V.S. Bouse!Jolds Listeti The First President to 1 Master TV WASHINGroN -Coming to the point directly, Richard M. Nixon is such a hot televislon per:sooality that he's got the networks gasping. He can command the alr in prime tlrne and get people in half I.he households of America listen· 'Ing ID him. So it may be said that Nis:on is the first American pres- ident to master the electronic medium. Elsenhower, Ken· nedy and John.son couldn't touch him in their time none of them really.under. standing now to gel in direct contact with hearth and home lo make their sales pitches. This Js aU very strange considering that Nixon fared so badly in his television contest wiih John F. Kennedy, but in the en111.1ing years Nixon has learned by experience things that Kennedy did not know and Eisenhower and Johnson could not cbmprebend. Tll1S IS QUITE SIMPLE. It consisls or going on television, either by press conference or solo appearance, in those hours after dinner when Americans 1ock he is doing. He d-Oes not care about CBS's Crorikite and. ttit new NBC· newstesm including Brinkley, nor about the tlme pressures on f morn i ng newspapenn'en. l:le wanls to hurdle the themselves In their homes to digest commentators and news st$lws and make the evening meal and seek ways to direct contact with the 1a'rge·st possible avoid cmlplete boredom befott shuffling number or citizens at the hours when off to bed. Of course, you've got to they are nonnally disposed to con- be good at it, too. centrate on the tube. That is what he Eisenhower had no studied rationalt · hail · been getting, and_ at ~ times of his fur his television appearances, Whii!h · 'oWn c~.ing, 'fou'.rteen times, in fact, were mo.stly at press conferences 'h~ld sO Tar ill bis adminiStrati and when in the morning boun when house~.iv~s it·counQ!d. in .bokllng ·or· iriing public and bread winners were busy at their, s pport . · · appointed tasks. Kennedy had 1a .u . ·. , misconception that hi! TV appearances Thi.s is re:'11y 'what should be so timed as to key in With present coptroveriy Over anuhg TV the evening MW! broadcasts, giving the time · to opponerits of the · President's ~onkite and HunUey-BrinkJ.ey shoWs policies. When CBS broke luie ki and time to prepare and use film clips and the . morning newspaper editorialists time to tried to regular!~ ~e kind of a ~e- prepare ttieir summaries and con· sponse by Democratic Na~onal Chatr- clusions. His trouble was that most· or man Lawrence ~ O'Brien iti wu a boll:lb CBS GAVE AWAY $75,000 worUt•ol air time for nothing except some vague principle that the loyal opposition to a president ought to be heard. Th• trouble was that so few were listening. CBS seems disposed lo lei tbe Democrats have al least three more such t i m e s before the camera which adds up to quite a lot of free air time to devote to such a small audience. A certain number of CB.5 stockhokters Ytink S(l. too. and the network has not got wh at could be called a prime attraction for its trouble in tr)'ing to "balance" its coverage or the P,r~.sident . As .noted hereih before, the networks, and p.-..rtiCularly ·CBS, . are in U:ouble beeausi of :'ptd>lic mistrust gfowin1 oct of. lbeir co...erage of the Vjetnam war atl(j student riQta, heavily fertilized and fed by the steamy . rhetoric of Vice Pies'.ident ·Agnew .. The networks brush this of! as the public ha ving sickened of. seeitlg ·things as , they · are but that "isn't wha t a good many viewers think. his appearances were at the wrong hours. foi-this • engaging politician. Too few A GOOD j\.lANY think UUs C1'.lverage people had eVei-heard of him and too .. is hoked up to dlow the bad side of many who had weren't interested .. He everything, a put down on the ad· JOHNSOS WAS confused by the whole business of when aod haw to l(>P¥t on television and with all due respect to hiJ hard trying, made a botch of it. NIX Nixon. He knows precisely wha t · ~blf would have been better off t~ minislralioa, ~e country, flag and home kef:p cl.8.moring for equ al Ume without reflecting . only the political dyspepsia getling ·lt, thus creating the impression ·of the TV producers and commentators that Niion's networks gave the President and shot throtigh with over~ramatizatioo a sinister unequal advant.age. · and exaggerated emphasis on dissent. Why We Males Oppress the Ladies 1 have a letter from a lady (ud I hope she won't mind my referring to her in that fashion) who says: "Hoppe: When it comes lo the Wome11's Liberation Front, you write nothing but unadulterated rot. It shows that you, like all men, are subconscious male chauvinist pigs, who don 'l even kn aw how vilely you are oppressing U! \\<omen." This ls ou trageous. First ol all I don't write unadulterated rot. I write adulter. ated rot. Secondly. this whole concept of Womens Lib that we men are unknowing. ly persecuting the fair seI is sheer nonsense. AS I WAS SAYING to the fellows down at the ~fale Citiuns' Council the other night: ''Now do11't get me wrong fellows.'' I said, "I was raised by a woman and I know we all love our women. But the fact of the 1natter is that latel'y they've been getti11g downright uppity. "It's the.se oul3ide agitators from the \Vomen 's Lib," Colonel Stonewall, US~1C <retittd ). said. shaking his head. "C1'.lm· ing in here and stirring up our girls. They were always happy whe11 they knew their place." "That's right,'' agreed Senator Stro- mond . "We used to get along jusl fine 'cause we knew how to treat Oiem. You gol to treat them like children." "The fat1. ts they're basically stuftless •nd untrustworthy,'' aaid Wally George, .----B11 Geor ge ---• Ooar George: I Do you make a Jh•\ng o[f that llUle coli.mn? Jr you can rail It a column. . -WONDERI:;G Ot!ar Wondering : Yes, I make a Uvlng orr lhia column. If you can cain It a !lv1ng. Art Hop~ .... .t.o.;.;. a...-11' <) nodding. "They say one thing and mean another. And if you let 'em, they'd spend all day playing cards, gabbing and watching tee-vee." "YOU GIVE 'EM any money and they spend it right off on nashy duds and stuff ," added Berl Bilbo. "Whal'!!! more, they can't hold their liquor. lt makes 'em quarrelsome." I •·Now hold on, fellows,·• said Tom Tolerant, who's 90mething of a moderate on the sex issue. '"There's some good 011e1 who are a credit to their sex. Take Mrs. Nixon. All she ever says is, "I'm glad to be here and thank you for the roses." Now tl\d-e's 1:1nc who knows her place. You don't see her k.ind out agitating. , "Tom's right." conceded Bert Bildo. .. Not many ever amounted to a hill of beans on their own, but they make fine maids and cooks. And I'm glad to have one around the house to raise my children. We've always tre'!ted her He Opposes Fluoridation To the Editor: The City Council of Hunungn>n Stach has voted unanimously to impose fluoridation of the Huntington Beach water supply upon the people. At the last meeting of the coum:ll, dentisl!I and physicians spoke in favor of fluoridation as a treatment for the "disease of dental carle!". It is clear that using fluoridation to prevent a disease makes the nooride compound ~ used 1 diseaae preventative or a medicine. Notice lhat • fluoride com· pound found naturally in the water ~ not a medicine because it is not in· tentionally added to prevent disu:te. Howevtr, intentionally adding a nuorkle <001pound ID your diet to prevent dlseaSt is a medical procedure, and should bt done only on an lndlvldual basis, by prescription to that individual from a physician « dentist. FLUORIDATION of the waler supply is equivalent to .ddtng chOdreD'a vitamins to an adult food. What'• mort, it 1$ -equlvaltnt to using childrtn'll vitamins to water your lawn and flush your IA!lleL It ta rldlculou> . lf )'our kid needs fluoride compounds, let a pbyslcian decide that on an in· dlviduaJ basis and Jet hlm prescribe them for him. 'Iben )'OU may cive hlm J ••• ... <'"/" ·.Mailho~· L1lllr1 from rHdtMI .,.. W.ICOIM. Horm•I" 'II'•!~,. "'°"Id nnWY tNlr ,,,..,_,.. In aoo _..,, ., i..a. •Tiie rl•~' la COl'llltftl4I ''"-" ta Ill IPaC• .. •Uml· lltlt llbtl It m.tved. A II ltlten mull lrKllld• •It · .... ivr. lf'MI l'Mllfflf fddrtU. but n11'1'1n IMJ' M Wllllllelll 9'I .... uni If IUffi(.191'11 ,.. ... II .... rt nl. l"Mtn' .-lit nat bt IWblhlltd. fluoride pllb such as my kid Is now taking, but for God's sake don 't force me to eat the fluoride pills. Our "Big Brother·· city council believe! It knows what's good for u!. tr they ran do th is to us. they can t'la· worse things. They are Power mad. Our coun- cihnen are otir servants, not our rDlers. THEY ARE BfPOSING nuo datlon ~ us right sfttt an electk'IO. so as h> avolrf the ~e of a pub!J vnte, Alto • .they arranged th~ act.Ion uring the summer when t>eOf'lle are on VAr,.tln'I. l'O a." to "fool atl the l)COnlt ti\ the tl!'li!." J..et's Mt t .. t lh'"1 Mo it to 11•. , Oronb:t, and 11:lrn pttltinns tn prcvenl r11oridatl~. At the next elecllnn, tttrn\V tbfo rAscels nut. i 'Power to lhe p«ltllo. MARTIN ANNENBERG like one of the family ." "THEY DO HAVE a natural sense of the rt\ylhm method," agreed Colo11el Stonewall grudgingly, "bu t would yolJ. want your sisler to marry one?" "look at the scienti£ic f acts , gentlemen," said the 11 o t e d an- thropol ogist. Dr. Carruthers MC.Snair. ·'All my studies prove that women dres~ differently , act differently. think dif. ferently and are built differenUy than we men." Thus reassured. we pledged allegiance to our ha.Mer -a crowing rooster over the legend. ''Male Supremacy !'' -and reafJinned our stand in favor of repealing the 19th Amendment abolishing college education for female s and maintaining separate but equal facilities. particularly in bus stations. SO mE TRUTH is we males oppre.~~ ladies simply because we've got a good thing going. And like all Oppressors we ean think up a million rationalizations to justify it. Thus all the is convince us the good thing of. luck. ladies. Women's Lib need rln oppressors to give up we've got going. Lots --~-- Friday. July 31, 1970 The editoMal page of tlU1 Daily Pilol 1eeka to inforni and stim- adote f'tadtr1 by presenting thi3 .ncw1papcr'1 opinions and com- mentarv on topfcs of intert1t ond danfficance. by providing a forum for the ezpruaion of our reader•' optniom:, and by preuntfno the diucrse oicio- ppintl of ~n/ormed ob.servera and 1pokcrmen on topica of tl1t day. Robert ·N. Weed, Publisher ' JODEAN HASTINGS, 642 .. 321 ,firJN~ • .lwty ,,, 1t(t 'M .... IS Dri Ye ·Shifts . . ' To Hig h G,ear • I ' Mrs. John Kno~. membership chairman 0£ the Huntin~ Bea.cb- Junior Woman's Club. is in the drivt::r'.s seat for an all-out drive now under way to recruit new members. A member of the General. Feder~tion of Woman's Clqbs, the organization is geared to the interests of young women 1~35 who wish to join in building a better community. It is a philanthropic organization and its myriad projects are diversified including Americanism, education, youth, health and safety. Two meetings take place each month. the second and fourth Tuesdays. · · Highlighting the camp.Ugn will be a membership 'tea for all prospective members Saturday, Aug. 29, in the women's clubhouse, Huntington Beach. Active members and officers will greet interested women at 2 p.m. to explain the purpose of the club and acquaiitt them with· its activities, which include furnishing a Smokey the Bear for the Hunt· ington Beach July 4 parade. Anyone wishing more infoimation about the ·organization may • call Mrs. Knox at 846-0815. . Mrs. Stanley Hettinga serves as president of. the club, which, was organized in 1946 and incorporated in 1965. .. RIDERS WANTED -Hoping many Huntin~ Beach. 'WD1e!I· be- tween the ages of 18 and 35 will climb aboaril are members of the Huntington Beach Junior Woman's Club. Inviting passengers are (left to right). Mrs. Edwin Hume and Mrs. Wendell Emde. A membership drive now Is under way and wUJ culminate with a tea Saturday, Aug. 29, 1n the woman's clubhouse. • / --'· .. v • • ' 1. I . -. P ROCEDURES DISCUSSED -Judge Celia Balter (left) takes time 21fter a court case to explain the procedures to Mrs. Franklin Gilchrist (center) and Mrs. Norman L. Whipple, members of the Huntington Beach League of Worrten Voter.s, as part of the league's current study on the· administration of justice. Th.e women are visiting courts on every Jevel and plan to sponsor workshops in the fall. Study of iustice League Members ,Form Jury for Courtroom . There~s a new look in California courtrooms·these days. It's not jn the judicial procedure .but iit the ·observer areas where groups of women lit showing great interest in . the .proceedings, ' They a re meJI}bers of the League of Wbmen Voters who have taken · a court study a• their majot· project to obtain. first-hand knowledge of the · administration of justice in California. . . The women are visiting municipal and superior courts all over Call .. fomia, realizing that all knowledge is not contain~ in books. Most had never been inside a courtroom and decided that first-hand knowledge of the area courts and joint county-state responsibility was essential to m .. telligent discussion of problems facing the courts. Members of the Huntington Beach league visited municipal courts in WestliilDSter, walcliingtlie proceeomgs of justice. and t.ooic-advantage of the invitation5 extended to them· by judges to meet in their chambers follow· ing court cases. · -· · · The Huntington Beach league also participated in a county sympos- ium with six other leagues on the;administration of justice. Featured as panelist.. were Judge William Speirs, presiding judge of the Orange County Superior Coort; Cecil Hicks, Orange County District Attorney, and Attorney Frederick Mason, chairman of the Orange Cou.nty Bar Association's judi .. cial reform committee. Points discussed were the method of judicial selection. the number of jurors and whether a 10-2 jury vote would suffice instead of a unani .. moos decision. , Further discussions concerned the administration of justice and the judges and juries and the •methods of selecting judges. Huntington Beach members also visited the California Supreme Court in Los Angeles. Huntington Beach deL.gates also visited the orange Cotinty Court· house to see the operations .of Santa Ana Municipal Courts and' the Orange COUll\Y Superior Courts, including .tbtt jtiry pool. . Thtee sets of·adminlstration of justice,units are planned for the fall focusing particularly Oil "how well does the otate administration of justice ·serve the needs of the people, especially the poor and the minorities?'' . Huntington Beach area women wishing information on the League of Women Voters and Its current study may ~ontact Mrs. Franklin Gilcbrist, lldminlftratlon.ot justice chairman, 592-2512. • Restaurant on W·heels Drives Husband ,o Distracfi on· . . . DEAR ANN LANDERS: My wile is the most disorganiied person in the world. She spends whole d a y 4 doing a~hlte.ly nothing. Then suddenly she1s a whirhriod or activity -rushing, dashing, yelting, "l have. only two bands!" Etcetera. Alter •1 solid· ·lfftk o! goofing off, she decide. lo do EVERYTHING. She sets an the clockl in the hoUle...-ahead 20 m.Dtidtl, takes the receivers .off lhe HookJ and vows to make every second counL Lately she lt.arted IOllletbing new, She drives to lhe shopping cent~ wi th her cereal bowl and milk in lttr lap 'jto save time.'\ -Our car looks 11"-" a ~rbage truck -paper n a p l i n s , stlvenya~ and food all over U1e p&ilce. This nut lTm married to wooldn.\ miss ANN LANDERS ~ your coltunn for any,thtng. So ~ea.II print my letter ind give me the joy oC. watching her face ,when she runs iato it. '!banks -JOE.FROM FLINT DEAR JOE: Hen ls ls. Now -lltw't YOUR fact! DEAR ANN LANDERS: J,,;diJagree with your conclusion lhat the: husband who wanted his wUe•te .have an .affair WitP another man was trying to degrade her -or e.vea tht score becau1e-ht had a fullt;> -ience. l had a slm1lat expei'ience with mt husband. A -..:ychiatrist el'"plalned hit behavklf in qwu a different way.· Allen (not his real name) had a' disastrous marriage before we met. He • caught bl& wife in bed with her tennis teacher. Allen not only w~s shocked but' deeply hurl H.is wife had always been cold to bitn, but the tennl! teacher brought out a '11ide of °1w!r' he never -existed. After Allen and I manied be wu unable to perfonn sexually.half ~ time, l pretended It <IJdn't matter. ·He tnew better. When he iuggested I have an aff.ilr with another man (be even offered .lo bh-e someone), I was mortified. For .yeah All.n nagged me but I reluled, thinking.be had to be deranged to suaeot such a thing. WbeD : Allen. died last year, r went to ple<ea. My doctor explaiiltd that he was hopJni to 1'abulld his abatlered ad! esteem bycprovld&)i me with ,IOIDetbing he felt he was 'CfePriving me of. l'm """' n<M I didn't g• along with blm. Not for my 'sake, but for bis. - EL ,\NOR DEAR.ELEANOR: Obv-y,JW uve . ' --''" .. .... npl-tloo. AJiotbtr ditnplll m!pt •-eome ap with a dUremt OM -11111 ei6'r ceiuid Q\le ~ rigltt. I ' DEAR ANN LANDERS: Cln a l'lO" gal get out DI a sport5 car without Ioo~iag like a baby eltpllant doin( a toe dance? I'm cJallng 111ree guyl who own 'tlilmbl .. aize can. Tbe'te mi!Pt' be a digniffed way to get oot or tli ... baby boKgles but I can't flgure how to do it. Please cume up with some advlet -not only for me but for my suffettng slaters. I'm not alone. -TREE TOPPER. DEAR TOPPER: J'm $'1" ud I Jeel like a m00te · wbea 1 tty M cUmb out ... -" .... · You'll -rleol.-.ia.lf,.. -. .. cloie to dae door ... poulttle, a:eep- your U.t1 t~, pot y-• 1q· out flnt ud extend ,...,.-..... .. &lie 1end,.... wllo.-be .-, tiie ... -'H lie'• a 1enae.111. (P.S. 1e.carer1t.-' llot to pot all· ,_ welPI !lilt tli1I Jl'UP IW Y" "'"Y Dip tM cilY .ter ta llll back.) . l What awaits you on the ottwf aide of the marriage veil? How tin you be sure your marriage wW wor\t Rud Ann Landers' booklet "Maniait-Whit · to Expect.•• Send your i:eqilest to Ann Landers in car.e ol. yOut newspaper enclosing 50 ce,.nts in' coln, and a )ong, stamped, self-addressed envelope In care of the DAILY PILOT. • ~·· • .. '• =~ ~l :i ·A lumn ae Offer Early Christmas Huntington Valley residents are being assisted with Christmas plans by members of Delta Gamma Alumnae Association of Huntington Beach, who are selling Christmas cards with proceeds earmarked for aSsistance to the blind. Shopping .early are Mrs. Michael Tooley (left) and Mrs. ruchard Schrader, chairman. The sale will continue through November and anyone wishing to view the cards may ca11 Mrs. Schrader, 9611-2110. ' Your Horoscope_Jomoaow • Gemini :. Follow Your Runch SATURDAY AUGUST t By SYDNEY OMARR &boat womt• and llberalloa. S.stt&ariu mty sound pedan-,. Uc en tlth 1ubjecL TEEN DATING IDNTS: AilIBS (March ll·April 19): Tiie mooe 11 a e.., ud Leo There is a breakthlvugh 1C! wtn altlae mtder tt. Aquartu1 creativity. You ~ve reason Pould Uve talk •boat. to celebrate. You gain plaudits .PtfmaHBey of relatlouhlp., • 'of those Who .previouslT 'tfere wtatle CaDOer m.lgllt set stuck,. 1-;l,kepUcal. Leo In d i v 1 di.I a l wUla dlect. Roinaaee i.Jiaures pro~nlly. h!PllPlod for Aries, wklle.')' 'r.AURUS lAprjl ZO.May 20): Pllce1 1hoUI take It 1low 1nct New-'persons enter your Ille. euy. 'I1dl la a daie Ume You rediscover qualiUes in wlald: feablrel Dows, tK family members. You also grand gesture, f Io we r 5 , find out that you possess more romantlcllln, c r ea t I v e en· of value than imagined. Be deavon. Unique 1Hcb gets perceptive. YOu learn much. dealred respome. Muell talk GEMJNI (May 21.June ·SI): , r ·To avoid tlisappoi.Dtment, prospective ' brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white ,l?;lossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De- partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received !allowing the wedding will not be userl. . For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline is not met, only a sto<y will be used. To help fill requirements on botb wed- din~ and engagement stories. forms are avwlable in all of the DAIL y PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by Women's Section staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466. Lutheran Nuptials Performed Accent on utUiiation of points or view. you invite natural ta I en ts, qualit!cs. financial 1ain. I( you adhere Follow through on hunch. to narrow course, you oould Learn by shJtlng knowledge. Jose. Realize thla ~d respond 'Obtain ti!nt from T1urua lK'COl'dingly . Check 1 ea a l meeisage. Relative m a k e s points. surJ!l'l!e apnouncemen!· AQUAJll\JS (Jan. ZO.Ftb. · ,,CANpER, (3une 21.JuJy 22): 18): Streu on public rel1Uon.s1 ·Some may make c I aims general popularlty1 Be an ll· regarding your _possessl~ns"i l.entive 11,ter>er. You. g11Jn wltt\ Defend you own .. intere!ts., attitudl or r~vlty. No Re,,Ort to unorthodox methods.. need to force lss\itl.: Time Check individual wbo · brings fa vors your efforts, goart. rumors instead of facts. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): LEO (July 23 _ Aug. 22): Pleasant social affair should Definite advancement made not be used as ei:cuse for toward cherished goal. Aries overindulg~. Remember individual figures in schenle past resoluti0ft$ concemlng ol events. Go straight to the diet, ~eneral tieatth . Fjne fur top; there is room for you. get-log,ther with associates, Utilize sense of showmanship co.p;orkers. VJRGO '(Aug. 23-&pt. 21): IF TODAY '1S YOUR Stop playing gam es. Find out BIRTHDAY you have natural what it is you desire. Then executive ability. You do bet. see the right people, Your te.r working for yourself than cycle is on upswing. Be f th · forthright, confident. Visit one or o ers. Year is very confined to home, hospital. significant.If single, marriage 23-0ct ) could be on horizon. If mar-LIBRA (Sept. . 22 : "ed ddl famil You may find that some who ri , an a lion lo Y make promises do so under is distinct pOssibility. In pro- the influence. Be realistic. fessional area, there is added Trust those who p r 0 v e d responsibility and g r e' a t e r reward. themselves in past. Family member is making valid To 11nd out wno·1 1....:~v ,..,. vw 111 moner ind kl~•· onltr SYdney o.n.rt'1 statements. Llsten. b0ol<1.i. """-' H11111 19• M111 ,,,.. Wom<!n." s.nd blrttlidatt 1rtd JG ~r111 SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): to Om1rr .-.S!lakm' Seer111, th• You need more than flattery. DAILY PILOT. &CUI JU•. Gfand c.ntrM Sl1tlon, New Vort;, N.Y. 10D17. Get; UJe facts .. ~k sources.,...-=~~-.~=~~-~ ·social event could provide AndY,'s Fun 1 valuable contact. Be con-Ask any kld. "Ask Andy'' Is fuli. siderale toward one who SttmS slow. Set· fine example. Ste It Saturday~ In tM DAJt;Y SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-·PILOT. Dec. 21 ): Good lunar asJiect.";ii~~~;;~iiiiii~~~ coincides now with journeys, If higher educati0rt, your ability J Ir: J UPHOLSTERY\ , to gain and utilize knowledge. Ml!ANSI OU.t.LJTY, INTEOll:ITT-, A. h" h dm' Sl!ltYICl", CJIAl"TSMANSHI ... 'I un 1g ; many a ire you WE Lll(I! ••AUTl,UL l'UltNITUa and will express their feelings. WI! ACCEPT C"-'LLl!NOl!S I CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): By observing various 64Z·5176 J .. SEMI-ANNUAL SALE ~t~ Art Forms Draw New Interest Newport Harbor Lutheran Church was the setting for the wedding of Sue Lyon, daug!Jter of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Lyon of Anaheim and Roo Souder, son ol Mt. arid· Mrs. Walter Souder of Newport Bead1. Thi s is the 11 G I STARTS FlllD4 Y,'.JULY 31, 9 a.m.: l One ••. REDUCTIONS UP TO 75%! ~ .:. By J,F.AN WILUAlllS : l --Of .... D.n'f' I'll•! ,,.ff , 1 :: If it's made out of wood • =~ ·I NOW OPEN! :; ;. :? .. I Fa mil y Butc her ·. ., .. .. . .. .. . ., . .. . ,. ~ .. .. ' . ' ' ' -~ ---< . . . . . ~ .. , ROBERTS Olde Tlmf! BUTCHER SHOPPE 270 I. 17ttl -CM'9 Mee Nezt to ''TM Sizder"•642·71 t i A Moetn10rl Educ:atio11 CCtll deftlop ••c:c:n1h1l attl~ towards l101nhu1 a11d llYl11t tl1rl1tt tlle crltlc:ol for111otlve Yffn, AGES 21/J TO t FALL ENROLLMENTS HOW ~--CALL ---, CMta Mna. 645·2121 N•~port hoc• 541·2516 _J_ I I I I - I aod boadq1eobles.ia II art 1. • that some arUsta ...., IA.be The average gallery vi.1ltor, moving along with tedmology. faced with pai.Wngs done jn 'Itley employ modern bot colored w , cDnposititm materi.U with a great 111,11 . :!' · , of "'""\"• using, fne esample. of ,pamteif.. •11berglass tJ'lb. pl.mies · ~in . paintl~g and met.al, . or collages • uilng sculpture. -Artists may find everything from .P~C. 1¥1:5 .' beauty in f~ 0~ fiberglass, to saw ,;blad:S, ~'·f'·!l;i1 ·· ~· 1 plexiglass or 'eVen in discarded mod~ art lS toq ptc. out'. ·objects sudl ·as paper cups We ,hear abot1t 'such uO. or lengths of11,wire. The new familiar things as collographs forms call for ·new terms. and serigraphs, m~ame or The unfaztilliar w or d encaustics and we wonder "macrame" 'iefers to the wh8!-.has happened to the old knotting of twtne Into various famili~ art forms. . . des i 1 n s '.l'ancl shape~; Actually, the old famihar serigraphs a~ silk , screen 'forms.we still around -but prints (and :some modem some ce being used in new artists may place such prints ways in conjunction with our on plexiglass);-coli<>graphs are space-age t e c b no 1 o g Y ex-printed from .collages or all plosiod. kinds ol odd mtiterials such as Art instructor Charles Bruce acryllcs, wires or metal wash- 'Piner interviewed at Orange ers, and encausUcs utilize Coast' College commented hot colored Wax instead of --' paints. INGENIUOS USE "Art can ~ made out or anything that can be ordered," Piner commet1ted, pointing to a striking statue, standing in the" Art Center patio of a Samurii 1warrlor which was made of di~arded auto parts. An •. .orapge Coast art student's ;work was partially ready Jar· showing in the col- lege art iallerf, and the large aJmost muraMlke paintings done in vivid· acrylic paints illustrated «Ml· of the. in- novations of our time. Acrylic paints, Piner ex- ·. plained, . • r • • qyi~:<IJ'Ying. water based pairU made from plastic that cm be used on abooel 'Pf type of fabric stretdled fo .vi-frame Tiber than Che b9ied c a n v a s • ........,, for oil•,'.!"< paints, on the other hanb, can be throne d io r esemble wate~lors. ' " OTHERS DIFFER . OOi:er artl!b may niove away from tedmology, Piner said, and employ n~a t iv e materials sudl as bur1ap and henip or dellberatelr strve for uneven, effects in pottery or sculpture as a kind of pro- test against the smooth. func- tional appearance of machine made articles. Artists who may seem ex· tremely modern actually may be using ancient forms in new waysl Modem &CU1ptures In glass that emerge free flowing and assymmetrical came from the same process used by glass blowers centuries ago. Piner added· that ' ' t h e perVersity of our time" seem s evident in some works of art which seek to combine the hand made look w i th materials of modern invention. Laminated wood, for ex- ample, whidl was invented for aircraft comtruction in World War II, now is used to polished eflect in wood sculpture. Art is different in the space age -yes. But so too is the viewer. st·R·E·r··(,ff ·& SEW-.. .. -·- ,. . . .. A. SUiU'UfllD METHOD Of stWINo WITH ~HIT&~ , . • SPECIAL! llaijilrog Sult Cletiet .,; ...... ALSO The bride was given In m,ar- riage by he< mother and father for the double ring ceremony perfonned by the Rev. Ronald White. Miss Carol Dye attended the bride as maid d. honor. Miss Karen Probasco was bridesmaid and Jill Kratz was flower girl. Derek Johnston carried the rings. Larry Souder was h i s brother's best man, and usher- ing was Terry Temple. The new Mr. and Mrs Souder, who were classmates at Newport Harbor High school, will make their home in Costa Mesa. Boots Wa lk Into Fall Boots for the smartly dress~ ed woman just go. on a1l4 on. They show for fall . and winter in sort, crushed suede, in shlny vinyl-liWe finishes, in kid, and even .paterned brocades and the like for evening. Favorite heiibt.for dfytiroe; , just below the knee. Favotit~ material with inmly designers; the reptile , pat- terns. , ALSO · 20%-30% OFF REMNANTS BASIC EIGHT ClASSES I ' I I . I I I I I. I - S.T-R.t-T.C-11 & stw IN ORANGE ,124 E. ICATRL\ • (714) AU-2141 Solo LAnh ll'lvn. thru Sat. • A .. nt e •A .. uif 11 0!'£111 M.f 9 A.M.-5 P .M. lvt's 7·9:30 P.M. Sit. 10 Ul-5 P.M. . - .... ..__ . J. . .I I l , f All Sununer Me~lllise Goes ! No Gimmicks ! . ; .· • JUST TREMEHOOUS VALUES FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK '. , UR .ENTIRE STOCK OF SWIM SUITS Regularly to $35.00 $8 TO $18 WET SEAL CHARGE HUNDREDS OF COTTON SHIFTS and PANT DRESSES Rog u)orly ta $25.00 SfiOO to s13oo MASTER CHARGE ENTIRE STOCK QF SUMMER SHOR,TS and TEE SHIRTS ~ogulorly to $1 3.00 Regularly to $50.00 R.egul1rly to • $17.00 s300 to SfiOO IANKAMERICARD POL YEST R, CO'R'PN AND BLE D ... PANTS , s500 t • • ,, . . , SIYIN SOUTHLAND LOc:AflOHI ·. ' ' . .. ·I , " ALL STORES OPEN SUNDAY, AUG, 2nll, Noon 'tll 5 p.m. I ' ,, I I I ~-.,,~-~--~~~~ ... ...,·.~---¥''=""~~·--__,,._ . . -....... - . . . . YOL 63,' NO. 182, ;c SECTIONS, -42 PAGES - -. .. ORANGE COUNTY,· qALll'ORNIA -· . . FRIPA Y, JULY l r: l970 •. :-.~ ·~ . . . -j . -. N.Y. sq.ea ~t ' .~ ' .. ,. -. . IEN -CENTS. • -.. --~ .L' ., • ~ ~ ~• '1 I , .... :::. t ....,.:!. ... Wh~ t.' s · lli -it -Lih.r:a ty '" Books or • Bar l)qde-·Band~~ ) U. bm:oque . muaic ·and baseball are · "We Wlllt :aoin.thini• for <Y.ryone •IJI pe'bapo on a ltuo·~·and ·wl~ pot~ merclallzing a. PU!lve Park too mucli pooed 10,QOO.squar.:foot . mJ4it~ qntll 'funds b<come av,llable to-~~: both asPect,s pt. culture, .where do they. thiJ location,' ... Neutr:a countered. ·'·'A tial lnstruction by top, a(tista. with 50llle of theSe library additions." • recreation hall tie pl.a~ nut . to tbl It. : , . · , . . · .• fit in' the concept of a central library chfor·an_,~,to11m•mllaliy·.~,th-·e ll!J;. ~.an uperience A• food service area or small 1nack Vasquez objected to the "hofbrau" and library rather Ulan oa the edge Of 'Hun-A "'Wa,it . and see" attltµde 'was 1c»n.- -·~ bar -_ .. _;:...a .... .JL.-u"'of sorts. •M..• .. ht tbt •concept of the library .was UJ\gton Lake. ~..1--..1 best,.... pta--ent o1 ••• --for HunUn..t"n Beach? ,.-iWll,... i11.11w-• .. """& ' ~~ " • "."' _.., • ~r·-'"T'I-· e..., •. A1 lfeW-ideas • 0(£ered ·br. Neutra and -A planel4J'jum ' with a S p .i t.1 being applied ·\o Im.any craft arefs not "In this • sense w~·, could conoeatr1te on· facility. . t. 'c . ~7 ·A -variety 'Of'-opinlons was of(ered ·others to ei:p1nd the library beyond· plane1-riµm tnstrqment. necessarJly •belonglng in it. all Ul& Darder activiUei-in 'of.y aru Current plans rot the library cill .~ Thursday as mare thaO a dozen mem~rs it! traditional concept.include: . -A communieaUan center for amateur ''I consider baroque music 8nd baseball and not spoil the passiveness of• tbt· it least a 60,000 square-foot atructurt of tbiJibrary board. perks~commission ...--An·art. plleey and exhibit area with· telellision, film" making, and •. theatrical bolh a part of culture," replied Dennis otbe\-lak~," Neutra said. . at ·the southern pp of Talbert LUe. andi.,City staff dilcUssed ·with architect a. rtlattd .. sbOp'' ~e 'e~ced producllons. " · . , Mangers, a member of the parka cofn. Mangers · said, "No. The library will Neutra.admitt'ed' aome .or b1J .11,Utru'f D'ion .Neutra, the pro·po· sed -libranr and . art~ns m 1 ~&!11 -:0ri,, J!_l~~ .reproduC:Uon, -A·natural hislory area.and a museum mJs.siOn and principal of Harper" School have· to stand .on it.! own. We "'lhauldn't would require mqre . spice· and costa .,, equ1~en . . .. with a display of l0c1l or interesting in Fountain Valley. "Tl)ere ls no question use ~· slmmlck of placin~· the lwo woWd rise abovt the originally estimated its ftinctiorfin'the ceri,tral ~park. -:Pr'Ovisions-fM wOOO Working, elec-flora aad f,una. · that expansion of the library lnto1 a buildings toa:ether so more people~ $2.1 million. , .''The :tdei !'of it: is to · appeal to1 the· trical crafts, metal,workitii :aod other -Book store. multi-purpose area is desirable." aee the library.'' --_ Se.verna concluded the ·Inform a 1 huni1~ ... !>eiiiJ . at "!M,;e · l_evels than just' ·typ,es of manual. arts actl~el which -fra.visiOns·fot."spee.d.,reading courses. Mangers, along', with the majority of Several apeakel'I' ~opposed ithe idea of meeUrig• with the reminder that economJc • cheCit!!C_-ouL a boOk, _,..,Neutra said. . e.lttitt::.&UJe noise .or mes!~ Robert Vasquet; ~a ·member of the those present, did o'ppose the concept rock music and square dancing next factors wodld answei: many of the quea.- 'Sci!;M;. Q.fficial.! bi.Ik'ed at Uie-term. r-. ---,Ah a~rpoHCOiiimunU.y room.-city's . planning''Nff.-challenged som·a of'in.strucUon in the library, while agree. to the libFal'f. lions ral$!<1 during thl•· and otblr "c\ilklral J'll.S09fC! ce~• .. t aril ~r(Ued ·::--~ babj~tting .,ranjement.wt_th •plf.Y Of Neuti:a'i Offerliijl. t . ing that tome provision for aeUviUes Tom SeVf:!JlS, ~ d e .v e 1 o pm e n t diaCussi~ ·· , ' · • for: a, classical con~911 of, a.1 Ubrary ~ .~:fOI;" ~. ~ + • • "J.don't think wei can offer )qmethi.Dg might be made. coordinator, rem' evf:FYOM that the ·;very · g we· w'ant to put In there, _ .prlliilrily booit"orfellted, · -~llo.!enllft! PfOdtlclnl;:i_rtisp shOpe, .,fot ~~'!i."!'! •ijcf;tr. Jll!nk . '!!'re_ "l!'"· At one point Neutra lllU'5lelf a pro-recnoatiOn ball baa )1e<!l delayed . ..,-way wJ11 bav• to be jUJtllied llnancially." __ ... r -+ -• • • "-------.... . ... -· . <~·. ------.... -,_ .. ---.. -. . .MARINE ·G_uARDS EL TORO'.CRASH• SCENE!'AS AIR P'OICE 10NE 'rAXIJ ~ 'RUNWA't 1 1 •. , -P'retldent'a ·Pl•ne W•s Being P re.,. red for Training Fliiht When ·crash ·~uM;rod • . . • • ,... • , , lo •. ·~;:t ( I_! -'~'{.;. ,, ... r..,. °'I '• "'· "'"" ''"; I' • , .. • •. "'r o,:t."4~.lf'• I· I '0:' ' . ' >,. -I '· ., . ' • -' -~ .. • Oil Finii Fined _. · $500 for SpjJJi~g Into Waterwa y · -El t1:n·tington Her~ Filo~ Dies in El Toro Crash A. '$500 fine was ,!tapped .on an oil 'By .ARTHUR R: \{INSEL ~pany this ,week . for allowing. oll to or .,.. 1»1w ,.,,.. lfeff, seep into Huntington Harbour waterways One. ·Wing droopil)g. as i~ I•nded wi.th inhalation · 1wbile inside tbe bluing, ske)eta} fusela1e, but was helped ' out of the wreckage to safety. Israel Nixon's Mide~_t _Appea l.Heeded • -TEL A VIV (UPI) -The Israeli cllbinet, heeding an appe.al from Pre!!il- dent Nixon, today accepted U,e U.S. Middle East peace proposals lhat lncluda a three-month ceasf>.Hre on the Egyptian front. Egypt -had accepted th< propo5a!J earlier. The decision was ta.ken .by the cabinet. hr the fourth crisis session of the we.ek despite the ~threat of a walkout by the sU: Gaha!"'Party members of the National Unity Coalition that would imperil the government of Premier Golda Meir. ... . dflCussJeoa W\lldl woOtd.'~ Ir, jro- bJem of, ;a cease-!!.t:e. Oil ~: ~rs with Ambuudor Gwm•r ·V. Jarrina IC· ting u mediator, and bopelUlly, to preparelor· .. aot!•Uooa to"Ottte.a10l!Qal •nd to the conlllct. . -. ~ • • - The. l!lwkilb Glhal party ID1'"111Ced . 'f .J;".-. ~ 1ix mernbera of the liawkish party qalns_t ~ lht Jl'Oll0!'1, .... ' li . ~"f)lt"9t!li~~ (g " ...,. l'""'' i!jf•· . • :1 . ' wiur~ · h; Hfj,,;._et;'llier ·ala ·:-. ·;· · . , ... , .. no~" ~ ~ put i!Ut_ <-4 .,. TERllY QIMWI • llUP . 4'ildit •~l '• , f 6f Wl9""" PW... I • _. • Po!iUl!.\1-""""'"' Aid )I WU llllllkely "I slill, b&ve I Job.:'" •:.J\llrlUf Gaba! would -tw .any. lirm doc:Won Cbaiiomi Scbwuk•voky!lld tb!S. !Don>- bef~ Sunday,, leaving the country still lng after wb'lning in crurt her fight teeter111g on the edge of a governmental to remain a principal for another year crisis .. The Gahal bloc,' which 'has 26 r . • . • · • • seals· in the · 120-seat unicameral parlia-in Huntillgton Bea~h. . • , ment; had decided Tuesday to· walk out 'lJle Job was g1ve.n he.r by1 qt¥ge il the cabinet said yes. County Superior Court Judge Rober\ L. Despite the threat, the Gahal ministers Corfman, who said Thursday the Hun- were-' invited ·to sit on a minlstetiil ungtl)n BeaCh 'c1£y st:hool •Districl'-bad committee wbi~ will draft the' 'official . n~t given. the LeBard School prtnc1ji}.1 Israel reply. . . ! . • . . . · The:.Jsr.aell~statemen~ today sakl-ISrael sufUc1en wa1'Dllll!.;~fore . demoting . bet waS prepared · to 1.subsci'ibe• lb the U.S. . to classroo,Jn teacher May; 13. . ; . .ln · •dvlll.ce iOf-the···cabinet lelliCnrhy woitld.,leave. ~e gov.e;~nt lt•the ~ .wu,ln tbe ·a.ffirmative apd despite ·~ deilt Nixon's assurances nlur1~ay - ·the : American · p~J)oaed Ull"M-tnoatli ceaae=.flre would.not 'De used. for' a Soviet.. Egyp/Jan buildup. . . • • • ' • •' I""" ~ .... ~,•.ll"lllll" ·' ' . 'l'lli, ifril&'I!' .mt.cf Ja•ffrlr1h1• a mr. paNi>ta •Of cblldnn •ID LeBlid 'SChOoi comp1a1ntd u ·M«1e11,.11ou1 Mro. SC!"'lllkvvstr •• ptlilcipal. : · Mollett tJleli dftred Mrs •. Schwliii!W· s~y. a chance to resign. or 1?f! tramterred ·as·a P'lnclPil'to ano\l\Or 11¢ool. Sh•er" fused both ·offer,. · , . 0n,r:-MJy' 13 the~ prtricQ>.al spent 'ti,I hours .. diac~lnc. the ease in . executivf . 1...r0n wllli diltpc~ tru.s!eea . aplL at!' nilnistrators.. . At the end · of 1ir: hours tne · LeBaril Principal lllll rtfuaed to accept transfu I Feb. 24.. a: bounce. a1giant XC130 ·midair .fueling Tbe City~ of Hunti_!'!~n. 'Be.ach won . tanker careen · down the nmway at a criminal ruti against the GroYer c.ollins -El Toro:..¥aJ.iQe. l(:qrp.s Ali-St8tion Thur~ Corp, of Compton, whi ch operates.seven -day., ru~ovu:and·uplodedln flames. wells near Harbour View School. 'The pilot, a ·much-decorated veteran · M~'!,lcal Corpsman Mike Shipplel 1uf. Iered burns on. Ule hands while ad. m.inistering+aid to theJnjur_e_d.J:!len. _ Operations Officer Col. Ken Huntington credited Sgt. Grover St. Clair's r~ue team with saving the survivors, although.1 they had to wait tor firemen. p~posals for a 9().(iay cease-fire "It .Corfman'11', detiSion ·means. M·r.s .. leest onAh'e.:.EgyptJan fron&.!!-'J!his ruled Schwankovlky-wiU:have-a~leut another · ~t a cease-fire now -«?11 th~· •Jordanian year In .IJ\e di,strict,a_. 4! P!ill?.Jlal! tbouih front where 1 Arab guerrillas have not necessarily at Lea.rd' School. or {'fl' ~iin~ ao..,she IWU Wmo'-1 ·io the itatus of.a· clusroom teacher. -titlmlnlltraton;-tnliteii iiiilli!ii"~ . s<liwan!iov&iiy, re!WiOd ' toJ nvlll' wti.1- Judge Fenton Jones of west Orange · ol ·~ietnam• helicopter .duty, died in the . . ' . . . blazing wreckage, which came to rest courity Mun1c1pal C.Ourt, le~ed ~h.e $500 only. 200 yards-'.from Presidenl Nixon~s f~, but suspended a possible JaJI sen· parked Alr~Force.•One 3etlhler. tence for Grover Collins Jr., presi'dent A midfield, crash .crew raced . tp . .tbe or the corpora tion, on co~ition no.such scene· and was .praised ,for saving the oil leakage occur-over the neirt year. lives <i four ~e~. _members, three of , · . . whom •were1.ba.dly· 1nJured. , '"".e expect. the successful p~os~cut1on Firf;t, Lt-Roger w. Mul.lins, 27, of of .this case will have a beneficial impact Kuntington. Beach. perished in the on other oil operators who should take overturned four-engine t u r b o p r op every precaution to avoid such oil spills," aircraft. . City Attorney Don Bonfa said. . The lnjured crew m_embers were 1den· 0 ·1 h d d r . of th eo· u· • tilted as: 1 a seepe rom one e 1~5 -Maj. ·waiter ·cyikewicz, ·41, Missim1 wells Feb. 24 . It streaked across city Viejo. . · streets. into a storm 'drain and eventually -Capt. Ro~tll.(Walla·Jr., 28, Tustin. ran into the Christiana Bay area of -Staff ·sgt. JCeMeth C. DB:vis, 311 Huntlngtqe Hai'bour. Santa Ana. . Coliins ~aid for cleaning the oil •from -Cpl. Kenneth1Metzdorf. -21 , who lives II f . on base. the1 waler surface, but stl aces action All were admitted to Orange County by the district attorney's office on behalf Medical Center, where· all but the major or the CaH rorilia Fish and Game Com· were listed in critical ·condition today · mission. and perhaps a flurry of civil from burns and smoke inhalaUon. stilts from angi!y boat owners. Two members of the rescue crew - The well that leaked was !~led near who carried• out three vidllf!I -were The ,firefighters laid a blanket of foam through ·the flames as a safety path and the crash crew smashed its way into the' plane and had the men .. out within two ·minutes: · A column of smoke v!Sible for 2.S miles shot into ·the sky from I.he ~ne or the tragedy on Runway 34, which· runs in a north-south direction. A panel of invuti.gators ·was im- mediately convened to· probe1 the first accident involving Marine· Refueling Squadron 352 in 11 years. Built to carry 10,000 caUons of highl y volatile fuel, the KC130 was not loaded, otherwise the cruh. -witnessed by hundreds -would have been.far worl!le. Lt. Mullins, holder of. two Dilµnguish ed Flying Crosses and 32 Air Medals. -was making his third toucb;.arni-go pr1c\ice threatened to continue the wa r. S. A. Moffett, district superintendent, The U.S._propoaals,wer:e vaguely word· said no decision has bee"n reatjled on . ed. and Israet. was forced repeatedly whether1 to appeal the. court order or. to seek clarificaUon fl"tl1ll Washington where to place Mrs. Schwaflkov&ky. on their meaning. The Balers proposals "The bo,ard of trustees meets TuUch,.y spoke specifically of a, c;eue-fire on night,. '.J'bey,'11 decide our qext Steps," the Suez Canal front " and hop~:fully tlf MOffet t explained. the other fronts. "l don't think . l,bey ·want nie ltQUnd But during the ·9(1.day period the here very much," Mrs. Schwankov1ky, belligerents could begin preliminary the center or a stormy controversy the Taxation , Top of Pier . Facing Beach Council landing about 3 p.m. when the plane New taxes. and the controversial Top Orange County Apartment· Hour e crashed." of the Pier plan are expected to provide Association urgill( them to attend , the No immediate determination of factors . the llvelie'st action at the HunUngt(ln meeting . to stop 'a move to· increa!e which led to the aci:ldent was offered. Be!ch City Council meeting MondBy the. annual tax on apartments ln the but witnesses said the KC130 bounced evening. $6 and snegged the left wing which broke city to · ' . wu ~ in the e1ecrutlve.seasion. 1 r.Joflelt aafd th< situation 'hid In- . from. cOMylairita over ttiree years. Mfs. · SchwankoVsky 'said cl14rg..,· qil1Jllt he: bad nevet i>een OJ(>lained. • , . Aflt!ir trus~, had deomoted bet 1 Mr.I. Scl\wankovsky went to court. to ,.btp. her pooltiijn on 1n>.,;t1s sbe-bad nbl been liven lldVance notice of he.r 'dein.~ lion. · ' ' Judge, Corfman, after studylng-ih&C'8t the .·P,Ul two daya, l?'ID\ed ·a writ of mandate, forcing her. reins.t4tern,p~ ., prlnclpaJ, because there was · inadequat! no~ce of the diatrict's intention to..re- clallily htr. . . ".I tho!!lht-they ....., wr1u1t In whal . tJity did anti, I ~ to fight them;•: 1 M~., Schw,ankovskY qpla~. '.'l thJni: It would be aOll<I Jor the district. II> I have to .live. with me. and aee if I I can handle .things." , -priJlclpal Said she's·not ·si1re wtlal her pl~ art for next1year. "That depends on ·"bat the trustA\ql t- do Tuesdaf nigh(.''. .' I ff A qotict . has been sent out to the The ·present acale. fee on the 10,000 ° Cr,tes, bundles and other debris bounc-300 Huntington Beach members of the apaitine11ts in .Htmungti)n· Be a ch - ed into the air as the craft spun• 180 averages $1. • ' 1 · • Algonquin Street and Heil Avenue. The also Injured despite the fact one wore leakage was blamed on faulty main-an asbestos suit and Ol)'gen muk. 0r..,e -Ceut tenance , said Huntington Beach officials. Sgt. Bob Tribett collapled due to smoke Preliminary Hearing Set In Bah v's Liquor Death . w degrees and flipped over, its engines The S6 tu: on · apartments ls ''b&« breaking away and skldlng down the Booby Trap Ki1J s. CUlsidered ... I way of'belpiq·to raise concrete, spewing fire. money to. pay for •. ~..;eivic ~~ilitiea, Sgt. St. Clair said one of the crew including the civic center ctmplex, members, his flight suit in flames, La Palma G~ .. } library, and fire stations. . · · managed to stumble out of the blazing .LI. The council· will fake another look wreckage on his own. at.the .. TOp Of-the Pier plan'for .redeVelop- One witness was Bud Hanson, a ranger A 17-year-old La Palma girl was shot ment 0£ a · five-blOc~ ·w~ · dgWgtown at nearby Lion Country Safari, who 11ld to dea th Thursday night by a booby Monday evening.. . ' the huge lar.ker had just passed overhead trap rifle ~iggered wllen she rai11ed The city's ~notnic c o n 1 u 1 t 1 n L.s , and its engine11 .seemed silent. a bathroom window to e.nter her Economic Research :AuoclateS CERA) "They alwayg make a Jot of noise, boyfriend's apartment In Anaheim. of Lo8 Ahgel,es, ha's updated •Ua study A Huntington ~aeach couple accused organs. even the Cats look up ,'' said Ha8'0n. A .22 caliber· bullet struck Melita Jay on the feasibility-of convertlng....U:..aiea of murdering a 12-month--Old baby by An .autopsy CClldUCled by "the Orange Another ra'Jlger watching from a high Bonham in the left eye, police said. frotn Sixth .Streer lo Flrit . street into giving him alcoholic drinks will face County Coroner'• otiioe showed that the point in the park, John Pardue, sald Neighbors •ho heard the shot ahortly , an 1,8QO-spece-J><V~.lolt ··1 ....... a preliminary hearing Aug. u ·at West child had c<l'llUibed exceuive amounts Lt. Mullin's aircraft touched, then rose before 9-+p1m1 found her pn the1 lawn The ·U~L·st¥r ·"~~0t:d¥td itler ., or•nge Coonly M~Jcipal Court. • • <>I alcohoL , . . , ·o1f the runway ·a 'bi~ •and ,nOsed '•'Id , .~ ~~r:t"'• ~•d!!4-~.~hour !he, coiuic,q1~rpi<l1 lba\',lli<~°'lilpl~ One of th~, 1"1Cllll!!d, C.rm<lila L.r • ·Rapp, idtntiliotH•" police u a Marine · '.Jl a steep angle. '. , · • "', • • \II""*' . , M~1'Hd!!1\""· ~t,.Gf,apiu~Ul!Jn .of die "'°l!"!Y ·lilt! ~yoolds, 21. of 2222 Dela~art ~t .. IS .. J~U~· Ui #J..wll ~S,11.. and 1 the. :\if. ~,ce.,Ofl•. w~ ~rited GO ill!li ' ~-·~.,.··-· · IOM up . Vv•~' a. ibnlloll -·~ ilo I !~."~iO•~•iL ~~~i"'1/~~ .. ~al •~d,.w•"' ,aJi<:~·Oe«l',\t tlie i'u!i'l'•Y 'PrtAAi'' ~1..:cv · ,' ,bl(,.j>oliC< · l!,ll0,000. • i' "•I · l 'I·', ! ibliidi · Ga~,\i;,iJlA~ '1' Q!',lilli. ·li~bt•'*;lli!i'11, , .!. " . ror. '111Uti0.: 1Pt'actlce\fl(gllt atlcl,tol>k '~·'"'l'I"'' tit'1bf *"'1iont ·•I• •Brander C.slle, U1i&tant·d1Y aifmlnl. e 1ed'Jrea. fs'iieuf iil""Orange cOunty · Bolb weft brilinilly taken Into Cll.litody off later. ... ' 1 ~. •.1:20 l .rri. N9 Chtr'~ 6a~'fbed". strator, aaid,. this f!19P)ing,_thit the l!RA 1 Jail· in lieu of $62.500 bail . on child fteglect charges lhOrtly sfter Lt. Mullim iwOni ~ltt ~tion'~ second· Thel rifllt~~ppa~~)' ~ •i1utd •as · reported that lb'e plan would stllJ ~k Detectives have alleged thal \he infant, the baby's death .. but were re-arrested , highest award for flig~t. berolsm twice . & ~ma~ .burgliri-':lafaud ·device. despite '1he one-1.hlrd lncrtaM· m.· ~ I ?t1yfon Reynolds, was given ak:oholic when investigation yielded sufficient while serving In Vietnam. fro'"m Ml!liY The ... Jroht' dQOr Wll:a 10cted" .Md no one qulsiUon costa.~ • ' beveraget -Including rum and Coke evldenct to warrant the murder charge. to November rot -.. aJ'ld thtn was horri: at 'the aparttnenl ), J~ni Miss The council .,;111 meet in · two.·~ , -'Which • caused poisonina of internal accordlne to detectives. a Pemacola NAS .fllaht instructor. Bonbl.m trled the'.,1'indi>w: · ;-. •· ' Monday, at 4;JO p.m. and 7:30 p.m.· .. • I I • U you'f< looipftt .. for a cba1110 in the wuther -don't. This weekend ll'.ilr:_be~ a·.if!9d~I Ilk!! olher weekeods :wu.b sunny skies and liUle chanae iJI temper•Jure. INStni: ·TOJfA~, . . , Ru.uia's 'Moisi~u Ballet rf"tl , ~rns· to ,Los '1naelts to thaw out the cold toar Mzt wek. Dti . tbu., 'in' todau't Wtck111dcr, f . .....L. ' t. II l ;;:.,;-i-' - --·~: ,.,, -= ~ =::.: Ult ,,...! .. ::r:..ei:"Pf • ., c.-a 1f IJMe ,....., ll ~ ,1• ~ .. """ ..... _ • ..... ,,,..... ff.ll ............ .,........ . PINMt 1~11 ~ -1 '-.. _ . ._ ~ 1S • __.. J11eWt l).1J .... ' ........... ,..... .... '4' t '"' ,awt r •• ~ .. • i DAILY, l'ILOT -,I! ' _Tate ·Defense Haminers ·at Drug -Use LOI-• (1IPI) -Uoda.J[-. lilu 1 5 f I ....., lllll"obt bid' -lh1u in lf'09P .. communes" ever since .obt lei! ...me al the ace of 11 and up until the time abe joined Charles ., ___ "family." ~ .._ enm!nailon by Dal...,. ~ Paul' Fltqerald, the state's eundaaUoo by lleftNt Attorney Paol Filllprald, the atate'a prime wlll>ess -locl(tcUbat abe had a OOOllderable lmoaat of "human· experience" before lho lotnod tbe ....... cull charpd wllb the si..... Tat&Lieiaca &la¥lnaJ. F')tqlrald baa ll1d ho will attempt to ibow that 'Mrs. Kasablan'1 accounts of the killin&& were a "fantasy" that came from a mind Impaired by tbe lear -· ol drup. Mn. Kuablan Nici lhe had lived In communes from coall .to coa!l from the time she 1efl home In a llllllll town In New Hampoblre and had a cbUd wbeli Ibo wu 11. Nixon Likes News Parleys Outside DC ~ LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Prealdml Nixon b tlpeded tn have ,,_ ;,.,.. ....i.r.iic. ou-ol Wllllllncloa. He obrioualy -pleuod wltb bis own Jdltoric "ftnt" ..,. a televised (l(lft. -here w!lb Earl "Squire" Behrens, dean o/ the Calilomla presa corpa 1111ia(, "Thank you, Mr. Prelldenl. • Behrens, a polilical ~ for the S.. Fraodaco Cbnmlcle who rtcelved the Medal .of Freedom from Nuon, WU more slbdued In mttmc olf Ibo ...,_ ,.....,. lhu 'litre ·-nporbln la Wubbopo wbo abo\11 "lbanl: 100• and aWe a mod -!or the telephone. Tbe · 17-JOIM!d dllel necullve had been primed all day In bJa pluab pen~ bouee aolte in the Century Plua l!QW oo poalbte qu..UOO. be wnuld be uked. He was well prepared and seemed at ease before the stand up microphone in the hotel's glittering Santa Moclca Room, as be wu quizzed on subjects from forelp policy In ...... He wu aWred In bJa mal«m'1 blue 1111~ w!Ute shirt and blue tie. He bid a California tan and allbough the temperature la the room was down he wiped bdils ol petsplrllloo from bJa faeewllb illlilnclUn:bW .. at mr.c1 to g1 .. 111e .......,, half d tbe cwntry a chance to see a prealden- tla1 news confereuoe . on prime Ume - I p.m. PDT, - When he wu ulted for hlJ views -t the Jftllo bt ~ recalled bb own unbapp!" ~ •I bb "Iut" press cwference-in Califon1a followlq bis-dofaal : JD· the" -1* (Ubemalorlal ra<e. . -' "I just wbb l.Jiad ,U sDCJd a p!W u my wile has,'" be quipped. But it waa on hil delire to. dowqrwie Waahincton as the naHonaJ power center that be appeared lbe moat delenllve. He said he has beard ''ctiUclsm" that be leaves tbe Whit. House too olten. Muskie Urges Nixon To End Car Pollution WASHINGTON (UPI) -sen. Edmund S. Mualde, D-Malne, baa urpd Prmdent ~ to use powera bt alnady bu to eeet an immediate end to pollution from can, tnclneraton and other JOU?cea lllon( Ibo East Qiut. -~ Aid Qi-In 1917 gave tbe Seenttary of Heallh, Education and Welfare authorjty to seek a halt of "Arly emiaaiona contrlbuUng to an im- minent and -.UUll endangerment of the public health. •• DAILY PILOT OAAHGE COAST PUat.IJ.tOMG CCWl'ANT Robtit N. 'W•t4 J•ek a. C11rl1y Vk.9 ~ •1111 Gtod1I M.w11itt Th•11•• Keewil E1i1W TII•"'•• A. Jr1h1,,fii110 MW.Int t:Aw Al•1t Dlrki1t W•I 0 1111111' Qllftt'( fdlW . Alllert W. let.. AINdtMiidllw HMtf ..... IHdiOflke l7•7S a..eli lou!e"ar1' Mellittt ....w ... ,,, P.O. lox 7t0, t?641 ............. t.....,.ae.c.cm, .... ,,._ ca.It ,,,,_: D W.1 ...., Strw1 ' ""'°''' htdl' ftll .,,.., ....... lfw1rlll'C la11 C~ Jlllf MOrffl El °"""" 1t .. 1 ·-. Min.V'PILOT, W.111 .-0. • OftlMrw:d "" "-'"'-· .. .,.,.illMd dilly -· '-•w Ill ..,..retc c.dlt""' tot LffllM IMtl'I. ,._... atld'I. C..lt MtH, MIM011tlt11 lieKlt _,,. ~·"' \Ith,, ''°"" """ 1 .. , ,... .... 1 tdllllllll, °'""" Oull l"l.*lh~lllt C"'9M'I' lll'lllttM !IMl'lb .,.. " ttll W.t aallH ·~ ,......,. a.di. .,.. m weu ...,..,...., CMM MIN. • T1'1rh111 (7141 142...0JI ~ W•al11t1r c .. 1 141·1Ut Q enM1 A4v .. tt .. 11 6U·llJI ~ 1m. Ora..-Ct1Jt .. llM ........ ~. ... -''"*· """"""-· 4lllltWfllll _..., ... ''~'".._,. """" IM' • t .. f W' wlilltyl NllClel ,_,_ .... "· ...,..,., ""'*'· 1«M1 t:W •latl ..... at Nl'Wtflt tHclt ""' ""* ...._ c.ilfwft11. s~ w eerrlw CM "*"""Y' ~ -it ll_. ~1y1 lftllli.rt ,..Nt-.., CM "'°"'"IY. I .. I Linda: I Thought '.f~ Were Beautiful Loving People', . . ~ ~ takJll& J.')D W!I" Wllb.Jlllln," &be Aki. • "In-tie oukll4oon, ~I -eiPf,.. lbO bark ol a ltee, II< Ibo Her !hi _..... In <OOUDwlll li•·-!'ExllDllve .. ol drupl" willlla ·niJaall.' Wbm I joined Manson's ing was in Miami Beach, Fla., &be "I wouldn't say eztenslve. It varied. it fainDJ I wu lmpr111-.ble and I wasn't said. She next. lived with a group in From Boston Mn. Kasabian then came toa:~r." sbe aald1 • _ . Boston and t.ben joined another commune with her second husband, Robert Kasa-11Btit you bad baa CONidePable e.z. in Greenwich Village in New .York City. biaD, to 1..-0s Angeles and lived in a pe.rle~ in group livin,i. Y()U were alft\08t From there she went to the Haight-CQmmune at Venice on the ocean front a pioneer in communal living weren't Asbbury section of San 'Francisco where west of J,..os Angeles. you?" IFtzgerald asked. she lived with another-commune and "We decided to go to New Mexico. "Yes." then went . back to Bolton where she We went to a place outalde of Taos." "So 'when you Joined .tbe group at Uved witb the '~Amtrlcan Psychedelic ''Did 1t have a name?" the Splhn Ranch~ tbo&lgbt JOU knew' Circutl." • · "Yes, It wa.s called Sons of the Earth what you were clOing and what kind "What was that?" Fitzgera1d asked. Mother." of problems you might erioounter In ••we wanted to get buses and animals "I was always moving from one place communal living?-" asked Fitzgerald. and travel all over the country as a to another, usually with a group," said "Yes, l. just thought they were' circus .. I _ dQn't koow exactly why it Mrs. Kasabian. beauUful Jovµig people," she said. was called psychedelic." "Would you say you wue J.m. Fitzgerald took over croas examlMtlon "Wa.s It drug.orieoted?" presslonable when you joined the com· of Mrs. Kasabian Thursday in an attmnpt "Yes, they took drugs." mune in New Mexico?" to nullify three day1 of testimony 'in ••What drugs?" "I was . searching for something I which lhe gave an eyewitness acount "Add. They smoked weed." wasn't aure of, but I got It together ol the killillca laat AU(. 1-1. PRESIDENT FACES NEWSMEN AT CENTURY PLAZA ViefJ'Nm, tht Economy, the Mld11st end the Campus Nixon Speech Highlights War, Inflation, Pollution Girl Kidnaped In Newp0r~ Raped, Shot A teenage girl from Pico Rivera who had been raped and shot after being kidnaped in Newport Beach w a 1 ~ by four Camp Pendleton Manne. early thb morning u abe wandered Incoherently along the San Diego Freeway IOµtb of San Clemente. The glrL 17·!'W'-<>ld SUW! Price, ~ rnaiDed semiconscious thn:>ugb the morn- ing and under intenaive care at South eoUt COmmunity Hospital w!lh a bullet lodged tn· her neck. Preliminary report. Indicated lbe girl was left near the Lu Pulgas 1ate of the Marine base, aulferin( a single wound In the neck ati.r a t.rrifylng journey from Newport Beach into North San Dlero County. Miss Price, whose addres.s was not immedlately available, applrently was abducted in Newport, where she bad been vac,aUoning, police said. The four Marines reportedly found the teenager at 1:5S a.m. and drove her to San Clemmte, where they notified police. Mias Price then was taken by am- bulance to South Cout Hospital, where the bullet wound, hidden by balr and blood, WU discovered. ' Aldea al the hospital Ald Ille girl bas not yet undergone llW'IOJ'Y early this morning. Detectives from Newport Beach, San Clemente, and lhe Sao Diego Sheriffs office were at the sCf:ne through the morning. The investigation bas been joined by Investigators from Camp Pendleton, reporta said. Jl'ltzgerald told 'MWaben' that the defense for Manson ancJ three female codefendants would be based in prlneiple on the contention that Mrs. Kasablan, a 21-year-old blonde who lived with the family for one month, was not menta.lly C<XllpelenL . - Under ~natiDn, Mn. Kasa. blan admitted Laking um, peioi.. .m~ine or •11peed," intscallne and morning glory seeds. · • ' · "My sole purpose for ta k Ing hallucinogens was for realization -God -realization," she said. "And were you successful in realizing God!" Fitzgerald asked. "I realized you don't have to take peyote or LSD to diacover God," she replied. 04Most · ot my ftper'iencea while Roeket Rider Pattern of a featiJV l'd picked up, Ol'I: I'd gaze at the star1 111d the moon." ' Mrs. Kasabian said &te had had delusions while under the influence of druga, but· Wisted she did not suffer from "flashbacks" after the drug had ,/ · worn olf. , ''}las .Laking 'LSD alt.red y o u r personality!" Fillgelald asked. II "Yet, it has altered it, l 'belleYe, to a certain ·extent, bee a use it has aho\\'ed f me a loi about myself," she replied. "Are you any different than you were during July and August, 1969 (Just prior to the Tate-LaBianca a I a y 1 n g 1 ) ? ' • Fitzgerald questioned. "l sure am," she replied. "I've come to a lot of conclusions about reality and right and wrong." DAILY ,It.OT ,~ ay Terry c .... rn. Thursday was a bright, sunny day and Huntington Beach's Lake Park was full of youngsters running, jumping and climbing. And there was two-year-old Soren Mitchell of Long Beach. Higblilbts from Preaidt.nt Nilon'a first West Coast televised pre~ cor)feience : m<int.hl ago.to combat air pollution. DREXEL SALE The President said the U.S. proposal for a cease.tire in the Middle Eut would be coupled w!lb a military standstill. He forecut ahead of the ctUe fire DETAll.8 ON PAGE C • that 11Ia:aet1can agree to the cease fire and agree to nesotiaUons without fear." Inflation is being cooled and will con- tinue to el3e. The ecoriomy will move forward In the long i.nn and tbe slack In ernploynwit will be taken care of. "U there Lt a war between the Soviet Union and the Unlted States there will be no winners." That ft why It is tm· portant that the United States not be dragged into a mililary con1lict in key areu like the .Middle East. The heavy blanket of amoa on the East Coat shows thei-e isn't much time le.ft for the nation to solve its air pollution problODll. Congress ahould take P'°'."J! action OD legislation be IUbmJtted r Ice Floe Murder Suspect Ch'11'ged WAS!DNGTON (UPI) - A Mexlcan- M!ierlcan techntdan has bee1t Cbar&!d wllh munl<r in the mysttrY aby!Jig of a researdl tNm commander on a remote Jee island anoat in the Arctic Oceln aomt 300 miles from the North Pole. Time is no , longer on the aide of the Viet Cong. "I beUeve the pfo.pect, for a negotiated peace should be better 1'1'W . than they were t>e.fore the Cam- bodilJI operation." -Pµttlna: the blame on government for st~ dissent is very ahortsl&hted. It is 4 problem for college administrators. Huck Finn Derby Opens at Pier In Huntington That annual costume and fishing con- le9t known as the Huck Finn P'lsh1ng Deri>y will bob lip again next Wffk in HunUngton Beach. The 18th annual derby will begin at 9 a.m. Wednesday on the municipal _pier with _ youngsters 6 thriiugh 1( fishing for a ho$i. of prir.es. In addition to prizes for the blgge.,t, most unusual and smallest fish, awards will be offered fo.r the best Tom Sawyer and Becky Thatcher costumes. • The event q: ~sponsored by the Parks and Recreation Department and Ron's Bait and Tackle Shop m the pier: Registration is at lhe bait stand. ~ Youngsters may sign up ailytime. · Huge Transport Plane Crashes PIGGOTT, Ark. (UPI) -A huge Air Force C130 cran.sport plane crashed and burned at dusk Thursday in an Isolated pasture in far northeastern Arkansas killing all six persons aboard. Mario J. Escamilla, 32, of Santa Barbara, Calif., wa1 arraigned 11lur3day before U.S. Magistrste Slanley Ktog in stlburban Alexahdria, Va., in the shooting death of BeMie Lightsy of Louisville, Ky. A preliminary hearing was &et for AU(. 5 .. The bearded Eocamllla, In bandcuffs and chains, was flown to Dulles Alt1>0rt Thund!Y along with Llghlsy's boily. lie was acoompenied by the four tn- vesU1ators wf1o Oew to the island Mon- day to try to unravel details of the death, which. had remained a mystery because of poor radio communications. 'Ille plane sheared two poles supporting power Jines and CJJt off electricity to . many residents in the area. ~amllla wu charged under maritime law because the lee floe is considered the same u a ship at aea flying the U.S. fl•&· ' Clay County Sheriff Burness W. Dalton said all but one of the bodies was severtly burned . Witnesses said the plane "Jul! fell and blew up ." Other witnesses said the plane appeared to be on fire before it crashed into the pasture and they said it gave out "seve~al loud bur9ls'' before plun1ing Into the ground near an abandoned railbed . One of the plane's burning wings landed 300 feet from a fannhouse but caused no damage . FEATURING DREXEL'S ESPERANTO COLLECTION OCCASIONAL-DI NI NG-BEDROOM DEALERS F.OR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE 7ed11111 NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W•stcllff Dr .. 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'Tll 9 INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH Pro,.11ion11 Interior DHlgnor• Avollable-AID-NSID 3•5 North CoHt Hwy. •94-655 I OPEN FRIDAY 'Tll 9 ".,..Ten"-MMt ef Or"" c.,..., i40·'26J . . l I I { .. ' -• t . Beaeli -T~l'IBal N.Y. Stocks I ' .. .. ,_e:.a • . .. Israe·1 -- • • • •• FRI DAY,4UL'f 31 J l970 , -· . ..: 4 • ... -Ol(s .. TEN CENTS ~ --·Re'ace NiXon's Midell$t ·A ppeal:JHeeded TEL AVW (UPI) -Tbe l!taeli cabinet, heedinz an appeal fr:oni Pres!· dent Ni.Ion, todsy aecepted the U.S. Middle .East peace proposals: that include a tbree-manth cease-fire on the Egyptian rroot Egypt hid.accepted th• pfO!IO"ls earlier. The declaion wa1 taken by the. cabinet In the fourth crials session of the week .. . . . Egypllan buildup. • · · The rljih\.W;ng Gahal party not only 0P90sei -i -cease-fite but insists that any territory captured from the Albs: ~ the lts7 Iii day war reinlia · &11 ~lt:JJl .part of Isr•el. It fe&n that any Dflollated pea<e coold giean the loos of that t.rrilory. . Officlally .olaled I1taell govemnent poucy 'Is that some of tbtle issues Can be ne~ted. ~ Prealdell( Gama! Abdel · Nailer ~ Egypt a,ccepW the American ce1ie-Ure prapOsals u illd Jordan, But h!J aCikin . split the Arab world, with Syria and Iraq condemning hls action and with. Iraq oftet"lng U,000 troops to the Palest.I·. nian Arab guerrillas who have vowed they will QOt a~ept a cease-lire. In .the mliJsl of the political developments Israeli Phantoms and Skyhawks bombed Egyptian Suez Canal positkr:ls throughout the day ~ the 71st consecutive day of such attacks, and Israel sent other pllnes into Jordan to hit Jordanian army ... positions ln retaliation for att.lcka: on Israeli border setUemenu . desplte f:be threat of a walkout by the six Gahal Party members of the National Unlly CoallUon that would Imperil lbe government of Premier Golda Meir. Tho m members of the ba"kish party """" qalnel 1coepllnf·the proposal. ..,. cordln& , to the. Israeli st.Ile radio which said the' vote in the cabinet was 17 .. with. DO abstendon.s. However, they did not •immediately walk out but caucmed *·' ik * . * * * • "-DAILY PILOT ........ .,. .~ ll:Mifr MA RINE ,GU~R DS .EL TORO .CRASH SCE NE AS AI R l'ORCE ONE TAX IS DOWN RUNWAY P resident 1 Plane Wes Ben'lg Prepri'rtd for. Tr elnlng Flight Wh en Crash OccurNd Ceas~•Fire Told . . again to <Uclde tbelr oourst. . N~n Ann;ou~~$ Peace Acce ptance Area Teachers .Want Surplus Salary Funds Huntington Hero Pilot Dies ·in E'l Toro Crash Politfcal l!l)llrctl said it was unlikely Cahal would take any .firm deCW.on before Sunday, leaving UJe country still "e!erin«.1111 tlla edge of a &ovenunenlal crisis. The . Gahal bloc. wbich has 211 seats in the l»seat unicam~al P.,lia· ment, hid decided Tuesday to walk out U lbe cabinet uld yes. By ARmUR It. VINSEL from bums and smoke Inhalation. De~ the -~ the Gahal lljlnlltenJ By JOANNE REYNOLDS 0t-. D•ltr l'lllt 11• Two member• ol the _rescue crew -were lnyi~ to ait on a. ministeri_al M 01 '~ o.llY l"li.t Sl-'i One wing drooping as it landed with who carried out three victims -were committee ~which will draft tbe:·offtclal embers of the Newport-Mesa Educa· I r ·' pl • a bounce. a giant KC130 mldalr fueHng also in1'ured despite the fact one wore 1 a~ re y. · tion Association will ask school board """-I U •· •-•· said •·-el tanker careened down the nmway at an asbestos suit and ovvgen mask. , • .., srae stau:ment .,-way uaa members to dhilribute some ()f the S890.· -J ..... .....i to bscrlbe to 11·-us ooo In additional salary budget funds to El Toro Marine Corps Air Station Thurs. Sgt. Bob Tribett collapsed due to smok• was pr".-"'""".... su .. ~ . ! •· day, n1·pped over and e•ploded in, flames. inhalation while inside the blazln&, proiiouls for a tlJ.day ctlse-fire "a teacui:rs' sa lary increases, associatio n 1 I the ~ · ! .. Th President Brad Thurman· announced 1~ . The pilot, a mucl\-decorsted veteran skeletal fuselage, but was helped out es!t..on ,.i:.gyptian ront. is rtded d of Vietnam helicopter duty, died in the of the wreckage to safety. out a cease.fire now on the Jordanian " •By JOHN VALTDZA Of,......,,....,.. ... Io an unuprecedented ippurance be- rora, the pre11 al the San Clemente 111n ~. Praident Nl•o n Olllclally.an- nowicd laraeU acxeptance .ol '~ U.S. ceue-!lre-' In the l\lld4le w Flu!~· by llocreWy GI Statii il!Uiebi p. a.,.,.. the Praidenl ll)ade Jlle ~· -Viall to upnu h!J Jil'I....,. at ln-forinaUon received tocloy ~-the iov" emmenl of Jarael. tliat ll ha >aa:epled the proJll!llal. -• • .. "I .am 'araWled that~now alrthree gov. emmenb to whom we have addruled our lnltllllve have raponded poitUvely and· accepted the United StatJt tJropoa· al,'' NlxOn said. .. The President stressed, hOwever, that wider the plan "it ls an integral part 1 •• that neither 1fde is to use the cease- fire. perlud to. improve ·111 military pol!.. t1on 1n the area oC the cease-fire lines." "All would have to.refrllp from em· placing new nilulle or other installation• and from undertaking a military buildup of any kind in such an ares." The President said that the acceptance was a ray of hope but added "we do not underestimate the dilflculUes which sUll lie ahead.'' After readlbg the-prepared statement lhe President left wlthoot further com: ment. Secretary Rogers, who received strong praiJe from Nixon for being drafts- ~)~( th~ pea~e _pll!_n,JJJ <l_ noj cpmment a.f~rming the situation "explosive," blazing wreckage which came to rest Medical Corpsman Mike Shipplet sul· front where Arab gUerrillas have Thurman said the 1.000 teachers who are only 200 yards f~ President Nixon's fered burns on the hands w)t\le > ad· threatened to continue the war. . • m"1Jpera of 1Jle • .....,~UJ>ll m ul!"'\ing ~keel .Al< F.or<e,!)ne jell~ :, minialering aid ,to the.\Jliured mea. ~!~were vaguelf wonJ. IJ{ D 6? # .n.. . ' M . t • =:i~vln~~.:r~ ·.:...~:':°:CJ11~rrr.r ~~Wli.·-~l;I ... ,,_ ~-a=" ~llOf'~ ress ree ina aPfll'O\'tdbyboenl--.,. • UYei ol four 'creff,,,.,.....tbr• ol ....,wllltaa'(,iqthelllivivots.althopP ll'!-~'llle~.pr-11 ' ,'' .. '" e "Fa< three yean the boenl harbeeir· whom ,..re·badlf llliurecl Ibey' bad to wait ·forliranen. · apou lpildlk>llf or a· ceaMu. on • . . telliqustheywouldllketolmproveul· Flnt,U. 8-,.,,, MUUlni, 21, ol 'l'ho~Jal1fa·blaaloetof!._m lbf•lua ~!root IDd'llopelully ol ·pl--.<.e• 'M Pmide ' • aries, bul the mone1 just wun'I lbett,"' lllmlill&IOq llNch, p<rished in Ole ~ the !WnOs al a Ulity '.pith tbt _..fnlidl. ie'(.f,3 a J". · nt be said. · overtuined "fouf.qb>e . tu r b op r op and ihO c:ruk ,....., lmulied 111 way Bui · durilJI the 90-<lay petlOd the • LOS ANGELES (UPI) -~d'"t Nixon IA: expected ·to have more news conferences outside ol WashingMA. "Now the funds are av~table anc1 lbe a.Irerift. into the plane and had . the nlen out belliiereota COWd begin prellinlnery :: teach~rs feel they have every right to The injured crew· members Were Iden-within two m.Mutes. diacuak>ns which would tettl~ the pro- ext>ect the money to be used for either tified as: A column of· smoke visible· for 2S blem d I ce111e--!ire on other sectors salary improvement or fringe benefit!," -Maj . 'Walter Cytkewlcr:, 41, MJSBlt'.ti miles shot Jnto the .sky from .the scene with Aipbassad:or1 GUMar V. Jarring ac- he_ ~dded. . . Viejo. . · · of the tragedy on Runway 34, whfch ling as , med\ator, aDd hopefully, to The $890,000 In add1t1onal money was -Capt. Robert B. Walls Jr., 28, Tustin. runs in a north-south direction. p~re for neeotlaUons to write a formal announced at the ~ul>: 21 meeting .of the -Staff Sgt. Kenneth c. Davia, 31, A panel of investigators was Im-eo<trto thel'conf11ct. • · school boar~ by d1str1ct budgel director Santa Ana . mediately convened to probe the flrst 'The hlwldsh Gahal party announced \\'alter Adrian. He told ~rd m~mbers -Cpl Ke'nne lh Metzdorf 11 who lives accident involving Marine Refueling In advlhee of the cabinet. sessfoo they t.he.funds, .mor.e thsn anticipated 1.n pre--00 ba~. · ' Squadron 352 in 11 years. . would ·1e1ve-..f,he,govemment'lt the reply :1n;ry . figu~ing ;~Id be edcoming ~ All were admitted to Orange County Built to, carry 10,000 gallons ·of h1&hly wu in the affirmative ind despite Pre&i· 1 :.strictnd rou~'fr~as . aJ!~ Medical Ctnter, where all but the major volatile fuel, the KC130 was not loaded, de:nt~il:on'.s usurance11bursday ntgb! ~: ion a a rise 1D &-were listed in critical condition today (Set CRASH, Page Z) the ~ Am.ttican· pro~ three-month eo!r~~~~~rs will have to select a eeu&-fb:e wciuld not be uied fCI' •Soviet· meW of diBlributing the money during the 'Aug. 4 meeting when the budget is scheduled for final approval. One alterna. ti ve Is to reduce the ta:ic rate slighlly. Ditlrict Superintendent William Cun- ningham is slated to report at that time to the board on the feasibility of return· ing the surplus to tax payers, using it on salary increases or restoring cut budget !term. He said he will give trustees a number of combinations of the three plans. Thief 'Pulls' Gear Fro1n Mesa Del)tist Al Costa Mesa dentist arrived at the offiee Thursday and found, to his pain , that 90meone had extracted $2,000 worth of equipment. of. John A. KraJian, who practice!! at 1919 Newport Blvd.. told • police the lool included. a typewriter, adding madline and camera . Officer <>wen Krnta said the burglar apperent1y en· tered throuSh an access door on the roof of the building. Viet Cong Flag Charges Ag_ain st Teen Dropp ed .. Cbargill ofidi.sturbing the peace were dismissed Thur8<1.ay afternoon In the c11-se of a BayltM>l:es youth, arrested tor fl~ing a .Viet Cong flag. ·- William.F, Groszkruger, 10, was taken into custody July, <I 11nd originally was charged under •· federal statute which covers display of lhe American flag. Chargt1 wert later redu_ced to disturb- ing the peace on lhe grounds that display o( tHe VC nag on the erclusive tract's beach had provoked several healed and potentially violent diacunlons among a crowd of about 40 gathered at the scene. Grosikruger's atklmey, Mrs .. Patricia H~g. asked for dismissal Of the cb&rges because "it has not been established that there was a clear and preJeDt>dlnpr that the peace wu goln& to be shattered violenUy." She emphasized the point that the First Amendment provides protection fot individuals Who wish to erpress un- popular views·as well as those espousing more generally accepted oPinons, Judge Everett Dick~y. who 11T•nt.ed Mrs. Herzong's motion for dismlSllal, slid he concurred with her statement.I. "The right of free peech ·must be protected," he said, "not because free speech is inherenUy good, but because s1.1ppression of it is inherently bad. "It should be ~ the court is not in sympathy with the political· opinion expressed by the defendant's action, but conduct of this nature is protected under the First Amendment," Judie Dickey said. Comt Fire Boai Extinguis hes New port Blaze A brush fire apparenUy started by an arsonlst, burned to within 50 feet of thfi plush homes I.long Galary Drive In New. port Beach before being extinguished by the Harbor .Department fire boat Thurs. day night. Newport pollce said a boy was spotted near the tcene of the fire throwing a naming object over the embankment near the intersection of Mariners and Galaxy Drives. Fir~men stood by while the fire boat hosed down the blaze which covered an area 250 feet wide running from the wa. ler of the Upper Bay to within 50 feel of the horn,. in the 1500 black of. Galu;y Drive. . The Colla Mesa police helicopter aided the fire llghl by lighting the area with Ughll mounted on the alrualt. He obvloosly was , plea.sed Wi£h his own historic "first" -a televfaid cqn.. fere11ce here with.Earl ';Squire" Bt!:b,ens, dean of tfie California press corp1 siyi11g, "Th.a~ yoy, Mr. Preslctent." · Behrens, a politic.Al columnlst i for the Saa Franclaco ~ronlcle who received the Medal' of Freedom from Nixon, wu ~ore subdued Jn cutting:· oU the ain· re~ tlilft win! .. .,,iee riporte .. 'ln Wuhiagtcn who lhOut ·~t!Wtk you"' ,and make a fn11d duh for thi tele;hoM. 'I1te 57·year"'°ld chief es:ecutive had been -primed all day in hl1 plush pent. house lldte ln the Century 'Plaza Hotel on possible quesUons he ~Id be asked. He was well prepared arid seemed ·at ease before the stand up mfcrop'1one in the hotel's glittering Santa Monica Room, as he was quizzed on subjects from forelp policy to smog. He was attired in his customary blqe suit, white shirt and blue ·tie. He bad a California tan and allhoogh thfl temperature i1 the room ·was down he * * * Nixon Outlines· Nation's Future ·, Hlghlighll from P""idenl Nlun'1 !irll West Coast televlled press confereQ!:t: The Pmldenl Aid the U.S. pro-1 for a .....nre In U'le lliddle Eaat would be coupled with a ,military .-w. He !orecall . ahead of 'the cuii ljr, Meeting No 'Mi.rid Ch~nger Harbor llepartm<nl olficlall uld the tire bUmed for about 10 minutes before it wa1 extlnauilbed at 1:35 p.m.-. I · 'I Anoa Investigators lald.tliey found a · D&TAILI ON· PAGE .I fruit jar containing a smi.U amount of · catollne and a pack of mitch6 ln a ._ _______ ._ ___ .J construction lite nesr the scene of the thsi "Israel can agree to the cM.e fire f'reetva.y Con ference Producfs Low·key Dis cussion fire . · and airi" to negotiations withPut fear." Inflation is being cooled Md will con· tinue rtt-se· The economy will move forwmt In the long tenn antt the 11acll: ln employment will bl taken car&'of. Authot:ized Cuban A 1 Thursday lun cheQn of the 'H11rbor Area Freewsy Fighters and Laguna Beath city offici;ils produced some low· key ditcusslon and opinion exchange but apparently changed no mlnds . n.e Freeway Fighters sUll support Auemblyman Robert Badham's bOI to delete the adopted route of Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Bea<:h. Laguna oflid als today said thei still opposeit the bill, fearing ll ""1ld dolly 1 and JlO"lbly alt.r the bypa" m~lud 1 of Laguna Beach. They ¥1dla; li!ili of · the route study could abo re-open the possibility ol a bisectlni freeway whi ch the state Divlalon of Highway engineers once favored. City ~1anager James D. Wheaton of LagWIJ, who attended the meelin1 at the Santa Ana Country Club, laid: "Newport Beach doesn 't like the route they've got and I can't say that 1 blame them. I share their conctm over tbe adopttd route so far as that ' goes but my difference (of position) 1till itands. "rtold:then-they've·taken the wrong tack. I asked them why-they ' didn't go !or a bill d!rectin( the hJlhway com· -to reopen the ,..,. lllldy •.• wblcb I! apparently what they want. They didn't 'llilnlt they could ,.1 ·ll lhrll!l&l>..nd -the whole .,.111tkllll roule. deleli<lli) .. the "clalatloll.'" Wheaton aaid the dlacuuiOn was all friendly and low keyed. He said the freeway fighter1 apparenUy blcne much of their problem on the poalUons of both Cost.I Mesa and the Irvine Cotnpany. The city manqer ukt the Freeway Fiiblen ti.tied U..y will fichl the l5'ue In cour1 u Badham '1 bill · rills. II comet , .. up for Senate committee hearing Mon-- day. Badham bas said that his ~bill represents the . urufied request or 20,000 of hll constituenlll. Visit Questioned Huntington Eea<:h.· Fowit.irl-Valley, WASHING'l'ON (UPI) -Reps. H. R. Costa· Mesa and Laguna have paued Gross, R-Iowa and Wayne Hays D-Ohio · resolutions against Badhatn's bill. 1 say Coqrm. d.owci-comider~UnPeactimi The luncheon '"'"Ung· callod• ~'tile· I a t-f!idge Wbi\·I ... yljlP1e leader freeway flghten includ..i ·Councilmen • Abbie HOiiman penftisslon to travel to Roy Holm and Chafllon ~)'II llmn 1' ' , !or a month. . Laguna.. • ' •• I~~ oald U.S>Dlslrict Court 1udp HOii' for l~ meeling was ,MarNI> Ril!!Oit ), Jllley of Chicll(O ''Gave_UU.: Duffield, chall'll\an of ·the-rreqay cbarw:ter authorization to "' to CU!Ja,. Fighters.. . , • I -"' hO (Ho!lmanl can learn others Included CouncUrotft +Howard the 1·1atelt teclin.iquea in sabotage to Rogers of Newport Jlcach. e'l•nfayor Paul overthrow our. government." C o u r l Grube.r, vice chairman of the freeway permlui0n1 wai required for the trip fighters: Vin Jorgl"rt!en, treasurer of &cause Rof!man had been convicted the freeway fiahlirs ; and Jam~Panney or riot 'con1plr1cy ·in· the 11Chlca;:o siven11 or Emerald Bay, an a&tmmy. ' 1 trllJ.. · · · • "lf there Ls a war between U\e Soviet Union and the United St.at.H there will be no winner•." Th't It why Jt · ll , im- portant that the Unltad Slat.1 not be dragged into a military CQDlllct In uy areu like lbe Middle Eaal. inie 1ie&1<Y b1an11tt, 01, -.. """ £111 ~ -lbore ·11n·1· ucll Ume left lo< the naUon to oom '111 .l:'polluilon 11roblema, Con-1 •ilioWd like ·Forni' 'aCll<Nt'. OD· Jqlllallon , be· 1Ubm/ttec1 11< monthf ll(O lo oombal air pollulion. , Time 11 no longer on the aide of the Viet-Cong. "f ,bellevo .ll)e pl:OlpeCls for a negotiated peice ahould bie better now than Ibey wele befott ~ cam. bodlan Operation." PutUna lhe blam~ on ,1overrvnent Jor 1ludent CllJaent' Is very. .1borti11htid .. 14 la a problem for coil*. o4/nlnlatfatOr. .. . . ( " wlpOd belds of perspiration from bis lace with a handlo!rcbler. He wuted to give the western hall of the country a chance to see a presiden- tial news coaference on _prime time - 8 p.m, PDT. ' Wheh he' was asked for hls views about the pre.55', he laughed and recalled his own unhappy • experiences at his "tut" press collference in California follo,whlg hls defeat in the 111&2 gu~rftatorial race. "I just wiah I 'had as good a pmt as my wife has," he quipped. But. It !"' OD Ju. desire to downgrade Wuhington u the natldftal rpower center that he appeared the OlOlt defensive. He said he bss beard "criticism'' that be leaves the White House too often. S. Viets Reject COalition Rule ' . SAIGON (UPI) -President Nguyen Van Thieu said tonight South Vietnam will accept no form of coalition with the c.ommunJsts. He caUed for a cease. fire with "effective supervision'' and again proposed free elections to end ~WIJ. "The Republic of Vietnam should be conaldtred an independent free and De!Docral.ie nation which wlit not accept any form of coalition with lhe Com- mwtista," Thieu said In a 40-mlnulll nattonwide televlSion and radio speech. Teo hours earlier President Nixon said at. a Callfonrla nrits conference the AmerjCan Poeitlon on a coalition ~overn­ mesrt wu the ume as Thieu 1. C.u t Weather . If you're looking,. for a change 1n t.he weather -don't. This weekend will be a good deal like other weekends wlfh sunny skies and little change ln temperature. INSWE TODAY Ru.s1io'1 MoirqcD Ballet rt• h:".N to Loi A11Qtles to thaw 0'4lc U.. c616'100~ M~ WHk, D .. l<lils fn lo!fav'• w,tk<ndtr. ; , t • DAllY'PILOT N FltlW, ~I"!, , ', _ Tate ·Defense · Raminers at DrUg Use . . . ' l LOI AllCllLll (UPI) -J.llldl Kou· blan !eltllled todoy thll ahe had been livln& In group "communes" ever since lhe teft home at the age of 16 and up unUJ the Ume Ille Jolnecl Charles MIDIOD 'I "fllQUy." Under aoea examiftlUoo by Defense Attorney Paul Flloaeralll, 1M slate's ewnlnatwa by Def..,. Altorney Paul Fllqerald, llie llato't prime wltom .aeknowledjed that she bed a contiderablt amount ol. "bu.man ezperieoce" before Ille joined Ille ....... Cllll cllpsed with Ille Sharon Tate-LaBiuca ~· F!tzcerald baa ul<I he wtl1 attempt to . show that Mrs. 1Cuabiln'1 accountl of ·the klllln&s were a "fantasy" that came from a mind impaired by the long UJage of ctrup. Mrs. Kasablan Aid ahe had lived In communes from coast to cout from the' time she left home in a small town to Ne.. Hampahlre and had a clllld when Ille was 11. < Girl Kidnaped In Newport, Raped, Shot A teenqe girl from Pico Rivera who had -raped and lbot after being ltldnaped In Newporl Beach w at dllcovenid by four Camp Pendleton Mirines early this morning u abe wandered incoherently along the Sao Dlego~soutbof SanC!emeate. The gtrl, 17-year.old Sunn Price, ... mained semtconscloua through the morn-lni ml ..-Jnlenllve care II South Cout COmmunlty Hotpllal with a bullll lodged In bu -. ' Pr<llmlnory 1'!porta Indicated Iha cir! WU loll DUI' IM Lu Pulpl (Ila ol the llartne-. tuffwln( a llbliJo wound In 1M noclt after a forrl(yjng' journey '"'°' Ne~ Btadl lntO North Ban 1>1Mo Cow>ty. Nla Prtcce, wbote ~ WU mt tmmedilteb' available, -apparently wu all.<fuded In Ne..port, whm Iha had bf,en vacatloniJll, police uid. .'Jbe four Marines roportadly found the ~ at 1:55 a.m. ed drove her to San Clemente, where 1J1ey nollllod police. • -.. • • r .Li~"9: i',t;lio~ght.~T~ ~W-_e re:.!Jeautiful Lovi ng People.'. -~:::l.5i~:~"t.:: Her f1n1 e~ In ~unai ll•· · ~E.ten.t.:e g;; ol tl?.p?" . · "*" .,.u. -I ~ M-n·a ' ~tzgeraf! toh! "nenneo -thal \he ··pa~ ol a lealher I'd picked .~P· Ing was in Miami Beach, Fla., she •11 wouldn't saY extensive. It varied." famUy t ~u impresaSonabk&Dd I wun't ... defertle fO( Manson and three temale ior ~Cl &•r.e at ~ star~ and the moon. said. She nut lived with a lfOl.\P lo From Boston Mrs. Ka.sabian then came to,.tllier, the llid.. • ., ~ , .. ie • codefendanta would be based in _,,..;.1...i... Mfl. K1sab1an s11d the had had Boston and thenJoloed another comD;)\µle With her second husband, Robert Kasa-"Bot )'OU had h:'d . cdlvlderab ez.. · ,,...~~ '·dttulkm while under the influence ot in Greenwich VUfa1e In New York City. bian, to Los Ange Its a~ved in a perlence In group11vial'...¥ou.wert almGst on the COf''!,n~on that Mrs. Kliublan, dr\aill but inalt:ted ahe dJd not suffer From there she went to the Haight· commune at VCnl~ on the ocean front a pioneer in communal lfvtng weren't a 21·Ye8.~ld' blonde who Uved with YI•'_ f '0 11 .. ...,blc 11 Alhbury section ot, San Francisco where west of Los Angeles. you!'' ~tqerald utecL {amllY, for ona moo&h, waa not mmWJY r'a'l •-kt arter the drug had .she lived with another axnmune and "We decided to 10 to New Medco. ''Yes. • -com~tr ~ worn oft.· then went back to Bo&ton where she We went to a place outak!e of Taos." "So when )'OU joined tM lfOUP at ·Under ~Uon, Mn. ·x .... -"Ku ... ~. LID aJlered your lived with ,the "American Psychedelic ''Did tt have a name?" . the Splhn. Ranch~ thouam you·llne'lf bWl adntfUed tUln& LSP, ~. penonaUljl",rttllerUS ailed".-· • Circus."'. "Yes,.Jt was called Sons of the Earth wbat you were ~dolaa and what kind metbedrine or "apeed," mescallne, tnd »'Yea, It ..-~ iltered '" I .. believe, "What was that?" Fitzgerald asked. i1other." or probiema you ~t eocouoter in mornln& kJory·lteda. to a certain ~t. bec1UJe it h.u showed "We wahted to get buses and anlmals "I was always moving from one pla~ communal llvinaf'' uked FlticerakL 11My aole purpo.te for ta kl n g me a lot about mylelf," she replied. and travel all over the country u a to another, usually with a group," said "Ye1, I jut thought they were halluctno1ens was for reallutlon -God "Are you any different tho you wera circul. I don't know euctly why it Mn. Kaaabian. beautitul lovin& PfJOP]e," she said. -reallzatJon," ahe aald, durln1 July and Auiust, 1189 (just prior was called paychedellc." "Wou1d yo\I say you were irn-Fitzgerald took, over cro11 examlnaUon '1 And were you succ~saful in reallJin& to the Tlte-LaBianca 1 l 1 y in I 1 ) T • ' "Was It drug oriented?" pressionable when you joined the C<lm· of Mn. Kuabian'ftunday in an attempt God?" Fltqerald uked. Fitzgerald questioned. "Yes, they took drugs.'' mune in New Mexico?" to nulllfy three 411' of testlmon)' in "[ reallied )'OU don't ha~e to take "I 1ure am," abe replied. "I've come "Whal drugs?" "1 was aeardling for something I whlcb lhe gave. an eyewltneu acount peyote « LSD to dllcover God," she to a lot of conchWons about reall.ty "Acid. They llftoked weed." wasn't 1ure of, but I got it together of tbe kUli.ncl Ju;t AIJC. H. repUed. 0 Moct of my uperiencea while and rflbt aod woq." I Appraiser View~ Changed •• • Became Bay Swap Supporter After Investigation By TOM BARLEY Of fllt Dlllr Pll.t I t.ff Ao appralaer ..-report led to Ille State Landa Commla1on'1 eodonement of the Upper Newport Bay Jand swap between Orange County and the Irvine Company today said he opposed the deal in an earlier investiga~on. Real estate broker Hardy E. Pabner testified in the Orange County Superior Court trlaJ that he viewed the trading of 157 acres of county-ow~ Udelands for 450 acres of Irvine Company uplands as "less than ideal" when he first ex· amined the proposal In 1966. Pahner changed hia mind a year later when he submitted to the cmunlaslon a report that broadly confinned the recommendations of fellow appraiser Bernard Evans , And he stated that a "reassessment of economic consider•· ations" played 111 part in his revl.aed opinion. Pahner al!O told attorney Duffern Hels- ing that a memorandum from the State Attorney General's office contributed to County Board ol Supervtaon. another look al Ille Upper Bay propoal Attorney PhWp Berry represent.a a had ~e known that three Jslanda valued group ol Newport Beach homaownera · · by the Irvine Company at more thao wbo argue that the trade ii unlawful ff million were to be dredgeci'-aw17 and uncoostltutional and repreeent.s a shortly after implementation of the land breach of the Udeland1 agreement reach-swap. ed between Orange County and the atate Berry pointed out that deduction of of California when the water frontage the $9 million from Irvine valuations was deeded to the county. would bring down. the value of Irvine's He also charges the Irvine Company 450 acres from Pahntt's calculations of with fraud and misrepresentations to $16,426,000 to a little over f1 million. the State Lands Commission durin1 Both Pahner and Evans valued the public hearings Into ttle llllle. county land transferred to the Irvine Berry claims Irvine repre1entaUye1 Company by· the county supervlws at submitted untrue values of the reape<:Uve $11 ,4",500. Berry alleged that reviled acreages in the swap and also declined valuations In the llabt of Irvine intentions to reveal to the commission the full to remove the islands: from the Upper extent of public rights and acceu to Bay scene would mean the Joss ot more tidelands throughout the Upper Bay. than $4 mllllon to Orange County. Helsing represents county Auditor Vic Pahne.r al80 told Berry that he had Heim who was sued by the county and voted agaJnat the land rwap in l9IS the Irvine Company. Helm refused, by because he had felt that boating facll.ltles agreement, to pay the first Irvine bill in the Upper Bsy would be dominated for dredging in Upper B1y waters. by private interests lf the trade went Pahner said today he might have taken through. * * * * * * I Miu Price then wu taken by Im· bulance to..south Coast Hospital, wbem tile bullet wound, hidden by halr and bJOod, 'WU diacovwed. Aides 11 Iha hotpital Aid the 1Jrl hat nol ,.t ,.......,. ourpry ur!J tbil mornlai. ' • DAILY PILOT ltefl',,.... his reconsideration of the wisdom of -'N OT REAU Y RETIRING, JUST CHANGING JOBS' --111;,..~;::.;,.,ndum adv!eed Pahner CdM Po1tm•1t1r W1tson Swltche1 Addre11, Too that considerations of the usefulnes1 or Upper Bay waters for commerce, naviga. tion and fiahlng need not concern him and that mch factors were purely the province of the commiJsion's le1al dlvilton. Nader Keeps Ey·e-on-~ri~ Detectives from Newport Beach, San Qeme!lff1 and tJje San Diel• S"rlfft office were at the a~ 1 t1U'oUCh the mornina:. The JnvesUgatlon has been joined by Investigators froJD. CAplp . Pe~ton, ~-•••cJ. --I ... ~ repoi .. MU ,;",;-', ._. ., -,t :: :;..:_ -. .'J: ... '1!.,: ... Helpful :·W'.0m~if ~ Loses Jew~Iry . .. Beinl a Good Samaritan me.ant nothlna but trouble for a woman who stopped 'lbunday to belp a little gtrl hunf her lost eyealass lens at Colta Meaa Part. Mrs. R<ba Vaughn, 117 W. Wilton Sl, It\ her pune conlalnlng tine dJa.. mond rtn11 worth '2,300 down Wider a tree. Someme stole It, but cblldren later recove~ the empty purse and, nearby. the most valuable ring, set with 23 diamonds while the victim was reportln1 the grand theft case. 'Ibe thief who aa:ldentally dropped the best piece IUll hu two worth more than $1,000 and carryln1 great 1tn- timental value, Mrs. Vaughn said today. One ta a gold. band with 1 diamond and two rubles; the other is a white gold ring with 10 dlllllO!lds and ahe ii offertng a reward with no queitions asked to whomeve r returnJ thtm. DAILY PILOT OIANOI COAST ~UILllHllfO COM,AMY lte~ett N. w ••• l'ruldllil W l'llllllllW J•c~ It. C11rl.., va,,.,..11.,.._.......,.. ' 1\o111•• ~ .. "' ...... Th•111t• A. M11r,lii•t M-.lfll E•IW n-" 1.,11111• Ht....., lttdl Clly EtllW N..,... .... omc. 221 I W11f l•lkt h11l 1.,11l M1ilh11 AU,..u ,,0. I•• lt7S, ,2,,J --c.. Mftt; Qt w_...., ''""' ........ IMtll: Jtt ,_,A-Hlllll=:.•~r 11"S Md! ~ t.11 : .. Nit* II ""9liM ..... • ' Postmaster Vern ·w atSon " Retires.· After 35 Years • T ... After 35 yeirs, Corona del ·Mar Post." mllter Verne Watson maintl,ined b1nl- neu a1 Ulllll today -h1I J,ast day on the job. '. The postmaster, iwho re'Ured today, wlll be moving rrom Corona''del Mar to Failbrook in San Diego County 't'here he plan1 to become an avocado rancher. "I'll probably be JUI!• at buty u al· ways,'' he aaid, "but I don't really feel like I'm retJrlng, rm Jutt changing jobs." Wataon came to the Corona del Mar Poet Office 11 a clerk in UH7 from WJchlta, Kansas. In 1941, be was ap- pointed po1t:muttr. "In thole "'ya, there was no city de- livery, evefyom came to the pOlt oftlce tor their mall. Corona del Mar wu a for their mall.-Cor'ona del Mar w11 pretty IDllll then," he remembers. f'1ootll P .. e J CRASH ... '.' atherwlse the cralh -witnessed by hundreds -would have been far worse. Lt. Mullins, holder of two Distinguished Flying Crosses and 3S Air ,Medals, was making hla third touch-and-to practJce landing about 3 p.m. when the plane crashed. No Immediate dettrmlna.tioo of t1ctor1 Which led to the accident was offered, but wl-1 Aid the KCl!O bounced and tnaaed 111e· lefJ wing •blch brolle Olf. ' . ' Cratot, bundlit.and other debris bowie! ed q,i. Ille air u Ille craft tplUl. llO d-and OIJiped over, . Ila q1,,.. breaking away and tkldlng down Ille concrete, spewing fire. Sgt. St. Clair said one of the creW members, bla Olght strlt in flames~ manaaed to ·&tumble out cl, the bluing wreckq:e on ~11 own. One witness wa11 Bud Hanson, a ranger at nearby Uon Country Saf1rl, who said the huge tan~er had just passed overhead and its engbles·teemed 11lent. o;They always make a lot of noise, even the cats look up,'' said Han.son. Another ranger watching from a hi1h poinf in the )>ark, John Pardue, said Lt. Mullln's aircraft touched, then rose off the nmwi.y a bit and nosed over at a steep ana;le. Air Jl'oret one was parked on an apron next to the runway Fepttifti for • rautlnt pr1cUce fll&ht and took off liter. Lt. MulliM won the nation'• !eeond- highest award for fllght heroism twice while 1ervlng In Vietnam, trom May to November of 1'68, and then was a Pensacola NAS flight tnltnictor. He ~rted for duty at El Torti anly 1~ week.'! 1go and ls aurvlved by a 'ft'lfe Wanda and 2·year-old daughter. Funeral 1ervlcc1 were ptndlng loday at Olld11y Brothtn Mortuary ln llun- lln(ton Beach. Wataoo ~ '·lhlt au ' the career em. ployes at, 'Uie Corona del lm';' branch were appointed by him dut!Oi flla 12 Ye&rs he has been In !ht ~ fOri!nwo· Uy. "Jo a way,, they're IOl't 6f like a family," he noles. ' ' Watson's' wife,. ownet: of ,Virgtnla'1 Snip and SU!Ch $\op In Corona def Mar, will be thangJng job! with hlm. 'llleir two dauih:f.eta-wtlJ take ov.er mana1ement of the ·Corona &ii Mar fabric shop and Mrs. Watson will assume the mana1e- menl of a similar store they opened re- cently near Fallbrook: · "F'or a number of years we've hid two home.s -one here and one in Fallbrook. We'll be moving dowtl there on li perma- nent basis," Watson &a)'I. · He will be succeeded by Assistant Post- master Grant Howald who will be called officer ln charp. Mesa Man Onl y Candidate Filing For Board Post OOici.als at the caunty Voter Reglstra· Uon Office 1ald today only ooe penon bu filed for the elect.loo tor the vacancy on ttte Newport-Mesa Board of Educa- llon.' . J~eph Dully of 2425 Bowdoin Place, ~.ta Men, la Ille only 'per100 to !Ue toe the Poll to date. He liate<i bis oc:cupaUoo ai a·bualMM e1ecutJve . · Camlldales may lllo wilh the voter rtglstraUon office, 1119 E. Chestnul Si .. Santa Ana , unUI Sepl. 10. reglitraUon olflclth tald. The seat wu vacated when Mr1. Elila· beth Lilly resigned from the board in late June. Only resi dents of Trustee Area Two -are eligible for the election. The area starts at the lntersectJon of Ne"1)0r't and Harbor Boulevards and follows· Newport to the north city limits . The western boundary runt •bl& Harbor to Baker Street, along Baker to Fairview Road . then north ak>ng Fairview to the city lhnill. ,10,000 Dodge Trucks RecalJed by Chrysler DETROIT (UPI) -. Cheysler Corp. announced Monday It Is asking owners of about 10,000 Dodge Trucks to return thtm lO thtlr dealers for Inspection and cotredlon of possible safety dt!ects. A company 11pokesmll\ 11id two recall campaigns were Involved, and iOllte of the vehicles were involved ln both cam- paigns. ' Judge Claude M. Owens la presiding over a trial which will produce his rulln1 on the .validity of the land ei- cbange between the Irvine Compaoy and Orange County. It Is expected that It wllJ. be some yean before a final ru ling ls obtained via several appellate court level.I. The trade has been approved by the Orange "Nader's Raiders" are watching the Upper Bay trial. Harvard law school atudenl Michael Berman has been ualgned by consumer crusader Ralph Nader's team to view the progresa of the Oranee County land swap trial and report Its findings to Nader's Center for Study of Responsive Law. Berman 's presence was made known today to Judge Claude M. Owens and the jurist lmmedlalely agreed to allow Ille yowig envlronmeQ(-orlenled lawyer to ei1mint the nlOl.D'lt.ain of exhibits that bu accumulated lo the thee-week trial. Berman told the DAILY PILOT Iha! his presence is prompted by his organlla· tioo's "deep interest in all matters per• tainlng to land use and the role ol. public rights in Callfornla in relatJcm to the aims of private developers." DREXEL SALE FEATURING DREXEL'S ESPERANTO COLLECTION OCCASIONAL-DI NI NG-BEDROOM DEALERS FOR: HENREDO N -DREXEL -HERITAGE 7ed11111 " NIWPORT BEACH 1727 WMtdlff Or., 642·2050 Ol'EN FRI DAY 'Tll 9 'INTERIORS LAGU NA llACH P10 .... Jonal lnterlor Detlgners Avall ablo-AID-N510 345 North Co11t Hwy. 494-6151 OPIN FRIDAY 'Tll 9 ...... '-" ,... ... ef 0.,... c..., IMl-12ll I • """" Ju~ ll, 1970 1.5 Miles Not Enoµg'1 ' . . . Marine Beach Offer Termed Vnaccept.abl,e An ollicial spoke!l'tlan for Camp Pendleton · loday confirmed lhal the Marine Corp! has o£fered 1.5 miles of virgin shoreline for public u:te on • 25-year 1ea.9e. Bu\ the Stale ol Ca)ilornia l.s holding out for more land and iays the offer Is unacceptable. Robert Meyer, deputy dirtttor of Parks and Recreation, sakl the cost of develop. ing the 1.5 miles of saod for surfln1 park woukt be prohibiliv.e. "The state woold llke 4.5 miles of beach with a is.year lease -then we 'd have a fantastic park," he said. The Pt1arlne Corps: proposal was lellt to the state nearly two weeks ago, following: the rejection by the state of another plan for the beach. The Marines fonnerly offered 1.5 miles of beach for seven yean, with the lease revocable at any time . After lenlthy ne(OtiaUons, the longer- term plan was drawn up bul the state would sli~ like a longer altttcb of beach sand, .Meyer said that negotiations for the %&-year lease will continue, but that the final decision will not be made by Clmp Pendleton. 0 Tbat final decision will !'Tat wltl) the Department of,OefertJe," he pated. Director of Parka and Recrtatlon, William PeM Mott, met with COL .A. C. Bowen at Camp Pendlelon Thursday morning, but the likelihood ol a MIU"ine concession ap;»eared unJlkely. "The two men toured the area, bUt f imagine all they did was get their ~live views acro&S to eacb other,'' Meyer aakl. Meyer noted tha t the property b creating more than local attention. • ·~· Allonio Bell -haa talked with Defense Secretary Melvin Laird about opening up the beacft-, Wlder a long-tenn lease. . " "We!re ~ for http from Ule ·1I Del<t>,. Dlpl. We know aJoo-lhal •-• lot ot publlc ......... ii b&illdlng u " and ~t the Marine Corpa -·t need.fo all Gf ·the 17 mllol ol beach lhal Ibey now bave." .1 ... '"Ille Morlnes have lold II! lhat they" cannbt olftt tbe.4.5 mfle11 or beach soutJit' 1 of San Ooolre beoause'lhey .,. pl.sMtngot to build a helicopter paa on the las~ 11t mile. &it it will only be temporary. i'1~ \llj "We are also disturbed by the lac' that a private aurflng club his leased',.J year-by-year ooe mOe of beach on tha1,. base-. . ·•:, ·'):r the Mariile's can lease the bt.achii.i1 laqd lo a private club, Ibey ... leaao some to the at.ate," Meyer deelared. ~, Meyer menUoned that the land le~1 was di.scu.sMd by President NiJ:on, Gov. ;.1 Ronald Reagan, and Sen. Georce Murphy ..::i when the three had dinner t<>t1ether at the Western White House Monday even· ing. However, Meyer disf not elabor1t1 on the discus!ions. ""'; Strange Bedfellows Judge Grants Slocum Ouster Of Attornev Airport,Report S.tudied, But Choice Still Far Off ·! "CharUe," the cat, likes rats, but not to eet, notes his master,· Monte Iverson, 8, of 376 E. 22nd St., Cosia Mesa. "Charlie." who has been a member of the Iverson family !or seven years, first exhibited this unusual reaction to rats about two weeks ago when Monte acquired four of the rodents from a friend. And U..e rats apparenUy have no fear of "Charlie." Monte, who likes science, is studying the strange behavior patterns of the animals with great interest. -.-fj An Issue that became, court officiab Orange -Cowity ail'1)ort c0mmlasionef1 Board of Supervisors to reach.a declakl& :.: believe, almost as Important to Or. spent two houri pondering the Parsons in 30 days," chairman.. GJlmore uiL :.. ,/ Subve rsive Acts Under Scrutiny i1i Laguna Beacli Possible subversive activity in Lagui1a Beach wa s under scrutiny this week as an investigator for the state senate }'act-Finding Sub comm it t e'e on Unamer lcan Activities zeroed in on the Art Colony. The subcommittee, headed by Sen. Election of Carpenter Now Virtually Assured \Vesley G. Slocum u the murder char1e report on Orance County Air,>ort Thu~· ,:,··(·o'"r lheif :.~I.~~~ w.1 .. 1 ko,r_.?W' time ~-.',· ht faces was resolved in his favor Thurs· day, and came to the conclusion that .. ~ ... ~ 111a: _ . day. they may not be able to make an Thursday's mteting was called to ' Superior Court Judge James F. Judge "educated recommendation" by Au1. 11, discUM alternatives one and two of t)¥ agreeed to tbe firing or Costa Mesa the date they art to report to the report -cutting back or m1iotainin1t·. trial lawyer Paul Augustine Jr. and Board of Supervilors. .. ' present service -but the time •as ._ ended a troubled association. Commission Chairman Jamu1 G~ spent discussing noise. °' Dr. -Slocum has repeatedly tried to directed Aviation Director • R 0 be rt "We are belng asked til but eur ~ fire AugusUne in recent weeks, but the Bresnahan to investigate the poaibillty decision on noise standards ht do not court rdused pumlssion for him to of es:tendtn:g the terms Of the conjract exist," Gilmore said, "We wM't. bow ~ do so. wilh the Ralph Paraona Company. wt.at those standards 1'ill be unW they'' Orange County taxpa~rs will fool the is as.sured Carpent.cr shares the same The actlOO niunday ended a troubled Under the •tt0,000 contract, the Board are adopted by the Jegislatutt. ;1 bill for a $110,000 el lion with only concern. relationship which Ausustine descrlbed ot Supervi!Ol"a must makf their choice "At the same time, we cannot. tn ~ one real caridldate Aug. 8. as 'jhell oil earth." ---or suggested alternatives by Au1. 21 my mind, ignore the wlahes of the ....,.pie. , The election of Carpenter to fill oul "I was 'ready, willing: and able to or face a penalty of $300 per day. ,...., ,Republican leader nlcds Crarlpen,~er the term the rest of lhe year can proCeed With the case at any point,'' The report lists eight d l ff ere n t who live under the flight pattern because 0 Newport Beach was assur 0 e ec ion accomplish two things for Republicans: Augusllnt aald today . alternatives foi: the future of the airport of technical standards." 1 ' to a state-Senate seat in the special c-·~-m -·-• said Dr. Slocum's _ from cutting back to' ~ven com-Commissioner Donald Killian, who said '; ' h h. l pponent Douglas -11 will give Carpenter seniority over .,... """ ...,....... he 1· he ded 1· "· vo e w en 1s on y o , .., dispute with AtigU,(ine was not connected mercial fiighla a day 'to expanding to 1ved "on t ex.ten center me Irvine, withdrew Thursday. other new senators elected in the Novem-to the . specific case for which he is 62~nighta a day by 1971. of the runway in NewJ>011 Beach," asked,, Irvine, a Santa Ana housing de veloper. ber general election, provided Carpenter !icheduled~to stand trial. The penalty clause was lnchlded in Stanley Walsh. the P~ns represen-,, talked to Carpenter Thursday night and defeats Mise for the full term as ex-Augustine has successfully represented the contract because the ParS>na Com-talive, if the state might adopl, standards-, Hugh Burns. functions from the senator's office in Fresno and has looked into ctivit.ies... oL exlremisL_groops ranging rtol'i1the Com-nluniitpirtr to the"--Johii Birch Society. threw his support, to him pected because of a heavy Republican Dr. Slocum before, winning acquittal pany did not want to keep its team more stringent than those the report ~rpe:nter, Chall'tif~pob~ts;ttauon-edg . _ on--an-attempted-murder-charses-..in---Of_e.nginecrs...and_consultanll-JrLihe..aru. are bued on. --.,-•---i Srateciriti'iF€0mmifteP,1.liUr\iiHilllll}" . . rmuld g~arpenter-lo-Sacr-amenio-volvlng arrAl)rltl-----tui\iilhtWtul&alill:-andinactive fO( more-than a month. Wa!Sh-replled ·that {t was-•111ffCtitaID The invesUgator u id he was In· terviewing 1 number of people in town, including news media personnel and city oCfleial11, about problem area!' 1nt11 persons reputed to having leanings to the left. He also soughl opinions or re$i.denL, .on the activities of some city and other public officials and employes and their as.sociates. The investigator said Sen. Burns' com· mittee is engaged in a county-by-county survey of subversive activities, ranging rrom college campuses to local cily governments and civic groups. He said the survey In Laguna .was precipitated by security problems that hRve arisen as the result or establishmen L nf !ht Western White House in nearby San Clemente. is assured -barring an unforseen write-1n ume to provide the vo~ need~ . to Ana police. If the airport aervk:e Is to be cul to consider the proposed standards H t'I in cam~ign -. of ele¢ion to fill out put Gov. Ronald Reagan s $1 billion He was with the surgeon In Superior back or kept at its present level, the. thole that the state would adopt." .. 1 the ·unexpired term of J ohn G. Schmitz. tax ref_orm proposal over the top. The Court for a pretrial hearina on 1 S2.2 1Pusons team can be d I ab anded. 'Ale: nex r. meettng of the commia!lioll Schmitz hm . been elected · to the late lax $ift package was two votes $hy million damqe suit attmming from that However, if a decision la f1)ade to expand, will be Tutsday at 7 p.m. in fbt. James B. Utt's former seat in Concress. of the Z7 nttded to clear the Senate. confrontation when Dr. Slocum was last Parsons woukl theri prepare a master SuRtrvi.sors' hearing room at 515 N. carpenter still rfaces a l'hallenge from toctar wi\h one supporter temporarily arTested. plan far the airport. Syca~ $t. in Santa Ana. Altftnlllivtf Democrat ,Dwight W. Mise .in the hosp1talh:ed. 'The suit has alnct been dismissed. "lt Is unrealistic to expect. us or the orie· aiid twb wfll be diacu.ned. · JV November gener~ election for the full There was talk among Republican 1------------~-------------"---~..,,~--------------<c four-year state Senate term. strategists of possibly shelving the r The wicontested election of Carpenter measure until Carpenter's election on will cost the counly an estimated the 18th. $110,000. But by law the special election Carpenter, who was off to northern has to be held even if there only had California today on a Republican Central been one candidate on the ballot. Committee speaking tour was unavailable Irvine's name will remain on the ballot for comment -it is too late for him to withdraw ~ But Phil Seltz, Carpenter's campaign but he is ask.ing hi!! supporters to vo~e director, said he doesn't look for for Carpenter. Carpenter Lo provide the tie-breaking frvine said he was in · tht. race . to vote. "I can't imagine them throwing :i;pea k for ''the burdened property tax-in the towel and not trying to get payer" but after ta lking to Ca rpenter it through until the 18th," he said. Super at Market Girls .. San Clemente Dis_taffers Taking Over Boxboy Jobs By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of IM D•llJ ,. .... St•tf Tl used to be thal when a high si:,hool. boy· wanted a job . he usually began looking al th~ loca l supermarket to see <1bout beconling a boxboy. ~ Bol in San Clemente the guys .aren't doing t)'lat so much any more. The girls are. Now. fn at lea st Halt or the San Clemente supermarkets, the kid behind the checker packing your sack,s wi_th vittles might very well be a pert, teenage g_irl . In two or the city's four large food 1tores, the hel p includes girls behind the checkstands and when the coeds aren't sacking they sweep, stock shelves, Jt:ather shopping carts, and even mop floors. l And their bosses sa.y the girls .outdo their male friends in the . demanding job. -. ''The gals are getting a good reception from the customers, too," reports Leon Riley, manager or the local Alpha Beta. "Especially the men." The Alph' Beta market employs lwo boxgirls. a'nhough they have a more subtle name of "clerks' helpers." The i tore also employs eight boxboys. 'Mle girl helpers are ao outgrowth of hiring women to run the checks1:3nds. ''Two or three ytar11 ago we couldn't get boys with the draft calls so hl~h 11.nd the fact that everybody was 1n school. So we hired wives whole children were in school during the day. 'nlell we began to accept 1ppUcations trom the older teenage girls to work here." Riley notes that the 1irla, while &Ing helpers now, can get the "feel" of the 1tore and then move to the ~uh re,clster. Bob Be.rteh, manager of the Albertson 's Market at e02 N. El -Camino neal has one girl to six boys worklng 11s clerk 's helpers. ''She'ii a good worker, and If ishe v.·1sn't ~he wouldn 't ~ here," Sertch declared. Tht "she" he refers tn is 11 recent gradual'e of San Clemente Hl&h Scho-01, • GROCERIES HER tlAG M1rket Ct.rk Mld'l1ux ----- •. -Wendy Mii:haux . "I ioVe Jt here. It 's really nice," she r!marked, 'as she expertly loaded a sack with grocerie:i; of all sorts. Wendy, 17. has been working for I.he store for the past two months. "I just Came In, filled out an .application and was hired -all in one day." She is fr'!lquently told by some of the male market-goers that she Is "an awfully 'good-looking box.boy,'' but Weody is quic k to add thli"t the female shoppers like her. too. "One lady was happy with me a couple of weeks ago. becau~ f didn't put the -tomatoes in the bottom of the sack, like some other people will do," Wendy said. Whi,le not backing up the checker loading sacks and helping customer1 with their groceries, Wendy collects shopping cartl and stocb lhelves. Btrsch Slid the first girl he emplo)'ed came In during lbe winter ·months and wanted a job. "'Ille boys were non-ex- istent , aod she was going Lo school at night, ~ I hired her. Now they all• t."Dme in. u . ··... ; • "But not ev~be qualifies for the job. It's really nOt.'thal easy, especially pushing the slloppiag carts back -into place. Yod've. really Cot to scramble .'' Ber9Ch soid tl)at while the slore has not hired too many •young women to work, older Wives have been at the at.ore for a Jong time. "We need them during the winter. All we can find are these surf bums and they're no pod. So we go to the women or the girls." Safeway Markets district oHlce In Orange reports that the chain oQtlel )las only tried the gal helpers In the Palos Verdes area, but not in Orange County. "We 've always had boys who -are flvallable for work," an ofUcial said. - "You have lo realiie that there are certain lll'!litations on the girls . . . weight they can lift, hours they can work .•. " . But lhtn1 llOme of the bo1girl11 In SAn Clemente know Nttu, 'l'hcy'va..lxu Ublrated. ,, Some chefs Yourenot. .,, are paid to cook over hot flames. Sclenjoy a flameless electric kitchen. A flan1cless, a11-e:Tectric lcitchcn is o)le of tht big btntflts builfinto every Medallion Home or Apartmtnt And that mean• a clcan,cool kttchtn. A Mtdallron Home or Ap;artment can also mean flameless electric heating. Clean heat. It docsn~t ditty your curtains or upholstery. And flameless air condltloniog that cool11nd cleans the alr·you .breathe. Ptae comfort for tht cntirt C.mlly. And flamel ess wattr hut,. lng-wlthout a pilot, wltliout 1 Rue, without wasted space. Furthermore, a Medallion H'ome )ias 1mplc wiring tor today's clectri· cal appliances, plu1 provisions for the tlectricd wondtrs coming ap :n tht all-tlectrlc futare.MeclaJtlco Homes and Apartments are now anllable ln all pric•ranges. YOU can stt l\'hy ]l!l!J't l!KI lllOl'O people are chooslog to live the good clean lif e-clectrlciUy. lncluding chef .. Southern California Edilon • 1 l I i "-~· "-·"""=· ... ::. -.. -:--- . • ,f DAILY PILOT F"rlday, July 31, 1970 Vow• Stnog Fight Nixon Assures (C ... I"' ft' t11t ~ PfW 111tt1 In Neville's Cross, England, Timmy, the blue, budge.rigar- a small Australian parrol-1s ba~k home again because he knew his phone number. His owner, Mrs. Enid Barnett said the bird was returned to b 1 er after being miss· ing for five days. ''Obviously he bas heard us answering the tele- phone with our number and bas learned it by heart," Mrs. Bar· nett said. "Thank goodness he's an intelligent bird." • • A 40-year-old truck driver from Hugo, Okla ., fell asleep at the \vheel Tuesday and injured four elephants. Robert D. Cline told po- lice he was about five miles east of Norwalk when the truck, owhed by the Clyde Beatty-Cole Brothers Circus, overturned. The circus ele· phants suffered scratches and bruises. • A Halif~. Enyland wight- lifttng club hM had to clrue be- cause a stron g arm gang has "lifted" all 3,000 pounds of itl e"quipmtnL. • "When the first setUers arrived In early California," Gov. Ronald Reagan said recently at roll-out ceremonie s of a ne\V tri-jet. 0 they found half-naked savages smoking lite leaves of a native plant. You <'an still see the same thing on Sunset Boulevard every Saturday night,'' the Governor added. Israel on LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Only hours before Jsrsel accepted the U.S. to.day cease-fire, President Nixon assurtd the nation that it could accept the proPosal wilhout fear of giving a military ad· vantage to Arab nations. In a news conference Thursday night broadcast from a Los Angeles hotel, the first full-dress meeting wUh reporters he had held outside the White House, the President also promised to press * i:: i:: Nixon Blames Disturbances On Faculties Nerve Gas Dump. Delay Ask'ed TALLAHASSEE, Fla. '(UPI) -Gov. Claude Kirk demanded Thursday the army abandon any immediate plans to dump 2,1!175 tolls of nerve 1as into the Atlantic Ocean off the Southeastem Seaboard. And Rep. Paul Rogers ([).Fla.). asked the Pentagon to delay shipping the ga11 acroes the South, a move scheduled for Aug . 10, because of the "Potentia l or disaster." Kirk and Rogers, however. appeared to be lodging the only major official objections in Dixie to the plan to dispose of the World War II nerve gas by dumping it Z82 miles east of Cape Ken · nedy, Fla. Authorities in the states through which the slow-moving train carrying the cargo of 418 desk-sized concrete 0 coffina" must travel eem assured that the Army i~ taking every precaution to avoid any danger to the population. Peace Storms Soak Muggy U.S. Sticky Weather Ranges From Midwest to East Coast California ,. ~ ... ~. VPIWtATitll roTOtASl® \J Coastal ... ,.....,,,...,. A.ll(lwlr11• A.ll1nl1 ft1k1rill1lll •l11N1rc~ ftol1e ... ., 9r""'.,.Vllll C:MtllO C:lfl(ifll'lltl 0111v1r Dff M•ln!• C.1ro11 F•lrbe11k1 Fort Ww!l'I ,,_ Hlle"I 1(1""' Cltv Lii VH1 • L11 An"I" Mlnnt•POlll M..,0r1Mn• N•Yol'll; Hol'rtl l'l1tlf 01101"4 ~lf!IOl'N C.1ly °"''"' l'1lm S.rl1111 l'IM ltol)ltl l'l\Ofnl• l'llftikorflll l'Of11t nll f111lf Cltv ltd &kill ·-i*'''"''"'' !.111 Lokt Cn~ S1n DI .... ~111 Frt ncJJ(e S.1tllt Sl!Olc•~· fflt•m~I W1t11111.io11 MIN lw Pl't(, ••S ft JI -" ,tJ '' 1J ., &1 11 Sf ,11 •• !1 ~ .. ,,, n •• 1ft ·'' ~ '' ftl 11 ~1 ,01 ,, " IO 7(1 ,'9 Ml H ·°' HIO fl •1 •• " ~ 10J 11 ,II lftl 71 ., 11 " l5 .01 fl 73 IS It. lClll 6) .... 10? ,., •5 '' , 110 •• ., ,,? IOI II ,, •• .u " "' '' .n I& al " " .... .. .,. .lJ ,, ., ,, Jt " .. ,, 11 I II I I "° If J.I 'Rockless' Rock Fest Q. What should a person do who is worried about inflation, the stock market the future? A. Cut back on unnecessary spending. Protect your family's future by placing your savings and investment funds in an insured savings account. Q . Doe s it make any difference where I put my savings? A.Yes. An insured account with a savings and loan association will pay you more interest than banks and will be more certain than stock s. Q . Do all savings and loan associations in Southern California pay the same interest? A. Yes . Q . Then why should I put my savings with Mutual Savings · an d Loan Association ? A. We asked our own account holders for the answer to this 1 one. They have confidence in the knowledge of our employees. They can depend upon receiving accurate information , and are pleased with the efficient and courteous . service. Q .How big is Mutual Saving s? A.We're called "The Big M" because we have over 440 million dollars in assets . Q . Where are your offices ? A .Mutual Savings.has offices in Pasadena (head office), Glendale, West Arcadia, Covina and Corona del Mar. RobMD."- Vlt1 p,~ii'-111 & A/41111,,,r MUTUAL SAVINGS . CORONA DE.I. MAR. U67 Ea.st c.... Hoal>••r ( • t I • I I I I ' I I I I• 1• I I • -.... ---------------------- D~LY PILOT S U.S. Bombers Pound Reds QUEENIE lly Phil lnterlancll Raids Greet Returning Enemy Units From Cambodia SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. IW bombers carried out their heaviest raida ln Iii months across Vietnam ln a •rill ol mlsslooa enc!ln& today. T!Ht U.S. Command aakl «Mt American wi1rplanM w en t alter prrllla 1Nppl7 llDel in Loos and ClmbodlL B5ll dropped at leaat four ml11loa pounda ol bombs In JS ralds over South Vletn1rn 10 the 48 houra •odlnc at ~military s po te 1 men Aid. 1be raids we.re the heaviest s1nce the IO mlsalom flown Jan. 2'-JO. lain jungle border relli«is ol Ille nor!hern provt,_ of Quang Tri and Tl!• Tl>len. Two otl>ers bit 111'..,ts !rom three to four miles from the Combodlan bonier and 71 IO ·79 mu.a mthweat ol S.lgon. l'ie1d reporll !rom Phnom Penh .. id a Communllt attack before dawn today on a Cam· bodlan atllllery poslUon 40 miles west-$0UU\west of t~ capital bad blocked Highway * * * Policy Said 4, coanectins the a.pltal with Ille port of KomPona SOm. Ci.mbodlan army unlts ·aent In relnforcemerit.s led by armored cars to try to reopen the highway. 'lbe severing of the hl&hway prevented Cambodian troopa from getting reinforcements by road to the five-battalion unit moving up to wauJL the Kirirom Plateau, a few miles west of the roadblock. •Aggressive' Military officers nur the aceM aa1d ID armored ba~ talion from Ind Military Dlvtaioa beldquarters at Kom- pong Speu was rushed to the scene ahortly after dawn. Even with help from Cam- bodian air farce T28 f\ghter- bomben,'\ they failed t o clJ•lodil• lhe Viet Cone. They reported five Cambodian troops were wounded. The bomben struck at targell ranctnc from """ mile IOUth ot the clemllitarhod .... (DMZ) cllvldlnc tho two Vitt. nams lo the U Minh F«at near the naUon 'a IOUUllm tip. Hanoi Calls Nixon Talk 'Lie' NEW YORKER DONS SMOG MASK Toni Brown Parodies 'Fun City' Tag New Yorkers Choking; Traffic Cw·bs Urged By United Press lDteroational New York City St'Cmcd llke the largest stuffy room in the world today. There were few signs a window would be open- ed before late in the weekend. The City Department of Air Resources reported Thursday that the air pollution level wu again unhealthy and was e1pected -to remain about the same today. The department e;tplained there was no danger from short-term exposure, but added that this was the 58th day this year it had described the air as unhealthy. lo develop again before the weekend. A first·stage pollution watch in five southern counties of NMY Jersey was canceled. ll had lasted two days, the longest in the state's hislOT"/. But smoke in northern New Jersey increased. West Virginia extended a pollution alert, begun Monday, through the weekend. Industry was told to curb smoke and residents were asked not lo burn trash. Heavy showers wasted away pollution ln Georgia after two days. The raldl followtcl .. ports that three veteran Communltt regiments had moved blck in-- lo South Vietnam from Clm· bodia. The strikes ln the north pounded buildups in aecton near the Laotian border whtre allied troops ena:qed in heavy fighUog with Com ni un 111 forces three weeks ago. · Nine of the raids dme tn the Z4 hours endinl at noon today, oeveo ot tbem In moun- ' Bomb Blasts Barracks 111 Saigori SAIGON (AP) -A bomb ripped through the ground floor of a U.S. enlisted men's billet in dcnmtown Salgoo tonight, c au 1 l n g enensive damage to the bulldlng and a half dozen vehicles. F1nt reports aald there were no injuries. American demolition e1- pert.s sai!l terrorists placed a 45-pound plastic charge ad~ jacent to the lo-story Ky Son enlisted men'.s billet. About 400 Americans left the building and U.S. officers said all military men were ac· counted for. PARIS (UPI) -North Viel· nam said today Praident Nix- on was telling "lies" when he asserted prospects for peace in Vietnam were .better and the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong were weaker. In a formal s tatement, the Nri Vietnamese delegation to the peace talks condtmned Nlxoo's Vietnamese policy lltatement as "An ~ve, bellicose and colonialist policy" that had allegedly pushed the 18-montb-Old peace talks into a deadlock. The Hanoi statement said that at his news conference Nixon continued "to boast oC imaginary U.S. victories in Cambodla and In South Viet- nam. Carried away by these lies be claimed that the U.S. aggression against Cambodia had 'weakened' Ille """1lY and allowed to look forward to 'better prospects for peace neg<iUaUons.' 'lllis unfounded claim of Mr. Nil'on Ls signili· cant for the two aspects oC his admlnlstrat1on: "-It has achieved ex. cellence in the art of Iylnt, In the art ol making defeats look Ute · victories. lt still clings to the Illusion of acoring a military victory on lhe bat- tl<flekl Ul<ly to lead lo a positloo of slrenlth at the neogtlaling table." The statement reaflirmed llanoi's demaocls, already re· jecled by the United States and South Vietnam's President Nguyen Van Thieu, for the aeation U a provisional coali- tion cabinet in Saigon that woukt prepare new general Mayor John V. Lindsay, who earlier in the week had con- sidered ha.Ming unessential automobile traffic in lower Manhattan, urged commuters to leave their cars at home and rely on mass transporta- lion. He followed hls own sug· gestion and rode the subway 10 City Hall Thursday. ()Jtside City Hall, 20 youn;:- people demonstrated to de- mand thal the city be closed lo all outside automobile traf~ fie. They wore black robes and hoods and six ol them had on gas maaks. Guerrillas Kidnap U.S. Official 1'he explesion burled a lar1e _ ball of flame into the aky and fire swtpl through the billet. The demonstration w a s organb:ed by "Environment!" Danielle Frankwthal, describ- ing herself as a full time worker for the group, said, "Why can't people just take a vacation for a couple of days, or if they have to come into the city why can't they use mass transportalion?" Officials in Washington had barricades ready in case a full pollution alert was called. The master plan calls for a ban on all but essential traffic in lhe capital if the smog reaches tbe critical point. Wuhingtoo, like most ol. the Easl Cout. expecled ~lttle relief. Thwlderslonn activi!Y in southeast.erp Pennsylvarua lowered the pollutant levels in Pbiladelphia, but t h e outlook was for the situation Conductor George Szell Dies at 73 CLEVELAND (UPI) George Szell, 73 conductor o( the world-rtn0wned Cleveland Orchestra, died Th u r ll d a y night al Lakeside Hospital here. Si.ell had been confined to M 0 NTEVIDEO. Uruguay (AP) -A U.S.·Embusy o~ flclal was kidnaped today by left-wing u r b an guerrillas. They also attempted to kidnap two other U.S. Embassy of~ ficers, but failed, an embassy spokesmJD said, Police reported the Brazilian consul, Aloisi Comitti, was kklnaped by the Tupamaro guerrilla organization moment& after five terrorists ·seized pan A. Mitrlooe, 50. a public safety adviser from Indiana. Mitrione is atlathed to the Agency for Interna- tional Development. A news vendor was the only witness to Mitrione 's kidnap, · police said. The v en do r reported live persons anned with pistols and automatic weapon1 intercepted Mitrione's car this morning and forced him to get into their station wagon. Police reported Mitrione was found, apparently wound- ed, an hour later, in a Mon- tevideo suburb. But a U.S. Embassy spokesman said he knew nothing about Mitrione having been found. Mitrione, a Navy officer In World War 11, was a policeman in Indiana until 1960, the Embassy said. Some adjoining Vietnamese frame buildings abo were damaged, aloog with a half dozen military vehicles parked near the billet. Ambulances and fire trucks raced to the scene. Witnesses said flames shot Into the sky after a die9el fuel engine running an out.side generator for the billet blew up. An American sentry M a concrete guard post 10 feet away etcaped injury, although he was blown across the street. Shortly before the blast, some Vietnamese children were playing in lhe area, said Lt. John Pickett, Olicago, Ill .. who live.s in an annt1 200 feet away. A string m American billets ln the 1ectlon have been bombed in previous terrorist attacks. The bombing 1Pa! the first major incident Jn Saigon aince July 20 when Viet Cong gun- ners fired two rockets into the capital. An apartment house was hit but no one was hurt. Two daya ago natlonal police claimed to have broken up a Viet Cong terrorist ring in Saigon with the arrest or 12 cell members. Keeping Se~ret Britisli Ban Mag 01i Meg the hospital after suffering a LONDON (UPl) -Buck-askinc them to reconsider heart attack upon return from Ingham Palace said today whether tbll wu an •P- an East Asian tour this aum· British magazine dealen have proprtate article to publish mer. decided to Withhold dlstrJJ>u. here," Griffin aald ... That ii He was born June 7, IU7 tion of the current Ladiet all 1 know of the matter." In Budapest and was a piano Home Journal iuggestlng the The current issue of the prodigy, appe.aring with the marriage of Princes 1 Ladles Home Journal carries Vienna llymphooy at the a1e Margaret and Lord Snowdon an artlcle by a ••well·placed or 10. He was a gueat con-might be an unhappy one. British dlplomal" ca 11 e d ductor with the Berl In Maj. John GrUfin, press "U,rd X" who refers to Philharmonic at 17. secretary to the queen mother Snowdon and the prlnc6S as S.r:ell was in America when and Princess Margaret, denied "•reluctant couple." World War II broke out and there had been pressure on The article said that on decided to remain. the American magazine from formal occas\OM, Prlnce111 His own piano composiUons the royal family. Mar1e.ret and her bwband put Include Piano Quintet, Vari... "What happened Wh Uutt on a ahow of harmonY but lions on an Original Theme an informal approach wat that at informal 1atherings, for Orchestra and Ly r I c made to the B r i t 11 h 0 the unfortunate altuatlon ii Overture. distributors ot thil maguine, all too clear." ~ .•.............................. ~ : OLYMPIC POOL : I • Tho "MARATHON SWIM" Is In lh ith O.y. Tho Kida Havo Swum • 21.4 CU. FT. SIDE-BY-SIDE REFRIGERATOR FREEZER ·-CAPllll'f ••• F,_ lolds 11p ID 232 11. IU co. It. offnsllfool-lllbenfriinl«secllo>-a~ r~t ii lW' h!lllL Refrfaerttar ~ aut an wbeeb fer tie.WC. 11 WISIUlt Cltmtml S11UYIS let JOO adjust hllhls qalcll/ "" US!ly. 11 -l S!IUS[llOORI ~both,.,..., pb butbt llftd eheesa kMpeB, 7 day mut keeper, eai drawer, ml frtsh frult and '"et.Ille hinl. Cl SIPIUTE T111PEUTUIU lllfllOLS ietYW <Iii lbe euct ... aree DI' cold yaa nat la botb refriftrlt:Dr and frlmr sec:tktls. • It[ llllll 1£1DY ••• (l>dsr .... (opllcml, mo) • old ~ ) lot.'•·-""~ o11ea. om 11,..11a1ir11ps. IN1952 I 513,3'6 Varda (291 Milos) 119 ContlnUOlla Hovrsl ·' HAVE YOU IACKID THIM WITH YOUR .1 .... I • I DONATION? W• ... "" ............................. , ... , ...... • ,, I s 10.oo..s100.oo., 4•Nt&H .... ,. NAMI ..................................................... -······················-····--·-·-····-···--··--• • ADDUSS ..................... , ............................................... -............................... . I OLYMPIA POOL P.O .... eoo • ' Loosened Cap Not 'Air Raid' DOWNEY (AP) -Paul Redwood thought somebody was bombing him when a ml, di3clike object crashed next to him as he was quietly washing hill car. Redwood, 45, ducked behind a wall, thinking the five-inch- wide thing might be a time bomb. It wasn't. Investigating policemen said SUnday it wall a fuel cap that fell from a passing airplane. Nose Amputee? DETROIT (AP) -Mou the F. Wlllaon, dlrector ot lhe Detroit Zoo ... ~ might ·~ Is ...tine quleUy •-." after a aurg\cal 1eam from ._>'l"'" Michigan St ate University A paweiul tranqulllzer wu sewed her noee back in place. rushed to Detfoit Wednesday She nearly lost her nose from Sandusky, Ohio. and Wu when her roommate. Mary. used jo· qu~ the ~year-old bit her Wednesday in a nasty eleptfuit during the operation. moment. ~ Moment.. alter the drug lt took 30 stitches to repair wore off, Wilbon said, Mona the elgllt-foot lnlnlt. U>cd the trunk lo ccmune When lt gets hot and humid, four pounds ol hay, a loaf elephants set j\..i like people ol bread, six apples and -crabby/' 5:8ic1 Dr. Robert gallons of water. BIG 16.6 CU. FT. NO FROST 2 DOOR 95* ~~ REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER • Canple~~ lrolt free In bol!I n!rfc"11or ft-· • lllont top f""1r llolds 'P ID 154 ... of-- • F°*Ml-sbellw,hlldss ~I.- • ~ ....... contnllt. • TR Ytl•table aispe11 hold up to ;s bua.het. • Jct 1111ker INCtt' -Add It wtMnt\111' JOU obocMJ TV and APPLIANCE IN HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD. COST A MESA 540-7131 D.aily 9 1til 9; Sat. 9 'til · 6 1 FOUNOATION Cosla Mosa, Calif. 92627 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ,,r_ .. .:;;.. ............................................................................................ . • .. -· •.. • • • • . . • • DAILY PROT EDITOBL\L 'PAGE Modular A &l'OUP of parents of Costa Mesa High School stu· dtnlJ recenUy attended a school board meeting to ex· pre11 their dlspleosure with the school's modular sched· ulln( system, The two problems which concerned the parents wore that their children were not getting a good educa· tion and that their complaints -made through proper channel& in the school and distrtct administration - went unheard and unanswered. Both concerns are valid ones. Some aspects of the i1Sue should be ncted. For example a petili<!n 1lgned by UZ parents of in· lermedllte and biJth school students was 2iven to board members. The petition asked that the school be return- ed to "tradltional scheduling" by the end ol 1970; that 11late approved text books be used: that homework be assigned reJtularly; that grades be issued regular~y ; that students not be allowed to leave campus during 5chooJ hours ; that tests be given regularly: that pass- fail grades be abolished. and that students be returned to a "conventional dress code ." At the June meeting of the school board at which he resigned, former school principal Frank Lopes made public plans to have a closed campus in the fall. He also said freshmen and sophomores would have more sched· uted time. The problem that the school had last year with ir· regular1y issued grades had been solved , Lopes said. by improving the compOter program that handles the school's grading. He told board members Costa Mesa students would be receiving grades as often as other high school students in the district. Apparently many of the parents who signed the peti- tion were not aware that· text books for hil!:h school stu- dents are approved at the district level, not at the state level. They apparenUy did not know that pass-fail aradtt were offered only in the beginning art course and·driver education. • Educational innovations and experiments inevitably RedSansei ls Playing PQnther Rol.e Y-lont-!Wnd ndlcall shook ap tho <omfor1able ,.iddlodUI delegates at the J~AiPerican C it i 1 e a s ~ ID O>lcai!'> receetly with_ onpy --.pMc6ia nl a rum on the wartime relocllloa of West OOUt Ja_,.· in J94l. Learning ~f ~1!venta. I could not bolp befnl ~ again by the ...... rful Impact Iha! ihe NeiVO ~ had on American culture throllghout tho .. uon·1 lllltory. Let me •JPl•ln. From ljlvery d&yr onward, N~ dance and its aoeompal\)'v ing musk: have lfl.. fluenced ·11111:raUom oI white minstrel ahows ind blackface 1kits. Negro raatime. 15wept the country In the early years ol this century. Right after World War I came the Jm Ace and its huge Impact on college JOUth in the IO'L In tbe 30'1 and 40'• there wu the redlscovery of New Orleans style band music aod Chlcqo llyle boo(I<! woogie. More recenlly there has been the .conquest of American youth by tradilional rhy1hm and bluta. It ii almost axiomatic that Americans, upeclally when young, derive an important plrt of their culture from the American N•l?O· THJB TIME AROUND the big llOUJ'Ce of inspiraUon for . white youlhs Is .not Lead Belly or Ellington or Cab Calloway or Charlie Parker. but the Black Pan- then. Look at the white radicals around Berkeley and UCLA. Many of them are simply playing Black Panther, with their scowling looks, clenched fist salute, obscene language, hair In a fuzzy mop, the Afro print shirts. One group calls tt.self the White Panthen. The radicals among the sansel (third generation Japanese are sansei: the im· migrants .,. 11nowu u tsset; the second Civilian Jets Mailbox .~ . To the Editor: During the last )'tar, the commercial jet aircraft out oI Orange Counly have not llCfeued. but tht civilian jets have, • and they art m1klns more noise for Newp,ort Beach thin the commercl•l jets beclUIO li~le Is being done by the ~ and the FM to regulats the ~ ol flllbt over tile Biel: Bay. NOW Wt: llEAll thal the county ii eo11't ill men commerclal fllahls. I -I{ campolp promlsts m.an 1n~ llf1llKIR. ca.pen. let'• IN what :JOU can do to llOp th~ nolte pollutloo -All<n IUrtly iln't doinc anything. A. L. W AILACE. JR. Comm<relal Pilol ~ ._ .......... ...,..._ """""" ""'""-•llWW _.., ,..... _.,... .... .....,,.. w ...... Tiit '""' ......... ..,..,. " flt ....c. ., tllml- ... ,. HW1 It .....,..,.. Al """' ,._,.I llldlm ,._ fl•IVN 111111 IN""9 ..... ~ ,.._ _., llt wltl'll'llkl M ,_., " ~ ,...,. " _.,_ ............. ,......,.... Dear Gloomy GU8: ~k drivera in Newport Beach are always honking at me. What am r doing \mmg? -Blondie """ ... ,. Ntllm ,....,.... YI-.. -.......... "' ...... "" ...... , ....... ,_ ........ .....,., .... .,.,.,. p .... generation as lllaeJ) are typlcaUy from famWes of m..chants, e:reculiva and prcilesstonal ,_ Uke whits youtha of OW: aame -sociilC lass-the fadlcil or S~ un.sei arw verbally lifted, with • )trem.--of the Importance of their optnJons and even more or their moral judgments. They have no quesUona about radam or Vietnam, only -,,,.,. ..... fully ualmitated Into white culture that they do exactly what white youths or the wne social dass d9 -tbeJ allo play Black Pantber. IN ON! RESPECT the yellow Pan. ~¥°' hive a .. n advantage over the White Panthtri:. Inittad or simply protesting white racism, they can claim to be a victim of it. This turns out to be a little difficult to do. Japanese... Americans are Jn ctillege in greater numben relative to their population than any other ethnic group. In college they get most of the prizes Ind scholarships. On araduaUon they are eagerly sought by employers. Not being able to show that they themseJveg are victims of white racism, they work themselves Into a rage about the lMJ relocation. If you try to tell them Iha! ll all happened long ago. they 1lower a\ .you and insist that it's likely to happei\ .gain any minute. Whaf infuriate&' the radical sansei most of all is his parents who, despite the i:aw inju.stice of the 1'artime relocation, lived through it patiently, fought with honor for their country in World War JI, and came home to study and work hard and prosper -so that their children could go ·lo college. It hwnlllates them IO think that their pari!nls submitted to the relocation Instead of, as they im1gine the Black Panthers would have done, shooting it out with the authorities. THIS EMOTION ACCOUNTS for the odd campaign of radical sansel to compel Bill Hosokawa of the Denver Post to change the title of his history of Japanese in America from "The Quiet Americans" to aomething more mllitant-IOWldini. The book reveals l8e courageous Ind dignified way in whklt Japanese-Americus, call- JQg on the fteeli moral ruoun:es· •Of their background culture, aCcepted their impossible situaUon and kept their faith Jn America during the whole savage war between the land of thetr adoptJon and the land of their ancestors. So little do lhe radical san.wi understand the Japanese cultural identity, .which they claim they art userting by their Black Panther behavior, that lhey are ' 1duall)' ashimed of their pare.nts and arandparents! (Warning : I'm talking about radical sansei, not all sansel.) 1bt trium'ph of the Black Panthers ls that they have done again what Negroes havt dooe ao succuafullJ before. They have established. a UfHtyle -a ety1e of dress and speech •nd gesture and &elf-dr1m1UuUon -for other Americans., irrluding whites and Asians and Me:w:ican-Amtrl.can Srottn Bereta, to emulate. Pity, the.rtfore. the little Oriental girl ol the A!ian-Amerlcan Political Alllaru. . al Ua.A or San FranciSco Stato, looking !n the mirror at ht.r k>ng and black but hopelessty 1tr1Jght hair, ll:lllling aadly that it Just c1n 'l be •rr•nged Ah'O style. fU&bt on! By S. I. H1y1k1wa Pn1kM:nt, San Fr1nct1eo Stsio C.U.11 I Scheduling mean a period of trial and error and create problems that need re-evaluations and adjustments. But if the school district doesn't try new approaches to educatl~n. the system will fail to keep pace with the changing needs of our young people. The most unfortunate aspect of the Costa trfesa hfRh situation seems to be that concerned parents felt they had to resort to petitions to get consideration for their concerns. This is a communication fallur:e thit needs prompt and serious attention from the board of ~ education. ' l Our s,vimmers Need Help Harbor Area volunteer swimfllers have passed the 500.000 yard half-way mark in their one million yard, world-record S\vimathon. The marathon swim is a dramatic effort to encour~ age financial contributions for the building of a 50-yard Olympic size swimming pool to serve the Harbor area. S\vim team members from all area high schools, Orange Coast College and UC Irvine, plus volunteer in· dividual citizens, have churned ,endlessly back and forth up and down the pool at Newport Beach Swim Club in Eastbluff since last Saturday. So far they have raised about $20 per mile of swim- ming, a total of only $8,0QO out of $87,500 needed. The $87 ,500 is a one-fourth share of the estimated $3.50.000 cost !or the Olyrppic pool which would be built on the ,i::rounds of Nev.rport Harbor Hill!h School. The city of Newport Beach put up another one-fourth share which it expects to come back throu~h a larger aquatics re- creation pro~ram in the big pool, and Newport-Mesa Unified School District has pledJ?ed a half share of $175,· 000. about the cost of a standard-size pool. They need more financial support from the commu· nity -a lot more. Donations may be mailed to Olympid Pool Foundation, P.O. Box 800. Costa Mesa, Cali!. N • ~MY HOOK l>lSSOLYE~.'' 111 Prinie Time, Half of IJ.S. Households Listen The First President to Master TV W ASHING'TON -Coming to the point directly, Richard M. Nixon is such a hot television personality-that he's got the networks gasping. tie can con1mand the air in prime time and get people jn half the households of America listen- ing to him. :io It may be said that Nixon is the first American pres- Jdent to master the electronic medium. _ Eis~~.r. KeD- nedy and Johnson couldn 't touch him in their time none of them really.under- standlng how to get in direct contact with heartb and home to make their sales pitches. This is all vr.ry strange considering that Nixon fared so badly in his tel!vision contest with John F. Kennedy, !:jut in the ensuing ye11rs Nixon has leatned by e:tperience things that Kennedy did not know and Eisenhower. and Johnson could not comprehend. THIS IS QUITE SIA-IPLE. It consists of going on television. either by press ctinference or solo appearance. in those hours after diMer when Americans lock Richard Wil1op. • ·" themselves in their homes to digest the evening meal ind seek ways lo avoid ccr.nplete boredom before shuffling off to bed. Of course, yoo've gol to be good at it, too. - ~ he is doing. He does not care about CBS's Cronkite and the new NBC newsteam including Brinkley, nor about the time pressures on m o r n i n g newspapermen. He wants to hurdle the commentators and news shows and make direct cootact "'ilh the largest possiblfi number of citizens at the hours when they are nonnally disposed to COll- centrate '?n the tube. l'hat is what he ·has been getting, and at Limes of his own choosing, fourteen times, in fact, Eisenhowu had -no sludied rationale for his television appearances, which were mostly at press conferences held in the momlng hours when bousewives- and bread winners were busy .at their appointed tasks. Kennedy had 1 misconceytion that his TV appearances should be so timed as to key in with t'1e evening news broadcasts, giving the Cronkite and Huntley-Brinkley show-s time to prepare and use film clips and the morning newspaper editorialists time to prepare their su1nmaries and con- clusions. His trouble was that most of his appearances were at the wrong hours. JOHNSOS WAS confused by the whole business of when and bow to appear on television and willl all due respect to his hard trying, made a botcb or it. Not Nixon. He knows precisely what so far in his administration and whe n it counted in holding ot gaining public support. This is really wbat eounts in the present controversy over cranting TV time to opponents of the President's pOlicies. When CBS broke \he ice and tritd to regularize some kind of a re- sponse by Democratic National Chair· man Linvrence F. O'Brien it was a bomb for this engaging politician. Too feW people had ever heard of him and too many who had weren't Interested. He probably would have been better off lo keep clamoring for equal time without getting it. thus creating the impression that Nixon 's networks gave the Pw.skl.ent a sinister unequal ad vantage. CBS GAVE A WAY $75,000 worth of air Ume for nothing except some vague principle that the loyal opposition to a president ought to be heard. The trouble was that so few were listening. CBS seems disposed to lel the Democrats have at least thn:e more such t i m es before the cznera whlch adds up to quite a lot or free air time to devote to such a small audihice. A certain number of CBS stoc\::hoiders think so, too. and .thr. network bas not got what could be called a prime attractio.n for jts trouble in. trying to "balanct" ill coverage of the PreSidenL . As DOted heft:in before, \he networks, and particularly CBS, . art in trouble bewlse if public ll)lstrusl _.,, Olll ol their cOvuage of the Vietnam war and student riots,, hef:Vily fertillztd and fed by the steamy rhetoric Of Vice President I Agnew . The networks brush this oft as the publlc having sickened of seeing . thipgs as they are but that isn't what a gocxf many viewers think. . ' 'A GOOD MANY · think this coverage is hoked up to show the bad side of everything, a put down on the ad- ministration, the country. flag and homt reflecting only the pelitical dyspepsia of the TV producers and commentators and shot through with over4ramatizaUon and exaggerated e:nphas.is on dissenl Why We Males Oppress the Ladies I have a letler from 1. lady (and J hope she won't mind my referring to her Jn that fashion) "'ho says : "Hoppe : When it co1nes lo the Wome11 's Liberation Front. you \\Tile nothing but unadulterated rot. ll shows that you , Hke all men, are subconscious male chauvinist pigs. \Vho don·t even know how vilely you are oppressing us women." This is outrageous. First of all I don'l "'rite unadulterated rot. I write adulter- ated rot. Secondly. this ~·hole concept of Womens Llb that we men are unknowing. ly persecuting the fair sex is sbttr nonsense. ~. ' '\, AS I WAS SAYll'\G to the fellows down at the Male Citizens· Council the other night: ''Now don't get me wrong fellows." J said, "I was raised by a woman and I know we all lo\'e our women . But the fact of the inatler is that lately they've been gettb1g downright uppity. "Ifs these outside agitators from the Wo1nen ·s Lib.'• Colonel Stonewall, US~tC (retired!, said, shaking his head. ··com· ing in here and stirring up our girls. They were always happy when they knew thetr place." .. That's right." agretd Senator Stro- mond. "We ustd to get along just fine 'cause we k..ew how to treat them. You got to tre•t them like children." "The fad. ls they're basically shiftless and untrustworth1," uJd Wally George, .---B11 George --~ ~ar George: Do you make a living off th1l lltlle cotw:nn? If you can rail tt a column. IVONDERLVG Dear Wondering : Yes, I make a living off this column. Jf you can call It a ~l\'ll\R. Art Hoppe ~ nodding. "They say Oil(! thing and mean another. And if you let 'em, they''d spend all day playing cards, gabbing and watching f.ee.vee . '' "YOU GIVE 'EP.1 any money and they spend it right off on flashy duds and stuff," added Bert Biibo. "What's more. they can't hold their liquor. It makes 'em quarrelsome.'' "Now hold on , fellows,'' said Tom Tolerant, who·s something of a moderate on the sex issue ... There's sQme good 011es who are a credit to their sex. 'fake Mrs. Nixon. All she ever says is. "I'm glad lo be here and !hank you for the roses." No\v there's one who knows her place. You don 't see her kind out agitatb1g . "Tom's right," conceded Bert· Dildo. ''Not lll8ny ever amounted to a hill of beans on their own, but they make fine maids and cooks. And l"m glad to have one aroond the house to rai5e my children. We've always treated her Patentable if V seful Could you get a patent on an alarm clock that 5:<1uirts cold wattr down a sleeper's neck ? A man in Chicago did. Whal about a balloon drawn through the sky by eagles! Or a stickpin made of candy, to be eaten after use? Or ;in au tomatic hat tipper for lazy gentlemen? These, too, all won patents. To the inventor"s neighbors, such idea5 n1ight seem pretty silly. And our patent law does say that, for an Idea to be patentable, It must be "useful." HOWEVER. IN deciding whal is ....tul, the law Is vtty tolerant indeed. 'Ille law rementber1 (even if Ult neighbors don•t) that people laughed too at Alex- ander Graham Bell's rtnt ielephone and 1.t the Wright brothera' lint airplane. True. you cannot ret a patent on someth l111 that has no use at all. For ex11mple. an inventor claiming to have created a "perpetu•l mot.Ion m~chlnt" \\'A~ turned down oo Ulll ground. The ruling pointed out that the m11chine could not possibly work, because It was con- trary to the laws or .. naturt. Nor tan ycu patent a device v.•hich ls userul only to do tvil. 11\us, a court • Law in Action •. rejected a patent for 1 method of fakirig the appearance or tobacco lea\•es for ' the purpose of making them look better than they really were. THE J UDGE SAID: "Congress did not intend to extend protection to· (.in- ventions) which confer no other benefit upon the public than the oppurtunity of profiting by deception and fr1ud. The invention mll.!t be capable of mome bene:flcial use as dlstln,uished frun a pernicious use." But for most Investors, the test of usefulnes1 ~n be passed without too much trouble. The law arnerally takes the aame opUmlsslc 1ttltude tbar Ben- jamin Franklin onct took when he was asked ; "What Is the use of this new in· vrntlon?" Frt1nklln·1 reply "'a..,: "What is th~ use of a newborn child?'' Au A1ntrfcon Bar A.$SOCiotio" pttb· Uc 11trvfcc Jtaturt b~ \VIU Bernard. like one of the family.'' ;'THEY DO HAVE a natural sense of the rhythm method," agreed Colonel Stonewall grudgingly. "but \\'OU\d you want your sister to marry one?" "Look at the scientific r acts, gentlemen," said the 111 o t e p an· thropologist, Dr. Carruthers lt1cSnair. •·All my studies prove that women dress differently, act differently . think dif· ferently and are built differently than "'-e men." Thus reassured , \\o'e pledged alleg!a~ to our banner -a crowing rooster over the legend. "Male Suprtm.1cy!'' -and reaffirmed our stand In favor of repealing the 19th Amr.ndment abolishing ctillege education for femaleJ and maintaininr separate but eqi.Aal facilities, particularly in bus staUons. SO THE TRUTH Is we males oppr't'!!S ladies simply because we've got a good thing going. A11d like all oppressors we can think up a million rationalizations to justify it. I Thus all the \\'omen's Llb need do is convince us oppressor~ to give up the good thing we've got going. Lota of luck, ladies. --.iW- Friday, July 31, 1970 The tdltorial page of the Doilr Pilot seeks to inform and stim- tda.tc readtrt bu presenting thit newrpaper'1 opinion.s and com. .~fafJI on topics oJ blterert and riQ1'i/iccntt, by providing o. forum /or tM 1xpreuion of our '"tt0dtr1' opi1'llo111. and by presenting the dlt>erit vf1w- pointr oj informtd obstrvtr.1' and rpoktsmen on topics of the clay. Robert N. Weed, Publisher • • • . l~Lives ,t , '1 , Brig Hten ed by COior fui E fOrt ' Picture a patio wit1i candy-striped swings, multJ.colored pUlars al)d strawberry ice cream 1colored benches-a combination to delight We eyes of any child. ' There are 54 child""! at Fairview State Hospital who 1!ol only may find delight hut 'the jof of learning basic skills in this particular petio, redecot:ated ~y •· gh>up of volunteers from Asslsteens. Membei:s.of'.the auiiliary to tile Assistance League of Newport 11eacb are glvihg-weekly time all slimmer to brighten the lives of children 1n their "adopted" ward 114. Under the direction of. "the ward's charge nurse, Mrs. Angie O'Doneld,. they are glvil)g the· all-important individual attelltion need· ed by children everywhere. . _ Each child bas· a planned program foc maximum perfonnence of self-<levelojlmeot, under the guidance of Mrs. O'Dooald and her stall. 'l'l!ree years ago, most of the childrell-'-ranglng in-a8' from toddlers of three th those in their teens-were bedriClden and perhaps bottle-fed. Today, .the same clilldren ba\re Jearned to. walk, dress aDd f.eed themselves. , · · 4 To assi~t tb""thil<\ren to make a rm• of learning to walk, the Assisteens painted ~lor!UI lines, circles and triangles on the patio llOor. Now they may give their time to patiently belpmg lit& feet ~~~uv~r through the ·linked circles, or to follow the llrigbt.eol~ Colorful decorntiOM give cheer to the youngsters who must work so hard lo help themselves, and bright toucb.S of artificial floivers also have ·beep· provided· by the Assisteens. , . Now they are ,hoping to !ill another need for the,children by p~OV!dlng a variety of furniture for the patio. Fllnds for, this project · will depend 01} sales_ w_hich they oversee on the second SatuJ:day of every month 1n the Assistance League Thrift Shop of Newpo_rt Beach. . The children_ in ward 114 are part of 2100 patients now boosed in, Fwmew HospitaJ, one of the few state hospitals to take only mentally retarded patients. Approximately 50 pereent of these pa· !i!"lls are physically handicapped, and although new•methods of train· mg he)p them to gain motor and muscle coordinatioo, they need the constant assistance of volubteers to put tbe methods into effective use. The Assisteens are fulfilling that need for 54 special children this smnmer. ........ -BEA ANDERSON, Ediklr -.,..,. ,..., "· ,,,. • ... u • • STORY TIME-Assisteen member Karen Schweitz. er, 13, bolds a brigblly colored picture book to ii· lustrate a stocy for two cb!ldren in ward 114 at Fair· view State Hospital. BRIGHT TOUCH-Assembling coloi1DI artificial flower ar- rangements in pol.> to decorate ward 114 patio are (left to right) Kim Miner, 14, Robin Minor, 16,. and Brynn Garner, 16, all from Newport Beach. The group of provisional and regular ~hers of Assisteens are volunteering weekly time all summer. • DAILY l"ILOT ......_ .. .,....__, HERE· ·WE GO-A small patient at Fairview Stale Hospital takes an ~ !ant step, assisted by Jamie Bedall, 14, of Newport lleacb>wbile Leelie•Ripl"1/ 15, of Balboa Island puts finishing touches of strawberry ice creiiJn.coloAci paint to a patio bench. · . ' • • ' • . . . . • Wheels Drives Husband . to Distra~tion .; •• .. Restauran .t. on • , I ' DEAR ANN LANDERS! My wile ii ·lie mo9l di""'sobed pm<n U. Ibo ;jlorld. 81111 ,opeodl wboie d a 7 1 .doinf :11>so1utely nodtlng. 'lllen suddenl;y she's ·i whirlwind or acUvlly -rushing. ·mshing, yelling, "1 bave on1y tw.o Wnds!" Etcetera. " . ...Uter a solid week of goofing off. lit d<cides to do EVERYT!ilNG. S!)e ..ts all the clocks in Ille liouse theod • minutes, takes the ttcetven ol~ the Ws and vowa to ~ake every ~eecood ,....,t Laiely llleotaned --..-. 8bo drives to tho ahopplng-will> IMr -bowl and milk ii blr lap "'io save time." Our car lobks lib a prbsp wet .-ll"Jl'1' napk~as., 1111....wan'and IOod all IM!f the ...... ,:·'11111 ant I'm morried to -idn"t min • ' ANN LANDERS ~ your colwnn for anythinc. So please :":a:~m~:r •:ce at!.tie~e ~ ~ mlo il Thanb -JOE FROM FLINT>I DEAR JOE: 80n la la. Now -....... YOUR face! DEAR ANN LANDERS! I dilllM with your ""1Clusioo 11111 tho bulblnd who w1nted his wife ' to blv• an 'affair wilh -·m -1ey1ng 1o decrldo \!ti' -... ..... . lbe --~-he had a guillJ CODICleuce. I had a similar uperience with my husband. A psychiatrist explalned b.11 behavior in quite a dilfereot way. . Allen (not his real name) had a disastroUs marrWtge before we met. Ht' caucht his wile in bed with her tennis teldler. Allen nol ooly wss -eel bul deePIY hurt. His wile bad alw~ -cold'to bbn, bul the tennis - brougl!t out • side ol her he neve< cftameduisted. • Aft"1' • Allen and I .married be was unable lo· perform lleSUllly ball Iha time. I pretended b dkln't matter, Be bid betta'. Wlll!I he suggtsted I have an a!fair wUh another man (he even offered to hire someone), l wu mortified. For years Allen nagged me but I refuoed, thinking he had to be deranced to sugge!I such a thing1 When Allen djed last year , I went to pieces. My doctor explained that he w11 hoping to rebuild bis ahllttred sell esteem bf provid1n1 me with 10metbing he !ell he wu d<privlng me of. I'm >O!T)' 0 n0w I didn't go lloni will> bim. Not for my aake, '*t for his. - ELEANOR DEAR ELEANOR: ObViooliJ )'Oii U)la !oaad -... -~tleo. -~m1P1 •..e-., wttll a different eae -Ud <t:l&Mr eoald Uve beea ri&Jtt, ' DEAR ANN LANDERS: Can a 5'10" gal get out o( a sports car without looking like • baby ei<phant doing a toe dance? I'm dating three FY • ...., own U.1mb10.. size cars. There must ~ a dlgnltied way lo get out of ~ bab7 buQ111 but I can't figure how lo do It. Pleue come up with tome actvM:e -not only for me hilt !or my_ .,i!•riaf ailltrs. Im Ml llont. -TREE TOPPER. DEAR TOPfER1 rm l'I" .. I feet · like a -.._,. 1 1rJ 11 dim• .. t el a.,..... cat. I . , ' Yoa'll 1J!11Mr lelo•-•·1t,_ -· a cloee • tlte ._. • p1 I Im, l1llp yoar ...... ...-. ,.1 yoar ...... ffl fin! 1nil nleod .,_ -11 .. geotiemaawk-.. e! •1- -tf 1te11 1 gen~ .... (P .S. 91 eareflt nOI lo put Ill ,_-welpl 1111 .. ITllP or yoa m11 flip d9e 111 tftl' en Ids back.) What awaits you on the other side or the marriage veil? How can you be sure )'OW' marriage 1fiU work? Read Arir\,Landers' booklet "MllTia&e -Whal 'to Expect" Send your requoot lo Alm Landers in care ol fOOC'. ,ewlPIPI( ....tosintl 50 centa in coin and 1 looJ. stamped, self.addressed enve'lope In care o! lbe DAILY Pllm, l I I I I I .. . ··~ . .· -• . ' • ·- . • -... -· ... • • ' ' • . . • • f'rlNy, Jub' ll, 1970 '• 'You r Ho roscope Tomorro w ", " ).. ' ' 'Gemin·i: .. Fo ~.ow Your ''Hunch SATURDAY AUGUST I Ir fbtul womH ud .Uberatloe. Accent on utillution of> points ol view, you invitei •·'""ttariu DllJ' HUd pedU-·natural t a I e o t I , quaUt!c1. ' ilnaqclal a:aln. If YQU adhere -.• Fo'Uow through on hunch. to nan:ow oqurse, you could BJ SYDNEY OMARB tic on tbls subject. ~am by sh~lng knowledge. I~. Realize this and respond ''ARIES (. M,.;....h ii-April 19); Obt.illn hint from Taarus according!~. Cheek 1 e g a I TEEN DA11NG RINTS: ...,~ message. Re1ative maker pOlnts.. ne mooa 11 • e w ... Let There b a breakµlrough to· swprise announcerrtent. · AQUARI~ (Jan. 20.Feb. will alalne under IL "-_.. cnativltyJ iYtu have reaaoa T CANC!R'(June .21.July 22): 11): Stress onfpublic relations, UoUI Uve &alt a lt ••• toceleoraui. Joue~nl'lalkl;Ua .~J: ·~Y make .c~alms general popularity, Be an at- permuucJ ef relldoMWit. ol those "ho previ~ were rtl•rdi.DI your--~asioru. tenUve listener. V~ gain with wtllle Cucer mlab& aet ~ skeptical. Leo i ll d J Y J du a 1 ~C,pd ~ou · owh · iPterests. atUtl,Jde ot · recepfl.vity. No wt• cbect. R • m • • e e'' ~s Pi'omlnenUY~ ., • Reiof:t to iu>Orthcid.61.metbods~ need to force issues. Time lllPllpted fw Ariel, w!lloo , .TAVRIJIHApril·~ 20): OheO:· Individual •Iii> br"f fa ". our e•-•· goals PilC'tl slloUl take ft slow lllil M-~ persons ent~, ur lite. 'rumors •-~-ad of lac•~ .. : y · ,,,,__ .. t: · n..... "'"""" ~ P (Feb. 1s-'March 20): 'euy. 'l'tds II a date time You. redlsCover guatilies in LEO (July 23 _ Aug. 22): Pleasant: :90eial affair should wllcll leatares °"''' dte family members. Yoo also Definite advancement made not be used as excuse for cruel aesture, f 1 e wer s, find out that you. J>08SeSS more toward cherished. goal. Aries overindulgence. Remember nmatlclna. e r ea t Ive ~ of value than unagined. Be individual figures in ~heme past. re!Olutioos concerning de1von. Ulllqae toocil 1ett: percepti ve. You l~arn rh· . of even.ts .. Go straight to1 the diet. general health. Fine for desired rapome. Mucb talk GEMJNI (May 21.J ~ 20). top; there is room for you. iei-together with ai:sociates, Utilize sense or sbowmarjstup, Col-workers. To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding •torles with black and white glossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De- partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received following the wedding will not b·e userl. For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub-- mitted six weeks or m<lre before the wedding date. If deadline is not met, only. a story will be used. To help fill requirements on both wed4 din~ and engagement stories, fonns are available in all Of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by Women's Section stafi members at 642-4321 or •94-9466. YJB.GO .(Aug. 23-Septj 22)' .. IF TODAY ·IS· YOUR Stop playing games. Find out BIRTHDAY you have natural what it is you desire. Then executive ability. You do bel· see the right people. Your cycle is on upswing. Re ter working for yourself than forthright, confident. Visit one for others. Year is veiy confined io borne, hospital. signifieant. If single, marriage RA-c....... .. .. ~ could be on horizon. If mar· UB 1~, .. ~•. 22): . f I You may fin<i that 30me who r1ed, an addiUon to ami 'I make promises do 50 under is distinct possibility. In pro-- the influence. Be realistic. fessional area, there. is added Trust those who pr 0 v e d responsibility and gr e a t e r themselves in past. Family reward . rn-ber IS' making valid To 11~ out who'• luck" for "ou 1., '""' ITIOM'>" •ncl lo\lt, onlf<" $YdMY am.rr'• statements. Listen. book!tl, "iectff Hints '°" M•n 111<1 WOINft." 5'N:I blrthelti. t ncl 511 ~nll SCORPIO {Oct. 23-Nov. 21): 10 Omtrr _..,,011111 SK•~· "" vou·need more than flattery. PAILY PILOT'. Box Jl4. Go"Wld Ctnlrtl Get the facts. Check squrces. s11t1on. Hew YM, H.Y. 1ao11 .. Social event could provide Andy's Fun valuable contact. Be con-Ask any kid, "Ask Ancly" ls.fun. siderate tov,,ard one who seems slow'. Set fine example. Stt It Satul'days In the DAILY SAGllTARIUS (Nov. 22-PILOT. Dee. 21): Good lunar aspect "';i~~~~~jiiig coincides now with journeys, • higher education, your ability to gain and utilize knowledge. Aim hig h; many admire you and will express their feelings . J • J UPHOLSRlY MEAN11 QUALfTT, INTIO•lfY• SlllVICI , ClltAl"TSMANIHI ... Wll LIK• llAUTllJUL flUllNITital WI ACCI PT CHALLllNGl5 ' CAPRICORN (Dec. %2-Jan. 19): By observing various 642·5176 646-lpll I .. . . ' . ' i; ~lt!mnae Offer Early ; ! 't Hmitington Valley residents are being a ssisted with Michael Tooley (left} and Mrs. ruchanl Schrader, • • Chrlmnu plans by members oj Delta (!amma · chairman. The sale will continue through November ! i Alumnae Association Of HUJJtinglon Beai:h. who are and anyooe wishing to view the canb may call Mrs. • • selling Christmas ~anls with proceeds earmarked Schrader, 1168-2110. ; j . . ~f;:or~~~=::c::•..:to:'....::th:::t:_b:::l:::in:::d::_: ;:Sh:::opp:'.!'.!:::ll>g~earl::::~Y_:·ar:.•:..::M::rs.:·:.....------------------:. .... ~t. -Art Forms Braw New Interest ~ .. .. . .. . . " ••• .... -.... · ' .. ~: i · .. " : : " .. •• :l ' " ·: ., :: ., ., •• .. .. .. . .. . . .. , . ' . • :t' ; v . . . ' -(~ ~ . . ~;!: ,...; ~: ,..;: . . ,, . -....... . , I 111 JEAH-wwniis ..................... - u It'• made out of wood • NOW OPEN! Family Butcher ROBERTS Ola '1'1- BUJCHER ·SHOPPE and beadl pebbi• la Ii artt tbal ocme artlaf3 -= to bO plained, • re quick-drying, ... -.... ~. =>1::::.'!"'""'""'" -m--al.........,"""""'"""';-_.,. bi<•••l")llllnts"ll!ade from me ....-age lm>n> vmuur, •••• w'" •••• _.., · Iha be ··-• faced with · l1'inp done in 'I1"Y snploy m 0 de r n plastic t can wicu ~n hol -'~ pa ~·C.o:<"fiij&lii' rnaterlab with a .,._ 11oa1-~ arry type of falmc ~-%"ornp\'•'. • of l\!C«&' ~ for pmilple otrcld>ed, to a frame £'11h<r of polnlell flbergla!il '.·Wilh plaS!lco j,, ~ and th'!" the'l!eated capva1 ;inetal, ;fir ~ages ' aaing ecul~ Artiltl moy .find necessary fo1»qil& '!be l>linl<• "!'~ !Nm ·Pl'*. ~ beauty in 1orm! of ftbergiaos, cri the other "nd, can be t.0''81\9 bladM;t>aiaJ,.,;.M ~glassWevenindiacarded thlnnt.d l o resemble ,,_ art 11 '\q<i~'to!".ot.:.' , Objects rucjl as paper wps walerl'Jlon. , ~ hear aboot'--1 "1-or lell(h of wire. The'!<" 0'111ERS DIFFER' =ar ~ u collogtlpl. lonns call !Or new terms. · ~·-a~~ n1ay j,.... ~ln'-M• mac::rarne « .. ~.i: • d ~-·~~ ,~--·1'"'!"• WOod The ..._.l.Ular w o r awayfrcm ·~.·Plner encfustlcs and we er 11maa"81Df:1~ refen to the 1a1d, am employ j(na.'tlve ""'i bu happened to Ill< old knotting of jwtn. Into vanous materials ouch u '""lap aod f~lar art fcnrui . d e 1 I 1 n 1 • . and lhapes: hemp or dellberatly ' ltrive M\ually, the old famlllar oerlgraphl are lilt ocreen fe< uneven effeda lo ti>ttery fonill ore still around -but pints Cq oome' modem or sculpture .. a kjltd of pro. .,me are being used in new artJsta: may •place iuch prints test against the smooth, func- wayi bl conjunctioo with our oo plexiglaS); coQolrapbs are tional appearance r:/.. machine spaoe-age t e e b no 1 o 11 e1· pr!nl<d ~ collages of all ... __ _.1A1 _ _j ma\R: llUYl;Jes, ~ ploPon. kinda d. od matenllfl sueh as Artists who may~ seem ex-• Af Jn.truct« Charles Bruce a<J')'llCI, wim O< meta; wub-mod all Pm.I*' Jnterviewed at Orange en, and tncaustlcs UUIIse, tremely em actu 1 may eout' "-''-, cmunented hot coltred wu instead of be using ancient forms in new !!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!~:_:::::;'.._'.'.~~·~· ints ways. Modem ~es · In pa • glass il}at emerge free Bowing 211L17"-C....M .. Nat .. .,.. ............... 71t1 A M•s 11.t .. ....._ c• ....., .. ~ ... ...,,.. .. ..... .....,.._.II.I .. ...... ,.. crfttcal ,_, .. -A•a :l'A TO t fAL\ INIOU MINT1 'NOW ..---CALL --~ C.... MIN '41..ZIZI ............ 14 ... 211 1 -'-I I .. -~ I - .. INGENWOS USE and assymmetrical came from "Art can be made out oc the same proeesS' used by anything that can be ordered," glass blowers centuries ago. Piner comniented, ,pointing to . Piner .added that ' ' th e a atrik1nl statue, standing perversity of our time" seems In the Art C.enter patio of evident in 90me works of art a Samurai warrior which was which seek to comblne: the mad• of dLscanled auto ports. hand made look w l t h An ofange Coast a r t materials of modem inventioa. student's work was part.laity Laminated wood, for ex- re-'!y for llbowing in tile col· ample, which was. invented for i.,e art galleey, and the 111'.ge aircraft construction In WOl'ld a1moet mutal-0.ke paintings War ll, now is used to polished dol)O Jn vivid acrylic ·pa1m. effect in wood sculptur~ iJ!t*a~ ope of the Jn. Art II di{fmnt lo/ the space DO'Vltlom: d. ar tlme. at:e -yes. But IO loO is Acryllc paioll, ~ <I· the viewer. I Lutheran Nuptials . Performed Ne'Np(lrt Harbor Lutheran O:lurdJ. was the setting for the wedding of Sue Lyon, daugl!tor of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Lyon al Anaheim and Roa Sooder, son of Mr. and Mrs . Waller Souder of Newport Bead! • The bride wu given in mar4 r1ase by her mother and father for the double ring ceremony performed by the Rev. Ronald White. Mi.ta Carol Dye attended the bride u male! of boner. Mi.ta Karen Probasc o wu br!Oeomald and Jilt Kratz was Dower ·girl. Derek J- carried the rings. LaJTy Souder was h I s brother's beat man, and uaher- lni was Terry Temple. 'Ille new Mr. and Mrs Souder, who were classmates at Newport HarboT High s-chool, will make their home in c.osta Mesa. Boots Walk Into Fall Booll! for the slnartly dr~· ed woman ~ . go on. aod on. They show for fall , and wjoter in soft. crushed suede, in shiny vinyl-like flni:tles, in kid, and even patern e d brocades and the like for evening. Favorite height fer daytime: just below the Jenee. Favorite material with many designers; the repWe pat.. t.ros. I ' SEMI-ANNUAL ' ' ~&,t ... !!.~;~- Th is is the llG One , , . ' REDU(TIONS UP TO 75% ! • All Summer Merchandise Goes ! -,. No Gimmicks ! ' t JUST TREMENDOUS VALUES FROM DUR REGULAR STOCK OUll EN~RE STOCK OF SWIM SUITS: R99ularfy to $35.00 $8 TO $18 WET SEAL CHARGE HUNDREDS OF COTTON SHIFTS and PANT DRESSES Regularl y to $25.00 $6 00 to s13 00 MASTER CHARGE ENTIRE STOCK OF SUMMER SHOR·TS and TEE SHlaTS " ' . . ROlularly to· $13.00 I • Regularly to $SO.b0 H . ~ v ~ s300 to seoo IANKAMERICARD ;,, , qNE AND 'fY'O.PllCE. . , ,,D R E S, S E S , ., . . . ., 5·800 . to ·525 00'.~ • ~~L SALES ·RN~\ " • . - POL VESTER. CoilTON ANO BLE D -( . ~ P A.'41 T S ~ ,, '· ', .. s500 :~SB"; _ .. 1\.tO t ' ' ; . ,, ~ ooOas ~ 1.1 AlL ~oin fA.M. '1'1 L t 1JO ;.M, fll. JUL'l:,11~ t ' • ' • • • • . . 'ALL STORES Ol'EN ~UNDAY, AUG. 2nd, Noon 'til S p.m.; - ' I I I " 1 ) ' . I r I r t I 1 I ' I I r • • • • •• ~ ' : yl!)r; "6 : fiO. '182, ~"SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES -'FRIDAY, ~~LY 31, 1970". "' TEN CENTS . ,.. , -' c. ' . --. ••••• 1 .. Re.ace Nixon's -Mideas ·t Appeal· Hee~d .. , OAILY P'ILOT ,...,._ h' ,l:ldlanl ktlllltt MAR-INE GUA~DS EL TORO CRASH SCENE AS AIR FORCE ONE TAXIS DOWN RUNWAY Presldent'r• Plane W•1 Being Pr1p.1recf for Training f li ght when Cr11h Occurred :.\rea · T.eachers W ~p.t Surplus ~ii{ary Fuµds ' . : • By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ftl• 01l1Y !"Utt Stiff Members of the Newport-Mesa Educa- tiOnl A!;SOciatjon will ask school board members to distribute some. of the S890,- 0001in apditional salary budget fu_nds to ~!11 1 salary ' increases, a.siociation Prttlklent Brad Thurman announced· to-- uy: Huntington Hero Pilot Dies in El Toro Cras·h By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of --o.ltw ltllel llllf One wing drooping as it landed with a bounce, a giant KC130 midair fueling tanker careened down the nmway al El Toro Marine' Corps Air Station Thurs.. day, flipped over and exploded in names. from burns and smoke inhalation. Two members of the rescue crew - who carried out three victims -were aJ90 injured despite the fact one wore an asbestos suit and oxygen mask. Sgt. Bob Trlbett collapsed due to smoke inhalation while 'nside the blating. skeletal fuselage, but. was· helped out of the wreckage to safety. TEL AVfV (UPI) -'l1le Israeli cab.intt, heeding an appeal ff'!>ltt Pruj.. dent Nlzon, today accepted the U.S. Middle East. peace proposals that irtcluq, a three-mooth cease-lire on the Egyptian frool. Egypt•bad accepted the propoaa_b; earlier. The decision was taken by the cabinet in the fourth crisis ·session of the ~et:k despjt.... the thttat of a walkout by tht si.J GahalParty members of the National· Unity cOaliUon that would imperil the government of Pr.emler Golila Meir.· thf: siz members Of the ba~Jdsh party. voted against accepting the· proposii; le-. corCting to the Israeli atat.e radio which .sald the. vote io: the cab!Mt .. was •17" with no abstentions. However, they did no~ Immediately ·walk out but•cauCU3!1d a1atn to.decide lbeir courae. Polllleal,.oowte1 latd it .wu unlikelJ Gallal '""1d tab dY firm . deiiisloo befcn Sunday, l .. vlnf !be country llill teetering on the Ma• ol a governmental crl>I!. The Gahal bloc, whl_ch hu _2' aeata in tht lJO.teat unicameral parlia- ment, bad.,peclded Tuesday .\o walk out if the cabinet &aid yes . · Deiplle !be tbreilt, the Gaba! minlsters Wert Jrivj{.e(f to tit on a ministetla1 committee Whlcb· will draft the official Israel reply, · Egyptian buildup. The right.Wini Gahal party not ooJy opposes a cease-fire but insists that any territory captured rrom the Arbs in the 1967 · si.J day war remaJn an. imegal part of Iuael. ft fili'I ,'that an\> IJOiotfated peace could" mUn . Ifie !QM ol lflat territory. . Officially ttated Israeli · j:oVtrllm'ent policy Is that 10me ol Ifie" JA!ie•,,;•111 be negoUaled. Pretldent Gamal Abdel Nauer' of Egypt ac~pted the Americail ceaae.ftte pl"<lpOll!. as did Jordan. But bli aclion• ' . oplit the Arab world, with Syria ond Iraq condemning his action and with Iraq ollertni 12,000 ltoops to the Pale.ti· nian Arab guerrillas who have vowed tbey _will not a~ept a cease-fire. In I!ie micbt ol !be p O l•ft" f C a l deye1Qpment.s Israeli Phaiitoms and • Skyhaw~ bombed Egyptian Suez. Cina! l!OOilion• lhroughou~tbe.day In the ,7l1t con.!leCUtlve day 'of 1uch1 ati.ckl, and lsrael sent other planes into Jordan to hit Jordanian army poajUorui in retaliatiorr for attacb on Iaraell • j)ord., aetUemenfs . * * * * * * Cease~Fire Told Nixon Anno11:nce.! Peace Accepumce · ·Br JOBN VAL~ · · '. The Pruidint stres.e<E, however, lh•t · · ~ .. M ,,.. ...., · under the pliln "it ls an tnteara1 part 1 In· an 111111~ieci -~~ .e6, ... that nelµier side la to 1J!O the~- ,_the·-at the S.. Clemnli Inn fire oerlod lo Improve-JU military posl· •~.... n.. ident N 1 ~ ~ 1n the area ot the cease-fire l!riM." ..........,., .-,es i:e n Qfficiall}' an-.. "All wOU!d·have to refrain from em- nouncd Israeli 1ccept.tnee -cl-Ute U.S. placing new missile or other inlt.allationt ,lr,d, ~•l:bt ihe Middle Ea!t. add ·from undertaking a military· buildup -!' i..y Seert(uy of State William of any kind in such an area." P. Rogett,..the Prstdtnt· made the '1ur-The President sa1d that the acceptance J:ise v~11· ti> exprea~ hla plealUJ'e at lo-was a ray or hope but added "we do n t ~~~ 0~!:;! ~1t ':1 :e:~ ij~a~~~~~te lb~ difficulties whicb· 1Ju the prnpo11!. • • ;·· •. ' "i am· gra{Uied that noW all th'iM ov·. AJter readl~g the l?"epared statement, emmenta: to whom we hivt 1~ ~ Presi~nt left· without further cow. oor iniUaUve have respondfld potttt.ei ment. Sec:retary Rogen, who. received and accepted the Unltesf St.a•-Y strong PflllSe .from Nixon for bemg dnftl- al." Nilon 11ld. ~ ~~:ii~( ~e·peace.,plin.1 C!l~ ~~mmment Terming the situation "e1plosive,11 ~ said the 1,000 teachers w~ are ~ ~ ~ auociatl~are ez~ng . llllilifol .. ~b>-111 ~b>:lho,.l percOlit •c<ll " llVlllg ;_,,.. already &lllJl'.OVecf;,by board piembof1. • 1be pitot, a much-decorated veteran of Vietnam helicopter .duty, died in the blazing wreckage. wbich came lo rest onJy 200 yards from Presldent Nixon's parked· Air Force One jeUiner. J, m iMl<lif (:rUb -rl!<r' to Iha; ,.,..,. aild wu $'falJed. fpr .uvlng tllo li'!,es of lour crew members, ·three of. whom were badly infnred. l.1ed.ical Corpsman Mike Shipplet• au!· fered burns on the hands f w~ile ad. mini$terina aid to the·JDjiired men. ~11.!"o:fllr..j;7<<1fa:.m!lf . •• Mi Tht lsrHil statement today saJd lsl'lltl Wu Jl"PI""' to IUblcrihe lo llie U.S. proposals for a 90-day cease.fire "at least on tJie El)'ptian• froot." This ruled out a ce1!t-fire now on the Jordanian front where Arab guerrillu have lhttatened to continue the war. 'lbe U.S. proposals were vaguely word. w f D M 0 !'i!.!1.~'ite ,,, ~ ~~rn e.ss '.. ~eting . "For wee yearl tbe boar has been telUM. ua they would like to improve saJ.. arief~'bUt the moriey jult Wasn't thert," he .. rd. Firs~ , IA. R-w: Mullin!, !7, of Hlll!lingtoo • Beach, perlahed In the oVerturned four-en,me t u r b o p r op airer aft. team, wJt,h aav,in1 the ~vor11:1 ~ they bad to. wait for firemen. 1 · The firefiihtus Iafd ~ blanket ol li>lm throuflr Ifie names al -a aalel)' 'polll· and the crash crew smash~ it.I way into the plane and had · the men out within two mMutes. l!Pltkt ~ical.ly or a ceue-flrt on .... the S14U Canal front ml bope!ull1 of . p J.,.,. ~ 1 'M P' .! J ,. ui;.~::b.111< 90,-diy period the · ~es t • r. .teswent 1'Now the funds are available and the teachers fee.I they have eYery right to upfct the money to be used for either 1alaJ1 improvement or fringe benefits," helllgerocta cOUld begin pre1bplnary , . . · · dJacus!loils which would aetUe Ole pro- blem ol a cease-!!re on other sectors with 1AJnb1s&adol' Gunilar V. Jarrinj ac-- ting u · mediator, and hopefully, to prepare 'for ne,otiationa to write a fonnaJ he added. · The $890,000 in additional money was annouaced•at the July 21 meeting of the BCbool board by district budget director warier Adrian. He told board members the ,funds, more than anticipated in pre- liminary figuring would be coming to tbe 1 district through increased •~essed va!UatKm and a 62-cent rlse In the dis-- trict'a ta:a: rate. Botrd membeni will have to se}ect a mMnJ of distribuUng the money during the Aue. 4 meeting when the budget ia 8Chfduled for final approval. One altema. tive is to reduce the tax rate slightly. District Superintendent William CUn- ningbam is slated to report at that time to the board on the feasibility of return- ing the surplus to taxpayers, using it on ga)lry increases or restoring cut budget Items. He said he will give trustees a number oC combinations of the three plana. Thief 'Pulls' Gear From Mesa Dentist A Costa Mesa dentist arrlv.ed a1 the office Thur&d.oy and found, to his pain, that someone bad utracled tl.000 worth .t equtplnonL Dr. John A. Krajilln, who-" pracllces at 1919 Newport Blvd., told )lollce !be loot incloded a \ypewrlt<r, addinl m.achinfl and camera. Offk:er Onn JCma Aki !be buriW" apponntly ..,. tffed. thm.lsh an access dt9r' on tile rtlfll ol lhe buildinl- The injured crew members were iden- tified as : --Maj; Walter Cytkewicz, 41, Missi on Viejo. · -Capt. Robert B. Walb Jr., 28, Tustin. -Staff Sgt. Kenneth C. Davis, 31, Santa Ana. • • -Cpl. Kenneth Metzdorf. 21, who lives on base. All were .admitted lo Orange County Medical ,Center, where &ll but tht major were listed in critical condition today A column of smoke vil!lible for 25 miles shot into the sky from the• sctne of the lragedy on Runway 34, whJch runs in a north-south direction. A panel of lovestigaM>rs ·was im- mediately convened to probe the· first accident involving Marine Refueling Squadron 3S2 in 11 years. Built to carry 10,<MM> 1allons of high]y vOlatile fuel, the KC130 was not loaded,· (See CRASH, Pase I) ·Viet Cong Flag Cllarges ' Against Teen ~ropped Charges ·ol disturbing the peace wert dismissed ThµDd~y afternoon In the cue of a Blyshores youth arrested for flying a Viet Cong flag. William F, GrOl!lzkruger, 19, was taken into· custody July 4 and originally was charged under a feder1l .!tatute which covers display of the Americ8'1'1 flag. Charges were later reduced to disturb- ing the pea·ce on the grounds that display ol the VC flag qn. the e1ctusive tract's beach bad prOvtked Hveral heated and potenlially violent dbculslons amo111 a crowd of about to'1athered at the scene. Groukfucer'a attorney, Mrs. Patricia Her,og, uked for dll1111ual ol the charps btcaUJe "it has not been establilbed that ttw:re wu a clear and ~ daqer lflat !be peace wu goinl to be shattered vlolenUy.'' She emphasized the point th1t the First Amendment provides protection for individuals who wish to express un- popular views as well as those espousing more generally accepted oplnoru. Judge Everett Dickey, who granted Mrs. Herzong's motion for dismissal, .said he concurred with her statement.I. "The right of free peech must be protecttd," he said, "not because free speech is lnherenUy good, but because suppreuion of It is inherently bad. . "It lhould be noted die court is not in sympathy with the political opinion upre&Sed by the defendant's action, but conduct of this nature Is p-otected under the First Amendment," Judge Dickey said. Meeti1,1g No Mind · Changer Free way Co.n ference Produ ces Low-key Discussion . ' . ' A 'I'tlurad~y luncheon of \the Harbor they've got a.Del I 11an't" 11y that 1 up for Senate--t'Ommltt.ee bearln1 Mon- ~ Freew'ay Figtiters and Laguna blame them. I share their0ct11cern1over day. Bitch city otfk:lals producal some 'low· the adopted roa.te · so far as that 1oes BadfWn bu said thet hla bill k4!ycli1CUmon and opinion uchanae lx.lt but my difference (ef position) st.ill represent.I the unified request of Je,000 end to the cont'llct. The l\lwklab Gab>! party ·announced In .advance al the cabinet session they would Juve t.hi government if the reply was In !ht affirmative and despite Preli· dent Nimn '1_auurancea ThurSday niJht the · American. _propoeed lhreo-mooth cease-lire wcult! DOI be UIOd for a Sovie~ Comt Fire Boat Extingu_,ishes Newport Blaze A bruah rirei apparently 1ta.rted by an al"!OOist, burned to wllhin 50 feet of the plush homes along G1la1y Drive in New- pprt Beach before being ertinguiahed by the .Ha.rbor Department fire boat~ Thur1- d~y night . Newpor.t._police said a boy was spotted near the tcene Df. the Ure throwing a fiaming .object over the embankment near the interaectloo of Mariners and Galaxy Drives. Firemen •tood by while the fire boit . hooed down !be blue whlch covved an aru ISO .feet lride runolal from the wa- t<r .t !lie Upper Bay lo tiithfn 50 feet .t !be homes In !be llOO block ot Galuy Drive. - ~ Colla Mesa police helicopler aided tbe lire fiJhl by Hghtlni !be ,.,.. wllfl H1hta IT10Wllod on the aircraft. Harb\lr De~eot ofliclaiJ said the fire burned fOr aboot 10 miriu"a before it w~i utinsut4hed at 1:35 p.m .. Araon h)veatlt•tors uld they found a frulf Jllr.. ,containing a mJall amount of gasoline and a pack of matches in .a construction alte near the 1cene of the fire. . . . Authorized Cuban Visit Questioned ~nged no miolllr. stands. of bl1.eo11stituenla. . . ' The Freeway Fighters 1Ull su:pport "l told•tbem theylve .takel»the iwtOOf HUDUngton Beach, Fountain Valley, WASHINGTON (UPI) -Reps, ff. Jl, AMemblyman Robert Badham's bill' lo tack." I asked tliem. why they didn't · Costa Mesa and Laguna ~ve ))llled Oroa~ ft.Iowa, and W1yne Hay1, D-Obio, de"ete the adopted route of Pacillc Coast.. go for a bill directing tbe highway com· re10lutJons against Bad ham 1 MIL aay Coqrw 1hou)d coD1kier bnpfaching rrleway througll Newport Beach. miWon to reopen M>e roole study •. , The luncheon mee~ called b1 ' the 1 federal judge who pvt ,ippte leader ~· olficials today said lbey Jtill which la apparently 'lb1t they want. Crttway fighters incl ed Councilmen Abbie Hoffm¥ permialon to travel to opPosed Ifie bill, fearing it would il<la y They didn't lhlnlt they could iet It Roy Holm . and C1i ton Boyd from : · €V.b( tof',.t~, '. llWI J>O','ibly aller the bypa,. route fnland lflrough and •"1t the whole way 1 ... 1<1111 Laguna. , ~ , • i I !Jr:W ""<I ·u:s.• Dlatrict -0,.,rt JllC!io ol 1.1giina Beach. They said a reopening route del•Uqal on.~ lellill•Uon." Hoat for lh< me<tlng • waa M~ll I ~:;J. l(floi< .t IChlCJ'IO •'(J•,._ lh11 of "the MUie ;tudy coulct' abo re-open W)leaton lailfJ lhO· dillClllllioili 1'i• ill DuHleld, \dlaltman ~ 1he -~,~~ -~id>I'-lottiil_riJ&tJon "to· lfO to Cuba, thi possibility Of a bfaett.ina: lretway friend}.y' and lW ke~. He u ld the F1ghtefs. 1'.f~,1 .•·-.' .,, ,. ' ,.._ ; -: · I I •tune IO,,,..-(Hollm,an) cai\ learn whjch the 11fate {)j$i1k>n of HiPW'IY Freeway lighten apparently blame much Others incluat4 COuntlhnen ·JIO,ward the latest 1tecM.~uea ·in s•~?&t to qg&neera once f1vored . of their problem on the· po.!IUcm11 of bOth Rogers of !'ii~ Deacb, ei-mayor' Paul: overthrow our aovernmept." • c our t City M11naser James 0 . Wheaton oC Costa Mesa and the Irvine Company. Gruber, vlce chairman of the f:rttwa; perml111ion wu reqµired for lhe trip Lall1rla, who attended ttie meeUna a~ Tbe city mana1er said Ute li'reeway flitlters: Vin Jorgenaen, trtuurer of btc1UH Hoffman had been convlcted the·Slnto Ana Country Club. old: Figllter• •lated they will fight Jhe illua tho freeway f!lll;n: ,aod James Penney or riot "'"'piracy In lhe "Chlc-ao Seven" "Newport Beach doesn't. Ilk• the route in court ii Badham'• blll falll. It comes of EmeraJd~.r1.n attorney., trial. .. LOS ANG!tES CUPU -Pmld0.t NU:on la ,eipected lO have more new1 conlertncei outa:lde ol WashJnit(>n. He obviously_ w111 pleaaed with his own historic "flrlt" -a lelevised con. fereJlce here w:lth Earl•".Squlre" Behrf:ns . ' d~ or the Clllfonil11 preu corps aayilg, "Thant you,•Mr, PrUldenL" • . I , Behrens, ·a poUUcaf cofumnlat.for the Su Frlndlco O!.ronlcle who received. the Medal .t TreOdom·fi'om Nb.'On; wu more .1Ubdued in cuWns off the -fe....:t !hon wW secvi<e roportOn In WilsllJqton .who tliooit :•lflank .you" ml make .• mad'dalh for.the tel!phone. The 5t-yev~ chief execut!Ve :tf1d been primed all day in bis plusb pent,. house 1ulte In the Century Plaza Hotel on polltbfe quetllou he would be ulted. He was well prepared. and aeemed at ease before the 1tand up microphone In the hotel's glltterinJ Santa Monica Room. as he wts""-qulzzed on subjects from foreig• pulley to amog. ·He · was attired in his customary blue suit, white shirt and blue tie .. He~.had a Calllomia tan and although the temperature I• the room was down, be ' . * * * Nixon Outlines Nation's· Futur.e DETAILI ON PAGE "I J that "llratl can agree to the cr.ue fire and agree to negoUaUOM wltMut fea~." inflation i11 being cooled and will cori· tinue to ea31. The eronomy will move · forward in the long tenn and the 11,:cll:: ln employment wW be taken c~e of. "rt there ta a war betWeen the Soviet Uoion and the United States there will be· ~ winne.n.'' Tliat it .whf. It ii 'Im- portant tliat. the'. Un\le<f Stalel not be dragied fiito ·a mWtary conlllc:I In uy .,.... ~ Iba Mlddlt ,,Eut The bioa'Y' bllllkeL o1 •. omor on !be Elst Coal allow& Uiere .Isn't much Ume lelt for !be nation lo aolve ltl ilr pollulfon . pr®ieml. CooaTPI lf>Gtlld ~ pnimf>t action oa lt.W~tloo bO· 111bmlltlfd 1ir monlhl ... lo -111t ilr p0lluf19D. • Time fl "no tonpo •• Iba ildt of the Viel GllnJ. "i bllleve the ~ . for a •lated" pe1<& 1bt>ald baiter now thin Ibey were lllfor., the Cam· bodi.ln oper•Uon." Puttlni the blame on&irnment for . 1tudtnl diAent ·ii very · • It : iJ a problom for "'Ile.. a\bra. ' ' • wiped beads· ot perspiration from his face with a h>ndterchlel. He wa11ted to &jve the western half of the country11,chance to 1ee a preliden- Ual ntw11 conf!rence on prime time - 8 p.m. PDT, When he wP "Hked Ior his VieWI about the J>felll, he'laughed and recalled his own unhappf. experiences 1t hiJ "Jut" preaa ' COliference in CaWomia lollowlJlg hir defeat In the 11112 rubemltorlal ract. "I just wlah l had u 1ood a preu u my wife 6u," he qulp(led. But.it WU 00 his desire to ·~e Waabtnatoo u 1the ~atkmal power ctnter that _be appeired the most defenalve. ' ·He llld be' baa Heard "crtticiJm" that . be lea\oes !be Whit< Houae~too o1ton. S. Viets Reject Coalition' Rule SA)GON (UP)) .,: Pr .. ident 'N1Uyen Van Thieu said tonlght' South Vietnam will accept no form of coallUon wi.tb ·the Communial.I. He called for a cease- fire wlih "·effet:_tlve supervi11lon" and" again pl'OpQled free elections to . end the war. · ''The Rep1bllc of-Vietnam allould ba considered an independent, free and Democratic naUon wblch will not accept any; fonn • .t •coalition with the Com· mwuta," 1bleu .said 1n a 40-minute natlomridl·televilion and radio speech. Ten hours urW. Preaklent Nixon aaid at a California MWS 'conflrel'lee tbe ~an poalUon on a coclltion govern. ment wu the aame u . Thieu's. or ..... Weadier · u yoo're lookJn1' for a chan1• In the weather -· don't. Th1I weekend will be a good deaf Ute other weekends with sunny 11kie1 and Utile clwile In temperature. . . . INSmE TODAY Jhw~'I JlloiUl/CO Balift fl• tunu tO Los, Angeles to thcrD out the cold "tDGr nut we.Ir:. De· taUs In tDda~'s Wt11c1nder . ...... ,....,. ,. ................ --. =:-=.. •n -... ... ~ 1•11 ·-. -.... -. .._., "'"' 1>-lJ ..,.. ,...,., ... ..... .. .. - I I I I I r I . ,,. • I DAll.v-.itn --c · ,._, Jofi1 n, 1m , ~ I I -• T tt-te ,. D,efellse ~Hamfuers at D~~g Use • ... ": • '!°" .. • • • • • .. • . ... ~~!~~~~ '?~L i~f}n: l Thougi~t They W.erf!_Beautiful Lf>!i!Tig .. Peo pk' ; ~:=~~·~=-~~ :}: ::11i i::ie ~ ~ ~ it;/:!' ~Hor fim ..,.;...;.;. In _.,.;.,.i Uv· "'Eltentlve Ule ol ilrup!" • wtlllo ..,..U. 1'bm 'f joined Manaon';· :'.'FitzgJ..id told ' ....... en that the ,_... of a feather I'd picked up, Manlon'a "famll,y.'' _ Ing was in MJami Beach, Fla., she 1•1 Wl)U!dn't say el'tensive. It aried." famUyl was Impressionable and I wasn't r der-ense-{lor Manson and three female" · orLl'd a:ue at the stars and the moon." Vbder c:nm e1aminaUon by Defense aald. She nett lived with • aroup in From Boston Mrs. Kasabian then came to1eijler," ibe said. • ___ _... ... -.:. __ w_L codefendanls would be based ·in Pr1nclple~ Mn. Kasablan said she had bad Attorney Paul Fitqerald, the state's. Boston and then Joined anothei: commune with her second husband, Rober t Kasa-••But _you hid had cvnuzr~U· . · r ~di while under the Jnfluence of eumlnaUoo by De~ ~ttome p uJ • in Greenwich Vllfage in New York City. blan, to Uls Angeles and lived in 1 perieca Jn &rOUP liylna._ You 1{e(e •st on the p,>ntenUon that Mrs. Klsabl1n,: -. J'itr.Ctrlld, the ~te·-1 prime ~tn!u ·-rrom there she went to tbe Ha ight-commune at Venice on the ocean front a pioneer in communal living weren't a 21-yeat-old btoode who livid wttb the ~,,_ ~t ~ted sJle .did not auffer acknowJedled that sb&--had a conaidlrable. Ashbury section of San Franclaco where west of Los Angeles. you?" FJU&erald asked. ramUy fbr one month, wu not mentally frqm '11~~~" after ""the dn.11 had amount of "human Qperim:e" before she lived with another commune and "We decided to go to New Mellco. "Yu... , conapetent. wOrn oil. i • abe ~ tbe .blpplt cult cbarpd w:Ull then wait back to Boston where she We went to a place outa:lde of Taoa... "So wben you Job*I the ll'CUP at Under eiou '1 •mlnaUon, Mn. Kua-t'Rai tOtnr l.1jb il"1td y () u r theF'lllproldT~•,:lfi:, ~itompt g~s~llb the "American Psychedelic ;;~~.\~":, •c:e~ns of the Earlb :;i-.. ~ ~ =., ~\ .i'::t ~ ~~ .. ~~· ~ ~t~t·~ie: ~j bellevt, to -that Mn.' Kuablan'1 &ccoonts "Whal wao that?" Fitzgerald asked. Mother." of problen11 ·you mJl!tt encounter In momlng,ilorY oeecll. to'l certain-~ bec1U1e ll h111bowed oC the · klillbas Were a · "fantasy" that "We wanted to get buses and animals "I was always moving from one place communal Uvinl?" uked'Fitqerald. "My tole purpo1e for t It 1 n g me a lot about m)'tlelf" lbe replied.~ came from a mind impaired by the and travel all over the country as a to another, usually wit~ a group," said "Yu, I Juat, tbouebt they were halluclnocena waa for reallution -God "Are you any dllfei'.ent than you were lona usa;e of dtu.p.' · circus. I don't know exactly why It Mrs. Ka11abian. . beauUful loving people," &be llld. -realization," ahe said. durln& July and AUl\llt. 19119 (just prior Mn. KaaatUit Aid lhl ~ lived in w11 called paychedelic. '' "Would you say you were 1m· Fttqerald toot over crou eumlnatlon "And were you au~ ln reallzin1 to the Tat.LaBim:a 1 I 1 y f n 11 ) T 1 1 communes from coast to coast from ''Was It drug oriented?" pressionable when you joined the com-of Mrl. Kas&bia.n Tbund1y in an attempt God?1* Fitzgerald uked. Fitzprald quetiloned. the time ahe left home in a amall "Yes, they took drugs.'' mune in New Mexico?" to ou1llfy three da)'I ot tes\hqony Jn "I reallzed you don't have to take "I rure am~" lhe replied. ''I've come town in New Ham~ and bad a ""What drugs?" "I was searching for something I which the 1ave an eyewltnesa acouiit peyote or LSD to dllcover God," lhe to a Jot of concl1.11ionl about reality child when lhe wU tt: "Acid. They ~ked weed." wasn't sure of, but I 1ot it together of tbe kllllnp 1ut Aue. w. replied. 11Moet ol. my nperienc• wblle and rtstit and wrq." Girl Kidnaped In Newport, Raped, Shot • A t.eenage t!rl from Pico Rivera who had been raped and lbot alter being kidnaped ,.jq· Newport Beach w 1 1 ·~ cflscovend by -camp PendlltOn MariMI early thlJ morning N Ille wandered lncoberently alOl!J the San Diqo Frlewlll'. aouth ol llan Cle!pente. '""' pl, !!-,....old -Prloa, .. mainM lllllllconldoul th"1lllh the morn- lni Ind uodor lnteDlln Cll'e al lloulb CM& Commwll(J ~ta! with .• bullal loc1'"4.1n~--. ' ' . Prollmlouj nporll frvlfc.u<I Ille lirl wu 1ell aaar:the 'Laa 1'1llpl p to of tbo--· 111d!erln1r• alnCle ......i In tbo -. Illar • tarTilYln& journey 1nxn ,Nnport Btacb !JllO !forth llan llle&Q Coun(J: . .l\1111. Prlcie, -ilddreA WU nol IDunedlately anlllble; apParenUy wu lbducted In Newport, where Ille hid been vacatlordnc, police uJd. Tbe bar -reportedly found the ~ &I 1:16 a.m. and drove her to Ila 'Clemmta, where !hoy DOtlliecl poUet. • . .• Mill Price• 111111 :WU liken by 11111- bulanc:e to South Coast Hospltll, '!'here the bullet """"'· hidden by hair and bleod .. 'WU dJlcovered. 'NOT REALLY R!TIRING, JUST CHANGING JOBS' CdM Po1tm11t1r W•taon Swltch11 Addr111, Too Aldu ot ·the ""'"fa! said the girl Ito& riot . ,)'II )liidor.... 111111"1 early WI moriWtc. . . Detectives from Newport Beach, San Clemon~ and the Son Diego Sherlfr• olfice .;,,,, a1 the "'"' lhrousb Ille . ' ' ., ' momma. . • 1be investlg1Uon bu been joined by tnvestlgatora from Clmp Pendleton, nports Pld. .. : -.--·-..• .. ~ -.. -·-·~· He1prU1!W~m&b:: .. Loses Jew~Iry ' Beilll • Good Slmlrttan meant nolbiJ1I but trouble for a woman who ltolil>ed Thuraday to help a UtUe girl h1111I her loll eyq1111 le!ll 1t Costa Meaa Park. Mn. Rebe V1ushn, 1117 W. Wlllon st., oet her pune ccmtafnlll1 lhnle di•· mond rlnp 'liarth fl,31111 dawn under I UM, Somecnt: llole it, but children later recovered the ·em!llY pune ond, neu!Jy, the most valuable ring, set with 23 diamonds while the victim was reportln1 the grand l1Nll ..... The t!1111 ..,.,,-ICcldeotally dropped the beSt ptec:e. ltij1 has two worth more than '1,IOll and carrytnc great Rn- timental -ffhtt, Mn. Vaughn aid today. One ~ls, a gold band with 1 diamond and two ruble1; the other Is a white aold ring with 10 dlamondl and ahe ii olf!rinl a -anl with no queaUono ulced lo whomever returnl them. DAILY PILOT OUHC>a COAJT ,U.LllHINO COM,AfrY l•llt rt N, Wt.4 ""9tlHM W MlllNr J ef.• l. Cvrley Vici ""9tllftrlt ...,. Otfltrll Mlflttlf" The111f, ~•t;<"ll ..... Tli1••11• A. 1i11;,,hi~• M ..... lnt aifl*' ' . ----]JO Weit l 1v Str11t M1illt1t A44r.Hf P.O. lor 1 s•o. •1•1• ............. N1.--1 tllcll1 1111 W1H l tt1111t leul..,ttd ~-..qi: m ,._, ""- "~ lltl!": .,., • ._,. ........,. ... C.._MI * Her1ll II (Mftllll ""I . -A .. .. __Jt&._ Postmaster Vern Watson ' Retires Alter 35 Years . . . . After 35 years, Corona def Mar Post· master Verne Watson maintained busl- neu 11 usual today -hiJ 1• day on the job. · · The postmasttr, who reUred -today, will be moving rrom Corona dtl Mat, to Fallbrook ln San Diego Colinty where he plaru to become an avocado :rancher. "I'll probably be jUst 111 buay U al- way1," he said, 1400t I don't really ·feel like I'm retiring, I'm juat chanfinl Jobs." Watson came to the Corona del Mar Post Office u a clerk in 1947 from Wlchttl, Kamas. In lMI he waa a~ pointed poalmuter. "In thoae c11YI, there was no city de- livery, everyorie came to the post office fqr their mall. Corona del Mar was a for their i'tilll. Corona del Mar Wll pretty small then," be remembers. l't'om P .. e 1 CRASH ... oth.,..ile the cruh -wltneaaad by hundred.I ...., would have been, far worse. Lt. Ml1tl1n!, holder of two Distinguished Flying Crosses and 32 Air Medals, was makina hit th.lrd touch-andi;o pracUce landing about 3 p.m. when the plane crashed. . No immediate detenntnatiog.of factors which· led to the accident w11 offlJ'ed, but witnesses uid the KC130 bounced and •••a<d the left wlni which · bnike off. • . . cr1tea, bundlet' and Other debrll bounc- ·ed Into the 1lr u the craft 11J1W1 180 ·degrees and flipped ovet, 'Its 11\gtnes brt-1 away and llddlni dOwc the concrete, spewing fire. Sgt. St. Clair said_ q of . the crew members, hb flight oult jn name;, managed to stumble out of the blazing wreckage on his own. One witness was Bud HB'l'lson, a ranger at nearby Lion Country Safari, who said the hiqe tanker bad just passed overhead and Its en&lnes seemed 1ilent. '"They atwayg make a Jot of noise, even the cats look up," said Hanson. Another ranger watching from a high point ln the part, John Pardue, saJd Lt. Mullin's aircraft touched, then rose off the runway 1 bit and .nosed over at a steep an1le. · Air Force One wu parked · on an apron not to the nmway preparing for a rouUne practice fl1abt and t09k off later. Lt. Mllllini won the nation'• stcond· hlshest award for fll1ht heroism twice while servlnc In Vietnam, from May to Noverpber or 19$8, ai:id then was a Pensacola NAS fll&ht tnstructor. He reported for duty at El Tora only slx weeks ago and ls survived by a wife Wanda and 2·year'{lld daughter. Funeral scrvicu were pendinl tod1y at DUday Brothen Monuary In Hu1> Ungtoo Beacb. Wataoa notes that all the career em· ployes at the Corona del Mar branch were appointed by him durl.Jll the 22 years he has beett in lbe beach cotnmun- tty .. "In 1 way , they'hl IClrt Of like a family/' he notea. Witi6n'1 .!fife, owner '1 Vir&lnia'• Snip irwi Slltcb Shop Jn Corona def Mar, will be ~I Jobi with him. Their two daUll}:iers will talie over mua1_ement of the Corona del Mar fabric lhOp and Mrs. W"atson will assume the manage- ment of a similar store they opened re- certly .near Fallbroot. "For a number of :vear1 we've had two homes -one here and one ln Fallbrook. We'll be moving down there on a penm· nent basis,'.' Watson 11)'1. ' He will be succeeded by Aulltant Post. master Grant Howald who will be called officer in charge. Mesa Man Onl y Candidate Filing For Board Post Offlctals at the county Voter Re1tstra· tion Office said today only one person hai flied for the e1ection for the vacancy on lhe Ne"PQJi-Mm Boord of Edu<a· Uon. Joseph Dully of 2425 Bowdolh Place, 'Colla Mesa, ls the onJy person to We for < •the Poll to dote. He listed hil occupaUon · as a business executive . . Candidates may Ille with the voter registration office, 1111 E. Chestnut St., Santa Ana, until Sept. 10, rtll!tration olficlals said. 'nle seal was vacated when Mrs. Eliza· beth Lilly ,..signed from Ille board in late June . Only residents of Trustee Area Two _are. eligible for the election. The area starts 1t the Intersection of Newpart and H.-bor Boulevards and follows Newport to tbe n o r I h city Umlt.s. The western boundary runs a10ng Harbor to Baker Street, •long Baker to Falrvtew Road . then north along Fairview to the city llmlil . 10,000 Dodge Trucks Recalled by Chrysler DETROIT (UPI) -Chryaler Corp. announced Monday It 11 asklng owners of abOUt 10,000 Dodge Truck• to return them to their dealers for lnspel'tion and corf'K'tlon of possible safety defects. A company apokeaman 11ld two recall campelgna wtre lnvolved, and ,ome of the vehicles were involved ln both cam- pali111. -->$ -. .. . Appraiser View~ Changed Became Bay Swap Suppo~ter After fnves_tig,ation By TOM BARLEY Of tilt ~If' 'll•t I liff An appralaer wbose report led to the State Landi Comml1Slon'1 endorsement of the Upper Newport Bay land sw1p between Orange County and the Irvine Company today said he opposed the deal in an earlier investigation. Real estate broker Hardy E. Pahner testified in the Orange County Superior Court trial that he viewed the tradin1 of 157 acrea of county""ned tidelands for 450 acres of lrvlne Company upland.a as "less than ideal" when he first ex- amined the proposal in 1966. Pahner chqed his mind a year later when he submitt.ed to the ccrnmission a report that broadly confirmed the recommendations of fellow appraiser Bernard Evans. And he stated that a "reassessment of economic consldera. atlons" played ill part in his revised opinion. Pahner also told 1ttomey Dulfern Hels- lng that a memorandum from the St.ate Attorney General'• office contributed his reconsideration of the wisdom County Board of SuperviJon. Attorney Philip Berry repreaents a group of Newport Beach homeowners who ariue that the trade ls unlawful and uncoastltuUonal and repreaenll a breach of the tidelands agreement reach- ed between Oranae County and the slate of California when the water frontage was deeded to the county. He also charges the Irvine Company with fraud m'ld misrepresentations to the Stale Lands Commission durina: public hearings into the issue. Beny clalma Irvine representaUve1 submitted untrue values of thi resped.ive acreages in the swap and also declined to reveal to the commission the full extent of public rllhts and acceu to tidelands throu1hout the Upper Bay. Helsing represents county Auditor Vic Heim . who ed by the county and the I e Company. Heim refUled, by ment, to pay the first Irvine bill dredging in Upper Bay waters. Pahner said today he might have taken another look 1t the Upper Bay propoaal had he known that three lsl1nd1 v1lued by the Irvine ComP1111 at more than tt mUllon were to be dred1ed away shortly after lmplementaUon of the land 1wap. Berry pointed out that deduction of the P million from Irvine vahl@Uons wouJd bring down the value of Irvine's 450 acres from Pahner's calculations ol $16,426,000 to a little oVer $7 million. Both Pahner and Evans valued the county land-. tr81llferred to the Irvine Company by the county supervilOZ'll at $11,453,500. Berry alleged that revised valuations ln Qle light of Irvine intentions to remove the island! from the Upper Bay scene would mean the Joss of more than $4 milllon to Orange County. Pahner also told Berry that he had voted against , the land swap ln IIM beeause he had felt that boating facilities in the Upper Bay would be dominated by private lnterest.s U the trade went throogb. th~:" :.-:randum adviaed ' ~ader Keep g.....Ey.::L ·6ll-T_.! _ l ~ that considerations of the usefulri of ~ __ 0 '-"' ~ -:1:-ffitl Upper Bay waters for commerce, viga-- tlon and fishing nee . m him that 11.1cb f ra were purely the p"""'~ e commission'• legal div! . Judge Claude M. Owena Is presiding over a trial which will produce his rulln.r on the validlty of the land ex· change between the Irvine Company and Or1111e Coonty. It Is expected that tt will be some yeara before a final ruling is oblalned via 1everal appellate court levels. The lr1de hu been approved by the Orange "Nader 's RaJders" are watctiina: the Upper Bay trial. Harvard law school student Michael Berman has been assigned by conswner crusader Ralph Nader'a team to view the prolJ'ess of the Orange County land swap trial and report ill findings to Nader's Center for Study of Responaive Law. Berman's presence was made known today to Judge Claude M. Owena and the jurtlt IJnm,edlately ap:eed lo allow the yoqng envlromnent-orlented 11wyer to examine the mountain of exhlblll that baa -accumulated In the thee-week trial. llemlan told the DAIL V PIWI' that his presence is prompted by hi.!! organiza· Uorl's "deep interest in all matter1 per- taining to land use and the role of public rlghtl In Calllornia in rel1tlon to the alms of private developera." DREXEL SALE FEATURING DREXEL'S ESPERANTO COLLECTION OCCASIONAL-DI NI NG-BEDROOM DEALERS FOR: HENREOON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE 7eJ 11111 . " NEWPO RT BEACH 1727 Wattclllf Dr., 642-'lOSO OPEN FRI DAY 'TIL 9 :· INTIR(ORS . LAGUNA lll ACH 'rofM1lon1I Interior O.algners Avallabl-.AID-NSID 345 North Coatt Hwy. 494-655! OP I N PRI DAY 'TIL 9 "'"" Tell ,,_ lllW 9f OfWfl C.W, Mf.1211 .......... ...._--~ ~II!!'---~~-- f . _____ .._,._,'<· J • , • Strange Bedfellows "Charlie," the cat, likes rats, but not to ee.t, notes his master, Monte Iverson, 8, of 376 E. 22nd st., Costa Mesa. "Charlie," who has been a member of the Iverson family for seven years, first exhibited this unusual reaction to rats about two weeks as:o 'vhen Monte acquired. four of the rodents from a friend . And the ra~s apparently have no fear o! "Charlie." Monte, who likes science, is studying the strange behavior patterns ,of the animals with s:reat interest. Subversive Acts . Under Scrutiny in Laguna fJeach Election of Carpenter Now Virtually Assured Possible subversive activity in LagUDa Beach was under scruti~y this wtek as an investigator for the state Sen;1te Fact-Finding S u b c o mm it tee . on Unamerican Activities zeroed in on the Art Colony. The subcommittee, headed by Sen. Hugh Burns . functions from the senator's office in Fresno and has looked lnto ctivities of extremist groups ranging from the Commun ist party to the John Birch Society. The investigator aaid , he was in. terviewing a number of people in low:t!, including news media personnel and city officials, about problem artas and persons reputed to having leanings to the left. He al so sought opinions of residents on the activities of some i::ity and otht:r public officials and emplores ind their associates. · The investigator said St:n. Burns' com- mittee is engaged in a coonty-by-county survey of subversive activities, ranging from collegt: campuses to k>cal • city governments and civic groups. He said the survey in Laguna was precipitalcd by security problems that have arisen as the result of establishment nf the Western White House in nearby San Clemente. Orange County taxpayers will foot the biU for a $110,000 election with only one real candidate Au •. 18. ~ , iepublican leader Dennis Oarpente,r of Newport Beach was assured of election to ·-a state Senate seat in the specill vote when his only oppooent , Douglas Irvine, withdrew Thursday. Irvine, a Santa Ana housing developer. talked to Carpenter Thursday night and threw his support to him. Carpenter, chairman of the-~pubHcan State Central Committee, thus virtually is assured -barring an unforseen write- in campaign -of election to fill out Ute unexpired term of John G. Schmitt.. Schmitz has been elected to the late James B. Utt's former seat In Congrms. Carpenter still faces a challenge from Democrat Dwight W. Mise in the November generiil election for the full four-year state Senate term. The uncon~sted; election of Carpent~r will cost the county an estimated $110,000. But by law the special election has to be held even if thert: only had been one candidate on the ballot. Irvine's name will remain on the ballot -It is too late for him to withdraw but he is asking his supporters to vot_e foi' Carpenter. Irvine said he was in the race to speak for "lhe burdened property tax- payer" but alter talkin& to Carpenter Is aMUrtd Carpenter shares the same concern. The election of Carpenter to fill out the term the rest of the year can accomPlish two things for Republicans: -It will give Carpenter seniority over other new senators elected in the Novem- ber general election, provided Carpenter defeats Mise for the full tenn as t:x- pected because or a heavy Republican re11istration edge. · -It could get Carpenter to Sacramento in time to provide the vote needed to pot Gov. Ronald Reagan's $l billion tax reform proposal over the top. The tai: shift package was two vote,, shy of tht 27 needed to clear tht: Senalt: today with one supporter temporarily hospitalized. There was talk among Republican strategists of possibly shelving the measure until Carpenter's t:lection on the 18th. carpenter, who was oft to northern California today on a Republican Central Committee speaking tour waa una vailable for comment. But Phil Seitz, Carpenter's campaign director, said he doesn't look for carpenter to provid e the tie-breaking vote. "I can't imagine them throwing in the towel and not trying to get it through until the 18th," he said. Girls s ·uper at Market ' ' Sa1i Clemente Distaffers ·Taking Ove r Boxboy Jobs . By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL . ,_ Of tltf o.ily ,li.t lllft Tl used to be that when ~-high school .. boy wanted a job, he usually be g·a n looking at the local superrrlarket to ~ abbut becoming a boxboy. .. t:, . But in San Clemente the guys aren t • doing that so much any Jl10re. The girls are. \ i , ...... Now in at least hall. of the Sin : Cletne~te supermarkets, the ftid behind-~ the checker packing your sacks with vittles might very welt ~ a pert, teenage gin. ll In two of the city's four lflrge -food stores, the help includes g;i1s behind the checkstands and when nhe ..... aren 't sacking they sweep, stock shelves, gather shopping earls, and t:ven mop noors. . And their bosses say the 1irls outdo their male friends in tht: jlemandi'!I., job ' ·•The gals are getting a g~ reception from the customers, too," reports Leon Riley, manager of the local Alpha Beta. "Especially the m.en." , .. The Alpha Beta markei employs two boxgirls althoug~ they ,Uwe -. more 11ubUe ~a1ne of "clerks' hcii\pers." The store also employs eight boxboys. The girl helpers are ·a outgrowth or hiring women to run the ~ecUtands. "Two or three years a110 we coUJdn't • gel boys with the draft calls so high and the fact that everybody wa.$. In IChool . So we hired wives whose children were In school durin& the day. Then we begii.n to accept applicalk>ns from the older teenage girls to wwt here." ' Riley notes that the <Iris.' whllo! being helpers now. can gd the "feel" of the lltore and then move to the cUb r:tciJler. Bob Bersch, manqer of t ti e Albertson's Markel ll • N. El Camino Real has one girl to sl• boys working al c~rk's helper1. . "She's a good worker~ and Ir $he wun't she wouldn't be here," Bench declared. The "she" he refers lo is • recent graduate or f\an CJemente Hiih School, NIL l ,11.01 St.ft ....... GROCERIES HER BAG Marl<ot Clol'1< Mldf•ux W~dy Michaux. "I love IL here. It's really nice," she remarked, as she expertly loaded a sack with groceries of all sorts. Wendy, 17, has been working ror the slore for the ·past two months. "l just came in, filled out an application and was hired -all in one day." She is frequently told by some of the malt: market-goers that she is "an awfully good-looking botboy," but Wendy is quick to add that the female shoppers like her, too. "One lady was happy with me a couple of weeks ago, because T didn't put the tomatoes in the bottotn of lhe sack. lik'! some other people will do," Wendy aid. While not backing up the checkt:r loading sacks and helping customers with tht:ir groceries, Wendy collects shopping carta and stocks lhelv~. • jlersch said the "'first. girl 'he emplO"yed came in dUring the winler mooth5...and wanted a Job. "The boys were non~x­ istent, and she was going lo school at night, so I hirecJ her . Now they all come in.", . "But not everyone qualifies for lhe Job. It's really not that easy, especially pushing the shopping . cart& back inlo place . .'You.'ve really tot to scramble." Bersch sakl that .while the store has not hired too manr' young women to work, older wives have been at~ the store for a tong time, "We need them during the winter. All we can find are Uie.. surf bums and they're no JIOOd. So we 110 to the women or the girls." Safeway Markets di.str ict office In Orange repOrts that the chain outlet has only tried the gal helpers In the .. Palos Verdell area, but not in Orange County. "We've always had boys who• are available for work,'' an official said. "Yoo have to realize that there are certain limitations on. the girls • . • weight they can lift, hours they can work.' •. " • But then, some of the boxairls In !Jan Clemente know betlu, They've bttn liberated, ' • ., ----• . -. F•~•Y, July 31, 1970 H DAILY IJLO~ ~ _l.5 Mile~ Not -~nQHg\r Marine Beach Offer Termed Unacceptable .. An ofUcial ipokesruan for Camp Pendleton today confirmed that the Marine Corps has offered 1.5 miles of virgin shoreline for pubJ;c we on a 25--year lease. But the State or Calif!""i• Is. holdin1 ooi for more land and says the offer Is unacceptablt:. Robert Meyer , deputy director of Parks and Recreation, said the cost o! develop- ing the 1.5 miles of sand for surfing park would be prohibitive. '·'The state would like t.S miles of beach with a~15-year lease -then we 'd have a fantastic park," he Said . The Marine Corps proposal was sent to the slate nearly two weeks ago, following the rt:jection by the state of aDOtber plan for the beach. The Marines formerly offered 1.$ miles of beach for sevl!!fl years, with the lease revocable at any time. Judge Grants Slocum Ouster Of Attorney . An issue that became. court ofricials bclievt:, almoel. as important to Dr, \Vesley G. Slocum U the murder charge he faces was resolved in his favor Thun· day. Superior Court Judge James F. Judge agreeed lo the firing of· Coote Mesa trial lawytr Paul Augustine Jr. and ended a troubled association. Dr. Slocum has repeatedly tried to fire Augustine in noent weeks, bUt the court refused ·pennlssion for him to do so. The actian Thursday ended a troubled relatlonshlp which Augustloe described as "hE!il on earth." • "I was ready, willing and able to proceed with the case at any point," Au11ustlne said today. · Court~ ~ces said Or. ~~locum'.s dispute With .Auaustlne wes not connected to the 1~ic cue for, which he ls liclleifllleil to stand trial. • Augustine has successfully represented Dr. Slocum before, w\nning acquittal on an attempted murder ch~ in· volving an April 1966 gunfilbt with Santa Ana police. He was with the 1ur11eon In Superior Court for a pretrial bearing on a $2.2 million damage suit s\emniin1 from that coofrontalion when Dr. SJocum was last arrested. The suit has since been dismissed. ' . Alttr lengthy ne110Ualion,a, the longer- term plan was drawn up but the ltate would stlU Ute a longer sl{elch of beach sand. -~· Meyer said th~t negotiaUons r~ th~: $-year lease will continue, bUt Qiat the final decision will not be mlde by Caplp Pendleton. . i "That final decision will . nat witb the llepar:Unent of Defense," he noted. . Director of Parka and Recreation,' William PeM Mott, met wtth Col' A. C. ~en at Camp Pendleton Thursday morning, but the likelihood of a Marine con cession apf)earec! unlikely. ~ _ '"t11e two men toured the area, but J imagine all they did was get their respective views across to each olher," Meyer said. Meyer noted that the property ls creating more than local altention. "Coneressman Alfonzo Bell has talked with Defense Secretary Melvin Laird about opening up the beach, under a long-term lease. , .,. ' ; w .. We'N optlmilOc for ht.Ip from :;lbe ~ DefeniO Dept.. We know allO thal a· 1'* o1 public ·..-ire .II bulldfitl,,up . and Uutt lf!e Merine C'orpo. clllem'l --. au ol"tbe 17 mil• of beach that lhty DOW ba:ve." .. ''!lie lolorlnis hive told 11> Uutt tltoy c8nn0f offer tile t.S miles ol beach louth of San Onofre D<Ciuoe they are piaMlng · to build a Jlelii::oPier _ _pad on _uie-la~t • mile. Bul It w111 .on)y be temporJ1'Y. · "W~ 'are also disturbed by tlio. lad tbat, a private surfing club has JeMed )'(!;81'-tiyt)'ear one mq, of be.ch ·On the .. base. ' "li the Marines can lease tbf, beach . land to a private club, they. can 1eue some to tbe state," Meyer declared., ·• Meyer mentioned that the land leaae ! WU 1iiacussed by President Nixon~ Gov;. Ronald Re<gan, and Sen. George Murphy • when the three had dinner together at the Western White House Monday even· ing. However, Meyer did not elaborate on the discua&ions. - Airport R·eport Studied, But Choice Still Far· Off • • Orange County aU,.Ort comm~ llpenl two hourll pondering the PatJOn~ report on·OtllJ!fe County ·Alrport ''""'11- day. and came to the conclosion that they may not1~be able to mUe. an "educated recommendation" by Aut. ti, the d•te t1Je1 are to report 1o .lliO Board of Supervisors. •• • ' · CommWloil Chalnnan Jomes G~ direded ·Aviation Dlr.ctor Jtote'~t Bresnahan .to investigate the "()OlllbOlty of .extending the terms Of .the contract with tl1e Ralph Parsons Compony. • Under the •tto,000 contrect, 1the Board of Sllpervisors must' make tnelr choi~e Of suggested altematlyts by Aug. 21 or face a penal\y o( $200 per day. Tbe report lists eJgtir d I f f e r e n t allernatlves for the lutUre or: the altport -from cutting 'back io s,ven. com· mercial fllghls a day. to e!pM<ling to GZ flllhls a day by 1977. , , The penaly• clause wu Included in the contract because the Parsons Com- pany did not want to keep lb teun- o( engineers and c:Gl)1tlltanta in the arta and tnacU.ve for more ~n a month. U the airport service Is to be cut back or kept al its present levt:I, the ]>arsons team can be d Is b an d ~~­ ~owe\'tr:Jta decib is mi0e1k> bptnt. ParsoM wduld then prepart a' master- plan for the airport. ••it Ls unrealistic to expect w or the " Board or Supervilots kt-~ a dedlloe ,. in 30 days," chainnan GUmore llid, -, "even., if we spent all of OW"' time ea ~ it for Che next three weeks ... ~y's meeting war"'~aned fn· discuss alternatives one and two GI. the report -cutting • -at ~ preaent aervirce ·-but the time Wl:SIC spent dlacusSing nob<. "We .. are ~ing asked lo:· bue our1• decision on noise standards lhat do DOI ~" Gilmore sald. ''We ·Wcin't mrr' Whal those standards wlU 'be iintil tbof' are adopted by the legislature. ·: "At the aame time, we cannot, ~ my mind, Ignore the wishes of the people.· who-liv.e .under the flight pattern because of technical standards." Commissioner Donald Killian, who said. he lived "on ·the extended center 11.ne· of the runway in Newport Btadl,"·1aked1 Stanley Walsh, the Panon. re~. tative, if tbe state mlcht adopt standani1 more .stringent than those the report· are~ on. -ci Walsh replied that il ·was "prKUcalr to _consider the propooed standards u< those that the stale Wbuld adopt:" ' • The neit meeUng 'o( the Comiiilmloir wjU 1je Tueoday at 7 p.m. I# tl!il Saperybon: helirlng room at ~1$ N. SycJ.n\ore St. in Santa Ana. 'Attttnattnl one and t~ wfD be discus!ed. ... .. '' Somechefs , arepaid to cook · over hot flames. Youtenot; ' So enjoy a flam~ess · eledric kite~ A nan1cles s, .U..lectrlc l<ilchen is one of the big benefits built into .every Medalllon Home or Apartment. And that means a clean,cool kitchen. • l A Medallion Home or Apartme nt can also mean flameless c!ectri~ heating. Clean heat. It doem't dirty your curtains or upholst<cy. And flameless air conditioning th~t cool~ and cleafts the air you-... .breathe. Pure comfort.fop the entire nmily, And fl•mtl"" water heat· ing-without a pilot, without a floe, without wasted spice. Furthermore, a.Mcdalllon.Home !in ample wiring for today'• elcdri- cal •ppliancer, plus provislom for the electrical wonders coming ap in the .n .. lectrlc future. Medo!llon Homes and Apartmeht. are now avall•ble in all price ranges. You cm see. why nfore and ii.on jitople arc choosing to Jmtl1egood du n life-elcctrldUy. lndtullnschlfo. Southern Califomla Edlaort • .-___,. .... - I I \ ' Vows Stl!Ofl F!ght Nixon Assures Israel on Peace LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Only hours before Israel accepted the U.S. 00.day ...,..,..._..., ·cease-fi.rt, President Ni1on assured the cc...-.. "' .,. Dl9I "" ...., naUon tbat it could accept the proposal In Neville's Cross, England, without fear or giving a mili tary ad- Timtjiy, the blue 1budge.rigar-vanlaie to Arab na tions. a amall Ausfralian parrot-15 back In a news conference Thursday night home again because he knew his phone number. His owner, Mrs. broadcast from • Los Angeles hotel, Enid Barnett, said the bird was tht first fuJJ..dres.s meeting with reporters returned to her after being miss· he had held oulside the White House, ing for five days. "Obviously he the President also promised lo press bas heard us answering the tele· phone with our number and has learned it by heart," Mrs. Bar· nett said. "Thank goodness he's an Intelligent bird." • Donald 01'k<I/'• father lalu1 "° ch4ncea tohe7& he sendl tht 11·11ea,... old to plait baleball i11 &tona· Park, New York Citt1. The 11oung1~r ahow· f!d up at Ftting praCtict Thursd<iy wtari1''1 a gas mdak because of the clert.leve! air poUvtiOJl 'in the citt/. • The Clifton, N.J. city council re· centJY approved a liquor license for Temperance A. llrank. • Ch1:.ao Mayor Richotd _J_ Daltv revoked the liquor Ucen.se Of the B&B 1.o1inge recently, cborgin.g it WCI something of a clip. joint. Police had 1tporkd that a man had blen attacktd at the B&B and hil head shaved bt1 otlttr patrons, ond yie 01D'n- ert gave him no pro~io~ .• , ' , >' '·' A 40-year-old trucli dri~~QI Huao, Okla., fell asleep a~ ~e wheel Tuesday an4 injured !J>ur elephants. Robert D. Cline told po- lice he was about five ntjles ·east of Norwalk when the truck~ owned by the Clyde Beatty.Cole Brothe1s Circus, overturned. Tht clr'CU\ ef~ pbants suffered scratches and bruises. • A HaliJa:i:. England ""'iah~ lifting club has had to cZo.se be· cause a strong arm aano Ms •'tift.td,. a:U 3,000 pound! of it.s equipment.. • "When the first settlers arrived In early California," Gov. Ronald Reaaan said recently at roll-out ceremonies or a new tri-jet, "they found half-naked savages smoking the leaves of a native plant. You can still see the same thing on Sunset Boulevard every Saturday night," the Governor added. * * * Nixon Blames Disturbances On Faculties SAN CLEMENTE, Calil. !UPI) - President Nh:on Thursday night accused Univeraity; leaders of blamtni him for their own shortcomings. . The ~oblems of dis.sent mushrooming lato violence 1Dd students ihouting cbecenities at visiting speakers are "nol problems for the government," Nil on said. The President obv~I)' was chafing undei' recent critkiam directed at his administration by Dr. Alei:ander Heard, the Vanderbilt University chancellor who recent!y·ended two months u a specia l liaison for the academic community with the While Haure. Jn rtportl made public last week, Heard and hlJ uaistant, Dr. James Cheek of Howud Univmlty, h1rshly i;riliclud the Naon AdmlnistraU.., foe lallini to cammuntc~te with YO\llll· peo-ple. .., ' Showing J<Jml· IJ!ier and considttable eusperation, the President chose Ms news conCerence Jn Los Anl:eles to reply. "The problem of communicating with students' and other groups is a perennial cne. It exitted in •previous admln!lltra- tlons. It exJsta tn this one," Nixon uld. He pointed eut that his administration Wu movinc taWard an end to the war in Vietnam bd "the draft and dullng with problems Of Ute environment. "But once a11 those thJnp are done, still the ""l'tinea aod the sballowneu, the superficiality ·that . many college student! find in collqe cunicull will •till be there. . ''We cannot solve Jt. It is a problem which. colle1e lldminiltraton and .colle1e facultie1 mut face up to. We share our part of the plame. l assume tha t responsibility. We wiU try to Po .better. But tbey have to do betler also.!' • t. ,. ' ' N~e Gas .D#mp. Deiay Aslioo ~ TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPii •-Gov. Claude Kirt demanded Th~ay ·the anny abandon any immediate· plans to dump 1,175 tons or nerve gas into the Atlantic Octan off the Southeastern Seaholrd. And Rep. Pa\tl Rogers ID-Fla.), asked the Pentagon tb delay shipping lhe gas a<ross the South, a move scheduled for Aug. 10, beCause of tht "PotenUal of d1aaJter ••• Kirk aftJf , Jtoters, however, appeared to be Jodling ~the only major offlCial objections In Dixle to the plan la dl1po.e of the World War Il nerve {BS by dumping Jt .m miles east of Cape Ken· nedy, Fla. " . Authoritiei in the slates throU&h which the slow-movini train carrying the cargo of 418 des•-cized concreCt "coffins""must travel teem a~ that the Aimy Is ta.kin( every precaution to avoid any danger to the population. ~ Storms Soak Muggy U.S~ • • Sticky Weather Ranges From Midwest to East Coast l'e111pertlturn "'"" Lw 'l"K· I .',(.:. "' AIM • 11111111111 """"®~ C-t•l V.S. Su111-r11 Htll' tuMt!illl kldi?. 1..i.M wt1"11 wlnll lli9M t llll ""'4'111"' Mufi btototft· '"' --ly . 19 u klool• ... •""'-todt' ..... '-11.!rclt,. Hlt ll ._., ... c .. ,,,1 fMIHl'•tul'h ,,,... ,,.... 1t 11 11. 111i.1111 11m11111111r1i ''"'" '""' fJ 1'I N. W111r 1-••tu,. u. ~ 11\911 . . l:M '·"'· 'J lt<ttld 1ew l.'11,1T1. J.5 IAfUlOA'I' "''"' l'lltll ' ' • JO:»'·"'· ,_. "l•1t low ....... 4tN 1 "'· -e • lt<Olld ~1111 , , , • , t!f' "·""' ~ I S«O!ld ktW ' ) 11 ., ... JJ 11111 ltl<MI l .01 1 1'1. Seit 1 JSfllTI, MWll •bM 1:2<1 1.111. Sth 1.1t,,.., Al~~ ' AJK!-tll """'"" l•kt ritl•ld lbl'!'Mln~ ··-.... ~ l!l•OWllll'<llilt Cl'll«'° Cll"otlMlll -~ "'""~ ...... "''"-l'lli• l"or1 Wtf'ltl •m~ M11- !Ci,...I tl!w LH V-1 lo.A~ -· Ntw Of"IMl'll Ntw Yl"I! NVlll '11111 Cl••""" Oo:lllltlrN C11V Omtlll Ptll'll S.rlfltt ,,., 11o111n ~ilf "'"'""""' 1"11(1!11'1f lll11tld C+IV l\flll ll11fl ·-"''•"""It Slit! Li':t Cfl'y • S111 Oltto ''" 1'•1!1<.fl(lt 511111• 5flottM "t ...... 11\11 Wtl111n1!0,, .. .. .. ~ .m " " " ., " .. "' M " .. .. .. " .. ~ " .. n " " " ·" " " • • tt • • .M "' " " " " • "' .. ... ... " .. " ., " ·" " " " .. •• .. M .. "' • .. " T ·~· .. " " "' •• " .. "' " . " ., • JJ •• " .. • .. • .. • . .. " " •• " • • " " "' " .. ,, •• • ,,. 'Rocliless' Rock Fest •• Q . What should a person do who is worried about inflation, the stock market, the future ? ~'.l , A . Cut back on unnecessary spending. Protect your family's future by placing your savings and investmeJlt funds in an insured savings account. Q . Does it make any difference where I put my savings? A .Yes. An insured account with a savings and loan association will pay you more interest than banks and will be more certain than stocks. Q . Do all savings and loan associations in Southern California pay the same interest? A .Yes. " Q . Then why should I put my savings with Mutual Savings · and Loan Association ? /) A. We asked our own account holders for the answer to this I one. They have confidenc~ in the knowledge of our employees. They can depend upon ~iving accurate infonnation, and are pleased with the efficient and courteous . service. Q.How big is Mutual Savings ? A. We're called "The Big M" because·~e have over 440 million dollars in assets. Q . Where are your offices? A .Mutual Savings has offices in Pasadena (head office), Glendale, West Arcadia, Covina and Corona del Mar. RobcrtD.~ Viet Prttilkru 41: M-.- MUTUAL SAVINGS .;.;.;....;,.;;,:.:;..:..:...i COltONA DEL MU• 2U7 EM Cooot H;,ltw•J ---- ' ' I ' ! I I I I I I I I I =""-Tlft=:-:-7 --.--===-====,.....,.=--.................. ~---------------- '--~ U.S. Bombers. Pound Reds . . Raids. Greet Returning Enemy Units ·From Cdmbodfu t SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. BU lain, jungle -,...,.. of bombers carried out their tho norlhern . prov-of heaviest ratd:J In liJ: montha Quang Tri and Thu 11dtn. across Vietnam in a eeriel • Two othen: hit tar&eta from of misslona ending today. The three oo four mil• lrom tho U.S. Command Mid other CarobQdlan border and 11 to Ame.rlcan warplane1 w e n t . · 79 mHes northwest ·of Sat1on. alter guerrilla auppl,y .llMI In Field repot"lo from Phnom Laol and Cambodli. Penh said a C.Omrounlat attack mi. droi>ped 11 lull IOW' before dawn today on a Cam-mUilon pounds ol boml>o In bodlan artillery position to lt raids over South Vietnlln miles west~ or the In the 48 holJn enillq 11 capital had blocked Hi&hway · nooo, military s p o t o • m e n _,.__ _,.__ _,.__ said. 11le r1ldl were the "W" w w 4, connectlni tho capital with tho port of Kompong Som. C&n\bodlan army utdta: sent· In reinforce.menu led by •armored can to try to rtopen the highway. The severing of the hlghway prevented Cambodian lroops from getUng' relnforctments by road to the five-battalion unit moving up to assault the Kirlrom Plateau, a few miles west or U.e roadblock. heaviest since the 20 missions ~ J•:;;.:;:; struck 11 Poli91 Said '"Aggressive' . Military cl!icen near UM .. ~ Aid an armored 6.t. talion from 1nd Mllltary Dlvblon headquarters at Kom- pong Speu wu rushed to the scene shortly after dawn. Even with help from Cam· bodlan air force T23 fighter. bombers, they failed to dislodge the Viet Cong. 11loy reported five Cambodian troops were wounded. targets raDCinl from one mile south ol the demllltarbod zooe (DMZ) dlvidlne the two Viet. llll1ll to tho U Minh Fore1t near the MUan11 IOUtbtrn tip. Hanoi Calls Nixon Talk 'Lie' NEW YORKER DONS SMOG MASK Toni Brown P.1rodiet 'Fun City' T11 The raldl followed reports that three voteron Communll\ regimenta: had moved back ~ to Soulh Vletnam 1n1m cam- bodia. The strike• In the north pounded buildups In -· near the Laotian border where allied troops engopf In heavy fighting wlth Communl1t forces three weeks ago. ' '. New Yorkers Chol<lng; Nine of the raids ~me tn the 24 houri ending at noon today, seven of them ln moun- Traffic Curbs Urged Bomb Blasts Barracks By Un.ited Press lnternatlooal New YGrk City seemed like the largest stuffy room in the v;orld today. There were few signs a window would be open- ed before late in the weekend. The City Deparbnent of Air Resources reported Thursday tliat the Ur pollution level v.·as qain unhealthy 2nd was expected to remain about the same today. The depart.merit explained there was no danger from short-tenn exposure, but added that this 11as the !illth day this year it had described the air as unhealthy. Mayor John V. Lind1ay, who earlier in the week had con- sidered banning uneS1ential automobilti traffic in lower Manhattan, uried commuters to leave their C81'.S a~ bpme and rely m mass transports- -He foilowed bis awn sug-gestion and rode the subway oo c;1y Hall Thursday. Outside City Hall, 20 young people demonstrated to -de- mand that ttie city be closed to all oul5ide automobile traf. fie. They wore black robes and hoods and six of them had on a:as masks. The demonstration w a ! organized by "Envlronm't!1~" Danielle Frankenlhal, descTib- ing herself as a iull time worker for the group, said, "Why can't people just take a vaoation for a couple of days, or if they have to ca!tle into the city why can't they use mau transportation?" Officials in Washington had barricades ready in case a full pollution alert was called. The master plan calls for a ban 00 all but essential traffic in the capital If the smoa: reaches the criUcaJ polnl Wa&hingtoo, like most of the East Coast, expected little relief. Ttnmderstonn activi~y in southeastern Pennsylvania lawered the pollutant levels in Ftillaclelphia, but t h e outlook wu for the sltuauon Conductor George Szell Dies at 73 CLEVELAND (UP!) to develop again before the weekend. A first-stage pollution watch in five southern counties of New Jersey was canceled. It had lasted two days, the tong~st in the state's history. But smoke in northern New Jersey .increased. West Virginia eltended a pollulion alert, begun Monday, through 1he weekend. Industry was told to curb smoke and residents ftl"t asked not to bum tr.ash. ' Heavy showers wuted away polluUOn in ~rgia alter two dajts. Guerrillas Kidnap U.S. Official In Saigon SAIGON (API -A bomb ripped through the ground floor of a U.S. enlisted men's billet In downtown Salgco tonlgtit. ca u 1 l n g extenllve damage to the building and a half dozen vehicles. Fint reports Aid lhere were no injuries. American demolition n:- perts !aid terrorlstl placed a 45-pound plastic charge ad- jacent to the tktory Ky Son enlisted men's billet. About 400 Americana left t be building and U.S. olllcen said all military men were IC9 counted for. The explosion hurled a large ball of flame Into tho oky and fire swept Uirough the billet. M 0 NTEVlDEO, Uruguay Some adjoining Vietnamme (AP) - A U.S. Embassy cf-frame buildln,1 alao were ficial was kldnaped today by damaged, along with a balf left-wing u r b a n guerrillas. dozen military \ltllicles parked 'Illey also attempted to kidnap near t.be blllet. two other U.S. Embassy or-Ambulances and fire trucks !leers, but failed, an embusy . raced to the scene. spokesman said. Witnesses said flames shot Police reported the Brazilian Into the sky after a diesel fuel consul, Aloisi ComitU, was engine runnin& an outside kidnaped by the Tupamaro generator for the billet blew guerrilla o r g a n i z at i o n up. An American sentry hi moments after five terrorists a coocrete guard post 10 fee t seized Dan A. Mitriooe, 50, away eecaped injury, aWolgh a public sa fely adviser from he was blown across the Indiana. Mitrione is attached street. to the Agency for Intema· Shortly before the blast, tional Development. some Vietname.se children A TleWS vendor wa i; the· only were playing in the area. said \\'ilness to ~fitrione's kidriap, Lt. John Pickett.. Oi.icago, Ill., police said. The vendor who lives in an annu: 200 reported five persons armed feet away. with pistols and autcimatie A Strini <J Amel1can billets weapons intercepted in the aeotlon have been Mitrione's car this morning bombed in previous terrorist and forced him Jo get into attacks. their station wagoii. The bombina: was the first Police reported Mitrione major iocident in Saigon alnce wa1 iound, apparcnily wound-July 20 when Viet Cong eun- ecl, an hour later, in a Man-ners fired two rockets into tevkleo suburb. But a U.S. lhe capital. An apartment Embasty spokesman said . he house was hit but no one knew nothing about Mitrione was hurt. havln&.beeQ found . . Two days ago national police ' Mltriorie, a Navy ofOcer 1n claimed to have broken up World War II . was a a Viet Cong terrorist ring in policeman in Jndiana until Saigon with the arrest of 12 1960, the Embassy said. ceU members. PARIS (UPI) -North Viet. nam 118.id today PresldeDt Nix· on was telling "lies" when 11< asserte<I fl"'IPOClS foc peace 1n Vietmm were; better and the North Vie-and Viet Cong were weaker. In a formal statement, tile North Vletnameee delegation oo tho peace talks condtmned Nixon's Vietnamese pcllcy statement as "An agsressive, belllcose and colonialis t policy" that had allerecJly pushed the ta.montfi-okl peace talks into a deadlock. The Hanoi statement said that at his news conference NIJ:on continued "to boast of imaginary U.S. victories in Camtw:l.ia and in South Viet- nam. Carried away by -Ii" be clahn<d thot the U.S. aggression against CambodJa , had 'weakened' the enemy and allowed to look lonrlld oo 'helter ~ for peace negotiations.' Thhl unfounded claim of Mr. Nixon is lignifi· cant f« the two upects of bis adminiltratlon: "-It has achieved ex- cellence in the art of lying, in the art of makln& defeats look like vlctot1es. It stilt clings to the Illusion of scoring a military victory on the bat· tlefleld llff'ly to lead to a positioo of st.J:.eogth at the neogtiaUng table." The statement reaffinned Hanoi's demands, already re· jecied by the United States and South Vietnam 's President Ngu,yen Van Thieu, for the creal.ioo d a provisional coali· tion cabinet Jn Saigon that would p....... new general 21.4 cu~ FT. SIDE-BY-·SIDE REFRIGERATOR FREEZER • -WMllf •• • r-1""'11 •II !12 lls. IU m. It. ,, .............. tfoo _ __.,. .. 111 rllitill.,..-.hflfiwalmrrdls oot•-f<r ~ •llJflDlll ClllU'lll smm lit,..""'' ltfclll ..... ...,. ·---~"""•_pla __ _ ~ 7 "" -1-.... """"· '"' ~"" fnllt ... """""' blla. !!I SIPAWI !llfl!t.l11111 COllllOLS ill Y"' dill Iha -dto '"' of ol4J111 Wllltla boll reltfill1W --- • ICE lflllll IWf •• , a'lfor l "° (lillfelrl, ..., or add ~ ,, latar for·--~ of lu lll11111.,.. .... tips. • Loosened Cap Not 'Air Raid' DOWNEY (AP) -Paul Redwood thought 8'?11lebody was bombing him when 1 red, di.sclike object crashed neit to him as he was quietly washing his car. Redwood, 45, ducked behind a wall, ihintina: tbe five--inch- wide thing might be a time bomb. It wasn'l Invettlg&Ung policemen said Sunday it was a fuel cap that fell from a plWlng oirplane. Friday, July 31, 1970 DAILY PILOT 1j QUl!NIE By Phil lnterlanclt Nose Amputee? DETROIT (AP) -Mona the elephant la rest!~ qui.Uy after a gurglcal team from Atichlgan St ate University sewed her no&e back in place. She nearly lost her nose when her roommate, Mary, bit her Wedneoday In 1 nasty moment. It took 30 aUtches to repair 1he el&ht·foot trunk. When it gets hot and hunUd. elephanls pt Juat like people -crabby," aid Dr. Robert F. Wllboo, dlroctar of 1he Dttroit Zoo. "Alll'tl>ing ml&hl happen ." A powerful tronqulllur was rushed to Detroit Wedntsclny rrom SandUsky, Ohio, and was used to quiet the ~year-old elephant during tho operaUon. Mome;nts alter . the dnC wore oU, Willsm said, Mona used the trunk oo anumo four pounds of hay, ·• loll of brud, olJ: applea and gallons of water. George Szell, 73 conductor of lbe worJck'tnowned Cleveland Ordiestra. died Thur 1 day night a< LaW!de HOlpltal here. Keeping Se~ret BIG 16.6 CU. Fr. NO FROST 2 DOOR British, Ban Mag 01i Meg Szell had been confi!led to the hospital after suffering a LONOON (UPI) -Buck· aakin& them to reconsider heart ettack upon return from t~ham .Palace Mid today whether thil was an •P-. an Ea1t Asian tour thi1 &Um· Britbh magazine dealers have ]X'Olrlate article to publilh mer. decided oo wlthhold clbttlbu-here," Gr1/fln uld. "That b He WIS born June 7, 1897 tlon of the currenL .Lad.lei alllknowofthematter." ln Budapest and was a piano Home Journal suggesting the The current issue of the prodigy, appearing with the marriage of Pr Ince s s Ladies Home Journal carries Vienna symphony at the age Margaret and Lord Snowdon an article by a "well-placed of 10, He was a gue!I. con· might be an unhappy one. British diplomat" ca 11 e d ductor with the Be rt In Maj. John Griffin, press 0 Lord X" who refers to Philhannonic at 17. secreta? to the queen mother Snowdon and the princess as Sz:ell was in America when and PrbiCess Margaret, denied ... tttuctant couple." World War II broke out and there had been pressure on The article said that on decided to remain. the American magazine from fonnal occasions, Prtncea: His own piano comPoSitions the royal family. Margaret and her husband put IN19&2 110.1 r..,,, .......... ' ... -~s499 === 95* REFRIGERATOR·FREEZER • t.plete~ f...t 111111 boll>~··-· ·-l'l--•111151111.cl--• r.. Ill( 1111t11-, I-II\ I ad)ilrljlfl. • !lpanla """'""' -• Ml•11.W• ~holdup iollillrlltl • a nktr ready-Md ft wMnMr 1a11 cball "'•299•1· .. include Plano Quimet, Varia· "What happened wae that on a 1how of harmony but tions on an Original Tbtme an in!crmaJ approach was that at tnform1l gatherings, IOI' Orcheatr1 ind L y r 1 c made to the B r l t I 1 h "the unfc:rtunate situation .ii Overture. distributors of thll magazine, all too clear.'' :········c;f.YiAPic.PCiCiL········: TV and APPLIANCE· a Tho "MAll4THON $WIM" 11 In lh 7th D1y. Tho Kida Havt Swum • 1 113,316 Ylr<h"(291 Milnl 139 Continuo"' Houral • •• • HAYI YOU jBACKED THEM WITH YOUR : DONATION?[w" .... 7•% ,.,,.,. •• .,,, ,., ......... """ ,.., ss.ot- • ~'t:.''11°:'.'.~.~~~~~:..-................... -·····-············-···-----······--·-: ADDRESS •........•. -.:.. .. .r.._ .. :.-·--········-··-··--·-·······-············--·-·······-·······'· OLYMPIA POOL P.O. lo• 800. • IN liARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD. • COST A MESA 540-7131 Daily 9 'til 9; Sat. 9 'til 6 1 F OUN DAT I ON Coste Mt11, C11lf. 92617 • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1._:;;;;.. _____________________________________________ _ • + I I • DAD,Y PROT EDITORIAL P AGE' • I .Modular Schedulirig ' A Cl'GUll of parents o! COsta Mesa High School stu- deata ncenUy attended a school board meeting to ex· preu their displeasure with the school's modular sched· iiliDR gyllem. . Tbt two problems which concerned the parent. were lbal,lllelr children ·w.,e not getting a good educa· tloo IDd Illa! their complaints -!'lade through ~roper channels in the school and distnct admirustrat1on - 'Went unheard and unanswered. BoUI coocerm are valid ones. some aspects of the IBsue sbo.yld be noted.· · . For nample, a petition signed ·bY t32 parents of in· termediate-and bigh school students was given to board meriibers. The petition asked that the school be return· ~ to t•traditional scheduling'' by the end of 1970; that if.Bte approved tei:t bookS-be Used ~ ·t~at homework be assigned regularly; that grades be issued regular~y ; that students not be allowed to leave campus dµrmg 1chool hours; ·that tests be given regularly; that pass· fail grades be abolished, and that students be returned to a "conventional dress code." At the June meeting of the school board at which he resigned, ·former school principal F~ank Lopes made public plans to have a closed campus m the fall. He also said freshmen and sophomores would have more sched· uled time. The problem that the school·had last year with ~r· regularly issued grades had been solved, Lope! said, by imP.roving the computer program that handles the i;Chool 1 grading. He told. board members Costa Mesa 1tudentS would .be· recefvihg grades as often· as other high school students in the district. Apparently many Of the parents' who signeil the peti· tion wei-e-not aware thit'text• books for high school stu· dents are approved~at the districtJevel. not.at the state level. They apparently did not know that pass.fall grades were offered only in the ,beginning art course and driver education. Educational innovations and experiments inevitably mean a period of trl8l and error and create problems , that need re-evaluations and adjustment.I. But lf ·u. school district doesn't try new approaches to education, the system will !ail to keep pace with the Chanl(ing needs of our young people. The most unfortunate aspect of the Coat.a Mesa hiah si£uation seems to be that concerned perenta felt they had to resort t6 petitions to get comlderation for their concerns. This Is a communication failure thaC needs prompt and serious attention from the bolrd of education. · The McKenzie Years Effusive praise can be embarrassingly bestowed at times, but it was genuine and underplayed. Monday, when Costa Mesa recalled the McKenzie Years in city government. Marking the 17th anniversary of incorporati9n. Ci· vie leaders also met to honor retiring city manager Art McKenzie, \vho left for a long stroke convalescence in Mexico. "Art bas grown with the city," said Vice Mayor · \Villard T. Jordan, noting he overcame a polio handj. cap and resumed his law enforcement career as first police chief. "His ability to find what was best for hls men and also the community earned him the respect of all citi· zens," added Chief Roger Neth, who began under Mc· Kenzie as a patrolman. . Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley reminded everyone that McKenzie has been offered adminiStTative posts with 17 different organizations when he is recovered. Art McKenzie's character showed through, per· haps, as he listened to accounts of bis 17 years at dedi· cation as though he only did what should have been ex· peeled o! him. And then he thanked those who were only thanking him. • ' - •• c 'MY. HOOK ~ISSOLVE~l: Red Sansei Dear Gloomy In Pritne Time, Half of lJ.S. Households Listen Is Playing Pantlier Role., t, G~s: Dur ' 1• fair WH . t)'pica) as Jain go. \\'hat did D.O.B. (()us, July .,24) expect? Flower pavilion was outatanding, diaplayi lnfonna· tive. ;Let D.O.B. plan next year's fair -then, no complaintl! . -Mn. M. L .B. "--.. .... ._....._ .. -... ....... . .... y-lonc·bolred --.. -..__-_ .. __ ....:;_. _________ -_..J lhi ~ middle-<:lul delegates - The First President to Master TV WASHINGTON -Coming to the point directly, Richard M. Nixon Is sucfi a hot television personality that he's got the networks gasping. He can command the air in prime time and get people in half the households of America listen· ing to him. ' So it may be said that Nixon is the first American pres- he is doing: He does not CBS's Cronkite and 1he care about new NBC • CBS GAVE' AWAY §75,lltltl w~rlh jlf air time for nothing except some Vague princip.Je thet ! lhe .Joyal oppasiti'on to newsteam Including Brinkley, nor about a president iooght to ,be heard .. The the lime pressures 'on ·nro r n i-n g trouble was IJ¥1t so .few were listening. newspapermen. He wants to I hurdle the CBS stems disposed to let the Deniocrats commentators and news shows and make have at least ljthree more such t i m es direct contact with the largest po'ssiliki before lhe CS:nera which adds up to number or citizens at the hOUrs when quite a lot <( free al;. time lo devote to such a small audience. A ~n they are normally disposed lo con-number of CBS Stockhoklers 1thln.k IO, at ... ~Amcian C I t i J e n 1 ,eOeration • nilei) .,.. .......... 11 .... from ft--,---ie........... 11~f'11ith "l'Cl'Y f ·1 ' .,.,........, 1P9* M* ad I film on the wartime 1 Jim! jn of mercbanb. eJIClltlves and Jdent to mast.er the electronic medium.-- Eisenhower, JCen· nedy and J ohnsoo couldn't touch him In their time none of them reaJJidnder- atand.ing how to gel in direct eontact with hearth· and borne to make their sales pltche!. themselves in their hemes to digest the ·evening meal and seek ways to avoid ccr.nplete boredom before shuffling off to bed. Of coune, yoo•ve got to ~be good at it, too. ': Eilenhower had no studif.d rationale fw his television appearances, which ~~-'mOatly •t preSa conferences held iA ltbl. monUna: h9un when hol13ewives and breed winners were busy at their appointed luks. K"'!!edY had a m.iaconceptlon that his TV appearances should be ao tlmed u 1o key in 'lrith the evening news broadcasts, giving thf: centrate on the tube. That is what be too. and Ule !letWQTk .has OQf gOt 'Whit h.u· been getting, and at UmH Of b1! could be eallt.d a pr imrattr.actiun for own choosing, fourteen t~. ,in fad, its , troubl€' in trying to "balance'• its I I ' ... IM'F of -O>ut J-in .~fH!iou' -. Like whllo youths of JMa _..,, 111 .,_ e""la I could • -~, class the 11dtcal or ooi belp i.i,. ililpnaed qaht by the BDS-type .....,,,. verbally'.ifted, with powerful wpoct thal the Negro has • ~ ..... of the unportance lad .. w-~<\be of u.ir op1nim and eve.a mor. of aattae'I • . J , .::::.;::-,...._la, lbor Ill•• no .. tr111ut racllln or, '*'wn, only Lei mi tlll!lllln. l>i;ofti elavery ~ . ""'I"'-'l1le)' are 10 Mb' autmilaled onwin, ~-,. ' Into white ~ that they do exactly ~ HI ._.,,.. · wbat whilo youths of the ...., !OC!al mg mus. llova Ill· claa do -Ibey alao play Blad. Panther fiuenced~..-railons • o! whtfi mloolrel IN .ON!i RESPECI' the yellow Pan. &hows aocl blackfaot then have an advantage over the Whitt skit.. Neero.ragtime Panthers. Instead of simply protestlng awept lht country Jn white racism, they can claim to be the etrlY ye:ars of · a victim of ll. This turns out lo be thia century, IUght a little difficult to do. Japanese- after World War J Americans are. in college in greater came the Jazz Aa:e numbers relaUve to their population than :1 c!i1e!:'~ru;~tbe ·I0'1. In the JO'I any other 'ethnic group. In college they and 40's there we1 the redilllcowtJ of get most of the prizes J.nd scholanhips. New ortieans style band mUlic and On graduation they are easerly 10ught by empSoyers. Chicago style boogie ...ogle, More Not being able to show that they rec::enUy tbehl haa been the conquest themselves are victim.I of white racism, of American youth by traditi~nal ~ythm they work themselves into a rage about and ~luea. lt ii almost ixiomattc that the ua relocation. If you try lo tell Amencaris, especWly when young, them tl\Ol-.ll all happened Ion& ago derive an important part of their culture .,. they gtoww .. i"at you -and insW that it'~ from the American Nqro. likely to happen qain any minute. THll TIME AROUND the big aource of Inspiration for white youth& la: not Lead Be.Uy or Ellington or cab Calloway or Charlie Parker, bul the Black Pan- thers. Lo$ al. the white radicals around Berke)ey and UCLA. Many of them ~ simply playing Black Panther, Wllh their 1cowling )Dok&, clenched fist sal4te. obscene. language, hair in a fl.my' niop, the Afro print shirts. on. group . calls ll!<U the Whtt. Panthers. 'I1le radical.< among the ...... 1 (lhiro gemraUon Japanese are saruiei; the im· migranla ore !mown as i.ooel; the oea>od ' Wilson Quote -. What Infuriates the radical aansei most bf all is Jli& parents wbo, despite lhe raw injustice of the wartime relocation, lived through it patiently, fought with honor for their couritry ln World War JI, and came home to study and wWk hard and prosper -so that their children coU!d go to college. It humiliates them to think that their parents submitted to the relocation instead of, as they imagine the Black Panthers would have 'done, ~ting it out with the authorities. Tlil8 EMOTION ACCOUNTS for the odd campaign of radical sansei lo compel Bill Hosotawa or. tbe Denver Post to change the title of hla history of Jap1neae in America from "Tht Qui.et Americans" to .90mething more mDJtant.;.aoundln(. Tht book reveals the courag .... and dlcnllled wayi in whi!b Japaoeae-Americms, call- ' i . Mailbox ' ' . 1 · ing on the finest moral reeources of , their background culluro, acoeptod their impossible situation and kept. their fajth --......... .... To the Editor: ) in America during the whole aavage war between the land of their adopUon and the land of their ancestors. So little do the radical santti uridentand the Japanese cultural Jde ntlty, which they claim they are aMerting by their Blick Panther behavior, that they are actually ashamed or their parents and grandparents! (Warning: I'm talk.lng about radical sanaei, not 111 Nnsel.) AJ much as l try, 1 can't put out cl my mind the clever remark our brilliant mayor made about a black boy being on his f~ 1porCh at night and seeinl only "a set of beautiful white teeth and eyeballs.'' (''Blac) Youths get Ll~ to Sell Candy" -July 21.) Did he ~er think to Invest 1n a pordl light? Lei him tell that to Dr. Rtlph Bunme or other greal men like bim and let'• oee how funny Ibey thi>Jk he ls. Did he ever consider that hfs llJllOPhllllcaled bald head makes a ter· rible Cllre In the 111111 light! I'm .ashamed to Uve ln a town that has a mayor who tblnksl wblt he 11id waa a fumy joke -et IOmeone ebe's expenae ~ot couroe. The triumph of the Black Panthera is thai they have dooe as•in what Negroes have done so successfully before. They have established a llfwty}e -a style of dress and speech and gesture: and aelf-dramatlu.UOn -for other Americans. lrdUcilna: whJtu and Asians and Meli.can-American Bto'ifn Butts, to emulate. Pity, therefore, the llU'8 oriental 1irl o(. the As;ian-American Political ADlance ... at UCLA or Sen Francl9Co State, looking ilt the mirror at her long and ~lack MRS. LOili PINSKY • b!!1 hopelessly straight hair, roollztng t..nm fN1M ,....,, •rt Wtlc9Mf. Nomi.ti• ,..,,,,., Sadly that jt jusf. CIO't be atranced .,_,. ~ ~Ir meu.tU m JOO ow d' or "·'· Afro tlyle. TIW ,.. " ....._.. ,.,.,.., "' u1 '"a. or f.11"* Right on! nat. ..... ...-rwd. "AH ltt!ttt tnvlf lntlllfe tit· M""' .,,, -m,.. ~ ~ 11ttMt m•v M ........... ... ,.... ff tulllcltnt Ntfllll It ... ttnf ,., ........ ---. Bys. t. 1·1ayakaw1 Prt1ldenl, San Francl1co Slate Colltp TIUs is all very strange considering that Nixon fared so badly in his te levision contest with John F. Kennedy,, i?tJt in the ensuing years Nixon has learned by experience things that Kennedy did not know and Eisenhower and Johnson could" not comprehend. 1lUS IS QUITE SIMPLE. lt consists or goln1 on television. either by' press conference or solo 1ppearanct, in those hours after dinner when Americans k>ck Cronkite and HunUey-Brinkley shows time to prepare and use film clips and the morning newspaper editoriallsts time to prepare their summaries and con· clusioils. Hts· troublf was that most of his appearances were at the wrong hours. . .JOHNSON WAS confused by the whole business of wbe!t ~ bow to appear on television and' with all due res-pec:t to hi• bard trying, made a botch of il Not Nixon. He knows precisely what f · h' c1m· · . cOverage of the President. so ar 1n 1s a 1IDStrat1on· and when As ·led = •J the ' t •· I led · '--1.r . In . no . ID ~lore, ne wor~, t coun Jn. 1JV1U'I\& ot .1am g public and particul ~. 'Ire in ttOuble support. because· of 11.iblic mistrust growing m:t This is really whl( munts ""tft the:~or thCtr~.-agi of the Vletnlm wur present controversy over granting TV and student{tiots, he!vily fertilfzed .~d lime to opponents 0( the PreSident's fed .by the I steamy rhetoric of Vice . . President A,gnew. The networks. brush pohc1es. When CBS broke the ice and this off as the public having slck&led tried lo regularize !Orne kind o( a re· , or seting thjnga ap they are but that sponse by Democratic National Chair· isn't what a good m&Qy viewers think . man Lawrence F. o·hnen·it was a bomb I for th.is en,aging politician. Too few . A GOOD ''MANY think lhis co~erage people had ever heard of him and too 1s hoked up tG show the bad side or many who had weren't Interested. He everything, a put down on the ad· probably would have been better off to ministration~ the cowitry, flag aOO home keep clamoring for equal time without reflecting only the political dyspeplia getting it, thus creating the impression of the TV producers and commentators that Nixon's networks gave the President and shot through with over-dramaUzation a sinister unequal adv~lage. and exaggerated e:nphasis on dissent. Why We Ma·les Oppres.s the t adies l have a letter from 1 lady (and I hope she won't mind my referring to her in Uiat fashion ) who says: ''Hoppe: When it comes to the Women's Liberation Front, you write nothing but unadulterated rot. It shows that you, like all men, are subconscious male chauvinist pigs. who don't even know how vilely you are oppressing us women." This is outrageous. First ol all I don't write ,. unadlllterated' rot. I write adulter- ated rot. Secondly. th.is wbole concept ol Womens Lib 4hat we men are unknowing. ty penecutlng the falr sex is sheer ·nonsense. ,_·~ AS I WAS SA YING to the fellows down al the 1ifale Citizens' Council the other night: "Now do11't get me wrong fellows." 1 said, "I was raised by a woman and l know we all love our women. But the feet of the 1natter i~ that lately they've been gettl11g downright uppity. "It's these outside agitators from the Won1cn 's Lib," Colone) Stonewall, USMC (retired), said, sh<1king his head, "com· Ing in here and stirring up our girls. They were always happy when they knew their place.'' "That's right," agreed Senator Stro- mond. •·we used to get along just flne '~•uat we Dew how to tna them. You gnt lo treat them like children.'' · "The lact is they're basically shiftless aod witrustworthy ,:' aaid Wally Gtor1e1 1111 Georse ---. Dear George ; Do you 1111ke a llvl111 off lhlt litUe. column? If you can rall tt 1 column. . WONDERL~G Dear Wondering: Yes, I make a Jiving otr this column. If you can call It a !lving . "Now hold on, fellow~,'' said Tom • " ·Art ffoppe " l Tolerant, who's something of a moderate · ,) orl lhe sex issue. "There's some good i·A I .. • OMS who are a credit to theii" sex. •• ~-~ ... Take Mrs. Nixon. All she ,eVer says nodding. "They l!ay one thing and mean is, "I'm glad to be here and thank another. And if you let 'em, they'd spend you for the r0&es." Now there's one all day playing cards, gabbing and who knows her place. You doO•t see watching tee-vee." her kind out a1itaUng. "YOU GIVE 'EM any money and they spend it right off on flashy duds and sturt," added Bert Bilbo. ;'What's more. they can't hold their liquor. It makes 'em quarrelsome." "Tom's right," conceded Bert Bildc>. "Not many ever amounted. to a hill of beans on their own, but they make fine maids and cooks. And I'm glad to .have one around the houae to raise my children. We've II.ways tre.ated her Patentable . if lY sef.ul .. Could you gel a patent on an alarm clock that aquirta cold water down a sleeper's neck? A man in Chicago did. What about a balloon drawn through the sky by eagles? Or a stickpin made or candy, to be eater. after use? Or Dn automallc hat tipper for lazy gentlemen? These, too, all won patents. To the btventor's neighbors. such ideas might seem pretty silly. And our patent law does say that, for an idea to be paj,entable, It must be "u.se.ful." HOWEVER, IN deciding what i& useful, the law Is very toltz;ant indeed. The • law remembers ( 1ve11 U the neighbors don~) thal people laughed too al Ale.- and« Graham 11<11'1 lint telephone and at U.. Wrlflhl limben' firll airplane. True, you cannot lf:l a patent on tornething that hu no use at all. For example, an inventor claimlng to have created a "perpetual motion machine'~ was turned down on this ground. Tfle rullna pointed wt that the machine could not poalbly wort, because it waa con- trary to tht 11w1 of nature. Nor can you patent a devict which Is uaetul onl1 to do evil. 1bus, a cow1 • . . I .. I • •5' . • Law .~n 'Action , .). . '· ... r~e<:ted a patent for a method of raking the appearance of tobacco leaves for the purpose of making them look better than tftey really were. THE JUDGE SAID: "Congress did nOt intend to extend protection to (In- ventions) which confer no other benefit upon the public than the oppurtunlty of pi;ofltlng by deception and fraud. The lnvenU01f must be capable of aome beneficial -. as dlstlnlll'islled from a pernicious use ." But for most invettors, the ten of use(ulness ca• tie passed wlllJoul 190 much trouble. The 'law g!nt:rally takes the same <!J>tlmlstk: aUllude tl'lat Ben- jamin F~ GnCt toot when he was a!ked : · "What is the: use of this ne:w IP.. ventlon?" · Franklln's reply was : ''Wba.J Is the me of I newborn child?'' , An Amerfca.n Bar A1socfatfon piib· lie 1ervU;c jeCU.141'• b~ \ViU Btrnord. like one of 'the ramil y." ''THEY DO HAVE a natural sense ·of the rhythm method ," agreed Colonel Stonewall grudgingly, "but v.·ould you want your sister to marry one~" "look at the scientific facts, genUemen." said the 1 o t e d an- thropologist, Dr. Carruthers McSnair. "All my st\ldies prove that women dress differently, act differently, think dir· ferently and are built differently than "''e men." Thus. reassured , we pledged allegiance to our banner - a cr9wing rooster over the legend , "M!le Supremacy !'' -and reaffirmed our stand in fa vor or repealing the 19th Amendment abolishing college education for females a'nd maihtainjng separa te but equal facilities, p&hie\llarly ·1n bus s\aUoils. SO TR& TRUTH is we males oPP"f:S" ladies aimftty because we've got 1 good. thing going. And lik e all oppressors we can think up a million rationalizations to jusUry it. Thus all the Women's Lib need /'lo is convin<"e us oppressors to give up the good thing we've got going. Lois of luck, ladies. -----iililiiiiil-- Fdday. July ~I. 1970 TIJe editorioJ page of the Dail11 Pilot rt61u to inform and stim.. Mla~j· r.s b11 presenting tl1i1 1fcws 1 opfnion.t and com-• mhtGfll J»l Copies of intere1t IM\d lign · nee. btl providing a fof"Um 1 Of the crpre.ssion of our ' rrortcra• opfnlom, a11d bu prestnti111 ~' diutrse oieto- poh'tl Jj informed observers and ipoi;1smt n on topics of thti 'da~. f ' Robenl N. \Vecd, Publi lher ' I I ·' I I • I I t . , L--· --· ·Sadllehaek . . I .. . . • '. .. . •• yp~. 63,. NO. 1821·4 SECTIONS, 42. PAG~S · . · . ORANGE . coumv.' CALIFOl\NIA FRID'Ay, :JULY 3 f, '1970 , .... ;TE ~ 1. }f. . • • ' ' . ' .-• . " Girl,.· 17, ,Raped, Shot Near ' : * * '' . ·srae . -· * * c.ce • ' . . -' . . ' -. 1 • t • • MARINE Gl,IARDS El. TORO CRASH S<;ENE As°AUl ,FORC:E,ONE TAXIS·DOWN RIJ NWA.Y · Pfo11donY.a' Pl•no w ... Bol119: Pr-•~·for Tr•ln"'9 Flight· Wiien CrHh ·Occurred. . ' ' : : ' ' * * * * '* * '. ' .s eace Cease Fire • P.r':lposals .Win Okay .TEL AVIV (UPI) -The IM1ell cabinet, heedinl ·an appeal from · Pres.I· dent NI.Jon, today . accepted the U.S. Middle East peace proposals that include a three.month ceue-fire on the Egyptian front. Egypt had accepted the propos.11s earlier. The decision wa11 taken by the cabinet in the fourth crisis session of the week despite the threat of a walkout by the six Gahal Party members of the National Unity Coalition that would imperil the government of Premier Golda Meir. The six members of 1he ·hawkish party votea against a'ccepting ,the proposal. ac. Co_!'_d,ing ·lo the..lsraeli st.ate radio Which said' the vote iri. the cabinet •.as 17-1 with no abst.enUoi\s. Howe'ver .. they did not immediately walk oot but caucused again ·to decide their course. ---·- .. .. -. . . ' ' . . . ' .. , , .. ,,_ • I * ~* • * ... • • ' ' J .: .......... -·---) __ ,. .; -- ' ' .: . • l I ... ' . ' Su bve rsiv.e Acts · : . ' , ·; ' . . , Politioal 9lW'Cl!llJ. 1ild )it was unlikely ' • ! -~'!!t"::~~-j):' · titter~~ of a governmental ·~Iii.Crisis. Tti G~ bloc, wtiich haa 11 ' Vn der Sc tutin y iii.Laguna Beach P.Ollible .. subverlive actlvlty·ln·~guna Beach was. :under ICJ'Uf.lny -this week u an ln\'atjgatar for the atate Senate F~Finding Subcommittee ~n Un~ricen Activities zeroed In on the Ar!· Colony. • 1'1e subalmmitlee, headed by Sen . HUgtl Burns, functiorui frOm the'leinltor's· ol(i.~ in Fresno and ·hai JoOi.ed 1nto acti'(ities of e1tremist groups rugtng from the Communist party to"'1he .Jotm Bifeh Society. 'J\e Investigator said he was 'tn- t.erv'H!wing a nurn~ of people in t9\m, including news media personnel 'and city officials, about problem area!! ~ per.xis reputed to having, leapings to the 'leH. He' also 8Qllght opinions of residents on ttie activities of aome city and other publk: officials and employes and their a~al.e5. 1 nae investigator said Sen.' Burns' com- mittee is engaged in a cOunty-by-coUnty survey ol eujweralve" acUvlties,. ranging frmt college canlJl!.lltS .to 1001--city covernments and ciVic lf'OUPI· He said the 1t1rvey •. Jn. La,guna ~as precipitated by .ecurity pcoblems that have arisen as .the rt111lt of·establisbmeqt of the WNtern ·Whitt Hou• tn nearby San Clefnerite. He noted that the police departmelltl el the twC) cities have a muttial aid 1•ll'ftDlenl, which, In .an emersency. could draw Lagawia Jnto 'the· Wblte Houae-ae.curity sphere'. Sobversive activity in the Art colony cook! have an lai:tver11 effect ~ leCUrity' ~lflladt in 'tbe neighboring com· munlty,.he aid. , ~PP01"11tlYI well briefed, the· ln~esti­ g1tx:r had a list cX. names ol persons known ·locally for their,liberal beliefs or aQOCiaUoo. wilh-oohJied JiwoJ ·aroupo. Boo~y Trap Kill s La P ahna .Girl A ;17-year:Old LI Palma girl was 1hol to death Thursday night by a booby trap rtne' triggered when she raised a ibathroom window to enter her l)oyfriend's apartment in Anaheim. A .n caliber bullet struck Melita Jay Bonham in the left eye. police: 11id. Netltibors who heard the shot shortly be:for': t p.m. found her on the lawn bene1th lhe window. Sbe died an hour Iator al Anaheim Memorial HoopltoL 1be boyfriend, Rondy Eugene Acklu, 1ar was taken into CU!lody by police: wlltn he relurned to• the apartment at l :*> a.m. No charps have been tiled. nae ri0e l~Y' WIS riged as a holnemade burglaiy olleguard device. The. tront door wu locked and no one home •t the .. par1men1 when MlJa llonlwn tried the window. • ' • , 1 aeat.a: in thf 126-&eat unicameral t))ll'lll· Vie1·0 CreWfilan ·1i;il··.ure.d. ·. r.::;:b~~.:iy~.·"'ay to wait °"1 De9pile the threat. the Gahal m.inister1 · • . were invited to sit on a JnWster:lal · · · · · committee which Wlll draft the' ·official : In Air CFash at El Toro . Jsr~ I~:u statem<nt today said 1'19el ' was prepared . to sublcrlbe to-the ·U.S. . . By UTRUR II.' vmU:r. .. Of~ Nlf ,_--~ One wing drooping as Jt landed with a bountt', l.'~nl'KC130."rDi6'air fueling LanJier· careened "doWn the' nmway ·at El 'Ipro ,Mar_iM Cocps Air Station Thura-. d,ay,,.flipped over .and .~1ploded in names. The pilot, a much-decorated veteran Of Vietum• helicoPter duty, died in the bluing wreckage, which came to rest only ·Di yards from President Nixon's parked Air Foree One jeUmer. A ·midfield cra!lh 'Cr'ew raeed to the acene and wasr praised for saving the lives ot four .crew members, three ol whom were badly.injured. Finl~ Lt. Roger W. Mullins. 27, of HuntiJlll<>n B<aeb. pui>hed in the overtuhled· fo!Ji.ngine turboprop aircraft. The in,fitred-crew members wert:11de.n· .til'led ,IJI : , I -M1J. Wolter Cytkewlcz, 41. Mwlon Viejo. -C.pt.~ftobert:B. Walls Jr., 21, Tustin. -Stall Sgt. Kenneth C. Davis. 'Jl, Slnia "'1a. -Cpl. Kenneth Metzdorf 21, who. lfvea on·1>i~e. · · • Alr were ·at1mitt.ed to Orallie· County . Medical Center. where all but the major were li!ted in critical condition. today from burns and smoke inhalation. Two members of the rescue crew - who carried out three victims -were also injured despite the fact one wore an asbestos suit and oxygen mask. Sgt. BOb Tribett collapsed due to smoke inhalation while inside the blazing, ake1etal fuselage, but was helped oot of the wreckage to safety. Medical Corpsman Mike Shipplet su!· fered bums on the· ~hinds while 41d- mini5'-erklg ald'to tl;lt Injured men. Operations Officer Col..Ken Huntington credited Sgt.. Gl'}.lver SL C!air'1 ~resc.ue team >With saving the survivors, alt.hough they had to•walt for firemen, Tht. firefigbters tald a•blanket.ot foam (See CllA8ll, Pap I) Gir-l, 17, Raped, Slwt ; Found Near Clemente A4ee ..... girl from Pico·Jli""ro who had been roped and abot aft<r being )tidnaped . in Newport Beech w a s di!ICOvertd by four Camp Pe~n Marines ·early thil morning ~ u ahe wandered incoh&J:ently along the San Diego Free.way south of San Clemente. The girl, 17·year..old Susan Price, re· mained aemicomcioul throu&h the morn. ing and under intensive care 1t South Coast Community Hoapital with a bullet lodged' In her neck. Preliminary reports Indicated the. girl wa.,. left near the Las Pulaas gate of the Marine bue. suflerlng a sm,Ie wound in the .neck afler a .lerrlfying journey from' Newport BeAch into North San Diego County. Miss Price, who3e address was not lmmed.i1tely available, apparently was abductfd in Newport, when. ahe bad been vacatiolling, police Hid. The four Mari.nu reportedly found the teenager at 1:55 a.m. and drove her lo San Cltmente, wher~ they notified police. •· Miss Price then wu la.ken by am- bulance to SOuth Cout Hospita.1, whtre the bullet wound, hidden by hair and bklod. waa dilcotered. Aid., at tilt boopital sald tbe 1lrl " 1 \ hu not yet undergone surgery e.a.tly Ibis mqrnlng. • Detectlvell from ·Newport Buch. San Clemenle, and the Son Diego Sheriff's Office Wert at the ICefte through the morning, I The 1nvestigation has been joined •by investigators from Camp Pendleton, report.I Hid. 1be deteetivu througtl the. morning probed the brush-covered bank sloping coast ward of the Sin Diego Free.way, but San Diego Sllerilf'1 officers, Who are In charge of tbe case, relused to divulge details ol the investigation. Mis& Pr\ce has not. betn interviewed and police have yet to speak with the four Marines who reported the dJACOvery. Miu Price apparently clawed her way up tht steep embankment to the free.way alter her assailants left her. San Diego invest.lg1tors woold not specify whether Miu Price has made comment! on the identitr ol or l,ht number ol tht 'pinoi.I in\lolved In the attack. ' · Police ln f(_ew'poft. BeaCh meanwhile were reported to be probina the circumalances of the abdllction: in their city. It appa'"!'Ul' """"1'td around ml4• nl&bt. ' , proposal1 for a. llO-day cea•fire "AL least on the Egyptian. front." This ruled · out a cease·fire now on the :Jbrdanlan front · where Arab guerrillae · have threatened to continue the war. llll.~ U.S. proposals were, vquely ,word· ed and lsrael was forced .r~tedly to seek clarification from, W8Jhi.rllton on their meaning. The Rogers prof,osals . spoke ' speclflcally o! a' cease-fire on tt\e; Suez Can s! ·front and ooptfully of . the other fronts. ' ' ·But during ·the. .i(kfay ·per)od the ' beW'gerenls· could begin preliminary di11CUSSlons which· Would settle 'the pro-· blem of a ·cease-lire · On other sec'tors ' with Ambassador Guhnar V. Jarring ac-. ting as mediato!, and hOpefully, to prepare for negotiationi to write .a formal · end to the conf.UcL ,_ • State Rejects · ·. Mari.hes' Offer Of Bea~h hind By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of ,,.. 011..,. ,llift lttff An official spokesman for Camp Pendleton today confirmed · that the Marine Corps hu ottered 1.S miles of virgin shoreline . for ,pu.blic we on a 25-year leaie. But the Stat.e·of California ,fs holding out for more land and says the offer is uaacceptable. . . Robert Meyer, deputY. director of Parks and Reereation, 'laid the colt of develop- ing the. 1.5 milts of 11nd for. aurflh.g park would; be prohibitive.· "The. 11tate would 1\ke 4.5 miles oC beach with 1 2$-year le.ue -then we 'd have a fantastic park,'! be ll&id. The Marine CorpJ proposal wu 1e11t to the. state nearly two wetiks ago, following Uie rejection bf the state or another plan for the bud!. The Marines formerly offered · 1.5 mUe11 of betlch fOf' se,ve.n yean, with the leue revocable at any time. Alter lengthy' negotiations, the lbnger- term plan was drawn up but the slate would 1tiU Ulte a lon1er•atretch of beach llnd. ' Meyer said that negotiations for the 25-ye.ar lease will conunue, but that the final deci.!ion will not be. made by Camp Pendleton. "That final decition wUJ rest with the llepartmenl of Delense," he noted. Director of Parka and RecreaUon. Wllllam Penn Mott, met wJlh COi. A. C. Bowen at Camp Pendle.ton Thursday ' (i!ff BEACH, Pap I) .... ,.. . • ' I r'-lV~stet,n ·J!.te~s: ~e~'ing'.~",:· ' ' ' ' I ' • • ' ' · I ' ' ' ' ; ' ' ' P~ases ''M'ri Presfde'nt':··<· ' ; I 1 ) . ' • ' ' i ' I ' 1 ., . ' : :" ~ I .! , .... • I '' ,r' ' ' ' ' I.OS' ANGl!LES ·<UP!f -' P~lle•t · Ht was .well ,.:.Parecl'ehd> oeOid!!f ·•I N~oq la, _expected: t.o ha'(e' mcir'e. qe.wl .1 ease before the stand ' up microDbene t'M/<!'"-i>ulJ!de1of,Wao!>i\liloll·:· ' • In• the llCJlet's ·1Htter1111 su.., 'llliinlea He obyfoµ11r .. ..,,• P!e•ied-"')th ·~la : ~. ao.·he· was·:q~ ""lllljblodl owrr·histor1C' ''fitst'' :..... a; te.lelifsed "t'OO~ (rem.1oreip :poUey toi aog: : ~--1 . · . He. was attf~ in· his cu~tomin')b}Ue ferenci'bete •ilh·Efrl !'S(iulre'.' Belrrf!ffs~ ' suit, -eM,lte' Shift am b~µ&·.Q~: r~.~ dW or:the' canfotnia Pres! CorPs.!IYll1g, . a . Cal. lfornia .•. tan I 8, 11!1. al~ tile • 1 I ·.1 _ · · r • • · • "Thank 'you,. Mr. Pr-esldent." . .' , . t.etnperature bl ' Uie iroom :wi" 1Nt ''Belire~; a pblific'al 1co'luinnlsi for 'the : wtpe(J . beads of; ~l'splraUeit:.-ftolli .hJS Su. ·~Fr.aectsoo ChI'9f1icle : who ·T~!jv~ . face-:wtth a handkf!'rchier. : ... t t • He Wuted tO'.gtve ·the iWdtemJ'hi.'lf the Medal ot:Freedom from Nixon, wis · ot·\bf:countryacha:nde.k>M'a'~r­ m·ore J1ubduec:i : m icuttlng .. ofr: th~ 'c~.. . tial _new1 conf~nce OQ .~';ltaiiW.'-. ference ·than wire service reporters . in 8 p.m. PDT. . Washr.gton1bo shoot •:il\ank ·yo~" and ·When ~be· was --<aak«I ,f.,...~v1qs make a mad dash 'for the telept!Ofit. ~t the preu, lie Jauched,~ niCaJted. The-57·Year--0ld chief· es~tiYe1 hiu:I .. ms own ~· experiences at hil been primed all. dfY jn his, pfush .~\. "llst.'1 press mlttiera ·.in ,Caltfornla hciclse sulleo Jn the C<n1ury Plaza Hotel · ~I~ his d"'eat . Jn1 .ll?&' ,,. 'bl · he-Id be ked bmlato~al race T 1 •-fl' T -on pou1 . ~ ti~esliol'.ls-. 'r°" , , .as • 1 "I'· juit wt!h""Jl ha·d a; goddL.:,~ *' of{ . *" ' .. my wife lw," he 9uieJ1«1: · ., > • • . 1 , • ~ 1 · , • • • ~But',.lt'WiirmtTilil:.-·sre ld doiittilflde N,, . 0n·1:.... . . . . lVuhinglon as tli<'nillllx!al _ ...... ~f}.ll, . . l#ll.es . tllat he appear<ld u.e -Jlel-•. ' · . . He slid be Jiu ht1!1lf"crlU~" :the! Nation's' F.Utur.e "'i .. ve. the ~t·lto.iie """'11en, ~i~~·1111.rii·Y~Icki\i Nixcm'a f~ · W!OI·.~ \elev~ """conf.,.~, The President sa1d the .U.S.;P.ropoaal : for a.ceal;6-firt' tn <ht ~lddle Ea~ ~d bo , q>upjed . V(ltlt a 1 mJ~tary ~I ... He ·forecut Mead of 1¥:. ceue fU-. · .. DETAllA ON °P~G~ ~ ,, ., ' ... ' . , .. th'at'"tlr1tt can 'acr.M'tO tht twle"fire ., and.agfee to,!i•eoti-Wltllo\ll ftar."; '. lnflatlori ls oeing,~lod, and will -· tinue \to' eue.·''nle ~'P-Y _'w,ill .n)ove:; ' forward. Ip IM;·loRl tonh ape! the; al,aclt ., In emp)oylneht Wil\ bo ~'n ~ of, • •·11 Oie!ii ii a w11 lMftften the ·Soviet Ullion and.~ Uoi\ed &tJll., tbeJ", Will be no ,winrfets. "1 Thlt1 i\ .why it '. ii im· Pol'tant . thal the. UnJ~ Slates 'DQI ,be draged Into a milt~ry ·condii:t. Ip kiy areu llke the Mlddle'~ • , nie he.Ivy bionul ,or lmog on, the East Cool ohow1 there 1'1 'I mJ'.2: time 1en for tbe nalkm to 1oiv, iii •ir p0Uutlon problems. COngms shoQld. lf]ce prorppl aclion on Jeglslation·he 1ubmltted 'aix months aio'to combat air pollullon.' .. ' • 0r ... , . ' .. ,. ' .. , Wac..r · ~ . ' . ' .... , • I I ' J OAn,y PILDl SC Friday, J•~ Sl, 197! \ ifate Defense ·Haminers at Drug Use 1=~ -...u.:.K::; Utlnl in Cl'OUp "communes11 ever ainot lo let i-at the qe ol !Sand witll the time Jbe joined Charles 1$ Wfamtl,y." er crou uamlnailon by nerense Atlomey Paul Fllzgerald, Ille state'• examloa~ by DtfeDM Attorney Paul Fltqerilld, Ille State's prime wltn.is acknowledged thlt 8be had a cooalderable amount « "human uperlence" before ahe Joined the hippie cult chuged w!lh the SMroll Tale-LaBlanca llayfq1. Fl~ bu aald he wW aliempt to:'lhow thlt Mn. Kuablan'1 accounta of the kilJ.IDI! were a "fantasy" that came from a mind impaired by the lol)g usage of dru11. Mrs. Kaaablan aald lhe had lived In eommunes from c:oeat to coast from Carpenter Assm·ed Job -In Election .on.,. County lupayen wW fool tlla bill for a $110,000 electlon w!lh 111>11 °"' rul eaodldlte AUi-IL llepJbllcan leader Dtnnls Clrpml« of Newpolt J!eacb was -of- te • -·-Mii In the opodal vote when hla 111>11 -4 Douciu . lrvlne, withdrew 'lburlday. Jrvlne, a Santa Ano houllnC developr, tallted to Cerpenter Tbundq ol&l>I and thrlw hla IUpplrt lo him. Carpen!«, dialrman of the RepubUcan S!fte Central Committee, lbUI vltlually la--blrrlni .. uni..--In c:ampalin .,.. of election lo ftll oul the unexpired term of John G, .......... Schmltz bu been eloc:ted lo the late Jamea B. Utt'• former 1e1t ht O::Jllerell. Carpenter llill , ..... clWlenae """' Democr.i Dwl&hl JI. Mlle in the No'f'lll1ber pneral election let the ' lull 1.....,... -&mate term. The --of Carpenter wW -the county an .umat.1 •110,000. But by i... ... opodal el- baa to be beld ..... If ..... 111>11 hid been one tmidLttte CID the blllot. Jrvlne'• ...,. will -.. the ballot -, ii i. "'° late fer hbn lo -w hut he i. .... bla --lo -,... Cerpenter. . Jr.Jn• -.. !'If. la Ille '""' lo opiok for "Ibo bcii-...,..ty 1u- pa711"' bul --... lo carpente( b -Cupllller -Ille -cooctnl. I 4 The -of c,rpenter lo ftll out the term the rf9t, Of ttie , Yell' CID aocomplllb two lhlnp for Republlcanl : -It wiU give Carpmta' -ty .onr. other new aen1tora fiectld Jn the Novem. her general~ P'l"idedoCarp<oter defeats Mi>e for lht lljU r.nn as a• peeled because Of a lieovy l!epubll<&ri registration edge. -It could get Carpenter to s.cramento In time to provide the vote needed to put Gov. Roa.aid Reagan'• St bllllcin tu: reform iwoposal over the top. 'I1le tu shift package was two votes shy of the 27 needed to clear the Senate today with ooe aupporter temporarily hospitalized. 'lbere was talk among Republlcan strategists of possibly shelving the measure until Carperter'a election on the 18th. Carpenter, who was off lo northern California today on a Republlcan Central Comm1ttee speaking tour wu unavalllble for commefl.L But Phil Seltz, Carplltter'a carnpoian · director, aakl he doesn't look for Carpenler lo provide the llH>reaking v<te. "1 q.n 't imagine them throwing in the towel and not trying lo get it through unUI the 181'.h," he II.id. He said he beUevea hUI _. wW try lo push it lilrollgb apln today. DAILY PILOT N_,.,, 1 .. 111 Ha•lls"w ... .._.. ..... -·-CMN M.. ·S. a1 11: OIWfGI toAn' l'UILISHIHG CQMf'AJn' ReHrt N. W..4 l'fUIHl!t .... ~ltflW J.dr l. c.f'I.., Vb f"rulMnt Ml O.W.I MlilltlfW n.111111 Kaa"n ..... Tlt1111u11 A. Mu1 .. ~i~1 Mltlal~ Edl1W ltlc)i•N '· Nin Soo.1111 ~ c-tr E•lltf """" Calla Mnt1 U& Wot SIY S!rMt H1WJIOl'I a.11e111 2211 W•I a.lllot s .... lirvtl"ll ut-1-'I• m F~ A-HlllM"'91eft s.d'll 1'1111 .. Kii IJ!.11 .... u·• .._ ci.rr-te: JIU Mortll 1:1 (Mrllro flHI lht llma Iha WI bomo in a lmall town in Now Bunpablre and bad a chUd. Wbln abl WU lt, Her ftrat _.....,. lo <OIDllluDal Dv. Ing .... in Mlaml Beach, li'la.. abe said. She nest lived with a group In Bq&ton and then.Joined another commune ln GreenwlCh Village ln New York City. From lhere sbe wenL lo the Haight. Ashbury section of San Francisco where she· lived with another commune and then went back to Boston where abe lived with tbe "American Psychedellc Circus." .. "What was that?" FIU.,enld asked. uwe wanted to get butes and animals and travel all over the country as a circus. 1 don't know exactly why it ~as called psy~." "Was it drug oriented?'• 0 Yes, they took drugs.'' ' 1' olleJ#IHIU Action UWhat 'dnlp?": ''Add . .'J'bey llDOted WMd." '!Eltenalv• .. o( drulst'' .. , woUldn't .. ,. eltenafvt. n varied." From Bo11on Mn.,Kuabian then came with her second husband, Robert Kasa. blan, to Los Angeles and lived in a commune at Venice on the ocean front west of Los Angeles. "We decided to go to New Mexico. We went to a place outside of Taos.'' "Did it have a name?" "Yes, it was called Sons or the Earth Mother," "l was alwaYfi moving from one place to another, usually with a group," said Ptfrs. Kasabian. .. Would you say you were Im· pressiooab1e when you joined the com· mune in New Mexico?'' ''I was searching for something I DAILY ,IL.OT lleff P'lll'9 Dan McFarland (rll[bt) spikes volleyball. as his doubles partner, Peter Ott, watches die results of this set. Pair are wanning up for Laguna's l&th Open Doubles Volleyball Tournament this weekend on Main Beach. Play starts at 9 a.m. SA!Urday and Sunday, Freeway Fight,ers Still BackBadhamRoutePlan A Thuroday lllllCheon of the H,rbor :Area Freeway FJghtera and Laguna Beach city official!: produced some low· key discussion and opinion eichange but apparently changed no minds. 'Ibe Freeway Fighters still aupport Aasemblyman Robert Badham'a bDI to delete 1he adopted route of Pacific COast Freeway through Newport Beach. Laguna officials today said they still opposed the bill, fearing IL would delay and poe,sibty att.r the b)'pOSs route Inland of Laguna Beach. Tbey said a reopening of the route study cou1d also re-open the possibility of a bisecting freeway which the state Division of Highway engineers once favored . City Manager James D. Wheaton of Laguna, who attended the meeting at the Santa Ana C<Mmtry Club, said: "Newport Beach doesn't like the route they've got and I can't say that I blame them. I share their concern over the adopted route ao far as that goes but my difference (of position) still stands. "I told them they've taken the wrong tack. I 8'ked them why they didn't go for a bill directing the highway com· From Page 1 BEACH ••• -.Ing, but the Dkelibood ol a Marine concession appeared unlikely. "1lte two men toured the area, bu' I Imagine all they did was get their respective views across to eadJ other,''. Meyer said. Meyer noted that the' properly ls creating more than local attention. "'Congressman Alfonzo Bell has talked with Defense Secretary Melrin Lalrd about opening up the beach, tmder a Jong-term lease. ''We're optlmisUc: for help from the Defense Dept. We know also that a Jot of public pi'essure Lt building up and that the Marine Corp11 doesn't need all of the 17 miles oC beach. that they now have." "The Marines have told us that they cannot offer the 4.5 miles of beach south of San Onofre because they are planning to build a helicopter pad on the last mile. But it wlll'on1y be temporl1')'. "We are a!JQ dl>tprhed by the fact that a private surfing club has leased year-by.year one mile of beach on the ba!e. "If the Mari.nu can lease the beach land to a private club, they can lcua iOme to the state," Meyer declared. Meyer tnenUoncd that the land lease wu dilowed by Preskftnl Nixon, Gov. Rooakl Reagan, and Sen. George Murphy when the three hsd dinner together it the Western White House Mond.11y even· lna. However, Meyer did not elaboratt on tfle dilcuS&lons. I mission 1o reopen , the rqute study ••• which ls apparently wha~ they wanl They didn't think they could get It through and went Ille wh>le way (seeklrig route deletion) on the legislai.lon." Wheaton .said the discussion was: all friendly and low keyed. He said the Freeway fighters apparently blame much or their Problem on the pos!Uom of both Costa Mesa and the Jrvtne Company. 1be dty man.ager said the Freeway Fighters staled they will fight the Issue in court U Badbain's bill fall!. It comes up for Senate committee hearing Mon- day. Badham has said that bis bill represents the unified request of 20,000 of his constituents. Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa and Laguna have pas.sed resolutions against Badham's bill. 'nte luncheon meeting called by the freeway fighters inch.rd~ Councilmen Roy Holm and Charlton Boyd from Laguna. Host for the meeting was Marshall Duffield, chainnan of the Freeway Fighters. Others included Coimcilmen Howat'):I Rogers of Newport Beach, ex-mayor Paul Gruber, vice chairman of the freeway fighters: Vi.'1 Jorgensen, treasurer of the freeway fighters; and James Penney of Emerald Bay, an attorney. From Pagel CRASH .•. through the flames as a safety path and the crash crew smashed its way into the plane and had the men out within two mmutes. A column of smoke visible for 25 miles shot into the sky from the scene of the tragedy on Runway 34:, which runs in a north·south direction. A panel of Investigators was Im· mediately convened to probe the first accident Involving Marine Refueling Squadron 352 in 11 yean. Built to c:arry 10,000 gallons of highly volatile fuel, the KCI30 was not loaded, otherwise the crash -witnessed by hundreds -would have been far worse. Lt. Mullins, holder of two Distinguished Flying CrOSlel and 32 Air Medals, WIS making his third touch-and-go practice lsnding about 3 p.m. when the plane crashed. No immediate determination of facton which led to the accident wes offered, but witnesses said the KC130 bounced and snagged the left wing which broke orr. . Crates, bundles and other debris bounc- ed into the air as tbe crart spun 180 degrees and flipped over, ils en8'nes breaklng away and skl.dlna down the concrete, spewing fire. w1111't "'"' of, but I pt II loplher wttbln myMlf. When I j01ned M1n100'• family 1 wu lmpreulonable and I wasn~ topthar " lhe uld. 0 But You· had bid considerable ex· perlence ln group Jiving. You were almost a pioneer In communal living we.ren't you?" tFtqerald asked. "Yes." "So when you joined the group at the Spahn Ranch you thought you knew what you were doing and what t1nd of problems you mllbt encounter in communal living?" asked Fitzgerald. "Yes, I just thought they were beautiful Joving people," she said. Fitzgerald took over cross examination of Mn. Kasabian Thursday in an atterrlpt to nullify three days of testimony in which lhe gave an eyewitness acount of tile killings last Aug. 1-9. Fllzgerald told ,.,.~en that the de!-for lllAnlon and three female codefend1ntJ would be hued In principle on the contention that Mrs. Kasablan, a 21-yeal'-Old blonde who lived with the family for one month, was not mentally competent. Under cro&S-examlnatlon, ~frs. Kasa· bian admlt!OO taking LSD, peyote, metbedrine or "speed," mescaline, and mornlng glory seeds. "My sole purpoae for t a k I n g hallucinogens was for realization -God -realizaUon," she said. 0 And were you suceesaful in realizing God?" Fitzgerald aslr:ed. "I resll%ed you don't have to take peyote or LSD to discover God," she replied. "Most of my experiences while ta.king LSD were with nature/' she said, ''in the out-of-doors. Sometimes I would explore the bark ct a tree, or tht patteru of a feather I'd picked up, or I'd gaze at the stars and the moon." Mrs. Kasablan !&kl ate had had delusions while under the influence of drugs, but insisted she did not suffer from "flashbacks" after the drug had worn oU, ';Has takinl LSD altered your personality?" Filzgerald asked. "Yes, it has altered it, I bellevt, to a certain extent, because it has showed me a lot about myself," she replied, "Are you any different than you were during July and August, 1969 (just priOI" lo the Tate-LaBianca s I a y i n g s ) ? • • Fitzgerald questioned. "I sure am,'' she replied. "I've come to a Jot of conclusions about reality and right and wrong." Planners Eye City Future To Present Views on Bound<tries, Downtown to Council By BARBARA KREIBICH Of ... o.&ly ,, ... ll•ff Four membera of the Laguna Beach Planning Commlsa1on air!d their view1 oo various aspects of general plan pro- poaall aL a lpedal aludy eesaion Thurs- day nlgbl and w!U lake action al their regular meeilng Monday night, lo trannnlt their recommendatiom to lbe city couocll. Commlll:ioner 'lbomu Johnston wu ableni Thurldoy and II WU noted that both he and Carl Jobnlon w!U be unable to attend the Mood_, meeting ao there mlgbt be ...., question aa lo the weight ol the recommendation. · However, city pl1111Der Al Autry, noting the urgency of a declalon to enable the Plannine twn from Daniel. Mann. JohnJon &r: Mendenhall to complete its coalract, euqealed that It abould at leut be poulble to prepare a consenaus report for llJldance of the DMJM plan- ners. Notlna that 0 there ls a difference ol O!llnloa on the commlaslon on several itemt," chalnnan William Lambourne took up the DMJM proposals Item by item, eeekbig the views of each com· mlssiootr. BOUNDARIEIJ Discussion opened with the DMJM recommendation that Laguna Beach bwndaries be established al the proposed Inland freeway, deV<~t be confined within that 1 area, and the 500-acre Sycamore Hills triangle further out in the canyon be d~nnued. Carl Jobnlon sald he favored the boun- dary limitation aod the de-anpexation or, if the trian,$:Ie shou)d not be de-an· nexed, would like to see the property rezoned for better control of its develop- menl Robert Hastings said he would go along, but would like to see the triangle de-annexation ''u.sed as a bargaining tool" for a land swap with the tuture city of Irvine, to permit acquisition of property closer to Laguna. He felt Laguna's boundaries should be Jeft ·su1. fidenUy flexible to pennlt anneut1ons north to perhaps as far as Corona del Mar and inlaod over the top of the billJ. James Schmitz agreed with Hastings regarding the northern bounderies, but said he would not favor de-annexation of any property at this time. "Wait until the time comes, then decide whet.her or not It 1s to our advantage to de-annex," he said. FLEXIBLE Lambourne said it might be a mistake to de-annex the triangle or set a boun· dary at this Ume. "It should be flexible," he said. uwe will be crowded by outside developments and i! might be an ad· vantage for us to be able to control some of the developmerts. ~ people will be using our fltreetl, sewers and beaches alld we should have aome con- trol. It would be a terrible mistake to ck>Se in our annei:ation areas." He noted the commissioner3 were divided 2-2 on the point. Recommendations for the central business diltrict were ne.t on the lisL Autry aald DMJM favored a somewhat tourist oriented central area, with ouUy· ing "villagt" centers providing for residents' commercial needs. Hastings felt the approach was sound. Johnson sald he didn't interpret the plan as lim!Ung the central area to tourist use. "There are mixed uses there now and I feel they should and will stay," he sald. lie emphasized that he favored the mall system and was sorry to see !!Ome of the DMJM alternate plans had not included malls. Since the DMJM cootract did not call for a precise downtown plan, he suggested accepting what was presented as 11Usfylng tht cootract and leaving preciM planning for the future, DISAPPOINTED Schmitz said he was "vuy disap. pointed" with the downtown pro))Oalls. "I don't like the way they've moved roads, or the location of tbe1r parking structures. There iJ too much mall for me and I don't like theh' Main Beach approach." He said he felt there were some aspects of a downtown plan presented earlier by Ha1tlng1 that "would work better than the DMJM plan." Lambourne feK Ille DMJM plan had failed .to recognize some of the OOwntown problems and said he, too, found merit in Hastings' plan. "Traffic and parking must have priority,'' he said. "We must consider the ability of the city to develop and I feel the DMJM downtown plan could take 20 years." Regarding the "vil'?ge·• centers for commercial uses in t.~ areas of Boat Canyon, Bluebird Canyon, Canyon Acres, Arch Beach Heights and Top of the World, there was general agreement that some, or all would be useful in the fu· ture, and thst the planned locations should be left as possible developments. The "multi-purpose'! corridor proposed by DMJM for South Coast Highway, is really an extension of an existing situation, Schmitz suggested. He and Lambourne said it would be more II) the point to develop a hotel zone as soon as possible. .. -· -·-·~ -. DREXEL SALE FEATURING DREXEL'S ESPERANTO COLLECTION OCCASIONAL-DINING-BEDROOM DEALERS EOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE 7ed11111 NIWPORT BEACH 1727 Waotcllff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH Prof"1lon1I Interior De1lgner1 Av1ll1bl~ID-NSID 345 North Coast Hwy. 494-6551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 ,...._ Toll JfM M• .t Or.,. Centy ICO.l2U ( • I j • . . . . - -·~ --· • . U.gDDJ. .~&eh ' •. .. -1(:. · .. ' • . -.,. --.. . ' -_J_ .~~Y'.·.~ . -----· .._ . N.y.s~ • ··~ . t ; ' • • I -~.,-· r . ' ' ' . ' . · ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF.ORNIA ' f A .... ' YCll 6l;•NO. 1120 '4 SECTIONS,.42.P>;GES ·. TEN .CENT$ . ' ' . . ". . . . . . ·. ' . • ~linallleriban·' Pro hers Zero " . ' ' . ' ' ... . . ' ' ': *• •* .-.. *· '* * * * . - ,"' : • ! ••. _,_ In,. ' ; on ... • ~ •• • * * ~* .. ' ' __ ., . ( . .• _ .::...r ·--'-· -t :::-·! ' . -:t~agµn~ ' '. ........ ' •• srae .··s . -·RD . . . . • )' ~·· . . Cease Fire --~-.. _ ----· . • -------·-·-· ._.._,.c. - le· ·r· ..... l .• " ,t .•• : : Proposals . . ' . : . ' . -•,. MARINE GlfARDS .EL TORO CRASlt SCE NE AS•AIR •FORCE ONE TAXIS DOWN RUNWAY · : ,, •P•os ident'• PJ•M-Wos B•ifti ~P-,..."fo r Trai Ing -fUght" Wll.,. ·creoh Oc_cu""' ,, .; ". ,,,. , • ' ~ • • •1· 4J, ' .., of I ' ..,{«. ll ,\ -• t' ~ 1 I~ "(~ '• I • ' " • ,, ' ' ~ ' S~ive Act.I ' . . ' . Uiukr ·Scrutiny · i1i':Laguna . B£ach PO!Sible subv.ersive-:activity In· Laguna Beach was underi scrutiny· this week as an investigator-for the state Senate Fact-Finding Subcommittee Qt1 Unamerican Activities zeroed' in, Qll thp Art•Coiony. The subcommittee.., b~ade,d ~ 1 Sen. Hugh BurnS; funetions·from~Q»e,~atqr'I ~ in Fresno and ·bas looked .J.nto activi.ties of extremist groups raaginC from~. the ·communist party• to the Jolm Birdl'·Society. . The investigator said he was In- terviewing a number of people in town, including news media personnel and city officills, about problem -areas and pers4is repu~ to having leanings to the left. · He also !Ollght opinions of resJdents on the activities of some city and other public officials and employe! and their associates. ~ investigator said 1*n. Burns" com- mittee is engaged in a .cowity-by-county aurV,ey qf subversive activities. ranli:U from · college campuses to-·local aty 1o{imments and civic groups. He said·-the survey in" Laguna was precipitated by! security problems that have arisen as ,the resajt ol es4tblish1qent of ·the Western White House in nearby San ~Clefnen~. He not~' that the police de~lmel'Jls ,of the two cities have a mutbal aid agreement, which, in an emergency: Could draw-Lagauna into the\White HOO~ 3'0ll'lty_ sphere. sdbversive activfty in the Art Colony could have a.a adverse effect on lf:CUl'ity pnwbi<>ns mide in the neighboring cont• mudUf, he said. APi>arenUy .lwell briefed, the. lnveatl· 1atar-had a 'JiAt,. d. names of. .~sons kJKrim Iocally1for their llberaY.be,liefs or aqociatloo with o<><alled liberal, groups, . . Bero.'.~tf!t me• . . . .~ --~. ~.·· · . . ~ ' ' . ·Viejo -Crewmati lnjure.d · · . . . ' ' ' . hi Air Crash . at El Toro · By AllTRUJl a .'. VINSEL ·.. ·-Stalf Sgt, Kenneth C. Davis, .. 31, Of"'·' 0111rPUtt .,.,, Santa Ana. One wing drooping as it landed with -CpL Kennelh Metzdorf 21, who ll~es · a bounOe~,.a. gian~ KC130 · niiilaif 'fueling on 'base. · ' · tanker ' careened Gown . the. rufiway ·at Air wer" admitted to Orange O>unty ·El Toro··Marine{Corpl)AirJStatiortThurs--, ·Medical.Center, where all but the maJOr day, flipped'over·and ~xploded·ln flames. were,r Jisted in criticat condition today The pilot, a -m1,1eh-decorated veteran from bums and smoke inhalation. of .Vietiiam·'llelicopter duty, died in the Two members of the rescue crew - blazing ·wreckage, which came to rest who carried out three victims -were only 200 -yards from President Nixon 's also injured despite the fact one wore parked Aii Force One jetliner. an asbestos suit and oxygen mask. A midfield crash crew raced to the Sgt. Bob Tribett collapsed due to smoke sCene and was Praised for saving the inhalation while inside the blazing, lives of four crew members, three of skeletal fuselage, but was helped out whom were badly ·injured. of the wreckage to safety. First, Lt. Roger W. Mullins, 'J:I,' o{ Medical Corpsman .Mi~e Shipplet su(- Hun\ington Beach, perished in the fered burns on the hands while ad- overturned Jour·engine t u r b op r op ministering aid to th'e injured meh. air.craft. Operations Officer Col.-Ken Huntington The lnjuredrcrew members were !den-·credited· Sgt, Grbver St. Clair'1·rescue tilled as: team with saving t~e survivors, althouib -Maj, Waltet)Cytkewtcz, .41 , ·Mission th~y had to wai~ for firemen. · 'Viejo. The· firefightl!rs laid a· blanket of foam -capt ... Robert B. W'alls Jr., 28, Tustin. IS..' CRABH,c Pa1e I~ Gir~ 17, Raped, Sh.ot; Fo.und·Near C"lemente A -.,. glrhlrom Pico Rivera .who had bola rapH end llhot after being kidnaped In Newport Beach w a s ·dia:overed by lour _ Camp Pendleton Mari~s early this morninc as she w;,ndered Jncoherently along the San Diego Freeway south of San Clemente. The girl, 17-year-old Susan Price, re- mained semiconscious through the morn- ing and under intensive eare at South hu not yet undertone ouraeiy urly this morning. • Dei.ctlves from.:Newpoi1 !!each, San {)iement., ·and the ·San Diego, Sheri!('• office were at the act:ne through the morning. The Jnvestigation has been Joined by Investigators from Camp Pendleton, reports said. 1 Coast Community Hospital with a bullet At17-yur-old La Palma girl was shol lodged in her neck. Booby Trap"IGils La Palma Girl The detectives thi'OUgh the morning probed the brush~vered bank sloping coastward of the San Diego Freeway, but San Diego Sheriff's officers, wbo are in charge of the case, refused to divulge details ol the investlgatfon. to death: Thursday night by a booby Preliminary reports Indicated the girl trap rifle tri&iered · ·when she raised wa.s left near the Lu Pulgas gate of a ~throom window to enter her the Marine hue, auffering a single wound oo,friend'• apartment lb ~h<i : · In .Ille .neck after a terrifying joµmey A .2l uJiber bullet 1truck Meli Jay from Newport Beach Into North San Bonbam In the telt eye, . Aid. . D1ego County. Neighbon who heard the 1horUy Miss Price, whole addreas was not. hefore t p.m. found her on the lawn lmmediately availlble, apparently was beneat~ the window. Si)e died an hour abducted In Newport, where abe bad later at ·Anaheim Memorial Hospital. been vacaUoning, police llld. The boylriend, Randy Eugene Ackles, The four Manne• ilportedly lound the 1a, was taken into cus~ by police tee.naaer at 1:55 a.m. and drove her wheD he returned to the ·~~ent at to San Clemtnle, tr.here they nol.ilied 1:2CI 1.m:JiNo ch1.rges have been filed. p0Uce. 1'ht ri e appareotly wu rigged 11 Miu Price then was taken by am- 1 homero•de burglary safeguard detr>lct. bulance to South Coast Hospital, where The front door w1s locked and no on• the bulltt wound, hidden by hair and home at the apartment when Miu blood, was discovered. Bonham tried tho window. Aide& al tho hoopit.al 11ld the gkl l . Miss ·Prtce has not been interviewed and police have yet to speak with the fOIµ' Marines 1r'ho reported tbe discovery, Miss Price apparenUy clawed her wty ll.P the steep embankment to the freeway· after ber assailants left her. San Diego investigators would nol specify whether Miss Price has ma~e comments on the Identity of or the number of the person.-if\volved In the attac~. . 1 Police In Newport 1 Beach 'meanwhile were reported to be probing tM circumstances o( the abd~n In their city. ll apparently occurred around mid· nlghL • • ' .W~Okay . TEL AVIV (UP!) The l!!'aeU . cabinet, heeding an appeal from Presi- . dent Nilon, today ae<epled the U.S. Middle East peace proposals that include a three-month ceue-fll'e on the Egyptian frool. Eaypt had accepted the pr<lpO!&is earlier .. The decision was taken by the cabinet in the fourth aisil teSSion of the week despite the threat of a walkout by the six Gaftal P8rty members 'of the National Unity Coalition that would imperil the government of Premier Golda Meir. Tb,e liX members of the 'hawkish party voted against ·accepting.t~ pro~, ac- cord;ffig , to the . l.frpellr ~tale radio w~i~h :said the vote in .the cabme\ .was 17-6 with no-abstentions. However, they did noL immediately walk out but caucu.ed -;~~~·~··~~m:: ~ ..,. the edle of. a ......,.en1a1 crlala. , ~ bloc, which l!U. •· "Iii .II! .ti!* -anlcameral p.rua • ~~ had tleclded Tuetday lo walk out if the cabinet aild yes. · Deapilo the lllreat. the Gaba! mlnilters were ln'{fted .to . sit on a . minis;terial . cohlllllttee which . will draft the official IsJ:ael rePly. · . 1 The f1raell statement today .aaJd 'lstael was ' prepared · to sub5cribe to the U.S. proposals . for a· 90-day cease-fire "at ; least on the EgypUan front." .'I]lis ruled oot 'a ' ceaSe.fire now on the Jordanian . front where .Arab luerrillas ' l!.ave threlttned to, continue the war, 1be U\S. pfc)posals were YigueJy ;woro.:. , ed ·aod Jsrael ·was forced · ~~Y to · ·eeek clarifi~ation· from WublngtoJt on•their mfllDing, The Rofers·prOpo~ · spoke specific11;Uy of a etue-'flre oft th< Suez Canal front and hopefµlly of. the other fronts. .· . ' ' . ' ~ ! I · . , r "t.os M.ctr.P:s , 1tlPii,,...: J.~deat ; ~'w'as ~ef! ~repar•<r.~4 ~.ii.d1~t 'Nixon ls"~.ete4 U..·}\aye. ~ ne,rs e~.-befor~ ,tJte stand up ~ conlarences ,ouisllle of WUltilliion.• · .-lit the .botel's gllUeri9g, &.;£;.Jdoiijaio He obvfOU'sly i'is ·p~e-i.. ... '.-ulh ... ,_ : 'R!>Om,. tis i.a was '.qliWed ocl.'aubiMif• -·w• ·~ from lore1Jpo11MH• _.....; .. ,'-.:""' But during the · !Mklay · pertod the belligerents could begin preliminary discussions which would settle the pro-, blem ot a · qa..-!ire on other sectors with Ambassti>r Gunnar V. Jarring ac- ting .u ·mediator •. and hopefully, to. prepare for negotlationa to write a formal oWn h'J.itorfC .. 'firlt"'-•i ti!lerised cml-. 15" "3 ,... .xuvg • fere11ce bei-e With ElrJ"'Squlre~' Behfeqs, : µe ·•¥ ~tp~ in his ~~lllllfY. 'b~ . 81iit, wlilte ihirt ll)d ,b\Oe Ue. He , hid • end to the cmflict. dean or tlie «allfomiL p,..,; c0rpS1aylq, a. Callloihl<f ·.tan 1 11nd ,&Jµ,i>ugh • l!Je "Thafik: you, Mr . .President,•.•· , · · :· tempera~re .. ia .. ti\e roqm ·wu,,dqWD be _ Behre.ns, a• i)ollti~al columnist for the , wt~ r:be.ads_ · of per_sp,lr~tf~ ,tf~. ·hla SU Ftaheiseo ··dhtocilc1e: wbo.:rtcef·vea f~ce·Wfth a1h~ndkercltie(. ,._ , J •. -. •• the Me'dil -ot .free(l...W.~ffum Niion, wU ' )le ~wQft~· to' give tht ~ . • v···.. , . oftlle "coUotryachiI!ce,!4.e.a•p · State Rej ects Marines' Offer Of Bealh Land more mbdued ' Jn · aiurng .oft-~th·e ·c0n~ · Ual .news coriferen'ce oh· prl:iite 'tirite _ ference . than wire service reporters in 8 p.m, PDT. wasiiliigton.'who ·1hoU~ !'tl)an\(~jou'' and · rWh~ he was aik~ !Ottnl~Viftt. make a mad·dash for the telephone, + about the press, he laugbeid and ~ailed The 57-year-o1d Cftief exeoitfve-;·had'" Jiis own unbai)py:, eq,ertaicies at his been primed al• day•in bis •. plu1h' pent;.. 'lut" p!'els COJ1ference tn 1 CaWornia house !Uite in the Century Plaza Hotel follqwlllg , his•. dtfeat ,·.-ini.~tbe.. •18Q on ·Posllble Quc!stioilil he w6Uld:&e;uked.: llJbematoPal rac;e. 1 1 i t i ' .. -' ' By FREDJ!:RICK SCHOEME!IL Of ,.. Dall,-, .... Jttff An oHiCial• spokesman for Camp Pendleton today confirmed that the Marine Corps 4111 offered U ihilis of · virgin llho~ far •pubU. 1119 · on o :tS;.year teaall . ,,, • . . BUI the Stille" of cailfclrnia'll• holdllig ~t for more land, and ·aya the 'offer • • • , c • "l just "11/1 11 had · as ,1ood ,a:- • . · "#'.*·I *• . ' ~B1:'fj;r(;.~:;r.~~~·d~ NIX• ·~_ 11\.:.'a.l,eL'...., .. ' ·,. Wubingioo ·u tlieiiitiONJ "-r-oenter v.a.r; <VµWll..,., !hat he appeared 11>e.moo1·def11111ve. · l He Mld"'~hu hemt"''crHldsni'.':lllel Natio:h~~: Futur~ 11e1 .. vesthe·Wbl~a ..... i..-. ' ! J . ,. • ' ; •.• ii una«<ptable. · · · :JWbert Meyer• deputy director of Par~s HJghll&hta lnuri~President Nl1on'1· fii'st ' · and Recre'ation, slild the cost of develop-West 'Coait •televllta PrW b1nferetlce: : 0r .. ,...: .. "'-""' ~·· tng the' t .S 'milis of sand for surfing The Pr~ident u\d-tpi:v.s.: proposal · park would be prohibitive.' f0r I cease-fire In·~ Mi~~'E~st°Woulil . be couPled With a• rhilitary statldstill .. "The state would like 4.5 miles of He · f9~st ahta'd of ~ th~· ce.aSe 1 fire beach with a 25-,Year lease -tl'jen we'd_ . • , . + • , 1 have a fanta~tlc; park," he. said. I , . 1 • 1 , • , ••• 1 ·.' The Marine Corps proposal was sent riETAllA ON PAGE 't to the. atate nearly two_ weekJ •ago, . · • .. • ~ followin1 the rejection by the llate o( . L. ------..,----,.,....--', another plan f~r the beach. The 1'farinel that .. ·llttel. can acree:. to the cU tire . formerly ofrered 1.$ mUer ot'beach for aDCf • .,_ to)netqti1Uant1ritboot 1feer."• · seven years, wtU..-tbe leaat reVocable Inflatiotl is btlng cooled 'and will con-: at any time. . tlhue'. to eni. 1be fCIClftOll\Yc wiJJ; move Altu.~y n...Uall!W• !he.I"'!&"• forward tir the iollJ 1ermi end .II"! olaotn • t.nn pl~· w1_a. <!'awn UP, f!o!!, ll)e• stale . 1a emple)iliientrWil! be iollen<Clrl of.. . • l'Ollkf·sWI'!I~ a l6nget 1treteh of. beach , "II. there 11 a. war between the Soviet.: 1 ''!Id•-. · · I ·· .. ··-· ·• · · Ulilon anc!Jlile •lb>iled 5ialel 0.... w!H. i M.eYf!:• s,a\i;I: that neaoU•~. for 1:he · bt no wtnaen." That· it"whyi lt ii~ lm-· ZS.year leaae: wiU continue, but lhat. portant tblt the United SW. not' be ~ ill< fin~! d'!'ilsiOn !'lli J!OI be ; niod• dlaQed, inlo ·a military confUct In key by Camp Peiidleton. 11:<¥ Uke tile.Middle EutJ' ·· , 1 • "Thal · finaJ, ·decifion wfll 'rest ·with • 'l'be-be1vy blanket of ,amor on the . the Dapartmtnl of Oefenae, '' he 1'0"8d. _ Eaat ·Coat 1howa ·thtJfe'>im't much: time · Director oC . Par kl and RecrNtion, left_ for tbe,.natlort-to IOlw Its air polluUon r Willi~. Pell' Mot met: wllh P.,1. A. prObtenis.,eon,_ lhoUJd iakL ~ • ~. Bo!l<o al Oamp.Pendllion. ~urllday action · on lqillaUon Ite llld11nltltcl· . ..,, • , ... BEACH, Pip I) montbl qO lo combat air pollutloll. • __ __, - ·. . ,. . . ,. .. • DAD. y I'll.OT SC Fridlly, Jij~ )I, 1970 Tate Defense ·Hamniers at Brug Use L(lll ~ (UPI) ;_ Lloda K- W. ..... .., lllol lllt bod -1Mlll -. paup .. 4l 1R oont''' ever alnce Ille 1-11 home at the •I" of 16 and up until lbe Ume lhe joined Charles Mamon'• ~'famUy." Vader crou uamlnatlon by llefen.oe Atl«M'f Paul Fltqerald, the slate's e11mlMtloa. by Defense Attorney Paul Flblerald. the l'tate'a prime witness aeknowledged that she had a considerable amount of "human uperlencf:" before abe joined the hippie cult charged with the lll1lroo Tate-LIBlanca alaylng1. F~ bu uld be will attempt to show U.t Mn. Kuabian's accounts of the tllllnls were a "fanta1y" tut came from a mind lmpolred by the long usqe of drugs. Mn. Kuablon aald abe had lived In c:ommuoea from cout to coast from ~nt.¢r ~ ' . .. . -~ . Assured Joh In Election ~ Comity lujloylr• wlD fool ... bill for .a tU0,000 -wltb only one~ 'ctDdM•fe Au&-•JJ. ~ --IJomlll Carpiit<r of Nftoport l!Ndl WU -of eleeb lo • -Senate -1 Jn the apeclal vote -bis only oppaaont, llollPa Irvtne, -'l'hurada1-Irvine, • Santa Ana boualnr denlop«, talked lo CerJBllal' ~,, Dl&bl ml lllmrbls~loblm. .• Cupenl•", -of tho 1lapallllcar1 Stata Cenlral Commntee, tlmo *"'8UJ the time abe left bome In • ....u 1o1rn In New 11.UppablA aad bod a child when abe lrU II, Her fil'lt --In commomol U.. Inc .... In M1ami Beadl, ll'la., abe Aid. She ..xi u....i wtth a group In Boston and tften joined another ~mune In Greenwich VJllage In New York Clty, Frora there &he went to the Haight. Ashbury section of San Francisco where $he lived with ·another commune and then went back to Boston where she ,Jived with the "American Psychedelic Circus." "What wq that?" Flbgerald asked. ••we wanted to get buses and animals and travel all over the coi.mtry as a circwi. I don't know exactly why it was called psychfdelic." "Was it drug oriente<l1" "Yes, they took drugs." • • "What &-upT" 11/.dd. They amohd weed." "~VI Ila of, clnJll?'" ... ' ~ •·1 ..... ~-Mlieol ... 'll~erltd." From Boll. Mh. Kualilan tht4 came with her aeeond husband, Robert Kasa- blan, to Los Angeles and lived Jn a commune at Venice on the ocean front west of Los Angeles. "We decided to go to New Mexico. We went to a place outside of Taos." "Did it have a name?'' "Yes, it was called Sons of the Earth Mother." "I was always moving from one place to another, usually with a group," said Mrs. Kasabian . "Would you say you were lm· pres.tjonable when you joined the com- mune in New Mexico?" "I was seardUng for somelhing I la --borrloii·• --In -9&1C!' ·-·of •-lo rm • • the uneilplreC -cif.J'obn a. ...... ~ . ; -hu been elected lo lbe lata Jam11 B. Utt'• former -t In Ooacna 1 ~ 11111 ,_ ..... .,.,,. .. - 00-11 DwlP! w. lolllt In lbe N'owmbar -al elactlon far tho full ,_--ta term. !Ibo -electlon of Carpeuler will -lbe ,county ... -'110,111111. ·Bui .., law the lllOdal election hu lo bo blld -If ther6 only bod been coe CIJ't!N1te an the bdot. . infoo•1 -w111......m m lbe bollol -It fl loo Isla for btm .1o wlllldl aw liul ... fl !l!ldQs ~ ..,..,... lo """ b'Cli,.. ... • , I 1mne uld ....... In a. ..... lo --for "!be ""'-pcopaty tu· _.. but -talkllll lo ca.,.. .......... ~ ....... ,Ibo -c<IDCC'D. : • 'Ibo 'olicilon rL c.)lalllW lo llll aal tlla !Inn tho -ol ~':' can """""P'lab two tlllap for .,,.; -It ril stve.coi...,·~­ other -senllon-bl the NOftll!i· ber a1 ·~ ·~ c·-~· c1ere!:'"' MIM lat ~ •iliJJ .tmn-:f P:, · peeled because of 1 ~ lleP11bnep nglstraUon edge. -It could get Carpenter lo Sicramenlo In time lo provide the vote needed lo J>lll Gov. llonal4 Rlqan'1 '1 bllllon tu nform propoeal over the top. The tax shift package was two votes ally of the 27 needed lo c1ear the Senate today with oOe supporter temporaril)' hospitalized. 'Ibere wu tilt among Republican slraltglat. of possibly shelving the mea,.s:ure until Carpenter's election on the !Ith. C&rplllter, w'1o .... off lo norlhem Clllfcrnla loda)' m a Rlpubllcan Central Committee~ !bur wu unavailable for comment. . But Phll S.ltr, Clrl>onlor'a campaign dlrector, llld hi iloun~ look for Cllpenlel' lo ~vlde the tl&breaklng VOie,. "I ciii~ lmastne them throwlf1i In tile towel and not li'ytn( to (et It tllroulh unUl the lltll," be uld. He said be bellev" bill -• Will try lo push It _,,, apln today. DAILY PILOT .............. ~-­.. a, a OltAHOt: COAl1' PVILllHIJt9 fOMNN'f • le'Hrt N. W ... ,.,.. .............. J•t\ ··~:1:r \lkl ,,..!Mnt... ... .... lh•Mtl K~I t!lftlO, Tite111•• A. M11rJ!\f11e M ........ IEdller l ie.htr4 P. Hall SOu!ll Or.,.. CounTr IEdllttf -cosi. M-• -WOii • .., Slnlf N...,..1 .. 1cl'l1 811 Wiit .. lbol k!.11c\11nl l..tlllM t.eldl1 m ,._, ,._ Mlltll'"'l.., hKlll ln1.1 ••ttl\ ·~1-nl krl Cltmlfllllil ......... ~ C-.... RMI OAIL Y l"ILOT iltff l"lltlif VolleJ#baU Action . Dan McFarland (right) 1plkes volleyball as 1 his doubles partner, Peter Ott, watches the result. of tbiJ set. Pair are wanning up !or Legum'• 16th Open Doubles Volleyball Tournament this weekend on Main Beach. Play starts at 9 a.m. Saturday and Sunday. Freewlly.Fighwrs Still ., , \ • I • I < • ·./• ' BackBcUlhamRoutePlan ' . A 'lburiday I~ of lherHarbor Area Frttway Flgh~rs al!l ~Laguna Beach city officials prtlduce4-~e low· kty dllculillon and opilllon e1d>lnge but apparently changed no.minds. The Freeway Fighters aUJt · support Assemblyman Robert Badl)ain'r. blU to delete the adopted route ol P.Ctltl: ~ Freeway througti Newport Belcli. · Laguna officials today said they St.ill opposed the bill, fearblg it would .delay and possibly alter the bypass rout> Inland of Lasuna Beach. They uld a reopening of the route study could also re-open the possibility of a bisecting freeway which the state Division of Highway engineers ooc~ favored . City Manager James D. Whelton of Laguna. Wix> attended the meeting at the Santa Ana Country Club, aid: 0 Newport: Beach dottn't like the route they've got and I can'~ say that I blame them. I share th~lr concern over the adopted route so far as that goes but my dllfirence (of position) etlll stands. "l told them they've taken the wrong tack. I uked them wily theY didn't go !0< a bill directing the bJ&hwsy com· ' ' • From Pcge ·J BEACH .•• mOnalar. but Iha likelihood of •·Marine concession ap;:ieared ~kely. · ''The two men toured the area, bu• I lmg\ne all ·tiler did was Ce\. tllelr reopectWe views *""" lo ~. otl!el't' .. Meyer Slid. Meyer noted that the property, ·la matiri( m6re than local attentlbn. - •1Congressman Alfonzo Be11 hat tAlked with Defense secretary Melvin ·La!M about opening up the beach, under a lonc·tenn lease. "We'ra optlmiltlc la< help from the Defenae Dept. We know also that a lot of public preuure is bulldJne up and that the Marine Corps doesn't need an of the 17 miles ol beach that they now have!' ''.The Marines have told us that they cannot dfer the 4.5 miles of beach south of 5an Onofn! becallll they are planning to bulld a ~ psd on the last mile. But ti wW only be temporary. "We 11't aJao dllturbed by the !let that a private ouriln& club h11 ltued year-by.year Me mUe of beach on the bue. "If the Marlnu CIR lea1e the beach land to a pnvatt club. they can leue • some to the ltlte,'" Meyer declared. Meyer menUoned that the land !we \'las di3CUSsed by PraJdent Nl1on, Gov. Ronald Reagan, and Sen. Gtorp Murphy when the ·ttiree had dinner together at the Western White Hou11e Monday even- ing, However, Meyu dld not elaborat• on the dl1CU11ions. mission ~ reoi>en' tbe rlou.lo ·~y , .. which is app8renlly wtiat they want. They didn't , tblnk they coiild (<I It through and ,...t the "1>ole way (leeklng rou_tf! detettor!)' U1 the legi~tlon." \Vheilon saJ4 the dllcuutoii wu ~n fdendly mi iow ·k~yed. Be aald' the ll'i-ee-Way 'figtt~ appareniJy. blam~ much of their ·proolem on the pooltlons of both Costa Meaa and the Irvilie Company .. ,,,,. dty m-er· Aid the Freeway F1gtiUn ltated lhef will fllbl the lllue tn COlll'l 'H Badbam's bill falls. It COIDea up for Sellate commlttae bearing Mllll- day. Bidllam hU u ld thal bis bill repr.,.nta the unified request of :I0,000 of his eon!lltuentl. Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa and Laguna have J)aned resolutions against Badham'• bill. 'n\t luncheon meeting called by the freeway fighters included Councilmen Roy Holm and Charlton Boyd Crom Laguna. Host for the meeUng was Marshall Duffield, chatnnan of the Freeway Fighters. Others included Councilmen Howard Rogers of Newport a<acb, es:mayor Paul Gruber. vice chairman of the freeway fighters: Vin Jorgeneen, treuurtt of the freewsy ll&bters; and J11111u Penney of Emerald Bay, an attorney . f'roM .P .. e l CRASH ••• throu(b · the flames "' , a ialety pstll 'and the crash c~ Jm.Uhed. Jts way • into the plane and bad the . men nut wlthln two -minutes. A column ot smoke \1isible for 25 miles shot 1nto the sky from the scene of the tragedy on Runway U, which runs in a north-south direction. A panel of investigators was im- mediately convened to probe the first accident Involving Marine Refuelln& Squad,ro.n 352 in 11 years. ·nuut 1o carry 10,000 1a11ons of hlcbl.Y volatile fllel1 the KC!!O wu not loaded, otherwise tne crash -witnessed by hundreds -would have been ftr worse. Lt Mullins, holder of two DllllnJullhed Flying Crosses. and 32 Air Medals, was milling hi• third touch-and-go practice landing about 3 p.m. wbell the plane c:rHlled. No immediate determination of factOf'll which led to the accident was offered, but wltoesses aid the KC130 bounoed 111nd snagged the left wing which broke off. Cratea, bundles and other debris bounc· ed Into the alr as the craft spun 180 degrtts and flipped over, Its engines breaking away and akldlng down the concrete, 1peW1tJg tire. ( w.-•t 11n of, bul I IOI K ........ Filqerald told -that the willllo llljOaelf. When I jolnad ~·1 def-for -and tbioa famolo !llllfl1 I wu Im~• and l' ,...,•1 codefendanta -.Id ba baled in"prillct;le tnMbar " lbt Mid. on the contenUon thlt Mn. Kaaab}ln, -r.BUt-iou· hid Md. considerable ex-a 21-year-okt blonde wbo lived with the perlence Jn group unac. You were almoat family for one month, was not mentally a plooeu 1n commuoal living weren't competent. • you!':!. Jltz&er.ald asked. Under crosuxamlnaUon, Mfa. klaa~ "YIS." btan adm\tted lokl~, LSp j>eyO!e, ''SO wheft you joined the group at methedrlne or 11speed, ' mescaline, ind the Spahn Ranch you thoogtit you knew momlng glory oeec1,, what you were doing and what khl<f • f'My sole. purpose for taking of problems you might encounter m hallucinogens was for realization ...:rood cmununal Hying?" asked FJtzge:rald;--reallzatlort," lhe said. __ ·.:--· "Yes; l just thou&ht they were "And were you succesdul in reallzing beaut.lfuJ..Joving people, .. she said. God?" Fitzgerald aated.. • -' . Fitq:erald took over cross examination "I realized you don't have to lake of Mn. Kasabian Thursday in an attempt peyote or LSD to discover God," ahe to nullify three days cf testimony in replied. "Mos~ cf my ezperie~ while ~ she gave an eyewitness· acoun' taking LSD were with naturel''·she said, of the k1llinp la.st Aug. 8-9. ..in the out4-doon. SomeUmes l would uplore the bark Of a tree, or the psttarn of a fuiliat I'd picked up, or I'd gue at the star1 and the moon." Mrs. Kuabian iald lite · had bed delusions whlle under the influence oC drugs, b~ insisted she did not suffer from' "lliibbackl" liter the drug !lad worn off. "Has taking MD altered your personality'!" Fitzgerald asked. "Yes. it has altered it, I believe, to a certain extent, because it has showed me a lot about my.elf," she replied. "Are you any different than you were during July and August. 1989 (just prior to the Tate-LaBianca s I a y I n g s ) ? ' ' Fitzgerald questioned. ;,I sure am," she replied. "I've come to a lot Of conclusions about reality and rigbt and wrong." Planners Eye C~ty Future To Present V{ews on Bound<tries, Downtown to Council By BARBARA KREJBICH Of fM o.llJ PIJft ittlf Four members of the Laguna Beach Planning Commission aired their views on varloos npecta of general plan Jll'O" pooalo at a spectal study eealon Thurs- day night and will take action at their rc(ular meeting Monct.y night. lo tranmtlt their recommendaUons to the city councll. Qmm.lssioner 'Ibomu Johnston was absent Thuraday aad It wu noted that both 'be and Carl Johnioo will be unable to attend the Monday imeeting 10 there might be aome question u lo the weight of the r!lClOllUl10llllUon. However, city planner Al Autry, noting the urgency of a dec1ston to enable tho plannfni team from Daniel, Mann, Johnson It Mendenhan lo complete lta contract, tuggested that it should at Jeut be poulble to prepare a consensus report for guidance of the DMJM plan- ners. Noting that ''there is a dlfference of opinion on the commiaslon on several item1," chairman William Lambourne took up the DMJM proposals item by item, 1eeklng tbe views cf each com- mlas:ioner. BOUNDARml DiSClllllon opened with the DMJM reconunendaUon that Laguna Beach boundaries be established at the proposed inland freeway, development be confined within that area, and the 500-acre Sycamore Hills triangle further nut in the canyon be de-annexed. Carl Johnson aald he favored the boun· dary llmltatlon and the de-annexation or, if the trian'-le should not be de-an- nexed, would like to see the property rezoned for better control of jts develop- ment. Robert Hastiags said he would go along, but would like to see the trlanale de-annei:ation ••used aa a barpining tool" for a land swap with the ·future city of Irvine, lo pennlt acqulsfUon of property cloler to Laguna. He felt Lagwia's boundaries should be left 1uf- ficiently nexible to permit annexations north to perhaps as far as Corona del Mar and inland over the top of the run.. James Schmitz agreed with Hulings regarding the northtrn boundaries, but 18.id he would not favor de.a.MeUtlon of 1DY properly at this time, "Walt unW the time comes, then declde whether or not ft ls to our advantage to de.annex," he !aid. FLEXIBLE Lambourne said It might be a mJstake to de-annex the triangle or set a boun· dary at this tirM. "It should be nexiblt;" . ' . he said. "We wlll be crowded by outJ)de developments and Jt nUght be an ad- vantage for us to be able to control 10me of the developme~. These people will be using our streets, sewers and beacbes and we should have aome con· trol. It would be a terrible mistake to close in our annei:aUon areas." He noted the commissioners were divided 2-2 on the point. Recommendations for the central business district were nei:t on the list. Autry aaid DMJM favored a IOmeWhat tourilt oriented centnl area, with outly- ing "village" centers providing for residen1s' commercial needs.· Hastings feU the approach was aouod. Johnson said he didn't interpret the plan as limiting the central area to tourist use. "There are mixed uses there now and [ feel they should and will ... . stay,•• he said. l1e emphasized that be favored the mall system and was aorry t<> see some of. the DMJM alternate plans had not lnclud'![ malll. Since the DMJM cootract did not call for a precise downtown plan, he suggested accepting what wu presented as satisfying ~ contract and leaving precise planning for the future. DISAPPOINTED Scbmitz said he was "very di.sap. pointed" with the downtown propoalls. "I don't like the way t,bey've mewed roads, or the location of their parkfna structures. There 11 too much malt for me and I don't llu their llfaln Beach approach." He said he felt there were IORle • aspects <i. a doWntcnvn' plan presented earlier by Heatings that "would work better_ than the D.MJM plan." · ' · Lambourne felt the DMJM plan had failed to recogniu some ol the downtown problem&· and said he~ too, 'found m'erJt in Hastings' plan. "Traffic and parking must have priority," be said. ''We must consider the abllity of the city to d~lop and I feel the DMJM downtown plan could take 20 years." Regarding the "v!Jl:ige" centers for commercial uses in t1e areas of Boat Canyon, Bluebird Canyon, Canyon Acres, Arch Beach Helgtits and Top of the World, there was general agreement that acme, or all would be useful in the fu. ture, and that tbe planned locaUons should be left as possible developments. The "multi-purpose" corridor proposed by DMJM foc South Coast IUghway, is really an erten!ion of an existing situation, Schmitz suggested. He and Lambourne sald it would be more to the point to develop a hotel zone a• soon as possible. DREXEL SALE FEATURING DREXEL'S ESPERANTO COLLECTION OCCASIONAL-DI NI NG-BEDROOM DEALERS EOR: HENREDON -DREXEl -HERITAGE . 7td11111 NIWl'ORT BEACH 1727 Wattcllff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRI DAY 'TIL 9 IN'l'.lllORS · Pm.tonai lntorlor LAGUNA BIACH Dollgnart 1ivai11bl.....AID-NSID 345 North Coall Hwy. 494-6.SSI OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 ,. ... , ........... ., Gt.,. c..., 140.1261 ) • r P9le Signs Law Change Due Soon?· An inconsistency in the sign ordmanc. regarding installation o~r pole signs pro. b;lbly should be correcled by· ameoding the law, city • planner Al Autry 'told ptanniDg comtl)issioners at a' stud')' geSsion Thursday night. The matter was placed on the com· mission's Monday agenda for. estibl_ish· ment of hearing dates. Autry explained that, while the ordinance permits signs att8'!hed to buildings to pro)ect three feet over lhe public right or way, as well as into the • established building setback, pole s.igns may not be Installed in lhe~se-tback: area. In some instances, be said, the setback may bf" estifhlished behind a public right· of.way, reserved for future street widen· ing, that can extend 12 feel inward frOm tpe curb~ In the case ol a six-foot setback, for exatnple, this would make it necessary to place a pole sign more than 18 feet in from the curb, whiCh is a hardship for some businesses. It would be conceivable, said Autry, that a building with_ only a three-foot setback could install a six-foot p~ jecting sign on \he structure, legall}l extending it three reet over the setback plus three feet over the right-of-Way, while a. pole sign would have tQ · be placed 'entirely behind both 'right-of-way and setback. The suggested amendment would permit installation of pole signs within the setback area, with the sign itself permittel;t to extend three feet over the right-of-way, as is the case with signs attached to buildings. Police Probing Phone Threats . In Tram Ha8sle Laguna Beach police are seeking to Identify callers who allegedly h a v e threatened William Leak, the man whose persistent safety campaign brought Festival of Arts trams to a halt this week. Leak, whose furniture finishing studio on Broadway i8 *just a short. distance from the festival gi:odnds, told police he has been receiving a barrage of phone calls at his hom'e and at worli, criticizi.Jlg his action. Some of the callers made obscene comments and threatened him with statements such as , "We 're going to tear you to pieces!" Leak reported, Police said they are investigaURg the threatening calls, which are illegal. Leak directed a series of letters to the city, the festival board, the CalifOrnia , Highway Patrol and the district attorney, charging the little trams were in violation of the California Vehicle Code. MoJK!ay their operation was halted by police because they lacked safety brakes and windshields. • \ o•h. ,., Mission Visitors Summer visitors gather beneath statue of F'alher Junipero Serra in tranquil courtyard1 of Mission San Juan Capistrano. This is the height of the tourist season at the Mission, founded by Father Serra in 1776. Hundreds 0£ visitors come each day. Some, like the Mission's famed swallows, make .the pilgrimage each year. B_olU"~ President l{ey Man • •• In School Burglary Iss ue Somewhat keyed up over recent burglaries from school facilities. Laguna Beach school trustees have locked onto the problem with the aid of an expert -board president Larry Taylor who de- scribed himself at "a master locksmith for 16 years." Latest in a series of burglaries involved the .removal Of some Sl.500 worth of !Ollnd eqipment from the high school audi~ium. Earlier, S500 worth or tools J\'lontreal PO Struck had been removed Crom the school bus terminal and, last spring, $513 worth of photo equipmenl was stolen from the high school photo lab. Police believe some of the burglaries have been accomplished by persons using keys. Thts·nas resulted in considerable expense for changing 10Cks. Keys reported "lost" by slaff members entitled . to carry them are a major problem: 'trustees agreed. ·it was 'sug- gested that some method be devised to place part of the responsibility for loss O'l1 lhe person to whom a key was issued. . I . MONTREAL (UPI) -Al\ postal services in MontreaJ were al a standstill today' as post office workers began a ~t@v.t.re;>lati~g ~st!P,te: ... -..-A•'pOst office spokesman said the strike a/f~t;eP the geperaJ · ~st office. the airport and staff post oftices within the · boundari~s of the M9ntfeal poslal district, strelfhing from Sherbrooke to the Laurentians. Keys also can be marked ''Do Not Duplicate." Taylor noted . Teachers who give keys to: students corupli cate th_e,pr:obli;m .. he added . An observation that students can "open locks with files" was discou'n{ed by Taylor. "I've been a master locksmith for 16· years:' he sa id. "and -1 don 't thinli kids can open any lock that's correctly installed with a file ." Girls SQper at Market San Clemente Distulfers T aking Ove r Box bo y Jobs By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of IM ·o.itr Pll9t Si.it It used to be that when a high school boy wanted a job. he usually b e g a n looking at tht: local supermarket to see about becoming a boxboy. But in San Clemente the guys aren't doing that so much any ll'l()re. The girls are. Now, in at lea st half · or the San Clemente supermarkets, the kid behind the checker packing your sacks with vittles might very well be a pert: teenage girl. In two of the city's four large food stores, the help includes girls behind the checkstands and when the coed' aren 't sacking they sweep, stock shetves, gaQler shopping carts, and even mop floors. And their bosses say the 1irls ~utdo tJl~ir male friends in the demanding . -----··-job. -.• ._.:.. .... ' "The ga ls are getting a good reception from the customers, too," reports Leon Riley, manager ol the local Alpha Beta. "Especiafly the men ." The AlplUt Beta market em ploys two boxgirls. although they have a more subtle name of "clerks' helpers." 'The store also empki ys eight boxboys. The girl helpers are an putgrowth of hiring women to run the checkstands. "Two or three years ago we couldn 't get boys with the draft calls so high and the fact that everybody was in school. So we hired wl"ves whose children were In schoOI during the day. Then we began to accept applications from the older teenage girls to work here." Riley .notes that the girls. while being helpers now , can get lhe "feel" of the store and then move lo the ca:lb register. Bob Bersch, manager ol t h e Alberlson's Markel at 602 N. El Camino Real has one girl to 1lx boys working as clerk's helpers. "She's a good worker, and', If she wasn'~ she wouldn't be here,·•· Bersch declared. • The "she" he refers to is a recent graduate of San Clemente Hilh School, GROCE RIES HER BAG M•rkot Cltt;k Micl1•u• Wendy Michaux. "l' love It here . Irs really nice," she remarked', as she expertly loaded a sac k with grON!ries of all sorts. Wendy, 17. has been working for the store ror the past two months. ''l just came in, filled out an application and was hired -all in one day ." She is frequently told by some of the ' male market.goers that she is "an awfully good-looking boxboy,'' but Wendy is quick tO alld that the fem ale shoppers like her. too.· · '"One lady was happy with me a couple of weeks ago, becauSe I didn't put the tomatoes in the bottom of the sack, like some other people will do ," Wendy said. While not backing up the checker loading sacks and helping.customers with their groce.ries, Wendy collects· !hopping c~art.s and stocks shelves. Bersch sakt the first eirl he employed came in duripg the wintet: months 'and wanted · a job. "The boys were non-ex- istent, and she was going to school at night,. so J hired her. Now they all come in." · ' . ' "But not everyone qualifies for the job. It's really not that easy, especially pushing the shopping carts ba ck into place. You 've really got to scramble." Bersch • said' that while the store has not· hired too many young women to work, older• wives have been at the store for a long lime. "We need them during the winter. All we ca.n !ind are these surf bums and they're no good. So we go to the wotnen or the girls." Safeway Markets dislrict office ln Orange reparts that the chain outlet hws only tried the gal helpers in the Palos Verdes area, but not in Orange County, "We've always had boys who are available for work," an official said. "You have to realize that there are certain limitations on the girls , , , weight they can lift, hours they can work.,.'' But then, BOme of the boxgirls in San Clemente know betlcr, They've been liberated. Laguna CofC " Requesting M;o1·e Space The Lagi.rna Beach Chamber or Com· merce 'Till .~ . "out . on the sidewalk" If it,. cannot ,renecotiate an agreement with the city providing it wi!J;l only 450 square feet· of office space in the library, accordini to President Bernard Syfan. Despite the ' old agreement, the Chamber now Is occupying 700 square feet in the ells.Ung library building, Syfan said, and would like to have at least 1,000 square feet in the new library. He. explained that the city had agreed to provide office · space "in perpetuity" when the existing library was built, in return for title to a !IQO..square-foot buikllnt on GJemeyre Street, then owned by the".Chambir~'But sirice the Chamber occupied ·ooly..-half that structure, the agreement called for only 450 square feet'Qfspace in lhe library, When. the ·city· transfel'Ted title to the library. to tl'le C11Unty, which ·will Quild a new facility,· the agreenent with the Chamber was Mcluded, Syfan said. without meotion of the fact that actual space in use now amounts to 700 square fett. The a·greement wiLh the coonty, he noted, 18its until the year '20'l0, at which time the _new . library will becoine city property. "If they cut us down to 450 square 'feet we·u have to move oUt on Lhe Sidewalk," said the president. There would be r:oom in. the new library, ·designed by. architect Fred Briggs, Jor the needed .t,000 square fe~t "in a sort of sub-basement," Syfan said. He . plans lo api)r.oach the city for a re.:fle_goliation of the space agreement, poJnt1ng out that Chamber administration or the city's advertising program is among the items necessitating additional space. -•. Dunnion Takes Se at on Board Hugh Dunnion, assistant vice president of t~~ Laguna Beach branch of Security Pacific Bank, has been appointed a di· rector ol the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce by President Bernard Syfan . Two vacancies were created by the resignations of Al Eccles, who transfer~ red to the Laguna Hills branch of United California Bank and Peter Ostrander, elected to the L!lWla ~ach City Council. Syfan asked feilbw clfrectors to suggest a candidate for the-remaining board seal, preferably someone engaged in the business aspect of the arts and crafts field . " Fndoy, July 31, 1970 L DAIL y PI Lor a ·p ier Project · •~oins Big . crane .. workirlg ,on c.oun1Y..owned Aliso Beach in S1outh Laguna ·~ prepares foundation.for land ._ qd of 610..foot, low silhouette, recrfa· '' tion· pie l".:,The $665 ,000 ,pier is' to be in use by next March'. Beach end ,. wilJ ho1,1se a restauran·t and a· bait ahd. tackle store. ' 1 , .. ·. ( Nl:xon's Clemente .. Villa . I ·" . . . , .. . , M To Be Permanent Home?~ The Nixons .call It home -their ~an Clemente villa by the sea -lind home it will probably remain . First Lady Pat. Nixon told a· group or visiting Irish school teachers in Washingt.on last week that she and . her husband will live in California after they leave the White. House. ·However, she did oot specify where. Constance Stuart, Mrs. Nixon's press secretary, Is betting that the Nixons will mo~ J>ermanently to San Clem!"\! after Ult.President leayea office. She say1 it is a decision that likely won't come up for six years. Naturally she's bet.Un& on Nllon'a election to a second term. -~ "They' refer to this .house as home,.-. J ' • Mrs. Stuart told a. reporter:/ "and would say at thi1 juncture they w!ll1' keep it as home¥ Tiley Jove this house." , : The President purchased the 014 Hamilton Cotton estate last year -irrrJP mediately pUtting San Clemente much ~ in the national and International news. ·ft He takes obvious pride in showing ott1 the. Spanish-style house and &l'Ouods, where President Roosevelt used to play - po((ei', to visitors. Neighbors report ~1 occasionally see the President llppinl1~ around in hj.s golf cart or walking. Whittier, the President's home~; offered to donate from 30 to 100 acrei 1 of land for hll library earlier this year.. !~ ~' .... J Some chefs are~tocook over hot flames. Yourenot. .. So enjo}r aflamele8s · electric kitchen. A flameless,..U .. lectrio kitchen is one of the big benefits built into I every Medallion Home or Apartment. And that means a clean, cool kitchen. A Medalllon Home or Apartment can al so mean flameless electric heating. Clean' heat. It doesn't dirty your curtains or upholstery. And flameless air conditioning that cools and cleans the air you .breathe. Pure comfort for the entire family. And flameless water heat• ing-without a pilot, without a Bue, wjthout wasted space. Furthermore, a Medallion Home has ample wiring for tod>y's electri. col appliances, plus provisions for the electrlc.J wondtrs comlftr l!P in the all.electrit future. Mec!allion Homes and Apartments are now available in all price ranges. You can see why more and more people are choosing to live the 8"°" clean lire-electrically. f ntludf 111 ch<f1. s'E Sou/llern California Edison . • ... I I ., ' 1 · I • ' • • l -. . .. I 4 -y Pit.OT -·----· ---· frictt1,-.Nly Ji., l~O 1' ows Sl!!Ofl Fight 'Rockless' Nixon Assu,res Rock Fest Israel on Peace Rocks On c ..... ., ., ~ .. Miff) Jn N~vllle's ·Cross. England, Ttmmy ' the blue. blldgerigar- a sma1i"Austra!lan parrot-is back home ~aln becaus~ he knew his phone .:ti umber. His owner, Mrs. Enid llamett said the bird was ' . . returned to her after being !DlSS- ing for.. five days. "Obviously be has heard us answering the tele· r.bone with our numbei' and has earned it by heart," Mrs. Bar· nett ~d . '1Tbatlk goodness he's an intelliteot biril." . ' ~ ._.. . LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Only hours before Israel accepted the U.S. 90-day cease-fire, President Nhi:on U!Uttd the nation that it could accept the proposal wtthout' fear of giving a military ad- vantaie to Arab nations. In a news conference Thursday nighl br.oadcu t from, a Los Angeles hotel, the first Cull-dress meeting with reporters he had held oubide the White llou:se, the President also prom~ lo press * * * Nixon Blames Disturbances On Faculties SAN CLEMENTE, Calil. (UPI) - President Nixon Thursday night accused University leaders of blaming hlm for their own 'shortcomings. The problems of dissent mushrooming lnto violence and students shouting otiecenitles at visiting speakers are "no~ problems for the government," NiJon said. The President obviously was chafing under recent criticism directed at his acl.mini.rtfaUon by Dr. Ale1ander Heard, the Vanderbilt University chancellor who rece:ntlY ended two mont.ha as a special liailon-for the academic community with the White House. Donald Olskey's father takes no In reports made public la.st week. c~ toMn ht sends the 11-~w· Heard and bia assist.ant, Dr. James old to pi.JI bOubql.l·.in Astoria Par1(, • p.,ek ... of, Howard \lllivtnily, harsbly New York City. The 1/0Ungster .show-~ciied the Nlxon Ad~lnlstraUon for ed up at batting wacticc ThursdO]I ft'mg to communicate with young peo- wea.ring "d ·gtU tnalk rbeaJUlt·"'i.1 the P • . ' " b ale;t·leVtl air poUution in the ¢ty. _Show1n1, aome anger: and considera le • . nuperatton. ~ President chose his The C!Uton, N.J . city council re- cenUJ approved a liquor licens'e for. Temperance A.'.'llrink. •• ChicoQo MOJIOT Richard .J~ Ddltv Trioktd tM liquor liotm1 of the B68 1011.noc rtcmtl11, chaTging it was romtthing oJ a clip joitit. Police had rcport.td that a man had bem attaCktd at fila, ''B and 1"' h<ad sh<111«1 bJI otUr patnnu:,. .dad the ouns- ers gOVt him 'no pfottction, -~ .,., .. ,, --·-• A to-year-old truck driver lrol)I Hugo, Okla.. fell asleep at the wheel Tuesday and injured four elephants. Robert D. Cline told J>O· lice he was about five miles east of Norwalk when the truck, owned by the Clyde Beatty.Cole Brothers Circus, overturned. The circus ele- phants suffered scratches and bruises. • A Ho!ifaz, England weight- lifting club has had to close be· ecuae a strong arm gang hcu "lifttd" au 3,000 pounds of its equipmtnt. • "When the first selUers arrived In early Califurnia," Gov. Ronald Reqan said recenUy at roll-out ceremonies of a new tri-jet, .. they found half-naked savages smoking the leaves of a native plant. You can still see the same thing on Sunset Boulevard every Saturday night," the Governor added. news confettnce m Loa Angeles to reply. "'111e problem of communicating wittl students and other groups Ja a tperennlal one.,R existed 1n irivlous administra- tioos. lL ell!ta in thls one," NiJ:on said. . ... Ht,P>inled out that-his admlniatratlon was moving toward an end to the war in Vietnam and the draft and dealing with problems Of the' environment. '"But once all thole th1np are done, sllll the empllness and the eltallownw. the superficiality thst many college students find in college curricula will atill be there. "We cannot IOJw: it. It is 1 problem whid! c0Ue1e 8!!mlnietraton and college . f~ulties · must fact up to. We share our ,Plrt of the plamc. I assume that responsibility. We will try lo do better • But they b1ve to do better allo." Nerve Ga.s Dump Delay AslCed TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (uPI) -Gov. Claude Kirk demanded Thursday the army abandon any Jmmedlate plans to dump 2,675 tons of nerve gas into the Atlantic Octan oft the Southeastern Seaboard. And Rep. Paul Rogers (0-Fla.), asked the Pentagon to delay shipping the gas across the South, a move scheduled for Aug. 10, because or the "Potential of diaulu." Kirk and Ro1ers, however, appeared to be lodging the on]y major official object.ions in Dixie to the plan to dispose of the World War TI nerve gas by dlllllping it 282 miles east of Cape Ken· nedy, Fla. Authorities in the states through which the slow-moving train CarrYing the cargo of 418 desk-sized concrete "cofnns" must travel sttm assured that the Army is taking every prtcauUon to avoid any danger to the population. .'• ! the fight against pollution In ConJre!ls, · MIDDJNIEW, Coqp. (Ag}_ -Young in the government and throughout in-. 'people continued to pour tnto.ttl!e rockleas dustry. ,Po,vder ¥ge rock festival area today "This is an area where we cannot heed}els of the fact that thert was wait," he said, notinc the eye-tf.in&ln& no rinµJK:. But as they d_pd the prodoctr paU that settled over major cities coast-of the roci festival announctd he wu to-coast and overseu this week. ·trying to rent Yanktt St.Idiom for I -two-<loy concert Auc. u llld :i. He also served nolict he might seei Ttcket.s sold for the Powdu pi.c .. e higher laxes if Congress does not curb .... its spending. He hinted he might veto festival at $20 apiece would be honored lwo appropriations bills that oceed his at the Stadium. producer Alpn Sherr budget requests by more than $1 billion. said. He said contracts to rent the Nixon insisted that "inflation is being Stadiwn would be alped withllr a few cooled" despi~ an upward surge in the days. 'lbe ball part hokls 161000. wholesale price index in July. He aa id A festive atmosphere was mainlained he was more eocouragtd by lhe at Powder Ridge meanwhile by 16,000 downward trend in the index -harbinger young persons already 1t the ski aJope of a rise or fall in consumer prices aitei -in the past six months. ~ newcomers arriv ed today sin&Jy On school desegregation, the President and in groups, walking and bitchhlkinl added a condition to his plans for federal to a festival banned by the courts as assistance to Southern school districts a nuisance. integrating this fall by saying that U.S. A few ·slept along the road.me durinc officials would be sent only into dl!lricts the night but mOl'lt continued the two-mile \vhich have requested them. trek on foot from the state police bar· 11ie President. relaxed and self-con. ricades set up on roads 1nnmd the fident throughout the half-hour session site. that was delayed brie.Oy by a microphone State Police Commissioner Leo J . failure, returned by helicopter to the Mulcahy said he haa no plans to force Western White House at San Clemen te anyone to leave the 1kl reaort. immediately afterwards. "They can stay there till 'nlanis,Siv- The President spoke before a na· in&~" ' tionwide audience after lhe Israeli The young folk camping out there cabinet met for the third time this SIGN OF DISTRESS AT ROCK FEST? seemed undeterred by the lack ot music week without a decis1on whether to ac·, _____ Y_o_u_ng.::_M_•_n _H_•_n.::g_s _F_l•...:g:_U.:.p_si_d_•_D_o_w_n_•_t_Po_w_d_• ... •_R ... i_d.::g.:.• ____ or_..._the::...:•::.:rr_:e::.:s•_:•::.f .:the=ir.:hos=t:~ ___ _ cept the American peace plan for the 1 rnidd1e east. Israel accepted the plan in the fourth crisi.!I session of the week this morning. Nixon acknowledged that Israel was concerned that a cease-fire would result in a mi.lllary buildup in the Arab coun- tries bordering on Israel. • Niron interrupted a JO-day working vacation at San Clemente to come to Los Angeles for the nationally televistd and broadcast news conference. He held an informal news conference in his Whlte House office a week: ago Monday. Nh:on also said he believed "inflation Is being cooled and will conUnue to be cooled" if the federal government keeps its budget under control. He e1· pressed bis confidence that the country was "on the way" to an upward moving economy in the last half of 1970. The President said he was not too coocemed with tbc •. increase in the preliminary July wholesale price inde~. because be wu more interested in Iooatr range movemenU. The index shilWed • 0.3 percent Jn. C!"""" in July -the sharpest j- since January. Turning to lndochi.n1. Nixon again said there js no disagreement between the U.S. pos.iUon on the Paris negotiations and the po.siUon held by South Viet· namese President Nguyen Van Thieu. He said Thieu's po&Uon °is on all fours with ours" and noted that the two cou n- tries have consulted on what will be negotiated at Paris. He noted that Amba.sudor David K. E. Bruce had met in Saigon with Thieu to make sure there was no disagreement. He told reporters be beli<ved that chancn for a negotiated pe1ce on Viet- nam were better because fl the Cam-bodiin operation. On the sensitive Issue ol 1chool desegregatiM. Nilon said no feder al reps eetntaitves would be sent to key southern ICbool districts unless ~y were requested by local governmeots. Tbe Prestdent amplified on his recent denial that scores of federal a1enta would be dispatched to the South this fall to bring about desegregation in holdout dJslricts. Nixon said how m111y federal represen· tatlves went into the South would depend on whether the districts "ask for the help" of Justice or Health, Education and Welfare Department experts. "We are not going to have forced policy in this area," Ni1on 1aid "Our policy wiU bt ooe of cooperatloo, rather than coercion.·• ' unt ..----- Q. What should a person do who is worried about inflation, the stock market, the future? A. Cut back on unnecessary spending. Protect your family's future by placing your savings and investment funds in an insured savings account Q. Does it make any difference where I put my savings? A.Yes. An insured account with a savings and loan association will pay you more interest than banks and will be nzore certain than stocks. Q. Do all savings and loan associations in Southern California pay the same interest? A .Yes . ' Q. Then why should I put my savmg~:With Mutual Savings · and Loan Association? · . /' Storms Soak Muggy · U.S. A. We asked our own account holders for the answer to this I one. They have confidence in the knowledge of our employees. They can depend upon receiving accurate infonnation, and are pleased with the efficient and courteous . service . ._ Sticky Weather 'Ranges From MUlwest to East Coast C'allfoml• rmltWarmAWUTMll.WIGllCllTTOl:llUt.UT •••• ,. H•1r l<HI"""""' tO<Nr. ll9111 v•rlabl• ...... ""'hi • ..., ""°'"'"' llOW• Huwft. lflt ""•lttlv I lo 1$ kl>Olt lfl 1ntr- foffr -.!..11\N'llllV, Hlth IHI, 61. to.1tal ,..,, .. ,1111rfl •• .,.. from '' II 1'. 1"11..., ltmN ... lll•IU fl r!M 1.-.m 12 lo M, Wllllf' IM1Nr1twre U. Su11, -'loon, Thies l~IH'ICI fl!•" • )I ...... .., 'tcOnd low l ,41 I.ti\. 1.1 SA TUii DA\' "'"' hith '103'1,..,. ft 1'1'11 '°"' ., •.Ol t.m, ... , 'tallld "'-" • '' •:)• ··"'· '1 $KO!lf IO.¥ • l :ll•"' '-' Sii" ltlNt ''$) •·"'· Slit 1H1 ..,. MOO!\ Iii.-l:l l 1.m. hit 11U ,_..,, . • ••ktnflald Bl1...,..rtk '"" llOllOI' •riwn1vlllt Cfllc:1to Cl11tl..,..tl ..... ........ o.1 .. 11 '"•lrti.tlkt F-1 Worlh ..... Ho,_ W:•-C!IY l ll v .... l.Oll Al\felH Mlf'llOMHlll H1W OrlMn.t _y .. Hortll il'l1lt1 01ti.nc1 OklMIOrN City °"''"' l'tlm "''' .... "''° ltolll .. ,,_1. Plftl.,.,,...,, '""'"' ltt~la Cll't ltt;f '""' ·-IKfltft'lt"t' i 1.11! l••• C!!r ''" 01-Stn Fr1nc!1ce Set !llt SllOl<IM ":'hli ..... 11 Wulllntlon ( Mltll Uw '"''· " .. !111 .\.$ .GJ 11 •1 ., .51 ,11 If JI ... " " H 70 .11 .., 11 .07 tt $1 .01 ts 1S '° 19 .ll HI Sii ,OI lilt 71 fl •1 " .. ,,, •• .t i It• 7J .. " fl 7f Al •l 7J IJ 7• 1• 6J .... '" .. tS 7J T l lt ti ..• .,,. ·~ .. ,, It ,IJ )j ,, " " .. " . " . .. At ti.I .ll ... ~ " . .. 11 ., 111 •s .. ,, .ii Q. How bi~ is Mutual Savings? A, We're called "The Big M" because we have over 440 million dollars in assets, Q. Where are your offices? A. Mutual Savings has offices in Pasadena (head office), Glendale, West Arcadia, Covina and Corona del Mar, R_, D. At!On Viet l'n,iditlll & M--rtr ' " ) • ' .. ' "' .. ~-.: ~~ ' ·; f >t' v~ \1 ' MUTUAL SAVINI& CORONA DEL Mil• 2167 Eut Coeal HWt~•1 ' S j n-€1emenie ·~: -:=~~apis~rano . . • . 1 EDIT:IO N . ' . • • • • • ,. . Tod"ay,'•. •••t . . . , . _,...._ . . N.Y . Steeb ' ' ',I ~or. ~l. No: 1 BZ. ,4 SECTIONS, 42 PA~~s I ,, I •' J • ORANGE COUNT.Y, CAtlFORNIA • • • FRIDA'y, :.JULY 13 f)1970' ! • • I TEN CENrs .. ·-. " ' • • " . ' " . : I " . . . .. . . • • • ' t 1 • • .. (;irl, 17, Raped, .. ' ,. ' ' s'.att ... ·Ci~ineri1.e ' . . ; .. : . . . ' . ; .. • h • -.. ! ! * . . * * ' . * "* ' . . . . ' * * * .. * ' *' * ' • ,, . . ----. . ' . . .. s.rae ' .s eace • . .. . . . . . . . ·-. -Cease Fire ; :Pro})9~als :wm _Okay TEL AVIV (UPI) -Tho larotll cabinet. beedinc an appeal ~~ Prest.: dent Nizon, today acttpted the U.S. Middle Eut .puce proposals that include a thr~rnonlb cea-.nre on the Ei)'Ptian lronl Egypt bad accepted the propoo1!1 earlier. · The decl31.on was taken by the cabinel in the fourth crisis aesaion of the wtek despite the threat of a walkout by the six Gahil Party members Of the National Unity· CoaJIUcin lhll would Imperil lhe government of Premier Golda Meir·. Tho. six meml>ero of ~ bl)'kilh }>lily voted· 1glinat 1cceptlna the proJ>Olll, ..,. . cordipg !o the l~fl~li ~te radio w~ said the vote in t:M: cab4ltt was lT~ . ·"'RINE GUARDS _ EL TO. RQ·CRAs.ti .sc~ .. E ·.1AS«' .. R.liORi:" QNE TAXIS oowN-RUNw•v . 'wit11 .... -.s. However, Ibey did ~ If-fl' ...-.. .., . ~• • . not. immediately walk oot but caucuaed '. ... ,.Pr,.ident'1 Pl""°', Wll' lleil!I' P.r .. !Mrod ,for T·re lni111 i;llghl ·Wh°"·Cro1h-Qc~y'fooj, , ,.;. .i .; e ala" dlcide '""Ir couroe. , , · J J!) { . ~··· {"'~:A ... \.~ t • • •• '\,.·.-. , ....... , ~ ", • .. ,. •• ~ •. -· ~~-~~-·-·~.. .-•• , :--· .~. J', _,1, , , \ •RY i u . ~&ve'r8iv~· Aci.S' <, · •~ P!!!i Dies · · , .. · : 1 ; : =. "" u;; ec1,. o1 • ~ ..... en1a1 "1 . ~ . . ~ ' ~ . ·' .. ' ~7Tbe, il*t bloc, ·whleb.~hfa-.... U d S -, · v c In d aea~ hl the l»eut unicamer1l 1*'li•- . '~ . er cru4n y .· ie1' 0 . rewmail ' ·1· ur .. ' ' e . . . . ~ ~lne~ y~odly lo Wilk out' La B h llet!pite tho lhre1t. the Goblll minister• in., . gu'_ na eac . • . . . . . ; '. . " ' wett iovi.ted lo 1lt "" • ~teri11. In A Cr I corf\"'1Uft ........ 'irih droll the 'ofl\Cl.tl PoMble 11Ubversive..actlVity In Laguna h t E T · ~ael ripJy. ""r 1 • : · 1 " Ir as a or-n_.· The lJr•dl lllltem<int lod-uld'llrllel Beach was under scruliny thia week U -w .-..-lno 1 'tilt.or ,for the state Senate 'Waif pttpar~ to lllbleribe tp 1hf ·UiS. Fact-Jl'blling Subcommittee on proposa1J1,,far I ·flO.day ,ct-.fire ,"11t Unameriea Activitie! zeroed in on the By ARTHUR R. VIN8EL -Staff Sgl Kenneth <:. Davis, ~3t, le'ast. on tbe Epptian frmt.'" This ruled. Art Colony. ot -. ~~ ,....,. ,... Santa Ana. out a cea:ie'-tire noW on ' t)\e ,Jotdanlan 'lbe · subcommitttt, headed by Sen. One wing droop_ing as it landed with -Cpl. Kenneth Metuiorf 21, who· livu front'" •whert Arab ,Uerrlllu1 'bav• HUCh Bums, fUnctioru; frOm the'fleflalor 's a bouDCe;a giant KC130 midi.ir fueling on base. · '' · ' threatened. t.ocoritlnue the war. · Offiee in Fresm and has 'IOoked 1rito tanker ' caree·ned ' down the nmway 8t All 'wete i'dlnitted io Orange County ;'Ibe US .. prtiposala •were yaguely;wbrd- actmtles of. extremist groups ranging . El Tor.o Marine Corps Air Sta~on Thurs--Medicat.Center, where all ·but the major ed. an(I 11,::~l'I wa:s for~ r .. ~V frorn~the Communist party to the John day, flipped over, and exploded in names~ were, listed in critical condition today tO ·,~k '..~lf\cation -from \l{i~ Birch Society. Th~ pilot, a . muctHiecorat~ v!teran from burns and smoke inhalation. ·op. ·their 1~1(11ing. •The· RoiMs· propoU.ls The investigator said he was !j,.. of x1etnam helicopter duty, died m the Two members· of the rescue crew ,...... spoke ~ically• of. a ceuHiJe OD terviewing a number or people in town, blazing wreckage, which came t6 re~t who carried out three victims -were-tbe. ~z Cana.\ front and1 bope(Jlµy · of iilcluding news media persoonel and city only 2® ,yards from Pr~ldent Iiixon s also Injured despite the fact OM wore. the other froots. officials, about problem areas and perked A'J! Force One jetliner. an asbestos suit and oiygen mask. ~ But dui:inf the · IG-day period · Uie ptrsons reputed to having leanings to A midfield crash . crew raced. to the Sgt. Bob Tribett collapsed due to amoke. beW,fftllta coukt. ,begin preliminary the left. ~ and was praised for aavmg the inhalation while inside the blazing, di.scuujons which would. lltttle the pro. He alao sought opinions c:l residents bv.es of four crew members, three ol skeletal fuselage, but waa htlped out blem of· a . ceu.!ire on other sect.on: on the activities of some cK.y· and 'other wt>o:m -were ba41y injured . . of lhe wreckage to safety. with Amba.saador GUMar V .. Jarring 1.0- public officials and emplOYi!S and ':their Fi.r:st, Lt. Roger W. Mullins,, 27, or Medical Corp;sman Mike Sh1pplet sul· ting as. mediator, ind ~fully, to aS80i"Ciates. · Huntin~ Beach, perished in the fered burns on the haiids while ad-prepare for negotiaUons to write a formal The Investigator said Sen. Burns' com· o~er:turried four-engine t u r b o p r:o p mli;ilatering aid to the injured men. ehd to tht conflict. mittee is engaged in a county-by-county aJl'craft. Operations Officer Col. Ken Huntington surv~y or-eubvtrsive activities, ranging . ~e injured ·crew members were Iden-·credited Sgt. Grover st. Clair'•· rescue tfom college campuses to local city tilted as : , team with saving the survivors, 1lthough govemmenU and civic groops. .-:Maj. Walter Cytkewicz, 41, Mission they had to wait for' firemen. He said the survey in Lagwia was Vte}O. . The firefighters laid a blaniel of foam precipitated by .-rity problemo tllat ~.Robert B. Wlllls Jr., 21, Tustin. !See 'CRA811,.Pqe.I) have-arisen u the-result of dlbliahment fl the Western White HCIUle in nearby SanfClem'ente. He noted that the police deplr'tments of the two c!Ues have a mu'tual aid agreement, which, in an eme\1(ency,' could clrlw _l,aia~ lnlo Ille Wblte Hooae oeairity ophere. "Sulwf!rsjve · ac'tivity in 'the Art >Colony coukl have .an adverse effect on leCUl'ity provltions mode in the neighboring com- munity, be Slld. Girl, 17, Raped, Slwt; Found Near Clemente State Reje,cts Marine8' Offer . . ' Of Beach . Land By FREDERICK . ~OEMEllL Of t1Mt DeWr Plllt 1t9t1 An officla1 1Jiokell'nan for-' Camp Pendleton today confirmed thit · the Marine Corps his offere<t .1.J mllea of virgin shoreline. (fori ,ublic \Ill on a ~year lea11e. A teenage girl ifrom Pico Rivera who bu not yet undergont 1urgery early But the SI.Ile Joi CaHlomia iJ 'boli:Sing had been raped and ahot. after being this momlng. oot for more land and aaya the offer ---'~ -. ' . . ' -'· ... " -... • . , -• • . ' . "~·r. .. i:"-• ' ;r.. .... -• • .. • " -. an-' -. ·- • . ' : Apparently well briefed, the lnvesti· 1ator had a list ol names cl persons ~ JocaUy for tbe.ir liberal belie/1 or 1i..clotloc> witll ·11<><alled ·libero! lll'OUP!· kidnlped in Newport Beach w • • Detectives from Newport Beach, San · "'•bl 1 discovered by four Camp Pendleton Clemente, and the San Diego Sheriff'• JI unaccet-e. Man'••• eirly thi's morning u ,.. 1 1 ....... , ... _ .... h .i..... .Robert Meyer, deputy director of Park• Hflhllll1la.froin l'ttlldent NW1ri'1 firol. WMt Coat ~levised!pie1J1con~ 1.0r .. •• .. . (Au(' Booh.y Tr~p Kills La· Pa1iiia Girl 0A 17-year-old LI Palma 1irl was shot to dNth Thunday night by a booby lrap riOe triggered when she raised a • betbroom window to ent.er her boyfr1tnd1t apartment in Anaheim. A ... caliber bullet slruck Melita Jay Bo~ tn the tert eye, pollce ~id. :t_.fel1'-bor1 who heard the shot abOrtly before t p.m. found her on the lawn· hene6tlt the window. She died an hc!ur laler' ti Anaheim Mem<>ri•l Hoopllll. ) The boyfriend; Randy ~ugene Ackles, 11, wu taken into custody by police "11\en he rtlumed to the apartment at J:2:0 a.m. NO charges have been filed. •it: o fk:e were a "Ill'' tcene WIVl.I.,. u• and Recfeattop, iaid the colt of deveK>p. wandered Incoherently along the San morning. ing ihe 1.5 miles of . iand. lor · llll'fin& Diego Freeway .south of San Clemente. The inveat11aUon bas been joined by park .would ·be" prohlbltlVe. · , ' The girl, 17·year-old Susan Price. re-inveatlgaton from Camp Pendleton, '11\e. state wuld like. 4J mllU t:J. malned semiconscious through the morn. reports Aid. beaCh With ·, 25-year le•• -· IHen we'd ing and under intensive care. at South The detecUvea throutb the momina have a fint.a.ltlc put,"·he aald. • Coast Commun!ty HC>Spital with a bullet probed the brush-rovertd'bank slopinC 1be Marlne tCorps· pfopofal wu 1ent The President uld the U.S. '.pnpolll : f0l"1!c<ue1firi bi the Mlildle'Eoot;Wolli.t be ' coupltd< with . a .mUIW}I IUnclltllL - • He• to..,Ut lheld ol Ille ·-lh ; I , •, I ' loclged in her neck. coastward of the ,San Otego Freeway, to the~ .state nearly two, weeU aio. Preliminary reportl Indicated the girl btlt San Diego Sheriffs officert, who foUowing. the re~ by the slate oC ~ ' was left near the La.s Pulgas gate of art in charge of the case, refused to. Mothet.planforthebeach;'Ibe.Mtfinel. '~t ~'Jll'Hl"c~ ~'•'tht,-;fitt .1, the Marine base. suffering a single wound divulge details of the investJgatloh1 fomferly offered 1.S. miles of·}~.tch for . and qr~·~ '1!Jotiat;i11111; ~ fear ~1 , 1 in the nee.Ir: after • terrifying journey Miss Price bas not been lntervle~ seven yW"a, ~.with .. die. 11111 )'eVocable · Innatto,n ill. betng' cooled,uia. Wilt eo• ! from Newport Beach into North San and police have,yet -to speak with the foul' al .any; time. ~ , , ~ . · J • , tlnpe :to ~ae/'Tht eC~y1 .W\11 ~Ve, Diego County, · Ma rines who reported the dl9COvery. l 1AfU!r 'len&,fhY ~Ot.11000.,,.tbe 16oger• . forwani'dn f.tte'1 tOn;'.tirm .i.Dd' the_'.1~Ck ., Miss Price, ·Whole address was {'Qt Miss Pfi9e appreotty cl~wtd he·r war term-'Pla°o; wu drawo ud .bUt ta.e stale · in fl'\P\oYnJent wilf1tit takeil c;U. of. " • .lmmedioleJy avalllb!e, .~!'U. · op)l.e-~rnlJ'ln~~-"'·lhe.-Wi)< wlliilif lt!n like a'li>npr lll'etth o(belch. "If u.er< i•.: w1rbelween f'10i;ovlet .......... )I, ~. where ... ,.llld all« hd! .-ilont.. left. ·'IN!r: ' ' 1Bnd. ·-• , . ·, . ' U•""'. ond the, United1S!lteo.tllete .. w,lll. ~";~!if. po1klt 11id. • > • • San Diego mvesUgalon woold ~ Meyer lli<I lbll JIOIOl!ellonl for Ill• . ~~.!'lm<n·" Tliat jl wby ll*m· The lour Morines r<portedly found the Bp<Clfy whetller Miu Pr1ct bu modi U-yeor -.. wlU -· bul tbol porwH 'lbll· the . On!IM; ~ lit teenager 1l 1,15 1.m. IJld drove her comments on Ille identity of or Illa ~ •lioll ·.docloloa Wiii DOI be • llllde cir--' latO-a mllltafy c.et1lcl .Ill y lo San Cl<menla, where they notified number ol the per..., involved in a.. · ly Clinp ·,.1e1on: · ' · m.. liko Ille Mlddle Eoll. ' , 1 police. 1ltack. • • "TIW · llilol deci,\oo will rtot w~ 'tl1I ~ ~· 6l .... on lhe bulance lo South Coast Hospital, where ,..,. reported to be probln1 tho, .,~·I!! • ll!ld. , ltf(larU.. lo~llr,palhill\ln-, the bullet woond, hidden by halt IJld clrcum>lanceo of !be abducllon in~' :ll(Qlioim.-'l'tlii\ ' ""A. prq~I-. ' 11110ilW ,t:IM<fl""'ipt - . ' n,. ' rifle 1pporently WU riped IS t hoPtem•de bw'gl~ safeguard device. The front door wu locked and no one home 1t the apartment when Mias -tried the v.;indow· Miu Pritt then was taken by am· Police In Newport Beoch meonwhUo' •ihe De'*"6iel.. . ,~ , , ~ CMt~~ lm'l1M !l'l!" '. blood, wa! discovered. city. It apparently occurred around mf l.!1 IQJJ.D "al •C -~Tb\inclay actlon on lei 1Uon ~ht iu~ rlii · Aides at tho hospital aald tho 1irl nl1hL {Ille IEAci, Pop I) monllll qo lo aimbot llf poUlltlio. ' '---------....:.J • , . ' SC Frtdl1.-llu~ Jl, 197G ]fate Defense Hammers at Drug Use ' ' Ull ...... M'I) -Linda KMa-'*"' -....., 1111& ... bod -l_lo_._ ..... ,_ Ille left boo>e: at the ii' of 11 and ;£,,:I tbo !!me a joined Charles '1 "family." Under crots examination by Defense Attorney Paul Fitzgerald, the state's •unlln!itlon b7 DeltDIO Allorney Paul Fl!JC!tald, the <talAe'• prllne witness acknowkdJed that abe bad a conaiderable amount ol "'hwnan erperlerw:e" before Ille joined lbe btpple cult char&ed with the Sbama Tat&-J.,oBianca llaylnp, nuprus bu aid, be wW atlempt to 'lhclW tbat Mn. Kulblan'1 accountl d the ldlllnp were a "faetuy" that came from a mlnd impaired by the looc usage of drugs. Mn. Kaaablan Nld Ille had lived In CODUllUDel from coast to coast from Carpenter Assm·edJoh In Election ·Otooce County tapayera wlD fool tba bill fe< a fU0,000 eJectloa with cnl)r one rul candid.lie Aue· II. R<plblfcan -llw11I carponter of Newpor!B.eodlwu--' ol - to • -llenate .... In Ibo opedel vote when bta only -4 DouaW Irvine, wllhdrew 'lburaday, lrvlne, a Smtta Ana boulln( davalope<, talked to Carpenter 'l'lllnday nlPI &lld threw ht& llUppOrl to him. Carpenter, dlalrman ol the Republican Slala Central ~. lhlll virtually la --b&ninc .. uni..--'In campalp -ol electloa to fill out · tl>e .-plnd W1Q ol J .... G, ......... Schmlla bu -elected to the !&W Jamaa B. Utt'•--tlnOqrW. Carpenter llllll faces a dlall:"t flml Democrat DwfCbl W. Miao the NoYmllilll' -al -·for tba 11111 f-llate -t<rm. :n.o .....,._ ·-· of carped« will <:DO{ the county an ..tlmalad f ll0,000. But by law Ille opeclal election hu to be held .. .., u there only bod been one cmtlclate on the ballot. 1rvlno'• ....,. will remain .. the blllot ,_, It la too· l.te fcr-blm to withdraw but he la uklnc bla IUpportln to .... tor Carpenter. •I" Ii lrvlpe Nld he wu In the r-to opolk for "tbo bunlened properly tu• payer" but aftet taUdnC to Carpenter .. -carpoater -tho -concelll. • • The -of Corpeoter to fW ... the term the rllt ct. the year can aocompllJft two tbtn(o for Republlcana: -It will give Corpeofar MDlorily ovtr other new senaton'elec:ted !n the Novem- ber general electlon,~provided Carpenter defeals Mlae for tho tun .. nn ar "" pected because ol • !Movy Jlepubllcan regi5tration edge. -It could get Carpenter to Sacramento ln ttme to provide the vote needed to put Gov. Ronald Ru1an's IL b\111'"1 tax refonn proposal over the top. The taK shift package was two votes shy of the 27 needed to clear the Senate today with ooe tupportu temporarlly bospltalimd. There was talk among Republican strategists of possibly shelving the meuure unut Carpelter'1 election on the 18th. • Carpenter, who Wll off to northern CallComla today on a Republlc.an Central Committee 11Pe9king tour WU WllVlilable for cornmeal . But Pbtl Sella, Carpenter's campaign director, aa.id he doean't look: for eai,ienter to provide the llo-brealtlnl vote. 1'1 can't imagine them throwing In ttie towel and not trying to get it tbn>uP unW the lath," he aald. He said be believes bill sponsor1 wW · try to pulb IL tbnJu&b apln today, DAILY PILOT ""'*' ··-" ........ .... ....... ...... ...... .. ..., c.... w... s. ct ••••:i OllAltG• COAST PUILl1HtHG ,COM,AMV l•Mrt N. w,..1 ,,..., .... ,_.""" • the time Ibo left borne la a lllUlll town la New l;lamPlblnt and bod a child When IM WU 11. . Her flnl ~ ID COlllUIUDal llv· In( was In Beach, Fla., lbe said. She nat llvtd with a group ln Boston and then ioloed another commune bl Greenwich VUfage In New York City. From there lhe went to the Haight. Ashbury &eellon of San Francisco where she lived with another commune and then went back to Boston where she lived with the "American Psychedelic Circus." ''What was that?" Jl'ttigerald asked. "We wanted to get buses and animals and travel all over the country as a circus. I don't know exactly why it was called psychedelic." "Wu it drug oriented?'' "Yes, they took drugs.'' VolfeukU Aetlon • • "~t drull?" "Acid. 'Ibey amoked weed!' "E&ttMiv• ......,-dr\1111" • flJ wouldn't II)' uteliift. Jt tarlecf'.M, From Bolton Mra. Kaaabtan lllon .,..,. with her leCOl'ld husband, Robert Kasa .. blan, to Los Angeles and lived in a commune at Venice on the Ocean front west of Los Angeles. ''We decided to go to New Me1lco. We went to a place outside of Ta GS." "Did it have a name?" "Yes, it was called Sons of the Earth ltlother." "I was always moving from one place to another, usually with a group," said Mrs. Kasabian. "Would you say you were Im· presslonable when you joined the com- mune In New Melico?" "I was searching for something I DAILY ,!LOT ihlft ..,_,. Den McFarland (rlgbt) spikes volleyball as his doubles partner, Peter Ott, watches the results of this set. Pair are wanning up for ~·· 16th Open Doubles Volleyball Tournament this weekend on Mam Beach, Play starts al 9 a.m. Saturday and Sunday. . wun'I ... ol, '"ii l pl II tocllhlr wtllU J1111111, -J Iii* -·· famllJ I waa~Dle Ind I wun't folltblr,''tbeNld. "But yoo bad hid cooslderable e:r· per!ence In gniup llvln(. You were almost a pioneer in communal living weren't you?" iJl'tzgerald uted. "Yes." "So when you joined the group at the Spahn Ranch you thought you knew what you wue doing and what kind of problems you might encounter in communal living?" asked Fitzgerald. "Yu, I just thought they were beauutul loving people/' she said. Fitzg~ald took over cross e:ramlnat.ion of Mn. asabian Thursday in an attemp~ to nu y three days of testimony in which she gave an eyewltneu acount o1 the killings 1..i Aug. a.s. l'llJIOrald told ... _ lllal tho =~ -and ..... flalalo -be bo..d ID prfnc!ple On the contention that Mf1. Kasablan, a 2J.year-old blonde wlio lived with the family for one month, was not mentally competent. Under crou-examinatlon, Mn. Kasa· btan admltled taking LSD, peyote, methedrine Or "speed," mescaline, and morning glory aeedJ. 1'My sole purpose for t a k i n g hallucinogens was for reallzaUon -God -rtallu.Uon," she aald. "And were you 1uccessful in realizing God?" Fitzgerald asked. "l realized you don't have to t.ake peyote or LSD to discover God," she replied. "Most of my uperiences while la~lng LSD were with nature," she saJd, "in the out-of-doors. Sometimes 1 would aplpn tho blrt ol a tree, or iho pa!Wn ol a I~ I'd picked UPi or rd gaze at the stars~ the moon." Mrs. Kasabian said she had had 'delusions while under the influence of drugs, but insisted she did not suffer from "flashbacks" aner the drug had worn off. "Has taking LSD altered y o u r personality?" Fitzgerald asked. "Yes, it has altered It, I believe. to a certain extent, because it has showed me a lot about myself," she replied. "Are you any different than you were during July and August, 1981 (just prior to the Tate-La.Bianca s I a y I n g s ) ? ' ' Fitzgerald questioned . "I sure am," she replied. "I've come to a lot of conclusions about reallty and right and wrong." Planners Eye City Future To Present Views 011, Bounrl<tries, Downtown to Council By BARBARA KREIB!CH Four members of the Laguna Beach Plannln( Commission aired their views on various llpecU of general plan p~ posall at a special otudy oeulon '!'burs. day nlcbl and will lake action at their regular meetinc Monday nflbt, to tranamll their recommtnclaUons to the clly counclL Commlaioner Thomu Johnston wu absent 'nlundly and It wa1 noted tut both be and Carl Johnaon wW be unable to attend the Monday mtttlng so there might be aome question u to the weight of the recommendaUon. However, city planner Al Autry, noting the urgency of a declskm to enable the planning team f.,.. Daniel, Mann, Johnaon & Mendenhan to complete lb contract, Illumed that IL &bould at least be poalble to prepare 1 con&elllWI report for guldaece ol tho DMJM p1a .. nera. Notina that 0 there 11 a difference of opinion on the commlulon on several item.1," chairman William Lambom-ne took up the DMJM proposals Item by item, 11eeklng the • vlew1 of each com- mlasioner. Robert Hastings said he would go stay,'' he said. He emphasized that he along, but would like to see the trlanale favored the mall system and was sorry to de..annexaUori 11used as a barg.Wng see some of the DMJM alternate plan! tool" for a land swap with the future had not included malls. Since the DMJM city of Irvine, to pennit acquiliUon of ccmtraet did not call for a precise property cl~ to Laguna. He felt downtown plan, he suggested acceptJn& Lquna's boundaries ahould be left suf· what was preeen~ as satisfying th• flclently flexible to permit annexaUona contract and leaving precise planning north to Perhaps u far as Corona del for the future, Mar aod Inland over the top ol the DISAPPOINTED bills. ·~-.x;iuultz said he was "very d.iaa.p- James Schmit% aireed wlth Hastl114s pointed" with the downtown propauls. regardln& the northern boundaries, but said he would not favor de-anneutlon "I don't like the way they've moved of any property at this time. "Walt roads, or the location of their parking tll th tlm the d Id structures. There Is loo much mall for un e e comes, n ec e me and J don 't like thetr Main Beach whether or not It is to our advantage approach." He saki he felt there were to de-annex," he said. some aspects ~ a downtown plan FLEXIBLE pmented earlier by Hutlngs that Lambourne aakl it ml&ht be a mllta.te ;=..I,d work better than the DMJM lo de-annex 1be trtancle or set a bow>-Lambourne feU the DMJM plan had dary at thlr Ume. ••tt lbould be flexible," failed to recocntze some of the downtown he said. "We wW be crowded by out.side problems and sald he, too, found merit developmenta and Jt might be an Ml· in Hastings' plan. "Traffic and parking vantage for us to be aDle to control must have priority," he said. "We must some of the developmerQ. These people consider the ability of the city to develop will be uslng our ltteell, sewers and and I feel the OMJM downtown plan beaches and we should have 10me con· could take 20 years." trol. Jt would be a terrible mistake Regarding the "villr gc'' centers for BOUNDARIF.s to close tn our annexation areas." He commercial uses in t .. e areas of Boat Discussion opened with the DMJM noted the comm1saloners were divided Canyon, Bluebird Canyon, Canyon Acres, Freeway Fighters Still · =~~!t~~:'.?:E :"=~$~0:e .. f%.t~~ ~:~r:i~ S:!~·?E~~;~:~f:~e~~ • within that area, and the 500-acre Autry aald DMJM ,Uvored a sbmewhat ture, and that the planned 1oca.tions · • . Sycamore Hills triangle further out in tourist oriented central area. with outJy. should be left as possible development!. B k Badha R Pia -the canyon be dH.nne1:ed Ing "village" . centtrs providin&: for The "multi-purpose" corridor proposed ~It m oute n Carl Johnson aa.id he ra~ared the bowl--resklents' commercial needs. by DMJM for Sooth Coast ro,hway, ~ dary limitation and the de-annexation Hastings felt the approach was sound . is really an extension of an existing • or, if the triangle should not be de-an-Johnson said he didn't interpret the situation, Schmitz suggested. He and , . . nexed, would like to see the property pl an as limiting the central area to Lambourne sal d it would be more lo A 'Iburlday Jll'M!'heon of .the Hlrbor nusslon to reopen the routo at\tdy • • • rezoned for better control of its develop-tourist use. "There are mixed uses there the point to develop a hotel !Ont as Area Freeway Fighters a:rMl Laguna which Is apparently what they wa.nL ment. now and I feel they should and will soon as possible. Beach ctly official& pr<Xluced llOllle low-They dido~· tblnt they could pt ft ---:::ii;;;;;;;;;,;;;;,;;;;;;m.-;;;;;;;;;;;;i::~~::~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jiii;;;;;;;;:--:: key diJCU1sion and opinion e1cbange but ,. apparently changed no minda'. through and went the whole ••Y (11ettn1 The Freeway Fighters at.i.11 support route deletlotJ) en the JertslaUon." Assemblyman Robert Badham's bill to ~Ion said the dltcUSalon was ~U delete Ille adopted route of Pactllc Coasl· frieodly ~od low keyed. He Nld ·the Freeway ~gh Newport Beach. . Freeway flgbter1 apparently bll'1J.e much Laguna off1cla\1 today said they still , , opposed the bill, fearing it would delay of their pioblem on th~ J>l?'1Uons of both and possibly alter the bypass route Inland Costa Mesa apd the lriine Compeny, of Laguna Beach. 'Ibey said a reopening 1be city manager laid tl;Je Freeway of the route study could also re-open Fighters stated they will fight the l1sue the possibility ot a bisecting freeway in c:Outt U Badh-m's blll falls. I t comes which the state Division of Hi&hway up for Senate committee hearing Moo. engineers once favored. day. . City Manager James D. Wheaton ol Badham has said that his bill Laguna who attended the meeting at reprf!!ent.s the unified request of 20,000 the Sania Ana Country Club, said : of his constituents:. "Newport Beach doesn't Uke the route Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, they've got and I can't uy tbat I CO!ta Mesa and Laguna have pa.ssed blame them. I share their concern over resolutions against Badham'1 bill. the adopted rpute so far as that goes The__IUJ><;heon m:ettng called b~ ttie but my difference (of position) still rrcefi'ay fighters included Councilmen stand!!. Roy Holm and Charlton Boyd from "I told them they've taken the wrong Laguna . tack. I uked them why they didn't Host for the meeting was Marshall go for a bill directing the highway com· ~ffield, chairman of the Freeway Fighters. From P..,,e l ·BEACH ... ' inomlng, but the likelihood of a Marine . concession appeared unlikely. "The two men toured tbe area, but t imagine all they did WU get their' respective views iCros.s to':'eactf othu,'' Others included Councilmen Howard Rogers of Newport Beach, ex·mayor Paul Gruber, vice chairman of the freeway fighters: Vin Jorgensen, treasurer ol the freeway fighters ; and James Penpey of Emerald Bay, an aUorney. .f'rotlt Pflfll! l DREXEL SALE FEATURING DREXEL'S ESPERANTO COLLECTION OCCASIONAL-DI NI NG-BEDROOM J ..... ~.::r Vb ,,.. .. , ... "'......, • Moyer iaJd. Meyer noted that the proper\)' is creating more than local attention. CRASH ••• - n.,,.,, "''"'" """ Tt.0111•1 A. Mwq1\lrit MAMtlnf l•U.,. aich•r4 !, Ntll a.111 or .... ~•1 IEdH"I' ....... C:Mlt "'-'»I W.1..., 111'81'1 ,,,..,..., ... Cflll 1111 wtlt ...... """"''" LtfllNI ~I !ft P:-t A-... ....... 11 ....... htdll 11111 tttdl ·~ ....... ihll C..._lot.I • ...,,.. fl C-IM llNI \ "Congrettmen Alfonzo Bell has talked WI.th Defense Secretary Melvin Laird ' about opening up the beach, under a long-term lease . "We're opt.l.mLstlc' for help from the l>efenae Dtpt. Wa know also that a Jot of public pressure is building up and tbaL the Marine Corps doem't need all of the 17 miles ol beach that they now have." "The Marines have told us that they cannot ofter the 4.S miles of beach south of San Onofre because t})ty are planning to build a helicopter pad on the last mile. But It will only be temporary. "We are also disturbed by the fact that a private surfln& club has leased year-by-year one mile of beach on the base. "If the Mari&I CIR ll!:ase the beach land to a private club, they can lease eome to the 1tate," Meyer declared. Me)'i!r menUoned that the land lease was discussed by Presktent Nixon, Gov. Rooald R<ag1n, and Sen. George Murphy whtn the three had dlnntt t<>sether at the Westtm White }louse Mond11y even· Ing. However, Meyer did not elaborate on the dlscusalons. through tha flames as I &afet.y path and the cra•h crew smaslled Its way Jnto the plane and had the men out wi\hln two minutes. A column of smoke vislble for 25 miles shot into the sky from the scene of the tragedy on Runway 34, which runs in a north-aooth direction. A panel ol invesUgators was im- me(liately convened lo probe the flr1t accident involving Marine RefueliDJ Squadron S52 in l 1 years. Built to carry 10,000 gallons of hl1hly volatile fue~1 the KC130 was not loaded, otherwise tne crash -witnessed by hundreds -would have been far worse. Lt. Mullln!I, holder of two Distinguished Flying Crosses and 32 Air Medal!, was making his third touclHnd·go practice Jandtng about 3 p.m. when the plane crashed. No immediate delenninaUon of facton whlch led to the aecldent wa1 offered, but witnesses said the KC190 bounced and snagged the Jen win& which broke off. Crates , bundles and other debris bounc- ed into the air as the crart spun 190 degrees and flipped over, It.I ent1nes breaking away and 1k1dlna down lhe concrete, spewing fire . DEALERS F.OR: HENREOON -OREXEl - HERITAGE 'lttJ11111 NIWl'ORT BEACH 1727 W"tcllff Dr., 642-2050 OPI N PRIDAY 'TI L 9 INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH Profealonal Interior 0.1l9ner1 Avallabl.,_AIO-NSID 345 North Co11t Hwy. 49~5 1 OP EN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 ...... , ............ o,... c •• .,. 140.1111 I 1 Explosion Rips Hall Police Facilit y 3rd Area Blast Target OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -police administration and Is A bomb shattered windows In also known as the Oakland the lobby oC tile Pollce Hall ol Just.lee. Adminlsti'aUon Building Jn The ezploltoo was the third downtow n Oakland Thursday this week ln Ule San Francisco evening,_ but c-used no in· Bay Area . juries. office.rs said. Two bombs went ofr wllhin Last June 23. a bomb loaded with nuts and bolts and a.ir parer\uy thrown from the Grove-Shafter freeway ex- plOOed 50 feet from the California Highway Patrol of. fice in Oakland. l"rld1y, J11!y .n, 1970 DAil V Pilaf 9 Compro.-al~ Expected Soon . . Judge Delays' Medi-Cal Revisions SACRAl\lENTO (UPll - The Reagan admlnistrstion's top health care official tX· p~s!ed hope today a com· promise will be worked out "In the nezt few days" to allow court-delayed Medi.Cal revisions to t.Ji:e effect. of the re1ulations in lhe ne1 t ble roe-certaili Metfk:ll.Cal few days," benefils. "We art pleased that 36 The disputed section would and t.5lhs ol lhe 37 regulations set a $150 monthly lncome on the medically n e e d Y ceiling on persons eligible tor package were found valid by Medi.Cal. Under f e de r a I Judge Perluss." he said. The regulations, w h i ch regulations, persoru are allo• would have taken effect Satur· ed to rece ive $158 a month and S'tlll be eligible for Medi- Cal. Perluss' decision came two days after a hearing oo a suit to nullify the refU]alioN. Tilt odion "'" filed by the California Rural L e g a I Alµltance on behalf ot the affected, Medi-Cal recipients . "We-•ve established that ·it five minutes of each other was a bomb, but we don't Mond1y. One blasted a hole know )'et what klnd," a through the Armed Forces department spokesman said. Palk:e office In downtown San Damage was limited to the Francisco. No one was in- lobby, wit ere lHlme 20 large jured. plate gla ss windows shattered. The otlter explosioo went off police «ported. Most of the about four miles away In the upstairs area in the nine-story shell of an old Nike missile building ltad empUed before (In display in the Army Salinas Valley March Staged by Cesar Chavez Dr. Earl Brian referred to Superior Court Judge Irving H. Perluss' decision Thursday to delay the effective di.tt of the new Medi.Cal regula- tions by a month to Sept. I. Perluss said a section ol the regulations limiting tile income of a Medi-Cal recipient appears to violate federal law. He asked the fflder11ol depart· ment of Health, Educatioo and Welfare to advise him on the question of a hearlng Aug. 20 after whicb he will decide whether to allow the chan&es. day, would requirt 50,000 medically indigent persons k> pay a certain lmOWlt . of money for medical serY.tces before becoming eligible forl l\ledi.Cal. The new rules would tighten 1 restrlct~ons on ownership of ptf!Ollll property and real property aq.d lower income ceilings. They would affect the 1 200,000 per50ns In t It e medically indigtnt category, those· not on welfare but eligi· , ............... 1 ..... 7llrl ~pettM:allir W• uf ~t'• Golde• C.v•i.- rade of C...U'y & Wr.,. trnt M ..... Friday, The l i .. a parral 8f'Otben; S.turd.ay, t la • It ea t MERl.E HA GGA RD with TM Stn i:a1"'"' ft:•· Ull'b:ll Bo-.ie 0.eiu; Su11.d_,, 811 11 Ml•e. 0.0.'t .. 1 .. ill lhe 5:50 p.m. blast. Presidio. The missile itself DELANO (UPI) -Cesar The surrounding block was was not damaged. Chavet, who o r g an I ze d cordoned off as o f f i c e rs The blast at the MP building vineyard workers, now is turn· searched for possible other e1· occurred Jn the garage wltUe ing rus attention to 1 dispute plGSives, but none was found', three men were on duty in investigators~said. the front office, a safe with the Teamsters Union over Police said they ..were told distance away. The gara1e who will represent farm tltree men were seen hurrying area was peppered with shrap-workers In the vegetable from the building sh(lrtly nel, two windows were blOwn fields. before the blast. No ahests out. a five inch hole was The day after his AFUIO were reported . punched in a conCrete block United Farm Worker :s The buildlng. located at 455 wall and an auto was damag· organiling c o m m i t t e e an· _.;S.;".;';;".;tll~St;;··~hou:;;;;;;";:.'.;lll;;•~c;.;ily:.,..;ed;;:·:...~=~===""'il · nounced victory in its efforts r tG represent grape workers, Dr. Joh'\ Walvoord, Noted Theolo<Jian SPEAKS AT MORNING, EVENING SERVICES, COAST a·tBLE CHURCH, S•n Ju•n Caplatr•no. Sund•y, Au9 u1t ?nd. 10 A.M. rnd 7;l 0 P.M, ALL ARE WELCOME -Come Sund1y, Aug. 2nd. Chavez 'f'hursday aMounced a march to Salinas, center of the lettuce industry. He said his followers, many of them Mexican-Americans, would trudge to Salinas by Sunday. The Teamsters previously announced: reaching agree- ment wltlt the growers of let· tuce, celery, carrots and other crops in botlt the Salinas and Santa Maria Valleys. eon. tracts, the Tea~ten; said, 3 DAYS ONLY FRI., SAT. AND SUN . THERE'S LOTS OF SUMMER LER! ! ;luy IOW and SAVE! 1 OOO's of DRESSES REDUCED! 50°/o or MORE What a aale! A·linee, llar11, low tol'IOl1 ahifta-2 piecera, too! The Mason's beet buy a! Petites, J union, Mi11es' and HaU Sii•; but hurry for your choice! GRANT PL~ZA .Brookhurst & Adams • Huntington Beach HOURS: t :JO a.m . to 9:30 p.m. Dilly • Sun. 10 1.m. to 4 p.m. would be 1;1ego t iated in· divkl.ually with growers. Lawyer:s for Chavez went into Monterey County superior Court asking the $ a 1 i n a s Valley agreement be abrogated on grounl!s it in· terfered with employes' rigbts lo choose their own union. Defen d an l s are the Teamsters, the Grower.Ship- per Vegetable Association and foor local growers. Brian, director ol the health ' care s e r v I c es department wh.ich administers the huge fltedi--Cal program said he was "Dopeful we can flnd a solu- tion to tile disputed section 3DAYS ONLY Yards 'n yards of exciting Current FABRICS $ SALE YDS. ·oo HUGE ASSORTMENT T he se would sell for $1.00 per yard and more if on Bolts . TURN ON TV WEEK 11 •• ,,_ y•~ tu••cl ........ ,., h1pp•11i111 \.hil'!d ftl• Nb--Ew•ry S•l•l'lll•Y lit th. DAILY PILOI. A llarret• of 111 .. 11•11 A•d S.•IAtal Aid Mor. .. ,. \. ,.1.11 s.,.,.h.,,.,. .• , •• 1.11,, •••• 1l11l11d to \. 1111kt yo1r deller 10 ferthar. Wt 1how 1••1 o ••••I• of do11111f t1rrlfic lloys oll ow1r !ht store. (01111 .... , .. for,..,.. GRANT'S LIGHT IULIS SOlDINPAU Off OU I llMtTI TO ACU$TOMll IA. SUML~S STROCH NYLOllS 100% Polyester! Wrinkle·free ! STRAIGHT· LEG PANTS COMPARE! Thes e alacks will never lose their ahape . , . they're made of pure polye1trr! Ver· tical ribbinr, elaati· c.ized waistline. Fa•h· ion·right colors; 8·18. Grant Plaza e .Brookhurst & Adams • Huntington Beach HOURS: 9:30 1,m~ to 9:30 p.m., Dally; S':!nday, 10 a.rn. to 6 .P·~· I I I I DAllV 'llCIT SC Complete-Ne,v Yorli St0ck: Li~t -Jtloney'• Worell ' OVER THE COUNTER LEGAL NOTICE 1 Most Bo11ds .Sold 111 !.W 'VOt.K tAf) • P'•lllt n -.!tit h'-Ntii ~.... ,. .. .......................................................... ,~tw Y•~S'-<11 lAdWn99 lll~tt: r ...... Mltfl L•W Cl$ c111. 4ML1 '"'-L.W CllM Ott sr~.I Mltll """ .. -~~IM OC 1,10 2f :Ml• !l't !!"'--\o 01 Pee: ,toll It'll JI SI~ l'~ t-·~ !TFlfl l.f.: ll ~ ~ lo Otl"k flo'°' 13'~ 73 7 -\" --'-' n~'f~ .;: ,~ !!Ill ftt; ffi: = t: 1· o:o: 1~ .f, IC t"· ~ .t ; :t:~i-1'... rf ll~ ~ 1t: +t iz·~~"'A: ~ ., i~,. ~ :~ ~Jtl.;:o. 11f~~ ~ .t •• AC" l:J: L• ff f! ~ !b-1 ~=Ea 1.;t • 1N 21'-o m. •1• .fi .. l'lfl It' I l't lf! ... -... -~g:c,::,;. 1~ .~ .... . .... Lwe '•n ... ,. •lo Ir'\_,, .. _ lcld111efi:"',·:' i:, A~·'" .t\o +\: ... ~· • ., au ,. • ., M :f"~~w~·~~ tJ lNll ~" l!il11o .:..·lot 1tvE11~u 1': ~ g'i; ~~+Vi F-:'•" -i it ,~ Jt'·'t \r1'-1~ - 'A >S 11 I ~ ~-.• , 1tro. .JM 1)1 1•;~ ,,...., M -... Ill t?: lf" 2dl,. '"'--1\1' .r.: rr' '''•' !'" '" ll: Ill E!i;+ 'f'<• ,/Ii ,. ,,,. "" 'I ~ ·-.. , ' 1"' "' "T-1\tl Cllwt!Pe• ,,. t u.., u .. IS\o + .. n ·s.. 1,. .... "' • "" ,_,,1,.,i 2S )°"' I\ No -*CM• fllll M 11' li\6 11'1i 1~ ... ""'' lllJ IS I • •1 "I + ~ B' S'ILVJ • PORTER (" I d I I \Ill -'°' nt ~ • CKo I I VI )f ,., .. f1r I. IO ~11all1 1 olO \lj " • :m + • f•• -.,·.,, ,. 10,_ <t" '''" --.... i.t.tl Mt,lli M 'l .. Ill• I 14 -~• • '" pr ct I ti tr S \V DI Olllf •• l!'>Hll• ... 'r•k f •l't ltllll .. ll Sf tr•w I »,lot :M~ "~"' ,? '" *"' " "' " .. ,. " ,. loliotUn ~ t h ~ ~ I~ ~ltclr.f.! _ .irllll f '• Uil P!IJI $UO Jilli It 1-o ~ ·-l1tl 1 h t n ! V. ~d., Got tt. •,pJ\l •lh Clo;; .+-\lo k,11 j lll lJI~ 12" 23Vil + \0 Y h U d h t to pay) and IS "as ked" (the tr-1 H,11,.._,1 M Forrln1 t • 1 ~!lolll'!'I 1\1 I Uld:•I F JI'! A Prod i'f! 11 .a.;, It ~ f ~ KoC0 1/ 1.60! J >M. '~""' -Vo t 'ill lY.11,,2$1• :IJVil -14 0" may ave no ce r I , 1110!! or Sew' t!w F'l'!IN Ml 1:-..•, »1"1 Pk Pol \n 11'1 10119 I'll V. Air "'.J''·' 'j 'j' 11 1 , •I ' I.JO ,.---· ~" • 1 11,. 1w. r +, • 1 1 ON!•,. 11'1( .,. Flndl•Y lll'i 1\14 ~·-1 n , ... 1 ··~ 1 Mio ll\'O "" --.. ~ , .• :i Ila• ~·:t4: ., .. pr c;:e a dealer is wll jng to flOf :S;~•1 1;·...,1-. "'' au_ it " .01-t 'i;t". t 1 ,•,--"-" 11 • • ~ '!" • "1£ oot3 1 oo "~\ "" ..,"-+ .... • -.-. inste ad of ustrig the famlliar k d ••-t' 11ons , ,,0 ,_ "•IG 11,1 •e-1111 ,. , " ~ ,~ "' AJ ,.....,,.,!~ 1, ~ h ,;..:. ~ 1"" •1k' n .., 11.: 11,. , ,., rt<.C:o ,'·" , +•• word "bond." I'm frequently t a e), an u rc tran.suc ion,....,,,,"' rn1er. ~f' wF1n ,, P>'Oll ~ T• w j20\li ll ~~~~~"I~~ J 1.,.. 11!~ J3 : .... oi ~:. ·~ ,1 11 111. /,i'" -•=" ·t 1,1 ll• f: , _,. be t . 4ffi.r Pl'K•ll •l of lck"f 1 !"" PrJl1 M:r J T• I ) .... A;:.;oC .2' 11 I\ lt"'-'-filtNI 1· .: r~ ~ i4' ,._ ••1111.C !ill i. ~ 1-. l'J. +" -•·-Ing to the ·-·ri'tles may a a pr1ct com. •-u1m, ~!!,11 > ",-0•11 1j1t 1~ P N l'll< J T -!f ,~ ~1~u,~, .,•,. '! 1fl.<o o 10 o1t 111 ,.. •• n 1 Jtl'i Jt•i.,. "GrM1111111o. 1 t1 1'11i •1"1 1..-. , .. ~1 """"'" P.m .• t -..di !tie" or11 " 11 PubS '4M • 1'"°' T ...... nt .. .. .. IUM I I 20•0 2t 101 + l j ,... J" j,' .. " l!!i t,'>• \\ Gr;t11lW 1,51 U »1'• M ll\.io -t6 .11081 ,nalyi~ ,_ th'· series promising the two You the ..,,..11r.s cou111 "°""" l"' •\;o P~ s NC 101.t 11 T11tc1~" 1t+o 1 "'coS""" ._,. q H"' 1~ 1• + .... 1 4:.' ,,, -.. Gr•v<'•u 1.• 11 11,. 1,"' '"' + ,:.._ ""° !;\I Ml 1,11 • ' llt w Mii IM.lt• l"o.il 4'111 l :UO.. Pllblll\r 6\o '"' Tr:r.tl A$ I 1 A!.•llCIN -Rr :m 1 ... l ~ •~ Gt U P :» J) ~ 1tl!I ~ ,,_ ~·bli bowe Ill e 'th r ~'" 11V'°il/ ., F•tom • ~ P"'"'°" s '" l •?, 2\;. J Aif"<D ·'"" 1 lo ,,... : -+ ' ""•··• .1"' 1 11 " '°..,·· --',•, Glftor•r 1.r.:i· • 1~ 1~ ,,._ '.;' ~ "" • .a . " Tb'· I ,,.. c, vt r, w I e .iilo Cllkll 111 ... Fmlll c_, ,,,, ' P a,....., n n~ "'~ ,01 1o14 •lleellid t.ta ·• .. ,is. 1-11 111' "" >th as • llJ(;V'"inCOQle. ~ s .... t th .. ked" II ... .., m-~ FrMlf'I E ' ttl> Pwlty 51 I• " T~""' • ' m ...... vd r~ Im 15 --• \,.. .. 13'11o n-. thi -'•GI oNlll ' t .,.,. ~ II +"" ~Y a e as or se cti!'I:. ~ Fulv... ,,~ ! '"'" co ·~ , , •• 0, , .,~ . ' • ~ " '.:io .. a" ••'h ~u .. + "Gr W•r Frn1 1" It-'"' !4 d.llberate I •••"re y0<1 for· ' ' • -· M t 'lll -~ on " 11 lt~1 :JA. :11:i.. GIWPll!11l1 ... ,. ,,,,.. 16'ii It.at. -" • -< th · . Oii ~y. I -· 1l 1 • '• JDl\Nt • 1<~ 1ttc CPQ 11• '-' •II 1.M ~\\ 1~ T * · olO d lff'o l1U If\~_"' GW\111 llfl.N ' It" ).61-11\l , I .. r th at e "bid " price. •1-·1 '* lflclude ~rr·, IO ,,., )'~ OIHll CM ·~ ID';. Trrocnl G l)"o , .... AllldMn! .400 lJ -" Ofl'll iti.tO I 1••. \'""' h h + ~ GfW•""'"' .so , .,,,. It\ t\. +-... I ar&e perctn g t 0 II f4I., nwt'll111>. tnD • ., S ll T Swil ~~I ''~ l rf.1 0 1 1 "llf:UI .1511 ,j • n1 ,1, -'Vo om II JJCI lJI iil.. Jlli j''' -1, Gr~ N t ti~ t 1 21 _ '-o Q. WHAT ARE ~OtjEY:::tl,~" Dr ''""l:i'"~!c :!~1!~:!t..f>1C' ~~ :~lT~ D .~ ~"~' ~'ll!'i1~;01 1: llt-» 111wE pll.d u 1n 11w l'9o -'1G .JO , n 7J u . l.O.U .'s most appealing t.o you MARKET SECURJTJES? ~ ci!:'' 'v. ?~ :~elk l:t fi.! ==~ i! :;"' ~""' T~Olll~ ~" 1-r .... :: ~11ai::i 1P1 .,, ~~ '!" I ~ =-~!~ ~f 1'{; 'JI; 'ft;:: ~ g "' .. I !: ~t!i; ~r·• ~: +:: aren't bonds al all. By definl. A The h AF ... Pr r 11\.'i 11\l lf wr .... •l'I Atym ' UV, l!l'I Tvson f'd 101~ 1 "IDNIPC .:IOI • 1.. lMi llo Oll)M! , .. )ti.. 111. 'lJI -Ill GrumnlllCp , 1fl ,~, "'" loA\ , y are t e shor,l-lenn A.ITS 11K , ..... 111 11 11~ 1<:. Recot1 ci 111M ""' unnec 31, m AkN t.fl\ 1 \s 1'\• \\ -Miil• 1 , 1~ 1 " 1~ G11l1H111 ·'°' :11 r.11'» u ... 2J1? + ~ tlon, ••·y're notes or bills. And • AVM co 1~ 1j~ ~t11te1 Ho 1"" 1111 crtc1 31 121-> tJn 1uum nv. 211.9 ,.,.,•15UG 160 11, ~, •. ",.~ ~Vi lt.:. DMMlfl ·'°' It n 22 n t 1, GUMOh J./Ko ' sn. S1h m. t •• u11: J.Q.U S Of tile VlltiOUS bor· Abeflt In •'h !111" •~• 51• R!dclr Pu ll 'h 1• Un McGll S A'. .t.MBAC .JO 1 t • •• l•lll -~ !Of\f'O(;Cp ·'° 611 12\!o 11 l21'i + Gull 0 11 I.SO tlO ,.-., lll:o lt -'• a l.ar• percentag aren ·1 • Ac1!{ e1 •l't 1 ~11111 ,. nv. 111111 s111 " 11 vi akno• ,.,. 1~ Am1• e' 1.20 : 1:t; ''"' 1f:w; :; 11o an Ed11 1.10 220 »:+. 11\. i"" .._, Gu~ Rurcts '° '"' 1~ •\\ -•• • e t rowers : the U.S. Tteasury,A.n ,l• •t• •~ l"'"'w :r.i;..11111 Rwe1 e . n 111 n •1o v e11v•• 11Yt 1• A.mEtDt2_60 > lt\'} ,.~ im~ ~ ~1d11 DI • 1 1ii.-n n "'•GuuA11 01:ta > n~ 1 v.12~-·· d •• · the OO d k l •lr lldus 2i,o 1f ~Rub 2 7:W. AOll/11 M 11 U 05 Slll)tr 3'1'1 ~ ""'Hou :lS,. .-J ~ U \lo. -• on dl1 pl S I li"" S1,,_ Sl'1 ~ ... GUR11 011'>0 6 16\• , ..... 1'"'° Ira !;\I. m n m ar e s Federa l Agencies , state a ndAJ11trn F 10 1tv. eve :•, 1'll.1t0Mllf'I 10.,, us Tril l :ic.,,l'"'A<MH Dl.i.50 20s 1~ 10.., .,,=1 2!!,-000, •!·~ os.ll y•'• 0•1• ,",~•,,'•Gu11 1.u1 '.•• 6• nu ttio "'"-'• be -OO""" nd l l t • Alb;,o H :Al. 4\~ l S 7•'1 I lloy C4'1 2\~ l VD P•~P 11 I\'} M lrFHlr . .,:i ., .. 'lti "-' -· .,.,,., ... -. <Hllf SU pl $ 111 ,, ... '2iO tll• +11.o elt r. 111ty Me "'6"t a oca g O v e r nm e n s , cor· AllMr•s \\ii •1' :: ,.. ,,, Ai. sto11 u11o ,,..., u1111 std 0 , 1~ ""' Alrn" .IO 11! 1•"' 1...,. 11~ • • ii. 011Frt19111 1 ,. " ·-• Gu11W1r1C1 .so "" nh 1111 ,,,, + '• po tio of II t Af;f( "' •'i 'i1911 (11 7-. l'h ltvt11 Ho Jt 40 Vllt llld Hn 24 Am lllt1r J lo.I• 10\.1 lD'h -Ofl l.t .. I... Q Slo 4¥> 11 .. -•1 GlllfW plJ.11 I 3'\'t Jt ~ +', sold In the money market• ra ns a ypes. " u lM 11 1. '"" k 1'l.. ,,,,. 561111... 1•11 4'~ v.1 lO ~ 111. A11r~ 7.10 ,, JM• Yf\ 31"" ·· ·· on1t•1G 1.1, " Rh w. , ... -i.t Gu1rw 111!.1s 1 Uh Sl'-s.l1t + ,, • •I l tv 2'' J IA Ml! » l' S 111tn E 1"' •\• Vt nc1 St lt\11 U •1118 7' I~ -2.N JJV. Jm -t \oo !,'l P0-01'0.J •'•' ·~· ~.~· .~ +. \.o GUl!On INI IH< 11 a.i.. 61• And all of .... m ark .... are In general, ~ are the "I E• '" w. ,_ "'' •Sl'I ' fih" In >l'I • vi.tr.,. s m ""' 1• ... Cl l-. onPw --,. .. 1 UIO:' cu -I. t bl he ,,. .... o.. ~~ ''"" §§"II ·~ 1•''1 111~ I CDI• I 2\.o Wa<)'I All 11'-'"""' •C•n )s , 2~ 1•14 , "' °"I"" .\~ 1n ~ ' + ' -• - Part of"-· Y""t over.••---·nt-mosl mar.e a e, t most A.mo« i ~ ·~· r r ~ ... o. ci .,.., ,.... • .,., wt01w P ,',' ',',.'" ~~~fn". ,..,M n , ~ lh -:: ..• °",~;: ~·:! '~T 'it: 6'~ ~~ ! t .._,~w11 t.:ro 1 ,,._ 111,o ~ -" UJC -UIO".VU r 'd th I I~ ..... f ,. --i ""' ."'" ., 10\lo ... "' I{' J'' •v. CDI s-11\t 11 ... Wtlll lcl 1 2 I' .. ' onl C• 2 IU 1Sl. ).lb ).I~+~ ~WPrt I... ,•• ,.,,. ,,~ J.11.11 • ~. ---~-t 1· tart with So IQUI • e eas ,_,.T 0 ll~ ... El l M 3'1 • •0 en •'• ,,,. ·1-H 11-. 1 ~1 w llMCll ""' lh :~ '·tf ,..' ~ ~ 11~ 1 .• . IC• ptAJ_,IO ' :P\.o )1). s1•0 -' :. H<lllitll,;rt 1.0i :D Jlh J,h ll-" -1\t er ...... _, os ' ·•· income obligations. F or in-t::~=~ 'f1 '! .... ~~~~ni ;., ~~~~'l!D; 1:.,..ilv.C:~~11Na ,1 .. ,!~•oisrl.'1'.i. s ,, •• ~-=t: 011IM1•.•• 11 t4" u\, u• .. -;,~a::;·~.~\ • ''-1t~ 1i~~.;~. Q, WHAT IS 111E OVER-s••-am-g the I 0 U • OU" Gr111 •5'"' .._" H•,,..,, s 1t t1 S.I• CmD • .~, w11~ RE '" •·~ Am O....IVtll l2 ,,, 1o.; AO+""' onl 0 11 T...IO ™ n:i.. H\o vi.-+ 1• Htrnmnc1 10 1: 1:l" ,., '""-. '• wu,.;c, ... , .,.sy 1n14 ;51,1~H•ver.1., l•olts1-l•n 101 .. 1o~wit T• ''"'"'""DIMl -i>f,IMll J lll•Hl o ijllo Cont O!l .,2 l :U l.l'•J.I +1 ·61 • T HE-COUNTER MARKET? ..... e ad't ~. nd II ' Mldl('9 11\'l 11 "" Ht!l{ftl F 21 2'1'1 ""' Gro1 ·~· s~ Wtbll Re '" ' Aln!IPw l.U •11 75\\ t.... .... ····· Cont SU I I 1• " " ~=·A'" . n 11 r::; 1' mt +i i: c ... , r I y VIAY a se 1n" St ClDb l'li l HtrU l.P )J~ l'4 .... ti\ Vo .. .., 4/\') W1lo1r11 I ' Am Elllll ,, a • at + 14 Con• T• .IO ll1 It Il l• •1h -"" • a,• 11 ,, A. This Is the market in the money markets a ...... •St G "' .... 111o Hn11w11 511 • ~•ndol> S\li 1141 w,11,,. M 1,s." u, ~~··•"',',"1, .so1 1:110 it:• i'o _ "' '°"''01 ot11 n 1 n"" s1h ~"' -+ '" ;!:""' M D1 .,.so '3 1' ,,,,.. ~ ·• '"'· Am Telv lJ'<'I 13 Holm EP 'I .0 rnlli'I M "'" 'Ii W11c1! p .. ., nd ., 110 » SJ Cor>wQQ\I l.tO S l2<• 12•1 12\ttl + ~ ...._ Jiit .ot, '° ~ -~. \\'hich the overwhelm ing ma· U S T b 'll d 1 A1111ott1 9 7.i\~ ~ kO!oDm u. v . ~ .. 11c1 5, s ,14 214 w1m NA •1-t m " ff!tno .50 u' 11 t> +·;..; coo11. vn11 .$11 11 2•v. 1• '' -"'Htrcaurt 1 n :M~• J1 ... l•ltt .,~, J'ori·ty of 11· • e d _ ,. n c 0 m , . . reasury 1 s, ue n "-'*•~ 111 1 ,.. ~· 3111> "'' sc11 wa1 ,1i. 111. W111'1 M!Q s1. 6 " fl•" 11r1.t0 2. :u~1 14\" 24y, + 1• cooP1r1n 1 . .0 11 21'rl 11~. 1n, -~ =•v11 1(1 11 ,1\ •1\. •Ito .,,, ...... h Up •• ••e year and the virtual ··~ lnO ··~ $' H""""' 01 11, 1<\o So NE Tl'l ltl.o l1\lr Wf'" P~b ;"' 7h AmHDll l .ro ., ,~ 10"' 10'"> +•1i ,_ '" I • u lS IS -+ 1 •• ltD p 1•11 IS11 ,,v, ... ~. 'l 1Jou ht d Id w "" •nlln M 7ti ~ Huctc Mf l•l 5 SoUn G1 11 )1 111 W M Wh i 61' A Ho.... l.lll •11 St\'J U~ !Jh -'9 ~-! PO.ts ! 11 lt 'll II + 'M ~:::~s~~·1·: ll 1t~ It 1'\~ seCUrJt es ate g an SO ""UiVaJenlof Cash•••·~ter AtrHnl)f 7'I ~ a..OPfl 11 b Vt l wC.•CD 1t""'11ji W!NHo 1•~111\A Ho..,.plt 1J 1J 1J -'r'I 009 •nd 1.10 ?t lf-kll ... Jt">-l 1to•ll "fl .• lt tl~•l''•!!:•,::: us r.A rnme ls Fedl'! I ~"t ........ ,. m Ark MD,. 11\• .,. uo G~$ U\.I Uh w EISvc , .... U'li WIK Pl :ro 21)14, ""' ... _ .l• •16 ~ )CJ »... llt DDnR .. -111 »I• 11'• lJ .. ' so 1th 7'1'~ '" -· · vvve n • .ra Federal Agency issues next A,,n ,. 2~ l'I u•tl P •~ ti• '*...., f. s . wr,11w I! 1~ '"' •1n1n~•t .so 1ct .,. 1111o M. :-: ... c-"" i.21 4 isl. •s"" ·~ +: =:;:0~1b 1 :.: 1J~• 1f~~ 1re = ~; Agencies, m unicipals, cor-• "''kit 1v. 1lli HY•tt e» 1s 11..., 111111Vn j 1~ •klllt w 1 ..-" AMt~1• 1·"" ", :»14 >5i1o l&h -~ c.-1n111e .n. • 1'\• 1•\'i 'HI'} -\;, H"<l•Mn 11, Ji 11 :r.i. "" _1,, to Treas ury bills the most ~,.c ~a.et "II!" tiv. H,•..,•tt !'!!. . ~.· ..,slli Sid R99l1 l'i 22 Nin'!' £ ..._ s ~·"'°i...,.01o ,11 fl n'.:. t l +lu. carGw 1.50A .. ut 1s1 1s1 -2 Hein1 HJ · 92 16 :ulo ,.1., ).Ii • .+'• porates -a lthough bonds are .. .;Cl ~ ""'" ~ n '"" '~ •1~ ..... Cor-'111 .u 1J IN t"'-,,... t-11 ...,..,. c_..,,.. lo , 111o I\\_'• NASO l lotlngo for Thur.day, July 111, 1970 ... , ..... ti .............. "' -1111111t " ............,.. ' ..... t..-~.UO.• l'rie• dot lllt IMWI rwllll w ...,,_ MMWLllll ... WI ..... Over · the Counte1' . LEGAL NOTICE also traded iD minor amoun tJ . ' • ., 12h Ill'. Ind o.. n\Ao ll"' ""'PholD .12 .... I • -\lo Coit BCICll .JO :II u ll\1 1)11 -I~:::~ Pih.. I " 11h u.;; U\~ -J marketable o I secur ities · P:1ro .\t '• 1" 1,.... s~ ~''' s •N•1~1 Lio "• J!._ •1., x » -1-. CO"llll'I• c°"' 11 :n. "-S\o ~'ler 1111 '° I• 16,, 1,,_. 1,., Oii lbe •• ~-~ ... This u· '".· shorl·ltrm tax..a:empt oblig• •• "tlnt •l~ ... 1n11 N11c1 t~ "' :,e.~1~~1 '5f :',',• -,, 14ll'.' •"' cPc 1n11 1.11 •1 :io•. ~ 'ltl. -h nP 10 ,, u 1, 1,•, IJ\t 4 '• ..... IJIMI... Ul'l'. 1:.... l.itthl li .d t OtW(ll ··~ ... "'xco 0 ll! ffl " ~~1 I • ••o ... C•-l,Mll 10 i.1oo ).I ).I lolffl'lffDll Cl• ' :Pt ""' + •• m.rket Wbl~ ~ v olume --.a .....,,,, '"6'"y qui 00. os tn P .?\• :\'I lfl!r••• ~ Atns;:,_•1f ,.·.," ,_•1• ..!.~, 11•, 111 + 1, cr11111tt 'i" 1 1 u •• u 11. H.,..1 nc .:ior is s'. .l 5 +, ~ E ~N A~ t ded · lbe "'°"" z.> 26 if'll '-' ~ ""' MUTUAL ,SoA -"'• 111• n..-14 C•Dfnpl(n .1111 • IJ>.. ll•1 1J;.. *' lottfCOIM '5e j', J;<0 ..., :is~ ' Ult tt)ll :-. of t ction d f ~ ra ID ITIOlley •riet.1 1~ ii" Int~ '" .fl\ J~ :;:: StJ' l' l l •l'-o <1111.io ., .... +\lo CrouteHlnd 1 I 11h HI,!, 71'~ -'' HerW!Fd i.IO U>o '!'-2-»'i Vo NOTl(I 0 1' INll!NOID fltANll"I• var"'.y r1n11 I war I market.! are large (l t00,000 • ,,. !'"I •• ,•,w, "'••-'·''• •, . ·-··· r.'·'' l~l R,_. ~~ :Mh +I~ C•DWCDI !Ari 1'1 "'' f\, ,.., -l-I• Hftlbl1ln .1111 1• J/11 l \t ll'I• = 4 NOTICE 1$ HEREIY GIViN ltlal II tbe listed eschanges com-""' ... ...., ~ ..... .,,, tJ\'I +I Crown Drt ., IM. 121'1 lit. -~""""' PKk ,. lfS 2J~ n1:1 »>,, JO(!( L cu~ e1o1n11 11<111"'" •• a -and over) commercial bank .. ~!..."" J ~ i'•"l!i!v',v l'f ·~ 1fVI r"...,.s1~11 . .!f 31•, "1.._ '•'•"• 111'4 .+-,., ,....flleH 1.60 61 '"' 2tl'i "'"' + ~ Hllln VDt!tee n 1 ... r.i. 1"-, C.11""11 lt-•dl Ind Dev.i-t Co., bined.• And this 111 the market " " -tVi "" -03 t•~ JAi -'o\ CTJ Caro 40 1' It 13" 1)'• -I.I iilltonHoltl I 17 »'° lJ"1 321', +·•o ""'-bu1J"'"' Hdr•n II ,,. NewlOll hi~ ·--k I certificates of deposit; lar1• 1w.· ~~ .. ,_ m" ,~. I 111 11~ ~="' FUNDS !'t'lr ~ . .:.ti 103 ~ I 1\.11 -... c~·~i ... , ' ·~·· ,.,. ,,... _ ~ Hob.lrt 1.20 ' J2 .... :rn .. lJ\~ -" w c I MtN CllllfDrni. l11ltNll. w UI IWlll no m a r etp ace, no .. .. . .., '61 IV. I'll J"' .. , Cudi'IY Dll.?S 16 II lS\.'t ,. -~-Hoe•nW•I .to ,,1 ··~· 1•''• ltl'J +-" ti •• .,_OI 1 lo Clifford llHt.f(!I ond ( $ J'O 0 , 0 0 0 aDd more) ,~, JlW 3: JJ:C:.:t: f lr? fl1 !~~Tko ".~ J33 .. I+ •s·... ~ +-'t CulllO•n .21 S! IG<i 1010 10i:'o + \t Hott EllC'lrn ,•,'-S\'I S~ .. _ 1 ticker tape, n ot even any de 1 ti •• 1 "' • ,.. 1., .. s ''~ th '"" + ~CY"""'" ·'°" 1 »>• :io"' :... -""'Ho11c1!.1"" .n '"' tS', tfu -1• .. 0.1tt!Wmlf\f co .. Inc .•• C•U,,..f'lf ell'· nornna ons 1,11 conunercia HI ,. " ""Wi t .. ... Am Zlflc ' • ' ' 'CwMOrYO ... ) 11"1 llV. 11\>o-f \'I HDllY "' l'ICI l IS'·· U•o u~.i-,,, -•llO!I ....... llush..eu HdrwK 11 11• rigidly fi xed hours of trading. El ~ JI~ J•tntt F 2f'• 211. ,...,.,1111 .60 , 1t o., 11'11o 16~• cuo lu wri 1 11 11 io 11,-. ll'lfo +-,,.:, Hon:lftlll• .e 102 n n tt\IJ • '• N-"n W1r , Cool• Mbl, C•lllornl1, I I -·•tie p aper notes ol COrporaUons· • .,. '"" '1'A j~ ~. 11" Arnellk .~ M If th ID +1' Cuti.r H 1.:ta tG "" 11'0 11 -" H_..1 I.JO 30' t.~. 1' 77V1 .i-2•, trio ttltowlM JlfOPlfW -ioc.MO t i n genera • ~.... s are bank • pla I ' c ""' "14 ltfV Fels • .... AMF 11'1( ... 111· l •'" !JI~ U.l.o -1• Cl'<toos 1.fG ' ,,,,, ,.\, 14\o -\It H-I I I.Ml 1 ..... 10\~ 20"' -·~ '1• MtwMn W••· C.ft ,..,...., Ct HfDrnlt! bought aod sold in this m arket er:! . acce nces n c"i: 1~ lS\lt"" k~~ ~~ u~ ~n; 11-!VESTINO Imp Gt~ I·" •.n ~P"..:' 511 I 30\\ """ ?t'I< ·t-<~ Crl>IV'M 1.611 ts S4W J.l\.o J,lV,.. = 17:.!i ,:161111 3/ u;; 11 21 ,-,. 1on ti'.11 '''°'· tblu•et. ""''-'· 111o denom1na lloos of $25,000 and ,.,. I" JG ' ic11JS1 pf 11 11 COMPANU<S inc fdl .11 ._,. "-"'"~ c..;0 l!t .,,~ "'vt "''• .+ 41 P-.....,.Mll\ A 11• 16 • ur'' ,,•., •• ,· "'""'' •lllf tuPl'llH of ""' ce<l•l11 by ne gotiation through dealers F 1o1t• "' " I~ Kt VI( U lo u~ lf'llllt!!ld .... S.» """~ t '40 ... ISM l514 !st;, -HouHllF t I 11 ,. 35t( ]I -I ~ 1wtlne11 ~ H "Clll!erCI lltMfltCll a •d bro•ers J-ated.the nation Up ; edeaJ Funds a ft d ,~· '.,' 11• l 'I> IC'tlt G•n f • :: NEW YOR K !A.Pl \nd T•nd 11.• 11,d Am"I .11 · 11' ":i': ~~~ ?t~ ~·~ g:!t; \~ ·11 ~: ~ ~ t ~~ Mfit•f ,i.,'~1 1 111 141 lot l •11111 o.w1_..1 c .... loc:•IM •• 1u ,. 11 ...... E urodollars. ~.... ':.._ ~ K!!:"'T \o ~. ittlons. WPOlllll bv nct1!rt J.# J.11 •111coM 1 t0 If l•t. 1,., 14 +i, O•i •na .-id ~ 22 !i2'111 -\Yo "=""', •"!'·~ J •1~ .,-. '"' h N......, wi v, c_.111 ~. C•1tton11t. over and communic•ting via 8 .. , .. ot-• • • 1i. Na1ion.1....,. r-~TGN •·'' 1.» A~ch Hoa 1 xi 2."" ttr~ 1,., 0 .,. 11'111 ,.1 It ~ :w~ ~ -m , ' ~ n "" •• D\W\111 n,. 111ree 1earo l"'mtdl1lfff ~ (But J assum t these a rt r("f,1! 1j• 11'" KK~J!!! 1'' !;:\ ••kin DI Sotllf'lllu /~-v Ci ID.1S ll.11 AAcor1>NSv 1 l IS 14lo ll t '·'o 0.11 l'tOCfll SJ ""' ·~ t\.\ ..... ttlP · !' ~~ JJh ~ 4 ~. I.. H •• ...~ J•ct l. CMlfDr'll ,,,. a n immen.!lt t t I t p b 0 '\ e ! 5111 ,.... ''" I °""''"· Inc.. .,. nv Gu 1·"' I.• """ Cl•1 , 20 ,•, ll§ r.... ~I ,.. \.;, vcoC10 1.1• 21 lJV. Ulo. lSl'I ... \II " •1NG•'''J<... l .. "'" •II! -+ •"· • • •-bt'g to be of prncu·cal •• w sv u·~ 24'11 K"'" E •'-1r.. ork H ,, wnkn 111v 1nc1 i,tl s.• As>ICl>ICP ·'IS , .. , _" ,,._ .• ,, ... ,. ,.. +. i=:""'Gt . •:it. ~ *"" + conducltol lwllMH und« "" followlno '· WU om(O ll"t 13\\o K11'1 F1D 10 .. 11\Qo .... , N<\ltlllet 1nv11:1 lti 10.IO Ul.t) -..CoOU I'"' ,., .. ... ~· .. Jolll> Ill 1-lfh ll """""•I 111o 1o1_1.,. -rn1u : networ... · l I t I'll di •-M '3 6' kn• Cu1 • l14 111 no bMn '[(:uon G.._ iii.Pt ',J , ~ •,•, .. ",,',', -_ l~ ytn~.\ j·.•,, ts -.tll'I 2,." •y•• _+111t ll'W"ll'I . ?• •Al 1Jft ll\~ ::.·1\ Jvly 1. '""·M.11 1. 1t4f: c11ffl><'!I Moot of the dealers who in e r es 0 you: so spense •rmM a •1 u K•••t "Pc •·• 1•• = Cbkl\:: "°"""' s f'dl J.olO :3.N ~"~ §:;p ,. .. ... 'L ..... no .M S""'d 1 o.. ,., 2014 20 'JO\lo + , .. ,, wi'th them \n the above •nrld ,..-,· J\o\o 1e1 ... 1"1 '"' :;Iii t•lktcll to11[i;'. u1 11n "ii Arcll•~ ,·,. ", 'i'•'~ ','1 .. •,•,•,. -21• l. PIO' ... 11:111 t1 '' ,, .. , ..... .,, i.:ta 1 ~ n~ -,._ ~~ •-rcn & OtvelOPt!'lf<lt co.. •• t ct b·u · -• d II ,, AAtM 15\.'l 1' Kl"D' e1 • s -Tn. f<ltt,. .,.. ·~ s. t l . ~.(II 0,,· , , .. • -111 ,. CD 2 •' JI a u, )CJ"' -!ti i "''' ... ,. f\'t I 'I-~· MerM1111 or., Huntl"''°"' at•• n . ransa t ions \II o ars g ph) ! .._ '"" 1 I< r11 c l • • "~ s 'I" 1, s .. 111 ,, ,!. "• • u1.,:i:. -~ rJ> 1,11 ., uM. ,.,,_., 16~ .....-111 HY "'""' :ii • u'i .1 •L 1.:<! 1•, c1111ornl1. ' worth of business wi th Pfora ra · :~ 1n1A Jlo J~ Kn•11 v':it 1 •;, 111.'t ""''" 1.l 1 1.u s.v e1 :n t:n ~~1~:::-g:s "fl ,. .... 11 i .. M1111 1.11 11 ~ n 1t11o ~ v. Id '~Pw 1~ " ~ Mi: 2~ t MoY ), lfft • PreMnl: Ct!llOl'd Q. WHAT ARE THE BOND •PTO. '\" J IC••l•I• ,.,,, ' "4ml••ltr Fu!Mb: •• p~ J..11 ··tt "•mCDS1 1:t.o 11• 2rt 1tt; ,m +:: ,. "r .lO 11>11 11\1\o ~·~' 2'>.o +I\ ldff ,., . Ht "' "" ll\11 ,._1! ::Ollt'hwW:: c:i:=~~ •• 1fa.. 1" customers and each other M ARKETS? :~e O:~ ~ ·r' ~~. °r..' 2~: 2~t!' Gfwln i.11 }Ji 1~:.. 111,ri ,;:i~ ,::n ~~:'.:, 111u..io ': ~ ~ 26~ . .... M4"'.60 k 1::: 1::! 1~ = ~ ll\"'~,~~ 1 ll ii · ~ ±:1~: Ti. 111111 1"t•ndftl 1r1n11er wlH be every year never meet face H . · .,,, GD 11'4 1t11o .._.,.., 11., l\ls • 1'~~ •.29 •·" vv t.IO •·• Armr p1 • 1s 1 ~ 54 l!"" .:...i · · 1t11 i°' 11 "4 ,._ '"' -II' Ctn . ..nf, 11 31 JM> 31lO con-•'"' °" .,. •lier Aue111t II. , . ,, A. ete IS where longer-•K MG tl• '~ u 1111 wo1 ,,_ "' " v11" •.31 .i.1t Hncock •.•1 '·'' Ar1n11Ck ·IO 4(1 21 '61<> ,.... _ "' •"'•"• '1.••' •, "I!;:'' ""/F »,J~ -+ '•' 11•1 ~'B·l! " s. ..,., M\4 ~·"' '''°· ., ttw offkt of Erk IC. l.ewl1, to face; they are 'vo1cts ; l obi! f , lb I IJ\t C•p l~lt l!Mo U rMll\ •• 1k. 1l: ~ .. 1.i,',',•ld •. 1, i.1S ltn -l•ll Armc• D1l 1S i ,.. !!: !It: il M lSI\ ..,, r.. 16t ft t . ' •·--· the>'r .. -rd over 1 p~--1.5 erm ga ICM o t va r ous ..,,,. 11111 JS L•n\"I M ... v s.s. s..M ~ .. ""•" '""", •• '• .. AfmRub 1.-.0 2~ v, o.·-··-'.• ,,' ,, ~,,• -, ~I'.' 1•Pt.:.. z,,", ·~ "' u11o :;::; ·~ .i Low, l5'!i E. .._...n ... ., IJUllC ,· ..... r 'ar t ded fn t '" VPS """ 11 LUllY Lii 11 lt All•"' F .1J .SI .. . ...... .Vo CDt~ to 14 I _,........ ,. 1P ..... im." ,..,.~ Juli. 211. Full•rlllfl. C•lllor"l1. ...... I e ra . um, ~r11tt , .. 2U, l"" C~I 1 ' ,., .... le , .. , t.01 ~Ill Bl 1,.01 ,, ... ""'I" '"" 1 ' 111. ' ,. !« ~ °"1Editl 1.olO 12) 1111 UY.I 1,.. •• . JN"-• 1..0 2tt t --•• J l(ic l.. CllffOtd Prices at e quoted a s "bid" . t lb k t f te hft ind l' 3'41 Lino: Miii Po ,,,. A I 1 M ) OI "' 1 6 u 1 JO . ' "•·-'l·. d,. -.I~ .... 1' 1 .~ 11h 11~ t "" tlld~n HCI ... 211 .::: lt\.lo ,;: ..... 0.1911; J~IV Jl. ltPO. accepttd with COllPlete trust. • the bood m arkets subdivide l::' ... ~. r· ttt l = ,c;,, ::\'I :~'· t:::!o 1"d .:U 1::1, :: '1~ '1:~ '.:U ~~lo~: 'j nv. '2~ 'l'I.: +"'mo.: Es1.:fS.SI 1\ ~1" = ~ -u. I~ c.1:' 10 ~ ~ • -h :J,\. ~~s.,.~".:s":i~i H' in o, e mar e or corpora :,irs u111 11•,; 111; lOlll•w sr . ' ,.::: o:.'11 1.n~ .:" ~111 2 t.:tM ."2 ::: 0i~.11 1"l #~ ,.J ?:" .. ~/::tr1 :: ~ ~ 1~ ~ t,.,. l~\Prt:~ •1• ~I'll ~ .. Il1.1 f ',, '•,•,,-,,,, ~t!"",,,,..i. LEGAL NOTICE bonds; for U.S. Govtmment c~1.~'~1 1~1ci1~~"' t::.1 {,~~ 1f,_, 1i~ "'C:~1,E•orr.;i 1.11 !::: li' 'ifi 'tII ~!.':." ~ , •\'} '"" •I'> +11o ani, 7.fl' u1 •,•,• ',!"' ',"' _ • •'-' .~·", r,",u,. •,•, •• u,, .. _'.I:•,, ----==:::o-7.:;;c.c;;:-,::;;:;---I bonds a nd notes· for longer-C~•h•"' n '' l~~ c u 1''° 1111:rrie 1.t1 1.n 111 J •.Cl.I•--" •nc1wE1 i~ '° 101 :it\ '° •Sii s·-·-... ' .. Putllllfltd °'""' Cotll Cl.ii, P!lol, N01'1Ca INVITIM ••DI • . Cllldfol I'~ •vt Mid GEi l)loo 1• lnv ... 1 7.SS t .2S u., J.ll J.n -'llCEI 01s:11 '., :M~ 1•.! ,,:? +Vo oi.s Cll,:MI ' 11Vi lf l'o """ ~ ... IMRd_ Pl1.l5 0 n 1. l2 l2V. + '• Ju,. JI, 1t11 1'11·11 ,._ ,_ """1 .. 11on OUtrlcts 14 term Federa l Agency issues· c.u, J " 11 '231~ M•I 1111~ 'lt '""' S<N;'d 1.01 D•• J.•• 1.n A 1 llldllkl 1 .. ., .... 01c?u11111 ... 20 Mt • ~ t"i . 1,,1.;., str 1 M l•lfl 1<11, t'l>l + •, ;::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;::::::;:;1 ,,.. .,. , . ' (1111 U B tl'o 22\4 Mtll~fl '\ 61 5toc-7.21 1.H =fl~~DG' 0S.'1 '-IS AU.ltd! pfJ.IS .~~ f" = ~ +-\i ~l.oolcl. ,,bl .» S1~t ~ W O ~ llVllClllJ ,!tp 4i ''" I 7 -'• IJNITED STATES N ATION AL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW OPl!N SATURDAYS ' i. P.M. MON.·TH UIS. 10-1 P.M. P.llDAYS 11·6 P.M. 17141 540·5111 . L.cetMI Ii i S.. CH&r Pl-. CM,. MIM •111. VICt Pl'fl ........ Mf E. H. LEVAN Or•.,.. cw111t wlll ,...,..., *"" Dldt for mun1c1pals. c;uv1n Mr 1 ''• u 11 M<1mt ,._, .,, '"' ""' EQ1v J.93 •.lO .,• -, '" .SI 1.n AH IUdl.!t J 3 ,,. 'II" 1 IGIDrtlo .6" J n" 11 11'4 'II "' /:f:F, pf•.50 illO " '" ., -1 ..... 11• 11:00 1.11'1 .. MoNl•Y· ·-·· 10, (i.lrll Ml lfl'·· 1• M111I" M J'io l~ .. ,.. Gt!~ sos S S.~. ,, ... 150 ····-" l! .. 02\'i ...... nu ... ~ .40 31 10" 1oi.. ID"' ... "' nt1 .10b II UV, 1• 1•'4 + ,, 100; ,1 wntch !Im• ~v wlM bt: •uD11c1v To · illustrate. la!lt 1nonth r1.~10" '~• It\ Mtnor c µo 'I" Am •n• •'.u .:s1 !-',"t. A1ch 17,52 u:" A111;-c~·.'f tt .,_ "° .. u.,. DI " 1 1 11•,, ?1"< 11* -~ 1111 c P11o1.1s n ,..,._ n,... 1t11r +1 OPOMO ond t•omlMd ol !he olllt• N J B ll T l ho !lint Mtr I', I'~ •r Mt<1 l'i II' Am Mui 1 40 1 ot '-""'IY •.Pf s 'I AJIU' c-..., 2 •o 2:ttt. ""' -\\ Ol-1 ..JOb :t'W1 101~ 1&2'• I~ --ot lnspfr Coo 1' » ~ d 4s _ ', 01 in. Dlstrlci., 1..,. fnlt Av•"~'· ew ersey e e ep oe liMDl'I o J"• 14" M1rm Gr 111. •~1 """N G11> i JO ,:s1 ~11\• Siie •.so ,:, A l•CP .. ~ •• ,.. JV. t'n -V. Oht<'l"" .,. Jt t u1 '"" -.,.1n1er(o 1.10 16. :rt'l'I tto.. tt'~ -t• ·-······ ....... Calltlffl/t, fefo tllt .,,..Id thro•"h an "nderwrlt\ng -·-, '•' ','" ',i~ "',,',''lw,r t •V. ttVi ~m PK -v•ll • ! t l"V J.'4 .... ATO hw; .... 'fo 1~12 )1\.\ IJV. + ... g1>1M11 l .U• JI '2<1'4 Ml'. tot. . t111rlkhw: l.IO I ,,._ m i m. -~. ,....,., • ...., -" "M .. 1!1\111 ti AIKllot Gro111>: ti"' Mal 1.11 I.fl Al>tw• P~DO 1 ~ V" fPfllptt .3' JI ll W 11 lf _,,.. 11M •,IO ll»S W \lo ill\\ "l\• ... IDllowl":~lE 01" SCltAf' MITili.L Syndic ate I new issut Of 9.J5 f= t; S~ ~ ~ ~!)'..';y I u~ .. ~~ Clpjl '·· },II l .::..11 S.r~~ :U.I •llfllmll\ lfld il :t !t: m '!._v,V. ~" .;f: ': 5:11 S:>;. S~ ~ 1\6 l~F~FrN~ :!ff ~ 1m r,; :+1~ s.ec111uioo11 No. Miit I bond t too \StOOO (_DJllN ~ •'t ,t? M;li. G '~ l11~ f~~ :::1 ;~ C•llH n .U ll.M ::: C;, !!-•1 10"" lOV. ''"' -\lo OOflnel!.v ·" IO ,,,,. l•W 16W + ~ 1111 .... v '''° 205 2l'A 22\11 ""' -'. Ilda """' bl Wll!tolttolf ., ttw 111m percen S a Colon ~•r ,;._. , • .,. :=:ic H .... '"' Fd 1..,, 1.29 , " ~1111 '·" 1.•1 • .......,.,.,.-. st J: ,.,_ ,.~ ~ Oorlt; CP .JJ 1 IA " ,_-+ "111.1..,111 1.p. • lm 'fl? lf\t t 1, 111110llod iw -Oblrkb "' •caro11roc:1 a. bond). Last week the bonds ~c:::'~ir ;.~ ~;"' Mf11Jt,''t1' ~·· i\ Vent ,' •,",.' •,] L111~"1 ''" 1.;ri;~ "-' Inc :.o J .: 'm 2:" + ·~ ~. ~:ve;. 11 ~:% ,: -~ 7 ~ :~ 1no~\ 10 'J: !~~ li~ h ~ -t• wllll •II ~roll'lllo!\> If IM -lllct no.... be' 1Jou h nd ld G lf'O 11 .o 1 12\0t 17"< iii.POiio O · .If M.'9<11 In 1 fl 1'0 .,,_ ot' I > l 1•\.'t l•llo 14\f! •• ,. Oowe!lrn i .M n '"' 6, '°"' .... ..;. ll'li Ml-. H tfl:., 11"6 lU\ +: l: S-.Cllkll~ bM bllf'lkl .... hlrlflff wert mg g I a so :;, f'1 ., r.l.'.! MlcllO c" tllo ..,. •NDCll l.O'I 1·• .."''" itt .. " •-Pd 'l.ll ., .. "' utl ........... OrtvoCP 1... s '~ " lS\lo -ft l11t """' .10t ,. ~ II .. 111.ot -4 lntorrNllon t'l\tY 11t IM•"*' •• "" in the bond market a l more s-1111~ ·6 i•. Mldtou • ,',"' 1J'4 :=~~Dllllh~~ ... ,. ""''! l#. ;:2,1, '•"",. Aitoc Oll ·1,. 2t 1~ 12\'t IJIMo +" ~1n11 1."° 1s t!,l; C ,,,,., + ~ 1111 Hk:ll 1.20 1u -37llo lM9 ,._,,,. •bow""'""",.....,_ Nt·1•11 ar h 07 (IOO) -"I ~om Psw 7•i • Mldw Gf :io J 11o FundA • . .o s.•M••l• 12,,1,.12 -8-rD'1fi •~ l2lt-i \'l \"l~..,1.so ~ J.lt4 J:\l)-•o s.it11. tan t .. 117. -,rcuuc ng 1~D l~ l:!n;:r::~~ i~1~1. ,•,4a ',·Ht;, '&-1 1:M 1:01••0ckW .lll "'f:I~'~ v. ttw~•t ·~ ~av.+"'1~11A:C1ft'' s1"" +F. J. WIWM $Y1Yetl•t tht or1gtna y teJd rom 9 .:ia tnD Intl )1, n,. MD AK~ J 3\.o ~.r, •10 410 Mii t Jt flt ·::"~""·~l"·u !Ill 1 It• 11'1•~.. t~ ""II t~ m!' k't ~h'I -+ .. , nl S.H l .olO :Miit ).I~ 91¥/ = ~ Ol•eclor of Flntnct 1 "'' roe J , J'lo MDII s,, 3h •'• "" D .. · Mer I'd 11'.o 12:., t 1'11 "\.'I 21\!o + I.I r•d 120 5' i."'" ·~ .., + "'I"' "!' l.l~S ~ -,_ • P""'ltMO Or•nH Co.it Dtuv Pl!ol, percent lo I. 72 percen t. CDl'l'+r•~ 2', l MDII~ A 1s0" 1•,\ l:.i~ 1~::t 1~::: :~ ~"• 1~!! ,'·!! '"'Pnt .l5P "io '9~ i!li'°l'.I '::? +iv, 1n .tOt ,. 1'11> ?5h m. -~• nfl'lli&. DJ~ t z1 1:10 I» · 1 tJ ' J~ty l1. ""' ,.,.,,, Q. WHAT JS MEANT BY ~::1,1',,<><I( ':'.~ 7~~ =:.. c~~ 10"4 1 1 ~ Eltr1ll l(nl J ,lt I.ft MDOcl1'• 11.1f11~:n !'!!p, "'t I 11\1\1 1 \ ,,V.-+-~ ~~:: !·ffto lSJ 11:1• 1n~ 1fi~ =1!1 ~ T :1~: t n1~ llf'" n~ it'' ~ t 11'1 .,... Moo p ·~ ' l erlc Giii oll1 S.30 MtF Fd 1,, 112 •n'ii 91 ·1.)I 21 ,.. 21 __ ·~ 1~ °"'"""' p!JJO 1 S!!'lo Siil~ 50\; .-. ln!T& T ,,H . I 1 1S ,J +, U ND E R W R !TING SYN~ ~:'~~n l. i; 16 Mo '.i.rs 11>:! 121. Blalr Fd J.51 '·" MIF 0111 ill •:.W >ill l ,NY l d Jli ~ -~Duo LI 1 6' 1:1 21~ 11 11 ··~I'' 1111 ,50 I ) 1• 1t +. CBRDREN LIKE UNCLE LEN TE' .. , s • ., Min T" Ill• II\~ Bondl!k S.IJ s.•1 Mi.us Gv ,.: II." r J.U 1,n • ,. -·~Ill! .Or 1 11<0 ltl~ l ' 1'1l + l~ ,·",t T DI) 4 • '2\11 11 I -1•\o DICA . D.Jm y, lQ'~ IH~Mlll~' ~1 ~ ,, losTon St •.St 1.'N Mu OmG •?l fSI •'1>0111.Sfl I.lo ••• Ymol~d t/1 3 f'Ao t \i f\(o -1\ nt T Diii:• H 6t '' " +1 t 11\o M •Ii s•" f'lott Fctn t.Cl.I t .I Mu °'"'" 1'n •'.st .,.,, Cit .15 11 ~ :iov. 7 1141 ,.,.,, "° .. ,.... J\:o S\'o v. In TT ,, .. ! y j ...... M"'o .. v. 1 A. This refers lO tht ill-~~~'°""•t 11:':11\~g:c~111D 10,.1 1 ~BD$IOll 1 11 1.IJMutjno u :tsn:fl osk l11C .10 l l l't llw.1 '"'.'. · EF -1nTTP1N '.ts 1 .,~...,., =·- t b nk ho f 1 ,,_u, 1 11 M iit 1 1 &orld s1 11.:1& n ... Miii ,.1 1,. 1111 •'-Ml• f I•· t\I ,1;, • -• -In! u111 1.411 ',! E ~ ~ -·~ v est men 8 ers W Orffi ~::. Co ~,·• av! M:!rAt c El 1'o l~ Bu~toc~ C•\1111: I! ll NEA Mui i 11 1 .. •: ~ pt t 12h 12\1\ IN\ '.: E1olt Pch .IO tS 'ICI'• :itU. :ta\• _ 1, Int Util A 'h r 211; -'< g rOUp!(syndieates)tO N•I Up rw!Cf'Q •lo !'o M...,.rl. .. 11-l•lt'~ ,,u!._..! 1 j·~ •• · Nol 1"4 1:111:11 llll~ttJ50 1n, UV.. 11'ra l'V.i EutDCD 1'9 • ll''z 111\ lf'>+•ln:lltll D'1.lJ .~ ll -'• ~. c"''" c 7'1,, •Yt NCC Ind ]'• ., •• ·-...... , ,·.Ntt l"vlt •Gt 6.$1 •• ~ ... , .• " D lJ 114 e1.1 •I• "-'r S11 •V. IHO 111+~,n e<0tc1, ... l f"-''• th f d t b I) l. ' c n 1 •• .. Not ~9<ur S .,_,,.. · 7t :Mot. ll '"° '' E•ol GP: .12 ll I"~ 2"'" 1"I:. _ llt nl.,NC:t 1 11 I !Iii -110 e un ~ . o uy a new issue 0:~ :,,• ,,! :~ ~:l'~..o tv. ;l't N11w s •.11> 10:01 ••l•n , f:\o.01 ••t:.i'c·~ ... ui :u;,. :n1~ n11o __ 1.., e.,1 v111 1 ,. 1 ,... U\6 11...,, lft lorDCt 01 s 1 n _ '. Of ··c"r1l1es from \be bor-~tt OH ~.1\\NAtCtt A 'IO"I NYV"!11.H ll.M ,_ i•>1 ~i:i'··-···so t lO , ~ ... + E11KD\11~·,. OlM"'m'llllY,".:.:1.111!1 •tncl ." ' 11~ -·· = ., &..,.M FO 6 It I 11 Olvia ,.:ll · .. .,. 60 l'M;. 2'fV, ,... -1• EolOllYa 1.40 ll 1111, ,1 j11 -\ ll'lter•ISlr Ml 161 1 • Ao W.0 . O•lt Gt11 H •o 7G NCmDCD , .. 1'-CG FCI i JO '" v .U edl""'" . .lO 1' '3 ,,.... ~ !chllnMI .J7 lj ~ !'" 11,.-1ll11Ter1Pw 1.24 1 llH Ir: \ffl>f 10 rower at a set pr1ce. g:11•nP '"~1t NM•.ou1 u •.11''capamr 11,,·,. Pf St~ J. '·" Dic:k Jt 1l:M..,:n .. .:.:,.~c1c .. o J .H 1 J\lo l •+·~l-•8"1 1 tl' !Jl:+'• B . h. h b k vii Fd •Iii \ NII G&O n .. 1.t' ·' . ,. lncorn "·IJ '" 8eKnA ,.. --" t • ' '"•-•Etl '30 11 ~I ••• " doino l IS, I e an ers .., Ml• IS " Net lib 2~ tSlo c .... , In• 1.61 ... Stoc• • 1'• I , . ~· IO ..... t.U -"" "°" ,.. I 1 J \\ ll J14 \;, G 1 "" -"' nd' .~be . Oeot'Ot '" } s•,Nitt Med ~A.)l ... C•Dll Sl>c J,31 S.12 Nel Gtlh i H i tt -::;111 .JO '°' 1""1 1• 1•~+ "o loG .10 JI J \o Yt l V..-"\-•111 1.:g J ~ 111 -If u erwr1te t issue -pro-o..c1b ,, 1<1 , ''"' Ntt P11 '" ,.., ce111 Shr '''ID ... Neuw Ct1 J » 1't j ,•, " .,. ••' • .!t ..!',,'· .!~.u.,•,'." '.~~1c~·""... ""• ·.~.' ~~ •,• ·.·. · .. 1:::~i~ l:t ,J 1 "" '''" nllll = },• 0 .' I 1 i• > H ' Sf!<ll 7lo ,~, (~1nnl1>11 Fu,.,,1· N~uw "O 16•1 1,·, el Haw 60 '"° •• .,.,. ""•• "' ~• * • 1t v ide the funds to the cor·O:iu.Ch 41,;"14 :,~how 1, 1 Ra11 n 10.0J10.•!N""'Wld10·17 11·11 8eH1n1erc1111 > ""1'"' >b Et.<:IA.•_tr. '' ,,... • .., •'4 -t\1,l°'t-to l ,."',,.,, -'1 . . h °'' C•o• ,, "" ",, Sll•r 4 ' •V. Corn St 1.lt l.S Newton 1\ltl <>'' l eml1 Co I ... 1$ l•l<o U, .•. •,llMMM~ ,',', ',' ,»1•, <'•" ,•.-+ !) ''" c'!!'0 · -ij~ l'>•L :Utt +_, .. porahon, s ta te, city, ot er 0e1 18,' 1~;'! 1•\o ~En GI! 1~"• 1!"' 6Gr-w111 •.n •.1,0 Nie~ S1•11 •2s 1 is ,",..M11• 1·1111 ,',' ,",,' "•"' 2111 -l4 1 1oinlt'i Jnc1 1, 1,, 1·,~ I··_ "'•LITT sv-D,. . .IO ""J ;r-to" H .. +2 t f bo 0 e Then lb. Otv Am 1•~ I NJ N•IG IS'• 1 ,\\ tneflm 6,11 1 J Norfa~I /." tl'lt • Pf J o t V. Ol\Ai 1' IP MNG ' • -J K ype 0 rr w r . ' o,WPV E l'o J!>io Nkl\fn F 711.1 lll Spee! I tl I St Ocnqot> iJ f J le1111ICp 1.60 "° •2'1· ., •1'. = llt'~ CD l.~ ~ lt~: ~. ~~:.:.: . -You •r• cordiallv i nvited to •tltnd our ANTELOPE VALLEY INVESTMENT SEMINAR lnv 1 1tl9 1 te without cibll9etion WHY ff th r'li'""" O<am Cc ll' " Nlt l:i A l Hlo lSlo Chalt Gr I on; Om.a~ S•l f !l 8-'1 pl._iO 110 '9~1 .n•.) ot•~ . ITltr EI~ 1 t~3 s.. .... !l'o Sol ~-"J•c•s11A.ll .2~ 11 f ~ 11• ... , g r oup re-o er s e secu I .. -.. OlK lilt •• •>lo Nle!I B JI J6 CaDlt "'1 S,,, !DO Fd 11 .. 12'11 S.n11f1 pf4,JO l' 6S '3 "'"" -rnEt DI I .to J 40 "° «I ., Jat-A!I pt,.. l !! .. . I a h·igher pr 'ce \o il<e N •blt'c ~ve< c 11 • -1 Nili. R~c 1>o 1._ Fund 6.tl 11J 101 Fa 1·11 , ... '""' Sl'ft.» '!1 ""' JI\.\ -·-·:::iz·•• .-.,. .. ._._ H •... ~•• J1pgt• ,,. 'J \4 +• a I .--. "'''' ,", '>•' •i•• HG 10 ,..... Frnt 59.1' "·'1 o-•ms ,. '' ·r: .,,.,_, , ••·• " "' -...,.,.. -" ~ • , , .., , -•••" ·• -Jl<t SW ·''"°+""Im 1 1.7" 1'26i~1ri 26v.+•,~•n:o,n • '19 11&;,)I_ I 'l'ht d ifference I , p r e a d ) J"" ~n. n\li N .u• 011 ,_., ti. •"""' 1·11 t.u P~ce ""° •ff f 1 l•rlitv P11o 1-. m , , .,.°''' 1 ,, l ,. , j• -+-,.. •'"'" 11 .06f 1t •• Al !i! + • Elf Oil ll·-· ""' NPili. G~• ti'• 1••· Speel " , • gTc Sic t':i.t 10' s lerrne< CIW'D JO ~ l"' ,, ••••• rr-(_ .to ?1 ' 1 + .. J .. Fll . h•.OM ! t1 ~ ••• between what thl' u n· ew "'' ,., 11t Nw Na1G 1•. •'• c,1.,•-i:1 1• 10 16-01 'N•ll 11::i. 11:,. I'"' s" 1.10 u1 nr. 1~ nl'I ...:·~ F.""l..,,,,111 A 11 '"\ l!h ,. Jt ftn P11ot M J """' ~ :at-\.\o -"" . Min o 10•1 10..NW P.,Sv ll 111,CDlon,.~I : Piia! J .. l.SI iOT~ .... fO 1 t1 <IOflo tl !!M1 8~s .l2 t ll\>1 \-.ll'• ·••Jewtl Co l..IO Jttl'11 42 .... ~..+1, . . h h ''"' El P1!11! 1'". 1111, O~IQ Ari •• , I Fund • ,, ··rt Pion Fnd ••11 JO 8!.llrJon~ • • 13\.'i 1m IJ\i +1t Ml ,1"' ,XI " l1l.;, 11'h 11'--l o {Im .. ~ •• ·.',.. .I! ~~ !:!'"'• -•• lhe securities and t e 16 .. er Eti•l , , ~ • l~• Ol'>lo W•• "" tJ Grw111 • 13 s.1 Pl~~ 111v 1:60 •.• I"" .._...,.· 1 11 ltlt 1,..... ,,.,.. + • -re ..» •1 •~• "" ••• J ,.., .)0 ·-~ • ... v . bi b th eof 1•J1 Sn ~ , , ... OD! St•" II ll'h ltKDm 9 O• t II Prier Fund1, lodl H• J6 ,, J.lV. t.Mxlnl t.:ro 1~ XII k n>~ .i-, Jol'ln J(lllf'I E 101 "\.o .it ~ -,. t 1 pr!Ct at 'II' c e group r • COii I •b '}Q .. ,1 .. 0•1"<1111 J'• ... v ... , 1,71 j_(l5 G .... t~ It.II lt .11 )11'9 8"11 i',. J ~ ~~ :!!~ -~ Ufl'Mnt .nt II l(lil "io1. 10" ~ ~ Johnt S•c . ,, 1'':0 )S" " ' derwr1Llng syndirate pays for 1r.., 1,1, 11,,., Nucl AK s ''• E11u•v '"'"v•lt Pion c:111 s.a /·tl l ltd<Oll: "·• » d i.:. ·~ ._. :.:1"' I W'G•• /·• ' 2t'1t 1'W ,.,, ,.. ii Jim W•I\ ·• )J1 ~ ?fl~ ;-" • • dtK Sv• '' ~· O!te< TP \l'o ll'o Col Gctll 4 ·• •.96 N Er1 t.t!I l.'i [" erb ' ••• lll ~ ... -'• l'llYI C• ... \a ttto lt lfV. _\lo {~~~. '"~ ", •,<1 ~,, .. •, ,,. *1\o f . ,. t ll t fers the secur1t1es to us El P11EI II'~ 1n. gvtt Nili. JI, ... CDmmc I.Of .... N HO< lt S5" S5 Dlll'llll CQ .. ·; ll" ,, ' ,._ 11111 PA.. 11 ~ l1 l1 ..... -.. v ....... 1· I ~ ... Every m•i·or er;ottol't'lic e ctor 1nu 1c:e 1i •n e 11 c1 '" th bk , i·t ,, •• ,,,, ,., 1, •¥Ctt 11"<1~,.,tornSBd •Oii •.•l PcvFv"4 1'0.0·,. .... ,, .-~ ,. 'I~ +•1u~nd .75t l '"' '''• ,,.,,,J0roen1n1.l0 11t1.,11 J1 -t• I V It represents e an ers pro 1 . ,;,. 11 1 .~ 1.; PEC bcl n l<t •ll.'I ~1"' •a 1.11 1.n P•o.,,,111 JJ!'1 •M :id' 1~~ ..... ,, ,~ 14 -1 v1nrP .60b , """ JS 31 .. _ ~· Jm1 .... ·"' ' 11 11. ~ 2111, .i-~ '••"••lmont ophort .. nity 11tit+1 in +h• Ant• Op • • '"· I , , .. "°' wlm co l:.. 141 ,,_,, 0· 1 •• "" · .. "" -~ .-..... , '' , , JIW Mft '.o "' 11 ,,., 11 •<" • " ' Of course, the underwr iting ! t~~ J,, l~ ~:.:~1,.ut~ •f'llt ";~ ornD ,., 1:,1 1'.IJ PUtnt;;. F · 1. ·-1="'1 W' •~ , " 1 "' ..., ... e""' • i! "' 1ll/!o 11'"' -1 K i "'' i · "'· Con1ide1th • ollowin9 : d ' t I hen lctc.:o• P 2\lo Pac Ft E 21 30 Dmoer s.Sl j .M Equr1 •.01;,.,, orowtr ·1.2s '' 2f~ ~ + F8~:'.:·:C, ll ~to 1t:': 1~Vt+1i:1<:1~57Dtt.1J ~ ~t! : .. Ztt .:t: syn ICa e oses m oney W ••""" ~·: 1 Pnkca CD JV. ,.,,, D"'D 8oi 1.t1 .s• <"•ton! 11 .ttll.IJ Drm•ru .to ,,. -•UL'TtON·. ,.,.0,, 120,000 ill 1970 10 a P•OJ.ecled ~00.000 the ba nkers mis]'ud<>e the El c ''" l'> • P•mDI 11 , 1~, amco Fo l.N l.S.. Gr!h •.JI t.1' Bos !dis t.J• I' · ffe f'11r Hiii -S. n~ '"" 1 l\.lo -Is li:•I '·1"11·31 1100 JS :ll .U · ,..., "' r. El Oi!~ <1 ~• p.,11,f De t11 t '.1 CDm$111 J,'3 J.t> /nc!tm 6,N l.!2 lh1vr"r In<; !I o "·~ F•j•monl l H l4\• t!lt 1;;0 ..._ ~ 1<.i1 CtM .BO 61 11'11 ))'" 17\lo -'• in t975. d' market a~ they have to resell ~:._:to0d',11 ,~:: .~ ~=~~ ~ I ~ ~=:rd'" ::tt ::~ "~~· !1:~ ':i1 ~=~~1', . .i: h i 1'» 5 'i:;. ~:1~~~' 'i'~' 2~ i!t. 1! •• 1;" +1 ::!.'~P!riu, 793 ~-~G"· ;..;~"; ~ PlllWAY5: Existin~ ~·i·f'f'way iwt worl< conna·t i.ni.: 1· the securities to us at 3 lower Ent•<1¥ c 11\, , , ••v;'IT, 10\:, 11 ~°"'v 1" 1,,. l.11 vo~•o s 1 •0t '"I"' 'l' 11• \II _ 14 Fwnltv Fl~ i it 121,. U\, 1,,,., KC PL ••.1.20 do 11 ~ u -1 rt'Ctly lo l!l81C'Wide f'Om f)lt'x, 6J m1lf'~ lo h E ..... At 11' .• PM•I "'' ·~ 101; ~~ ... u Mt 6.21 6.28 RID Tech l.» 3:.S, rb Mv "~ ,, \!; \lo ~ 11'1 Ft nllttl I"( •• t-\o ••• '" .. \\ kC PL ,., ' t•~ Jl', SP1 S'""" .... ~ I Pr ice than they pa\d t e e111111 1 • '111 Pe.,.1n T 21 2• .,,, G11> '·" 1.0. lttn•t 1 !1 t .ll ru P.i • ''I •h o\ls -\.\ F•rWti• Fl11 ' 111• 11i. 111'1 _,.~Kie ':.I:. ..n.IO 160 ., " ., .. . downto\Vnl.osAngc!l'S. / . £"••~" •I• •1t P• E.,.ln ,... 1~ .,, Lot 12.11 1•.0l 1ti..1rt1 u'.11 1.illl ,,., ..,; ' ' , .... _F•r-•.~ t 011. '"\ o,,,_..., c ... ~,·ind ? • ?ll"I 2''• """ All .. OITI: Froeral Government 11pprov1l for $900 n1ll-1uuer. f'°" COfP ... I~ P• G-"W lfVI 2t ~ntv C•P t.n ''·M "'-"" S.I• S.'4 ~Ho.It J !IS ""' 31"' + ~ F•S '"' •. Ml 1't .,.. ..... ~ •n • 40 !t ,... 10 .... !O\t -\~ ti .•• l nl ·.-ro•••··-·••t A1'•por l •• ·-locol!'(I 11--------------1~'~·~"'~'=0='=' ='='=· ='~·~·=-==·::~:...._'~'":....':=,1c'"' W!?~¥ U1141¥1 ii"'" Fd ""' ... 1 .. ¥ ... DI "' 3'l!. ~ ~ ~ Fi1Mi1 ,. 111 Ml 21 ..... ~ + ~ KtnPwl 1.11 ) 21•. 21>• ,,,._. oc·• "L • ur r" w ..... 1 .,...vttl 11~• 11 M 13.11 rkwv GI ... ll llS j lo Fldlr1I .~ l) 2~ 21 11\la _ n 1(11Y Ind s 1 t-4 R -1, a l Palmdalr. Lar g <'itl Airporf in the world CHV11h M si.:tt st.• , F11nih · k111nllG 1.n 13 " "' -=""""' 1,~ t Jl-h 21,, !Yt ,._ 1oo l(tul Brd l'O Mt l'1' :M\o ""' + " • ~ 50 'Ill Otlav.J>rt Gl'O\ID! lnl "" 11 s.fn IO '"""' Co n •'• ~ 4 -\'I FMPK Eon: \1 ,..., 1v. tA -\'I ICIWKI .Mb I 71. 1t•1 111t '4 '• upon i.."'Om l)lf'l ion, &f'..Vlog 1.....,..1 m1 un 0tc11 t.11 10." SDJI u '1J21°1J '#1\$Mro .20 •t\.i t ' •.. FMP•lct 1 t'I~ l?Vt irr.• ..._"••.tt•AD 1<0 1 Ill. 111'4. 1111i>t<> puS<>ngcri;. 8:'"'' IG.61 n . .o ••t 1t:n n.'n t •nShoe 1.10 11 ""' f'"' ,,~ -~ F Pto pf\ u 1 llO ,Wll; 11~ '!14 ic~it• 1.l'O •1 ~ 40'o "°""' '" PUTUll GROWTH: Unlin1i l('d. Pahndale pr o,if<cted 1(1 bi! Spec•' a I Dru~: 11~ t1.'u' S~IYst,,~~. 1·,, ~":-k 1.~ ~ .Jo'" 1u:" Jlf• t i: ~=~riss ,;: "1 r16t ';.~ 1 ;~ .t ~ ~::::..i"'t ,;o " ~\ ..... ~~\~ ~ +t'~: •-nd iArgf'SI cit y in Callfol'nia , fourlh IBl'I:· O<t~ Fd f,1110. IQl,lly tJ.l' 'll llH Co 20 M 1 1"' N .... FtdDeo!Slr I llS ~ l•Y, lS'i + '9 l(f111'91 w t 11 ll>'o t1 '° 11'> '• ~...... Otey! Lw 10.•• II, ln"ftt {U i ltldl F pf,60 • ·~ '\• ..... . Farro Cp 111 :n I 15 lJ _ Kolsev l ,W l 1•\i 1'\' l"lfo ~ t>SI in Un\tl'd Stal<'fl. E110f\&HD-•ol : Ullr• s'n s'lt 8~cl9el lft .... I) 1 ·~ 1 ... 'A Fl~ro .'it '~ !i'• 11 ..... .i-i .... '<Hldllt .tO •• ~ :it ,.~ .., ! " T Y N t I ·• G F. RCA • ··-khet'd 11 I I ""'~" t.19 t.12 Stt"i Am l:°' 1:tt Bull"'"'~ 1.11 ,,. JI :z:t.i.. ~ -I'll Fltlde!M 1.IO ?t si 1 u~ l!\11 ,..1 <t.-n111r>1t .1111 ... ,. l'>I. u , INDUI ll : D\\' oca l'U: . .... • ...,.. • UK 11·~ A t GrWl ll '·'' 10 ... 1·· ~$ 1 11 lJ·ff 8ulov• w . .o JI 111'1 It~ 1t l1' -1\tl l'IHrQI 1..0 10 I• 711.'1 1h\ -~ I(..-"~" J.lll " ~s~ .,., '31'0 '" Aircraft. fienera l Dynamics. Boron. Nort h n nou nee men tt>tam J.!I 5,16 '"'" Giii 1D Bu"' ll:•mQ 'J ·'le 1111 ,,,,._ t 111 Fin Ftdtrt l" Jt ll'lti ii1<1 llllt -loll V:FC~ Dtl ,10 lttl IA\ n ,,., 11'!1 -1"• · 11 k II I r SPKI • •.90 1.St Mm Fd ~ft 1't Bunk ll Dll.ll 2tl~ )4\'0 ,.~ '111 Plrtsl11r 1,.0 1 l1 •I l!\>1 .:11; + \' l(y UI/! 1 $" • nl4 15 1S _ ~ .. Amer ican oc \\'f' 1(1 n am e on Y 11 1•"'· Shx:~ "·I' u . .u l""r ,.0 t t'NM·u &11rl IM l,.o ,.• ,•~• ,--•, f:tt Chrt J.2tf 11• ~ ,.,, +,,.,Kerr Mc 1 ·~ JI ,," '"' AitO-••• IAILltOAOS: Southern PRc lfir--a 78 mile connectini.; link [E11t~1 10. s 11.TS h oun u:" 12:n aurlttor 1... '* f · -i1 -t' 1"11 Mttt l.5' 11 1.ii •1 'i~"' •:. ICt rfAI •U.JG 1 ,,. AA AA comp'•!~ •I' --t Of •~,000,000. FQrtl !G.lt 11.?o i.t ~ I.JI t.11 8ur1Nor ~I.SS It 6\0 ~ •''I -\lo l'tlf'ICllY l.• 15 ~1•,, 64 'i + .. l("""!l"O<'ll~ • I ?'"'! ,.,,, ,,,,, .:.: ,., ~-~ .,,,.. -v Emr~ Sc ~2S .... IYIYM l'Wldo: l ut""V .1>1l J11 • .. ~ \'I HI\ .+-~ Ftl!ol~ISI ,15' f ,~ ~ + '1 1(1 .... •I"• I ""f " lt\l'lo !I'll. 1• .j. ,., WA.Ti it: Additional w a ler vi11 Califoml1 Aqueduct Projttl The National An tl-Snk)k\ni.: ~~:::;;i,,•, '~.,~ lG.11 f~~!, t:P, ,~·~~ =~~"lf':1 ·~191 ... , ,.,.. l ft + ~ =~~ .l'f. J 1 111 i:t' l~ _: ~ ~r;~1 :, ;:• 1~ ~ ~ !t :11, ll\lr 1.971. Council \\•ill 1·ond uc1 \nlro· EQuliv '·" •·~ Trvst 1 511 1 -C-Pl!MtSd .1' u ,_ M ""'-·· .. l(lrnV'' 110 '1 >N ll:I' ,1Jt4 -'t t.co.-··T1D CITY • Palnld All' 2'2 4 •n""'~ 1nil"~ duc to 10 •••0 1'on• "'ilh !hi' """" Glh '·"* I. mil~ I f.11 1. 1 Flffnl~o _,. 1 l"I ~ •°"• v1no1t'<+ "' ~ "'°' 11,_ 1 1•~ -'\ ""' .., ' ' ...,...,. ~·. " .,. . ...,, Fut~ 111"1' wn Ir"' 7.31 l ft obDI C• .l'f 11 lt-111 36'~ 1'\li -l-"lo 1"Hn1'1t I 29 ''" h '-• 11" -t.. V'n~""'"'' •• }.I 1~1oo )•'" ,, .. POltT PACILITlll: Por l of Long Beach a nd Port of l.(i_~ amazing T\C\\' Audlt>·\'l~ual IEvtu• 1" 10. 11 . wt"" Gt •.1' s'.1J •I Fl,.."1 n 1"' nt. 1"' ... f'!• CN \I 1! 2 , 21 ~ • \It ICI-• 811 ~s u ..._ •v. •v. ::.1,\ Angelf's 82 m iles a\\·ay avaUable b" tr~way, vortex and hrlt• )UU stop F·O C111 •.33 •· I •nw 1\.11 n .1 !!_lah0~·· ","'• •.:i gw ti ll~i -h Fi. •• .so ! lf'A 1t 11, .. l' "'•••.to CD 1 • "" ~'"" ·"' i ,.., ~ "•lrld 1.11 l.SO DOC~• •!! '·" _., .. .. ,, ,..,~ 'Jl'o """' -'Ai i. ,_ 1.60 J n .. lio ., + 1A IC LM " " )t l l V, ,., ... -1 'ir, rail. smokini:: in just !ll'\'C'n da_\'!i. Fa•m Su •·5 1.n IFfmGI ., •Jt .,.,DP .M ll 2t,\to 21 .. ~ J~-'it Fla>Powl.t l 11 •n~ u1. ~0 +10 11_.. 1.,. .,.. f1 ,,..., ,.,;:_1 ,~ UTIL'T ll . « th C•tlfO I o•'·-$ lb Calif -·· ll •·-h I t F~ Gr!ll 10_ Hf. l•ff St tr. 31:00 dlt""' .to. 1J "' ,... ,... F~o I •1 IS !'"1 ~ "1 ICDt,...Dl'D t•cl I "11 J"" ' : ..,.·,u ern r11 11 ~n. ou . ern or· 11io.'SP iws.~1oni'\ "'I ..,-1•1 F111 CaD t. 10. ,.....,,11 ,.,,,,....: .,,, P•c l.:io •I s111i D\lo !2"'~·-., IHr •111 ts s:i. '! U•='4"••'1'~ '"' ,~ ~ ..,, 3114 • '\ llh\ Gas Company. Loe Angclt"I County Seni· ~s:'lnnini:: l'Al'h hnur from 9 1Fld FYnd u. 1• ' Atn •nil 6.ot !·!' 1P C ao1ci1 '' t.»6, 2>'~ -3'! 4-.._,. ·c, ·.u ltJ "' 1 11 tr>•-ic .... ,,. ss' u tu i1'\ «...., tlllh -_,1 1a lion Dist rict. lr ri<>a tlon Dlqttlct. Pacific A'f ''' II A'11 :\nd frorn I F.d Tr"\\ 19.0t 10..lt FklW S.H' • •rt>ru" l .SCJ 1" •• ~ Jlf• ...... -\' l'M ol2.2J 1 J2'~ l2 1.11, . 1 •·• ·-.... .. ·~• ,. '"' .. ~ Tel('1)hoo" C ornpa nY. Gclneral Telephone P~I l1.1 .• 5 Pl\I ~l onday 1Fi~~%'1 p;.c:i 1rr sJt~·, .. }:t. t:n :r:i~, ·~-.~ 1H'~. Mt ~t .!:. ~ ~=:·i·. ·.; r! .. ,~; 1~: 1~:. !: "'-' l)o S1 "' .,.. lt • l\ d !""'"" lr>idusl l.30 J.6 8•1 IS.tl)l,11 •fDTC~ 1,IO n,, •. ~·' !!", •. )'! l'ODI' Mltl 1"' l\._ 11t 1 -'• Companv. through l 'I'\ flY O\ o.104 lr><"om •.t i S.d C•D Co •.SI f ..$11 .,,:r,;c_~ .ill -.. FCIO!I Pl'2.20 J h 1• n _, OCCURllNG OIVIL6 .. MI NTS: 1\al.'lt'l' lndl!lltrle11 -•OO Rooch BoulC'VRrd, Svite 20A, F•~~"'vA i'_~ •,J1 ,u~"'i~t •t·?f 'f:lf :,:f.,~ Jt •11l ft1~ 1 i~. -''" ~:::te;', 1:: i ~}~ t;~ "+"' ~ ~~~~ ~~~~\'a6~.~~e~ ~f~~~~,i;: ~!f70ti(fr~0o0~e 8X~.~~lle~'1ul~£~ l~~:·~~l~ ::s 1:~ ;i~5h, t1:U t:B ~~AL " t II''" ll!; lli: .: ~ ~:!~"1.~ 1H H~ ~1' \ 'i :;-~ /ffarket llnllda,y l no 14 ntllllon Hott l construction O. Costa ~168.. ThC're Is no ~~1 ~!:~1 ~,~, t~ :cr-."t' 7,U1l:U "!!-~r 1 .~ 1~ SJ\;~-!~ ~~~::i:l!ir.11'1:-= ff ~~ ~j.., il..=~ program •nd mo1·1·. """l or obll<>atio o for the il'l· F11 Nat '1 •· tclW!t' j • ':ll 1 Carp 1fl , ... ,~ • ,i.:•, .. "'"'""',.. ~ .lO'i lit "' ti. ""' + 1, LOO ...,.... " jF•I Sle•• lll. n .1 Kllnot '.tt , ouC:C .to .. .a•o G 'ROS,.ICTS LO K GOOD: s1vi1·f' Sh utllt Proi:ra m liw·a· troductory S(!Mion. Come In Fi.1 C•D s:it ..• -01 m ,ttfS .11 •=r.·~.l :N t° -t; Sylllffb tion-F.dwanh Air Jo"Ol'("f: "---"'""'N' """'' now or ~nu {TI •l l 962...1828 1 F •~· FNI I.IS .. OWi' Miit "'ff 'll ....... \4 ljll ''• GAC Cp I.JI 11• I 11:~ "" -" ......,-...,..., .,,. F11 G•n •.J.I o.t7 '"' \;' t· I: _. "' .l!I a _·ft 1 ;• -" "'Corp . .o ii • .. tl.l -'• U.S.A. o r (TI 4l 642·4163 for a per· FM Gin ).61 ... r y . . NII Foy ! I ·-...-1.JO • '!ti ,.., l!:" . t THIS Is THI t Thi FDllNI•• tf:I 1.P II 11.'.lill'' Clllt+IMll 1.'I ti!'\ 11 '11• • « ,,,...,,-l(. t 11a. i•• Do ._ O M>nal ap[)O ntnlf'nl. sr,ro· F-~Q •• 1 11.1 wne Gr t• : I !.,, Ull.1 1.u 3 tt'-JP • 11\.o -" ,,..s llfl, 1 , ,,,, ,J._? -.,, 1._ _, .. ,_ h , •-• --you r tm.mu.r r•ntt County bafor t It Mtan n YOU gram flffl'N ll COf1l f'lt' F••flll ll11 G•DUO: '!di( inc u t 1111.1 ou • ,,. Siii 5111.o st1• •dO.. 1 l •, •,1 • .-..--. ·v ·~ .--. .. •-I ? It d 'd 1 h I A' 1 'II OPPOlTUNI mon~''·' hut<lt .. u,_r'fntff I "OU Ol'ITC ''° ':ll ~nll Miii ,.. ·._ ffl ltlPS 11, ' I•'• 1• 1'"" • r111Ck .eo ' 1••• I• .,., .+-111 1~ ,,~ mf>•k .. ,~ .. _ .... 00 I no ..... a rn• or 1rport ICI ty .. , a,,,,,.,'" '•",-···s '•"'"~··~1···" ·.·.·11 §~t.L,•.•,· .• •• 1 ,,,.. JI"" 11\o t \¥ i-•Y IN 'HI '" ~ .... '• s.111 llt"lwtt ... lll'WlfrlcJ.il I I• 't HA VI UIN WAmNG do o't 1';1011 ~1nokln1i: tn l t'\'t'll ,.. c :u ....... 21 111.1 .i. ''1.1. l"I A c.~ l'I-< 101-. 10•. 1 ;~ •-A111 utr1.,. •"•' ~ , • ._ ••• 1 int 1 • days. F::.O°'?.i ~·'' J:,4 U'l!cc,,.. ~.\ , g :::: ~. 1:: 1n flh ~ m: t ~ ::;:~\~ c~. 1 ii·.~. !,l,t: l~ + ~ plw 11oc1< d!vldtnO. t--lllukl91JM ..,.~ . -I'" frM~I 1.4' .... 1ncom 1 .1t 'l: c ... 1.ru ...... llb 1! 11h 111~ I/\: -... llAlnv l.'51 '2 1t1, ... ft-no. 0-0ecltttd • H'W 11'1 lf?t Plul 'Do you wish you \\'OUld have lnvested in Orange ''-------------·,1"11!111 ""' 1.• '·" c.11n ~ c.,.,o 1 -11 1t'lt "1' ,_,. +""' •mo11 ·'°"' I' ... J1•, F,''-._,, 111ocw e11vioe..o . .,..,,111 '''' ""'· 1- 0WN YOUR .. ~tltwv •)I l:ll" VIM t '11 Ctrt>lllld .IO It i\''k 1'11 1•~• -4" Alltn 1.11: 1 ],fl, "'• :~ + l1 '••tl)lof '" 1t11d1 ouo,... ,,,.. IS!N ttt Coun l v \Vhe n YOU COUid ha"e''' --• t11 Ste !·•1 .d Ul'O C•" • :4 C-•A ,Q ~1 17,. lt\t A'frn •11 1 .. \1 Ml 0'\ t I t~ ltlUI ,._ ..... •~-~~ -••· °' ~ . '-------------,' lbr1(1t 1' V•lw L!l!ll 111 CFI $11 . .0. 1, :t:! lt _It 8111t P\., I 1111~ ',"'• 11" ~-• on ..,,.,_,. " O'll...,.ll'IN Don't mlu th• Antelo,,-v.u.y •pport unityt OWN BUSINESS F'or 1 1~:r~'ti 11:ff v[1~ f.l}.fi c~~~l ] *: S i ~i :~ !'" f.". ~.· ... ~J1 G ~;7~~?Jl~$ LOCATION: Surf & S.nd Hotel, 9th Floor Confer · t u h rtt 111 1~111 TJ ~·lla::1 ~::-' , .• ~.t~ ... '!'!riot 'f •~ ~"" u'"' $ :.ti 1iZ 'm-... \ "'• ·~ 1n .,,..tL n-Ntw ...,., R 'SS S C h nvt'I; gal~ t e pro polf'nl vOlw\ 1 ~ ... v , 1, ~ 'f.; ,_,. .-' .,... " 'nt 1'> .,. F._ i1l 1'14--\ P:•N """ '"'· div....., ~ .. eftC• Oom, 1~ • Olt f Hl9 •• .,. ofthf.U ~wholtif\'endlru;: \T/c·ckcn1l cr ·.,.., ·":. ~i...i"" : .. tt ~=""·1!.._ I ni. JI~ ?llt l'!l'.t IDI ~'!"I~.,,,., _'-1tt~.,M 1Cllot!la~tf'l.ilffl dh ..... l .. un. •--h _.., __ '-•• ,...,.,,, I l'f H1,..Htoni ·111$1 •~ .... 11.)1 c ..!!. 211 11 1,. ~ ':)l -:;: ftlMll1t,;:: , '!;t !:o !!~ 1'~ -1-l.; l'WIHl1"9 ~-oec11rM or NICI "" 1'11 llw V91-ma"'""'" ..,,, .. "'-'•· nterna-HF1 i ~ 'I w1111 M~ 11.0 HA cl:"~ ,:; , , \' t!'\ U\'> • ,.:. 1 •• ~~ ll -" 11od: e1v~. 1-P•ltl 1r1 •6'cJI ..,.... TIMI: 7:30 p .m . tlonal. For additional tnforma· \ I , . Ofll ;: f• l:i'lftt'" Ori-1 c1111 Ofo>e • l• .,'"' d lo dl'I _\lo "-" • Q •\ .._ '\ • lo 1t10. •'"""''°"' <•"' vt luo °" t.-~ l ion .. ' ( \'Cl"llSlll!! ==~ 1·· t' I DI• il· 11··1 C"-ObtM 1 \ft ,, ... Jlh U\o t.. II 1 '9 1 1~-. I l l~ ~ .. «41tl•lllUllOfl ... "'. •-""" "' tult DATI: AytU•t 4, 1970 v ai("'1t1;. '.r,; ~ S, 1 1t ~~~t11',.~1 ~ i11~' ~ .. ~ .. "!:"~'~ ,, ~,,, ,?, J°'= .. ~:<tl..('!:,..IN. .. :-~·~~~.!i:::.~~~ P l ~ •t/. '!.!..":! 1'·11 ;·~ Cl!IM)1 p., tl I 111-1 1~ +llt "' 10 1/' l • •1 a ~,..,,bl/Itron, ••-(R ,,,hi -..w11111u1 ""1tl Re.erv•I OM •re ~Uftled •o J~lt•M C'On l.at l O\Ar\f't; A. PHONI 101\0 "!1... 'l· .. y.t: w1~~ 1 : 11'" ~~:rf~c1 i~ ~ ID": ~ ~:: ~ l-r:,11,jid ,j'j iU, M:: 11'! t -"' ·•"ts -w1"' w"'1111" ....... '#tit. ·• •t C f!""'m" , , 5!~' Ind ~. 1 ill {ldl!P ctNI" l ''•" '!" >j~ -~ 1•·ll •""•• it ·-f. '!I ._ ~ dl1t1 IOu<fd "'l-Wht11 IUUM, ftll-Nt •I $m.lth . Unlvtl'!l41 I.And ln\lf'ilmf'nl at"'"' ane;tnlenl OtO<o 870•4084 CM l!..;.i ·• w .!!~u , •rn, 11 ,_•••'cv_11 ,1¥ 111 ! \i ... ,.. .. 61'\ 'i: ," ;201 lftllw rr vi-In bt~l>;•\IPl<Y Of rtur'f> 1 • •97 ....... " 1 ... 11'),..Jj,,··21 (!'(Ip. .!4 • • .. pl. '" ! " ... .. l'-... ,, lf'I T ., n l'"" ' . !Ari .. 1: -..ii11 DI' llfiM •fOl'IAnlM """"' ,,.. pmny, •I 1 ..... • ,._ .,..__ -51 me .IJ ~~1n11t j·• !' ll•l>INll .,. ,. 1 1 ~. 1 "' -• ~u• 1 ,.. ''" n•1 _ 't "'"ill'IMltc.~ Att. er _,,,,,." bT t\Jtt L---------------------------J'•llllllllllllllllllllllll•IL _____________ ll tnH(! " :.# J '-I •• • ~'Y'"' tO 11,t )t l\\• ?.~: t•, "•'.,:ni;, J ·~. 2!1' ·~ ..+ '• C""totn!'l!I. trl-ller1ltn 111111 llllll• II 11111 c•• n I worll\ " IM-.;i '£• 3111 ~ .... -J, • • 111. i t'ltotttt Muoll1ttloll ti11. I .., __ '• .... I l ' I I I ' ' I ' ' ' I I t ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N • N • M • N N N N N N N M N N M M M M • M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M • • ::; M M M • M M • M "' ... M M M M .. M .. .. .. M .. M• ~ M• ,. .. .. M• M ,., .. .. ,. M• ,. •• •• " •• "' •• •• N •• •• •• •• " •• "' •• •• "' •• •• •• •• "' ~: •• "' .. •• ... .. •• N' ''" "' •• "' •• •• e: •• , .. •• ~· •• .. No E~ •• N.< ~~ NO Ho No N• •• •• No •• •• No No "' ... "' "' "° "' "< ~ o. ~ s:: .. " .. Frldlj, J11ty ll, 1q70 SC Friday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List ' DAILY PllOT JJ .... ... 1..._1 Hltll Ltw ci-c~ .. . , ,.,... ,! \~~ . ,. , .. •• ';. , . '"' +" Coulter Gets MDI Post Marketlng Directions, Inc. President Richard Lawrence announced ttiat Willi~ A. Coulter has joined Marketing Directions, Inc. as a principa l In the advertising agency 's Campus Drive olfice l n Newport Beach . Currently Coulter has been prominent In local and dvlo affairs, and is curTenUy presi· dent of the Newpcrt·Ba1boa Rotary Club and director of Hoag Hospital 's 552 Club. He is also active in the marine divisio~ ind Commodores Club of the Newport Harbor Chamber ol Commerce. A graduate of Claremont Mefl's College he resides with hls wife and two children on Bal~ boa Island. I ------- Friday, July )1, 1970 Nerve Gas Sinki~_g _Mapped Kl:RKPA.TRICK'S- 24 YEARS IN lHE HARIOR AREA W A.SHlNGTON (AP) dealing' with c h e m I c a I The great bulk o( the 26,500 But the sclentl!lc committee Nearly 3,000 t.oM of old nerve emergi!DCies will accompany tons was at the Rocky Moun-aaid also that &Orne o( the gu, staled tn *concrete arid il:)e movement. the Army said. lain Arse:nal In Colorado and chemical agent.I might tiave FREE lot• $1 . Yalioe ..;_ llAND lll<NALLIY TllAYIL GUIDI No--·Nec-.y Plans for' rait movement of the rest at Anniston and Blue to be dumped into the sea steel coffin&1 wtll bt 1unk ht U ,500·.to:rts of . obsolete herve Grass. under adequate safeguard! 1( 71 MODELS IN "ST 1 ship hulk about thr<e miles and muslard gas through A scientific commiltee from the rocket& in .the concrete OCK THI PIA.Ill Mocl•I FM.477 11" llii•t· 110 tq. 111. pl~­ fij,,, deep i1 the Atlantic some 280 cltles't.o the , Atlantic triggered the National Academy recom-and steel coffins could not .AND IUD'f' FOi IM,..IDIATI DILIYll'I' miles from Cape KeMedy, strong protests last year. mended In Juoe-1969 that most be disposed of otherwise. SUPER "SAVINGS ON 70 MODELS Fla., the Army announced These protests, Jed by or . the old gas warfare The committee suggested, Th -.a membefs of C 0 n g Ce SI' ma terials be deslf'oyed by as . an alternate means, the nc11· urauay. h · 1 b J d 1· u .. ·f · a n"•iear dev1·-to SALES & SE N da• . b resutte·d In dropping those c em1ca,· urnng or emot· ...... v .... "" • RVICE 0 . le1 was given, ulldeot:i· ptans Which called for dum· lion methods and the Army destory the (II colJins, but • gressldimbea A sourc,.A Nsa 1 11 1 ping 'the obsolete chemicalJ his set In motion a three-year the Atomic Energy Com· • . , · ~ woo ug. 10. at ona about 135 miles off New ope.rat.ion to · do this at the mission rejected this ap-2760 C H" h C Academy of Sciences com-J . Roe. ky Moonlain Arsenal proach. oast .. '9 -y orolia del Mar . ·Phone.' 6 73·2650 mittee recently recommended _:'.:e'.'.r.'.:"'.:Y::.· ----,----==:.::=::::::::..:::::=::_ __ .::_::::::::_ ______ :--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;"""~;;,;;.;:;~~~;:;~~~~!d action without de.lay. The disposal d e cl s I o n culminates l1lOff: than a year of study by civilian scientists and government experts. An earlier . plan was b)ocktd on aafety ground!. Stressing ma~ximum sa(ety precautions, the Army said 418 ol the coffins containing liquid nerve gas In rockets will be carried in slow·JJ1(ling trains from storage depots at Annllton, Ala., and Lexington, Ky., to a military terminal at Sunny Point, N.C. There, in an area described as remote froi:n major popula- tion centers, the cofrins con- taining 2,67S tom of chemical warfare materials will be loaded on a hulk. lt will be towed under Navy direction to the di sposa l area about 253 miles off the con- tinental shelf and some 282 miles east of Cape Kennedy. Florida's Gov. 'Claude Kirk described as incredible the decision to sink it there. Coast Guard vessels will escort the towed hulk and give advance warning to com- mercial shipping in the area . The hulk and its cargo of nerve gas will then be sunk In more than 16,000 feet of water, the Army said. "The Defense Department is taking every precaution to avoid future sea disposal of chem ical munltiO'l'ls and does not anticipate any in the future," the statement sai d. Because of the elaborate safety precautions , the Army said, the shipments of the 418 concrete and steel vaults from the Anniston and Blue Grass Army depots "should be safer Uum the normal commercial shipmenls of hazardous chemicals." A total of 305 or the con- tainers are at Anniston and the other 113 at Blue Grass. -1GiJ rOll lell to Sunny Point •:will avoid heavily PQPUlated areas where possible, and the trains' speed will not exceed 35 miles per hour," the Army said, calling this well below speed ordinarily considered "reasonably safe for trains substances." Each of the gas-carrying trains will be led by a pilot train from which specialists will scan the rails and the roadbed for previously un- detected possible causes of ac- cident. Medical specialists a n d military technicians trained in Bail Right Questioned ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) Retired Supreme Co u r t Justice Tom Clark say11 the prevenlive detention provision of the District of Columbia crime bill is unconstitutional because it would abridge a person'11 right to hail. · Justice Clark .said the pro- \'ision allowing so-called "no knock" police searches would pass the oonstitutional test. The provision would allow police, with court permission, to make rapid entry to a building if they believe delay would result in destruction of evidence. Clark said the Supreme Court had already upheld a Callfornia Jaw with a similar provision. Clark, who retired three years ago, commenled on the two provisions ln an interview Sunday. 't'he bill iJ awaiting Presi. dent Nixon's signature. - RAOPWTER WAYE SPRllKLER 2 57 . N0.61 Tht1 dud• wlll do a lpCJt:• 3t a 15 fMt. 14 u• your place ii 1•oller JOU. CGJI mo•• or buy on• ol our 1maller 1prillll•n. Jullt .. t the dlid a•d 1t will do th• ?Mt. <E••D pay th• water hill?). B.Y.I. ~~@SPRAY GUN 7'' El.ml~ no hlg deal comprHaor nMdtd. 11'1 got a bv.ilt In pump, JI you"•• gol a rou~h surki:c• to do. ?OU JI a!IO lo•• th• coY1rog• wUh 1111 'WOl!ed palal, J SCENE CE PARTS DOUBLE BATH SWAG 777 101-2 You bo"' U yourhatli. Jnt ho1n.·1 Vf>I CITIJ chann Oh10"' tb• shark out of lhe tub.), baug thl• up ond ... th• 1111\Jlerence. Colored glens JhrtW'll d itfu1ff the light. DOOR MIRROR 1'' Altirr vou'ff don• all th• work put thl1 12"•••" deal up cma ••• ho" yo11r hair I• all m•••ed \IP ond your cloth•• CJJe COY•ted. Wilh wallpaper po1te. (Then tell the old man you're going out to eat lonlghl.I .. · BDWOOJI COMPOST 1•• 70 l;B •. BALE . Th• •h&lf odds m~al to 1oo ... tbe 10ll and gl'" lhe 100t1 o: cbcmc• to 1-atbe. (We ought lo pul lh• L.A. air thru 11, and gl" 111 o: cbaace to :br-tbl a lM.) GLIDDEN SP RED GUDE 01 5 66 GAL. FM all •xt•rlor BIGMIU"f• til1. brick. 1h1eco. hloclr. ot 11001. fT•il ••·do JOll r.c111 bel11ft i1d11). Jn .om• grate colors. ADBESIYE BACK SBELYJHG PAPER If th• uofhd1hed 1h•IYi11g hoa?d1 !u1I don't clo much lor rour p1yeb1, yoll could try tbl1. It co111111 iD almo1t \lnll.111.lled colot1 cmd pc1tt•m1. (well aald. lor aoi:neon• who'1 Arter -n the 1tutl.) ROOM DIYIDERS 7'' Mil •err•• .. The1e i:iTe lhe tibergla11 onea." Pot MY•· "Tftey are plo111c:'" J would haMml 11 VU••• and·aay lhltf haff the wood fram11. 1991. and Jlbergla11 ln11J11 I" cc:ilor1 and d•1lgnL SCALLOPED COICBETE EDGllli Solid. Ia acmaral IJNf °' · ')>rick Nd. (You. lmow l met a. IJUJ' who Hid he llbd our ada. l ,,_tM to flod O\ll wby. )u.t thef .. .,. takli:lg Illa CJWGf' to th• ·Jaom• )uat then.) EVERllN PISTOL lfOZZLE . 49c POICELllN .COAT · BOOKS ·s · 1 P ·. h ,, pecia utc. ase. ~ JANE ELLIS __ MURALS · BID PRllTED WlLL SIZE 9 FOOT PARIS SCENE Jeautlfu.l hand printlld. wcdl muraJa don• !n the loo•• technique of· th• Fnncb palnt•rs. Pr.trimmed. washable, iic:rubbable; 'rb>yl labrle. l(ll hold you \lntU you cci:D. tab. that trip to Paris. Jn S colors.. · • 14 FOOT ILLllD Bomaneaque, a: delight to behold. (man. this mural la cc trip.) Pr•trlmmec:I. washable, Tinyl fabric. So easy to put up. no worry •ut weak papar to tear.Jn 3 colorL . 24. 87 REG. 49.50 37!?. 74.50 JOHNS MANVILLE .YJNYi; , TILE; 1/8 INCH TllCK: }4'87 . ·30 liQ. Tbla la the exclting floor that la1t1 and . FEET ~he shin• sioe• Gil the wa'( thru. Viny~.. . craft 111 ' pcrttem1 crnd c9lor1 lnclud!Jlg R£G · 24 18 Jlrtclr: recL aTocado and w.hlt9. 500 Joxe .. oDly, • • · .ldMttiMd •peel~ good thnt AVgt11t S, lt7'8. (Did)'0111mcrlP1bt 11lfWihi tr.ctla _. like o. klng.. J ccme Mme late Jail lllght cnicl .U ~eel ... ) , ' . WALLPAPER WALLPAPER REMOYER 503 OFF ly DO" fOU m\111 barf entyl{m• you ... ·ih!a b.od~. hat !t II true. Look cd the pcrtWu. compoN Ille price and q11cllty, Shorty wouldn't gmu you. ..... OUTDOOR CARPET ll:oH tM1 rifht thni the f•mlly ,.,"' eff '''"' ••' to tM potfe. Got ell the ff'Mt c.olo". Ye• COii pn It dewa 111 • M0111h1t with 2 ~ ,.,. er tprcry CMlktlM. PIPER ~ :~-'7., i7CPT. ~·-~ .\\ . ~PER ·,' .... , , k[L 7 11 rou'n got old paper lo ~ """°' get rid ol tlrtt. U.1111 the ~ ......_ .a.,. W1rJ to do. No reating \-a 9t~r and ll;htlnf wltil the ltvlf. Wt Cheml1try do it. (He·ccm. _,.-. •1 paper cm.Jtlna•J lilllT SPDISB • DOOR PRIZES PULLS 37~. Omote •triking hardwcue complete •Ith. mounting acN1". fffext weelr: .. run Detroit llcmlwcue compl•te with :nal11.I REGISTER TODAY FOR FREE CLASSES EVERY WEDNESDAY EVENING • , •. I.A MIRADA STORE COMMUNITY ROOM. W1 Ming 111 an el!pert to 1how you \he obort-cut1 and tha profe111o-1 wcry lo dit the pro}ect. So "hf ro1al1 erwnd m1d bope for luclr. lecmt i.e.,, -4 pocket the moa-r _ .... 7,30 to 9,30 PM REFRESHMENTS Augu11 S • "[.:terlOf Palntln; and Stalnln8" • 1w Glidden Co. Au9\11I J2. ''bit!GllaUoll al lhell SIG'11dml1 and lrocbt1" Aur•t Jt" J,o.,. and Ccrrdeft Con .. by the Ortbo CalpotetkHil. -. . . Frldl1, July 31, 1970 5 DAILY 'llO/ f. Mobile Home Cri·sis· Moves in on Cit y Dowa tfae By JOHN VALTERZA Of 11111 o.ltr' Pffllt ttefl A constanUy changing industry whlch in recent decades has evolved from mak- ing little boxes on wheels 1to MOderniatk: homes put tocether In !ntrlguhig modules hat sparked a mun1cipal headache in San Clemente. And city·councilmen and planning com- mlssk>ner1 agree that the throbbing will get worse aa•montha: go by. Faced with an ever-Increasing demand · for approvals ol mobile home pafu and an entirely new concept in con- struction of quick-built residential units known as modular homes, tbe lawmakers and planners are taking a serious ·look at their approach to tbe issue. Their reaction is mis.ed, but they realize that land is ·becoming scarce and expensive and the average -man can't afford lo pay the going prices for the American Dream -)'our own Jot with a house on It. · . But the galling aspeCt of the forecast of the new wave of dwelling styles Clemente Delays Op ening. Ri tes ' For Water P lant The tentative ded ication day for San Clemente's $2.3-million water reclama- tion plant -to whlch President Nixon was invited -has been called oU for - at least a month, city aides said today . Change orders, including a complicated shift in mains from easements on Brigham Young University land to a dedicated right-or-way have been blamed for the dela ys, said City Engineer Phil Peter. The plant. paid for through a bond election several years ago. has been under construction all year and now ls in the paintin g, paving, landscaping and final hookup stages. Along with the plant project Is a new stretch or Avenida Pico stretching from ils present terminus near the San Diego Freeway to El Camino ReaJ. The road extension. which involves a divided highw ay, will be paved and ready for Lraffit sometime next week. Peter said. The new road will ease the crush of freeway collec tor traffic on winding smaller streets through th! city'.! in- du strial district. Eventually it will be a major link from El Camino Real to thoroughfares deep into the hills alm"lg Ortega Highway. The plant. paid for In part by a federal grant, will process sewage to 1 the second-stage level, meaning that it will produce no effluent which must be dumped into the sea. The reclaimed sewage will either be sold for irrigation purposes or will be piped to catch basins in inland areas of Camp Pendleton for percolation into underground water stores. The process helps eliminate intrusion of briny sea wate r into fresh water wells. The President had been Invited to attend the dedication rites in August. but city spokesmen said no response has been received. A new dedication date will be set in coming weeks. ls that the regulations are belng 1et by the state, leaving cities powerless to dralt enough controls ol thtlr own. The s~uatloo In the ~lar home dilenuna is t.his : -The residences, put tGPther~ Jn park-like settings, are a combinaUm' or mobile.home style construetiono, but are t"'l"bled In sections Wl\l<h can be quif•IY dropped lo p1sce. -They 11e cheaper than tht tyndal"d house on a lot. ' · • , • -Bui their .,..,.,...tloh """ deslln ls regulated "by, tbe st.ate. Attd .me aili<> say they are poor!)' bull!. · -Lo.::al laW'(n&ken biven't had a chance to met wil!t apPl\table re111la. tioos cl the modulai -· If aQ11blng, the-rtsult lo the first modular ,home over&ure• in Sp Clemente two Weei:s ago w• a sk~J ttacUon followed ~ denW by city ""'°'tlmeo. · It ~ In "the form of a retaU.ely ·~ applicatlon fllr the collsltuctlon o1,, '$IJIOl!i!e ~)Ir~. 'BUl '.a ~ \,Y!apl>Jiesmen '""" Llncbln ud,LoOn for ·the ill-lated ~". :.., . Missiot,a. Vi sitors ' . . .. de~eot near the falrwoys ol Shor<cllfls Golf CouDe proved to be ...,.U,lng entirely different. Instead or txpandabie homes on -Is. ~ aaw colorful photos ol 1 SllfnnlO oaks development with meapderlng, fr ... style pathways and landlcapinf. On lne·shrouded knolla .. 1 shlngle-sjded modular homes -pleasing to the eye1 s~ek>ua and modern. But a UpOff on the state or flux In the ind~ came shortly afterwards when aides of the applicant admitted that the proposal for• Shorecllffs would be ol the standard house trailu with "perhaps some modular units on the !rif>les." They could mate no promises on the architecture. Councilmen balked, then agr<ed they had been given a ''bait-and-switch" technique. They turned the application down unanimously.~· The denial of tt>e lat.est in a regular pi'ocession of. mobile home parks •P- plicali<tts Jett the' city facing these Cac· tors: •· 'OAILl PILOT Sllll lttftlt Summ~r vj sitors gather b.en~alh statue of Father Junipero Serra in tranquil courtyard of M1ss1on San Juan Capistrano. This is the height of the tourist season at the Mission , founded by Father Serra in 1776. Hundreds of visi tors come each day. Some, like the Mission's famed swallows, make the pilgrimage each year. Girls· Super a t Market • San Clernente Distaf f ers Taking Ove r B oxboy j obs By FREDERICK SCHOEM~L· Of l~t OallY Plr.t Sllff 1t used to be that when a high school boy wanlecl a job, he usually b e g a n looking at the local superm arket to see about becoming a boxboy. But in San Clemente the guys aren't doing that so much any more. The girls are. Now. in at least ha lf of the San Clemente supermarkets, the kid behind the checker packin~ your sacks with vittles might very well be a pert, teenage girl. ln two of the city's four large food stores, the help includes girls behind the chcckstands and when the coeds aren't sacking they sweep. stock shelves, gather shopping carts. and even mop .. noon . And their bosses say the girls outdo their male rriends in the demanding job. "The gals are getting a good reception from the customers, too ,'' reports Leon Riley, manager of the local Alpha Beta . "Especially the men." The Alpha .Beta market employs two boxgirls, allhough they have a more subtle name of "clerks' helpers." The store also employs eight boxboys. The girl helpers are an outgrowth of hiring women to run the checkstand s. "Two or lhree years ago we couldn't get boys with the draft calls so high and the fact that everybody was in school. So we hired wives whose children were in school during the day. Then we began to accept applications from the older teenage girls to work here." Riley notes that the girls, while l>eing helpers now, can get the "[eel" of the store and then move to the cash rt~r. Bob Bersch, manager or t h e Alberl.'IOO's Market at eo2 N. El Camino Real has one girt to 11J boys working as clerk's helpers. "She's a good worker,' and if IM wasn't she wouldn't be hcrt," Bench declared. The "she" he refers to Is 111 tt«nt craduale of San Cl<mente lll&b SchoOI, GROCERIES HER BAG Mar1<1t Cieri< Mlc:houx , Wendy Michaux. , :'I love It here. lt's really nice ." she · remarked, as she expertly loaded a sack . with groceries of all sorls. Wendy, 17, has been working for the stpre for the past two months. ''I just came in, filled out an -application and was hired -all in one day.'' She is frequently told by some or the male. market-goers tha t she Is "an. awfully good-looking boli:boy.'' but Wendy is quick to add· that the female shoppers like her. too. "One lady was happy with me a couple or weeks ago, because I didn't put lhe tomatoes in the bottom of the sack, like some other people will do,'' Wendy saKi. While not backing up the checker loadin1 sacks and helping customers with their groceries, Wendy collects shopping cartl and stocks shelves. Berscll said' the fi rst gil'I he employed carhe in durin1 the winter montrus and wanted a job. "The boys were non-0· lslent, and she was going to school at night, so I hired her. Now they all come in." "aut not everyone qualifies for the job. It's really not that easy, especially pushing tbe shoP.Ping carts back into place. You've really got to scramble." Bersch said that while the store has not hired too many young women to work, older wives have been at the store for a long time. "'We need them during the winter. All we can find are these surf bums and they're no good: So we go to the women or the girls." Safeway Markets district offk:e In Orange repurts that the chain outlet has only tried the gal helpers In the .. Palos Verdes area, but not In OraJlie County. "We've always had boys who are available for work,'' an orriclal said . "You have to rulize that the.re are certain limft:atkml Ori the gitls . • • weight they can lift, hours they can work •. ," But then, some of lhc boxgirls In San Clemente know better. They've been liberated. -The ··-of ' two mobilt 'home parka already in the city. One occupies about a mile of beach ·frontage from the city's North Beach upcout. •toward Poche beach. The other ls a lon1 .. established park along El Camino Real below ShorecHffe. Both have · borne the brunt of criticism for years. ' -A growing public n~ f~r , hol!Sif!8 which , requires . little maintenance, a lower prk:t,, yet j.s spacious and cOm- fortable: · -I\ wealth -ol fallow land ·-either on abundant hillsides or on the· t'fatter terrace areas, but there are relatively few areae where a moblle home park W1lukl not interfere with exisUng,develop- merit. -A rapid])' changing Industry which Is developlng the modular concept, tut wheels. -An already-boned version of the city 's !irst proposed ordinance setting up doiens of. design crileria for mobile home park construction. it faces ap- proval, but does nOt approach the ques- lions: raised by modular housing. -Promises of sUll more requests to bulJd mobile home parks ._ ap- plications universally attacked b y neighbors ~by and regularly doomed before lhe council. Does San Clemente really want the mobile home park? , Mayor Walter .Evans popped that ques, lion for a stfaw vote before fellow coun- clhnen, planning, parks and parking com- missioners this week. Nlne out of ten said (in varying degrees of foodness) -that the parts were in- evitable and lbey would probably agree. if strong condiUons' were met. But· hardly any member would want such 1 par~ next door to his borne. "That seems to be the greatest pro- blem,'' said the mayor. "Everybody says they serve a function, but no one wants them dO\Yn the street." And as the debate continued among the group, several other aspects never reached solution. Some said the system of the mobile home park in highly desirable areas meam that qutmoded, old, a n d deterk>rallng trailers stay in a space fo~ years -repeatedly selling at tiigh prices because of the attract!On of the mobile l)ome space it.self. Counclbnan 'lbomas O'Keefe, long a strong Gpponent Of mobile home parks without strict.planning -reiterated his position .that allowing ,a ,park in San Clemente today would "create an instant slum because the lndmlry is in such a state ol flui:. It would make us anoU>er Oceanside or San Fernando Valley.",• Along the Orange Coast, he added, the three major residential developers -, ~ Irvine Company, Mission Viejo and the JA.guna Ni&U;el firms -have not even considtred the mobile home u 1 compxient of their residenUal master planning. 'lWe're rank amateurs compared to ·Some chefs 1 these pn:l(eulonals," O'Keefe said. He suggested thlt the city wait for a moderate period of Ume, then eumlne the industry and the future ot , new parks beln& built under new concepts el&e1fhere, But eveh as the cilY walta end tries to develop stirf -but workable standards -~ , pressure still is on by lhe d~velopers.1 The LinColn Savings representatlvu'· met Ttiund~ with Evan.s to pre.ent som& ideas for a new appllcaUon on the ShorecllU1 proposal -)Vhat Mayor Evans predicted would be a "really to1>11otch plan this Ume. '' An lnvltaUon has come from the flnn to councilmen and commissioners to board a bus or helicopter for a tour of the Sherman Oaks modular complex. It won some candidates at the meeting. About a half-Ooten oUiciab plan to . see the project in coming day s. But the question will still plague them even alter they are predictably im· preUed..:by tile complex. Should it be built In San Clemente? No one seems to know . -. . . Nixons Consider · Clemente Villa Their Home Tile Nixoos call It home -their San Clemente villa by the sea -and home it will probably remain. First Lady Pat Nixon told a group or visiting lrish school teacher!t in Washington last wett that she and her husband will live in California after they leave the White House. However. she did not specify where. Constance Stuart, Mrs. Nixon's press secrelary, is ~ttlnR that the Nixons will move permanently to San Clemente after the President leaves olrlce. She says It Is a dec;lsion that likely won't come up ror six years. Naturally she's belting on Nixon's election to a second tenn. "They' refei' to thls house as home," Mrs. Stuart told a reporter, "and I would say at this juncture they wUI keep it as home. They Jove this house." The President purchased the old Hamilton Cotton estate last year -im- mediately putting San Clemente tnuch in the national and inlemational news. He takes obviOU3 pride lo showing off the Span~style house and grounds, where President Roosevelt used to play poker, to visitors. Nelgl}bors report they occasionally see the ,tr'esicknt ~liWinl around in hls golf cart or w~lklnf. Wh ittier, the President's hometown, offered to donate from 30 to 100 acres of land for his library earlier thls yfft. Mission Trail ·1 • u ! Cape> Lions Club ,~ Plans Breakfast •• • CAPISTRANO BEACH -P&ncakes.c will be served by the -San Juan Capistrano Lions Saturday and Sunday. ·~ The fund raising event wl.11 take place ': from 7 a.m. to lt a.m. in the parkin .~ IOt of Von's shopping ceoter ln Ceplatrano' • Beach. ,. The breakfast wlll be directed by Red ..... Hannon, chairman, Dennis Paquin, co- chairman, Roy . Hawthorn, Bob Roark and Ernie Thompson. Proceeds will be used far various"' philanthropies, 'particularly sight con· sei'vation. • ., • . e Elk • Seek MeMbers MISSION VIEJO -'lbe newly orpnj ed Elk1 Lodge is still seeking members. Ed MacGuiri, membership cha1rman. invites anyone interested In becomin~ an Elk to attend one of the meetln~ hPid each Monday at 3 p.m. In' IM,t li-11ssion Viejo's Montanoso Recreatkl(l , Center. For memberahip lnformaUon cal\1 MacGuire at 137-2415. * 'I •• • .1 EL TORO -The S.rnoo Adobe lo , EJ Toro. a 124-year~ld hhitoncal monu ment, will be open to the public be- tween noon and 4 p.m. Sunday. -,. Coshnned hostesses will show vl81tor1 '.1 through the .furnished home of the lat.I Don J,ose Serrano. Visitors shooukl taki1 the Et Toro ramp off_ the San Oleg · Freeway and head eut following direc· tional signs. '" ... ... Reds Release Ashes 'I: Of American Ca ptiv& ·• HONG KONG (UP!) -Two rep<e,... taUves of the American Red CrossJ ha ve received the ashes o( an l American businessman who cOmmilled • suicide in a Communist Chinese jlriso11' after serving manj 1ear1 of a lUe sen· tente as an-alleged spy. . Tile asheJ ol Rugh .~; a n•~i~: of Yonkers. N.Y-., were handed ovb' ..... Wednesday by officials or the Communist Chinese Red Cron Society at the Lowu , border staUon. .:.. Youienot. are paid to cook over hot flames. So enjoy a flameless electric kitchen. ~ A flameless, all..dcctric kitchtn is one of the blg beneflu built into every Meda1Uon Home or Apartment And that IJ!Cans a clean,cool kitchen. A Medallion Home or Apartment can also mean flameless electric heating. Clean heat. J_t doe.snit dirty your cW'tains or upholstery. •' And flameless air conditioning that cools and cleans the air yoa .breathe.Pure comfort for the mtlre famUy, And flameless water htat- Jng-wlthout_a J>llot, without a Bue, without wasted space. Furthermore, a Medallion Home has ample wiring for today'o electri· cal a.ppliancei, plus provisions for the elec tri cal wonders coming ap in the all-electric futare. Me~ Homes and Apartments ue.1lOW 1.viilable in all price nnges. Yoa can see why more and more: people arc choosing to live the good cl= life-dectrlcaUy. l•clwU•1 chcf1. gl·E Southerp California Edison ,, ' ., ' 4 -1111.0t ln Neville's Cross, England, Tlmm.lr. the blue bUdgerigar- a small Australian parrot-is back home igain because be knew his phone ,number. His owner, Mrs. Enid Barnell, said the bird was returned to her after being misi;. ing for five days. "Obviously he bas beard us answering the tele· phone with our number and has )e•med it by heart," Mrs . Bar .. nett .said. "Thank goodness he's an intelligent bird." • .di'fj~~ Donald Ollktt1'• jatMr tckts no chancer 1Dht'1' he send.I the ll•Jlta.r· old. to play bastbaU *in AstorMi Park, New York City. The 11oungster 1h010- ed up at batting practice Thursda:v wearing 11 Qa.! maSk becouse of the alert-leVel ·air pollutUfu fit · the Citv. · • • The Clifton, N.J. city council re· centlJ approved a liquor liCense for T9mper•nc• A. F(•pk. • Gh~go Jfa1101 Richard J. Dalftl rtvaked t./t.e liqU-OT lidme of the B&B ioungt' recentlJI, charging it wa.r somtthing of a clip joint. PoUCf! had 'rtporttct that a. man had been attacked at the B&B and his head shtun~d by pth<r patr..,, o"4 lhe •!""' ers gave him M pro!eetion., • A 40-year-old truck driver from Hugo, Okla ., fell asleep at the wheel Tuesday ind injured four elephants. Robert D. CIJno told po- lice he was aboul five''miles east of Norwalk when the truck, owned by the Clyde Beatty.Cole Brothers CircUs, overturned. The circus ele- phants suffered scratches and bruises. • A 1Io.lifu, England weig ht- lifting club hll! had to close. bt· cawe c strong arm gang has "li/Ud" all l ,000 pounds of its equipment. ,. ., .. ·-··· ...., ,... ~ • ''When the first settlers arrived In early California,'' Gov. Ron.ild Reagan said recently at rolJ-oUt ceremonies or a new lri·jet. "they found half-naked savages smoking the leaves of a native plant. You can still see the same thing On Sunset Boulevard every Saturday night," lhe Governor added. Vows Snaog l'!g'ltt 'Rockless' Nixon Assures Ro-ck Fest • Israel on Peace Rocks On LOS ANGEl.ES (UPI) -Only hours before Israel accepted the U.S. 91).day cease-fin, Prtsidenl Ni.Ion aQl.lred the nation that it could accept the proposal Without fear of giving a mHltary a~ vantage to Arab nations. In a newa conference Thursday nighl broadcast from a Los Anceles hotel, the first full«esa meeting with reporters he bad held outside tht White House, the President also promised to press * * * Nixon Blames Disturbances On F acullies SAN CLEMENTE, Cslif. IUPI) President Ni.Ion ThurSday night 1ceused University leaders of blaming hhn for their oWn shortcon'lings. The probJem.a of dissent mushrooming into violence and students ahouUng obacen.iHts at visitin« speakers an "not. prob1ema for the government," NiJon said. "Mle President obviously was chafing under recent criticism directed at his admlnistraUon by Dr. Ale1ander Heard, the Vanderbilt University chancellor who recently· ended two months as a special liaison far the academic community with tbe White House. In reports made public last week. Heard and his asalstant, Dr. James Cbtek of ltoward University, hanhly Criticized.. the Ni1ori AdminiStr1Uon Cot failing to communicate with younr peo- ple. • SbowJng·some anger and considerable u:uperation, the P.resldent chose bia news conference Jn·Lol Angele• to reply. "The problem of communlcatlni with studenu and other groups is a perennlal ooe. It um.ta in previous adminlstr~ tlons. lt ulsts in tbit-one," Nixon aaid. He ~ out lhot bi. admfnlstratlon was moving toward an end to the war in Vietnam and the draft and dealing with problems of the ·environment. "But once ~I those things II'!! done, still the tm.~neaa and the 1hallowneas, the superficiality that many colleie students find in collere curricula will still be there. "We caMot 30l:ve it. lt is a problem which college ldmlnlltrators and colle1e fac;urtiea mu.st face up to. We share our part oC the plamt. I assume that responsibility. 9Ve will try to do better • But,1bey have to do better Ibo." • Nerve Gas Dump Delay Asked TALLAHASSEE, Flo. (UPI) -Go•. Claude Kirk demanded Thursday the anny abandon any immediate plans to dump 2,615 tens or nerve gas into the Mlantic Ocean off the Soulheastern Sta board. And Rep. Paul Rogers (~Fla.), asked the Pentagon to delay shipping the 1as auoss the ~th. a move scheduled for Aug. 10, because of the "Potential of disaster." Kirk and Rogen, however, appeared to be lodging the only major official objections In Dixie lo the plan Io d~­ of the World War II nerve 1u by dumping it 2IZ miles east of Cape Ken- nedy, Fla. AuthorlUes ln the state. through which the slow·movlng train carrytn1 the car10 of 418 desk-sized concrete "coff!n1'' mu!t travel seem assured that the Army ls taking every precaution to avoid any danger to the populaUon. ... !he light ogainst poUuUon In Conl""· MIDDLEFIELD, Conn. (AP) -YOllll& in the government and throughout in· people continued to pour tnto &ht rockltu duatry. Powder JUdct. rock t..Uval area today "This ill an area v.'here we cannot heM1esa of the fact that there was wait," be said, noting the eyMJniin& 1'° music. But u they did the producer pall that settled over major clUes co~ of the rock futival umounced he ,,.. to-coast and oveneaa thia week. tryins to reM Yankee Stldium for • He a1JO 11erved notice he mil:ht seek two.day cionetrt Alli· ZI and 23. higher taxes if Congreaa doel!I not curb Tlttets to1d for the Powder Pkl&• its spending. He hinted he might veto festival It • apiece would be honcftd two appropriations bills that es:ceed hill at tbt stadium, producer Alan Sberr bud Ih I said He sakl contracil to rent the get request.I by more 1n 1 billion. Stadium_ would be atcned witbia 1 ftw Nixon inaisled that "lnllation is being di~ -.. boll ~rt bolds '5,000. cooled" Hespite an upward surge in the ,, ... +11 •:: - wholesale price index in July. He said A fe1tiVJ ftmolpbert wu mal.nllined he was more encouraged by the at Powder Ridte meuwb1lt by 15,00Q dmvnward trend in the index -harbin&er YOUDC persons already It the ski alopt of a rise or fall in conaumel' prices site. -in the past six months. 1be ntwcoman arrlved today linlly • On school desegregaUon, the Preaident and in iroups, walkint and hitc:hhikin( added a condition to his plans for federal to a fuµval binned by lhe CQtU1a u assistance to Southern school districts a nuisance. Integrating this fall by saying that l' .s. A rew slept · Ilona the roadside durin& cfficials -would be sent only into districts the night but mott contin,u14 the two.mile \vhich have nquested them. trek on foot from the at.ate police bar· The President, relaxed and self-con-ricades set up on ro1ds around the fident throughout the hall-hour session site. lh1t was delayed briefly by a microphone State Police Commisal.oner Leo J . failure, returned by heliC'Opler to the ?t1ulcahy said ht has no plans to force Weatem White House at San Clemente anyone to leave the ski resort. immediately afterwards. '"l'hey can stay then Wl nwitqiv· The President spoke before a na· lng." tionwide audience after the tuaeli ~· 1be young folk campinf d there cabinet met for !he third time this SIGN.OF DISTRESS AT RQCK FEST? ..emed undeterred by !he 1ac:1c ot mllllc: w .. t without 1 decision whether to ae-, _____ v_...,.__,:_.Mo_n_H_...,--=.•_F_l_•.::cl_U_,ps_ld_•_Dow'---""-•-•_P_.,._•_do_r_R:.:lcl=go.:.._ ___ or::_:tbe::..:ur::..:ea::t..:ol:._lbe=lr:...::boW.=:_-- cept the American peace plan for the 1 middle eut. Israel accepted the plan in the fourth crisill session of the wetk this morning, Nixon aclmowledJed that Israel was conce-rned tbat a cease-fire woukl rel!lult in a military buildup in the Arab coun- tries bordering on Israel. NiJon intemipted a lo.day working v1eatioo at San Clemente to come to Los Angeles for the-natkmlly televlled and broadcast news a::derence. He held an informal neW1 conference In his White House «fice ~ week qO Monday . NIU1n also said he believed "lnnauon Is being cooled and will continue to be cooled" if the federal 1overnment ketps its budget under control. He ex- preued his confidence that the country wu "on the way" to an uPward moving economy in the last half of 1970. The President !!aid ~ wall not too cmcerned with the increase in the preUmioary July wbolc&ole prlc< Index, becau.se he was more Jnterested in kloitr rqe mO¥ements. The inde:r showed a 0.3 percent fn.. c~ in July -the sharpest jump SJDCe January. Turning to Indochina, Ni1ori agaln said there is no disagreement between the U.S. position on the Paris negotiations and the position held by South VM!t- nameJe Preaident Nguyen Van Thlt:u. He said niteu's positkm "is on all fours ••kh ours" and noted that the two coun- tries have consulted on Yril.1t will be negotiated. at Paris. He noted !hot Ambuudor Dovld K. E. Broce bad met In s.I1on wllh Thieu to make ue there was no d:J.aacree:mtnt. He told roporters be belie-i<d tbal chances for a neaott1ted peace oo Viet- nam w~ better bee.I.use « the Cam· bodian operatlon. On the sensitive issue ol acbool desegregati<Jn. Nixon said no federal rtpHsieotaitves would be sent to tey soutbem 9Chool dl.strict.s unless they were HqUelied by local IOY<mment.s. 1be President amplified on bis recent ddiial that ICOl'eS of federal 11ents would be dispatched to tbe Soulb thb fall lo brlns about deaelrqotion In hotdOllI district.. Niion said how many federal npreJtn· laUves went into the South would depend on whether the dllbicts "ask for the help" of Justice or Health, Education and Welfare Department experts. "We are not IOin1 to have forced policy in this area," Nix1.i said "Our policy will bf: one 6f cooperation, rather than coercion.'' ... ' unt I, Q. ~at should a person do who is worried about inflation, the stock market , the future? A . Cut back on unnecessary spending. Protect your family's future by placing your savings and investment funds in an insured savings account. Q. Does it make any difference where I put my savings? A.Yes . An insured account with a ~avings and loan association will pay you more interest than banks and will ·be more certain than stocks. Q. Do all savings and loan associations in Southern . California pay the same interest? A .Yes. Q. Then why should I put my savings with Mutual Savings · and Loan Association? Storms Soak Muggy U.S. A.We asked our own account holders for the answer to this 1 one. They have confidence in the knowledge of our employees. They can depend upon recei'ying accurate information, and are pleased with the efficient and courteoU1 service. Sticky Weather Ranges From Midwest to East Coast c.nrornl• 1 Coutel HUl' Wfllllit.. fedty. l.'9M "•dtti.· •ll'llh '"'"' ..... IMl'll!fll """" ~· ..... _,.,,.,. • " u kftoll •• •fltt- ,..., ... Sfitllf'fty, HitPI !WtY 611. '°"'"' left\Hntl\lf'9f •• ,,.. ,,,_ l' .. n . lftl•JW ,_ .. 111ru r•-tfim '2 N M. W1tw ""'"'l ltlrt 61. S.&TUllMiY ,..,, 1'11111 1l1X 1.l9I, 10 , • ., ·-• 1,06 1.fl'I ..... ~ """ .. ,,, •. ,,,, '·' ... __ ..,... )111,,,.. fl "°"' 1 1 .. 11 01 1'", ltlt 11J!tm. ""'""' ..... '.Jil '""' •••• 1111 '·"'· r-perat•res Mltti \...,. rrec. Al"*'-IW " .. ·--.. .. "' Afl•nl1 " n ll•ktrslltld " •• a!'""9rck .. " ·" '"" " » ... IM • .. trownw1111 " " '-Ille••• .. " ·" Cll'IC1"M11 .. n " Dtn~tr " " ·" DK Molrlts " " ""n" • " ·" ........ , • • . N FortWtrlll , .. " ,,,,,,,. " " li•lt~ " " 1C1111•1 C.il'I "' " ·" l.•1 v1111 '" " l.otAllft!H .. " Ml-HllJ " ~ ·" N ... Or ... 111 " " ..,,.y ... " " NWff'I Pl1U1 •• " OP1111C1 .. .. Okl..,.,,. (.lfy '" " ..... •• " T "•'"' SM!rits '" • .. •• 111 ..... " " Pi'•otni• '" .. '"""'"" " .. ·" ...,..,,,,,,.. " " l1111M (ltf " " lllld 11\ltf .. " .... .. • IMl'fM'Mflll .. " $111 Lt~t C.lftl • .. ·" S1n Dlttt " .. $1n l"rtn<ltce " " $111111 " .. SPOk1M .. " Tl>wmal '" " W1JPll11910" .. II .~ Q. How big is Mutual Savings? A. We're called "The Big M" because we have over 440 million dollars in assets . -Q. Where are your offices? A.Mutual Savings has offices in Pasadena (head office), Glendale, West Arcadia, Covina and Corona de! Mar . RobonD.AJIOft Vic« Pn1tdtlf.I 4 11...,. MUTUAL SAVIN&& COIONA DEL Mil • 21'7 Eut C-Hllhwar , • • Friday, July 31, 1~70 DAILY PILOT I U.S. Bombers Pound Reds QUIENIE By Phil lnterlancll Raids Greet Returning' Enemy Urtiis From Cam:bodia SAIGON (UPt) -U.ll. 1152 , . boml>en carried out their heaviest ralda Jn lix months acroas Vietnam In a , ates· of mbsion> ending lod1y. The u.s, Command Ilk! --Americla w~ we at after JlllOITlll• ,,_. -in Laos and Comboc!IL' B5ll dn>pped at -four milUon pouada fll llombo ln 19 raids -Sold!' -.. in tbe e boun eadlal · aL llOOll, mDltary 1 po kt ime n uict The .--the heariesl since tu II mlasions """" Ja. --'i.'.1'ol._ -· -•t _...,.. __ mile _,, .... __ .... (Diii) _, Ibo two Viet· ...... tllo u llfDh Farul .oe.-tbe Mtian'• lllUl.bern tlp. 'lbt ...... -nporta that --Communilt ,.,._. .... __ In- NEW YORKER DONS SMOG MASK Toni Brown P•rodln ;Fun City' Tag to South Vietnam from Cam- bodlo. The artkes in tllo aMlh pounded buildups in -neat tbe Laotian border where allied troops engaged in heavy fighting with Commun) st forct.1 three weeks ago. New Yorkers Cho~; Traffic Curbs Urged By United Pre•s IntcrnaUoaal New York City seemed like the largest stuffy room in the world today. There were (ew signs a window would be open- ed before late in the weekend, The City Department of Air Resources reported Thursday that the air pollution level was again unhealthy and was expected .to remain about the same today. The department explained there was no danger from short-term exposure, but added that this was the 58th day this year it had described the air as unhealthy. Mayor John V. Lindsay, who earlier in the week had con- sidered banntflg unessential automoblle traffic ln lower Manhattan, urged c;orrunl!ters to leave their cars at home and rely on mass transporta- tion. He followed his own sug- gestion and rode the subway to City Hall Thursday. Outside City Hall, 20 Y.oung people demonstrated ta de-i mand that 1lle city lie closed to' all outside automc.&ile· traf· fie. They wore black robes and hoods and six of them had on gas masks. The demonstration w a s organized by "Environmtftt.!" Danielle Frankenthal, descnb- lng herself as a run time worker for the group, said, "Why can't people just take a vacation (or a couele ~f days, or if. they have ~ come into the city why can t they use mas.s transportation?" Officials in Washington llad barricades ready in case a full pollution alert was called. 1'he master plan calls for a ban on all but essential traffic in the capital if the smog' reaches the criUcal point. WashingtOll, like most o£ the East C-Oast, expected ~it~le relief. Thunderstonn activ1~y in southeastern :pennsylvama lowered the pollutant levels in Philadelphia, but t h e outlook was for the situation Conductor George Szell Dies at 73 to develap again before the weekend. A first.stage pollulioo watch In five southern counties of New Jersey was canceled. lt had lasted two days, the longest in the state's history . But smoke in northern New Jersey increased. , We.st Virginia exlended • pollution alert, begun Monday, through the weekend. Industry was told to curb smoke and resident. ,,.,.. wed not to burn trash. Heavj'-,ahqwers wasted away pollutioil,in ,Georgia after two 'days. . Guerrillas Kidnap U.S~ Official M 0 NTl>V!DEO, Uruguay (AP) .u A.I U.S. Emb<wy of- !icial .... kidnaped today by left.wing u r ban guerrillas. They also attempted to kidnap two other U.S. Embassy of- ficers, but Called, an embassy ·spokesman sajd. Police reported the BruiliM consul, Aloisi Comltti, was kidnaped by the Tupan:iaro guerrillii organization moments after five terrorists seized Dan A. Milrione, 50, a public safety adviser from Indiana. Mitrione is attached to the Agency for Interna- tional Development. . A news yeftd9r W~s the ooly witness to Mitrione's kidnap, police said. The v en do r reported five persons armed with pistols and automatic we apon s Intercepted Mitrione's car this morning and forced him to get into their station wagon. Police reported Mitriooe was found , apparently wound- ed, an hour later, ln a Mon- tevideo suburb. But a U.S. Embassy spokesman Yid he knew nothing about Mltrione having be.en found. Mitrlone. a Navy ofUcer in World War II, was a policeman in Indiana until 1960, the Emba»y said. Nine of the raids came in the 24 hours ending at noon today t llYeJl o{ them in moun- Bomb Blasts Barracks In Saigon SAIGON (AP) -A bomb ripped through the around floor of a U.S. enlisted men's billet in downtown S&igoa tonight, c au s I n g extensive damage lo the building and a half dozen vehicles. First reports Aid there were no injuries. American demoliUon ex- pertJ aald t.erroruts placed a 4S..pound plastic charge ad- jacent to the tktory Ky Son enlisted men's blllet. About ~00 Americans left .t~ e building and U.S. officer1 said all military men were ac· counted for. The explosion hurled a large ball of flame Into the sky ond fire swept through the billet. Some adjoining Vietnamese frame buildings alto were damaged, along with a half dozen military voblcles parted near tbe billet. .Ambulances and fire trucks raced to the scene. Witnesses said flame1 shot Into the sky after a dleael fUel engine running an outside : generator for the billet blew up. An American sentry in a concrete guard post 10 feet away tscaped Injury, although he was blown acroa the street. Shortly before the blast, some Vietnamese chl.1dren were playing in the area, said Lt. John Pickett, Qlicago, 111., who lives in an aru>eJ: 200 feet away. I A string ., American biljets \n lhe .ectlon have Men bombed in previous terrortst attacks. 'l11e bombing was the fint major incident in Saigon since July 20 when Viet Cong flUll- ners fired two rockets into the capital. An · ap!rt.IMnt house was hit but no one was hurt. Two day1 ago national police claimed to have broken up • Viet Cong terrorist ring in Saigon with the arrest of 12 cell members. CLEVELAND (UPI) George Szell, 73 conductor of the world-renowned Cleveland Orchestra died Th u rs d a y night at ' Lakeside Hospital here. Keeping Seeret British Bari Mag 01i Meg Szell had been confmed to the hospital after suffering a LONDON (UPl) -Buck-asking them to reconsider heart attack upon return from tngham Palace said today whether thlll was an •J>" an East Asian tour Utis sum-BritWl nilgazine dealera have proprtate article to publlah mer. decided t.o withhold diltrlbu-here," Griffin aaid. "That .II He was born June 7, 1897 lion of the current Ladiel all I know of the matter." ln Budapest and was a piano Home Journal suggesUng the 'nle current iSIUe of the prodigy, appearing with the marriage of Princess Ladies Home Journal carries Vienna symphony at the age Margaret and Lord Snowdon an article by a "well·placed of 10. He wu a guest con· might be an unhappy one. BriUsh diplomat" c a I I e d ductor with the Berl ln Maj. John Griflln, press "Lord X" who refers to Philharmonic at 17. secretary to the queen mother Snowdon and the princess as Szell was in America whtn and Princess Margaret, denied "a reluctant couple.'' Wor ld War II broke out and there had been pressure on The article said that on decided t.o remain. the American magulne from fonnaJ occaalons. Princu.a His own piano composlUons the royal family. M.ara:aret and her husband put include Plano Quintelt Varia-"What harpened wu that on a ahow of harmony but lions on an Orfglnal Theme an informa approach was that at infonnal gatherings, for Orchestra and L y r i c made to the B r i ti 1 b ''the unfortunate altuaUon ii Overture. distributors oC lhil magazine, all too clear." -································~ : 'OLYMPIC POOL . : I Tho "MARAtHON sWIM" 11 In lb 7111 Doy. Tho Kids H .. o $wum I 513,a.I Yol'ft (291 Milos) 139 Continuous Hounl • • HAYE . YOU BACKED THIM WITH YOUR • : DONA nON1 w~ ... ,.% flln4• •··~ "' .. •-· ,,.. ,... ".... : I ~·:·:t·~~.~1~.~~.~~~·-··········-·····-··-····--··------·-··-·-·•-••···-: 1 ADDRf.55 ···-··'····· ·· ............... ·· ·· ................................ -········--····· ·· ···-·· .. · ··· ·· · · ·· · · I OLYMPIA P. 0 0 L P.O. Box IOD • taln jungle bonier ,..toU of the northern · province• . of Quang Tri ms Thu Thten. Two others bit tara<(s from three to fOllf miles !tun-the Cambodian bonle< and 79 to '19 miles northwes! of :iaiaoo. Field 1'portl from ·PhnOm Penh saJd a Communist attack before dawn ioday on a Cam· bodJan artillery position , 40 mlles weat·~thwt.at of the capital had ~ HlgJiway * * * Poliq/ Said 4, connect1n1 tho copltal wtth tho port of Kompollf Som. Cambodian army units sent In tt1nklrctmenta led by armored cars to try to reopen the highway. The oeverlng of the btghway prevented Cambodian troops trom getUng reinlorcements by road to the five-batlalion unit moving up to assault the K1rirom Plateau, a few miles WHt of the roadblock. * * * 'Aggre.srive' ~ officers near the ecene aaid ·an ann.,;"ed bat- t.llon flom %nd llllltary DI.vision he·adquarters at Kom. pong Speu was rushed to Lhe scene 11hortly after dawn . . Even with help from Cam-'!J~ bodian air force T28 lighter. .~.~";f.1 bombers, they Jailed to · .,, dislodge the Viet Cong. They ,{;. •' \ reported five Cambodian !{.!'· :i: troOps wtre wounded. _., · -ti * * Hanoi Calls Nixon Talk 'Lie' PARIS (UPJ) -North Viet. had 'weakened' the enemy and nam said today President Nix-allowed to look forward to on was telling "~s" when 'beltes-prospects for peace he asserted ]Jl'OOPeCts for negoUatlons.' This unfounded peece in Vietnam were better claim of Mr. Nixon Is 11lgnifl- ·and the North-Vietnamese and en. tor the two. aspect.I of Viet C-Ong were weaker. his admlnlstratlon: In a formal statement, the "-It has achieved ex- Ncrth Vietnameae delegation celleoce Jn the art of Jying, to the peace talks condemned In the art of makln& defeats Nixon's Vietnamese policy look . like victories. It sUU statement as "An ~ve, c:llnp to the Wusim of scoring bellicose and co I on i 1 l l 1 t a military vtctory on the bat· policy" that had •Deaedly tlefleld likely to lead to a poshed the !lknonth<>kl peo<e • pooillon of llrengUl at the talks into a deadlock. neogtiating table." The Hanoi stat'!ment said The statement reaffirmed that at his news 'conference Hanoi's demands, already re-- Niroo continued "'to boast of jeded by t.he United States imaginary U.S. victories in and South Vietnam's President Cambodia and in South Viet-Nguyen Van Thieu, for the nam. Carried away by these creation of a provisional roali- Jies he claimed that the U.S. tion cabinel in Saigon that aggression again.st Cambodia would prepare new general 21.4 CU. FT. SIDE-BY-SIDE REFRIGERATOR FREEZER . • • ·-W1a1Y,., !nmr loilt" lo %l2 k IU co. It. of fresh food sfmle In h refricerator sectim-1.qiermlrbt riatrt in ywr hmue.. Refrictrator Riis oul: on wheels f« clerii&. • UJmlll1 ClllllMI smm ht yon adlast l>till\I> qtilJ 11111 ... ,, ·---l!botfi9'elicnplusba!!lrllllf-. ....,_ 7 dq mMt keeper, err drawer, tnd ffesb fruit Ind .... tobl. bin!. m smam !11111.11111£ cmmG1S ~t ,.. di'1 !hi ux1 11oo If" DI cdl l'll Wllllillbolb rofrl&mbx-1 _ _,, • • lfllll llUT ••• flrdor tt ... (cptl<nol, od-iO .. ""' t ) la1llr fer ......... "'~ of lu -It,..._,, tips. IN1952 Loosened Cap Not 'Air Raid' DOWNEY (AP) -Paul Redwood thought somebody waa bombing him when 1 red, dillclike object crashed next to him .as he was quietly washing his car. Redwood, 45, ducked behind a wall, thinking the fiv-e-inch- wide thing might be a Ume bomb. It wasn't. Inve1UgaUng policemen said Sunday It was a fuel cap that fell from a pasaing airplane. "I don't lose my temper ber&-1 FIND it here!" . . Nose Amputee? DETROIT (AP) -Mona the elephant la resting quietly afte a 111rrt<:al team from Michigan 1. St ate Univeraity sewed her nose back in place. She nearty Josi her nose when her roommate, Mary, bit her Wednesday in a nasty moment. lt took 30 stitches to repair the eight-foot llunl<. ' When It &eta hot and humid, elephants ,.~ jllll Uke people -crabby," u:ld Dr. Robert F. Wlllson, director of tile Delrotl Zoo. "Al\}'tblnf( mllht happen." A powerful tra.iqullizer WIS ruahed to Detrot! Wednelday from Sandulky, Ohio, and Wal um to quiet the 30-year-okl elephant during the oporatlon. Moment& after the druc "we off, Willsm said, Mona used the trunt to coosume four pounds 'of hay, a loot of bread, sl.x apples and gallons of waler. BIG 16:6 CU. FT. NO FROST 2 DOOR 95* ~== REFRIGERATOR·FREEZER • """"'~frat frll .. llotlo ~ --· •Glolttop--.... 154 ... tl-- • r..111--.1-111, I ldJ flllL • S'(llllll """""" -• l'llln-~ atspois llcld "'to"-• lco -nodJ-Md l ........ ,.. _ "'•299•1~'· TV and APPL_IANCE IN HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540-7131 ' Daily 9 'til 9; Sat. 9 'til 6 • I 1 FOUND AT I 0 N Cosio MoN, Collf. 9'1627 • 4 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·'-~::;;;;. ___________________ .;. ______________________ _ I . I • D.uI.Y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE • Hair at No dad·blamtd U.S. Dlatrict Court Is goln1 to pull the wool over Saddlebact College's eyes. Coll .. e trustees have agreed unanimously to carry their ll&bt to control student hair length up the next run.( of !be federal judicial ladder. They're appealing the decision that college hair l..,U,. l'lllrlctions al Saddleback are unconstitutional. ·· 'I1ila appeal wlll cost the taxpayers money, of cdun. And altl>ough the board bas always shied away from aceopUnc federal funds to broeden their educ ... U-1 al!lrtn,(, they apparenU:V believe the hair issue Is lmPGnant -llh to merit tAe e-se. The U.S. ·Dfstrict Court held tliii •month that the right to detennine One's own hair length is a fundament- al fre<!dom. The court also found no evidence that hair lale<ferad with the educatlooal process. Ttle college trustees bold 1hat they are responsible to the voten for the day-to-<lay operation of the college and fOF making the rules. .Many voters of the district disaKfee that Ws CQJI· llnufn.( tilting with a hirsute windmill is worth the el· fort. But about the only way they will ever prove it to this hoard ts at the polling place. Festival's Huge Success ~una's-ResUval of Ar:ts_ba_s @Ille_ a long way ----,,~mce it.I hwnble beginnings in the depresa(On years. II la I buae succeu. by standard& both artistic and commercial. ·It helps 'stimulate business In the art · colony for six weeks and it ls a matdlless market place tor talented local artist&. · . The 'spectrum of art on -display this season is ooe lh;al llbould match ·every taste It varies from the. tradi· ~ 'to the modem, from the potter's crafl&manshlp to Iii• bold strokes on J sea scape. · • In the evenings, di coune, the I' stival's famed . • Saddlehack· Pageant of the ,Masters takes the limellgbt In enchant ing re-creations of the best art of the ages. J • The Pageant is always a sellout but from the at.and.· point of pure entertail1!nent this may be Ila best year. It js an anniversary command performance uUJtz.. Ing the best works from the past. Festival. ontct.11; Pageant producer Don Williamson. his staff and the hundreds Qf volunteers should ail take a bow for·lliil year's suc~ssful Festival. · · ,, Robert EvaDS' Takes Ov~r.· - When Robert E..vans o{ Glendora assumes the helm of San Clemente's Chamber of Commerce in September he will have inherited a stout ship which bu weether· ed. its share of choppy seas. Evans, a top aide in the.Pasadena Chamber of COm- merce. was selected in recent weeks as the new e.zecu- tive manager of the chamber. He will assuine the duties that have been haaciled -and h~ well - by a volunteer who served during the chambers bll!iest months. Walter Hunter, a San Clemente tax consultant, took the lernpcrary job of guiding the chamber only weeks before the Rroup's largest event of the year, the annual Fiesta la Cristianita. · • • ~ The .Jll)Q!lth , e1ijcienl operation oLtbe chambe·~---1---i ~machinery after its fonner manager .left hit 1>Qlt and , , the hujt'.e success of the, fiesta, can be att.('Jl:Jllted tO the • · 'work~by .Huoter .. President Blld Fowler Pletta~1Chair­ man Don Hansen and the scores of other volunteers. hod a we!J.planned list of long-range-projects is in fine order· and the work is progres1ink _. an energetic beaullftcallon prosiram ·and the big effort .fD compile this year:s -ial telephone diTectory to name but a few. Evans sb<iuld .find the-San •Clemente Chamber of Commerce ready for action.' · s . . ' •MY 'HOOK ~1$$0LVE~." Red Sansei 'Jn Prinae Time, Half of v.s. Bouse'ltolds Listeii . . . . I ' ls Playing :t .. Gloomy . Gm: The First President to .. Master TV Pant1ier Hok i,.. . • 'lil!en , Waima Beach follow • ll11111fqp11i Beach, Ne~ Beach ' ml co.to Mesa In f>Uytni pollce belicopteri lo keep · oor hoodlums II' line? • .-D. LL ' "" ...... ,..,... .......... .,... .. ~ ... ~---" ........ , ...... ~---.......... °"' ..... WASlllNGroN -ComJnc to Ille point directly, Richard M. Nixon.fa ·IUCb a hot television penonallty that he'• got· the networkl gasping. He Can conunand 'the air in prime time and iwt ~pie in hau the households o1 Amedca mten- Jnr to him. : So ·It may be said that Nilroa b the Y-Joot.bolnd -shook ., · lint American pres-the aefonoble middle-class delegaloa·' (elli!ltion u ntaell an .typically from ideal to master· the at the J•i:.e•American CI ti i en• . famlllea 1of mercbants, necuUtea: and eledttlnic medlum. ~•ID alicqo receot1y with Ml'Y ~OOI! m& Like Wltite youths of ~u, Ke .. ..-... mcl a film oa the wartifne ~ • Ame IOd.ll. clau the ndleal or nedJ •aud Jobnii>n relocollM, of w .. t ColA Japanese in SIJtl.fype "'!'<1 In verbelly glftad, with couldnl touch him lM2. JMIDl'}I of tbae llftnts, I could • ·~ -. of the lmportanct, ln tbe1r time nooe not belp )elii tmgfeaed 'agaia by the of 'tiir opinions and even more of ofthemreaUfuDder- powerful Impact that the Nepo . has · their. morol judglitents. They have no • standing hOlr to get had on Nnerjcan culblre ~ lM' questiono about raciam or Vietnam, !>l'IJ(' in direct conte~ with nation'• w.ioty. -:':Jllltltltn. no, an oo lully aonllltt& "ho8rib on( )lo!ne· to Let me explain. rrom at...ry c1aya " 1ati ""1lo Gillura thal. they do eioctly mote theii · ' sales onward, Negro dance · w~ 'wbi1e Y~ o1 the 111111 soclll p!tdier. • . and its occompall)" cllis do -ti1'f '15<> ploy Black Panther. 'lblr ·i.. all very strange eo1111dering jng muaic ~ve In-A:_ that Nixon fared so badJy tn his tt:levlslon fluenced ~ation1 JN Ul'J~ RESPECT the yellow Pan---• .. *' 'lb ''ohn F K . . of white tnlnstrel therl' hJve an advetage over tbe White ....,.._.,. wi ., • enriedy, but m shows ai>d biacltl1ce Psntben. Instead of simply proleltlng the. eMUinj years Nq bu ' learned akits. Negro ragtime white racism, they can claim to be by experience things thlt Xinnedy did swept the country in a vidim of It. This turns out to be not know ~ Eisenhoftr atid JohRIOn th~ early years, al a Uttle difficult to do. Japane• could not cbrilprebend. this century, Right Americans are · in college In greater after World War I numbers relailvt to their population than cam~ the Jau: Aae any other ethnic group. In college they :,:1 c!i_~eg~~'Utpa: the 20's. ln the 30's get most of the pri7.e.!I and ICholarahlps. and «l's there wa.s the redilcovery of On grad111Uon they are ea1erly sought New Orleans style band music and by emplo~ers. 11llS JS QUITE SIMPLE. Jt con~ of going on televjsion,, eitber ~by ~ conference or ~ ippearanct, ~ btOe9" houn aftrr -er when Ameri<.IJll Iock ' themselves in ,lhllr homes lo digest the evenln& meal , and teek ways , to avoid "'31p!et. boredom blrcn lbuf!1ing di lo bed. OI ~· yt>J've got to be &ood at it, too. • Eisenhower had no studied n.liona.Je · for hia t.levislon -· whith .... mootlY al phis -... held In the ""'1lll)C 1-a wllen ilousewives """ broot1-.rliinen were busY at their appointed !alb. Kennedy hod a milcoqc.,,&n that hia TV appearanca ehould be ao timed as to key in w:itb the eveninc news bro.dcasts, gi•ing the Cronkite and Huntley-Brinkley •hows Ume to prepare ud use film clips and the morning newspaper editorialists tinit to prepare their summaries and con· clUllonl. Hil trouble wu that most of hiJ appearances were at the wrong hoUrs. · JOHNSON ll'Aa confused by the whole business of when aM hew to appear- on"' lelevia1on and with an due mpect. to !'bis hUd· ~j, ·made a botch of ~ ~ . Nol Ni100. HI knows precisely what , o) he is doing. He does . not. care about CBS GAVE A WAY $7~,000 worth of air CBS'.1 Cronkite and the new NBC . time for noth1ng except some vague newsteam inciuding Bririklef, nor about principle that the loyal opposJUon to a president ought to be heard. The the t;tme pressures on m o r n i n g trouble was that so few were listening. newspapennen. He wanls to hurdle the CBS seems disposed to let the Democrats commentators and news shows and make have at least lhret more such t i m es direct contact with the L1rgest possible before the. cr.nera which adds up to quite a lot of fr.ie air time to devote number of citizens at the hours when to such a small audience. A certaio they are normally disposed to con· number or CBS stockholders think so, centrate on the tube. That is what he too, and tile network bas not got what bu been felting, and at Umes of his could be called a prime attracUon· for .own choosing fourteen tiibes in fact its trouble in trying to "balance" its iO far in his' a~inistration ~d wbe~ ~coverage of I.he. Prelidenl 't ted · .)..J,t1,... • • • Al noted' her1:m before, lhe networks, 1 CQun 10 •IVJWU'6 or gasnmg public · and particularly CBS, are in . trou~ ,.,pport. , _ •• ·because r<. public . tnist · .,..wlpf'10ii ·Thia is really what counts in th't • of their cqyerage of ·t~ Vt«~ w~ present · controversy over granting ·TV · and sttKlenl riots, )leayi)y ftrtllize4 ~d time· to opponents of the President's fed .by the steamy . rhetoric ot Vice . . . President Agnew. The networks brush po_hc1es. When ~BS broke _the Ice and this off as the pUblic having ~ic):ened lried to regularize some kind of a re-or seeing ,things as they are but that· sponse by Democratic National Chair. .isn't what a goi;id ,many viewers think: man Lawrence F. O'Brien it was a bomb for this en.gaging politician. Too few people hid ever heard of hlm and too many who had weren't interested. He probably would have been better off tG keep clamoring for equal time without getting It, thus creating the imprWion that Nixon's networks gave·the President a aln.later unequal advantage. A GOOD MANY think this covera8:e is hoked up lo show tbe bad side of everything, a put down on the ad· ministration, the cuuntry, nag and home reflecting only the political dyspepela of the TV i>roducers and commentators and shot through with over-dramatization and exaggerated e:nphasis on disse nt. Chicq:o style boogie woo&ie. More Not be111g able to show that they recently u.ere has bee.n the conquest tllemselvea are vlctlms of white racism, of Ame:rtcan youth by tradiUonal rhythm they work themselves into a rage about 11nd bluM It la almost axiomatic that the 19'2 relocation. lf you try to tell Ameri~ ~ally when young them that it all happened long ago, derive an izrmori..d part of their cu}twi, ijleJ: slower at you and insist that it'• Why We Males Oppress the Ladies from the' AmOrican 'lilll'O. · ~ly to happen again any minute. r • , Wfiat iutllriaiei the radical sanaei most TBIB TIME AROIJl'ID the bic llOllrCO of 'all Is ,his pannll who, despite the of implraUon for white .youlhS iJ DQt, raw inJaltlte of the wartime relocation, ~ad Belly or Ellington or Cab Calloway lived through. it patle'ntly, fought with or Charlle Parker, but the Black Pa. hooor for their country in World War then. Look at the white radicals around II, and came home to study and work Berkeley aild UCU. Many ol them are hard and proap•r+· so ·that their children simply playing Black Panther, with their could go to college. It humiliates them JCOWling lookil, clenched Ost salute, to think that their parents submitted obscene language, hair in a fuzzy mop, to Jhe relocaUon Instead of, as they the Afro print shfrts. One group calls imagine the Black Panthers would have itseH the White Panthen. done, shooting it out with the authorities. The radicals amcing the saruei (third generation Japane1e .ve aansei; the im· migraall '"' known as lssei; the second Pece of Change • I , COmmerits TBIS EMOTION ACCOUNTS for the odd campaign of radical sanael to compel Bill Hoeokawa of the Denver Post to change the1Utle of his history of Japanese in America .ftom "The Quiet Americans" to ~ Jllll!'I mllitanl·••m•llnc. The book reveals Ille. bQurlg""" Ind dignified way in which Japanese-Afnedcam, caJJ- } ing on the ftneR moral reaourcei. ot • tbefr bickgrooncl culb!1<1 acooptld lhelf · ~ impossible situaUou and ktpt their faith TIMI POot · LIP!. pollilsiled b y w....,... N1tiral Ga1 Co.: "Hang onto yout hall. The poet 'or change in the 20th century II without prt<edenl in human hlstory ••• science and technology achleftd more between 1900 and 1950 than In the whole p-evious history of the tmlaa race .•. Between 1950 and Jt65 ke wu more progress than in the ftnt IO )'UJ's •• .It has been estimated that ~tblrdl of all the trained &eien-- Ultl tblt tftf lived are alive today al!d -Idol hard on dtsc:overlng n<W twit .... , for nm further changes ... ._ u-,_ptly: "In ad- -to lbe lacl that gu lo a C011Vmlent, dependable uct economJcat luel, it otters a verJ palitm canlribl!tlon to the grow. Ing naUonal concern about envlronmenL Natural I". .. not have the air or wm ~ problems of tome fuels. Ac to Mlthetlcs, ga1 facUIUes seldom offend the eye because the 800,0CO.m!Jc plpollaa 111-k II almolt entlrel1 undar.,....i fll)ln wellbead to burner UP,-" in America during lhe whole savage wi.r between the land of their adoption and the land of their ~tort. So little do the radical sansel understand the J apane1t cultural ldenti~y, whlch they claim they are aMertlng by their Black Panther behlvJor, that they are actually ashamed of their parents and grandparents! (Warning: I'm talking about radical sa.nsei, not all saru;e.i .) The triumph of the Black Panthers is that they have done again what Negroes have done so auccessfUlly befort. They have established a life-style -a style of dress and speech and gesture and sell-dramallution -for other Americans, bl:luding whit.a and Asians and Mexican-American Brown Beret.a, to emulate. Pity, therefore, the little Oriental glr1 of the Asian-American Pol!UcaJ Alllance at UCLA or San Francl.sc:o State, looking in the mirror at her lone and black but hopelessly slr1l1ht bolr, realiatn( sadly that it Just can't he orronpct Afro style. .. Right on! By S. I. H1y1kaw1 President, San Frandtct Stole Collep I _ have a letter from a lad)" (Utd I hope ahe won't mind my referring to ))er in that fashion) who says; "Hoppe: Wben it comes to the Womea's Liberation Front, you write noth1ng but unadulterated rot. It shows that )'OU, like all men, are subconscious male chauvinist pigs, who don't eve ft know ho,w vilely you an oppressing us women." TIUs ia outrageous. First of all I don't write unadulterated rot. I write adulter- ated rot.· Secondly, this whole conctpt of Womens kb. t9i we meb are JJnknowjng- ly perseelitlng•J1he fill' "1 ls ihetr .. -· I All I WM, SAYING to the fellows down at, the Male CiUzen&' Counc~ lhc other night: "Now doft't get me wrong fellows," l said, "J was raised by a woman ~ I know we all love our women. But the fact of the 1natter -ii that lately they've been gettl11g downright uppity. "It's thete outside agitators from the Women's Lib," Coi0ne1 Stonewall, USMC (retired), said, shaking his head, "com· ing In heft and stirring up our girls. They were always happy whea they knew their _place.'' 'urhat's right," agreed Senator s~ mond. "We Used to get along just fine 'CIUle we Dew how to treat them. You got to treat them like children." 04Tbe fact is they're basically shlfUeu and untruatwortby," said Wslly Goorp, ,---Bii 6N1'98 ---. Dear Georat : Do 'f'>J mske 1 ilvlnc off thal - lltUe ~urnn? If you can rill it a Cj)lwnn. WONDERl;~G Dear Wond!ting: Yes, l make a living off thl1 column. JI you can call It a Uving. nodding. "They say one thine and mean another. And If you Jet. 'em, they'd spend all day pll!ylng cards, 11bbing and watching fe&.ve.e." "YOU GIYE 'EM any money and they spend it right off on Oashy duds and stuff," added Bert Bilbo. "What's more, they can't hold their liquor. It makes 'em quarrtlaome." "Now hold on, fellows,'' said Tom Tolerant, who's something of a moderaie . on the sex issue. "There's some good oaes who ai:e a credit to their sex. Take Mrs. Nixon. All she ever says is, "I'm glad to be here and thank you for the roses ." Now there 's one who knows her place. You do'n't see her kind out agitating. 1'Tom's right,'' conceded Bert Bildo. ''Not. many ever amounted to a hill of beans on their own, but they make fine maids and cooks. And I'm glad to have one around the house to raise my children. We've always treated be~ Patentable if Useful . Could you get a patent on an allrm cklck that squirts cokl water doWn a' , sleeper's neck? A man in Chicago dil;i. What about a balloon drawn t:brou'gh the sky by eagles? Or a stickpin m~ , of candy, lo be eaten an,r use? Qr an automa~e hat tipper for Jizy gentlemen? These, too, all wu. patents. To the jnventor'a nel&f*iors, such,id\!IS might seem pretty slily. And oor patent Jaw does say that, for an idea to' be patentable, U. must be "uaeful." HO'rivu, IN deciding what is useful, the low lo Vf1f1 tolerant indeed. The low mnemben (e"" If the nelihbon doO') tho! ~ lillCheo! too at Alex. onc1er Groham ll<U'1 llnl telephone and II Ille WTilh! brol!Mn' firol airplane. 'hul, ,.... CllllOI pl I pat.DI on \~ tlJal has no ·,.. It ail. For exomplr, an Im!-cilfmin& to have created a "perpetual motion machine" w~ tunt<!d don •.n tltla ground. The ruling pointed out !hit tilt machine could not possibly wort, , because it wu con- trary to the lawa of nature. Nor can you patent a de vice which lo useful oolf lo do eviL 'lb111, a court .. ' , t "'" ~ .,_, , Law in. ~ctiob ·~ ' ) ::>;,, ;):' ~ejected a patatt for a method of faking . the ,appearance of tobacco leaves for uie J>16P05e of ma'klng them 'look better than ,theynally were. . THE. JUDGE SAID: "Coniress did not 'iiitend to extend protection lo (in- venUons) which confe'r no other benefit upon the p(lblic than the oppurtunity of J>fOfilini by, aectpllon and . fraud. The invention must be capable of some beneficial uae u dlltlJ}IUlahed from a pernicious use." But for most lovestora. the test of usefulness . can. be pa.tsed without too much trouble. The' law •jenerllly tlltei the same optlmlsltc attitude that ~ famin Franklln once look wheo he was asked : "Whal I! the use of Ulis new in· venllon?" Franklin'a reply was : "What is the use of a newbQrn child?" An American Bar A.s1ociation pub· lie 11rvke ftai""'' b~ WUl Bernard. like one of the family.'' "THEY DO HAVE a natural tense of I.he rhythm .method ," agreed Colonel Stonewall grudgingly , ''but would you want your sister to mi!rry orn??" ''Look at the scientific facts• gentlemen," sa id the noted an. thropologist. Dr. Carruthers ~1cSnair. "All my studies prove that women dress differently, act. differently. think dif· fere.nlly and are built differently than we men." 1bus reassured, we pledged allegiance to our bantter -a crowing rooster over the legend. "Male Supremacy!'' -and reaftirmed our stand in favor of repealing the 19th Amendment abolishing college education for females and maintaining separate ~l equal fa cilities, particularly' in bus statkios. so 111E TRum Is we males ooppresit ladies simply because we've got a-'good thing going. And like all oppressors wt can think up a million ralionalliatk>ns to justify tl i Thus all the Women 's Lib need do ts convince us oppressors to give up the good thing we've got going, Lots of luclt, ladies. Friday, July 31, 1910 Th< editorial page o/ tht Daill Pilot lttka io inform and 1tim- WOU rtoder1 b11 prt1tnting thia MtDIPCPI"• opfniom and com- lnlnlal'l/' °" tqptct o/ tnf<rt•I aad lignl/-.,, bu providing a '""''" ,... IM <:rprHsf<Jll oJ our readtrs• opfnion.1, and by pres~nting lhc diotrsc vfcw- poiAµ of informed obsmitrs and spokesmen on topics oJ tht daU. RObtrt N. Weed, Publisher L!0..0.:.-"..-------------------------------------------------- one-M~ta~.JJµms :_iii w.~t~~-:-~.~-·-.. . -' . h!L. M. BoYD only •biil' the 'siu· ot ,,....; AM illED TO name. the sha ped ~erries , :; l llghl..t metal. Tlllt's liUllUll)-CHECKING GJU!At BlllTAIN, ti ;;dt of WeI&tw 34 poonQs pe:r cubic every 100' people l0&e ~II their foat. • W~ter welglis , 12\!! • UP • teeth before they're 21 ,., . pounds per cuqlc root. So will ANOTHER UNEXPLAINED 'rltHy, July 31, 1470 OAILY ~ILOT 7 •• Parental Per•msl•• ~eeetJ ·· . , .. · Senate Pt;inei -:OKs -Busing .Ban Bilt • .... ·-• .:.... "'t .. -... _ • .. • ---,......._ • ' ~ ''t SACl\AMENTO (UPI) ~aked by Sen. George be given to the parent,'' he attorney 1 g~~ral, 1 s~id ;\t- The Senate EducaUon Com-Moscone <P--San Franc.isco ), said. torney Geqera! Thqrria\ C. iri,tttee· earl)'· t"oday apprOvtd · if the. purjlose or the bill was · 'flie Rev. piaude• Svans o( Lyne~. ·~ieyed. ~he bill , w,as lithium float~\ f'io;.~r, f;'U,J~ ~ FAC'f is why men who have in water ano it bums •.. • · h stomach ulcers outnurpber the "HOW BJG WAS the biggest women with same ~>'-.. fgur. · · ·~ · · • Los Angeles_, •"bl&ek 'Bapdsi. '' u n eo Rstitull\)'ial in its . · and sent tci the 'floor a bill ~01 s\op compulsory busing for m{nlster, support~ Vae .bJlJ, " original . rorm,~ ii. n d. , un- to ban the busing of public iotegr8tion, \Yakefield rep,lled, saying, ''we in the blK-k ~-. constltutl°!1a! nflw,;1 bison ·bent?"' · lnq~s .' a ~· ~!\M-lhe heart, the faster to one , . . DOES,. HEROJN cu~. Pretty big. A. het:d' it .;. beats. And women B;Te kill ,more young_.f4!:llows than approJlmalely 25· miles wide. mamaLs, lhat's widdely know,n car wr81,\kJi? La'wmeri ,&J-!iit·: and lO miles long was WQUed ... ~in(f· accepted. , ' THE ROUND TA~J.J; '.- 99yeah'qo1n Arkall8lls. · 1 NOW AND' THEN in a 'tlight Maybe you recall ttie big argu- A CLOTllING ·COLO Jl: of craws, i ";few on~Cue ·win ment .a\ lhe Paris, P~e talks specialist contends nobc.',bUt . detach ~emSelves Irom -the some time · ~k .over. the the readhead shout~ e'!~r w~i:; .,,fJoCr, alid.1 litt-a squad of shape, oft~ confetel)Ce"'t~le. green. On blondes am blu..-...! selectetj '. exec!-ltionEh, w.11 l ! Ridiculous. tiw.t, ~~~ it nettes, be say,s, green tends &o peck" some lone ~..to. death .. .wasn't ·the first,So~n· or Faring Rap de~ss. Aidoobtful contention, in-midair, "!.Ulen rejoin-' the •. •lt.s kind . The ~3'I'able Robyn Louis -Rawers, that. .>t_qu~arine is knowo;to, flight as tho.ugti nothiilg had. of King _ Arthur W!lol said to 18, who just· relinquish- be the mos1. favor,al:lJe coWt" happened. Nobody, not evep •be _ the result of .... .db~e ed Ute title-of 1970 Miss. to. wear with aU hair. Shade""s,1 ':Mr. AuduboQ, ever e:rplalneJJ,! ... ,,~tely 'similar~tniat -:talill!'" Redwood City, will ap- and it certainly contains some the way of this. But ·btnt. • .... "'lUi:I: constructed--.!Jl~the ~I.JM! pear in juvenile ·court lively green. '!alchers --~ve rePGru;d 'It ·~'"a .. eircl~, finall1, 19,·il!"Mle. on charges of· burglar- BEUEVE YOU ALRE.\PY • ~..ii)', What do you ilup-.:tn~wtio SI\ ~· izlng a wcmen'.s.1· ap-I<n:ew a woman's he1art beats P*'~ ~-·'kill~ '·cro~s .. do_ ~',pdlf!liopeij .~odt'...:.~ . ·. • p~t s~op with _a male~· r~r than a ..mans ... About ,. to warrant .~ convictions? • .-.Your qru:t~W ~ comp~ton~ Pohce-~ay e11bt )o. lO'!bea}:.e: ~ ~te IF YOU · ~ ,$5.ll08 a men.ts are liel~cO. m.p Ute pair stole clothing fas,ter, iclualll. "1Ylif, IS .the y~ar. your working tune ~ Will be wed in,. Na,, .and "a year:'.s suiwlY. of. qlfeltlon. W• . ~S\l lier· w..-Di a !il\le _better than fojlr ' UP Whtreuer'j>d; . /JI," sun tan liquid,'' Her !9-. he.art is alslittJe sma~. \b~ls 'cents a minute ,.._ .• THERE 11dTes§ letters to L..JC~!l~ year-old col')lpani.on will all. Such ·1pret~~ m.udl stap-WAS· :A. ~ wneh the Pig-P.:'O. ·,Bqx 18751 "'1/~t face a superior court dard in ~~amm~. 't'f b ~ "\gest..~~il!e. worl~ W~reJi' .:,~effh, Calif.,-92~"'" ~. ::· , .. tri;al. -~t • • . -,. . .. Du Pont Continuous Filament Nylon or Herculon · Your Choice! Ooubl• jut• b1cking, cht>ice of many 1oltd or tweed colors. Price •includes padding •nd:·l.bOr.; " .• -· - '.$ • ··~ ... .. 3-DAY SPECIAL! Manufacturer's Special! Commercial Nylon Carpet lightly wov,en nylon pile tweed. Won't crulh or fuzz. COMPLETELY INS·TALLED! Ap1rtment-home awn• er1-s•e us 1bcut cur revolving time Credit pl1n. • . ,. • Qu flont 501 Tweed plus Solids Extra ~e1vy Du Pont 501 nylon pile, Your choice of . tweeds & solids. E11y cleaning, moth proof, non 1ller- genic. Meets FHA stend1rds. Completely installed! • 59: YD. • $ _99 ·· SQ. YD. SIZE DESCRIPTION 12•11 .4 Gr••n Tweed Nvlon Comm. 12•12.6 Grn. Twd. Nvlon Hi-lo 12xl0.4 Golcl I lrown Comm . 12•9.I A¥oc1do Kodtl Hi.Lo 1211'.l.6 501 Nylon kitchen Cpl. 12ii9.9 Royal 81~1 Kck11J Shtq 12117 l11door-Outd0Gi lliut · 12i'J0 Rud Nylon Sh.9 1 12110 Tw11d Nylon Co;.,.,; ,12•10 Red V1lw1t Pl11Jh ; I 2i:I j:.:_ A-~liq~t· Sold· Nyl&~ · 12.ilD-.f -·Aif!c "Gold ~i!Lo ' . $ .. ·- ,'i fZI .,_ . DESCltlrtiON ..•.. ' ~ t2.-.IS · :Hi-l• lei9• 501 , \21dl. , ~ft;~•••n Kod•I I bt~4..I AYo~•do v.1 •• 1 Phnli .. 1ii""11~. ·Min·,_~,-.,,. Sh•g t 2xfi.)· TwO'Ton• Sold. Comm, 12.-14.9 Tt11 Hi-lo !5011 12xl0.6' Whf1,j, kod•I sti19" . · t"2.-141 ;;;.to:Gold Tw••' · 1211 ! \" Kodel ·S.li•9 • · ·llxl1 . fled r1wh Sh19 •. 12.1.1.s l lu1 ,link $h19 121'10 6ofd·IC~Jel Sli19 .scpoo1 c!Jildren for ~aciaJ in-'_'i've neVet denied that ' we're munlty are more concerned He saiQ sChools were con- tegraUon or any other reason talking al;iput busi ng (or the with quality educa4of1; than slltutionallY required. to end , without their parents' ·written purpose or lntegratioo.'' we. are witb P~,Mg ,our kids · segi-egatlon, and that, the bill 'rtennisslon. , tbe""bill orlglnaJly banned .• to another-are.a. . . would ~ct to prevent them The me 8 8 u re by ... mandat&ry busing "lot the · Robert 018~, 4eputy s~te :l from dol}\g so. Assemblyman Floyd L. purpose of integration.'' ,. waken~ (R-Soulh Gate), Doubts were .raised as to its S' . · '1-• . · ,w•• approvedr'9ft. sput vore. ""!'•t1tut1onauty, ho~ever, ~nd •. t·a·.~·e.· 1·0-.. ·DV. est· _1gate. ·vote following ·Jft'ofo-hour late· the teterence to mtegz:at1on night hearing. . . w~ _deleted and ~e bill wu . , 11 wU ·supported by · ·a ··'11.me.'xled to require parental ~ • ~ L• E member of the Los Angeles . c:Ons!llt for busing "lo< any 6oar1Iig I_ ner· xp· enses -8oaril ol Education, V(hi~h is Jiu'rpose." appealing a superior cOurt ·Richard· E. Ferraro of the , . . . order to inte(rate its schools Leis· Angeles Board oC Educa-SACRAMENTO (UPI) -. f>ut opposed by a represen-Hon said. in support of. the The State Lands Commission 'tatiVe of the su· Franclko '9asure~ wu "no ~uca-Thursday ordered · an in· Uflffied ~ Diatl'lct. ·.~ -· 't~~t that's ever been · · · . AISO bppe>lfni .lb& bi.II· Werr: ~'proven \ "by .forcibly ·&using v es t I g a t I o n . into the the state attorney aeqeral, the • youngsters." , s k Y rocke liri g costs · of California ·School ·]j-oarl!:s1'., 1He·said a mass busing pro-· refurbishing · the drydocked Associatlan ~and the California · gram.~oold cost Los Angeles lu)l:ury· 1~i;ier, Qu~f! Mary. • 'Peacl'u:rs ·Association. ' · schools' '42 lnillion i year. .. ~ l'he ~COlflmi~~ A c..t l n g. Gov. Ronald R.eagan , Sl.IP-. "I ean ri!ally believe that under orders trom .the pof1,s the.me~. 1 --~ ... oiee.__(of j)usiq) ougbt to -<;alifornia--legislature,. as)Fed Its staff to, look into the ' ex- penditure o( $31 million in tidelands oil ' revenue ror tbe .projec{ by the city or Lo'ng Beach.' A report is due Dec. I. . . . .. 'I'he Southern Callfor11la port city bought the liner and Is ednV"r:~D•'.ll' 11!.\0 a maritime museum, hotel and tourist at- tra~loo. ' l }if· • . Qt. '"" SIZE DISCllPTION 1~. I S~T·• l!t~t l•i9t. ~.,1011 ~i-lo • • > I 12, I 0.2, '-.1d'll:!P•f;Sli•9 12~1 ~' J,.,,,"'Jo kodtl Hi ·Lo . 12~11 Gr11n 1'w11d Nvlo11 •Conim. . 11irl 1 .• ri;~. Awo . Nvlon Hi.Lo I 1tt.1 . Lim1 Kod1I Shaq 12110.l .lim1 ~yloft Sh•9 '. 12~1 J • 6 rnJ '!G lwd N'l'n Hi.Lo ll.1"110.9 ltd/Gld'1Wd Hire Com 1211 I '""·lfowil I Gold Hi.Lo 12116.f ~m~flw1•4' I 2·~1•1 , ,, lej11i .. J;tl-Lo ,, $ ... • SI~' DRCRlnlON 1211:1~ H••¥Y 1(04'11 Mou Gr•tll I 2xJ 4,4 Aw11,•do Hi· lo , . 12xl4 Co1?1111-Twted Jtde", ~· 12it19 lrOt11e Gold Hi-lo 12112 . Kllldtl Sht~li¥1 12•15.5 Gold Tw •• d Hi-lo 12• I 5 o.,,t.r 'lu1I. Sh19 12xl],, ~111t I Gold Con1m. 12117.6 Gold I Grit" Hi·lo 1Zil5.1 A11tiq11• GOid ICodel 12•14,!0 Hi·lo Nv1o• Sold 12116 lron~1 Hi-lo SOI Du Pont Nylon, Shag l . . ' A' il•tlsely fuft.q, !aw-pr~file 'Sfieg ) .. of · DuP.ont nylon p11e·-w'lth hee!:set y•rns to· m•infein ·fts goo"d loo*t . for yeer~ end y•ars. Choose from ~eiy-to-cere for .Jtwirds and s~lids'. Camplet•lr inst1llecll ~· . . . . . Poryester Plush Shag ' Here's the new Plush Sh19 1tylin9 .of thick-ind deeP . ' . . . 'polyester pile in. •n exquisite ch oic•· of: t~e,ds or . . solids.·lt's e n•w dimension in l11xury 411 et• ple11ant >'. . . low pric•. Cornpletelry instale"d. . 1 ' 2·Color· Tweeds and 'solids . . . -. KodelShag A long-str1nd Sheg of tightly.twisted ~odel poly•1t•r ~.i.ie y•rns with bou;C•-back ret.illence in • luxurious 'selection of twee~s end solld1 . It's eesy·clelning •. , ~·1 an •xfr1-1peci1I velue on ly ·at C1rp1t Town! , .. ' , ~Q; YD • .. .. $ .:99' $9. YD. $ ;, ; . ;,Q, YD.· . ' . t Ill " ,, ·1 .. , '" ' ·:o :fl j1i :.! .> ., :,, ' ;11 -.1 ,;, -. .. ,, ,, " " L .I . " l> ·' .> :.J. ·, . ' • • ,, ,, .<. I ( 1· .I I I l I ...;;;;.,;;...~~~~~~TH~ES~E--A~R~E-o=N~LY ... P_A_R_T_IA·L~L-IS·T-IN·G·s~o·F~T-H·E~-F~l~N~l'-~CA~~~PET~-~-~;N~G~.-w ..... E·H~A~V~E~A~V~~~l~LA~B~l~E--~.~T~H~l~R~.E~.~A~R~E~-~UlC~l'.-MOi:::::~Rl::":":F~O~R:""'::Y~O~U~T=o:"":s~~~L=~c~T=,~F=R=oM~ .. ~l~ ... ~.~1 ~·r=.-:-:~~---~ ~ .. ,.. .............. ;..;;.;;;;,;;,;;..;,;;,;,;.;.,;.;.;,;;,.;..;;.;;;;;,;.;;;;.:...;;;:.:.;;.;,;;;;;,..;;i;..;.;.;;;,.;,;;.;,;;..;;;;;;,;;,,;,;.;,;.;;.~.;;..;,;;.;.;..;.;.;.;,...,,;;...;;..;;;;. .. ~.i'-;..;;.;;~_~_~._ __ .. ~_.r, ...... ,.. .... ~ .. --~,..,:..~~ .... -. .... ~--~-----~ .. ~~'.,"!"':,~.~. •. . • .• ': .'. · For lnlormot19<1 -Phone 6(2-4305 WIRBIOUSI ' . -. .. Open' Jveilirigs 'til . 9 : p.m. · Saturdlly ·'fil 6' -Sunil'"" fO • 5 . ... . . . ' . . Our Huge lllJ!n9 Power · For 30· Ccirpet Town ·stores $ayes You Morel •,: ·.··. · .. ~ ·~·.~· ALL. SALE ITIMS SjJ8JECT TO PRIOR SALE • BRlljG YOUR ROOM ME:ASUl\EMENTS • , . • E)\PERT INSTAL~ATION AVAILAB~E. :· _., • . 524 .... :: .. ,. WEST ., 19th ST.· COSTA MESA NEXT TO THE BANK OF AMERICA '"-~ ... ' i I . . • I ·' •• DAILV "LOT ly JOANNE REYNOLDS . ................. ANAHEIM -Wboo tlie U.S. lltomoy _.t l1l6d I 1Ull aplmt a Toledo, Ohio auto &lits manulacbabl( !Inn Jul week, tht issue of 1 e :1 discrimination in employmt11t came into its own as an o(- flcial cause. But in Costa Mesi, Velma Mengeltocb Ls look.Ing forward to her fifth year or nplinf for the same cause. l\t:r1. Menplkoch is" an employe of North American Rockwell's Autonetics Divisim in Anabebq, and in January ol 11111 lbe began !be legal baWe against dl5crlmination ag&lnst women in Calilornia labor Jaws. The flJht has con· IUIDed most ol. her ta1ents and energies •ince then. On Aue. 11 the tlh District Federal Court of Appe1l.! will hear oral argument& oo her aui\ which bu already been to Ille U.S. Supreme Court. "It actually started I n December of 1965 when a iroup of about a dozen allembJers and inspector• - WGrDen -came to me and ubd me jf I would help~ them. Al !bat pain~ !be crime, II 7011 w1nt to cell ft lhat, had nol been commltted .. -me,~ !be -·ellc woman iiplained. ''The crime•• Mrs. rnd.,, Ju~ 31, ino T had 1n overUme requ est denied because I'd already worked the muimum hours allowable, I flied a formal complaint with UAW local 117," she said. The union could take no ac- tion because of the state statutes, ao lht toot the case to the then newly created Equal Employm,ent Op- portunities Commlssioo, whicll also returned her complaint with no action. "They were in their infancy then, and there were no precedents or even Pdelines for them to follow," the tood natured woman II.id. The two att.omey1 of record on the cue, Sylvia Ellison and Caruthers Berger are both nwnben ol. 1 legal committee formed by NOW (National Organitatlon of Women) to a!Slst on the case. A mother or three, who describes her age as "near the haJf century mark." Mrs. Menglekocb has become deep- ly involved in women's libera- tion during the J e g a I maneuvering, even though she is not a member ol any one organization. "By Ignoring Title Seven," In Oclober ol lhat yur at- torney Phil snv.r. filed • - dus action llllt In Loa Anteles Federal Court against North Amorican and the Slate lndustrial We 1 fa r e Com- mlssion on the basis that the stale law supercedes federal la wt. for she malntalns, "they are clearly sayln1 women are oot persons. And if 1'm not a per90n I'd like to know just what I am." Her piontt:ring etJorts In the field oC &eJ: discriminaUon have earned Mrs. Mengelkoch a niche among women's Jib groups. In October she is scheduled to speak before a UCI group and has already spoken to gatherings of NOW, the National Womens Party and the National Federation of Busi.oeM and Professional Women. Wo1nen~s Lib ~ ' "I haven't done any speak- inJ Jn ' the lui two years, because of pow health, but now my health's Improved, IO God ~Ip the world," she laughed. She said she has received a gre~t deal or encouragement and som~ financial aid from men as W;ell os women who have read of her case and written bu. "I never get over how these total strangers take time lo write of their support for my case," she said. Mrs. Mengelkoch views the elllUna: state labor laws with obvloo.s IDd heaJ'\.!eH disdain. "Granted, the llw bas been changed and erpanded some since J first filed the com· plaint. "But It still puts a limit on what women can do. There is no such law for men and there shouldn't be for women , particularly since a federal law prohibits it. • 'Th I s let-them-eat-cake logic u.sed by leglslalon and employers is not really much more than a paternalistic cover up of their own selflSh iN Alt Dim: • TODAY TBU TU.E$DAYI • tntertsts. Alter alt, if, by law, you can keep a woman tied down to menial, low paying }obs. you've got a cheap labor supply," she said. "It's no wonder there are liberation groups forming on campuse s all across the · na. lion. These girls and young women are learning that whatever degree-you earn is not as Important when it com- es to 1 job as the sex you're born with. And that's one thing that you just can't change." .. FIGHTS FOR RIGHTS Mrs. Velma Mengelkoch M..,.lkoch nferred to h a Wiie labo< J.,w lhat prolilbits women from workiDI mere than a Jiven amount of hours hi a 2f hour period. The state Jaw aJao limits the number oC hours during the week a woman cu wtrk.. ''Ibat North American did nol allow it& female employe; to eueed the overtime laws, wa a reflection of ltate law nol -pallcy, lbe noted. The rtderal law that Silvers cited in bis suit was the Civil R1'bfa Act ol 11114, specifically n11e seven of !be law wblcb ll&les thet llO -lball be dllcrtininaled .. -In employment cri lbe basil of race, ,.llglon, ,.Uonal orifin or IOI. •4ts Val! 22 Gal. hlJ·T.clll• Pllsflc And bJ Dmi!IJll the -of boun a woman em wort. till ute law ii aloo l!niltlni the promotions and tralnlng _..,. anilable to !bat wom1n . 11y1 Y'r1. M-1koch. "So, in JllllWy of !Ill when Meetings It was Ille opinion ol that court that Mrs. Mengelkoch had no cue under TIUe Seven. so the ca.st went to the supreme Court and they sent it back to the Appeals Court for decision. So nearly five years and as many attorneys later, the woman's rights crusader can lff the end of her 1001 stan- ding dispute. "J started from sround levtl -even below the ground - aod foucht my way up by tbe akin <l. my teeth finan-- clally aDd Gtberwlle. Y Deetlt Notieea mlpt 111 Iha! rm moot ea,.r , •UCICLIS lo hear the oral arcwnenta ~w1111 .. _ 9'Jdt'-" .u. ., .1..., and I'm eutious and ei:pect.ant A""-"" LIM, Hul'ltlMtM Mteft. Ott. 11 to the decision," she laid, -' Mtft. Jul'r JI', $uNINll "' flfhlr, .. ,_, •· H'-1 a breotlltrl: wmi.nt A.. When a declslon is finally ~ K.. .... ,,,. ic., .i.tw. ,.., "•,.,.., -reached m--cue lhe said lld\lldl, 11.-f'( ~!>', JUIJ' Jf. l "lllCI t 11.""'-Mau • AM ..,..,, JUPlr :n. st. "X lhe would 11lk.e lo write, not •-1v.-. C•tttollc ctwrdl, Hulltl"9fM o~ boo"' but lwo about the ..... R-kw Mor1\llf'f, dlrfCfot&. ,.u ~lier· . •••u s':"t. and experiences. "The F~ Adtlla Ellllth. tf.C Ct lll' "'"""" ttbt one will be _..._... the ~ HUis, Surv..,_, W MN: ,,.._ _, .nc L. s... ""'"' c.,im-1 J.tw. L.. legal aspects of. the cue and S.,._.L l"ftr1NI A ft91Mkt!INN!I; 6 that Of -~.. ~·1 be do-trlill>9ral'llKflllftWI. ~ ~· ! ....,... • "LI '"' wll Ile Mill 111 Duk/th, MINitMtt. l'adllc with my attorneys. 1be second .... __ ,,,, :Ta.T.'1.ir. i11rKttn. one will be men of a perwnal Gr-AM Mill .... "" wm 1tth St..-eet. history of the Cut," lhe ti~ =rn~iu:!i~11:...•:;:.-• =~ plained. SI.,., Sall!• Anai fllfct, Me,..ret k11tll, c.tWi ~. SaNk:• It AM S1turd•r, ...u...,t 1, a.II .,_dwar Cll11>1I. I"'••· '°""" Ht!'Mr tl..t ~i.1 l'erl!. ltll .,...,..., Mott\llrv, ;'frectolrt, TtlA\ltS """ H. Tr1Yh. n, of IS» lrYln• ....... ,....,..., •ffdl. SUf"'+'!Ytd "' Hiii: Stwf!tn lfllll MMl1 .._.,, .. , l(a111..W Mlhtiioetl .....,, ~I lbWI: "'"'· •. P. IClmRtli· A11M H.-11. Soervka wlll 1M J: l'M """''• Awl.Ill t. W•-dlff ~' Oii"'-<Al'9 M-. lft. 9-'1, TM A*t', hm. AM. W•t- C1ltt MWl'Uart', dlAdfrL ARBUCILl! A SON 11'-MorlaU)' 111 E. l~ 111., Ooaa M ... 1111111 • BALTZ MOllTUAIUD C.-del Mir OR Wilt COiia M,.. Ml W4U • BELL BROADWAY MOllTUAllY UI Brudw1y, Ce.ti Mesa UMDJ • McCOJIMICI[ LAGUNA BBACll llOllTUAllY 17111-~ M. _ -• PACIFIC VIEW ' MEMORIAL PAR.I. O..!...,.M....., cu,.i .. Padllc Vllw,DrifO !lnport -·· CaWorala -• PEEi!: FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL llOMZ '1111 lolta Att. ·"--• SBU--••EJl'D MORTUARY '--nl-1115 llao a.meote ...... • SMJTllS' MOR~Y 117 -lit. R r;::.- ON THE TUllE Ron Caspers Campaign F'Ullds Told Final tabulations show near· Jy 200 persons contributed a total of $80,'roi;.st to Newport Beach savings and loan e1- ecutlve Ronald W. Caspers' IUCCeS$!ul campaign to be elected to the Orange <Alunty Boord ol Supervisors. Cupen reported campaign expenditures were f I 1 , I I 5 , with the balance ('Urrt!nUy in deficit, according to one ahle. Largest single donor was Caspers himself, who listed his personal check or "6,1181 written as a penonal loin lo his campaign as a major share of the pre-election finan. ct. 'lbe Gilly other donors con- tributing more than $500 were Eliubetb Cupera P t t e r s , •ilo c:ontributed f l,000 In<! Henry Valentine, who gave '"'°· Listings Of individuals who gave more than $500 at fint erroneously Included Mr s . Athalie Clarke, mother of Irvine Ranch heiress Joan Irvine Smilb, plus Wtslminler Mayor D t re k McWhi.nney . They were 1mong the 181 Jisted contributors w h o 1 e donatiom were less than f500 tlch. This cal.tgory accounted for 1pproximately $12,000 tn con. tributW>ns. Businesses listed in thi& category i n c I u d e d Fullerton ~avings and Loan, Avco Savmp and L o a n , K.J.M. Corp., L. E. Pickell Co,, Ryan Advertising .and lncome Ploperty Services. The unsuccessful candidate for re-e.Jeetion as fifth distrk:t superviaor, Allon E. Alltn, reported C' a m p a l g n cOn- trlbullona totaling ' 3 3 ,4 I 7 . more lhart 11 ,!0li less lhan what be -1. Trash Can 1' Wftl.l!I • ' $1 " Quilted Pillow Coven Cot1 v•rt btd pillo'lf "'° """"""" ""· 99c ... harwianklrlg n.il-ti'-Cllllor 1ttlp1 1 & __ .... ~{ij(i)_ \!:'~-Carded Button Sale ''Sfrlom• ,,,,. .. butt-. Wood, rMtot. pol711tar, -·-"'""' 3i6Jc . . Or1111tal Pllltenl Imported Area Rugs ~98 ._......,. duakins ,..._ tn IP\ hlollaol. lk.ic4fr. •••• In rich i:.IOll. .... ·$399 ·: .... ' J'ftlll'ittl ., '. d. 24!124" cicroor:inol, 99:ic32"radangu· lor & 15ic21Yt'' Mtcl'lt•rr•"•~ onstyltsCOl"'I "ood ......... • '3" Dttecto llllltoo11 Scilo ~93 Accvrol• ••• quality O'/IOIM. In Whit., Gold M-., Alumin• um,.conbs "Sld oroca or rnony tima. 119. 4for 11" "" .. lUitlll"~.Cot• to" cltclr: upptn, n.itot.r IOI• & ..,_ • cop, fvll cuahlonld ln•ol1• .,.Ith oM *'PJlll'h. !5 • 1 !Z. Empire lncNe Pwlf Perc'olator Cooler Tum•lers ~ ~ ""39: cup eutomotlc, woim•r ul"llt, cl'rip-f,.. fou«t. '29'1 Vall lallmar 7z351ill-i.s ·$J6" 7Xmoonlflt:ti· tioft. • fkld of .,....,, 358 ft. Gt 1000 yds. Slz•• for ....,,(;-wom- • 11. Prefect ........... R19. 91' Wo11111's Vinyl Sandals 77c 6~$100 • 14&1511l or. aiz:as. Sofwty rim, haoyy bow • Full si1•. 5 poiitlon eluml"• -·- 50' G•d•• Hose •rM .. -to •t3" Twla Si11 Electric llankets ·~~~!.~ ~ cont"'I· $14.91 f.W IN Sfn •••• $11.tJ $)" Fullygtm• ""'ltd. Rug• .. ~ Reg. $1995 Norelco 9 Cassette Player J"'t pop Jn O"'( ............. .... SIS" & htm It on, plovs. ~·· i ort1ry ..,..cited. $111 Ladl11' Stretch Denim Shorts •$167 Populor Jornof~ c o styl• in cl'ioic• of colors ond aias 1-18. '2'' Hawaii1111 Print Min's Sport Shirts ·~·· ~I "J>'1 Cotton sot-In brllliont mul- l i colot -orintt. S-M-L-Xl. Regular '311 Men's Swim Trunks . -~·· l h '( ' Cottons, bltnd1, .J losl•~, mciny ~f llfyl-. Replar2" lors' Swim Tr1111ks ffJ .$1•• CottQns,. blends, '°'"" •r.10111, rrO'l'J aty es. . -~ Reg, '3" IOJI' Dress-up J11ns • $248 ,.!lf'CY _otS in !>O ~., pol'(es"1". !>O~;, cotton, fmklon ~ 6 to 16. Fifth Gallon Dunc. Slaclalr Scotch Whisky .$366 !~•d -of tht 1 ten bait lolt-h'IO ~ V•rt, very ''°"' ! $6" Soft Side 8 Luggage . ,. .. $493 • ~:eigkt, S!Utd, ~ fO)"Oll plold wltl1 ao1y-glid• :zipper, comfort grip molded "'°""' .... • $1.n JI" Taarnt ••• $7.tJ •SIO ... ft" ............ $1.t! $4" Hi-Fashion Sunglasses hrision Oilto 5DK1: ~'"""'l'Oty 6-F.-•.Lo111t .,,i_,, colori! Wllh opt.colly 1<111 i.....,. ... $299 Chipper's Nut Hut Cashews ~ 99c I j;·~~.::: poc:lc.. ~ al\lp-"'•"' ""f UO!· pocked . -~--~~~~~~~~----------------------------........................... .. • DAil Y "LOT !) Explosion Rips Hall Compromise Expected Soon ' • < • I fudge Delays Medi-Cal ReviSi~us ,\ ,. I • Police Facility 3rd Area Blast Target SACRA~1ENTO (UPI) -o( the reeulations In the next ble for ctr.tale." M~lcol.Cal and ttlll be eligible for Medi· The Reagan administration's few days," benefits. Cal . · OAKLAND, CalU. (AP) -police adminislration and i1' Last June 23, a bomb loaded top health care ofricial · t:X· ·•we are pleased that u; 'J'ht disputed section ·\vould Perluss' decisk>tl came two A bomb shattered windows In also known as the Oakland with nuts and bolts and ap-pressed hope today a rom· and 4-SUu of the 37 regulations set 1 $Ult moolhly ,inCQ\ne da)'s alter a healing on. a fhe lobby o( the Police Hall of Justice. parently thrown rrom the prontise will be worked out on ·the medically nee tJ '! ceiling on persons cllgl6le for suit to nulllfY lhe replatitw. Administration Building in The etplosioo was the lhird "in the neitt few days" lo kage were found valid by The action was flied by tht Grov~Shafter freeway e1t· pac · M·,1· "al. Under r c de r a I Ill 1 t downt'own Oakland Thursday this "'eek in the San Francisco allow court-delayed ~1 edi..C1tl Juo'ge Perluss." he said. ~....., Ca ornia Rura Leg a · e plcided 50 feet from lhe I · • II A · I beh If f 1•· evening. but caused no in· ay Area. revisions lo take effect. The regulations, 1v ht c n regu aliont, persons are a ow. ss1s ance on a o ,,. 1'w ho b rf 'th California Highway Patrol. of· d · !ISi ti th alfected Med' e I I · t juries, officers said. o m s went o w1 In (lee in Oakland. Dr. Earl Brian ref~rred to would have taken effect Satur-__ •:_lo.:...,r_ec_e_iv_e_;_-'_mo_n_-:-----~-•_r_ec_;_p_,._•_•._ "We've established that It five minutes of each other Superior Court Judge Irving day, would require S0,000 was a bomb, but we don 't Monday. One blasted a hole H. Perluss' decWon Thursday medically lndigel'!t persons to know yet what kind," a through the Armed Forces Sal' Vall M h to delay the effective d.3tt pay 1 certain 1'mount . of department spokesman said. Pol~ office in downtown San 1nas ey arc of the oew Medl..Cal reguJa. money for medical services Damqe was limited to the Francisco. No one was in· lions by a. month to Sept. before becoming eligible for I lobby, where some 20 large jured. 1. ~fedi..Cal. plate glass· windows shattered. The other e:i:plosion went otr s d b c Ch Perluss said a section or The new rules would lighten police reported. Mosl of the about four miles away in the tage y esm• avez the re'"1lations limiting the h' f " · · th nl st shell of an old Nike mlss1·1e .. i:i~ restrictions on owners 1p o up airs area 1n e ne· ory income of a Medi.Cal recipient d 1 building had emptied before on display in the Army appears to violate federal Jaw. personal properly an rea the5:50p.m.blasl. Presidio. The missile itself DELANO (UPI) -Cesar would be nego tiat'ed In-He asked the federal depart-properly and lower income 1 11te surrounding block wa~ was not damaged . Chavez, who o r g a n i zed dividually with growers. menl of Health, Education and cei lings. They would affect the cordoned off as of r Ice rs The bla~t at the MP buildi~g vineyard workers, now is turn-Lawyers for Chavez went \Velfare to advise him on tbc 200,000 persons In t It e seanlhed for possible other eit-occ,urred in the garage wh1~e .. ing his attention to a dispute into Monterey County superior question of a hearin& Aug . Ploaives , but none was found, three men were 00 duly in . . court asking the Sa I i n as medically indigent category , th. front Ofrlce. • Sar. with the ·Teamsters Un ion over Valley 1 gr e em e n t be 20 after which he will decide those not. on welfare but ieligi· investigators said. 1 •• 1_, nd .1 . whelher lo allow the changes. three men were seen hurrying area was peppered with shrap-workers in the vegetable terfered with employes' rights Brian, director of the health TURN O,~ from the building shortly nel. two windows were blown fields. to choose their own union. care se rvices department D r d I th which •dmlnfsters the huge TV WEEK li••P• ye~ tu11.J before the blaSt, No arrests out. a five inch hole was The day after his AFL-C IO e en an s are e t• wk•I'• kippin.in.i ~•lil114 ,th• Police said they were told distance awa y. 1l1e garage who will represent arn1 auioga cu on grou s I 10-1 were reported. punched in a concrete bl<K:k United Farm Workers Teamsters, the Grower.Ship--~1edi·Cal program said he w·as tub• -Every S1t11N1v in. 'the The building. localed al 455 wall and an auto was dal1}ag-organizing comm It l f' t. an· per Vegetable Association and "hoperul we can Hnd a solu· DAILY PtLOr. Sevenlh St. houses the city ed . nounced victory in its efforts _fo~o~ur:_1<()":'.''.°_1 !gr~o:>'w~er:".'·:_ ___ ~J"'i0"'."_'<()0_"'1h":e~d~is~pu~te";d"_'s":ec':J"'ion'.'."::========c=="--------------------r-=====-'~==~========--;I to represent grape workers , Dr. John Walvoord, Noted Theol09ian SPEAKS AT MORNING, EVENING SERVICES, ' COAST BIBLE CHURCH, San Juan C1pistr1no. Su11d•y, Au9u1t 2114. 10 A.M. 111d 7:30 ,,M. Df' • .111111 "· WI,_..._ PrnlQllt ltf rl'I• Dan.t Sl""M"' •IMI 11Ati.o..ltv 11-111111 1..,.rlty, •Piii!• 11 ..,. c-1 •*'-C1111rt11, M•t>c•· ,..,., .... Jr, HIP Sdltfl, S.11 J~ Cl ........ llM;~1e1t1teh .,., "TM TtllllletflM'll Lltr" ffllll "'11 tM W1rlll H ...... t.r Ar........,...t" Hur Dr. W1l,,,..,,.'1 ......... ,"" ., llMlt ~llbtclft. T•-· Dl'I &llpl '"' CN1I Hwr~ ., Da111 1"11111, •ltllt '°" Dll A.r.lin 11 SdlNI. All ARE WELCOME -Come Sunday, Aug. 2nd. Chavez Thursday aMounced a march to Salinas. center of the lettuce industry. He said his followers. many of them Mexican-Americans, would trudge to Salinas by Sunday. The Teamsters previously announced reaching agree· menl with the growers of let· tuce, c_elery, carrots ~ other crops 1n bolt\ the Salinas and Santa fi.1aria Valleys. Con- tracts. the Tearn.sters said. 3 DAYS ONLY FRI., SAT. AND SUN. THERE'S LOTS OF SUMMER LER! . luy NOW and SAVE! 1 OOo's of DRESSES REDUCED! 50°/o or MORE What a uJe: A·lines, flares, low torsos, shilt.1-2 piears, too! 'The season's best buys! Petitea, Junion, Misses' and Hali Sizes; but huriy for your choice! GRANT PLAZA .Brookhurst & 'Aaams • Huntington Beach HOURS : 9:30 1.m. to 9:30 p.m. Daily • Sun. 10 a .m. to 4 p.m. 3DAYS ONLY y 'J:i~.· Be glad in mad plaids Easy-care gingham shirts .$ Yards 'n yards of exciting Current FABRICS SALE YDS. $ 00 HUGE ASSORTMENT These would sell for $1.00 per yard and more if 09 Bolts. A b•rr•tt ef IHtrw•l•ll '"" s •• 1 ... 1 114 ••rt hr·'\. t•losl $1,tr •••.••trs' ••tcl•h •rlct • ll•s•t4 It '\. ••kt yeor 4olltr 10 ftrtlter. Wt •••• j11t t HM,lt of 401t•11fttrrlflc b1y1 •II ovtrt•t sloro. Co•t ..... 1 ...... ..,.. ... • •"kiel<_ ... • Col-: si-,.11 GRANT'S LIGHT IULIS SOLD IN PACI Off OU I UMITITO ACUITOMll EA. ' Gr•nt..own l'1ls f'I SUMLESS STRETCH NYLO .. S Style 400 Sold Singly Style 402 Sold 2 in l>kg. Sag.free mesh or plain knit .i n proportioned sizes for beauty-fit. New· eAt fashion shades. Si'ze!'i for petite, average, tall. • ... t .• • Wrinkl•·frnl STRAIGHT· LEG . PANTS COMPARE! Tbete 1lack1 wi ll never lose their a\i•pe ... they're made of pure polyt1ter! Ver· tiCal ribbinr, elasti· ci~ed waistline. Fash· ion.right col?re: 8-18. G}'ant Plaza e Brookhurst & Adams ~ Huntin,.+on Beach HOURS"'-9:30 1.rn. to 9:30 p.m., O.lly; Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.,./,. -- , . . . • I I .. JI DAil V 1'1lOT s Fridlf, J.,1y ll, 1970 I.BG.AL NOTICE Jtfon'eJf'• Worth OVER ffiE COUNTER Complet~ew York Stock List- Most Bonds Sold NASO Listings for Thul'1doy, July :Ill, lt70 Over the Counte1~ ...... _ .. _ ............ .-t..i-• ....,..........,, ..... ,... ....... l'ric•• • -. 111e11.Nt ,..e.,. .,. • .,...,. .....,. " -...IMIM. AINCUll Aft ... ~Lil1! ... ·-... ~r..1·.'.~ ly SYLVIA PORTER You may have noUced that Instead or using the famUiar v.·ord "bond," I'm frtquently referring to the securlties bein( anaJyied Jn Uli! lel'ies as 0 fls:ed-in00me." Tb.ls is deliberate, I as.sure you, for a Jargt peteenlaie or the tO.U. '•moat appealing to you aren't bands at ill. ·BY defini- tion. they 're notts or bill.a. And .a large peroo1tage aren't traded in tht bond markets either. They are bdug.bt and sold in the money market... And all ol the market! are ... -~w Y~IC lA'l J~le rec $(0 tlt '""I W• f .J"' SIU HN 22 ~ A;;;= 1 'Z (tht prlct 1 dealer is wllJln• ~_ ..... ::'" 1':...J: t• ~· 1 • .c: .:=1,,,. " s. l .. ':1 1f'f 'I'~~ ~ur 1.• ... ~ cuto:t bl p•fllkl T : •• I~ .... II Svllo ,,_,If s:::U ~ l°" f'f Ct to p()') Ind II ''asked" (lht IJ.fo,. '~ ~~ ~fFi~1 ,!~: .' .. ~rw.4~ 1:: f~ ~i:' '4 ~~ ,0.:~ price , dealer ts willing to "°'•1e;~.i""i;· ... ~ ,.N11 ~~. ~I" 5~ :~;'~" 11~ n !'::· 1 "1.f: ~~ 1~; take), and the transaction ~=1.11.:. •r.1:.:r: ~1•1GJli?., ',?. '~ ~r9 '19! l 1:: :'.,!.19 w , "'ll"' ~llllt~·~ ... li,~ L. Miki'" Pl'lcft1 •• ol F 1<•119 .,., I V, Pi Mitt. 21\ j l:lJ.1 't j l,'i •IP9ftoe .21 may uc at a price corn--1PPt011lm1ttJr J 'OOO "'" ~"' 1~ Pv N .. ,,~ 1~ v Ctm ••.:. t~ A.1krhn• .3' •• 1n., t' wt11<11 111 ... ,.,-" 011 .,,._ 1 P ':rc l' ""' •"'!l'nl 17!t Im ".lc.nA1u '·" promising the two. You, the="~"-c:~ ~:.r'~r111 ,~ ~:? ::=:11r c 1fh 1~ l~.,.:r':s 1f1 2 ::=~";".~ public. however. wlU either ~...., oJSf.'Hl,.,,O: ~:'.:r' C• 1l1 f' :"'::'-, J Jt l',: ~ I~ 1~J~ :ll::~i:. /.0: buy at the "asked" Of ieJI = ::::rUI~ ~~7::.0 E f,, r" ~&:.tr t; 1:, 11 t•n~ J: J A,U-~ ri ' out fl'le G•r ... ~ FU-n l . 2111 J-r 1'10 7141 r.c: '" ··'·· I •L ;,:~11:.c,,,•..,,1.fl at the "btd" prfce. 1111 no! l11ehlde FU'IUI IG "" l' Q'l'I CM ""' 10\lo rN:l'll G n .. Sil rtltU markup, liRI Cmg f1~ It St$1 SV. 6111 THIC"'I O t 2 A.II M Q WHAT ARE MONEY mtrkdow~ Of c.-ftrlt1kl 111•" """ RMI °""' ~ J~ Tr lMOO H •llt; 4llo A.Hi.dStr 1..0 · m1111ooi IJ Svc •1 filo 11.111111 {: Jn ' rlco Pd u ll •mdSllO .1SP MARKET SECURITIES? ~": c;i1 11>1 !'' :/~lk ft: f~ =::~ ! ~1~ ll t~:i~. ~v. 1fl'll ~~.f~•1.;. The A~A.Pr f 1$\lr 11~ lt1Wr 4\'a 4~ R•vm p 14V. U\\ T....on Fd IO~ I Aleo11 1.IO A. y are lhe short.term AtTS 1.-: • •111 111 E11 1v. •'~ 11.t(oq 11 1w. 1614 u ... u.c lV. m ,t,m11suo ..,10 . 4VM (p lo>• Jiiii ~tl IV. '"" Ref Creel ll 32'h Un 11111"' J1\lo VI• AMBAC ·'° l .O.U.'s of tlle various bor· A, .... ,1n ..... I .... Httl •• JI~ Rlddr Pw 13'/i I• Vft McGll ' PA. "11'1..-EI 1.:io cm. l •'~ 114 •llt!! ti ttli> RlleY Slo 11 21 OS Bkt\Ot '°"' N Ar01 E1 "'2,'9 rowers: !he U.S. Treasury, :r1 ~. ••• ,.,. l!!'n w 11>.\o 11:., ROid e~ 2111, mr. us E"v11 11v. 1• ""'Hen .!Sr Federal Agencies, state and :~~net~ 1l1'102.fi :'O ~~~ '. l: =~ M 1I0• 1! ~l m•r ~~riv. mr.:n~:= local g o v e r n m e n t s , cor· :!liM. H ~ :~ :;'....., ~ ;~: I·. ::: f1~~ 21~ Jui ~0laii"r~ '!J~ 2~~ ~A~~~~·• po .!lo f II l "k:olac •·• 41• rapt, '" J"• 1111 Rv~n Ho 3' .0 0 II lrld ttl'J )I A!lrand1 2.10 r ns O a ypes. ,t,I~ lf!O u .. ,,.. radl Sr 11'~ 1~ SH111r 2~ •'~ v1l lD su 6V.. AmBda '·"' I . J"-h ,t,I • 81v 2" s Gt,t, .v.1! ~>•-'••' ~',,.",'•" 1•0 ,~ •,~ vi,~,,!~ S. H\(I U Am Can !-" n general, ,,.,se are t e At1rec1 E" ~·1 '~ Gr"n ·' • .. ., v. .... ,I · ,l~ AC•~., .1.~ I k l bl th AIPll GM ~( ..... ~nll II:'.; 161, 11\io cl (Dir !"lo 71Jo Waell Rl1 .... ,,.. ""'(em .Ml part or the vast over-the.count· mos mar e a e, e most Amtdc 3 w. rov, ,., .~. n~ Sci Ind ~ •v. w111•w P u 1sv. .., Ch•!" 1•611 liquid, the lea.st risky of fixed-:'"e18f~ r~ l~\(i "'::: t-;, r..! :u ~~1~ lzl? Int =·1;:uB: 1~ 'm i~~ l:~ er market to start wtth. So . . • income obUgalions. For in· !::: ~~~ .. ~ 'iv. v~~~nl t \ r~~ ~~D: ~ 1:"" 1:111 -=:3.h°":iG , ltt AOlslT,I ·'°' . Q. WHAT JS THE OVER· stance, among the 1.0.U.'s you~ G•1-:~ ti:! F ~:=· .~ 1:,~ 'j,, ~.f,.m• it\\ l~ ::;hr~E i!ii i~ !~y~~~:i; THE-COUNTER MARKET? can readily buy and sell jn ~ ~eoc'!: 1~~ .. ! ~ =."t: 2~~ ~~ i~ ... G•J, ,.:~.I~ -:=:,,:• 1 1o.ro ; ' :;:e~i;;a 'i': A. Th.is is the market in the moneu markets are· A.SI G ..i c· J\lt Hu.,.~ , s-, , slwndOh n. i1t W•lll'4 M 1 u Am E•o lrtd h. b °'• h j • 1 · Am Telv n .... ll Holm EP :)0 -0 Sml!". M 1~1 6'lo Wstat p I~ 9 AGef\lns .511 w IC u"' overw e m111g ma· US T b'll d In """'ein e '~'" 70'llo H01ollfft 1•. t» sn1111 st s 1>..:. 214 w11n Na •h »i "G"•" on.•o J'oritv ol { i a ed. inc 0 me • · reasury I S, ue Arillen '" 1 A. HOOvfr Jt\' JI~ sc11 wi• 12~. 1)11< w.tn Miii Jl/o 6 ,t,mHol1t .10 " up to one year and the virtual !~~~" 1';1 f;! ~" ~:i:• ~~ :~ r~· l:~~ l:1 ff~ lT~ ~!: ~~ ~., ~~ ! ~= ~~2 securities are Oought and sold equivalent of cash· short 1 r Arden 01 ,~ Jt kuo PP 21 2~1\ s .. r.,c11 U\\ •Ill wi..N11 l&l.i ll\.'I "m Hot" .it -U.S. Governments, Federal ' • e m Art 11.oP IJ'~ 1~'-Mu1 Ga1 I~ llV. 1w EISvc 1""" U'.i. WI•< "l 20 ~ Amln"lsJ .Ml Federal Agencv issues next ,.,,_ H ''"' riv, Hur•• p ••• ..... o.c••v 4,,, 5 WrOlw E '"' 2"1 ,l/U!l':IJ! 1.40 a.nencies mun;ctpals cor· " • Ar .. la• 714 n.r. Hvatt c11 15 U\Ot si.11•1J'11 1rn "~ wr1o111 w uu; 1t AMetCI• 111' ·~ t ' •Ith gh bo~ to Treasury bills the most AsCC flDf 'to.i. Jn~ Hr1n .,., #l~ )Ill s111 a .. 1. 1111o n 111 ... , £ "'° s Am Moi.,1 porl 1 ~s ~ .• ""< ~'--5 a~! marketable of securilitS· NJ!'~"~' '!~ nt tl~ A~ !~ f' ::·:r~. 2·:~ a so ... aoeo Ul nw111r amounia i.--' • 1 .. tr 1 .. ll\~ IM Gn :b>'i U\4 AR.-.Ov .!Jir LEGAL N<mC~ 1.._ ha ' 11t.i I lbe s .. ," •·term tax-exempt obllga-11 1>11n1 •\' ... lllCI Nwl 2~ 2~ Am "'~'I"" 1 ~t e:icknc;:·volu~es and' ,Qona:, hlgbly Uquid too. I:~!:'*,. ~:! ~ l~X.C:d o ,,~ ~ tsm:7;11,_; -~-ty of 1 • .I0.. •• .::.1-a dwar[sl .$-\Al*> traded iri the money :;'"": n.~ l~ l~f-ecwi',.. i'? ~ MUTUAL ~:::5ti.;· i"70 .... n:; w--.'Yl.lll -... t...ts •• lag 1•100 11111 21 .... 22'h Int llWU, J'H 6 ,t,mS!d "'"'~ 1 all' the listed' t1Changes con).;. .. _a.e r r e .• " • 1~v. 1: 1111 t~i ::~v1: 'u!.. -'m s11r11 . .-blntd And 1 .. 1.. • the marKel ana over) commerc1al bWJk 11 .-1,.1,~! 6'.4 1 ~.;s-:r J"::. whJc:h bu 00~frketplace no ., certificates of deposit; larg :H1~ ~"' 'm l:"SoU111 ~la ~;z FUNDS :U-i .. 1';;4111 ·=·L.-·--t • (f l00 ,000 an-t . more rtfN-·1m':~Jj:.ii:t !"' ~ ' :w~,,._~ ~r -.-, no even, . any de.nominations or -~ · ac1i. H• '' n ..., w11 '~ s•~ A z1 rigidly filed boun of tra<l1ng .• .. ........ ~ cia eo.w EJ t~ 111o J...,n F 1111o 111. ..;:.'°" J'IC.60 . . · paper note.s otgations· '°'' a,.-•1.t 114 JM111bv ,.,. ,,... ..,,,_,... .111• In general, secunlies Jte b ker' · . \ Boot11e c ti,1 ~·~ Jlltv F•' • '"' AMF 111e ·" . . . .~ an ! aet 5 ,. l ft Sou Afl 11"· l~ Jh"''" Pd lTlo l7ll't ........ c .IO bought and sold tD this marltet d . 1. ol MS 000 nd '°' c10 N I"' 1<11w s1 ~,,. s•v. 1Nv1sT1NG 1mo G•11 s.11 1.12 AM, 111e .JI . . enomma ions ... a ., .. itJ '° ? 1<11,s1 Pl 11 11 COMP,t,JUES tnc: Fd8 5.11 1.u "mot• C<YQ by negotiation through dealers up· Fedeal ·Fund' d •,r1u Sc• 16 1w 1(111v1r 141,. 11'"' NEW ,0 ,, , •• , lnd•Pnd ~.H s.:11 Amsted J . .io k I led th I. • s an rw" "' 1<o .... 1(1!1 Gr~ l\\ 3V. ..... I"" Trnd 10.• 11.ll !omtel .u and bro ers oca e na 100 EtJrodollars eryi.h a1 1' 1~Y.> 1(1v1m ''" J,,.. 1•11°"" •1111r1ea by ..a''" J.4' 1.11 An.1coM1 1.'° .r and -mmun'<catlng v;a . 8udttr 6'·• ,,.., K11r T ,,,, ,,,., , ... N~•I-... HO ~ INTGN '·" 1.) A..a. H11<:t I ov .... (But I assume these are 11y,•nu11 s, ", .... ".~ K,•,,•, .. ~" 1•• Jl'I .. Ion of S«urll~ l"v CoA 10.75 11.71 AtlCorpNSv l an lmmen.se t e I e p b D 1 e loo big 10 IM! of practical l11 itr ... .2<'ti ,4_. "...," e 1 ~~ 1 ~ ~·1:~n 1':i"wt.~ ,::: ?~% ~.~ ~::: ~j,~0 1·;: oelwork ~l!T'CO "'~ I~{~ Kt'r't Fib 11).1.0 HI.I. "'"' HCutltlft lf'IV• &ft 10.llf 10.tl ....... O(lu 1j71 M-~ ·oe ·~ d 1 wb interest to you: so I'll dis pense :::M ~ !? H ~:::,ct~ :,, ~~ :,ld,bldtia\: ~ '"r&\l<Y~1 G.17:1 . .,. :~t ~I" 5ll UD~ u""' ea crs 0 with them in the above &11~..:1 1·• 3~ 1(1<111 Int :1• :'Ao l•sktOI hundY. 1N11 t.n t.21 ARA svc: ·" transact billions of dollars IP MIM )~''I It ~1"91 21 4 l -lhf IQllowll'lll 11,_. ''<Ill ),It l.46 .\n1l•N io.t paragraph) •P 'iow •>• 7\lo lrtt C11 l • •111 AD Stock 11·""·" Arc•t•N ;,,, worth of busine~ w i t b Q 'WHAT. ARE TilE BOND •D lnrA 3\• ~'Ii NP Vot n v. ll'h Abtrdn 1.11 1.u Se!KI .n t.31 Arr)I O•n 1 . 1•DTCll ?•'» l !C,..111• 1\lo l A.amJr1llW Fwn01: V•r Pr 5.7, l1I ArltPSvc: 1.111 customers and each other MARKETS" •rr oev 1 M LMC 011 Hi ,.. Grw111 sos l 53 Inv Reill ~.01 • ..,,1 .... os .,., . 1r11 111 , .. 3 La11e1 tn 2•1'1 251.fo lncom J.4s '.71 llltl '/·" 16.n Armco!! 1.'1oO every year never ~ee~ fa~ A. Here is where 1onger-:: ~& 'tit 1;111 t::: ~1 l~ fu. ,j~.~~ ~·'i: :·~ ~vwH11e0<.~ '"~ 2:in :,~2~0 to .race; they are voices.; term obligations of the various ~:l~"C•11 2\~ JU' t:=1 M 1~ 1l:: :lm)!14 fU tJl K~~ Fr!Ftau ~::C'ft.i~":5 their word. over a phone 15 issuers are traded. In turn, C~J:s ''t! 1J"' ~111v~ 11, i•, ~ll,~r F i:U r:!f ~::110&1 lf··~ 111:~ ~i:"fna1:.: accepted With complete trust. the bond markets subd·l,-<de Cll•rt o s1, ~ l•liw• Ii l•V. i.~ ,t,IJlll• Fd 1.'3 c'"' c..s 112 1 .10 .ii "'~'"nu 1-'0 Pr. ofed "b'd'' Chm lu I I lr.o-11 BF 12 1J ,t,mc1P •,IJ J.21 CUI II• 7." IJO As.sci Brew ices are qu as I into the market for corporate crm 111<1 2•• l ine M111 p.. t\~ ..,m Bui 1.&1 1.01 Cua 1<1 1.11 1.so ..,ud t>G 1.:io Ciiis Ulll 17"'r IJ lobllW n,, 6 ,t,m Ovln 1."I f.61 Cin KJ •·ti, .U2 AnO $t>9 l.:10 LEGAL NOTICE bonds· for US Government c111 er,.1 <;v, !~\.\ loU Cd¥ 7 2~ """r E•orei•: Cw st 111i H:ii ...a.Tran .oa VNITE D STATES NAT IO NAL BANK SOUTH COAST 'LAZA BRANCH NOW Ol'IN SATURDAYS ' " MON.·lHUIS. PllDATS P.M. 11·1 P.M. , .. , ..... 11141140.JJll. Lec....i ht: S.. C.., ,._., c .... M .. ""'· YICt Prn.>Mlupr E. H. LEVAN CHILDREN LIKE ~UNCLE LEN You •rt cordially invit.d to attMld our ANTELOPE VALLEY INVESTMENT SEMINAR Investigate without obligation WHY EYery m•ior ec:onomic f•c:tor indic.•t•1 •n e•cellettt inY estment opportunity exists in th1 Ant1lope V•ll•y. Consider th• following: '°'Ul..A.TION: From 120,000 in 1970 to a projected W0,000 In 1975. P•lEWAYI: Existing .Frtt\vay network connectlnt di· rectly to statewide complex, 63 miles lo do"'ntown Los Angeles. Alll:'O•TS: Federal Government approval for :S900 mil· llon lnten:onlinental Alrport to be located at Palmdale. Largest Airport in the ,,..·orld upon completion, lt'rvlnr 100.150 million passengers. PUTUltl GROWTH: Unlimited. Palmdale projected lo ht ~econd largest c ity in California, Cou1·th lar(:· r~t in United S lalt's. INDUSTRY: NO\\' located: G. E., RCA, Lockheed, llughe.11 Aircraft. General Dyn&JJ:UCI, IJloron, North Am"rican Rockwell to name only e f"w. IAILltOA.DS : Southern Pacific-a 78 mile connectlnx link completed at a ooet of $20,000,000. WA.Tiit: Additional water via CaJ\Corn\a AQutduct Projttt late. 1971. INCOltPOIATID CITY: Plllmdal" 22.f square mile.11. PORT PACILITlll: Port or Long Beach and Port of Lo.'! Anaele.11 82 mile11 av,·ay available by lrce\\'8~;. air. rail, UTILITll5: Southern Californi• Edison, Soui'be.rn CaHfor· nla Gas Company, Lot; Angele11 Count)' Sani· latlon District. Irrigation District, P•cltic Telephone Company, Ctne.ral Telephonfl Companv. OCCU••ING DIVILb,MINTS: Kaber lndu1lrlea -400 bed h0iplt11l, Broadw4)'-HaJe Shopolng Ccn~ IPr compte:oi, Larv.1n "hou•lnrt c!evf!lopmenb, liolida.y Inn $4 mllllDn Hotel constntcUon program •nd mon". PltOl,ICTI LOOK GOOD: SPllCf' Shuttle Proirram lOCA· tion-F.dv,'trds Afr J1'0rl'!e Blll"'-Spa~ Port U.S.A. Do ~ou remember Oranto County Mfore It bet•n to d.voloD? It did not have • m•i•r Airport f•cility nslsting It. ''Do you wi sh you would have Invested In Orange County when you coul d have!'' Don't miss the Ant•lopo V•lley opportunity! LOC.t.TION: Surf I. S.nd Hot.t, 9th'f'loor Confor- ence Room, lSSS S. Coast Hlgh,..ay, Lagun1 ... ch TIME: 7:)0 p.m. D.t.TE: .t.U1usl 4, 1970 ·--d . nd . . f I c,~ .. ,11 ~ 1()1 111 lllll El•," 11\lo u C•111I '·" 1.U l'~ ,',' ···:i' '• A!ICtrEI 1.J4 UV11 11 a notes· or onger· .,r •I ... 91 " t v11e11 11 14v. 1"'"" 1.'ll 1.12 u• , a. Auce1 DIS.11 ' Cit•Gel 1'~ '"Mad GEi ll$io 1• Jrwnt 7.SS 1.2s in 54 l . J.n "jl ll:lcllflCI t term Federal Agency issues· cu11 <J " n '3\'> M•i 1111r (~ ~'" s"""1 1.09 .... Pot•• ,,,, 2.2) A *Rdl p1i.1s . ' Cill1 u B ""' 7),,_ M1llkrt 65 61 SllKk 7.21 7.U l(nlckl:I S,N 6~ All 1111~" ~I J for munle1pals. c11v1" Mi 1.1•, H~• M<lm• ..,, ,.., 1~ Am E<1tr J.•i •.JD l(~Ja G1 6.Y 1. 1 Aj•Rc:Ji'~lll'l.• T 'j C!1rli. Ml 'll''• J1 Mtnl" M Jl, 3" ,t,m Grtll J.Bl 5.5' lt~ Grlll 1.N 1 A 1asC11en> 1 o 11 uslrate, last month r11v•on 1 .. 1"' Maroa' c s~ 61.\ Am 1,,.. •.Sf •.Sf le• llu:11 u." u.u ,t,ILa$ Corp New Jersey Bell Telephone ~lt~:..,. ..... ~ r! f~ ::~mM~ =~ ltt ~~NM~li, ~-~ lTi t/J:~k :::: tu :~'t,Crf!CJlf.it!' Id th h de 'tin (1ow (II 1 .... Ulo M llrowr ,~ ... 15\.io Am PK ·u.-.. ... 1!1 Llk Inv 1.U •. ., ... _a P•td so roug an un rwr1 g c~· o ~ t'" M1u1 l P 1ov. 11 ,t,.-:11or Gr..up· Liiie N•t 1.11 1.n JWlllJ'l'l'tn in11 nd• •-. of 9 J5 C091r (JO 5~ J.t M•Vtr I 17>,1; 0114 &•DI! 14i 710 lll'IA J.77 U.0 AVCO (11 60t sy 1cau: a new issue . C<ll•m E ,,, J"" Mcour n v. u •... ..~ ,·,, ,· .. Lllll"lll s.vlft· • .~ pe Ce I bood I loo (11000 c11111n1 F •~· ""Mtc1!1 G 2nr. """ ,~;;; i:tl 1Jj C1No :nAin.u A::.,~., .... "'° r n s a Colo" S1r ,;,, """ Mf'd(C H ~ •'Yi Fd IJ'ly 1 2' 7 9f Ctpfl 1.11 '·" AVMI tl'IC .. a bond). Last week the bonds l=~ir ~-.. ,~;:w; ~:J1.~1" ~1~ ll A~~~ Id ->:·:u•l'.~ L:'h"'e•o 10.~~:~~ ~= :P15o were being bought and SOid tom Gt! 101• 111/i M•rld lt1 11~ 13"4 ..... ocl• I DJ It ~lllrM 1"' 1.tJ l,'1 A.vorrPd 110 . Com T~I :1 1Z14 M1a111 Cl , .. w. ... I J'u .,. ... 1nh!n 1..22 ~.61 Al.If( Oil ·1111 1n the bond market at more com Hiio 6 t4' Mld1t• 2"' J'~ • !'Ofl • • • • M111 Fd t.1\ 10.09 · . [ Psv 7•~ • Mldw GT 11 u Alo;e HOUQhlon. MIQ G"' ,,5 10.Jt than 107 11107tll reducmg .. 3' ... M I G •A _., Fulld ... "'° J.OD Ml• Tr IJ 31 IJI' • -w •• the Oflglnal yield from 9.3S (mp ln•I J•, • o R,ch J l'llo Sloclc S.21 J.7? MllllOf• f 3' ' Jf lttf GE i . . . -~D Cm ,, ! ;!; Mf.! v~ u .. im Fund • l .l! '·'° M111:1 1:as J: J ~"",0111 ~·~ (mp Tee J • Jl'!o Mod Sci l>f of\, Stl Ct l.90 •.U Mtrld Fd 11 :.0 12'.4t B.tlG otli percent to 8.72 percent. ,_r"" 2,,, J Ml\flw11 R 1? ..... 1•,., t:=: 1li:1~:~ :=v~~ 1::tt 1fB·0l s,!'='"t,'1 i·',, Q. \\'HAT TS ~1EANT BY 1::1,,.odl '~! 11.\"t ~m )I°~ iGi~ 11\.'t !llt"O l(J'll 1.3' 1.,, MOlldY"'• 11.lt llj· Binlt Tr .U --· ,, ,. --· • ··-• Ber• G!h "'5 5.30 MIF Fd i.n 11 ... ,,, ' •• UNDERWRITING SYN· ~~~ l IS• 16 "O:e.s i 1i_l 17'" 11111r Fd 5.57 I .Of M!F Gr" •.li •.Jt Bant CR -:ii DICATE'I l~rp S l 4ilio Mto• Tr4 11"° 18'/o 8and1!k !..lJ 5.ll MuUS Gv 10.1311.2' !11Slc Inc; .IO • Co1m Yr 1~·1 ll'h MtQT r wt ~~ 4\;, 801~ St 1.5' 7.:11 Mu OmG 4.21 4.511 81!1:1 Ml<! A Thi ( I lh . !,.....,,. I> 1•1.1. M ! " M •Vr 5'1i 811$! F<ln ,_03 , .. Mu 01T'ln 1,12 •.!t 1111u Ml ot I • S re ers 0 e Ill-rei M;I ,, ~ i•~ ,...g,c Club 10•4 nv. jM<~ >< i',·t~ ,', "• M111 s11n u .tJ 11.tS lltlh Incl st I b k ho f rm rfft Mii 110 1•~ M ''I" 7 I or•d I'" • Mut Trtt 1.7' 1.7' B1th!t1 ot2.lD ve men an ers w 0 (rDSI Ce 21 ~ ...... M~!RI El 2'• l'llo B11!lock Cl",., NEA Miii '·" 1 . .w 81UKllll:I .lie grOUpS fsyTidicates) lo put Up Cruldl R J>o J•~ Mv•r L.. JR~~ 19"4 BuUCl 11.6111.7' NII /rd I.II I.II 8tJClrl1D' ·:JI . 5rore• c :r.~ 11'1 NCC Ind 1•~ ''" C1ndn 11.2' 11.ta Mat """' 1.01 '·" l.vW.Cro the funds to buy a new issue ~n~ Lb• •·• ~Narr..., c 1~1 , ii 1 ~~~= s l:ll 1J:: N~11;~11• ,Tiio.o' A:!f'~ l or securities from the bor-g:~;r 0: ::; ~ ~!le!;":. • 10~.1 NY v .. 1 u.n 11.n 11on11 •., 1 °' ""' FM Cl! ' . 0011 ~.. It•, 20 N(mo Co II\ ,,.,, BinM FO I.It •. n Olvid !"$2 3'1s Bedrnt~ .so rower at a set price. o .. .,,. " 1•. :;\'t N11 '-'"'1 16'~ "'" cG Fa 1.10 1.H Pt sit s:H 6:.w he! 0 1c1r: .JD B d · h' h b k D1vl1 Fa ''' 5 Na! G&O \Sfrio 16'-'I C1pamr I.II 1.• lncorn 4.ll •.n "9d1..i,r .7stt y Olng t IS, t e :in ers oav Mir I\. 16 Nat Lib 1! 25'4 c111U 1.... 2.•I 1.90 S!DCk •.k 1.• 8ttco P,.1 _._, d ··-th . DK.,,. In s !'Ii Nall Med 1!N 11'J. C•Dll Sllr !.Jl s.n Mel Gr!ll 1.16 1,lt 8tldJ'llH . .otr un erwnu: e issue -pro-Oriel!! "' 111 , ?)•11 Hit Pt• 1~, 1~ Cenl Shr t.1• 10.w Nrvw cei J.59 J.n ae11 How .60 Oelhl 1n1 ~' 1 Nt! Seo;R 7~1 1•;, Cll•nnl1>11 F1111C1s: Ntuw Fa 11.61 16.61 111!1 tnlttCOJ'I vide the funds to the cot· Dtlu• c~ ._,; •9•.r. Nat s11e1w 1•• 1 11111n 10.02 10.ts N!'W Wld 10.7111.n ll!mls Co 1 por.l'.On Sia'-C>.ly oJher Der C•nT oJ:-, ""'Nit Sl!vr .. ,,., Com St 1.39 1.S' Newton 12.21jl-' &endlJ 1.111 • u:, • Do!! !fir 1 ~'• Jt,.,. NEn GE 11'• 16 ... 6Grwlll l.21 •.60 NICll Srrg l,1J .7! 8mcljJ. ,,1) type Of bor-wer Then lhe Dtv .i.m ", I aJ NttG J}t; l!~ IMOm 1.11 7.2J NDrelJ I J.lt 13.lt 8tt1tllCo 1.60 '" . ' D~·r E 2'• ... fttrst1 F ,.,, 3'I SQK1 t.•I I.Sol Ckn11pll 5.IJ 5.13 9'nlll P'l•.•o ff th 'l ' Dli m ( 13 l• leis ,t, ~ :W.1 Cllllit Gt Bll5: 0"""'• !.41 .I.SJ Bt!<elt PU.JO group re-o ers e secur1 1~s DIK 1.1er .. • 4""' ,.1911 B ii 36 c1.i1 1.11 s.•• u111 Fo 11.tfu.11 '"""'" 5p12.so at a higher price to the public. 8!."::~,fM ; : j~ =~~.Ro;:~. 1~~· 1~~; ~~ 1t;i ,I:~~ FC..ms 1;~01 l:tt ::=:; '" The difference ( s pre ad ) Oow Jon 11>. 78\~ NEur 0 11 '" 1~. Sllthd 1.11 '·'3 Pace Fnd •.ff 1.l1 lterk'r PllG Do¥1t' Oi IJ•, U'fo N'" G~' 11', 11''1 Sotcl 11 1 . .0 OTC S..; f.1• 10.IS llffmK (.,,.a bet\veen what the Un· Drew "'' 7 • J'lo NW N&IG 110 l\1 C""mcl U.10 11.0J O'Ntll 11.36 11.ll 11!1~ 511 , IO . . f Oun•ln D 10"• l<R. NW PhSV 11 11V, co•on l•I' Piiat 5.N 6.SI B!t T~rtt j;o derwr1ting syndicate pays or Oorlron v " Hv. Nll(I RJ<: J sv. EQurv un1v•11 1110,. Ent S,t) J.9J 111ickOk n 11 . . h . h EZ P1lt1t J11• 11V. 01110 4r! •. , 1 Funll t,11 9.96 Pion l'llCI t.61 !G.50 fllalrJMft '411 the securities ar\d t e n1g r -Eav•c "' )'• 3~ Ot>lo w11 ,1.., n Grwi11 ~.13 s.n P1111 Inv 1.111 9AO enu l eul 1 . hi h Jh I E15t S11 ~" 71~ lkJI Sein 11 1av. Mcom 'ni t.~ Prlct Fund•· BIDdl HR 3"' pnce al w c e group reo ·Econ 1,11 1~•.1P~ 0'""'"1 11, ~ v1n1 J.11 •.os Grw111 1• 11 "·" 111ue B•rt 1,. f h ·t· l , Eo;luc S~s \•~ 311t; Oller Tl> 16 .. 11" (DI Gr!ll '.;I 9.'6 N Era I.IS •. ll 8!v8el o" °J5 ers t e secur1 1es o ~s Et Pa•EI 1ih 11h 0v1r NA ,,,,. .,4 commc '·"' 1... N H., 1•.!5 1' ss BOl!bl B' represents the bankers' profit. ~:::, ~,~, ;:: !~ ~ecc•1'v1 ~~~ l~ ~~'l;~ fl 1".'l\ ::~ ~~v!~ '1:'~ ~::: ::r;gi1c0~ Of lh d .,., g Et Nllt 1 312 Pab,1 ar .w M\.\. Cwtn. CO 1.:lt 1.0 PurlltJ'I .H 9.:W llDl'ld Ind ,, course, e un erwr1 n El N11e 5,~ ,, Pac ,t,uta '"' Hli Com11 ..,. 1.•1 1.n P111ntm F"""'1: " · · i h E p · 7'4! p F E 21 30 Comotl !.53 6.0I E<Wll 6.06 6.1! woen 1.:111 syndicate oses money W en elf::." 6.: 1 P:~co 'co 3,,. ,14 ComD 1<1 ~,..11 1.:w Gtor111 11 .92 u.os ==~ t~J the bankers misi·udge lhe El c !>v1 J•, 1 P111<01 1..., l'• s;anio Fd 1·5' Grth 1.:11 '·16 8 Edi 2,. El 011~ 51 S• ,.,-r or ~~ :~ C'!.i'1'o~d i:li ~:ll l~:O~ \·.\1 :~ 11:Wns 11..i mar"ket and they have to resell ~:.,~<ldd'111 1~:; .~~~ ;:~rv ~ 5 s11o c;:o.,.01 1n t.2s .t . .so v1s11 1.1t 1:31 er,~!IAlr .so the securities to us al 3 lower Entt~r c 11•, .,., P1vt11~ IGl4 n onsu tn 2.90 1.11 Vov•11 3.51 1.09 Rro1111St 2.'40ll . '·' h E""'' Ro 1'• '• p"rl Ml t:r.c. 10'4 ~""ll Ml 1.71 6.11 ll:eo Tech l.21 l·" :ri•:,:r ~7 pnct than they paru t e e .•• ~1,1a • :~ ~:e~~i! 2\~ 2;,1 ~:~~ 't~ 1t;;; 1!:rs ~f:t~~~ 1\:f. 13:~ ~L~_P}, .~., ISS.Uer. ~...:.-co•• •:; l~P· Gll.W lfVl:io (My C•O •.1210 ... Rose111h J.U 1.M .......... " --------------i;·~·~·~·•=O~"==~"~·~"~•~·~·~··~'~'o':=~''~'~'=,ICrn WOlv 11n1v1n S~llnl Fd ..... "" Br~wr C:I .Ill THIS IS THI Ol',ORTUNITY YOU H.t.VI lllN W.t.ITING FOR OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS Inve1tigale the profit potrnllal of the all new hot doR vending ma.cblnt by VEN·OOC lhtern&• i.lonal. For additional tntorma.. Uon Special Announcement The Natlonttl Anti-Smoking Council wilt conduc1 intro· ductory S('Ssions \1•ilh lhe amazing n<'v.' eudio·visual vortex and help you stop 'moking in just i;rvPn days. ~.'!l' sessions "'ill bt> held beginnin~ each hour rrom 9 AAf to 11 Al\! end from l Pl\f to ~ Pl\l l\londey throui;h Friday 1\1 18582 Beach Boulcv11rd, $11itr 208, Jiuntingto11 Bt-11.ch and 11t 1770 Orangc Avenur, Sull.r D. Cosla 1\'i<'S3. Thrrl' I~ no cost or obligation for the ln· lrodUC':lory .~l·~11lon. Come in no\v or call 17141 962-1828 or (il<ll 642-4163 f(lr It per· llonel a ppointmcnL Thi' pro-. gram off<'r~ a eompl('te mo11<')' bark RUl\rentN' it you don't lflOp 11moklni,! in seven day$. C:rn W0.,1 UMVlll Sc1'1111tr 11.H ll.DI llklyJ'IVG 1.1'1 oevllh M S1.2t ll.21 Scuo11tr Funcb : ""'"'" Co 0.•1wAr1 Gto11p: IM lnY 12 . .U n .M "-~lltr• ·°'° Otcal 97111169 Sod 1713,IU lw"Shot l.'t Detw• 10:" 11:111 Bii n :n tt."r.I 11rut1-. .111 0t1i. S.7 J. 76 com St 1.19 7.1t "uoEr 1.10 Dtt~r1 11.H 11,51 Sfcurnv f....01: BUdd co .10 o"v FO t.17 lC.U lllUIY 2.J.I 1.n llud!i F ., ... Ortrl Lv 10.94 11." lt1¥at l.6J 7.2.~ !ltu<taf!I Ill .•4 EA!DJ'l&.Howard: Ultrl $.37 J.t1 "ullFor<i 1.10 81IAn l.f9 f.11 utK Am 1.(Q I.ff llun-Rim~ Grwlh 9,tl 10,N ,I Spt<S 12.7' 13."2 l'IUflkR 1111.50 lncom J.n S.76 tnll Giii •.70 1.211 1111!1 lnd 1.40 Sotel 6.90 1~ l\lm F4 1.91 7.97 1111'1N.,,. I ..... S10tlt 11.3112.tJ l'*r Ao lt.N .. .l:t llllf1Nar .in IElltnt 10.7S 11.15 11 Dun j ·lt U,.., ll11rMv .11 111rtl IO.J.111 .11 lat .JI 9.11 lll.11'•8~1' .II' mrQ Sc 1.2s •.&.I trm1 Fu 1: B111llU~v .10t ""11Y 10.1110.11 ca.it •.u J.2S ntor~ 5.11 . . . l"vesf t.~110.u c I" C EQllll'v 1.11 1.31 Tr1111 1 51 1.78 t I P .11 E11ut Gt~ 1,6• 1.31 jmltll e {.11 1.n Ca. 1'1"1111 F.ue~ 11.n 11.n Wft Inv .n 1.n ca11ah" M~• E~tr't In 10.17 11.• ~l~v Gt •.1' 5.jf r1moRL .••• F·O C•o •,~J •• n er 1,,.. 12.0l lJ. ClmPSP !.l_D IF•lrkl 1,11 t.51 DllC"' J.51 6.lf r:o&tf'W ·"'"' FArm Bu l.tt I.it Frm Gt •.J2 ~.I rdn Pac J.?tl FN Grt~ 10.6S 11.&.I lttt 51 Jl.m Jll.00 Ctn1ll!:d 1.lG Fld <10 ,,7l 10.U SIH<lmtn Fwndl: g'~ C I de•! Fld F""° IJ.Ol 1'.,,. Alfl ll'ld 1.ot 6.61 ""'"'" l.fCI Fld Trrld 1t.DJ 10,N FJOuc J.7' S.76 ar1111~ .60 Fin111<l1I ,'Oii: Scltn J.6' 2.'2 l'"1ro r:AOll J °'"" j•• J.n Slt'ln Roe Fd1: C"tro"L! 1.M lllClinr .JO l.61 1111 1j:lj U.11 C1rpftw; I.till lncom 1.tl J . .U CIO Ot IJI Ctrrlffe• ·'° Ve"I 3.71 •.10 SIDl:k 111,7610.1' C•rG" I.Irle F1tF VA .... '·ff I""' lllGI S.4 •. 01 C1rttrW .401 Fslln DI• •.• , 1. llDIJ'IST 1.11 l.J, Ct~ JI F~1 1nC1t1 6.13 I· vncr GI 1.u 1.1 ca~!l..Ck .'11lo IFsl lllSjk 1.17 . ·" MR ,t,o •.3110.J~ C1ttrTr 1.10 1F'I Mull 7,ll 1.5"' THCllfl 1.10 1.112 CCI Cot• I'll Htt I.I! 6,,. ll'thl!CI J • .Q 3.1S CCI (p pfl.1! F.r SI~•· )G,lt .U.11 Khl'IOI l.Ol 6..56 r:l'CO Corp to F"I CID S.1' .... TlfflO r.1J1).ff2J.tl r1t11newt'~·, Flt! l'nd t,7~ .. TPWI' MR •· 4,61 t°.el•n pf,t,l.'11 Fii GI~ 1,Jt f.t1 Tran C•D f· 6.1' renc1 lfOI .ll Fnd Grtl l." •.02 Tr•• toa .7~ IM (fftl FllY FounO•I 1.n 7.$1 tr.dot Fd 11.n 11:11 Cell HUO ..... Fou•,111 .... n .J T'wnC Gt ,.~, . I ren tUL! 1 u Fr11nJ1Hn GrOllO! TWt'IC: lllC .62 j·fl Ce11!1!'°S 1:1' DNTC •• ,, 7.04 u ... K Mvt ... . .. r ... 1 l1 Et I Grwtll J.OI 5.$7 Onlfd .... ··n CitnMPw ' 1• VIII S.ff 1,24 On Caoln J.S5 I. fent SW (~ tJ'I om l.7• 1,96 VJ'lftld F\Jnd1: c,nl Sort .eo Frft'Clm 6-'' 1,&-1 A.ccm . .S.ff 6,tl C'"TelU .. b f:d trMul I.. .... lllCOl'l'I ll,lt n.H CffT<I 1 '611 f~~~~~~~~~~~~~::1 FU!lll ,t,m 7,4' f·ll sci.... s.n 6 . .t fett.1eed ti" Gti.W'I' t" .It Vimo ,,11 i~I ~fr]'" .iob ~i:.~ J:;: J::l ~:t ... '1,'),,. ·~: .0 ~I ,::11 •T°J IK~ S'!(: ..... ll~ 5.1 ,... lllfll,. ,,. For p:r· ,: ';t ;:; l::r"ll, tn ::u ·~~' .: Weekend er Gr:# si 1::,., '•:tl ~=~"" l:Jt 1~ ="'"Hitt ,~·" ! .. 1!·"11·~ """ t·U ·~ =t~'1, ~::~~ tl:ff 20:u ~fk!t!li"°'" · .. !':ll s;=~ 11~ H•mlt1Dn1 •11$t In ""\ · ~"'" v~' ] ~Fl \·•' •·U W•~" Mv I .•1 • ..0 C11t1 01111 · A(l',e1•t1" 1'u•Y iH•~ •. 1t t:i w&ii~~'" ~!""'ilil.'1 ~~1:.Mn, H .. C """' ·ll · ~ • ·" (lllMft 5"' 111 " l'!•rlwll t" I~ ·-· 1 ' 11 .. ClllMll S"''" Mrclb Gfl' • I, l.Cllr i'1J ~ ll (llllll'lfUT t IWf-l"VltioN ,.l'f' requettd IC) i»e.au 1.'nn\1c1 Chartcs A. Pl101.1c g::n-" '1YJ t iff...~ ·ri11:t1 ~~'f..,,f''.f:! Smith, Unlve.rlll Land~tttm"nt •r'ld Manes:t m,.nt Com· 870•408• ,~in1 tl~ 1}J ~fl\" 1 :~ 1i:i !~~~u ~ PHONE t Tl •• 97 J.u. .. £..A') A'J•_JI I/Gift .J• J.~ W!J'ICt FO j•Ol •. lll"'f'fltr ·'° Pllnr... . . ;JU> ,,...""""'J s •11e .1s i·n i'Wlil!lt•d ,itl ""'"'tt '·'° L _________ ...:_ __________ _Jl'•••••••iilll•lil•!'----------Ji mo.ct fl ,_.. , Wl14. 114 I. t.;it 11111 Cl! 1.M Im•<•• :n ,,, wor111 L ui lfl OE ... ----------------------------------------- Marlcet Syrnhls - J • • I • · 11im'siUy's ·Ciosmg Prices ':,, li1111 ~a.-:;.... Jill••·······---.............. , Stock Advance s, Decline s Even' DAIL1/ Plliff . ' ... Complete Closing Pri~es -American Stock Exchange List N.Y. Winners and Losers NEW VOltlC f.A.'I -Tllot fe*'"'t. net _.. tlle •tfc:t:t flllt 11 .... _,. • Tf11 most 1111111 ..,_. ftlt """ .... • 1 11WtW1t el cN,.._ °" t1'M1 NfW Ylrtc ttodl. EJid'll"" ~ "' ¥1flillmt. H" 11'11 ~I .. ctlMftl .. tl'lt •ltftrlnce ~ ,...IW'lliW'I det .... •"'-81111 ........ lalt~ ' • Ch,jna Tru~k · Sa le Okayed W ASHll'IGTON (UPJ) 1be State Department says the government has approved a $3 million deal tnvolving the sale-to Red Cltlna ·of II) dump trucks made. in Italy, but . equipped .. with General Motors engines. The National Secucity Coun- cil approved the deal after an lnlUal objecUon from the Defense Department. The trucks are being assembled in Italy and will be sent to China fro n;i there 1 Ra ils Dying, Offi cial Says . . Briefs I \ I • t I ' f . i JJ' DAILY PILOT Nerve Gas Sjnking Mapped · · KIRKPATR·1c·K'S WASHINGTON l.\P) dealina with chem I cal The great bulk of the 26,500 But the sclenUfic committee Nearly 3,000 tons of old nerve emerg.enci,e1 wi.11 accompany tons wa11 at the Rocky MMJn· uid also that some of the ias, sealed in concrete and the movement, the Army said. lain Arsenal In COiorado and chemical agents might hive at.eel ...,!fins, will be sunk Jn Pla111 for rail movement o( / the rest at Anniston and Blue to be dumped Into the sea ~., H,500 tons of obsolete nerve Grass. under adequate safeguards if a ah.Ip hulk about three miles and mustard gas througb A scientific commiltet from the rockets tn the concrete deep in the AtlanUe Mme 280 citiei•to the Atlantic tri ....... __. the National Academy recom-and steel coffins COUid not miles ff11m Cape KeMedy. strong protests last yea~~...... mended 1n June lte9,tbat most be disposed ol otherwite. . FREE '74 YEARS IN THE HAR BOR AREA R11olar $1 ...... -1\ANO ~TRAVEL ~UIDE ... Plftt..io '!~ 71 MODELS IN STOCK S.UPER ·sA'viNGSON ·70MODELS Fla.. I.he Army announced These protesls, led by of the ~Id gas warfare The COID.lllillee auuested, Thursday. members of Congress, materials be 'de,ttroyed by •s an attemate means, the nun resulted in droppinr those chemical, •bur~~ or demon~ use o{; a nuclear cf.evice· to ) SALES & SERVl'C E No date was given, but con· plans wl)ich called for dum-uoo mdhods and ' the A\'Jny destory the 418 C<llflns. but ' g~ssiooal sources said it pinJ the obsolete cbemlcalJ has ~t lnlmOl.loo.a three-yur the Atoinic Energy Com· THI fUSll Mod•I FM ... 1'7 11" tll.119, 110 •'I· in, pie· t11r•. ' would be .Aug, IO. A National about 1135 miles ciJ New operation f.O do thjl at the mi&sion rejected this . ai> 2760. C t H' h C · Academy~ Sc~oc•• ~m· _:J~e~rs~•Y~·~~~~~~__:R:oc~~~y~M:oo:•:~:m~Ar:~::::•a:L~~~~:M:~:·~~~-'"--'-~~~~~·~·~~·~oas~~~ICJ~·w~a~y~~~~a~ra~n~a~d~e~l~M~a~r~~~;P;h;o;ne~6;7~l;·;2~6~5~0~~~ mittee recently recommended action without delay. The disposal d e ci s i o n culminates' more than a year of study by civilian scientists and government experts. An earlier plan was blocked on safety grounds. Stressing' maximum ufety precaUtiol\S, the Army said 418 of the eolfins containing liquid nerve gas in rockets will be carried in slow-moing trains from storage depots at Anniston, Ala .. and Lexington, Ky., to a military tenninaJ at Sunny Point, N .C. There, in an area described as remote from major popula- tion centers, the coffins con. taming 2,675 tons of chemical warfare materials will be loaded on a hulk. 1t will be towed under Navy direction to the disposal area about 253 mUes off the con- tinental shelf and some 282 miles east ol Cape Kennedy. Florida·s-: Gov. Claude Kirk described as incredible the decision to sink it there. Coast Guard vessels will escort the rowed hulk and give advance warning to C()ffl· mercial shipping in the area. The hulk and its cargo of nerve gas will then be sunk in more than 16,000 feet or water. the Army said. ''The Defense Department is taking every precaution to avoid future sea disposal of chemica l munitions and does not anticipate any in the future ," the statement said. Because of the elabor8te safety precautions, the Army said, the shlpmenu of the 418 concrete and steel vaults from the Anniston and Blue Grass Army depots ''should be safer than the normal commercial shipmenLs of hazardou s chemicals." A tot.al of 305 of the con· tainers are at Anniston and the other 113 at Blue Gra~. Rail routes to Sunny Point "will avoid heavily populated are.as where possible, and the trains' speed will nol exceed 35 miles per hour," the Ann y said, calling this well below speed ordinarily considered •·reasonably safe for trains substances." E2ch of the gas--carrying trains will be led by a pilot train from which apecialist.s will scan the rails and the roadbed for previously un· detected possible causes of ac- cident. Medical specialists and military technicians trained in Bail Right Questioned ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) Ret~ Supreme Co u r t Justice Tom Clark says the preventive detention provision of the District of Columbia crime bill is unconstitutional because it would abridge a person 's right to bail. Justice Clark said the pro- vision allowing so-called "no knock" police searches would pass the constitutional test. The provision would allow poliCt>, with court permission, to make rapid entry to a building if they believe delay would result in destruction or evidence. Clark said the Supreme Court had already upheld a CaUlornia law with a similar provision. Clark, who relired th ree years ago, commented on the two provisions in an interview Suoday. 'The bill is awaiting Presi- dent Nlxon's signature. RlllfMISTEB WAYE SPIUIKLEI 2·57 . 110.81 Thl• dud• ,..111 do cr •pac• SC :11$ feet. ao lf your pl~ I• amall• f°"' ~ men Ol' buJ oe• of our amall•r •prltiklen. Ju•I Ml th• dial cad It 1111'111 do th• n1t. (Ena pay th• wot.r hill?),. . EJ.etrlC'11IO bit d.csl comprMIOr nMd~ It's got ct built la ])\lm.p. U yov.'n got• l'OUg h 11Ur(crc• to do. you'll ct!Ho Jo .... th•. coterag• With lff• wo:st..t pedal. I SCENE OE PARIS 1 11~ lfl ~ DOUBLE BATH SWAG 711 101.z You bow 11 your hath }\Il l ha1a'I vat a ny c:harm. fthro1111' th• shark out of lh• tub.), h1U1.g thl••P arid ... lh• d llMNnc:e. ColOMd glcu1 llxhlr9 cUUusn th• light. DOOR MIRROR 1··· Alt•rvou'••don• all th• -111: put this lJ"xW" dectl up an& ... how your hcrlr ls all -uect up cmd your c:lothes CD'9 c:oni-ed. with 'Wallpaper,.., •• (Tll•n 1•11 th• old man you'N going cn1t to .at tonlghl.) .. .. •.· -70-LB•-BALE •. The-.tl:U Mda ..wial to IOOMa tM IOU CPlcl gm tM ?'Ml•.~ to llnatM. cw• -.1r.t '° I put \M J..'.A. a& ... 11, aait gin '•• a cllcmce to 1-atb. alM.> CLDDEI SPIED · GI.DIE Oll . • S66 GAL • DBESIYE . JACK SHELVING • PIPER 29CYD. II th• unfinished •h•IYfn; board• ju1t don't do nnach for rour p~be. 1011 could try thl .. 11 com•• Jn ctlmo.I unlhnllM colors mad pattHD1. t-n -1d.1or 90mMne 1111'bo"a:n ... r ... "the •hlff.) ROOM DIVIDERS 7•• MN Mp. ''TMse G!W tile Jib.rglm• oaH." Pot ..,...~.,,. Jdmnc..,. I .aalcl liamrd a SUMS cmd·SCIJ' they hcne th• wood from••· litgs. oad tlb.fvlus lnNl't• la. colon and de•lgn1. EVE RAIN PISTOL i---=KOZZLE 49c Jut .... CIZld fO &olli Ba• to COCUN . Trigg•r action ahats ol:f whe JOll, NJ-.. . ~ trigger. Chroza.• flalsh. ' • -· POllCELUV COIT SELF snCKING SCOTCBBRIND . .. BOOKS 39c An•" t.rt1t to ti•• ota coal hook. In cOlon, )lig fa! porcelata.. Jfow TO\I bcrY9 .ola.•\lll~ • bcmg ' 1111'el l°"l• Cnd wll• oa· without na•L WILL HANGERS Special Purchase!! JANE ELLIS MURALS · BIJID PRIRTED WILL SIZE 9 FOOT P IRIS SCENE. .B~utlfal;hcmd irlot.d"W .. ali' mu~l• don• in the loose teclmlqu• of the Fr•nch pGmt•?t. ~r•~ed. wci•hable. scmabbcible, TiD.yl fabric. It'll hold yoµ ulllil you. cc:ID. take that tnp to Part1. In 3 c:Ol6r•~ · • ·-•°"'-• ' ' 14 FOOT"ltf.IAD Romane1que, a delight to behoJd. (man. this mural ls a trip.) Pr•trlm!Jled. washahl•. Yinyl fabric. So easy to put up. no worry a.bout weak paper to tear. Jn 3 24. 87 REG. . ' 49.50 37?Z 74.50 :JOBNS:.tUfilLLE VINYL . TI!.& ·118 INCH THlCK: .14•7.. Tiu. I• tho •i«:lllng Hoar that loot• and . 3~~~· th.• •hi.JI• go9s cill the way thru. Vinyl· · craft lii 4 pattern• and c~lors tnclud.lng REG ' 24 88 !rick rod. OToccido and white. 500 Box•• only, ' ' · Adnrtiaecl. sp.eidl• iaod: lhnl August S. 1910. (Old you lmowtW my •If• h~t• m• like a lrhtg. J cume~i-..1ate hn t night cuad •h• ~.cl.m•.) .WALLPAPER WILl;PIPER REMOVER 50% OFF I • . )J DOW JW •ut bmf efflTlim• yoll -Oda h.adbrig. !Mil It I• tni•. Look at the palterl&•• COSll.pctNI lbe pdc:e ad • q\&Clllty. Shoity 1111'0U)dp"l gCPU JOU. " . 11111;01 OU1DOOR CARPET -lolt--tWl-"9tlt1fn tM fwMilr ,.. .. _. rttht ••• , •• IN'I•-... ell rfl• ,, ... nl9ft. Ye1 c• ""' It d•W9 I•• fll•nil"f wlrfl 2·114" htJHI •r "'"'' ........... ' ... .. . ' . ' ';: .~ ........... .. PAPER PEEL 87CPT. 1f JOV.'ff gol old paper to ;.t rid ot llr•t. this Is lhe · ff'l wo:y to do. Ho f9o.ting a 11.am•r and lighting 1111'1tb th• •luff. Let Ch•ml1try do JI. CH• can nm.OT• my ~runytlm•.) GIANT SP AMISH PULLS DOOR PRIZES 37:. Orncrt• atrllilng hmdwc:u• compl.e• whb. mouallng Kte .... l'N•xt 1111'..C w• run O.trolt hardwa,. c:omptll• with nal11.J REGISTER TODAY FOR FREE CLASSES EVlJIY WEDNESDAY EVENING ••• LA MIRADA STORE COMMUNITY ROOM. W• bring l• n •irperi to•howfw th• •hort·cv.ts cmd l1M prot.uioml'"' ... 4o the protKL lo 1111'hJ rct1sl• ~off~ Jor h•ct. leara Mw. acl P«ht tlt. ..a.,. ...... 7:30 to 8:30 PM REFRESHMENTS Augu•I S • .. E)tlerlor Pa!Atlng 1U1.d Staining" Jw Glldd•a Co. A1gu1t 12 '1n¥.l.1atloG.al n .U Standard• Giid Jro:cbl•.. . -... Jl.ugu1t 11" tcrwa cmd Gcmlea c ...... by th• . Or1bo CorporatSori. 3 3 . Soropt.imists 'S' ' , "' •• r ' Smiles Perfer.m , : ... ~Special ~Service · ' ,. > • ·• • ' • \ ' ' ' "S" t 'd lo " '1· . s. al) s . r Sel'Vlc~ as wtq u f011 SOroptimist.' • "S'' abo •tanda ,for 11811 ct.ai., J teenage service • ,club· s~nsored by . the So!'QRlimiJf Clull of ~ J!each which wo~ band. In band with Laiuna B..ci. High School. ' ' In 1961. liigh sc;boo1 adlnlDiitrato~ dettrim,;. • n~ed fQI' such a club with o!!i!l<ilvei aimed at oenfi:e' to the school arul community . a1 . well aa,.P.l'OP8rlng 1Dembe.rs to .asslime 1e'a~enblp In the ,..,.uleu and professional worl(l. . · · ~ I • f ~· • 1 • ~be club was chartered ~n 'Feb. 2, 1961 with an lniti~ inem!IOrship of' .3s it,rl.. '\')iraagll U,. ,_, teenagers performed school services 18th u Ulllering, serving at banquets arul uoiotance-wilb> higli ocllool activities. · . .. . . ' They organized money-malting projects 'ouch u car \¥ashes; bat sales, flea market (lal.-~ IDd ule of pompons at athletic events .. Money earned from projects for the past three years has been used toward improving the high school Tbt first year, the girls were able to purchase furniture for the· se!llo! lounge. Jn addition, they have repaired the fountain m the school patio and installed a bicycle rack. • _ Besides, working, on these projecta, tlle club bu found .time to bake cookies and coll.ct lifta for servicemen in Vietnam and for overs~ orplwiag,es decorate ·and visit hospital wards at Camp Pendletori and sing Christmas carols for shut·ins in convalescent homes . • . U.nder dire~tion ~f Mrs. Herbert Sutton o1 the Sorop- "'. timist Club since 1968, the active teenagers have more than fj!1lilled their "S" Club pledge to service. ' ' ' • " ~ • . .. ' " • .. f· ' • • .. "' BARBARA DUARTE. •""1 1 1'11Nr, .l•IJ :n, tm "I 'A. .. 11 I ' • • , .. .. " • .. • ~ - BUSY BAKIR$-Kitcb~ helpers (left to right) Shar- lene SUtton, Melinda· McFarland and Karen Cutkomp whip up a batch of cocilties for hospi\81 wards at Camp '. --.. • ' ' !· • . , .. Pendleton. The girls also cheer up shut.ins in conva .. les~ent homes during the holidays, collect gifts, decor- ate wards and entertain with' seasonal songs . DAll:Y PILOT .....,., llY Gm kl!Mld4r .. > ,-,, " ' I GlfJ' WllAPPI! ~Pam Favour cuts a piece ot ribbop for wrill'P'!rs1 ielt to right) Elleeft'· Aebnl and Monica ~'· The "S" CIUb."members have' collei:lod gilts for iervicemen 1n v~. 81 .. ea as en- tertaining wounded veterans· in horpltel wardo al camp Pendletxm. TIME OUT-Teenage service club r mem- bers take a break between high school and civic projects . Sharing a joke are creft to right) Sharlene Sutton, Monica Richards, Eileen Acord, Debbie Zeug and Karen Cutkomp. "". 4 ~. 1 . ~ . ./II . , ' - on ' I , Wheels,. Drives Husba~d :to .Distraction ' f • fOllld comfort ia this esplanatl'o.t. Aooill er therapist ml&bt ••ye C!Gme up wltb 1 dlf£erent ooe ~ ucl eltbtr could lllve bees ripl. . . DEAR ANN LANDERS: Con a 5'10" gal get out of a sports car without looking like a baby elephant doing a toe dance? .. l'm dating three guy1·who own lhimble- size cars. There must be a dignified way lo get oot or lheoe baby llug~s but I clll't figure bow to do It. Please C\ll1le up ,uh 110J110 !dvk:e -not only for me bUt for my suUertog sllters. I'm nol llone. -TREE TOPPER. DEAR TOPP2R: I'm S'S" and J feel · llke • met1e m11 I try to climb •t ti a oportl car. You 'll 1ppear Ins COW·lllt if,.....,. II CIOH: lo tbt dolr IS ponlblt, keep your knees logetlter, pat yoar rt.cl* le& M first and extend your1 bad • &Mo ... Uemao wbo olioald be 1ladlng tllen -lf be'• a 1enUeman. (P.S. Be careM aol to pal Ill >""' welgbt llllo Ibo cr111sp or you may nip tbe 111 over on bis back.) Whal awaits you on the other s.idt of the marriage vtll? llow can you be .sure your marriage will work? Read Ann Landers' booklet "Marrilee -What 'to Expect." Send yOW' request to Ann Landers in care ot your newspaper enclosing 50 cents In coin and a lon1t stamped, se.1!-addrea.sed envelope ln care of lhe DAILY PILOO'. .. ' ;';} ( - \ , • . -· ·- • lo>. .., .. t . ii·.' "d'"'J. , ~ • -• • ' • Your Horoscope '1'4)morrpw ' • Geminj:· Follow.· Your Hunch SATURDAY AU6UST I -----~--....... .... ~ •JHI. .. ., ADliBY OMABll -DATING HINTS; ,... _ ........ ~ Ac:cent on utUl.uUon of points of view, you invite utural ta I e n ta , quaUtlcs. financial gain. U you adhere FaBow through on bunch. to narrow course, you could iAll'n by sharing kn{lwledge. )Ole, Realize this and mpond ~ • -Oblain. hint from Tauru accordingly. Oheck I e 11 J ARIEi (Mmb 21..Aprll 19): mem,e. Relative mak e a points. • ~ ..... -.-11.~ .. .......... &11': •b••t .. I '7 ti nll-IJ. --.... set-.. --. R••••ee NP"tll .... """'· - There II a breakll~h 'to !'ll'Pl;ise aJ)llOllllC<menl. AQIJARWS (Jan. 20-Feb. creatlvlty. You have reuoft. c ': CANCIR (June 21.July 22): 18): Stresa Ofl"publlc rtlatiw, to celeorate. v;;.~ditl ·&me , JI1IY make c la l m I I general popula~t)'. Be. an at· of Uklle who 'flt.re '' regarding your possessions... tenthre listener, You gain with akeptlcaJ.-Leo i D'd l ti d u t l Defend you ' own interest•, . atUtude of recepQvl.ly. . No figures pniminent)y, RelOl't to unorthodox methods. need .,...lo force issues.' Tlme TAURUI (April Z.May 20): Check individual who brings favor. your efforta, goals. --.... 11 ........ -.-lladalollme New penom enter your life. rumors instead ot facU. PISCES (Feb. It.March 20): You redil<oYor qualJU• la , I.BO (July 13 . Aug. 22), Pleasant ....,1a1 alfal< """'d family memben. You abo Definite advancement made not be used u excuse for !ind out ~)'® poueu more toward cherished goal. Aries o~etindulgence. Remember ol value than Imagined. Be !n.d'vid•al figures In scheme pll.lt ..,.JutiOll5 COf!Cernlng pe= Y(~ ~ ~)· Ol eVents. •<?@ straight to the diet, general he&llh: F~ for ----. ... ..... ~. flewer!, 1 M'•,creatlvec• -~-.... ..... IKJ 111r. MllCll talk Y '1 une · top; there u room for you. get-together • with a!SOOates, , : Utlllze·Mrule of showmanship. co-workers .... . To avOid disappointment, proa:pecUve brl411 are reminded to have their wedding •lorl11 with black and white ~lony rboto- lflpbo to the DAILY PILOT Women a De- ?partment one week before the wedding. • · Pk\JlrH received followin1 lbt weddinl wUf not be w..t. · l'Por engagement announcement.I it la lmperlllve that the atory, also acc0mpanled . by a blacli: and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted 1b weeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline iJ not met, only a story will btu11d. To help fill requirements on both wed-dlnc and engagement stories, forms are available in all of tbe DAILY PILOT offices. FurtJaer questions will be answered by Women'• Section stall members at 642-4321 or "'-NA. VlllGO (Aug. 13-Sept. Ill' IF TODAY IS Y 0 U R Stop playing games. Flod out BIR111DAY you have natun) what It b you desire. Then executive abill~. Y® do bet· aee the right people. Your ter working for rourrself than cycle is on . upswin.g: Be for others . Year la very forthright, confident. ~isit one significant. lf single, marriq~ confined to home, hospital. could be on borl7.on. If mar- UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. J2): ried,. an adQition to •family You may ftnd that JOme who is distinct posslblli~y In pro-make promises do so under . ~1 dded the influence. Be realistic. fess1ona.1 area, there s a Trust those who proved respons1biUty and greater themtelves in pasl Family reward. To lll'ld out _., ki<;k~ !'( "" 11' member is making valid "'°""Y •rid 1a ... , °"* S~dner o.n.tr'• statements. Usttn. llooltlet, "loe<ret Hl"'9 tor Men •IMll SCORPIO (Oct. J3.Nov. 21): :-::;;r~..:~=19 :=~::.at:;!: You need more than flattery. DAILVPILOT.&111132-IO.Gl'..a~ret Get lbe fada. (beck. IOW'cell. Sodal event could pnivide valuable conqd. Be con- afderate toward one who seem1 slow. Set fine example. SAGM"J'ARIUS (NOY. 22- "'"°"' Hew vm. N.v. 1 1. •, Andy's fiin . Ask 1117 kld. "Ask And7H Is {J., Stt it Saturdays \fl 1"' DAlt:Y PJLOT. .. Dec. 21): Good lunar aspect; 'iiiiii:iii coincides now with journeys, 11 higher edU<ation, your ability J I J UPHOl.STllY to gain and utilize knowledge. M•ANll OU.4LITV, INTlll•IT)',' A' hi h dm' •••VICI, CltAP'TSM4NSHIP'1 un g : many a Ire you WI L\1(1 llAUTIP'UL P'UltNITt,N\9 aod will uprw their fttlinp. WE ACCIP'T CMAU.IMtll CAPRICORN (Dec. zz..Jan. 19): By oblerving various 642•5116 ' Alumnae Offer Early Christmas Huntington Valley residents are being assisted with Christmas plans by members of Delta Gamma Alumnae Association of Huntington Beach, who are selling Christmas c~s with proc~s ~aT111arked for assistance to the blind. Shopping early are Mn. ·' Mlcha1l Tooley (loll) and Mn. Richard Schrader, chairman. The sale -will continue tllrougb November and anyone wJahing to view the cardt may call Mrs. Schrader, -2110. Lutheran Nuptials Performed SEMI.ANNUAL SAlE ' Art fcorms Draw New Interest Newpon Harbor LuthorMI <Judi waa tbe IOliing fer the weddlq ol Sue LJOD, datl(liler ol lllr. and Mn. J . H. Mon ol Anaheim and Ron .._.., 111t of Mr. and Mn. Walter -ol Newport Bead>. -.• By JEAN J\'lt.LIAMS Of "' ....,. l'1lit ..... · 11 's made out of wood NOW OPEN! Family ~¥tcher ROBERTS Olde Time BUTCHER SHOPPE A M•.......-1 ld1clttH CM ~., ••cc ... f1ll .ttfttdn tow1'45 ...,_,"' _. I'""' 41rl .. rN crltlcel ,....,,,. '""· A611 21/1 TO t fALL INIOLLMINTS NOW ' ~--CALL ---. C!Kte M... 641.JIJJ Now,.,. IHcll 141·2116 ~I­ I l . I I ·~--· .. -· .... . -·-·-...... . ---.. -' · 8nd bead> pebbles is ft art? thot oome artflll _. to be plalnod. a r a qulcl<~ The average gll!leoy V!illor; ,......U. Mins w!tll tedmolop. --pairU made l..m faced ~·th 'ntings <t>l\e in ~ ""P'°Y_~aern plaatic that can be ulOd on color wax, compoliilbn.s mate~ with J;;'~ deal ~art'~ = fl· pa~ ed tih<r~~. ·'with . ~;;'\ ~1n':rnc~n~ 1haa the trealOd canvaa m~· . or colliges , uaf!!g sculpture. '4ii11N may find ~ for oils. •'lb< points, ev f ~pl~ic lijt 'beauty in f°"811 d fiberg1.,. on the CIUw=r hlnif, can be to a blad.es, miY,ti)r.~ plex.lglassor'tvooindiecarded thinned 'to rei,emble . 3; art 1s too "far out~· objtcta •uch r as paper cupa watercolors. w~ ~u about such un. or lqtba i wire. The new OO'llERS DIFFER ' lami thiflls as collographs forms call r<inew t.erma:. · 'Ot:htt _...;_._ .... !.. move and lerigraphs, macrame or 1be :fr111 d .. ,.... "'MY --.. .. ur;t•~ and we wonder wt ar "0 r away ftom t...t.nnLWv, Piner .......... k.""11 "macrame" refers tO h Hid and ~--... t 1 what has happened ID the old knotUn1 ol t1lfne Into varlotis ·m~:...,. tudt • .!.l~p a':.: familiar art forms . 1 and ah.I -!411 uw A~•ally, the old lamillar de • In I ~ pe.1; hemP or deliberately strive • ,,. serltll"•pill .,. tU• """"" fer uneven off-hi pottery formi are still around -but pinff (and ;{ 10111' modem or ICUJptur'J a a kJ.Dd of pro.. somel are being used in new artlaU m1y ,.ace ~ prints tHt qainlt the smoOth, tunc- waysJin c:oojunctioo with our on pleql-)1 colk>irapba are Uonal appearance ol machlno s~age t e c b no Io g Y ex· printed trom1J collqe1 (JI all inade.articlel. piosiqn. kfndi ol odd !"'lerial.I aUal aa Artilll who may ,..m .,. The tricle WM given in mar-r1,.. by her mother and father for the dooble rlna ceremony performed by the Rev. Ronald White . Mia Cuol Dye allondod the !ride u maid ol honor. Mia Karen Proba1co "" brtdeomald and JUI Krall WU flow..-fllrL llm* Jobmton carried the rlnp. LmTy Souder WU h 11 brother's bat man, and .-• ine w• Tsry Temple. The -Mr. and Mn Souder, who were claemet.es at Newport -WF -· will make --in Cotta Mea. Ar{~ Chari" Bruce acryllca, wino !".metal wash: ~ """"'" actually may Pine!\ interviewed at Oranp en, and •11111ca uJ!llze ' be··-'-·-~~ ~ · hot cokred ...,,u inste1i:I of ·-. Ull.'nlll• '~•• m ne~ ~ College, COllll!lenled lnta · ways. Modenl llCUlpturea in I k Pl · . gJap biatemerge fne flowing Boots Wa JNGENWOll .IJSE and "'1Jlllllltric.al came from ' -.. • • • . 1 • .. • "Art can be made out '" the _. procea u3ed by Into Fall anythlng that can be ordered," P.. bloweJ1 centuries ago. Piner comm111ted, pot,,llnJ. ID Piner added tllat ''the 1lootl for Iba llinartly -. a ,•lrWN 1 statue. atanilini ptrvenJty" our-tbnt" setm1 ed wom1n · JUii IO m and In ., ~ 1()e.nter patio ol evident in 1p1ne worts ~ art on. , a ...,.,.ii wiln1or which Wl\I which aoet to combine the 111ey ..,.,, fer fall and 'made 'Ol•dllcarded auto (llfta. hand ri\ade !poll w I t h winter la aoft. ....-..,.ie, Art ·~ Cout a r t mat«!• ol -lnventioo. In llhley vlnJJ.111<• 1fn11be1, In atude.nt"I wort wu c-rtlally Lamlnated wood, for ex-kid. and even pa t er a e d ready fur lhofilic In ~ col-ample, which was Invented fer brocadea and tbe lib far l~o art aaiien-, and tbe large aln:ran colistruction in World ,,,.,.... .al"'°'t murlljfle J1Jlntlnp War II, qo~ • to polished Favorlle bel&fll fur~' done In vivid acrylic palnls etle<t In aciulpturo. just below the knee. F,-i1o illustrated one ol the in-Art ls different in the space m ate r 1 a l db IDlnJ novaUQoa al our time. . 11e -yes. Bui ao too is designen; tbe nptile pal- .\!:11111<:, ........ !!in!< ... • !!lo -·· terns. --''----'~~~~~--'~~~~~ . . . " . . I ' . llf(tdfii . W(G I ··~ • ' I • ~ .. . ·I .. I • .1 11 I .... : ' • ·~--~--'""' .... :..,1. l '. 'I "'4i '1 , ) : ' ' l · ~,... ' ) f >ALSO 20%..;10% OFF RIMNANTS , .. . . • I S-T-1.f·T-C~ & SlW lfOWlll 724 !. KATEUA OM.I 611•tt \ ._ ALSO - IASIC ll8llT ClASSB ....... ...... 1.~ di I f . , ... I I . ' . STAITS FllDAT, JULY ll,' o...! fhis is the 11 G One . , . REDUtJiONS UP TO 75% ! • AH Sammer Merdwllse Goes ! No Gimmicks ( 1 · ,, JUST TREMENDOUS VALUES FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK 1 • ~~~~~~~--....... -. ....... ~~~~~~~~~~~ ..... OUR JNTIRE STOCK OF ' • ,. SWIM ' SUITS Regal arty $8, TO $18: • .... • $35.op • htulartr to $25.00 WET SEAL CHARG~_. MASTER CHARGE . INTIRI STqcK OF SUMMER . SHORTS and TEE SHIRTS ....... ,, ta $13.00 ltaiularly .. '$50.00 • .... ,11, .. $17.00 ; s300 to seoo IAJ!IKAMIRICARD . , . ·llYIN ~YtHU.~~~r0\11 . • f i ! ............ -........... ..... - . 21a -IM -.,,__r...W'j 'Wft· fa~· . ·11111•-... ~ ••• ,, ... . . ..... __ . ' ~ ~ '--·, ....... ~-~-· .;; 900U ..... AT ALL ITOID t A,M. , ... Jilt, .... ., .. ""'''''" • nnN...,. . . • " .... """ c..., ~·· , ....... .... -........ -u..---.... w.c....,_ "'-Cltr "-, • , •• , , •• , • ·°'-te ALL STORIS OPEN SUNDAY, AUG. 2nd, Noon 'tll S p.m. ' ' ' . " ....... -~~---·~--- '~YJNG HIGH ,,....,..1. ~roglo • RECEIVES WINGS M.l ri•n HuMr • TAKES FLIGHT P•tricl• H•rriion i ' ' • Dione Halgre n Wea Coµple Choo$e~ Afternoon. Rite A double ring ceremony in Debb ie Knee bl, tbe the late aft~ llnk-ed Diane bridegroom's slstet', J a n_e t L,yoo Halgren and RiiChard E. t.t"atthiesen Ind Dtann Dilly Knecm in marriage. and Mrs. Tom. Coorad. Loil • Tbe Rev. Harold ' ··suna •Knecht was flower girl. u= The benedict was served by officiated in Nle Garden Grove Sulley as best man. Seallnc' Comlriunity O:lurdl. guests were John H\19811'. • Parents ol the bride are Gene Drebec, Bill Benbassat M'~ t-1ickl Cl&u.. 113.lgreo of Ind Nie\ Sanden. '• NewPQCt ' Beach and L e e 'Ale bride, is a sridoat.e ol 1-Ialgri!n ol San Gabriel. Tbe San Gabriel Hiib Scboql and bcne<Jki Is the son of Mr. attended UCI. Her hliiWncl ~nd , Mrs. Erwin Knecht ol ' Js a graduate of M~ • • l'lldlf, Jujy 31, 1970 • • DAIL~ PILOT ll Roxanne . Ray Selects September Rites Date Two cl.asaniat'tl ~ Weohbun Unlvtrsi\y, Topeka, Kao .. bav~-.. OOlipd. Tbe por-. ol -Elhabell> aa,, tllt J- Dovid Roys of ear.a. del Mar have IMOl.IJCed btr lortbcom- iog mact!MO lo_Sleplwl E . Jones ol Topeka. Tbe l>rid&-ele<t ~ • graduate of Corona del ·Illar High Scbool1 A 1968 . Cbildrtn's Home Socie~ «WMet•nte, Miss Ray Is I PIYcholGIY majo<. Her fiuce, the 900 of Mr. and Mn. llalOld E. Jones of , Di&!>ton. ""'-· gra<Nated from . . d hi. • h I . , . , Anobt,kn. .. Jligh School. Anal>elrn ""' ' R '> ' t " F . . Eicorted. to the altar by .,001. He plans to . attend ·es1 I. e·n s ' > IQ y1ng her f•tl\e'· the bdde asked ' CaliCornla WeetemUniversi\y, , • , , 'lo her sister. l.1rs. Douglas Sc.boot of Law Q:i the fall. J~hnsons • tell News · 1)!cbloo < lllati • Sdlool. A ·graduate ,lhtmiatry studenl, he 'Is alflllated with Thet~ Kappe Epollott. --ROXANNE RAY • ' .. • '. BOUey to tte.matron ol bonor. .• They will make their first "'Illree Orange ~.st young be servh~.internationDI fl~ht.s Mrs. James Blomo of Newpqi:t'. B~ds\ were ~ Misst! home in San Dieio~ A Deoember wed4ini: In Cofi?ni del Mar ii pl:moed. women hive jo.i~'more than out of John f'. Kennelly .Beach, ;..~ I ' graduate of S,000 high flying T'l'ans \Vorld lnternalioOal Airport in ,New Arcadia High School a.ricl ;at- • Airlines flight ho s te sses York. ~ ,Sfln,. Diego ,~laJ~e throughout the. .world. The daughter of fl.Jr. and ~Kt..) ": "'•'~ They have completed six Mrs. W. L. Huber of Pitiss.ion Mm. llaq1son ,w~ll senie weeks ol classroom and in-Viejo, Miss fl.1arian Huber 1s flights_~t ~Los ~gele.s tn;- ruaht fr_ainiiig. a graduate of Lejeune High ternaUQnatr AU"port. ' Among the three is t.tiss School, Camp Lejeune, N.C. Pamela Krogle, the daughter She attended Santa A n a of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Colleg~. She also will serve Krogle or Huntington Beach. flights out of Kewiedy Airport. A graduate of Huntinglo(I t.1rs. Patricia Blomo Har- BeaCh High Sdiool, she will rison, daughter of Mr. and • BAR KER'S DECORATING CLASS 'E\EGINS MONDAY! AUGUST 3 :~ PJl:OFESSION AL ,DIRECTION through our own ~ . . ' staff of Inter ior Decorator specialists: experts in personal ized home fashions. Special guest lee· Breezy Wrap • ' i t . 't , " , ' \, " .\. 9280 SIZES '6-1• Two main pattern parll - that's ALL! Whip up this wink-quick wrap in an hour or two for practically pt;nnies. Make several in easy-cai'e cot- tons with bright binding. '. 'fl~ughing It'. Is Not . . ' • • :Weddillc pild&eo wW 'be ~x­ !il>aqed -.....,.. by Jah ~ IDd 1-_., .. ......... ' ' Ebel/ Agenda The ·Only VV,ay to Go · boll\ "' Coate -· ' • 'lbelr l>etrolhol has liloe.n revealed by 'r.tr .. .._wi •Mr§:.~. Robert'C.·Jo&;ooo' ol Redwolld • N~w Sections Opened .~ City, 1>1irent.S of _.the .futu~e vice . bride. ASSOCIATED PRESS . . lnfonnal gar1nents a r e Miss Johnson is a (faduate always lo style Ill the pai·ks. of Woocbi<je Higll> .Sj;bool, Serviceable wash and wear Woodside, arxt S o u t b er n a vac3t)oo" too many ~·omen outfits are fine. They're great California Colleie where she shudder. They e n v I s i o n _fur field trips -and stylish was active' in student govem- tbemselves cooking out over too -but avoid e1.treme ·bell ment and selected as i970 an open fire, tighting olf bears bottoms. Take aloog a dress-bomecooiing queen. and other animals, and in up ouUil. just In case. Also, Her fianct, son of Mr. and general having anything but bei prepared wiLh a warm or ¥rs. AtthUr Helt\coct of San a good time. co!«f y,:eather outnt -just Diego, 1S an atumnUs of When their husbands sug- ·gest 11touring the parks for Well, "roughing It" isn't in case -for "that unusual ~.~isoo Hi..h School, S'an necessarily a requirement for weather." Diego, and :iii be graduated spending a vacation in the Make sure you have conr in June from sec where he national parks. And, jf Gile fortable ~ for \Yalki.ng. let~ered in soccer. Wl)en th~ NewJ)Ort Ebell Club be;im' the' ye8r•s a<> tivities with a Cotton Card Party ill September, there will be some group inoovaUons Ur itiated b~ 'Mrs. Ray Nielsen, club president. A club member ior 23 years, , ?itrs. Niel.sen ~ reeently · establiihed Cultural Arts Day, organized art Cla.9.5CS a,nd SIX)nsored· sections for Homes and Gardens and N e w Member ACUvities . Additlol)al ~ub secti~ in- clude seven book sections: P.flriy, a Christmas tea in con- junction with Junioc Ebel! members, an iU"Oll'l<khe-world fashion show and hu>cheon i.n February and a flea market ... ject in April. Proceeds from fund.raising benetits are di stri butetl toward scholarships r o r sludents. of nurSing at Orange Coast CoUqe: ,1 aw en- forcement students attending Golden West College; coo· tinuing music students a11d tho;;e achieving high scOO!astic honor!~ , knows v.•hal to ex~t. what Ranger conducted lriPl!i are--~--~-+--­ to pack, etc ., a great many fun and not at all difficult doubts about such a vacation for the average h ea I t ~ y vanish. persoo. . 'campers' property. Take along a durable rain· Keeping clean•and attractive Goren eooot ... ; PM Jet lp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iOiiiji Group; E ~Belle Tone Cbor-aleers; Travel; Goll ~ Arts and Crafts. Sal J. Prezioso, president coat and hat. isn't very difficult There are of the non-profit National washrooms. Some even have Recreation and Park Associa-IN THE PARKS hot water and coin-operated lion, has developed a set of Do as the park lovers do. showers. Som,e major park basic guidelines to h e I p Eat in the cafeterlas (where centers even boast beauty women make the most of their available) and go to the even-parlors in the main hxlge. vacation in the national Parks. ing fireside programs ooo. Need you fear anything? Futurt events will include a Christmas bazaar and card Wash Knives PLANNING ducted by the rangers. \Vith reasonable c o m m o n Electric slicing knives re. Camp only in parks where ~"'""e --"Ing mo~ than you quire no more care lhan an.v Plan as far in advance as _._ ' ,...,..., ., you intend to stay more than v.-oukl around home.,1fbe pa.rt &ood blade. DIAMONDS AND ESTATE JEWELRY PURCHASED possible. Once ·you decide a day. You can leave for a rangers try to eliminate any Simply wash b I ad es whlch parks you will vis.it, day of doing the park and daoger. If you stay "Where carefully ln warm sudsy water South Ca11t p1111 \Yrite in advance for specific come back to home base. you are 1uppoaed to -and and ri11Se and dry thoroughly. l ri1tol 1t th1 S•n 0;1110 Fwy, information on opening and Everyone does. C a m p e r s heed lhe warning signs -you Wipe motor handle with damp Co111 M111 540-,066' closing dates, fac ilities, fees , t~ene~ral~ly:_~"~'~pec~t _;o~t~b~e~r~w~ill~be~fin~e~ ..... ..; ....... ~·~lo~th~aod~d~ry~.i--..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~ etc. (Entrance. fees average ---- ab6ut ·$t per car per day.) I Realize that national parks [ are huge. You need a vehic~ to cover then1 . But if time doesn't permit you td drive · to the park, fly to a nearby) location and rent a car or a camper. Or join an organiz.. ed·tour . ALL COSTUME ' . turers"will also be in attendence. Printed~ P~ttem 9280: NEW Girls' Sizes 6, a, ID, 12, 14. Size 10 takes 1% yds. 39-ln. Acc!ommodations in t h e parkS often are filled and vary widely in quaUty . Reserve hotel rooms and oainpsites as early as possible . If you intend to try camping! for the first time, 1ry the idea first at a public campsite I in a nearby state park. JEWELRY SUBJECTS INCLUDED: "My Home is Me",' The Magic of .Col~r ·:; "Apt'lrtments", and other las- cina'tin9 subjectS! . TUITION: The course is only $I 0, which incl udes Barker's F-lome Decort'lting Kif and t'l gift cert ifi- cete for $I 0. TO. APPLY: Co ll Barker's Hunt ington Beach to- day.a t the number li sted below. Remember , the course starts Monda y, August 3, t'lf 10 A.M. so coll fo doy ! BARKf;R'S HUNT INGTON BEACH SEVENT)'.FIVE CENTS for eadl pattern -add 15 cents for each pattern for Air l\1ail and Special H a n d Ii n g : otherwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Marian Martin, Ttle Daily Pilot. i42 Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York , N. Y. 10011. Print ~AM:E, AD- DRESS With ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. If you decide to ·camp out, you should have 1 good twoj burner gas stove. Yeu should 1 also buy a small, insulated cooled for perishap!e food. Added musts foe camping out are good sleeping bags and 1natlresses. Coosult your local sporting goods store for ad· Pree E~tlmales RE· UPHOLSTER Conaplete Selection of Fabrie~· i11e h1dl11g; linens and Velvets Matter Craftsmen Always • •• ! CULTURUI PEARL SPECIAL Neckl1ce1, Brooches, Ear· ring•, 8ractlet1, Charms, Rings, and •nything •h• with a p•arl in it- 200/o OFF NOW THIOU•H AU6UST I IOTH LOCATIONS CHARLES H. DARR w.,1e1111 ,Lu.I N1w"°'I INcfl ' t7...n&'4 /.::' :.r!M A~ l llllN blW And A Wide Choic e Of WEDDING RINGS at HALF PRICE ONE OAY ONLY SATUIDAT, AU•UST 1 SIDIWALI SA Li WHtcllff '""• Ooly ;l>l~:;Bil/A~C~Hiii~~iYiDi.ioiliiiEiDilNiG~EiRiiill9iii2i·4i4iOi5i·iii~~~~~'~''~"~o~s·<~•~,.~~~~~~~~~~~~! Phone 642· 14 54 • •• ;> ·Paddle On Over For •' • I' ~~~~ • ••• ' 5ideWC.lk Sale ---"":-. -==. .::;-: ; -:-· SATU RDAY, AUG UST 1, 10 AM to 6 PM • ! •' JI O>Jlf ,. OT ., . . rrldly, J11l1 ll, 1970 'No 'l'raffle' ·rrofllem .JI.ere .. ' . . . ' , \, ' Tw<>year .. 14 Bubh!l Ma ypr of Tyler. Tex .. has his own melhod of llgbUng traffic. When the going gets rough and bigger · vehicles cause conflicts. Bubba ju11t pick11 up his car and exchang!s horaepower for' footpower. ' ' ... . ' Cities. Face llevenue Gaps . . . ' • By JF;f'FRE¥ D. ALllERMAN A.-.11.._ ,,_ Wrtlw • A gap belween revenues 8}'ld 6Pfndin1 faces many of America's l&rce dties thia yqr and offitials •e rushing to flit up l>\ldl•tarf• liol .. by mtW . of Mw taxes, city. empkt.f""~offs •n4 tervice cutbacb.• · . New York , Philadelphia, l.J:>s Anceles, Chicago, Pltt.sburih. Detroit and Seattle all reJ>9rl. trouble balan~ing their Jfl0-'71 budgets and all predict deficits unless new souroae ol reverwe are found. ~. p.re in the process of laying· off large nuJ'llbsa of city" employ es lo cut COits: In Baltimore, St. Louis and Clrveland spending wlll nol out.pa~ revenue bec:ause the. cities' charters don't allow deficit ~pending. But the chart•.,~·-..lreme•t makes lheir f~fpcial woes, no less 5«ious than the o t h e r s . Baltimqre;has ha,:! W"lncrease itl ~rty taxes., Gteveland ha$ cu( 1~ack o;i:; spending on parkS and recreation and laid off ·employC-1. St. Louis has a backlog of street repair, building demolljjon 1nd refuse collection ~au11e ot: . rnouy 5h<irtages. , , • Two main reasons are elven by clt.'y officials (CK the finlln· ciaJ crisis: inflation and•move- ment to the SUburbs. ''Naliooal inllation," Slys Mayor John V, Uriduy'· ol New X or k, . 1 ·r~l't'tlessly drlvH up operating costs for the city -a:s well . ~s for every one of oor citizen! - with no letup in sight/' · Of Ule growth of the suburbs, C. Erwin Piper, Los Angeles City administrative officer, ~~ys : PROBl.EM .. "Ours it .Ille' probl'fl1 of !11 "ric>-t;trings-at~·· s la I e grant of ;fS million which had teen proposed by G o v . William Milliken. Gribbs said ·he had manea:ed to whlUle the deficit dOwn W •n.4 ml Ilion. The legislaklre recessed for the summer without acting oo either the grant or the excise .... core cities thatl heve ·to prt> •LAYOFFS vide sefvlCer', for lldjoihing Caught in this financial bedroom communities. You squeeze ... Detroil began laying just can't ~tOp betause the ,off employes to cut co.sis. fire is across · the sitreet on Some 350 h<1ve been let go the oth¢r .side ol the iine. · JKJ far _;_ the first such lage Unl011UnaLely, the.st· towns layoff since · Ule depression. take advantage of our IL is anti ci pated anoLher 150 service." . , Will ,be : laid of! to .balance Some cilies, like New York, the bud11:et. have started taxing Uie in· Mayor: Peter Flaherty of come of subur~ltes who Pittsburgh says · that tu earn Uiei{..wages in, the city. , .re~e.nue there wlll _091e ~ 195 When Mafor R: S. Gribbs , nulhon or •96 m1lh<1n1 'That of ' 'Dell"!JI~ • todl( • ~oe , 1rt ; ,doeB11't cover th~ ~lty's 1970 Januat"f he was .told the city .• budeet ·oC $101 m1lhon. So the fa~d.. i: f60.milli0!1 ~udUt · lnayoi: has cul 300 PC:OPle from deOcit unle6s it .iouna ntw· ·rlhe ·payroll and tried other rct~e· sottrccl:. cost-cutting measures. The mayor iohen asked the Phllape!phi~ . .f~ced wilh a stal,f:· I~ gisl a fu'r e fof" hudgct gtip d .• Jttwcen t17 permission lo increase the city .1nilli.on and .~5.3 . n1illion for i~e .ff'X and to 'levy an 1~7~-71 , has put a .l ~ecze. on ·ex'"Mie £ix, TPt .legislature h1r1ng In oa ll bot cr1tical Jobs turned Ut>Wn the highly un-and i_s considering laying off popular income tax hike. 900 city ~·orkers. The layoffs . Gribbs, hov.·evcr, said he lhrealened by Mayor James could stiU balance the ·budget Tale, h'avc beef! .<Jeferrpd pen- with the excise tai: and 1 ~ing the outcome or wage .. ' negotiations wi th the cily'1 C·utb·acks in Defense 22.000 oonuniformed employes. Cleveland's fin a.nee director. Phillip Dearborn, says that his city has been relrenching ~ recreelion and park mein- lainance . and cµtting ad- ministralive cm plo_¥ts since early th ls year. the . city has laid off 100..non-adminlatrative employcs and not replaced a nothcr J 00 · who retirllff or quil. . . . . ' To Cost Million, Jobs .. W~HINGTON fAP) -One million defenM? i n d u s I r y workers wlll have lost their jobs by next Jul y because of culbaJks in military spending. o~lrense Oepart n1 cnt economists said Wednesday that 367,000 defense industry jobs were ellminaled between July I, 1969, and ~1ay JI, 1970. Ttris indicaled another li00,000 jobs will be lost by mid-1'71. • Robert C. M'ool. Pentagon budget direc~or1 said defenSc- related employment will drop lo abOllt Z.4 hllllion workers b.11 next July~ , • ' The IW1>yea i' fliurt\ Qf o,ne 1nillion is 860,000 more th11n the figure estimated by, t h e Nixon administration earller this ychr. 'The original flj;ure "'HS based on elfect military · spending ~ts .-OLllif ha~e-on companies which produce military supplies. CIOLD'S FURNITURE Ir Al'l'UANCES .1 IS HAVING A i: ., " ' .. • " .. f l ,,.. •. ·.SALE I t• ' .. •• 1; ii-7"r-; :-.-•111 •••••• 11-=a • • .. .. ' -·~llTOL ITlllT COSTA MliSA St. Louis has not h11rl to Jay off erriployes b u I Comptroller John Poelker say5 the cily is not ketping up i1s serviCfs as it should. NO ~IONEY "This fiscal )'ear we should have allowed for ·about $4 million in sc r vic ' im- provements, but the irtoney w.u noc. there," said Pelker. . A cutback in se rvices because of budget gaps has also occurcd. in Oiicago. ac- cording lo Jofln' toulter. ot Uie Chic~go Association or Commerce and Indu stry . Coul ter, 1ay1 1 the city hasn't added a sig:ntflcant number of lt.a<!her1 to, the 1y1tem In recer\I years 1~ ha1 r«!uced the scope of physical educ•· lion and library programs. New York City has had to dip into its so-called "iainy da v fund ."' taking out $3.l.1 n1 lllion of the S8~ mllliop in the fund to bah1nce 'th• ex· pense b1te!RCI for rlle yf:ar th at ended .lune :tO. Thtl fund is provklcd for Jn the .city charter Bnd is to be drawn 9n I( rtcolpll from Cllialn taxu and oth• rtcelptl fall below nOnnat. • 1 In effe;ct, the qty 11 t1kln1 a 1oen rrom lt•lf to make ends mett. The money has to be· paid back lo !he fund within 1iJ ycurs b)i la~·. , To qJt C:O&l11 New Yprk has drntically reduced 111 hlrlna o( ne,il empk>yes:· This rtduc- Uon ••ved the city aboul '-U million. ac:tt:1rdln1 to Budget Direclrir Frederick 0. Haju. , Ne.,.,· Yori was aleo·countiaa • LOOAL Narle& • • . . ' : ... ... ... .. " . • • ""I ... .... "'t L: -.. ... ,, •• •• .. " •• 01 "' " •• •• •• " " .. ·~ .. •• .. .. .. •• " '"· ... •• :'I ., ~ w .. •• .. ~ " .. T! ••• " •• t ~· . .... ... .... ... .... . .... ...... ... -.~,. Mo~ " . .... 1t1'>\ r• ... S!t tt !lndl . .., ..... ""' "''"' Eltt~ ·-.... .".;r. ..... ,, . rt:.i .. ~ .. , lt .. 11 = 1=: ••• M•ll ~~ .... .. . ..... "" .... ..... :;r; .... 11 .. 11 ·-'""' "'" --.. . .,~ •• ,, .. ,, ... •• •• ,, · •Al .. ~: . .. .. .. -- ................ ,......,tlh '. , ... ,. fttllJlllll '"·'" tit lllalt ,.,,... MllMlt *5h •. U/!MI - ....... ........ Mllllftlf M \111\ll H IMdi ........................ ..._ .• .,. ..... -:lll! _, .. . •u• ,,,. .tl16 ~ 'll!"..::f,. .j-~ .. IE ... .................... . .... '"!~ . . , • .....,, t.114 fl'ill'lll•I M~"'MllJ • M lill!llt H•!'Mr Hltfl .. . . .. . . . . . . . . . ...Ut .1. ff~lfl ...... : .................. ,...... ·"'' . . .................................. ... ' •• '""'''" , •• ,,.~ .... tM ... ,. "~''' I~ IJt I ~ s1J1 s.; ~i 1• • ~ •f ! 1i ii ~ •• ~ i.J •• ll ..... .... , 111,111 .~ .... 1•.u• T•J rtel ilfl•, 1Ml·71 .... . . . .................. .. 1t•trie1111t ••ll MI 11v1 kle""t ... ,, ........................... . Mlull •""'"· lH ·111 .......................................... , Alitlflttt4 Ml1Mt, Jwf\t •• ltM ................................. .. 91t\M•tlif fl¥ 1'Mtl1'9 M VMWUrff .. It. 1'11o7'1 .................. .. !=1111hf'?!;:' .. ~1"'!x.::'~ .. · ·e~;-.~· 'f.iiMit6 . itn:n·.: :::···· Mtl!""lilfl'IJ"""~f ...... ~ 141 lfll w-rr Curfl~~ Dlttnd T11 a,.u!,. ._ .. flt 1.,._7'1 ..... W lvN tv IWV Ill 'fti' •tcu"9t l'tO .. '. •• A~"iltrUttlf6 .•AUMCI, '\IL T 1 (t"tll ltl Ca..~tv f t .. Wl'V " .. .. """'l'lilt Cull Pvfltl ................... . ~~tWJttt lttctlv•lllt ................... , .. , , i ttrW ..................... , ................. . flr1H14 ••-&t .............................. .. TOTAL ~ul•l!NT ASSaTs ............. .. t..s c;.,,,..,, Lilllllltln I nf Dsft,.,., 1~• .• NIT •r CUMN INO IAl.AMC:8 ................. . A•h•JlmWI" "' ACC"ll"" llt«tlva•ll• ..... ", .. . A.iu.stme11t1 " Cur••"' lll•m1itl .......... . •AOJUatlD *'iT l l OINNING IALANC:I "'" 1.1~• 1f, l'IOljl;AL ll!IC~I llCllVl8 ,l6M lllbllAl ltUlCll • )I. Mlt~~ tM a!:"" " ....... , . 1 .. :n...-i.:.,... ,.:;--! ......... r:. ............. .. Titi'L ,IOI~\. IMCOMI •t· c11v10 ,,UM 'IPfM.t. •OU•~•• .. • a . 'lfr.IU.t. MOMI llCltVIP ,• ... tTATI' IMUllCll ' ... ·-· --"" ...... .. a Vllt1fltMI IM-t• 4" ............. .. '7J. IU!Wtllt ....-Miit A• •• ,. ......... . M. l::C"' ~"'-~~ .............. . 2f. otHlll • A,!11 1,4tS 11,:iu , ........ tU.Nl ull:ll: .... , -...... ..... 111.lt• .... ..... ...... , 1,w,1,. ...:.11: .. .... ,,:;:: 1'1,13 :,,,.,,.. _,,, ... -.47,nt 1,11'-"1 -•• ...... .... ,,,,. "'-41\r ........................ .. ... = ---................. . .... . ... ..................... . .......... -·"' --.... .. , .. 1.f ,..........,. =ft.:l:!h 'Woll• •• "·-·-62.1.,,.... ..,,. ...... ./.."; .•. _..'.~""'"''''' ................. ~!JM ...... "'-~~; A.! lllimlcltlwlal ,....,,\*.Milt ........................ . '1.S A~1 '¥ t'tiiotlc.,... "'1Mh Mr \li'll.m Nf ait1' . •-1a1 •M•t1'fl ,.c:illtl• ~ •~tliQlt ..................... .. .1. 'St.1 11 .. ltf $t.llWWllltM .,,1 114~ Ill\'~ ................. . '7,1: ~ ........................ . "· ~ ll"J ''''''''JJ.'.~···•"""""'"" Ta:JAL f,,.TI IN..-J '"''""""'" ,_, COVNTY JNCOMI n. lwellittMll Alf ,.,..., Tu .......... .. 1'. "Ml.Mflla~ ,1,11\if•" , ...........•.• T01At. CDllNTY INCOMI ........... .. -..,,. !~ ...... "'" -- . ... .-.::. ... ·- ---·~·-··~~·-~~-.,·---~-··~ ... ----------......... _..,..,,.."'""""'-"""""""'"' .. """""" ___ ,.,.,._ ........ ....... • ,,.,,. ..... r.:~ """ "' tt1M7 """' ..... ..... " .. * 611 .... •••• !!<!" :;:ir. ... , ..... "' ,,,,. lt.U1 111 It. It ..... ,J:lf, " ,1 ..... .... Frijaf, Jo!1 31, lt70 lflMI . ..... ·~,- II X.l! 'It. JI ••• •••• • JI."' >ll.1M 1k;Jit . .... "· ... '2l,1:)1 .,.,m 611,l~i l! xx l! 11 II x 11 x •• )I( l! •• x ......... ~.11• 111,Z .... -'""' 1191"-ll .. ~, "m' I,,. .......... - ... ... ,.,..., IU,U• "':ll" '1 I ...... .. -'=. 111, .... .... l'41M """' ""''' ... '"'' '"'" ...... . ... ·-!= ''·* .. ,,. "·"' 112, .. ..... .!! 1t1 • ..s ' .tll7 .. ... I :ll 11,1)/ , ••• " .. :.. •· .. T . I. l111ric1N .. i.in•· JoolV 1, ,,.. . . . . . . . . . . , ... 7, Tl• rte-:t.:•· t ... ,. ..... , ....... ,:!"""""""" t.'97.1D "'i .. ,,.,. .. ...,., ·~~ ,,..,. ......... .. . ~ . . ......... "'.. .... ... --· .................... -',·"'·'" 11 :::! • ...... . ..... ............................. ....... ·~· .. .:w ·'· ···= ... ,.. ,_ .. "'' ...... .... .. ...... 5 ..,.,,HI e. frtllnl tu "*"" M ,,M,.llQI! .. ,.tr, U,._7l . • 1 • n . 11ttr Mt•llff 111u1 ~· .................... 11 • 12.:r=:.~.~.~~~~~.~.~'.~....... ,..,,... ~· , * ... U. N.tl.llfW!tl _.u~t .. fl ""' '"tttell 111 N 1um· ' ·... ll'oiliit ., CWl"llll •lltl'l':f Tix l-.il,.. 4,91t, ')'1'1111 .., lftt.11 tr. Ni W I.UM tv II\')' .( ..... tll ,,.. ....,,. ,..,, ......... :.................... 1.Ul,1J1 ' ANN\IAt. llMAMCIAt. .... IU.~lt alHAf ' ' •iAN•• c•.l~ 1u•1•· ""'""' •1rralC'r . ''' "' ····"'~,.., ... _,..·~··· "''""'' ' -' """"" ' ,..,.,. ~ .... 7 'lt;t: A. lllUIHUI. IAl,IHCt, ,.U,/1,Y 1 , ..... ~­..,,., ·~ Ill jfll C.sll Ill C.u!VV Tr .. sury "".. . • .. . " ..• t,llJ'. lS litvt1¥lllf ~s~ Fu!WI ...................... , 11Wwt1 .. u1Mt•VI ...... , , . , .... , ............... , , A«N11lt fhctlv•lle .. . . . . .. . .. .. .. . .. . .. . .. .. . tr'H\tf IU4'1$* ............................. . TOTAL CUlllHT ASStTS ................ . L .. : Cu,'t!ll l.1••1111!" & btt.rr .. I~ , .. , N.l' llQIWH!"'f IAL>JfCI .............. .. A•lu~i.. • Afawai1 a ... iw..11 ......... .. _._ "'"~''"'f'' te eu.ttit Lt•"Utl• .... , ........ . L ~Oji'~~ 0 "!IT .. QlljNIN$ .AUN(:f , ,, a.rn,HJ 1t.7fo1AA.I. INCOMI lliCP. '"OM riDl .... t. sou•cc.,. JI .... 1!: ==·~1~catlMt1~ .. 1.~~ .. t.~•.) ... :'.','.'. lMM ~:: ~~--~~~'.':>'. .~~ .. (.~~.~~~.::. fOTAL ngf'" '"'°"' 'IOM 11'111 U L SQUilCll .: .. :t. 1'10.AAI. t ... <::OMt l li<::O. jlliltM sTATI SOUlCIS 21, N1fl*\1I l)ef~ lif. Ac:t OIJI, u.&kl , U. ~llfloitwit O.v•tt1, .. Thll. ~ct C'L •t-41SJ ............. .. ,., V-1~1 141, Acf t,l. ... 11t. M-J'7•> . !i. 01 ... , ................................ .. TOTAL ''=•AL INCOMI •t· CllVIO ' 'ITATI '0UlC:iS .... ll!lP,1 A.\. l>i( I llC:O. ,t.6M L6CAL IO~CIS ... 011\ft ... , .................. . fOJAL l=ll lU.L INCOME t,C. ' . (:I VIO , tM LO~AL souacas . ... CbMllN.lb $T~TI! ANO ~101•.i.L INCOMI . .... .. ,,, IU,Stf ~ .... 51, Vietlltl\11 IWuff~WI AlC ($,,.,llh· Hi/lh .. , C ....... ,ftlfM Adil ...... l llMf ~~\)jf'~J:O:/T~~~.~ .. , ....... '• 111.-6t. STATI INCOM. 61. "'t!11t:IHI "1N"l~11t "·1 1611', ~.i.l~HutlM A14 1M ·~ $uHWf ............... 2.~a.21• 67. Tt• •t1,,... MY¥fU~1 •1.t l ua• lil'v*'IM ................ .. 47.2 .. ,.....,. Tu lltlllt ............... . ... °""' """''!.'..:.'O.:'''''•'"'"'""'""'". 1,. TOTA\. IT.AT• 1NCOMI ............... !.7tr.nt n. C'OUlrl'T'I' tM't:QM.I ~.Jllflllt•Ctit• , .. ., ...................... ,...,, 7f.'=· IKl!l....... '\ll\ll" . ,, ............. " IAlt rt. . .................................. .. T . ~\. COUN'TV IHCOMI .............. t.W ..... ... LkAt. IM<::CMI , a. Ol•trld T•Qil tl.I StcllrNI •111, r111;41, •• lllllla rM ,,. 4,i1s.ui fl.1 IKurN • l lt,.,..1,11,M " lllUl'lri ........ .. .. . .. . .. . . .. .. ll •• ,,, •1.2 \1<1itiiJ;M ll•H .. . .. . .. . .. . .. .. .. * .. tl.3 jlfW1Y .. f't T111.. ................. *;'12 ,,, S.111 lt1 ~tfs:1!:'~.1. ". ~~~~1.: U. •t11ttl1 ti'll LU1tf, ••t:.,t "Mleetll•MtUt F1111dt" • • . ......... . "· lllftt'lf ..... " .. .. .. ........ " ..... " " ,,,, ... .. w.ut 1.W, .. ' t''.1 A11.11t ··~c•llM .................. .. --~?.t .~.~! .. ~:~.\.• .:::::::::::::::: . ........ I 1 TAL~L INCtMI ... , """' .... tt. IN IN$ SP'lls • ~i ft. t t. I '•t'""~WU'ih":::::: ::: .... =~ .. , ".: ,_. '. ............... 1.....,,., ,_ c. '""'" u .... .. d .. m:;:,~.r.:.~· .. ri.~• .............. '""'·"' 106. l,CM1NI TUflON ,,,, c '.l~t· ""l"itl .................. iii ••. ~Ulf\tl $119r!• .................... 1M!~ lit. " "'""'" ' . ".J.". "" ... .. • .. .. .. ·" O'TAl.6.AOMINISTlATIOH ,., ....... . M' '111. 1N51 U<::t l N ~ ,,. """'"" ....... tll . ,,1Mlit11• $411r'Wt ............... ...... 111. ~Ml~.,_., U l1t1t1 .......... ... • 1&1,,ik 113, TMtn' S.11,.,_ .............. "i!! 114, OliMr Ctl"mlpi!N 5111fllt , .. ,,... t ttt. CllHlfl" 11\lrib .• , ..-~·" ""' 1tt cc .. ,... ..... ,. .... . .. = ..,,,, ~ .. ... .... 11,,.. " t,ll!All • ........ .... IJ,ft7 tt1,m i!i 1.1 .... .. •. , ..... 17,'31~1) .t:il lt .... """"' ' = ••'fl ~ ''l' .. .. S.1UM9 II• I I -,. ·~ ...:1: ' • ·~ ...~ • -t -. --·······-·······-·····- ' ' I I " " ,.• \ .,., ' . ' la llMT 111.0T ------... -. UIGAL NOllCB L1110.U. NOl1l:i! LEGAL NG'ltCB , L!lG.u)NOTICE l,iOOAi •llCmqll »I ! 1MA1f·NCll1CS ·, '" ! 'i.il(;l'6'(im1C;J " LE~·N~1 1 ---~=-!~~ .. :.=,::-;r~ .. :'1llt~,.!,~~~~~=-i~~·:-·:":~-::-.:-::-::-:-·:-::-::~....,~.=.:::~':.::......~;.:::;:r~.'.'._.-:J-~-~-~.,..-~-1:.-.. -.!=~-=-~ ... :.~.'="~~.:.-:-~:~:~l=:"~i-;."::-.. ..:..--....::::~:..~'..!.!::!':.... ___ ,..,,:~-.-,r~i~r~,~::~.-~;,~r: .. ~~::~'.!:r~:~.-~~ .• ~ ..... ::~·~,r;~.-, .... -'.'-,~-": .. :.-7'..!~=.~z:~~:~~-~~.~.~-~::~~~~ ... -~:... ..... ~...,.....: .. :..:.~~~t~~.~~~"£.~ .. ~s~ .... ~r~.~~~~""··.,0 .. "':"-:-"M":c.-.~.,:=~~~1:m:;;~ . .::.:~~.;~~~~.c.--iii· • ........ TH •t•VtcU ~-... "" ""•"·,·,1·..:..:.::.,:";,:,:,· • .»14 t;-~ ' ...... ,..,,,~:\ill)f\ ..... "' ,. fl, '""-Mill ,...~iz::r~~. w chuottf ,. ~·=='~·:! ~~~M~net".:'.' _k~ ~~' ~ Ill. ~I-s.IM'• ......... ,. • ., ... \. D,111 !1.$11 2IAOI ""' 1 0-.,...... •• " ' ,·,, ... I .1.!.. O.Ol• •::r:t'f'~lll~lllt ~"':" ...._,, ,.......,( ,.., ~""'· , TQtAI., .JM. -llHHTil:JrtA~C• OF ~'HT ttft\M 1n;W i1• •ClellllHllO...,.,.. ., .. , ............. ., ""' ~ .~'" a..tet.lmft ......... \ ...••..... ,..t1.M 1.u-''''' T11tpu111ffll .. !:1!:!f•Aitr.,.~lr.j:lieM·.,O«MVW~Dlatrltf ... ,,Ji;;:;•,,, ·~ • •.:;rAL-=...'tl'H '"aiVic'"l':::::::;: .J: w.,; ~ .... ....,.... ... ,,~.......... J . , •• ...,._;ao.rn,·m1wr,.,.;;.;v..,1 ~~._,1_..:,,.~.._,,.,,,_!!. ·~,:~~~~ ............... _ ..... uJ~,.· 'ri.atJi ','. '. -. -eur-., ,. '"Nl , _ • ,. •• ...,.., , •• ·~·· -· 11111 .. Clldc "Jl.m' !" • ,.,... . c:i.r\'iti•" a.a.""', L, •• P.:•~.'&:!!· """r.=·· ... ,·,·::···i~-·,"·.·.·.·.·.·.. "".". .!>!!! .,,.,-._ -• -.,. .,,.., 1,. """' NW-If .i ....... ', •• ,, l,rw nt ·v •1tAOI "IJll ~-DI AICT ''°"' G111M, Ii;~ ".G ... WtliliW. · """1C , "' fl,llllo ,,,. .. , .. c~ ui.riet .. ..... .......... •,.tr,: !t!.lN ~........ """'""' ... ~MCIAI. .... IUNl"f •• ,.., ~pu4r DAILY A lffll .... CI .....-:11 1 l'!'J'f ' ·m _ ~ ~ oc. fl •Ottw '-••• ., ... , •. , ••. ,.,,. -.»i , OaM•UtPUMD ·' ' , • • ' • ~ "'ti 'ttH , ~·::=· 'ltf'fll~•~, ... ,........... ~ ..... ,, .U.'1' MJlt TOT•l. OPU.TIOl4 ~ fll.All1' •••• ..,... ~ t11.m tUL ••AC" .CNOOI. Olffl~CT, ....... ~ ..... ~. CAUNilNIA KM•rHrlell ... , ......................... \ ~; I t ~.. 1 ' !QI ' 14»~• ;TMdlt1'1 ... !t,:lq ii 19,'M,AIHTllNANC! °" l"UNT t _ """"""' ~ .. ~1 Gri"' '~''t'"'" .... : ..... / .. 'f""'"'' ~··.' <Co " • m: '11)Sutt~'All o~··:··. u.11n nt. aa..i"-~ ...... _......... 141,nt • ....,... .,,., • .....,. • ctf!I.•.+' ... ,, .. , ........ ., ............. ~ . •' • .4Ji1•', '-"': • •· .. ~n.·~lilol'W• . ~'" .1;1n , '.111, a.~ .. fw.... ........... M.l\f •N• J4Mol .... .._ • Ci( ... i .. '. ................ 11.~ ........... l:tMI • S.l)I ' 2.ut • HO. Oltltr ~ CfM.tt ... ,, • .,.;,.,.,,.,, <lol;Jlll 1•.;.tt ~JtlJif 1'0. ror,. E~.,-... ~·.:.~ .. ~·;.:.;~·., .... :: 1..a. 149.i...," .IA.1'1 --:: 1~. ,..,.,. ltJt.n 6llln_""f!:' ~ a. ~JJ«.' e4 ........... I • 1 , .. ll ' TOTAl.!'ll!lltll'O"'elfA..0&1 ....... : .. ·t74.SW ~'·'~ , v·---.t ...,,_,. _. ~ ·--.m )U, "1"'2 • """"' ..... : ...._. ' ~-IJ' '"'"!i'"'"I''""~" .. -.... lt,a+t • 1,Slf ' 12 .... ·t TOTAl;.~lCAaL1! TD IOUCATIPH COO! , ... FO(IO CHA•OE$ • -.. •••1tn•u1• ·~IK .... J\K.Y I ' ' " Tiil• r""'1''illliU lnclWJ,; Ill Wln!IMr)'. "'11\,. •11 •c"'-1 u~i.; ~" aNll •eCTION llflll l'OI T~(tllfJll' • tll. ANllollty ,-..,... ..... • .• ,....... 12'MI USA-U1.M C.111 111 o:tr.io1r Tr~ 1,, .• , ... ,,,, ,, ,, • , , .• .,.. JMMf ~i.~:!~ dlitrlct ,,,-.., "~U:. .• _(ljrl'tflt tlilctl ~ Mii ..... tffl¢holly ' &Al.AllY CCH.l'UTAT'IOH •••••••• ••• •• .••• , 6,lll,?'I, 1AOl!,~I t;.,.. "t."Wtl'lllMl'lf ,..,. ................... 1 ... "1!! '750 tt.evGhi119 c.,f~ .......................... .~ '}."'•-~~rv"=·~m..r~.nrGtAx.anvii.Jl••flN,11,,.:n ~, '°"'.,."~c"'...,.r~s ... ~~J!T~~,. · ~ ~.,..le. E,...._ AM•-..... ,.. ..,_ u..;.111, 2Dol,..t Au.,,,._. lltct11(#19; ............................. r-,. 1 T ... .,.~" .~:,;::. .,_ te~ n1t1 ttAl' IZt.OWAM.krvlwtt.OliMMllly ' ,,_u ~!.':~ ............ 'f'V"I "(''" r~. ,,,,, ,:MO . '" ,• '"''"' JtYJ•~·-· :+¥ T... ' ,i!Olf!f"'Ml!"'"'!.'11 ~................. ' ',' !!'."' HMlllJ IQM'..U ..... ,............ p;l'I , tt_ui llt• 10TAL C~lt.ui:r ASS.l!TS ., .... ,, .. ,,.,.,, • tn:,.lt :tSl,X. ,,• , •·Tptt . ··~ 1.,_,, .•"·~·~'of ,' . Sr.I~ ~.104 U2$ ••• I;.~ h1wr.-cit USJ: o.irr.uLIM!UtiMMMf~}~.~ ..,':L '''·~ d.,su ,.,. flWtDAN• ,,ult.Hill . i • ...,.. \Uitfii c··--~ ...... , TrlflfWliltOll "" .. " " 1~~: UT. '•ltl .. cia-,. .. tlwlt. ..... .... '°''*'' lf:t.UIO Hl!:T •EGINNJNG• '"~' "'!*. '1•1••;: ..... '. -"""' A. .,... ......... ,,,..,. Tiii • ...-..... I ' TOTAL .. orlL TiiAN~~O.ll:TATION. .. 11'1,$:• 1if,1rs l:l:tr .All O!Mr1 .-. . ,., ... ,,. lSl.W 111.N "41111611'1:1.nb IP Auo.111ti . .l'.c1lv1 .... , ••. ,. Ttnt ii.If•• 0 _ .. ,., p.~ • 1101"' ' ' TOTAL CUfllll!NT\iXl'!iP>!$(. , ~·~ , .... Ill"-.... ~ .. ~111111 •• • I Ad!"'*11N1111$ .. cur,tnt Li.llilltt• .,,.,........ +~ ~ )I 1C. II.. •i.. ;,~---.. ·~··-"···.... ' . " Df'/ li!D~.~ION , .......... 6 ""' .... ~ ...•. :i:t • ...,.., • • ' ....... . llllolorfll(• .... , ..... ;•• . 1U16 UAt "·"° AOJUSTl!O NE1" aEGINNl~ll' u.u.~ ,..... "'~ . ""ir. m,"9 ............ r,"' ,. ..... ~cilliotj.ed.. ' ax,..i.l'."'_ lfl(liolllld Ill"" ~ A«O I• Mt. ~~LF~~e;M~it(iEs ::::~1::::: i~~ m~: I~~ I. :o~c:::EltAL jN<;<».1" 1t!CiWtO,FROM • ., ~ ~~:.::-.;~~~ Q' GE;ltE IU.l, FUHD ., r " lrom ~ir=jl:~,~:~~.~!~~:.~::.~~~ . ,SUltDTAL "''LICABLI!: TO tEACHEllS 'FEDERAL sou~ia:s ltHUllJM!Hf;'.llf:f!llEOOH LIN!.A Tl_flt'n '. .. , .................. ,,~ ....... . l.t.LAJIV LIMltATION .... , .. _,, ...... ~ ••• 1,,NMI ll,"4,/1~ \J..,.,S1f ll.'41JMllWlfl(I 11\d ~~ .... , It,* 11•°!" :·J,,.,. Dlilfk#Ul'l!rlfwl)ellttr"'IN-IFllM"111 ,,. 11,,.l;COMM11, ........ ~.' .. ~· •• ~.w.,, -,:..":!.,~::to'°'~:'"':':........ IJ.!!2 ~~~~~v:g0;:~ ~~~~L SOOltCEf ·;,,ta lW'N .. ,.. 't~~=i~:rui.1iC';"'""".:..... ......... 1'"' ll~1 Lmm':°11y .~ .. im ............ :. Leu LllH ...,, .. -.. for 20. FEoeltAL INCOMI ltECIU\leO fl•OM """'°~ •••frf!Mllf S'.~1!1!'11 .............. ;,;m •M 11m11 .1535' . ' i TdJAL' c&v...utt•TY '.selt\llC EI " '*-"'. E•u!Pftwlt ............ .......... 141-11' 413..S• ff1,1:W STATE µ,>u•c•S Oll*"let QOtil~ltiut\ln fir 'O.ASOHt ............ ~., .. !\lllO'llt ~ UM. "''l!~Y (lfl$Trk!;:ill '!;OT.AL A,,.LICAILI!: TO ECS .,., FOil u. EC-k O.,.;wtvlllb' Act ............. "' t!! ~-,'!;"'~ ... -;u ........ :,......... ::;:: .. ~., -lt"1.11twi'' (C t· •'11y 's I I :."g4~::~f":::sy"°".t~~~J:TK>N ,. ..... , ,,,..,,,11 M,Jlf.M,I 1t.»1.w 2,. ~~";'l·~'~':o'e":A~'Xt:"""'IM "" ,,m "·¥' t.• ~&C#'.,.:rt.,~.,all:eN·~ititr'.:~·;-.;~~ ... • • • 1,,.1, 0 "* e:U;, .. ~:V ct .. · .. · .nt. Cl&Miflcd S•'-r'-".................. 1i,n1 it.at ~ui . ll:ECEl\lt'D FJIOM 'TATE &OUJtCE~ •JlU t,31111" 7,000 • ~ ~tlry Ill= ... tdleel·llill,iCt ~·"" •1lll\lt :1S6 1IOO. CAl'lT~ OUt\.AY ' i'Jt. Ot1W Ell~ .... .................. 14.,Pt. U~ U.2" a, STAIE INCOMF; ,,,. • tt ~~;..,_-•'!.'M"t"~··· 22.t47 11tll!'ltlf .il1'1 114. :~ro:;.'":"~~ SI~ TOTAL STUOl!Nt ' 4l.P1l11etii&1 A..-flonnWnl ,.._,,... <•-..-" 11 11 I! II ,_ ' 1-r Ir • ................... .. TltANSN>JtTA110N .............. ,.... ~»I .¢1u 41',_w '1.l &.sic, E•IHIU..llon' Ai. 4M 'l lllJ41nf. r ~rlienlMl'lf "'""'"""" 60;4 .-") 'SJU .1252. •lllldlllas !~restr~ecl) ,,,,,,.,,, '°/AL cu••ENJ EXPENSE ~·· •• ,. '···"-·' -.. 1·,··-·: .. i .. :.·,·, •• ···,·.:.:.:.:-............... '"°~ ' ·1~6~· loelo;I .............................. . _., Swo1>flft'l1t1l1I .SU-.1 ..... m.1u u _, 2 112 (. _ -IVi 0111« .Equipment ........... "" Cl' EDUCATION ·• ....................... 7,fN.JH lt,W,;o.) 12.fA/,v.,: "·2 EduatloNllY . Htftlr~--....... , t t,"611 ~ ~. 111191ect•tk""'.... 1 • JOTAl. CAl'ITAL,OUTl.AY ... :.~gi.!~1~~c~~ • .,1el' . . . . ... . . .. . . 11,141 .,,,» ,,,,,, ''· ;~ P.h~:;a~~-r-~·t"' ......... , .. ~.-~~:-~.;·~;£·Id ~ tell ,_ ... ~1~1. ' ~~:k ~~~g~olTUIUlS ...... ' . .. ... : . . m .olhar EIU'el\SU ...... ~ .... 1;4~ ,,·,·fil· 2.0IJ •1.11~1,ness f"'*ll!W"I' .................. • 91.I 11)(11~ TlltMAXll1MIM1J AK Tl ttr .thls ldlMI 1:1Ca.OE•T 4EllVICE ' TOTAL FOOD SElt\llCES .•...• , . 12.!11 "f \ ,2:1.7'2 41.t Pr-rty ll•llef .•.• , ..• , .••• , , , •. , , , 1,,321 ll 11 x 11 • ,lljl"rld, Wlllcll llYY M 1¥1,. ''M fll net I~. Attn.WI ll:•P<1Ymtt1l M Acx1unl ti lilelt llOt. COMMUHITY SE A\llCl!S . 1 TOTAL STATE' INCOME ............ ,,.. ~IM Mt.241, )11,Hl 111111r1I ""'f~ tu '_,,rr.,_15, 4 -..wn Sdlool ll~lldln,1 ,fr.~(licNltN~t lllO.C1t1lllate11 S1l1•1-.. , ........ !"'' 10) .. ) !'t,t,16 "102.537 7'.COUNTV .INC()(e\E ~low: , , • . TOT.Ai. OEIT Sl!~vlCE · .. 1120. Chluillld S.lerlu .......... v '''' I~ 11t,.Jn •1»,4$ol n. E!i1~Uutl011 ,,r. Offlll' T•~ •. ' •..• '.... 4,!/tr 4~T J,11J • '" .Alllll&rl.uod lly E'.d. C:-e.i• II i.uows~I Ullt ' : 1.00. ?&:~~Ni! 11fN,5FERS . 11to. °""" ~.... .. ......... .., .. , ~A.iO •t.n! ·~· , n. "M1.k.lu1.._. f'u"4s" .... ,,.......... .,u -,. sOo SM;.~7$1 Ei~iM '''': .......... · 11·41N ,~ O\t.l('TµHiG'n tOtAL COMMUNITY • '"ltl Jt, Otti.r .... -...... ..'. .... ......... ' "' ',!!lit S.::o.:!t' l:lltfltn »H.i""""'··· . . '·ToT.t.L OUTGC:ii'4G UN. UPl~~y~~SLAY "';"'""'"'" ,?tl,277 ,.,, U ' IO. LOCT:LT~~J:!~NTY INCOME ............ 1/IJf J,J!i ,113 · ........ ~ .. : •. , .. , .. , ...... '.: ... .,.,. ,'2.7~ , Tll'.ANSl'i•ll:S .' .. .. COMMUNITY !ElllVICE (ltESTltlCT.EO) ll. Plslrf(I Tixu. J 11•1• ll)c:i'11u11l,IW t§d.,Ced1 *16 .. _if~ $U6TOTAL •·········•·····;;····-···· 12'1. lmptC>VlfJIMI of Sllti 11,4.lt 11J,7to l:t:0.000 *' ". L9ill, ,~ .... I" ,/Niii~ !Al( '"MOl~lllllUTIO a1sw11:.e ....... 11'9, Re.d AulumeM ....•....•..••.. 11'-217 10~' ,,,,,, :::: ~~~= ~~!;,':!:!~~·:,~~.: .. sis~ l ~' llX'll,X ••L• u ,..."1'':')1 ~, :...1~· ~~~~e~~f:8''!Jll.&$A .. 0 • ~:!:· ~,:'1"11 "· ....... · .os,1i1 '' ~1 :Ill:;!: . 9'.lcllet ... ~. , ........ ,....... ... . 11 l! if.II 11 ,. i x. ';!A90 ~i:CM2o: ll'ft 1f 1 • • .... ~ tl~ . 1. l!NDIM• alUNcE;'~i,!Ni! ii""".'··'" 1111• Olflt: E.i.i,.:..:.:.· ...... , ..... " l OQCI •i.t U11$1Curt" ltoll ... .. .. 43.#~ t•,7t' ,Q4 Aultlor1Ud GIMtti '"PUip.i •. 0 T1• •""' l',w.',. I. Ct~ In CC>Unry Trttsurv· ......... . · · ""'"' .............. ' 11 .l ,rlor Y11r'1 Teiies ................ 41,14i 1.244 1~ ·lt•No Umlt ... ,............... S1.7J4' -w.... ,~. 1.1':.oll I. lttvelwln1 C11!1 Fund .: ........... ·· .•. , 11 ,m ""' ' ... tl.tM 31,313 ..... lolll,2'.J 4,Sl~.517 111.:IOl 111 ~ ..... , .... 1C .. xx I. X ll ll • lfl(""" ,lllllifl'ICJed llll a7,&17 tl. ArNwldt ti•tt , , , ,, ).t¥'. 5, J~vllftmwitl In U.S. •tndt Ill c°'I) IUI n.107 h .J s-sured kl.I ,., . """"""'"' 137.4!:1i 11:-Ull' ·1u',7-.i D. ._ ...,...... ... ,...,... ' -6. Ace111111b lt1CelVelll1 '· ........•... 153,0-ff JUI $2,17$ U,t Unncured .~oH ...... .' ... ·........... ,;ru _.. ,•"ilJ tol1d M11rut 1/ld0t1N'lll.ri.1 ,.Vft'\11111 ........... ~~ ... ~1;~ ··~ 1. ~"' .. 1c1"E"'I' ..... : ... < .... ,....... • .. , ISSU 1U ,.,lor Yetr'• TllXU .................. 7,52f yoD ·AHALYJ•I '' •11 llAI. ruMa TAJla f . ~r.!'&~&Ll l1E~~.a,·,;jiJHl' ... "'.'j"1" ' U::!,»t ·~· Rtnllll 1nd L•-· lllCIPI· ' lU.-,.cr TO, sl"•CIAL TAX llATI ,L1~t • ''" ;r 1200. CArlTAL OUTL,IY O~ON·•ESTJllCtEDI Jut. Jmprovll'fll!ll II I ll• ..... , •.. 1m. s u1tolll9f ...... , ......... . 12'2. JOOb .............................. . 121'. O!htr E-.i"""e111 . , ..••...... , . ,,1,4.U IU,HS ,..., 247,100 16. lnltf'ISI ............. ., ................ , .. a.o0c 9 "'. II" ••1 ••• "M!K1111neou1 Fuildt" ............. , ... , ,,,•,n,. 17 .• '.," i·"° .•t jti· .I .!J!T~~~-r'.u1iiiiiiT:.,,WSi.iT'i '':.'.':::::.'.'.'.':.'.'.'.':·•1.~~' t "° 153 ••··" ,,... no ... -L•J Clir...,, Lt•ll ,,,. .............. .... .. . .. .. ...... '11'.sn If." -~·' " ., ........ ,....... 1,011 , SU. :§...... j ) ,.· MIT INOIMe IALANCI .................. ~ Sl,,l7 . . .... ... ,., lG'-5'0 ll1M6· 3~,M1 t ,J3l,lo.i 10.'71 l ,lOf,nS • xx x 1,m.ti• 1~1"'' ....... ~. " • ••• ~ ,. 10,llllt ' 1 .... ,,,JI- •!~ .. ...... ' .. " 'l'OTAL ci.rlTAL OUTLAY ...... TOtAL Ellr,EHDn11JIE$ ... OTHEll: OUTGO 1400. OUTGOING Tllt.ANSFEAS '''-H 1,.(lf,.a t.111.541 .903.111 t ,111.e" :!ll,lf1 7,$,$(5 l,13t,tN ,,,n,.11• .,. Olhlt &,., ...... ,.~ ......... ~.1 ... ,....... 500 -! ·-!:, -;El ,_ > ,-. TOTAL •)(l'IMDITIIJl!I, OTM&I OUTGO 1.t7'-4'1 TOTAL LOCAL INCOME oc ....... ;;,,,.. 1Gt:57J ·75t.llM t:lf.110 il; 11 ~Iii'" b AND UNOlttlllUTIO ltl!llllV&, ,LUI. ~.f51,1'S TO'fAL IHCOM• C•~Lfl$1VAJ1f , o! __ .. ! .,,. ... 1 . 1 8' ·1'1!1T a,MOOt• IAU.MCa ... : ..... : ... :... t,l~.tl~ t.254,21$ ID,SU,Jit 11.~,740 ••COIHMIMO -•ALANCll ...... : .. , ... , .. : ..... 1,121.m 1,12~ 1,2.'?•'°$ ! ... !· ~--§11 . .ANlfUAt,,INAMCIALANOIUIOQ'a1.-011:T- c. TOTAt.. lf•T 1eG110111"'~ 1.t.L.A111c1r 1 .. ,.., 1., .... ~-~ .... ~~ <'t.-1 ••. !:V.:l :Sc .. ,. I~~• , _ '°"' 1NT••11T ""• ••o1M....,10M ·ruN11 AMO IMCOMI' ................................. l,):tl.. .... ,_.f ' • ..,. .. e : 'O 1~ ... . ·Oc•i• v..._ kMll DiNrkt, o .... c_.,., C•lihnila 100. Tuition 1'3f. Otllitr tlli1iln • .., .. . . . . •• . 1•.322 TOTAL OUTGOll!IG Tll:ANSFEll:S ~4,Jn SUITOT.AL . .... .••. ........ . ....... XXJJ UNDISTIUllUTl!D ll:ESEJIVE .... , .......... x, x 'It TOTAL EXPENOJTUR ES I.NO OTHEll: OUTGO, .. ,. , • f . ii:NOINe •AU.NCI!, JUHf M ~: ~!~v~r11 c~~~ F~wrY "'.:::::::::; f . lnvest:Mtnt • US IC>nd1 (•I ccal) ......... .. '· A«OWlll RealYeb!t ... , .. , •. ,. ,, .••• , I. PrtN\ll' E•"'1ff , , ••MEllAL ars••V•, JUMt :II, u" I (f(I( jt71-72) , ............ . ;l;lif.t.L ,CUJtJtlNT ASSIETS ,. ..... Curr11111 Ll.llllllllu ... .. . .... , ..... .. ~ N•f-. ~NOJ!lf• '1.AL.ANCI! .................. , ,.; fOJ'M. l'Kl"lt!JHTUll:IS, OTMIJt OUT•e ,,IU,lf1 1 ... •92.211 """ '""' 1C l( •• 4,&lll.&1• U7,$50 1,1n,1tt '"'" n.>• I; I; JI • XX XII 11 • 11 )( •,m,uo J,3ff,,jf) S,156,$ AMO UMOllTlllUTaD 11$Ell\lf, •LUS .• N•T fNOIMe IAl.AHC~ .. ... . .. • .... 11,5ff,tS7 'l'·nf:;flS ANNUAL (llJMANCIAL AND avo••T ••H•T OIAMOI :;·:~~A~u:~::·,v::i.".u:: ~IH•ICT CIJIANea COUNTY A. l&•INNIN• IALAMCI, 'ULY 1 ............. C•511 In Coi;nty Ttt.1111/N ...... Accoi;n11 ltect1v1bt1 .•.•• Totll cu,.tnl Aswt1"..... .. ....... .. L•• C.ur••nt Li,11m11u . . .. .. ........ . 1. N•I lletl~~lnt 1•*-llCI ........... . J, Adlutlmenr. 11 Cu,,1nt Ll•blll!le1 • Adlustff Nf:t l t111!1nlna e111nc1 I . INCOM• FH1r1I 1ncam1 t.C. STATE INCOME .... 5dlOOI F1cm1111 AP1'11tllonm1nt ''' tot11 Sitt• lncom1 1'. COU NtY INCOME 71. J unior Cc.lleiit l 1111ion TA~ Tolt l (Ounly Ince.me ff_ lNCOMIHG TRAHSFERS tl. lnttrh)"" Tt•Ml1r1 Toti! lll(omJn, Trenstt'I TOTAL IMCOMI (l!llCLUSl\11 o' •••tN. IAU.~C&I .... .. (,TOTAL. MET l•lllMHIN>t; IAU.MCt: AHO IJllCOMI! , . . . D, IJC,INOITUJIU A,.O OTNEJt OUTSO 121111, CAPITAL OUTLAY 120. 1u1101,.. TC>l tl C••ll1I OlllltJ • TOTAL l!XPllNDltUll:•S AM!I Oi Nlll OUTGO ...... •• tMOINll IALAMCI!, JUNI JI 21t.~I -·· 111,US JU,U' fMl,JU uo,m " +,,ill ,,,., ""'U •!.S~I •S,521 2,...,,.. I, Ce.U. In COunlY Trta111ry .. ,,.. ....... U.,,lJ ltlM) 111'2,#I 1.361,411 t.lol,7U SN,nt •. Accounll ltecelveb!t • , ........... . I . Tol1I Cur,.nt Au.h ....................... .. 1. LISI Current Ll1bUltlet .. . .. ........ .. Ntt E"41nt' .. lll\CI ~,, .................. . I'. Tl)TAL l!Xl'ENOITUJtlS .ANO Ue,31S 160,UI " NtT INOIMe •AU•CI , .. ,.,.. .. ..... l,ttt.731· .3,311,UI ANNUAL ,-IMAftCIAt. liMO &UNIT Jta,-OllT CAl'l!TfltlA ACCOUNT OltANGI CO"'T JUNIOJt COi.Li.i DISTJtlCT , OlllANGI COUNTY 4-lat;INMIN4 IALANCI, JULY I C1&11 In U.S. N•llcnal 1111\lt "O!M'lllnll" Cllh ACR11ot1 •1eelv1bl1 s1..... .. ........ .. Tohll C.11111111 Aslll• ... II CUn'tnt l11bi11!!11 .. ,, l. NET IEGINNING IALANCE a, Adlu11m11nb ID current Ll1bJU!lu .. AOJUSTaO HIT ••otMNINO IAU.HCf I , IMCOMI Ml. LOCAL INCOMI M. Siles M..i Food S1rvlc1 $•In 1t. Other "'- 10111 LC(I! lneome •o. INC.OMtNG TRAHSFEllS TOTAL l~COME llKCL. llEGINNINI IALAHCI!) , C. TOTAL MET llCilMNIN• IAU.NCI ANO ICOME 19, IXPIMOITUJtl!S AMO OTHEll OUTGO 100. MAINTENANCE OF PL&NT 1311. R11>11ctmt~l GI EQui1ment tot11 Mefnttnenct ol P11nl tCO. FOOO SEltVICES tXI. c11umect s.11n11 .i F-S1rvkt1 t:Jt. FOOd • • "'· 011\tr Ex~ttlSe> Tott! FOOCI SINkt• TOtAI. Ell,liNDITUJtli5 AND OfNl!Jt OUTGO I'. t:MD!Na IALAMCI!, JUNI! • I, Cl ih In U.$. N•llo~•! •• ~ .. "Ot>lt'.ilnt" '""" I At~11Unl1 "Kli¥tblt • Stores •. Ollwlr Curre~I A>n!S 1 Tot1I C-ilf'llll &1$111 I. Ltu C11.ritnt Li1bllhi10. Nd E'ldln• l1l1nc1 , P, TOtAL IXrl!NOITUltt!t ANO NET &NOING IAl.AMCI P110H"'" OrtnM Co1ll Dlllv Pilct. Jutv l l, lt7t LEGAL NOTICE ••.111 ft,l\T ... ,11 ., .. ., •l,Gll U,IO, 1.11• .,,, .. ...... 1.111 "' 1.l•• ,,037 ,,.,. \13') 1,1, .op 1.u• '·"' '"" tl)t) ltSO " " "'on """ l,Ul 103,171 "' •• 1.1u lllS,SC LEGAL NOTICE .... ..... 11.i10,1411 ...... ""' llt,500 0, l!lll"l!MIHTUllll AND OTMl!Jt OVlOO ~ .'S,·!o: l!!IJI• · • :rjl fz OUTITANDtMa IOMllD IND81TI DN1i55 , ' CURltEH'I' EXPENSE ·-·•lctld ""*-""·· Ju"' I, 'u,, ,., ... ~ .• '61-~,;11 6~"4 i 10t llt 'l,Sl1 01' OISTllCT, .. JllM. ...... s,111,oqo 4,.U.Olll 100. ADMINISTRATION .. ~ ~ .. U.2•1 !f 115 4151 "·'"' "2,lt7 PIUI ·-· •f "°""' sold .... s,1,,.«o 1,tsc.Oh 110, C•rllllut..i Sllt1rl1H \•11 recalp!J-;-,.... ..~ ................. ~ 1{p ss'-141 70,14' Ut 10,2a SUITI:>TA~ ............. 6.111ill06 of Admfnlilr•l!~11 21,toO l•,OU 2o1.0l5 .!',.~~~'!:,..,.· 111~~~:~":" 'lllcGm. " .... " :i:::: 11,22, 1 44,',1, "·* ~1 M00•~,,,,'T.'o'i'•'•"a"o•"'o'•o"'','•"o",,,· ·,·0· ·•· ·,·,·,· · · , "'.,"".,. , ~110""..., no. c11ulfled s111rlu c.l Alll'llhii1tr11lon t ,5ti; •.e12 t;oll ........ ""·" .......... _.,., ... t tM 303 lt.:iU t3.oll 130 l\,to .. '. • ,... UO. O!fler 6•penus of Admlnl1tre111111 , $,SST $,,SN 1,50t .. ,.,, ...... , .... ,, .... ~·.,!.~.,• ~:.. ...... ' , A. llalNN~~!JAL.AT NC&;, JULY I . -·1 •115 'IN lb -.. 5 m :i.nt s.11~ ,w C1$h 111 ....... ,1y ru,11rv ........ Jt1,~2 TOTAL AOMINISTRAflON ...... , ... , tS,NJ ~"'' • fClll, lf70-71., .. ~ .......................... •.6 f 4• lll 1i.sH TOTAL CUJIRE:NT ASSl!TS .. .. Ul.252 200. INSTAUCTION ••1'lctld 'IMl•l'll:t pllis' llltc.m• ........ 1.Ml """ 14,su t..U 1. Nl!:t IEGl!'iNIMG Ur.LANCE ,H,l\02 :iu ,:o.;, 110. Cll'tllk:eted Sallrlt~ Of lnllfutllen ,,,1,. •l,/ff AmDUllt'llclfllfld fClt expendllvr• 7 20f 50719 41500 U,?96 ~OJUSTl!:O NET I EOlNN ING IAU.NCE 2H,Oll2 Jll,2;:2 211. ,rt11d""l1' S1l1rlu ,.. l~.U.f •114/Dt tN~r? 1,,.tl ,.:........ . .. 11,~00 4. " • 1. IMCOMI , 1 t17. Su~rv4o,1' Salerlu Mlillfl'lllll'I ~I to M errterecl la Jiit 60,' tTATe I INCOME 213. Tucllll'1' S1l1rlu . ... W,f jf 6lS.4l 4'1,2S4 """'11ilf'f If Cwtanl Olltrir:I T.,r · ''1. T1-. lltdl.t Sllbvll)lio~• 214. Oltltr Ct,tlllctled sai.rlll , R_,ulrWl'lfnh tor 1'1~11 to •• C1rlvffl ' • '" fi·' i (lllo'" 1n .... n.crv of l11$1,uc111111 . .• lt,flo!, 1tA21 .-, i.vv .... Ill' 1K11r;:I r1lf ........ •••. 4t,W 1l.'20, li\.lM 5,,,., 111 llV'r' u ,100 , · 1.i/ rowty 11:111.t . . •.••• ~. Clt1$illld li•l1rl1J •f lnll,lldion ...... 12.077 A,,:zt1 ,,,.. ' · f'..11e•s Ca:;! et • "Tc.'4l St1'9 '""°"'' ("""' 2341, tu1bclC>lts . ................. 47~5 ~ 4~ EOuciflr.e/r11,r1g IO. LOCAL IH\:OME 2«1.1ot11tr llooks --....... ............. 3,aflf 4_... 5.40t Iii G,.._ i r.d t tl. Olrlrl(t t1xa ' .. ' 2M. Olhlf ElCl>lf\$1$ or l11structlll11 ........ •.Jtt lS.114 tt.000 I "Y 111 1!1-tary ti.I DJ•l•ld T•xas, S.C"flll 1',221,2• TOTAL INSTll:UCTION .. SM I 7t4Mt. UJ,2~ Of' Unlff;:I fl.II{, r1a1veil ............... ...... £11,011 •• H~L·'ft4 SEJIVICE$ ($el!lol '01s"lct ti.I, P!Jtrf(I, T•)C•, $.icur-.f JtoU, ll. 11. 5N.1lt. 114,1~ "'· ....... 111#•tld "'''"' 11 1, o:it • t"ulrtd' to Nlll'lt'• 1u.su1t •.... , ..... ..., 1t•trJefed ,flil;llfl«1 J'flr •I, !"' ................................... • 11J:IJ:'IHCUrld Jtoll ' ., H11tfli P-nllt'/ ...... ,,....... fAJ2 t ,U.t 10,200 T•• rtellOIS ltff-10 ................................ ,.,,.,.' ........... l t27,41 Ol) ... • y , Tl ..... , ............. .. •-.• , ... ··-··-.. , •• ,,. ,,,, .. , •• , ts. 900 • ..., . ' , ,...... llllf ...... ! ... ·-,... -· -... ... ,,,,, ••• , ..... 1 .... rtietlmt11t:;, 1 . 0 • • ,,,_ .. , ' .. TOTAL Hl!'Al.TH 6EJt\IM;&S f-*t t.t11 10,~ <hict~~,,inc1p11, 6 _Speclll E!dvc11l11nl ......... , ..................... N/Zo• 1f o!ll";r~ ............................ .. '°°· Ol"ERATION OF rLANT ~ ll:•lfld-' Ml.nee -.!(..I Fnc11m. .. , ........ , ........... "".~ ..... , ..... ,t4:1. 'Toll~ 'LG:~·1·:i~(om1 .... :::· '20. Cl11lllled S1llffu !tr Op1rlll1n ..... , 51.Ul 5'.237 tO,"° ~Clull 'f>C""'I., 19' .. 70 .,. ............ , ......... " .. · ............ · · "," 2{"'~ TOTAL INCOME flXCL\ISl\11 01' ,!IO.Otntr EKP9rnill for 011tr1l!Oil ...•... , 'U,71t U,lfl ~.)II!' Eit1matid tn,,ec1lpla·111 unttcured fClll, ltlQ.11 •••···•·•······ ····• '· 1&$1MNINll' &AU.NCI!~), ••..•.••.•..... TOTAL Ol'EAATION Of l'LANT ...... t l.01! te,.W ~.5'0 E1tlmttld $Nit Ind FeirlBI •PP6rfiWUTll(ll~,, Jt7C·11 , ...... "" l~l~S (.TOTAL. Jillff 1aGINMIN•·IAU.HCIE 780. MAINTENANCE OF PLANt l\Qtrteto:4 lli1111Ce plU$ lpcom1 .................... ,., .......... ,... ' I 'AND, INCOMI • • ........ , 120. Cl1~'1llied Sel1•lti !Cir M1lnlen1nc. 15,0&4 lS,11'3 1•,ltO Amount tl\ldg.tecl 'tor lllplnO'ltvr1 1r.d/or tr1~:;ltr, lf1D·1l ........ 3",4" ' o. EXPEND.tTllll:El AMO eTMEll: OUTOO lf *. x ~1.11• """ 11Aif5 •• 5f5,CI .~. ll .. '3',010 t~.!11 •.no \,010,131 • ...... . l ,OU5 Ull, Jttl>l t,tmenl ol EquiPmenl , . , , •. , , . . , M1xlmum trMUnl to lit 1111Mor1d 1n 1 ... <l'WNNIY cf .C~rrll'\I Dli"k.t t•ll 1ioo .. OE IT SEA\llCE , m . 01111, EIPlftNi 1w ,,,..lntet11fte. . .. '·"' •.u1 ''* lte4u.lr""*'h IClf 1'10.11 lo ff dtrlv.I by llVV en 11\6! ill:Ured ~·~· 31.~nntt ,1350;. lllM'ld •Redtm;>tlOrl ~QO,O~ 315,600 Ut,Olll TOTAL MAINTENANCE OF Pl.A.MT ,22.011 12~ 21,31'11 (.errhllulorl 1:6.l. l~lld lnle"'ot ..... ·• 2\2,111 'Ol,3U 3~1,1f' toll. FIXEci c'HAll:GE5 • .. ' ludaef' ·ji~il'.oi~:f:bif'u.:i:'i '.V.'D 5 2.\11 sU,321 ,,.~, tH. A111111ltv Fund ·11.1" ttJl.\S 20•~ ,,.,,, .. 1,. Diian.co, "'' 1, 194, ,·. ,3·!~! ·-••• D"TOO · ''' ''' 51, •• , "11 •12. Permanent f uno 1A'Jt 'l'A1J ..... "" ..... • .. , " ""'""'" ........... • •"" • ''' .• ' ••• Em'"'''',,,,,_,,,. >ON 11 ~.· 1,•,.1·T~x 1ealplll, 1,_t-10 ........... .. ....... l .. •••t I . IM_DIH•.•At,AMCE,JUMljt ' ~.. . , ' . "';"" • • au1rlo;t'!ll •-..l1nc1 pl..,. 1ncemt . · · 1i;11J C•~ k1 Coun1y Tr&:.ilrv , '·· . 211,2n ~'~·•10 '"·Jf 1:12. Old A11e. SllrvlYOl'I. DIWUlly ·~o F -Ac!U<ll ·11cp411i1, 1Mt-7f ····-···· 1tl NET, Ez,IOING IAL.ANCE .....•....... ,,. ~l.1!i2 .,4,410 3ft, HeeUh ln~r1nc1 ................. .... •,ll• .~·~ !,6CIO ll11tr1cied IMlen<::t, Jul\1 30, 1t70 ..... 1 · · O "TOTAL llllPENDITUllBI, •T.1t1• OUtCO 1 t31 , Emptov ... lnwr•n«, Tt•eh•r• ,,. .. t7,:J.U "" 11.oot E1tl1NIK to•,realpt1 Oii 11111.eeur .. ro l, 1'10.11 "' ·;-· .. •· ;.; .AND.Nl!T &NDINl'.IALANCI, .............. _, t,J,Cl 1,Q\O,nt 1,091,@ 131. Em1>loY1U liiwlr1nce, All Q!l!1r1 .. ... t ,oltJ JJ.llGll llKlrictecl tr.1i.rw:~ pl\11 l11CMll "' ... •· .. "' ........ · ··· :U,illl ' ANNUAL l!'INANCIAL AND IUOCET lt.E.PORT-I UILIUN• f'UND , ltO. Wc.rktnaii's Com~llon li\).irtn« .• 4,Jl1 4,113 •,MO Amounl buff•! .. &Ir ex11entl1ur1 •tr.cl/er ir1n:o!1~, 1t1•Jl ....•.. ,., . .,-. __ Oct~ Vl1W S~1l Olit,jct, Ori>ftf• C_ly, C...lllffille .•. MO, 011\t<' ,.heel Chlr111s ....•.•• , .. ~· . 1,11' 1..111 ,,a,oo M1xlmum uniunt 1o ii. ~·rtd ill "le "~ll'fll'Y DI ~~rr~k.i Q=r~HT•ll 2'l,f41 l . ll!GINNlH• IALAMCI!, JULY I , , • TOTAL flXE.o CHAltGISS .... n,U1 tl,1'7 1~,UQ Jt1t:1uir1menl$ lor 1'1~11 lo be derlv1d •H l•VV on 1 ' r Ann~il lh~"'ltll C1:;h in Couotv Tr~1:.11rv ,,,,, l;;Ji l ,JJl,165 !UITOTAL AP.PLICAILE TO TEACHEll:S' •i~ Acl.'lluii ., • lnll<llllrl)Mls rn U.S. '''·~;. tic, ·~s. SALAltY LIMITATION .. ' ......... : •v,~ 1.03'.1,. 1.ut .HJ ' 1•1• s II .• TOTAL CUlJtENT ASSETS .. • ?#, L.i;1 L1111 Jit• .. m1nt !Or r 11nt Sulldlnl Fur.d l. NET. lllOG!NNING l,ALANCE' 74'1,fit •nO E'IU1Pllllnl ....... ,.......... 'J,015 Ai;pM[Ol'Un•nt •• INf.Ohll . ,. TOTAL AP,LJCAILe TO S'OUCATION J • ~ ' • n.m .0. l..9CAt. ll4COIAE: ~ ,00, .''Tl." 1,., Fo. T'A'"'.'• • • ! •11trlctld .. 1e~. July I.I "'' , .••. ,., ., ..••. ' n7t5 M S•I• \ _ Tix r..:il)ft, 1Hf•70 • ,. . • "" ".. ' • · 1.Jl0,7"!' . SALAJIV COMPUTATION . .,. , •. ,. tll,to' l.~,lff 1,IUO,..., ll:u!rkled llllt11C•• pl~ lnljl!'l'll ........................... ''-':la M,1.$111 pf I~ .......... .. 500. PUPIL TllAN$PO.llTATIClN Actwl ••IMM" lhf·lO .. :........ . .... , ... , ............. ,•1 .• ·''''d .n. Olh!!" ...... , ............... · .... . J:io. crus!fltd S•l•rill ot ! • Jtu tricflcl Nllnci , June ~ .ffi~ . .. .. ~ .... · ... , . ~ .. ... . J,Slnl ,_ . T~•I. _LC>C•I · 1n~om1 .. · • .. · • ......... . PuP!I Tr1ntNrl1lio11 11 ,24f l~,7\j U.2M Gsllm1tld t.11 rKelplf Ol'I ur.JKured rail, 1J1~'11 ... ....... .... .. 3.' C TOTAL NIT llGtNMIH• IALAMCI Jl'O. Oltl1r E•pen:;e1 of RtilrlrtM hl,ll'l(e ptu.· 1.,_com. • ................................. 5·~ • AHf· 1Nc0Me' .. : .... ,. ........... -, .. ,_ Pu1>ll T•1ni.por11t11111 . . , .. ,. •.m s.oocr Anioount b\ldglled '"' 111111/i!lilv ... ·~J•r ,,lniftr, Ul~n · 'l"'"f '' '5,. •. IXl'INDITUJllS ANO OTMI• OUTGO TOtAL .PUPll TJIANS.POltTATIOH 1),"3 11,W tQ,:lGO Mi•lmum ltnC>Unl 10 be.t11llrcd 111 lhl s11mm1ry GI Currli>I Olur!o;t ,•!' 12o0. CA~lTA\. OUTLAY ' TOTAL CURRENT EXPENSE ll1C1~lr1rn11111 '°' u 10.£:10 .bto dtrlyff lly 19V'( OR 1h• 'ifUrt,d ... u ••. '°'~17 1"2 .. llllldtn,li .: ............... .. '100 >il c o -,1,.,,-•1111aACi.-\IHJJ Tani C1111t1r Outley • ' ' o~ EDU ATJ N .... '31,412 1 .o~.1n l,!4f,Ul AMNUIL .-1111• CIAL AMO 1un... c..#/i'"' itll'lll' " 1300. 0!11' SSJIVICE Ex1>1ndllur11 Included If! lilt AllOv• Acc~un!• " , OCH• View Sdlell Oillrict, at'Mll 1 F:• c.llllM., Ctl~Rlfl 3 13'1t, ll•P'vmtnt 11 51111 f>!.'fll.ll lvl!di119 "' "' 1.IU ,,..,, m 1,1t.1 l( J ~ l( l.ISt tr1<n Furicls G11nltd ul!Otr ESE A, P.L. ''·1• g~·., IHf-Jf Fund Al4 by Wln'inl to Ill• Sf1!1 Thie I :l,lllJ 1f6Mli Atlut;I WHll 191t-h T"i.urw O\lt If .P•K91dt !r•m tOll, 1'000 SERVICES .kl!,111 Pllli'W~ta .... , •$•le ol llond• .... ' f20. Cleuilled S1li1ri1~ 11 Fooll Ser. '·WI l.5'.?G Sl•ff 1..po~ OUTGOING TltA'NSFER$ f9t. Other f•p1n115 '1.10 A, •••INMIH• IALANCI, JUL'I'· 1. • t«o, Tret1S!ers · TOTAL FOOD SE'll:V1CES 2,St.O ~,ClO Cti.11 fn C-ty. T'NwtY . ......... •••. tt•.n'i J,001,fft · 1411. Jr.ler!un( Trit>slt rl 1100, COMMUNITV SERVICES ll:M/Ylnt C..M! Fuhd .. \ ............. ~ .. •·••·• 2.~ 4,oaa ~ l·Tot4r o u:1oln11 t"nsf1ri .•• ' 1110, C•rrllk•IMI Si1l1ries cl •• llN•lmtnt. In lU .• 91f!d• .................... iOO,r.GO 'l'OTAl. aXPIEN~JTUltES AMO (.Qmmun!IY servkt• 1,•4f •4S ~unll Aealvilli. ,, ......... -. . U3.t4t IJ.HS ~l\ .. lt .,outo• .... ~ ..... . 1120. cbu Uled Sel1rl11 of Pr•P'kl E'•PlllU .... ................ 15~ 2t.31<1 I . •N.IN• NU.MCI!, JU.Ml» Ca.mmunl!Y Strvlc•• • .S,,v? ... ~~~ ~.iu Ofilll' CllHtnt Au ll&· ..... ' lS,()OO ~h to .\:Oyt1fl{ TrlliU~ .... '' 11'°· ~~\!~~EKt~=u~,i~m~~~1~c~~ ::~~ '·tt' s.1•2 ..-~rt.;r~rRL't\~~-~s~l~e,, .. 1n~·m. 1·m1:; 1 ·~::~ ~1f"3:'6'11~1i· ~!i.A'wcE'' .:~~· ...... . ,,,30,loOO 11,ltl 11 ,1M 11s.• 175.tet 6lt ... ,. 105,tCll 7"4,"2 .. , .• .. 4tt,!1Jt '· 1,23of,0pot ll!X. CAl"tTAL ' OUTLAY " ' NET< IE~INNING IAL.t.1'1CE' :: •• : .. , · · 1Sf,l'2 ~~ X Xx X '·TOTAL tXl"a•elTUllll, OTIU!Jt OUTGO na. lml>l'DVtmtnl er Sites A~',ysll'f!tl'll• IC> Aeriullfs RK•l~ellle · •r1S,1'l +2l.65' 11 _,, X AND' MllT INDINll 1,lri\.ANC• ........ ,,.. 1,f5n,60CI 1 ,iJ~,G,2 (N>n·restrlctedl • ,1,\ I,. J.oot All wtriienls IC> Cvl'r111t Lllblll!lts ..... · -lf,.Stl Jlt,S03 '"'$ ·, . AMNyAL 'INAHCIAL AND IUOGllT JtaPOll:T'-nU. l uUO!n111 Cr.on·ruldctedl 11,,'7 73,114 M.ok A~JUSllO NE!T' aE.Gi,_NING IAU.NCE · ... 112·~ ,, , ', ST ... Ta SCHOOL IUILOINll l'UNO 110.001 nn. Other E•lllPm•nl . ... • U.Ul t4,.,, u,oct •• I (DMt . . .; FROM ~, --~t"I 114,W ~ .. , Dbtrkl, o,.,,.. c-ry-. Cilllffmll TOTAL CA,t1"AL .OUTL.AY Ill.NI ••,Ho '''°°° 10. FEbfll:AL INCOME RECEIVE A. •HJMMIR·DAUNCI!, JULY T O'o,~·.', .".','o'oNOITUAES .•.. ,.:. 1'°54,tU 1,Ftl.#9 1(l2S,31t ~l~~~~ti!n.~~~~;~sOPNlli!HI .......... 126,10, 4l,6U .fl,~(IQ '"h Ill (Cllrnt)"•TrM•UIY .•••.. 2u .. m " Oe•'L l"COM& •ECSIVEP ln11ulmetll•.ln•U:S. '"°""I' etc. ll0,000 1400. OUtGOING TllANSl'fRS TOTAL Fe " " lU,101 .QJIJ 43500 I. NEt IEOIHNING· SALA.NCI!: ..... 11J.l52 •f,lS2 ~1 .000 ..... 10,,35~ 10J,JS2 PAOM Fl!oeui. SDUllCES ... ., .. ' ' 1011. Tuition 20. FeOltllAL INCOM! ll~CEIV&O f'llOM A~JUSTl!:O NST IEOINNING IAl.ANCE 1,39, Ollltr TUlllon I.th 1,lj2 1,oot STATE SOUll:CES · I . IN(eMI TOTAL OUTGOING 2\..ttatlMl,lil. Otftn'9. EdllCltltn Act . J,'65 l,~,I 2s,ooo 'f, STATI! INCOME TRANSFERS J,011 1.~ '1,a.G 3' l!l•!r,'!'IUY Ind ll«lld•rv Educ.1!\1>n Act «.7;6 V,0$2 ~.m U A11portlonm1nt for SC!lool F•elllliK 5UITOTAL-............ XllllX 111111,x J,,5',ut 'Tl)TA.L!-,-llPCllAL lNCC>l.\il llt&Clil\IEO 't1Ul llll,lH 'folll Slit• Ince.me · UNDISTl!;llU,10 1\111.ll\ll .............. 11~ii11 1111'11 II n.l.3U FJI~· ITATli SOUACES • ,......... ~,211 • u. COCA\. INCOMI!: TOtAL EXPENDITURES ,&.ND '° STATI INCOME 16 'Tht;rvt •• ~r,.~~=.o~:~N''· JUNe .... ·•···•••••·•·• 1,0S..oQ.f l,1'2,41 IMt.742 . ''·ti~~~":=::::."'"" 1111 '!:rlil.i~\~f:;::.~~~~::::·· S '- •• I 5~ 2H1P• 3,"4,.UO :t.46',1to l ,._, -e•o l . Call! In COllntv Tfe1w'~ ............ 2'4.nO 23'.011 llPf' ~•!Idle ...... .,...... 'in:UO 110,ao.o 3'l4,l+I fl. NC """ A"G>r 3. ll:fYGlwlno C•Jll Fl.>l\d 500 • , 504 '1.2 Edt.IClf~~t;,J· lclppff """ ' le1" 29,~ 25,"0 f!i', ~(Ind 1'r~nd1" • .' ..... 1.~ccounJ• R1e1lv1bl1 ~:~ \~~ ::::~:::.~ itti1ir4t11"~:;::: :.:.: .. '.'.:. = 1~;~~ 1:,: ',t.'·~~~ce:,fr~~~!~io~v . !1~:'~L ~~·~i'vr:·J'uNI •• nn 41.t ~{f;•lly"'Hinlllclpf«I ' 'td I •• •• ,1.24 1:t.t'i 11,IGO T&'rAL fMCOM• fEllj:LUllVI .,. lier 1,n.ni • x x ¥,11 , x • 11 10.~o ::·i T "" 11~11i~~~~1c~:::' r uiii1!,' " tt.tS_h 2~ru 25,w t•••MM~~· 1"-~:c:'J.. ·a·a·AiiCi! · · ~ TLOTAL CU•li•'NT As1'i1Ts ' 2'JA1' ,2.11,., 10,100 1~.'!iPto: 1'\t~~A,..crllorun1r11 >l.l•' 4i,in nooo C.1,.0lA\i' .... ,~~ ..... ~ .... : .. :.~ ........ ~Na 111 current Ll..tilllll 1 . 11,to u.~ o .t ~)1c.'f.•M:• tor Tr•n~p0r11thtn . • .. .,, ' D, ali:l'it.i•ITU••s AMD •TMEJt eutoo t.OOCI fr!IO'Al!NDINI Sll.AMCI . " .... l1S,,14 2lU$t 10.$00 4J, 'liPIC 11 Alie•-'•· IT 11' 1 ~ \,121 J,14f, .,l•I~ too. 'FIXEO 'CHARGES ,., t T L (K,IMOITUP:••· OTMlll: OUTCO ~,.:~.f:!c "~:r.:t~.!°:.!~~!~'""'' • v. n r.i1:·1"ub'Hc em~~'fl!ll Jt ellremenl 1... • ... ,. UIONOO>l•N•O"o'a"!~NOtlr.IS•JtVt, PL\IS , · • a•o O••Oo••• lnvel!IO"' ...... ..$11 ll )I•• ll 12;2, ()lct 'AQe, S!KvlllOrs, Oillllllijly "" ................ 1,:QIAall 1~5.l.Jt 1.$00.2,4.1 " -.... lilt ·• tu'iilll 11 x •''If 1nd H•1l1Jt .ln5Yt1nc1 . ANNUAL l'INAMCIAL AMO IUOOET JllJIO•T ,J,I p,11 ... rly llt •· l s.50 410 1.aO '32. &mf,le\'tti ltl•Ul'ince , ..• , IOMO UjTl!•ES1" AND lll!DIMPTION ,UNO • 6t. Olh•r ................... ............. . J:i21t iii~~· 4,lot,1144 tc. W.(km1n's co._,,P111511ion lnswtn::• SIAL llACM ILIM ICMOOL OISTllCT, DlAMGI C•UNT"Y, 1:4L1f'OAMIA 'TOTAL STATE INCOME ............ : .. ,_S, ' Tetil Fl11ff 'C"-""'h U •• T'.. • .. "/ • 10. COUN·TY INCOME! ' .'"I''• ..,,. 11•·"' tll,Nt 1,7't,11' 1,1,,,17, 1,/fJ.hl -111 "' 0 IN I 010 INDlilTIDM•s• n . E•11•tlnll0R Alt! Of!UI Tiii 15,?121, •S,f7S 1U,7a 1200, CA,iTAL OUTLAV • 0,-DISTll:ICf, •t ............................ ,I0,000 ~ 71. ",\UiallontFOils F~" .' ::.~;·: , Jl" , 11.9tt 1.2,t;al 1232. $ii•, .. .,,,........... .. Sl5,t7' i UITOTAL ................. , .............. ,... t•• ~.000 TOTAL COUNT'( INCCW.e· ''·'" lr.&.141 12,,1.. 12a..1mp-mlo\t If SlhlJ ..... """" lS.ffO Mlnu1 •-.int., bends ftdl"'1td ·-"'.\"" .... 411.oot iO.ooll ·~· LOcAL INCOMI!! , US2, ulld!n11t ,.1 ........................... l , .. ,,tJO f,7lS,"'~ 1,'15,6" '<I.Ill " .. ,," 115,t;I "' ,,~. 1• • '\,:ltJ :.1~ 111,15' 2,109,217 ,,,,., '"'* ''""' ....... ' ~·~" l,2fi.w ,. .)f, Uff ' OUTSTANOING IONOEO lt'tlli!•lUDNl!!:SS .. 20t,t0li' 14',tOI II. ~lrict 'folxu 1211. •eon ~ ............ ,, ......... .. ANNUAL ,-IMAMCIAL ANO IUDtlT l•l'ellT A, ll•IMHl)ila IAU:Htl, JULY 1 1..J• f1o1 •lll 1.3ff~ X ll,X i 1272 oft\ ~ l!Nnlln1 '"""' ........ ''"-' YMr ... !nlll•• July I, ltN '""' •Mfll• ,~ .... uni C1sh 111 Counly Tr••MY Ill.VJ 4;!.13', ~:r·=·~!~~. ~~~~ ., . .,..q1 JTOh;, Ci~"-.. ~~utlliy :.::'.:::·::""" ~' 110.so. 2,3.,,an lll!AL llACM ,ICMOOL DlltllCT, o•AN•I COUNTY, CALIPDJINIA TOTAL CUltlllENT ASSIETil .... '. ••. • .. . .... . . • M.413 '° 13' ID N l•n"' ludgll •. '.. . .. .... .. • II II • • • II • x ),110.S" '*· OVTOOllolG T9ANSF&lt $ '· N•TICI OP AOO"IOM AMO TJtANSMlnAL • NET liGINNING &AL.t.NCl":::::·"·":" 41,n • ~ 0:1,. t1.IUna9cU•ICI" Roll ,,,,,............... sc,V4 ' .. ,.:!!! ~~ ... • ' 14#. ••latictt .. 01:"1d lly reaSC>n Ml eetloll 111111 Ill tlkln Ill tllll ,..,, 41,;111 r•ul1r Ill IUIP!orn.ICI IHCltl 1, l"COMI ..-...... •. l\.i ~rlC>r YMt'• T1111f • .,.,............ »,t:it -...., ' , I( l'.lfnilo~l•llon ,.,..i1n11 flf "" ~nine ~,.. '°· STA'li INCOME n .f.NIWlff 'Tn• • M 'fOJAL '-mr••T\l••• M• "•·""•••"',,~,•,,,su"t""',,'u'-,, ',",,.',",'",.",' ••o '"'''' ,.,.,,, ,,,, ·-·• •» :i''.'1 ,.",',~••'"",,.~1.~ ·' aa.1 securld' 1o11 ...................... 1.s11.1t1 ''~'.ii~ 1,~~;m •TM~• , o .. .'........... .. ....... 1,11.,»3 " " " " '"""' ,.., •w" ~, ll ll lt ~·t, ,u,!'l...""""'v~·_ll\!.0,·::_" " ...... · ... '9,0:t ...... 0. ,•,•,,,01!!_* ;!,~.L!HT<,•..,• JUNI •. • ... · ..•.....• • .. •··. M,·,,,l I• hlret>J llled by 1111 9owtnln1 llollr" of fflt 1ehao1 Olilrltl. .J l"rOll•rlY JttUlf .................. ' t p •=:,It -. '"" ...,,~ ,, ... '"'"' ,4,11)1; ,,.,"I .. ,...,,,, uty ,, 0.lt of m11tlnt1 J11,,_ t, 1'111 5i1nM M•rll M. Drtilltr $1Cl'.t1rv Tol•I St iii Income 60lo ii 14. S•lts O hi~, In \r.S, llOl:d,, tic. , 2.371,llS 111,451 640,CCI .., .... "· PUILICATION ANNUAL FINANCIAL A.NO SUDG!T REl"OJtT. lllt HY••n' IO. LOCAL INCOME • xx ,M;l.'-1• "s.equipl'Rll)f ·~ Sl.lllf'fiet 2~ Nl!T e1'!01N~ IALANC&. ........ Int blllrO, t11wln1 m1ot In July U, ""' MIC~ reYl5ltlli, 1!UltlC>n1, •l!d 11. Oblrlct T•~es '' ! ., .... O·O~tMr ,, L(U .......... j ....... ,-. TOTtL ll>C,IMOltU'ES APIO N&T ' • d>lnt• II ft°"""' "fUSW''" Hlldln1 PUbllc111on. llUbllc llffrfnl 111'11 lln•I ' 11.1 O(~trtct Taiiu. 5-···· ...... "' •n • NSl5. l'ltCIP I .... io• •••• , ••• ,. ' doitl\On IHI et. ti Ow I '""" "Mil ~il~MIU5 Fund•"' ..... .,....... 1, --• liM M • " -...... ,1'2,110 3,111,ill 1,)1,,fD 'r -& ' r y r urns I rt~r llloll, rtctlwo ,. . ., . ·~ a M.J 11 x 11<• ti, lnltrOUt ..... :.......... 75,~1 7'.t::t ts.oM Putillslie4 O~ngt Co11! D;i'y Pilal, July :11. 1f10 l'llLT6 "" ... 111~ ~rl1111 "" Ill I rtl'G•I Wiii bl! ht!d 11 J. H. McGeu111 lnltrMldf•I• 11.I Olllrkt T•••i· SIC\lrt4 ltall, .... l~ 5601-'-"-~--'-"'~"· -c'c. ;--------::::c:c-:-:-=:=C'"--"~I.;.:. k'-1 on AU8WJI 4, lf10 •1 11:111 O'CIGClc P.M. requtrotl lo bl.lift(. •~0~1t •• y 1{ ll lC lC 'If •l,1!1 "· ~~tiL .,i:.oc;.:i.:··;~eOMe ·::::::::::::. t.TD~I 4.lwt,S i.2N.1f1 ' LEGAL NOTICE LEXlAL NOTICE .. - ...... , ••• , • 1.T.''T ' •-"do 0 "'c"", ","'i ~ ..... Orualet Se<:-1ill'N 11.2 U11~•urtd ll:oll , l,Jil 1,tlJ 2~1 tO. INCOlo\IHG tRAHSFl!RS s ''" l---~=,.-,cc'='''7o• ' ,_ ' "' " · ' •• 1 · nc,~ •ti l";Jor Vffrt' T'•• !,tO '" • !1 I tl~ 01Mr tUll!Q.11 • · • .... •• ·' · • · • , "'.. •to .,·,.-• MllTICI ·1111v1T1Mf 11os ClllTtFICATl Ol'i '"'''''"1,..-.AV•JtAG• OAIL'I' AnlENDAHCI llU-lf IH .. 111 ,,,..1, .. ''""'' . ' ' '·''' o,•tt 1 •M -~·L 1"""''.\r, ,,,,,,.... .. • A hll.I Act 1 1114 1 ¥"' ...,.,. '" , • ......., .:.. '" "" Thi (11,1nlY $1nit.ll~11 Oi"rlds ''I FICTITIOUS tlAMI • .,1 ( .. 11 l'elil [GU! llldlmt .. . ....... ., Jr,4N ::11 . ..-t.< .S.Ul ' fOtAL'I IMB U!XC:L 11\/" OF. • '.o .,. The undtr>'oo d d ......... -1 Killtllt'ltfll'ltn iu 12' t•••L '"'°"' '''''"''"' 0, "l!"!f • lllOINNIM• '"'"Cll • Jll till 1,1:11,111 t.tn,-o--• c• . .,,· will r..:.iv• 1t.11!..i llil05 . ' ! o a., • .,~ ""'~~ Gr.-• l·J ............... :1)11 "°•• u•ulHl"8 ... Al.AN(l'SI .. s1,415 + .IJ ~NI c. tbTAat; itlT 1ii1NNtt1•.iAU~c. ,·, ... ·.,, ·,,2u-.:._'.' ltm,)M u~~~·w \l:;;' •. in •• MIMI,, AUt \14t IC. ~=!1~n·v·.1~,1~w~~e" ::.~~ Or•• ... . .. ............. ,,..... l.lU 167 2tl c. rotALall•T •••IMNIMI .• ALANCI ....... ~.,. ·'--•• ~~ .• ir:::u· ........ ,.iiili't!ITM'""". ' "I-:' • ; l'7t. 11 ~1dl<tlm1 tl!IY W{ll t• •utl!cJy fkt!tM tlrm lllml lf'vi t1af'"l"-ii ::T-.1t ~~mtr S1111l:·::·::· .. :::::·:::'." • ~: Q. ~~~.',.:.s··,.··········· ····,··"l '"'.'! tt.m n.ut 1;"~ CUll;l\21't! ·~l"CNSE' t • • ............ 4• .. lnl"ICI .1 lflt 1fflC1 ::0 .... 1111,,,' MH•,• .... •rrmu!! Clt'llllOIM .,,.,,. .... » ' '''' , ,.. . ljl ""' .... ~ ••• ,... " .. ·-,M.. ,,,.. • , ' ........ flamts 1">'1\;I -........................... '""" ,1u • '.. uoo. OEIT SlPIVl(E -1::: ~ .. , ... _.:\:\::"ii:., ... )'u .... ,,, .. "" l lf' .... ~ . ... vtm.11, Incl •l•Cll .. raidtncii •I'll .. "'li.1"1 T"'i1 ""'°"' lht# lllrtlfd•· "' wmlNN tom\, tn ectull ll111rw:l11 treriuct!MI •!If ua. """ ""'-''"' , •. •.•... ....• • ·,·: ~·..., !"'!._. -..W7 '•" '" ~ hunflFI• v111n c11tftrn• • tor th• •0•11• ,. '" 11., • .&t.11Ct$ .. ,_ lllstrkt ,_. t111 ~tc .. lllO •lltl aitr111t llk•I "'"•!Hf thl ltt\cl411Y 1>w 1 mt 1 "' "" 411•"°' ""' 111,.. •'"•~~ "'r.:JSlil•£.*.!,111 '••••"-',·.·. l~l$1 1 Alt ' rt:6if follllWI,.: ' ' -Fwnr.r11 Vi 1•-. "' , T mt'1~ .,__ ...... ..,.,_r~IM ''l' .. r. '0 ~lttl$1 .......... ,........... '·* S,MI; .. --it.Ill ..... »S,-11;1 .. . ·~fCT -c:.•:.·~':l~T~ .::=.'::.M=~ POft '""'"' i::i .. o:r,s:~v:.~u•·is···N• ............ 41,IOO O(M '5,600. ... INSl~OJA~oN.~!~11'!'. ~IOH, ''i ''""" .,.,,. IU,,fO ~~1.1!...!i"~ ~~SM,. T•UcK gVf:"r11'.c. YM1r, 'Ot CIMtit, ·~~ • "-' Th ,.. OTN•I!; OUTGO ...... .................. .... ft,• ~~' flO..ttnlflulttf'Si~~t ltlntlMlllii '. ,_. '0NIUl ~TONCL0$!011ANTY,e G'.~~r-~o:,, .. tf T•Xll aeft •• ,. a, IMOIMe •AU.MCI, JllNt a :i1):-,-r111ct~I( hi.'i. ,............. "911» ~ • -·•l!; TltU(J(-fliilf;lllOltlla Miio A~ Wllltf ( -YM,r • • • _..... Ul!llt ~ ~i~ ~N'o°:'~~ :~~~7e":·." ............ ·.·.· .. ·· .. ·.·.·.··. YJ-47i ~.·.• o.ao ·~t~X::;·~~ •• ~~~ .. ::'.::::::::: ·~1• t•=· ""'"" 'l'tlltElf tJl'l'r'.ft:N ltlCltl/I"' TllUCl(I Sllltt °' c111twn1a. Of'l11t1•·C.Un1Y· ~ •..m ., It ._.. 1 I a.M~ ! , ~ 5"c'.lflt.'f!M Mt. A4C1 On Jul'I' ao, lt10. lttfl~ hi 'u. 7!fAOt ,-, TOTAi. ••ir'•MaltU•lf, OTMta OllT~O "" , c.tf!ICIJ;:I s.i,r • , T\'10 ff) ll·TON CAI & CHASSIS P~llc I~ t njl for Mid f.ltit" !_'!!_"'I! ,wAr:.,."'~•n:0i!~, ~t.:NP~~: J~r,;·~1; .,n n .in """· 1:;;.0: ,.... aauf...lna1."::I: M"iiili;i;e;iO~":::: ~ • ~.fil ~ -~r~'1:l\i:N~~. " CHA1a11 l~'"r:tr G::::.,,"· t&vw:; ~M.,W:.w .. a»:~' .............................. IU'Jt 11,1'1 J;!!! -U4clfiQlltfl NG. A'°'8 -~' ~ Nim • ~ ~. OlliW' l otb ... ,. .. , ...... ,,.......... U • l4A41 •• ~!" .. ·"' a111t l'IYit Ii, aubmthiW 111 ~· fMm to ttie wl~ln lrl•INm~ :1,!~ .. ~ Qlhw I!~• of instruction ...... 1'•.17' tu.Qt · -....,,,n .. .., rtie Dlrtrlctt 111 '""l'lhiM• td ffllor •ll90.illd tilt ......_ , • TOTAL INITPllJCT I~ • · · ·• .,, · · t.tll,..U '~ 7.nt.el~ wit~ •II •r.vlslorl1 el fllt 'flCllf~llO:it. IOl'FICIAL &EAL) Mini,. "• 400. N.EALlM-.$EltVlC<ES ~lloN. Md 'lll~llk.• 'illl'll M11!et JCAH L JOI St "•· Ctri1tlc"ell £1•r1a •I ll!flf'fl\4110!\ Ill•~ lit .W•lllld ei tf,t NlletV Fu111Fc CttW • W4.1111 '''"""~" •••••• ' . ' .••..• 34.211 U.l)a . 4,~I ·~ '•OllM .. fe ltflll•nt t6'.:•11 ., Ptlrli!Mt OI~ Ill 11'1111 • v ~ 611\fr &11...,.ies "9f Hultn S1rvkl "" ,.Ii~",· 1.b, 7Jlll ~tlf, • Or•llf• '(.auniv 'TOTAL Ml 1'1. lH &(ltV\(f'S • . , · · ,.., 31,.tlf .sa,t1t Ju WI V!'it ir!V .. lt r M~ c.m.-ritl • E> ~. 01"15~4 lo>H Of' 'l.&MT • , , , Olr"9flr 11 l'INlllC• , Nl'dl ;, nliilH! l'lru ~. C!I HIM $tltr1* ,l~r-,Optr•t"fl .. ., ·fil~I ',~ltJ •».t1• ~~ Oftftff CMll OlllV ~Uol, PUllllPltd °""-• ew u D II ..... "'· ~ .. w 'Ofltr•tflll ........ ,._ JQt,ui .141,100 Ju• 11. IUI I...,. Ju.., 11 l llf A\llutt ,, 14,1:\, "~ v 141,411 • LEGAL NOTICE ........................ .---... _ .. ' --· ··-·~·-•<O•>''"'l~·•-M• .. ,,,,.,,,_, '" , .......... _ .. _____ , ,, .1 . ____ ......___ ·-·--.___, ___ ._ __ ---- ' .. ' '· ., ·, •• ltt.. \ I l J ,, ' ' I ·1 • " " ' " ·- .., .. ~.· ' " " ' ' , 1 ".:C,> " , 5 36 1 ;:i;: ~: " .· '· I 1 • -.. ·-·-·~--~---------~- DAILY PILOT Friday, July 31, 1970 -DICK 111ACY • • :,•, . .. ' . . ~''TUMBLEWEEDS \ I' ' I 1 1 ~ ·~ J:. r '! 1! 't "). 1 11\ 'I •I 11: '• J, ..,. Mun AND JEFF ' ' 'I :;:; PLAIN :JANE ~1!. . " . .. \ "· ~ . '. · .. . " . ... . ,. ,~I· ·' ' • • ., ' . _.,[DAILYCROSSWORD • : • by ; A. POWER I ' ' ACR OSS 43Woodtd VtSt~rday's; P"zzlt So1vtd : area 1 II ino(sota 45 Landscaptr's .::.1 • . . ntctssity ..... S Kind of 47 Otf!ecls I pictme· 48 Abode 10 Wtilh 49 Oeslined 1!1 "' --50 Engl ish ~Golfer's royil houst nl!;~na'"' 5} Obscure- 16 Romaa poet . 54,Cmrt.cl 11 Pttl Sil Trilt -&'!'Andu or li l Hi nt ·• , .. rbut" f.2 Shade t+l111nuf1c· Ii] Provl!fb lwer . 614 Fish l/Jl/JV Z ,TJny . 65 Amtr lc• 11 Greedy JS On be~'au . ll.aurdtfttd lod lans 14 Mort 61i Dl shtlt out 12. Yield of , , .. ctrti{Tt ~f Hardtns 13 British 39 Gas stat ion •!'-Small staltsma n .mrrcha11t rs e ' quantity DOWN 19 Average 40 Prophes ts 11Wtalhtr 42 Be•utiful Ll'L ABNa .. . . . .. BY .T-. K. Ryan. .•• s~i;a.y ~NANAS ,I··· . . ~--~' ... 'l I I ' I' ~ 'i I' j, "' P.E:RK'.INS 1'1'f. Tl•• .. .. ...... -.,...,,. -llf! Jn-..... IJl"fllk"'"·'·4..u> • . • .. ,, ,. . : . . .~ ... . • • • -MISS PEACH " . By' ~I S111lth " I .... . . '' v..; • ..i ,, GORDO ' WNV JJON'r \ttl nN OROWLIN1 AT J/IMY 71/AT MIGJ/T ..---.. .scAlt.1' HIM OfCF YOU!< r ffl!/r ~FtXlS. • . ' ANIMAL . CRAC:l(US . . wew1~~, I· Pee5ellt"f()I: Me. . . . . . .. . • • • • .. ": . l 'M ARTHUR. • • .. ·: • • • • • • . • • .. .. .' ... . . . By Mell %'Cl 9" AAPP)" ' ~~srro &JJ Rl!CO•Nl&I!~ Pu:roo. l 27 HaYing e1tension l Do condllion Y°'l"!I -· . i!I S"plCt '"'Black 1111rt agr icultLtra l wort lt·Sptclal 2 Other: natunl Latin ~· 11bl1ily, J Mili tarY ' 5 Kind of machine t enalty 4 Avoid a "3' S hl1norist decision 1 "Spinning 5 Strateglc lite.•-;'' Air .l/'i words Com11111nd: ;A111tt1can Abbr. 11t'ontitlSMan , 6 Tool Prnldt:nc y: l 'Splrltua l ~: .. Mlb"r;· 8 Group of •l -dt0f'O footbillltrs 4Z Con&rovtr-9 Actor 11,~Jal Canada- s\aoe play 10 Turn ' ' ' • 1 ., . ... . -. 21 Wrt ck 11W oman 25 Chttse, 44 Finished , • af tinie: 4b Gar"l:t Q\ 2 words ,47,lnilllt .. Zfi ll:ln~ of • 49 "And that's f:.rformance ---·!'·' tl I 50 Show 111oving busiots~ 21 Recreation garment area 51 Bas f 29 Knock for amovnl 2 words 52 "Agrredl" 53 Trick I JO Noise · 55 Adhts lv t J l Less 5e Stt~ c:o11111on 51 Social 32 That is: "affa irs 2 wotd s 59-Rove , . : .,. JJ Audit ion s 6~ Cond 11tttd " \ ' ' ,_t{ .. /l\ •••• , STEVE ROP.ER .. ~I_,• 11',>11HJNl(1U. IC i\'. 6'EAT I 1JllPHET . I a 0 I " ' ~ . ' 1,~ ''I ly Saunilen and 0•-'tal'd By Charles M. Schill ,............;.....___...._ __ ,. , By Gn Arriola / ly'OIJll.~ft ·1 ' ... 1 • M ltlAHll woao ' .. Ma.MUM· ' . ' . ·" DENNIS THE MINACE - l ..... DAILV PILOT Underdog All-Stars Tal{e Shot at Kansas City . . CHICAGO (AP) -The 37th. AU.star rootbl.ll game, alwnly overshadowed by pro football's bitter labor impasse, will ~ the world champion Kansa s City OUefs as 12-polnt favorites against the creern ol the 1969 collegiate senior crop at Soldier Field tonight. An announced strike by the National Football Players Association Thursday In rebuttal to a take-it-or-leave-It move by club owners in a pension scrap cast 11 pall on the charity classic, The owners Wednesday opent'CI their camps to any veterans wlllin& lo report. all.er breaking olf contract talks Tues- day. The Chiefs who won all the pro , marbles last Jan. 11 by crushing the Minnesota Vikings, 23-7, in the Super Bowl, have hod only · five full practice days due to the labor dispute which near'.91 resulted in cancelation of the All.Star game. But the addsmakers figure that even with a minimum of preparation, the Chiefs are capable of handing the ex-col· leglans -most of them headed for pro careers -a seventh straight beating On TV Tonight 6 O'clo.rk, Cha1u1el 7 in a series now standing 25-9-2 in fa vor of the pros. Coach Otto Graham, whose A11·Stars recorded the last two collegiate victories in the past 14 years -over the Green Bay Packers in 1963 11nd the Detroit Lions in 1958 -also bas been harassed by the NFL dispute. Although practicing at Northwestern University since July 10, lhe All.Stars held a one-day mini-strike in sympathy •with the NFL veterans on July 16, and raned to get in a customary game-type scrimmage pl~ed with either the SI. Louis Cardina ls or Chicago Bears. Graham will start Dennis Shaw of San Diego State at quarterback, hoping the nation's collegiate total offense leader or 1969, or Purdue's Mike Phipps can fire the All.Stan as Grq-Cook of Cin· cinnati dkl last year again.st the New York Jets. Cook sparked the collegians to a 17· point third quarter and the Joe Namath- led Jeta were fortunate to eke out 1 2&-24 victory after leading 13-0 against the bewildered All-Stars at halftime. The AU-Star dfense hinges around Shaw or Phipps hitting such good rect.iven as Ken Burrough of Texas Southern; Ron Shanklin of NorUi Texas State, and Jerry Hendren of Idaho, and the running Is Johnson Hurting Angels? Teammates Are Wondering Alex Johnson ha~ a shot at the American League batting title but some of his California Angel teammates are beginning to wonder out loud whether he is hurting their pennant chances. The 23-year-old left.fielder, hitting al a .323 clip, came to the Angels in a trade from Cincinnati where he hit over .400 for two seasons. Now, however, Angel manager Lefly Phillips i'!l pleading with the owner!! of the learn for more pitching he'lp a!l California opens a weekend series tonight against the heavy-hiUing Boston Red Sox in Anaheim Stadiwn. Tom Murphy, 11..fi, is scheduled to pitch for the Angel~ against Boston's Sonny Siebert, IG-5. While Phillips hasn't been given a new pitcher. his pitching starr got thr next best lhing Thursday -a day off as the Angels were idle and gained a hair-game on the Minnesota Twins who were defeated. In year!! past, Johnson had been ac· cused of failing to hustle at tim es, both in the field BOO after hitting the ball. The same accusations are made today. While the Angels, losing five of their last six games, fail to gain ground on first-place Minnesota , there have been locker room murmurs of discontent about the man who sits alone in hi.s corner, rnoslly a sullen figu re. Angel Manager Lefty Phillips. who fined Johnson Monday fqr lack of hustle and lecture(! him on Wednesday, also t-omes to his defense : ''We have a case of people in glass hOVses throwing stones." "Naturally," sakl Phillips, "f don 't f•ondone everything that Alex does on the field. When he fails lo take the extra base. when he fails to slide into s1·cond base in an attempt to break up lhe double play, he hears from me. .. However. I have to say that Alex is becoming a whipping boy for a certain elemcn~ in the clubhouse. We have made a lot of cha nges in a year, but there are stllt a few non-professionals and now, when we're not going that well, Alex is the easy way out for them." Angel shortstop Jim Fregosi, enjoying a fine season at the plate, says he's getting better pitches to hit because LITTLE MAN'S ADVANTAGE -Diminutive Fred Palek ,,f Pil.ls-" I f b h b H'iay eaps or the ball (top photo) \1•hilc i>atc k scoo ts by and runs u~ runs .Y Cincinnati's Lee May during Th 1~s_:!a_.v_ni g __ h_l_a_c_l_i_m_1_. __ u_n_d_c_r_lh_e atte1npted ta,i.:. C'i11cinna ti 1vcnt on to an 8-4 victory. Laver Ro111ps Past Hol111berg LOUISVILLI::. Ky. 1APJ -The lop 'four seeds in the W .000 LouL'>viUe tennis classic, including Australian J oh n !Newcombe and Corona del Mar's Rod ,Laver, entered the quarterfinals today. " fter breezlng through their opening rounds with easy victories. i Two-lime Wimbledon cha1npion and No. l seed Newcombe removed South Africa's . Ray Pttoore Thursday ""hile second-seeded Lnver, who is ranked No. I in the .,world, dropped Ron llohnberg of .}llghland Falls, N.Y. from the flrsl an- 11ual event. • Third-seeded Ken Hosew all and No. If seed Tony Roche, two 1nore Aussies, 'had easy victories on the opening day lot the tourney Wednesd1 y. : llowever, none o( the favorites 'A'lll !be. pltteill against each other, assuming : tbe)' cooUnue their domination of the :event, until the semilln&ls and finals :this weekend. : Today's matches include Roche against ; Spain's Alittrea Gimeno, Rosewall vs. •Newport Beach's Roy Em@rson, Laver •vs. Dennit Ralston, Bakersfield , and :Newcombe vs. CUrf Drysdale of South ~Africa. ~ F'lrst.-round dOubltl matches, postponed !cOnce becau.te of faulty airline conneetion.'l end a second tJm& Thursday due to tr1 in1 al.to were on tap today. ·~ -.. Book Co11tro-versy Defended Author Beard Holcls W e.~tc li,ester Open Leud HARRI SON. N.Y. tAP) -If Frank Beard 1s getting n freeze fro1n his fellow pros because of his controversial. reveali~ book on tht golf tour, he's not letting it affect his sleep -or his game. "No. J'1n not sorry I wrote it." the bespectacled, 31-yeJr-old author said to· day. "I think ntuch of the book was misconstrued and some taken out or con- text. "I don '! t-onsider it a kiss-and·tell lype of book that invades the privacy of anybody, It's an honest report on the tour. I said we'rr not one big happy family -that we have our own habits nnd separate intercsls and it's all lnlc. "If there's a vlllain in the book, it's nie." Beard, defending champion In the $'l50,000 Westchester Classic here this weekend, is off to a good start with an opening round 68, just a stroke ofr tht: pace set by Australl;in Bn1ce Crampton , Larry Hinson, Tommy Jacobs. llugh Royer and Brian Barnes, all lied at 67. His literary efforts and the reaction haven't noticeably upset the 1nild. business-like <taftsn1an fro1n Lou1!ivllle ··rve ·woi1 $82,468 thh11 year and I'm 12th in the money Hst:· Beard said. "I can'! complai n too rnuch about lhal " Beard was Ute tour's leadlng money winner in 1969 with more th~n 5175,000. Beard's book, ('nlit led ··Pro -r·rank Beard on the Golf Tour." written 1n collaboration with Dick Schaap, has sl1r- red up some ripples in the tour ranks just as Jim Bouton's book on after-hours high jinx rocked baseball. Son1e critics ftlt Beard told loo n1uch and cast unnet~ssary aspersions on some of golf's heroes, particularly Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, and Gary Player. Beard denies it, "f hav~n ·t had any direcl reaction ," Beard said today. ·•1 react some caustic remarks abou t the book by Jack Nicklaus. And Arnold Palmer haSn·1 said anything lo n1e, bUI we two were never especia lly close. anyhow. ··1 tried lo break the ice with Nicklaus at the Kemper Tournament but didn't get too much response, so l decided not to worry about it. "Jack and I have never been bosom pals. Our wives are gOOd friends. I've been over to their house for dinner. But Jack wouldn't call me to go fishing or rome over for a hand or bridge. "Palmer and Nicklaus live in different worlds. They fly jet pl:!nes. They are rich and very busy. I don't bJan1e then1 SQn1e peop1e said I wrote the book out of spite because Jack and Arnie didn't treat me\ll an equal. ··1t's true they don't treat me 11s equal, because we aren 't equals. They have been much more n1cccssful thnn ... But l'n1 not harboring any spite." Beard painted Palmer as a jet-piloting busi ness lycoon who is too busy to relax and have beers with fellow pros. He also hinted thaL Palmer, at 40 and ailing, may have won his last major crown. I-le said Nicklaus could be the greatest goUer of our time, winning one or two major crowns and $400,000 every year but locks the driving ambition to achieve the goal. He kidded Player for his physical fi tness fetish. ''There was nothing derog<1-lory about any or ii." Beard said . "Certainly, Palmer is busy. I would be. too, if I were in his shoes. I didn't say Nlcklaus 'should' win seven tournatnents a year. J said he 'could.· There's a dlfference.'' If he invaded anybody1s privacy, Beard said. it was that o{ his close friend, Charlie Coody, and Frank added: "Coody loved It.'' The ri ch Westchester, with it& $50,00I first priie, was without some of its big nrunes going Into today·s second round. 1.ee Trevino, t~ leading money winner, overslept and was disqualiUcd. The 58- ycar-old Ben Hogan, his left knee swollen and throbbing, withdrew as did Canada's George Knudson, Orville ~1oO<ty suffered n sprained left ankle and dropped out or competltlon. ALEX JOHNSON Johnson hits behind him. But another Angel pla yer, asking anonymity, said, ", •. that's his only value. How many men has he left on base'! How many more hits could he have for himself and the team If he huslled 'I "This is a young team and his·atlitude has to have a bad effect on the kids." said the player. Meanwhile, Johnson, sitting alone in his clubhouse comer Wednesday night, was quizzed whether he could win the batting title. "I-figure I can do anything,'' he said. Dodgers Get Big Assist From Torborg MONTREAL (~P) -The Los Angele3 Dodgers are calhng catcher Jeff Torborg a trickster. But his magic was no sleight- of-hand, just a hard swing with a solid connection. The result Thursday night was a 7-3 Dodger victory over the l\1onl.re.al Expos. Torborg hit his seventh major league home run with teammates Ted Sizemore Dodger Slate All GI-I" Kl'I (4MI J~I• JI Dod9er• 11 Monlrtll Auo. 1 Dod9ers •t Moto!retr Auv J Do09trl 11 MolllrNI 5 ...... S p,tn. 11:10 1.m. and Bill Russell on base in the fourth in- ning, and he drove in another run in the sevent h with a bloop single. ··After I hit that single," said Torborg, •·n1y tearmnaleS were k'icijtlng me, saying that I had moved their defense back after the hon1er and then tricked them by dropping one In . "I just wanted to gel the ball in the air and I'm glad il went as far as it did. Four runs-batted-in in a game is a high for me. I've had three before bul never four.'' He recalled that his last homer came off Rich Nye of Chicago in 1967 al \Vrigley Field. The Dodgers and Expos meet in a t winlght doubleheader today, with Don Sutton, 12-7. and Claude Osteen, 11-8. pitching respectively against ~fontrears Bill Stoneman, 4·10. and Mike ~farsha\J, 0-3. Dodger right-hander Bill Singer picked up his eighth victory against three defeats by limiting the Expc15 to six hits and striking out 10 in his fourth straight nine-inning perfqan.ce. "It was nice to work wi!Ji !Onle runs," said Singer. "The Expos are a pesky club, they keep on coming at you, they never quit. , "My fa st ball was working welJ for me tonight, my slider was good but my curve was inconsistent ," he went on. "I made three bad pitches In the eighth Inning -all fastballs -and that got me Into trouble." tOS ANGlLlS \ MONTltlAL •tllrttl 11 tll,_I Wiiis. •1 J 1 I 0 $1 ..... le, :Ito 4 t I I MOtl,11 JOlll"lltlY,11 f l,O W,DllYll, rf 4 I ) 1 $1-ub, ti t II I II W,Pork .... lb 4 I I I lr11,., 11 I I 0 I Gr1blrtc'wltr,llli I J I ~. cl ' o o o sr"""" .. 211 ' ' 1 • W191'1"'". " D II II • fhn.i.111, tf 5 I J 2 l"llr9\" II • I 1 1 T ........ r; •124 .. 1-,r; JIOI Sl.,g«, p J I I I Lobo\', lb 4 I I I WIM,H 10 01 1•1111, If I I I O lrfor;GI"", II 1 I I I H.ltMCI, p I I I I M.Jonn, f'f I I 1 0 T111111 Jt 7 II , T1111I• ll J I J LO$ A•lws 111111 QI '°' -1 MolllrHI 000 100 1'21 -J DP --UtHI t LOI -LM ........ Its If, MOlllrffl t 211 -Wiiii., ,llrt~. 511ftlle. ll -ltlll· • .... Hit -rorllOro (IJ, Sii -W, 0. .. 1 •• IPNltl11 1150 51"9't (W.1-JI t I J l l It McOlnn !L ... fl • I t J t HJIMO •! flJ W"°"'tf' I 1 I I I I Time -2:2'. A!tW•nc:t -llJU. of some sturdy backs, headed by Bob Anderson of Colorado, Art ?.taklne ol Arizona State and Helsman TroliJy win- ner Steve Owens of Oklahoma. .,r.-Graham admits he spent more ti.me than usual in defensive preparations. with alro95t dally sessions against simulations of the Chiefs' tricky mliltiple attack as engineered by, quarterback Len Dawson. "We've got Ui stop them consistently, or else goodbye ball game," said Graham. * * * Tonight's TV Lineups CHICAGO -N1mn. n....-1 incl 11Mll ... lot 10nillhl'1 fOOltlolU e•me MIWHn "" Kllllll Cl!J Cllll'h illld ll>e COlle<)t All·Sllts, ta bil MllolloWJ telt"llHd lrf Clll..,,.I 1, •:lll 11.m., PDT. KilllMll Clly C~loh A• 111-. He, N.i'"I 1""11loll HI, Hime h1Ulelt J sr,,....lld, k oo Burroutll 6 McVN, •II IG Jone.., I< 10 LI•'"""°"' qb ti "'"°"'Drl, ra 11 FIO••• qD 11 Sil.ow. qD 14 Podol1k, •O 14 J-, Clb 16 OI~, Clb U Plll11111, <ID II Tliom11, CO " Wei.rt, CID :let s.lltr5. wr " h1110.roet. ,_ '' G.rrt11, rb 21 ''"Mn· 11b 11 Mllcn111, Cb 13 Moort, rll 24 811•••· • i.s Milo.,., rb 2S Pins, wr 26 Mon!gomitry, db lQ Rkh1rC11on, wr •1 R1vno1<11, 111 l2 McCllnlon, rb .!O t.ll'Ullwll•-1, 1< 31 HIYft, rb .. 1 Sll1nklln, wr olO Mlrlllls, cb l3 Tllom11, rl '2 ROblnson. I JS OnkoU, ID " Wiison. P 36 Owtn1, ro .IS HOlontt, rD 31 Wlrnpr, 111 ... KHr..ey, • " MIH!lewo. di !I Lynell, lb '' T1ylot, db .SS Holub. ( ... P•OYMI. db 'O Olnty, II 41 Blounl, dt II Cul11, Ill .SO 1.Atod1nli.1~ l 4l Llnl1r, ID i t Orllrd, OI 45 Prlldtlomme, c •1 llellty, DI .. Sllin, lb 6l Wl!k1trto11 • .t 11 Budclt. O •5 lluroocin. lb ll Hiii, I .. ~m.oll, 111 ,, T•oKll. di 11 Hulclllton, el 7J M•Y" a~ " "'~· 111 1' M_.m1n fO C1•111n1tt. di 11 Trret, I II lln.ond!fe, 111 ti 8111. 10 JJ C9WU11111, di I( Ar~n.11. •~ IJ W1rd, ol u H11r.1on, 10 1' EPC1lno, 111 N llLKl>•n1~. Ill 15 L1ri.on. 01 •1 arow", ot 16 Smhll, el It T•tlor. wr 11 McCoy, di 7~ "''"''. 01 1' McK1y, el IO Hlfdm.on, Wf 11 HlndrClll, wr 12 libel, tt IJ GIU1tt1, wr '' Fllel, lb 15 Ptrtofl, di N Jon•, 111 •7 Clltsttf', tt u w1111.,ns, wr ff C11tl't. wt Owner Savs • Player Strike Nearly Over By ASSOCIATED PRW A scoreless tie existed today In the pro football contract dispute after the veteran players put the owners on the offensive \vith a coffin<'Orner kick. National Football League veterans, almost to a man, refu sed to report. to training camp Thursday after the owners hung out the welcome sign. It thus appeared to be the oW]Jers' move next. "The situation is more critical than people think," said Wellington Mara, president of the New York Giants. He said his team 's scheduled exhibition \v ith Green Bay Aug . 8 would probebly be canceled if the situation isn't settled by this weekend. "If we lost the exhibition game," said 1'1ara," we lost $1 million. That money will have to come out of the players' salaries in some ways." \Vhen no veterans showed up at the Cincinnati Bengals' camp Thursday, General Manager Paul Brown closed shop. Apparently dismayed over the bit- ter. sometimes-volatile contract war, Bro1vn said it could mean the end or the 1970 season. "I will be in favor r:f lolllng the season." said Brown. meaning to call it off. ''It's a sad dav, bul \\'e have no choice bu! lo send lhe rookies home and abandon camp." There were only 15 ye:irlings !cit in the Bengals' site in \Vilmington, Ohio. Another owner, ,1,.ho asked to remain anonymous, wa!I more optimistic. "I really don't think we've given them f'nough time," he said. "'l'wenty-four hours just wasn't enough time for most players lo pack their bags and a:et to camp. ."I think you'll see their ranks begin- ning to brea k up Saturday because If lhey don't get lo camp over the weekend they stand to miss a paycheck for the first exhibition games." ApparenUy hoping to undennine the . unity of the striking NFL Players Association, owners unlatched their training camp gates Thursday with the exhibition season only a week away. , .. .• CHARGERS BOMB • RAM YEARLINGS ~· San Diego Charger rookies scored f~ll touchdowns and held the Los Ange}tal Ram rookies inside their own territofY most of the day in winning a 24-0 roo)Oe scrimmage Thursday at UC Irvine. , The Chargers Intercepted three pass9 one of them going back 43 yards ~ t~ anns of Chris Fletcher of TemPJt for a touchdown . , Former Nebraska running back ~1JP. Green scored once from the one-y1'fd line for the Charger!\ and former Ariz<*& State quarterback Ed Roseborough tot&- ed for a pair of touchdowns _ 0~ for 37 yards to end Mike O'Shea t)f Utah State and another for 70 yaljll to Jim White of Arkansas AA1&N. ! • } ., ... ,_. , .. . , .. "' .. .. ,•I• . :" r .. • . .. '· •• ·? Sport• In Brief .. ·Ch'argers, Ram s ::·IJ~ck Up Strike A pair of wide receiven wert the only veterans lo rtiport tG the San DlegG Char1ers' trainlna: camp here Thuraday after the s p.m. ~ng !line. Don Alley, ~ by the Cha~ in an qt'fteuon deal "''ith the Pitt!bur&h steelers, and Rick Eber, tdh three-- year veterans reported to CC>acb Charlie WaJler: The r~st ·of the Charger vetuans voted to say out until . a · playt.TS' U90Ciation strike is over. • LONG BEA.Cl{ -"We've aot that 40-for-41> spirit, too.'' says miking linebacker Maxie Bauglwl ol tho Loo Ang<Ier .Rams. , And in Fullerton, where the Ram rookies are working out, a team spokesman Thursday Workt Serie! titles and h.b .,.lfe, Edna. returned from a visit to th.e Hall of Fame in Cooperstown. New York l;..o nights ago. Stengel s a I d everywhere he went people gave him a birthday cake. • INDIANAPOLIS -The first and third ~ed forel1n men dropped out o( the National Clay Courts tennis tourney hert In Thursday's third round singles play • Umeeded Allan Stone of Australia defeated the No. 1 roretan seed, Jan Kodes of Czechoslovak1a, 6-3, S.l. Unseeded Jaime_.lUlol of Chlle elefeated the No. 3 lor<Jgn seed, U.S. Indoor champ Ilia · Nastase , of Romania, :J.O, ~. M. No. l U.S. seed, Clttl Richey. had little lOlllblo defeating Butch Seewagec, S.2, . wasn't doubting the veterans: u.nified effort to boycott. ·6-3. ' No veteran hid reported since National Football League owners ended their lockout, and the Ram IJIC)teSt1W1 said, "really, we attn 't u.pecting iny." . The Rini Ve\erl!IS voted IS- O to atrikt and issuect a atate- mebl In Whlcb they ogreod ''lo stand firmly behind the nqollallng committee, M • ' :GLENDALE -Casey Stelllel ~lebrated his IOth blrthdlyJl11urlday relaxlnk at. •· his Gl.pdale , home, reading an ~ number of oon· 11rtlul•l<llT ·te)!IJWllS, listen- ing lo the ]liiiii.. ..... c:oo- llnUOllllj> and nunio( • llilht cold. · The man who sWded the New York Yankees to seven No. 2 U.S. seed, Stan.Smith. of Pas1dena, defeated Brian Fairlie of New ~allnd. u , 1-1, 1-2. No. 3 U.S. teed, Arthur Ashe, defeated ~ R6uyer of Frlnc:e, w, 5-l. Diabl~. • • MD Post Cag~ Wins Mater Oei and M'LSSion Viejo ended lhe Santa Ana Recru- tlon Department s u m m e r o•o•w•; i :op;ww p;oc; .,....... t=••. Frld1y, Jul~ Jl, 1970 DAILY PILOT ff Drill's Operi Monday For County All-stars By ROGER CARl.lON ot h tJ.ur ru.. stiff Closed grid workouts, reminiscent ol Woody Ha.yts and hJs Ohlo State Rose Bo11,·l football teanu:, have been an. l10WICOd ror ~rth anc1 South praotioeS on 1\1.esdays and 'Jbundlys when t.be two bodiet ready themselves for the !Ith IMllDI llortl>South Or•ng• Coonly loolball game. Tho s1rugale Is slated for Orange Cout College Aug. 20 and practices begin Mcoday with sessioos slated at 5:30 p.m. The North, lopslded winners o< the past' ttfo outings' at Orange Coast, will practice at Rancho >Jan\itol . under coach John Callard wllile Ed B1i.in and his st.aff will le~ who'll attend Orange Coast comod.ate the Rebels a t Colleae in the faJI, Is . one .fo'oothill Hijh. of six ends or the squad along Botti learns are exiiected to with Kurt. Dedrick of Westminster (6-1, 175), Ron underco game type scrim--MuniJ of Mater Dei (S-11. 175) mages wh.lcb will be open to and Gary Valbuena of Foun- lhe public. Tbe dates and taio Valley (M, llOJ. times of these will be an-nounced at a later date . A spirited battle al slatting Included in the Soolh J'04ler quarterback Mapes up with. of 30 are 17 Orange Cout Eiidle Bane of \Yestmillster l h d and Vic Pereboom ol Los area payers, ea td by All-Alamitos in .the •-"" fold. Cll' linebacker Paul Moro ol "'1llw• Huntington Beach. Bape quarterbacked Moro, a 5-11, 115-pounder, We1tro1nsttr for three years, led the Oilers to a 7·2 recnrd aod led ~ J,.iom to U)e Sumtt last year, the best mlU'k since League champloo&hip u a 'the Oilers won tbe -1rvlne Junkar.,lf~'s. small (5-10, 1901 League cbampioo!Jhip in 11166 · ,buf has ~ved himself ~1n l"ilh an overall 9-2 mark. , · all-rouOd-.•\hlete; .lettertng .irt Mate Lee Walt.ers (1-l, 19:1), · bastei:ball Bfl4. starriilg. in . bueball. • ' . His basibau elfort.o includ<d . telectlon 11 ~ Leq\le player-ol-the-year and Orange Vilas Paces CdM C?&st area plpxer~·lbe-year With a~ excyljent curve ba ll from the port si~e. · Pereboom, a &-1, I ;·5. Over .Loop tead~r Righthander Dive V 11 a s tossed his ~ conaecutive complete game v I c to r y Wednesday -night in pacing second-place Newport Center Kiwanis (Corona del Mar l lo an unexpected 2..0 decision ov&r loop-leading Newport Ex· change Club (New port H.-) lo highlight Hun· tington 8eadl swnmer league baseball action on the Hllfl· tington Beadl High diamond. Winn's Tow Service smacked a thrft-bager to clear the sacks . Gus Alba came up &r¥i 90Ck· ed a hooter on lhe next pitch. with Mike Qalch getting a triple after Alba's circuit blast. 1'he bases were full of Hun- tington runners in the sixth when the contest was called because or darknea, ow reverting back to the ICOl'e af\er five full frames . pounder, led Los Alamitos to a ClF championship showdown in AA circles l~t year before falling to Barstow. Mater Dei's Mark Dunn who's set l<>t duly •t N,.,,; Dame in the fall, leads area backf1e.ld candidates for· the South. Ounn was an AU-Jvllelus League selection twice. Others !n the South backfield, which includes the defensive side of the ledger, are Greg Newhouse of Westminster (5-9, 140), Mike Shaughnessy of Estancia (5-7, 150) and Dan ~aw of. Fountain Valley (S-10 175). • ·. > . Water Polo bl::ketball lea1Ue on a winning !tote Thursday night at Santa ----------~-~--;-----------.,----~--'­Ana College. (Edi.son); .meanwhile, utiliied ·a paJr .of big Innings lo sneak past Huntington H•rbo~r 1Wlm, went· the. dilt.ance on the JVOUnd for Winn's amt accounted · fO!' the 'victory wblle &;,eve Brooks hurled a complete ..aame klsli for HllD- tington. Spearheading the S o u t h forward wall will be All-Coun- ty choice Bill Otamp)on or Fountain yalley at center. And flanking one side of tht S.3. 205-poUnd Baron is guard Bob Tripp of Newi:mt Harbor . .. . Showdown Under War, ·-• toNG BEACH -Comla • ·del Mar-Inine-Nowport A>an. ICINA) boltles De All&l'1 B t~m tonight at 7 In the Na- .·· tional f'AU waler Polo cham· . ~ al Belmont Plaza Olympic pool. be,.._ Coach Ed Newland 's CINA outfit was to have mel Riverside this morning while the CINA B entry was dueling · seeded El Segundo this morn- '· • .h:t& and Concord this af· Jernooo. Both CINA teams are ex· ~ted to advance to • ~t.urday's competition, which · "niru from t a.m. to S p.m., also at the Belmont Plaza ···facility. · ·Heavily favored De Ama. 'Mending champion and the top seed. was in earlier batUe "!Oday. Coach Art Lambert'• '•1969 champs: have blitzed all •· 1-the other seeded squads and • .f1'De Anza is paced by Gary ,S cheerer and Gar y · Weitzenberg -a pair of 1981 Olympians. ., Other team members - ~ Peter Asch and Jim Ferl\1900 . •.A: were candidates for the •.Qlympic team until final 3electlons were made. • De Ania boasts speed, size, Mater Dei posted a 5&-J7 triumphoverSadd le ba ck wtlile Mission Viejo wop a forfeit victory from Jerome Park when the latter team failed to field five players. The win by Mission Viejo's Dlablos gave them a final le1gue record or 11-3, two cames behind Santa Ana Valley (ll-1). Valley dropped Its Thursday night contet. to El Modena. Mater Dei finistied with a 1-5 mark, a game behind third place El Modena (11>3). In the Mater pei victory, the Monarchs jumped out to a 15-10 first quarter margin and held a 23-21 advantage at the half. r With Saddleback limited to just one field goal in th.e third elgbt-mlnute session, t h e Monarclls took a commanding .f0.23 lead going into the final quarter. _With Rick Kniffen scoring e1fht polnts, Mater Dei rolled up 28 counters in th e final quarter. Pete Roberts Jed I h e Monarchs in the scoring d~partment with 15 (including nule free throws). Knirten followed with 12 (nine in the second half) while Steve Fritz and Jefr Kiley had 10. Mater Dei outhit Saddleback from .the field, 20-10, and also had a comfortable 2 8 -I 7 margin at the free th.row Jini. Kniffen and Steve Kemper collected nine rebounds each to lead the Monarchs in that department . you th and experlena!. It has M1t1r o.i u11 • an. uplos:lve offense and a "•1t1 'r ~ .. .. ' " ' " • • ' " stingy defense. 1t:r>1lf... s 1 -~ CINA's A group ls the team ::; 1 : • • ' ' • • • " • • " " ·l-ambert says De Anza must N1nrv o • .{eckon with, although Phillips =~=~·•••1 ! ! · ~ol· Long Beach -coached J. "-ll•v 1 • by Monte Nitzkowski of Hun-Po:!!::: 4 J •• .. • ' ' • • ' ' ' • • ' ' • ' • • ' , ~ " »-" ,. li,ngton Beach -could also ••••"••• on a... c1a~-··. .. • ~ ,._~ • ...._ Lk>lkl I I ,.. . ;.bie Aau s lammed CINA, t•r•• 1 o .. ;jt:.~ and Phillips, 11·1, ln a =~~""" ; ; recent' warmup tourney at st1c11n11 o • --c Golden \Yest CoUe,e. ;~::.. ~ : . ~. ~Ob.9erVen cla.e to the ICtfle Mu111t11 ' • ; uy CJNA's handicap ls goalie L.rc;,_": ,! 1~ , j• ir(eakness Ind general in-k ... 1 '' Ouwrt..-t ,,_ J7 • e~~---e, M1IW Dll IJ IJ 11 -~'~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'i"""""'iiiiiliiii'i'•'i'ii'iiii KANSAS CITY ROYALS IASEIALL ACADEMY TRYOUTS -AUG. 1·2, 10 a.m. IROOKHURST PARK ANAHEIM FM oulrl•nding •lholotes •9•• 1 l>-22 with omphatis on running ond throwing-Conago '• ocluutionol tr•lning •nd b•sobaD tr1inin9 for • ••'"' in the M•ior LHguos. Eem while you loam, , I Alamitos Los Al•mltos (Huntireton Beach), a.-7, on the winners' diamond. lnbnitable .Kaufman and Broad (Marina ) dropped its rlfth straight forfeit decision to NOr'l:h Huntina:ton Rotary (Fountain Valley). Entries Rate · Results Jerry Ashford led the losers' hitting attack with a pair of base hits. · ••Sll ALL HUHTINOTON llaCH LlaOUI Tripp was a standout in Newport's 6-3 season . He's S- Jl . 180. .Another from NeW)>Ol't in the line is Dave Martin (&-3, 210) while rival Jim North (&-1, 190) of CorOna del Mar wi!I be challeogl.rig Martin for a itarilng tackle spot, J •II• "' "' "' in 'I' " '" "' "' , .......... .hth' -· ltll ci.r a l'11t l'lllllST llACI. U) y1ro1. Mll"'1n t 'l'Hr ullh. Cl1lrnlnu. Pu..M 51la0. s ..... ., T11ky IKt n!IJ •.20 1.20 !.70 TrveCUll !P1m1t) 1.IO 1.70 llold tflp (,.I H l J,IO T"I""' .1'"5.ltD. a/If t ilt -......... llttltk.k, !.adl 'I S1l111, T•lth'I llltftd, Mitt 111'1ff C~lck, S.tln ltl....-, Tlwuf" 1111. kt'tk!Md -9olO lrli.h. l'•thlon Cltv, l-'• Mlrtr. 1•tOIU> ••cE.l5o ,.,,,, I ve•• ol<h 11111 IHI. Cl1lrnl .... Purse 11'00. Ott-Jou McCov t1C1n l1I !.IO •.IO J.00 DH·CMc ll11c11,1•I f51r1u•1l J.«I ) ... •.l'O M•. "•111 Sir tH1tf1 • . .O Tlrnl: .11·JllO. ,\!14 •tn -l lld!Y II••• Joe. Cout1te• W1r Chic:, Otr•l>bll, LI Pl1!1 J11, G11IO lllllOI, Dllllv Moo11h. '41rtlll D11t. Sc•1tchtd -He'• A lt-n!, Vn•1· lie-. I'm ll•rk>, 0\11l11r ll1r I W, NIGMTLY DOUILE, S . Snt••' TelkY I t -Joi11 McC1y, lllllClht•I, P1i. 11 •. lt. HIGHTL Y DOUILI, I · Snt1•Y t tlli" a •·Chic lt-t. •N Ofllll, p1I• Ill.•. THl•D llACIE. l50 y1rC1t. Mi!lden 1 '''' old•. (l•lrnln•. Purse 11100 !'-ln Cl•btlfr CPer~r) •.IO •.l'O 1 .Ill Kirn'• 1>1111 lllpluiml I.Cl l Ill Su ... Tn'1 Miii CWllH nl J.40 ti .... : .U-7/10. AIN r1n -11111 .. 11. GY~ """· Cl "· 11111'• c-bo•. l'lv 1tov11. 11ov11 C•e••· 0u ...... An1el. Scrl!cl>ld -Gin.er Sim. Time To f lt1, l'OUltTH 11.lC•. 11' Y••01. J ¥tar ells •nd w•. t l1lrn!n1. P11,.• l ,aoll t t>erollH C<I01 !CtOllrt) 1? 60 1., ! Ml V• Olo•o !Str~11ul S.IO J '"' Hiit\' LN rw111+.1 I 00 Tlmt: .'f-6/10. AllO rln -0.... An~ Or•~, llunn• ll•f Lue, Cr-,11 l•rt, Tr<t Bob. Wtt t °" '"'· Scr1tcl>td -Chief ~•rn lor1. l'o•- w•!'O llttlt ,.,. T• 1!:1111, Ho! P-er .... •1PTH •.t.C•. l)ll ,lrch. M11dM1 f 11e1r oid'I. Pu•tl \111111, lllllf' 1'1 .. SUrt 04~•11 FIMt 11,!n• Horn (Adil•! ll~nl1 81" (~l'lllh l Time: .11-e11a, AllO •~n -P11 M~•le. 81! ol OK~. Nl1M 1110. S~lro, w,..... "'"'' Tl"; LM. No 1cr1!c"" • IOlTM 1taCI . 94' 11rO\. J vt•• olCls 4nd UI. Al~n. PurM S!IQI, l oll C~k~ !Aeoot1c1l •.20 J.211 T 60 e.111 GI Min rw11,..., 1.0 J,IO l•rl F ... LIK~ Ul1nkt) l lO Tlrn1: ,J7-l/10 . ••• r1n -E••*" TGO, krtorlut • 01.0 Liii, Slllnl Ground. No tc11tt1111. YOU CAN'T SPCND MOit£ THAN '25 t•I L 17rt.1t~COITA_. ~ ........ ,,,_ ........... ··H~tw&<••WMW;;.._ ......... ---•••• • 11nv: .n ... 110, Al14 , • .., -Mr. 1111...it, Y..OW cto. P•lur Lul1, K..,..t j..i, l'u~ OIA,. Scr•lchecl -11w11 11-1, Vilas fashioned a five-hit shutout. walk.Ing jtl.9t three while fanning eight for the KiWanis, who meet. Rotary in the. season finale Friday. The contes wnl decide se- W L T 01 "-' E•cNl!ff Clu• ,I , ' ·~~C~ Klwan!1 I • I '" m: • ...., ' . •v. , lltlllf!I"" •'bour • n 1 '"°' l(Wfml" r 0 S 14 t lt Wlfll!•T-~c' ill I f \lo ,.. , ....... .. Cl'l~=rr I I J, Ntw-1 E•· · Mater Dei's' Tum Grr.ecka (S.:10, llO) and Ron Dixon (S- it, 165) continue the trend or Monarch linemen Jn the ~Ju.sic mold and Marina High " represented by I>ennis Ken. nedy, a 5-IJ, 205-pounder. IUN'TM lt.ACf, U) 111r•1, I ..... , 1111:11 br.O In Cl'lll. Cli lmlne. l'u"t 11-.0. "•"""* It-I lW1Ud Plllllfll lt•unl cw.ii.> nt .IO 61•20 u . .o DH·Dudl P1YoH (8tnlct) J • .0 J.IO DH·Sl\oft ltllCttl (lhlfllm) 10.ICI t tO t i"": .lt-4/ID. ' Al14 tlll -t iny HOI , fltlt OllrM• Go Mrrl Go. tl!lr Trl11'1,. G•lli ntm .. ,' """"'" .. '· . kr~tC!!M -Wotty C1t, Pno 11111, IUply t c....,..t, The Count, awntl1 Lulu. IJ I X&CTa. It· 1'19-11-1 a 4 · Slllrt ltfdllf, ..._.,, ,_ .. IHN .... Baseball Standings Ml lNM!lll t LMWI lflrMll~il W L T 01 LI l'olld1 1J I I C•ern 1 I s I cond' pliee. · · All the Kiwanis needed were single runs In the . fourth and sixth stanias to tland Newport Exchange tts first blank job of the season_ Mark Erickson led off tJ1e fourtti ror Kiwanis with a walk · and went all the way·around to third on a run-and-bunt play . initiated With ~tt Parker at the plate. Th.e latter reached · first and eventually scored on Jim Sears' single after Erickson was cau~ t.ryinR to score on a passed ball. · Slarter Alvin White and rireman Rick Smith shared mound chores £or coach Andy Smith's pacesetting Exchange nine and the duo combined for ten strikeouts. A five-run second inning and a,.,.11,lm t , • LO!lt l11ch ' ' I G1•0tn GrllYt 1 1 1 Colli Me5t s 1 • a three-run fourth propelled ''" Winn's to its U""et win over '" ~ '" ... ' • Huntington Harbour, virtuaily 0r ..... (Ill S.ddtt~t'dl , ,, t 1¥ ........ II'""' Glrff!I Gro111 l. '•fllllltlld! I Allll'lllm f, C..11 MIH • •v. ruining the: latter's chances Ot1n11 10, a,,.flllltl 1 L• l'ondl IO, $4001Q tt; I 1"tflltht'1 ea- Cypr111 v1. Or1n11e 11 lloYtf'ft Pl ... !•:XI> L• Fllllll1 111. ar111'1tlm 11 llovMn Perk ll 1»I ror a third pla~ finish.. Extra base blows were the name 0£ the game for Winn's · in the second. With s 3·2 count, two out~ and the bases loaded, Ed Winn ,.::9111111·~ 1 ToW l«11k u ;, H1tnt111111on •N Mw11tl...,... 1. k.utni.11 and r I ltort1l!l Vln~111f:1,0:: H•••ouf 111, 0 MMtl...U.» J:: O ~ •• " J, 1' F\t'li:'1rn, If J I 1 1 W1rnet". rl 1 t I 1 Vtmtm. 1b 1 0 I 7 Jim AllllorO. lb l I I I ~··~ AW!lord. c J I , . T 'J:'1HN'! TOW t1•v1cauu ' J 4 •• r •'rM :!Vi..'f. ~ l 11 "~··· lb l • 0 l11 1t1.' .~ l ' • : l lrMN1y,Jb l''' G II, rt I I t 5",McN.v,n 1110 w~":i·1r.• 1J1J1 Scwe • ., lllltlfltlh:: Hunt. H1rbou• •1o -1 l , Wl~n'I MO ,j NIWl'OllllT IXCHANOI CLUI 111 '' r II r1lol Hfdrld(, d 1 I ' • I(,_, U·C 1 0 0 H. Wllt11, c I I t I E1\!:,:"llnt. ,... l I I • t:..1·.t;:"r'-: • i : 1 : Abr1ma. If J I I o """~.rt 1000 s .. 1c11,..,, 1 010 Htu11.lb \0 10 rt:,,;!~'1b)b ? : 0 : Wlnttrd,1b 7 000 Tot1l1 Jj 0 5 D HIWl'OllllT CINTlll IUWaMIS Ill •• t ..... ~:~~·~b i : 1 : Oo~•, II l I I I Er-.c to10 P1r1r,cl J1 I O •11r1.rt 1 0 11 lll!OP.lf 1 000 A.Jalln-,lb JOOO VU11.r. >OjO '1'0!1. ;) 1 1 Sc.re ., lniolft9t Ntw-1 l!"•t~lllll 000 DCCI ~ S 1 N-1 Klw1n11 000 101 ~-1 s o Deep Sea Fish Report Major League Standings DEAN LEWIS NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburch Ne'tf York OUcago Philadelphia Montreal SI. Looll CinclnnatJ Dodrett Atlanta East Dfvlsloa W L 56 17 S4 44 S2 49 44 S2 44 SI 41 SI Wttt Dtvlsloa 72 32 SI U 41 63 San Francllco Houston 47 " 44 56 San Diego 40 63 Pct. .541 .$!{) .515 .169 .131 .131 .692 .!Ill .460 .175 .451 .:1811 GB Ii 3 7'h 11 \i JI \.i 12 22 22'h 25 31 <I AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division Baltimore Detroit New York Boslon Cleveland Washington Minnesota Ang tit Oakland Kansas City Milwaukee Chicago W L 63 39 5& " 54 46 51 .. 49 53 44 55 West Division · Pct. .618 .554 .$!{) .510 .480 .'55 62 35 .639 SI 14 .Sl9 !'6 45 .554 :JI 64 .373 ~ 84 .373 36 61 .344 Tllu,.....,.., •tWllt OML1nd J, lottwo 1 Mltw1ullM .. WMl'lln11'1111 I Klf\N' City a, o.t,.i1 ), 10 lt1111f>t1 c1 .... 11110 J. MlllfltMll I Onl'I' t-1 Kll«l\lltcl. GB I ii • 11 14 16\i T...,'l....,._ W11~11'1tlOll CkhtlltnllfU. .. u ti Olltl_,,., l'I"' ttrt Ml, nlt~t I011'1111 tS!tlltrt lo.JJ II AllHIJ IM11.-.hY 11 .. 1, 11llM Ntw Y-'I f .. 1'11*11 .. , ltld Ptl.ntn, 11·71 11 M11w1u11" tloll11 ,., ""° t11btlllltr ~U. I ~I-nil"' C!Wtllnd IA\lttllt 1>4) If Ch~ 1.lllwl t.U M1-tw/1 fly~ W) 11 Otll'll't IM<L•ln ""· nleltt IW!ttt: Clh' Cllllltf ).It 11 •111\tnott (Mc:H• .. .., 1)1), ,..,,, DEAN L·EWIS 1966 HAUOR ILVD., COSTA MESA 646·9303 Sorvlct, P•rl1, I. Body Shop Now Dpon Unlll I p.m. Monday Nl9hll I f Orang• County's luge~ aod Most Modern Toyol~ and Volvo Dealer • AU•\lST SPICl.ALS SPICIAL 1970 TOYOTA WAGON :!!.'! $1817 An 0-.. M~ 111 Sffd Mtft It-Hiiu Pict;.,_ 1.-4 C'""'9 C1NM VOLVO 1970 DEMO $2699 142 2 dt., r•dl•, f111t.r, 4·1p114, I.Ser. •47401 .. --~------------------·· ..... ,. -. -.-- 12 DAILY PILOT Sea Fest Will Go Undersea • Two WKterw11et weotsihave been odded lb lht California · JJDrMllonal foea P es t l1v.a I 'iill!dl g.U u"""1' way It Lo1\i -Sa\W'd>y. SuHurf1ce Spcl't.smen w1U take-oent'er stage the ·weekend of Aug. 8-9 -first at the · Long Beach Auditorium with the !Ith annual lntemational U n d e rwater Photographic Society Exhibilion on Saturday night, and the next morning with the Los Angeles F at h o m I e r s Spearfishing Derby starting at 9 a.m. {ll Aciµalic Park, a beach area acijacent lb the Long Beach f M'a'rine Stadium off Appian Way and SecoM Street. The exhibition -v.ill be the world premier showing of ·._.black aOOWlii!eStill photos, color slides lnd color motion pictures Judged .the best Of 1970 by members Of the world· wide organization in a com- pelilion which has become one o( lhe most respected in the "' sport of unde r water pholography. Tickets will be $3. 'The evei1· ing will also include time for show-goers to visit exhibits by 'leading manufacturers o( diving equtpment and publica- tions. The spearfishing derby, in- troduced to the Sea Festival for the first lime, will be open to men and women divet;s using aqua-1ung and scuba equipment as well as skin divers wilo preler simple. inexpensive s nor k e 1 s - whether or not they belong to o r g a n i i e d spearfishing clubs. Powerboat Marathon Set Sunday lntemational powerboating's most dangerous and, at the same time. most comfortab\~ endurance-style event -the Power boat Magazine Marathon of Champiorui -1opens the fifth a n n u a I Calitomia International Sea Festival Sunday at Loog Beach Marine Stadium. The fonnat -twin two.hour races, one for as many as 22 top outboard starS and another for 2'l star inbo:irders -calls for both driving skill and painstaking meehantcal preparation. The course is a tight 1.7 miles around , the turns leave little margin for error and in both divisions the premium wi ll be on start- to-finish concentration and control. Co -sp on s ored by the J\1arathon Boal Racer s Associatioo and Long Beach Boat and Ski Club under the sanction or the American P°"·er Boat Association. the program will open with in- troduction ol drivers and a flag ceremony at noon . The outboard fleet will line up LeMans-start style. dead in the water along lhe 6t.adi1.D11's south s hore launching ramp, and roar off at the sound of the ·starting gun at 12 :30 p.m. The inboard race also will start LeMans- style, at 3 p.m., and in both races the winne r will be the man who has accumulated the most mileage rrom fl ag to flag over the 120 minutes of action. 'rld11, July .31, 1970 Newsboy Wins 3rd ,, ' Baillie Sloop 6opi .Timu rophy Agai~· , 11J ALMON 'LOCKABEY _, .BlpliiU., 11113: Geai:I• Burke Sawyer (NHYC)0 ' .. .... •.itw Gr11Dtb'1 C&ssandra, 1 9 5 4 , The appropriately t l t I e d .1057, l95S : Gene Trepte's CLASS C, D-1. Swiss Na7, Newsboy won the Loi Angeles Evening Sta/., Jl56i'r· Peggy Dick Deaver (BYC); 2. Tima Trophy tor the third Slater's Tombo~ lAl:ll Savilar:, Finley B e v c n •-· -··-•ay In the r•-· • •~: ....... !llUl"'1 U l" Arnold Haskell ChubaHO, (LAYC); 3. Volante n. . . • nae of the Ya c ht Racing 1960; Ed Turner's Cotton PHRF -1. Calilia, Ph.Ii Unkn\ Ctuiae at Catalida Blossom, 111), ~; Ge r r: y Morga n (NHYC); 2~ Topaz, • • • ":f.:'wue•s IZ·met•• sloop Driacoll's Nova, .191%. 1964: Art Morono (CBYCJ. T'" Robert~ M. AJill•'s Holidayt~;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,2~ 'l'Omped acro11 the Catalina Too, ,1965~ Bill Ha s k elJ J 'sll Channel from the Los Ange les Bravo, 1966; and .,.ike Hirsh's Yld!j Club lo Howland's Lan-Volaote II, 1969. • ~ houri, ZS minutes, News.boy won tht Times A in an lfl.lo.3).knol Trophy in 196"1 QI 1111 but ~~rreded time, Newsboy lost it to Mike Hirsh'• Volante defeated .Robe.rt Beaucbamp's Il last. tear. Volante U fmish- Q>lum.bia '57, Dorothy O, by ed third in CJ.us D in a minute and.17 seconds. tbursday's .race:. Tiie Times Trophy . Tbe 11 bool YBU flal-races • ... -~ \ DAll.Y PILOT ...... "' IM..... originally known as the Times today from Howland'• to PREPPING FOR TITLE -.Action like this will he re-enacted' MoD<\ay ud U.p, is very possibly ti.. .-,,._Covewltll•tbeAllan Tuesday as the Newport-Balboa Sabot fleet holds• elimination for Jll!\ilinai ol-active yacbllng pihe a.-. .. tbe lo!> Jllll<. · championship-regatta at-Mission Bay. sabots are S.foot prams-and a a·vorite -.JILSouthern .c@f.Qlllia.'..._ ~ ~ ~~ resaM.s:_ with young sailol'S. ·Ila on!Y competitor In point ,l . ·~-r; I. Dol:otbY o.: of ··time would be the Saq~ "3. 'vilor, Bill· E ft in g e·r J>leio Sir Thomu .Upton CLBYC); "•4. 'El>cor., , Bill Trophy, .Lawhorn'(BYO); 5. """'°'nte, New Course Awaits Powerboat 'Drivers A new l~mile course call- ing for a navig ationally tough swing around hard-tp-find1San- ta Barbara Island is . the challenge awaiting drivers in the si.rtb annual LOog' Beach HeMessy CUp offshore power- boat race Aug. 15. As many as 40 racers in five classes are. expected to line up for the start of the classic, highlight of I h e CaWornia Interna tional Sea Festival at Long Beach. . Wjtb points towad the union 0£ Internation,al .Motorboat ing world championship (Sa m Griffith Memorial Topliy) and the American Power Boat Association national crown at stake, •Henne~ Cup entrant.! will make ~ir traditional flying start off Belmont Shore Pier in Long Bqch Harbor at JO a.m. San Diego ToEnsenada The course will take the fleet to Palos Verdes Poinl, southwfJ'(I. pist Long Beach to a buoy one mile off Newl)Ort Pier. the n northward to a sea ' buOy five miles southwes\ bf Hu n t ington Beach. and finally to Ship Rlck at the Catalina Jsland lsthm\l!. Ship Reick is the dividing point ln'the "'°ace, cOming ·s1 miles from the start. Entrants in the UJM • Offshore Class will continue toward the west end ori Catalina and then eastward· to ' Santa Barbara lsland , smallest of the seven Channel Islanl:ls. They will then return to Ship RoCK for the filial sJriill bac k to the starting line. , Sweden Wins 1 .. ,\ Sabot '·Fl~t ·Boeh awards were dedicatedtC::========.:..::~ 1Sets R.aces, . , in 1993, .laut the exact. date& <i ~'dedlcaUons are lost. 1bi ornate lilver Tlmea Cup .r was 'dona~1 by the late Gen. Harriaon Gray • Otil in 1903 as a, perpetual challenge trophy, and ·was rededicated Next Week' The Newpoit-BaJboa sabot Fleet will , bol1f e~ races Monday and 'rueeday ior the n a t i o n a ·I champioilship regatta on Misslon Bay." • Local entrants for '1bt na- tionals will be determined by the series. One entry tor e.Bch foo r skippers in the elimina- tions will be eligible to com- pete. . ·Only boats that have official measurements may sail in the elimination series. Any s kip. per and boat that does not have a combined weight o[ 22CI pounds will be required to carry 20 pcunds of floatable ballast. .. Weigh·in, spar and. sail · check wilJ conlmence at .9 a.m. MondaY at Newpo'rt Harbor Yacht Club. The first race is .scheduled for 11 a.m. .. Racing on ~ay. will be held at Lido Jsle Yacht ,Qub starting at 1:30 p.m. The elimination series" cmststs or five races. TwoAm~c~ns Sixth i.u Star '. ' SANDHAMN, 'Sweden (AP) -Don Tra.skl and B I 11 Kreysler of the United States finished 10th and fourth Thurs- day in the first · two races of the European Star Boat Sailing Cbamplofllhipr. by ~ YC in 11151 u the prize for tbe f1tlt race of the YRU cru.ile. ' la ihe~late .19'.0s and during the early 1930s . some of the mos! famowl allon In the &-meter "sacftd '"Sixes'' and lhe 3-meler cla!s were tem· porary 9wnen of the Cup. AHhough the cup w a s dedicated as a prize to be: ractd for each ybr. tbere h8vt been 11 year• in which there was 1'> race. The lirlt WU in 19151--lolfoWed by the World WS.r ]·years of -1917-18, tbtft three "):ears of no ac· lion in 1920-11-22, again Jn 1924, and finally in the World War II years ol.1943-44. Slilce be<omlng a YRU ~ the cup has been won by the late Walt EIUott In Escapade, 1952 and 19Ciii z. Zinlme:y~r Explosion ~ts ' Boston Station BOSTON (AP ) ' -Ele\oen window panes at a police stmstation were shattered s~ day night when a bomb ex- ploded in an adjacent alJey. Pdice said the exploSioo ""8S an army training device used to simulate artillery. Patrolman Albert •Jf liflrt for YELLOWTAIL .Al8ACORE ' ~·~,§J.', . . 'I .. .... t ~; .. • ·~ ., ' . ,. ; PB906 FENWICK ROP $1811 LIST'37.50· 1 Week Only •• , •• In the oyerall.standlnp they were s~ with 67 .. 5 points. McDonough, who was alone on duty at the slation when the blast occurred, said it knocked him to the floor. He was n9l injured. Witnesses reported seeing two youths leaving the scene carrying a pap« bag. . 600-A •., ~\ -MITCHnL ..,~ SAVE $ 995 IEG I ·PC Medium to heavy action 7·1/2' ' P-Cats to .. vie Again Big $ 'selection Most Sizes Big savings on slightly used new c;ar takeoffs, too I •10.00 •19.95 LIMITID SPECIAL! <PB1086l FENWICK ROD LIST •so:oo 1 Week Oniy ••••••••• 1-PC., Medium action, 9' GRANTS Has 1 em Alli / f!EELS by l'enn·Mitchell-Ouick- . Zebco-Medalist-Oolden WM.I .... "T-. TH IMfest Lunlcers" • '), ~ •• Rod Butt ~ests . f SALTWATlR 302 RER A.ND 9.;fOOT ROD $34.88 Here k one of the best fiih ing ~-~ anywhere. Top ~ Go.c ... M~holl C~n mabl fish~ .my. Tllli'Sl'ECIAL prico MGk• ~ '°'>' oo r-lludflt!Ool REG. •4.95 $ 2' S~~C!4i.; .... lot;t·Jumbo 16" X 13" X 11" REG.•25.95 L •• ~.178 ~N-UP'SwnCOMl -ASHtTO 14 Costa Mesa Firestone Store -475 l 17th St -646-2444 ........... AT .. TN·l·IOCJl .... TIClllNIA···~·-···o-u•'111111 ...... • I -.. HOURS: Mon .... Fri., I a.m. to 1 p.m. -Sat., I a.m. to S p.m. -• ' .. ,. F•ldlJ, Ju~ 31, 1970 DAILY PILOT fS ' . • K D R~ • I . A C ample te 611ille-. ~. Where to go ••• to do ••• 1 I• f I SUPE.RB, BALANCE, BOUNDLESS .ENER~ TYPIFY THE MOISEYEV DANC" COMPANY ' ·Under the Cr~tic's Eyes Moiseyev Family Driving Force Behind Moscow Troupe There will be three members of the Moiseyev family connect¢ w!th the performance when the Moiseyev Dance Company from Mo!icow makes . its U- performance appearance in S h r In e Auditorium in Los An&eles from August 7 throue)I 16. Igor Aleksandrovich Moiseyev, fotmder ahd ditector of the company, -will be very much in evidenCe. He sils in the audience every night watching tbe dancers with a highly critical eye. His wife, who was a soloist with the company for many years using her maiden name Tamara Alekseyevna Zeifert, Is now one of the two assistaht.s to Moiseyev, and is responsibJe for much of the training of the troupe. And on the stage iJ their solo diincer daughter, Olga Igoreyevna Moiseyev a, who has .danced with the company since she was a very young girl. She will dance the role of the Gypsy Queen in "Gypsies." Three new nurftbers to be done ' in Los Angele! by the company will be presented together with a host or favorites seen .here in the past three visits. ' The new dances are "Sicilian Taran- · tella;" an Argentinian Gaucho dance and "Dance of the Buffoons," the latter to music by Rimsky-Korsakov. Highlights ' of the old favorites include .. Su'te fl. Old Russian D a n c e s ; ' ' !'Yurochka," a Byelorussian Dance; ''Zhok," from the Moldavian Suite; "Old City Quadrille" and "The Partisans." ' The i.'00lp8DY of 100 .dancers, now in its fourth tour cl North America under the aegis of S. Hurok, is ac- companied by a symphony orchestra. Tickets are available at the box office and all ticket agencies; $1.95 -$7.95 .. ,I WEEKENDER INSWE FEATURES~' Friday, July SI, 19'1t . •- The Guide to Fun ' is crammea' -full of things going on tn the area. If you are looking for sog,Wthlng to do check It out before )'Olz make a decision. It's on Pagr28. Travel Pq;e U Wltftl1 and Campin& Pap U ID .U.. Golleriel Pagel< Kiou'1 Coantry ~taalc Page t4 Uve Theater Pase %4 'RlltbleGm.' RacWokd Page U o.t 'N' About Pa1e1 U -Z'7 Golde to Movies Pact !1 Padoa's-New Play Pip ~ Gaide to Fin Pqe 2' Televlsfo1 Log Pa1e ZS Sylvia M1Ui Dllemm1 Page 29 New 111eater .Pl1y1 Page !t Jo Ann Pnuc P11e It ' ~ '· ' .. SPECTACULAR LEAPS STARTLE AUDIENCES OF COMPANY /Moiseyev Troup Trains I U · Director's School I Everyone recogniz.e! a folk dance when he sees one, but few are aware of the extent or discipline requirtd to mfke a great folk dancer. ' Igor Moil<Yev, di-..Craph<r of the Moiseyev Dance Company from M09COW, demands that students in his school undertake a curriculwTi which combines • the muteular development of the classic' ballet dancer WJth the harden- ing rouJine o( an athjete's.traioing camp. His results: may be observed w h e--n the Moiseyev Dance Company .appears In Shrln,. Auditorium for 11 performances, including rour maUn~. lrom August 7 lllrougb I I. To becOme a member of Moiseyev's company, an as~rant must agree to altend lour.hour classe1 daJly for four years. ' . One out of every ten· applicants Is accepted in· the annual lr')'-<Nlll for the Moiseyev Sd:iool. Applicants must be at tea.st 11 years .. okt. The curriculum includes work · at the ballet barre, g)'IDll8Sflca, weiahl·UIUDg, disiu .. throwing and lenclng. 1lle student dancer must devtloi> a J)roficlenCy in high jumping. 10mesaults~ and a. wide 'variety oC acrobatic·mid-air twists. . Moiseyev cooaived the idea or his school In 1'43. 'lforid. War II prevented. Its permanent establishment untfl 1950. llll 1tudtnt body is drawn chiefly from M0tc0w. Unlike the Bolsliol Ballet School where "Uv1ng·in11 th.e school is the norm, Moiseyev Dancers attend during · only a portion of Uie aj wliile enrolled in a reiular outside acadtmic IChool. ' • • Holl1.DOod Successful_ Films Based By VERNON srorr UPI Mtltr#Mll Ctr,.......... HOLLYWOOD -ProdU<tr -director > Robert Al«ich is a btum, direct min who makes auccessful movies and ldmihl today audiences are t o t a 11 y un· predictable. "There it no way a producer oan anticipe.te what the tastes or attitudes ol the audience will be between the time he begins work oo a picture and when it ie relea!ed," be said. "What Is lq>k:al t<xlly is old hat tomcnow. "For kwt.anct, anyone making an "Easy Rider" type p 1 c t u r • with motorcycles and pot will discover he hes no audienct by the time it hits the screen. ,"To be successful, you have to be lucky. "Any honest producer will tell you that there is a large delree of luck in aubject mat,.,., timing aod the com- petlUon. "For -· when 1.-"!be Dirty Dozen' it was the tint an~lisbrnent pidure. But I dido 't mow, gomg in, that llldft>ees were ~ and wmting for a film' wi\h that theme. "'Mlen tt came out tllere weren 't too many -llOOd pictur<S ill drculalioo, ~ b another e1ample of good luck." In the fevel"ilbly changing movie scene Aldrich, like other producel"9 Is working ofi quicks:and. What tlnd of movie to , make? "Until th1np sotUe -n, I'm playillf Jt aafe," he aald. "Some.producers 1ren't making pictures 1t all, 'Jbcy're waitblg to ... what bappeno. "But l'.m going abead with 'The Grillom!Gang,'' a depression · 1aagater story. It involves rcmance a°gainst 'a viol"1t bacq,.und. "Certainly you can't plan many pic- itrtS two yean In advaoce because ol chanclnc aWtudes, but )'OU can be sure that no anti-1933 gangster picture attitude vr1ll develop at Berkeley in the near future. "If the pldure succee& or fails it . will be m iU.. own merits. To me that's playing 1t sale." AlJo in the "safe" category is another new Aldrich film, 11Whatever Happened to Dear Daisy." · 11'Ibat one is a gothic· horror story," he aald. ''Thll ..n of picture has been made with ux:ess for many years. "I'm abo working on a 1928 western. So far we've titled it 'Rage of Honor.' It wtll not be too off-beat or offen811ve to audiences • they a:lst todiy-." Alcrtch has the oourage lo go ahead with produdion llhile otlJer movie- maken •e doing nottq -or vrry little -for fear their pictures will be ollool«e be!°"' they're completed .. ~~~ t.t! ~$w!: ::~ Aldrich coocluded. "Righi ..... nobody ~""""'-.. Catan;es Witaae1• "The Strawberry. Statement," written by 19-year-old James Konen, Won this year's Jury Prize at the Cannes Film. Festival. It is cur- rently showing al Hiway 39 Drive-In theater, Huntington Beach, starring Bruce Davison and Kim Darby. Intermission Orange County's Theater Groups Ready for Se ason By TO~f TITIJS version of "The Drunkard" will cl06e °' 1111 o.11t ''i.t s11H out the Irvine season on July 1. Perched ion the threshold cl a new The Huntington Beach Playhouse. as season, Orange CoWlt:f's community usual , also has its season In the b~~ , wtth four plays and another summie:r theater groups appear to be a' bit better children's show on tap. The opener 'will organized than usual at , this particular be "Once More With Feeling," under juncture. this columnist's direction, bowing in· on Rather lh'en operate by the "catch Sept. IL 1 as catch ·can " method which has Completing the Huntington schedule characterized many local playhouses in will be "My Three Angels" with Oa\•id lhe pa.st, a good share of the county's Maiville directing, opening Nov. 20 ; little theaters now know not only what "Generation" under futndy Keene, Feb. they're going to do but when, .,ecifically, 5, ,and "Rashomon," with Ron Albertsen they're going to do it in thl' director's chair, slated for April One of the most ambitious groups 6 . Is also the area's youngest, with only Limited to three shows last year, the two productions to its cri;dit. The Irvine Westminster Community Theater Is ~murllfy Theater has announced a bouncing . ~ack with a (our·play lineup schedule of six productions and for 1970-7! -all of which are com· perlorriianee dates for each - although paraUVe newco mers to local audiences. at this .wriUng only one has been assigned The Westminster group will continue a ·director. , • to prOduce its offerings at Flnley School The Irvine players will st.art off lhe : ulitil Its ne'Y playhouse is completed. season on Sept. 17 with. G1e tandem '~ Westminster's schedule of plays and Carce "Black Comedy" and ''White direetors includes . "Bell, Book and Li~s." Nei:t up will be · a rerun of ,, Candle" (Glen Eckenroth) in September, the coUrtroom drama "Nlgflt of January "Oavtd and Lisa" ,(Louise Van Vlanen) 16th" on Nov. 12 and the comedy "Good-for November, "Thteves· Carnival" (Son- bye Charlle" on Jan. 21. drp. Evans) ih FeQruary . and "The Big Arthur Miller's "A View From the Krufe'' (Alex Koba) cloSJng the season Bridge," with the group's president, in May . 1 Richard Dow, at the directorial reins, The S8nta Ana Communi ty Player:ii, is set for March 18, fol.lowed by the also all set for their new season, art first Orange County production of "A offering 1a bonus this year -a live Shot bl the Dark." An original musical vrrsion ,of 11 Laug~ln." pop\llated hy teenager~. opening a, three.weekend run Aug. J( , , " ' '· Weekend Hig~lights •·' The regular five-play season for the county's : oldest producing group gets under way Sept. 18 , with "Don't Drink the Wa~r. "" RouRdlng ou~ the Sa~ta i' Ana sc~e .are "Dr. Cook's ,Garden," . opening Nov .. 6; "See How They Run,'' Jan. 15:' "Ulies of the Flt-Id ," March 19, and "The' Curse of an Aching Heart," . ,, .. LAGUNA ART SHOWS -Laguna Beach Is overflowing with art shows starting with the 180 artist Festival of Art.'1, 65JI Laguna Canyon Road. l'be Sawdust Festival is just up tjle •. street a block of two in the 900 block of Laguna Canyon Road where about 150 artists have their arts and craJts on view and the Art·A-Fair which is presenting its fourth sP.ow with about 65 artlsts is at M6 N. Coast Blvd ., Laguna Beach . All are Qpen afternoons a·nd evenings -s9me slig~htly earl ier. BENEFIT FILM SHOW -A series o! films Is being ' 'shown in tbe Laguna Beach High SchOol audltoriam at 7-p.m. each Sunday. These are experim'enlal films made by student and professional film mak~rs and '11ie ·funds raised will go to help support tbe Free Clinic In Laguna . ANTIQUE SHOW -An anUque show. under a red and white lent Is being staged through Sunday on tbe lnwn o[ the San Clemente Inn, San Clemente. All kinds o( collectors it'ems will be shown from I to 10 p.m. toni ght and tomorrow night and from noon to 6 p.m. Sunday. · · May 7. ' 1.ooklltg ahead at a seven-prpductlon year 1°wiCh all the playing dates establish· ed, Is the Lagurul Moulton Playbou<e, However, only the first show , "The Ro,11 Hunt of the Sun!" which opens . sept. 22, is confirmed a this writing. 1 ' Ukewise, the / Costa Mesa CIVio Playhouse has a five-play seison in ' the works, but onJy It! !lrst two slJ9ws are underlined. Tbrie wookl be tht: com- edies "11le Impossible Years'' (opeiitnc Sept. 11) and "Everybody Loves Opal.'' Still wailing Jn the wings are sucfl other groups as the Ram:ho Community Players, San Clemente C om m u " I t 'I Thcalt:r. Fullerton Footllghten, Ana· Modje&ka Players. Tustin Community Players ' and Udo Isle Players. With more theaters participsiUng than ever -bctore-;-'local playgoc.rs can expect a t.•••••••••••• ... •••llil•••••-' llU!lljltious menu in '19'/Q.71. . ' S.. Guld!l..ll.. Fun. !'ogo 21 _ . . I . .... ""' ....... ~~·~--. -· . "__.. ..... - I . • .. I LAKE . CHAPALA. Mexico -Ten thousand Americans have moved here. Where it's everlasting sprin g -5000 £eet up in centraJ Mexico. They swear it's the pleasantest place -and the best climate in all tha world. They're mostly retired people -you can't work in Mexico until you've lived here five years. There ,ve a lot of artilts and writers drawn by th• low cost of living. (Writing is not considered work. How about that?) * r .,. had Hveral e*um~ttrson---wha~~­seoo a month covers a modest rented house; a dailY maid; food and a (ew drinks; a party now and then, and a membership in the golf club. Artists and writers do it cheaper. Hippie types! Mexico is conservative. Th8y aren't very wel~me. After agreeing it's the best climate, the argument Is WHERE life is btst: The village of Ajijic (pop. 3500) where it all began. Chapala (pop. 7000) is a pleasant village with a cocintry club ,,,.idential area five miles out. Jocotepec (pop. 8000) is an Indian fishing village admired by the. art people. * '11 .....,, ..-1 people go for G~\~· a half hour from here. Hasn't got the lake · ate, but it bas more than a million people. Which means theaters and supennaltets and a livelie< life. (A study of world air currents and nuclear fallout showed the Guadalajara area would be' the last to get it. And you have to admit that's a plus.) We've rented a house here for a month A copy of my "Living Abroad" witb updated Mexico ls fret for the writing. (Bless those who include a large self-addresstd and stamped envelope. For they shall be answered first.) * ''W• •re planni,. eur first trip to Mex'ico but have hNnl to much Hout hHlth problems.'' U.S. Public Health thinks well enougb of Mexico that you don't have to have.a smallpox vaccination certificate to come back to the States. The only country I know of that's exempt. All tourist hotels and restaurants serve bottled water and raw vegetables have been washed in a mild purifying solution. We keep a five-gallon .~e of .water in the house. Brush our teeth with 1t. Refill the ice cube trays with it. \Vash our vegetables in the solution. · * My pen.on.al h9"0up is b~patitis. J've met sevi:raI people who bad it and it's no summer c~1s~. (Mike Hayes. been in Acapulco for years, is . in the hoopital with it now.) You can get f'reventive shots. 'Ibey Jast six weeks. Som~ ~le ~ere do that every six weeks ; some think 1t s Just too much trouble. But it might be worthwhile for your lri . People living here say Guadalaj~ra ha~ the best medical school and the best doctors 1n Mexico . * "We are considering driving down to Mtxieo. :~, Our ur is not air-conditioned and I feel the he.at." :: There's no cool route into Mexico in the summer. :: Jt coo1s ofl when you get to 5000 feet -Guadalajara. And there's no road getting here in less than ' ;: a couple of days from the border. •' Cheaper you'll find anyway, to fly down. Rent •• a car. F0r two people. U you've got a. large •' family. the car's cheaper. You. can get a!r-con-~ ditioned trains that are inexpensive. But I f~gured t car costs and tiain costs -two adults. two children. ~= .!Jr travel worked out the cheapest. • ~ l{nott's Schedules " .. :: Merle Haggard :: Knott's Berry F·ann will : _ present the nwnber coe en- :: tertliner in the muntry and :-western musk: field, Merlt ~ Haggard, this Saturday in ~ &bows IL 6, 7:30, 9 and 10:30 ~ p.m. in the Wagoo Camp. 'f: Haggard. af "Okie o f f. Muskogee" fame, will make ;; one of his few Southern '$ CaUf<llria awearances with · ~ tis band. The Slran&ef"S, and ~.his taJented wi~e, Bonnie ~()wtm. ~ Known as the "Poe\ of hle -:; Common Man.'' he draws :_ deeply on his past. lo pen ~= aongs such as "Mama Tried," •"' "Branded Man " "Swinging ·-' . .. Doors," 11sq Me Back Home,'' Ind, of c:ourlt, ''Okie Fmll MIBkO(ee." All JS 11oingles be has re>eased bave made the charts, and eigtlt ; o( Chem have reached number ont. Haggard has .90ld well , over three million records. ~. The Saturday show1 promise '-to ht one of dM! biggest events i-of Knott'& Golden Cavalc:llk ·; ol Couolry ond Western Music ·~·---•• : 11111 Frldl;y -Iden-• : Ila! 1-. "'Jl>o ~ol • Blodlm." (llort ol ldevlllon, ndlo, ..... ""' mcMel), will • perfonn In lbows al 1:30, 1:30 and IO :IO p.m. Suoday'1 beadllntt, B 111 Mize, w!U llUI lllldkn<ts to 0..., ex<IU.,. lllowJ at I: 30, 1:30 &lld 10:311 p.m. Jlecotlnlz. Cid u one ol. tbe belt mUli· C!lans In the country and wettem neld. the verulllt I MIJO II a noted ,Wlariel, BILLY MIZE At K,..tt', Sunday writer . compcser and singer. Friday, Saturday and SUn· day w\11 flnd Fiesta Village alive with the Latin sounds ol the Fred Hemondei Quartet amt the Conjunto Papaloapan. five ucitiog muslciam featur· lag a u!Wque Mexicln betp. Th< SallJ Sawdra -will dance hJill over tbe beads of Plm audiences a 11 weekend. A specla<:Ubr fire"1>1-ks 'fl)(1W will take place on the lake In Fiesta Village evey nl.ght 1t JO p.m., I : 15 on Sun· cloy. Knott's is located in Buena ,,.,k-a '°31 Beach Blvd .• Juot two mJles -ol the Santi Ana Fretway. Fleur de. Lis Break Capt. Grant Boice, commanding officer, Naval Air StatiODi Los Alamitos, zeros in on a painting of the Blue Angels flying team at an exhibit of Navy Com· bat Art at Coast and Southern Savings and Loan. 77T1 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach. The art will be tllert thri>ugh Aug. 7. In the Galleries Naval Art On Display COAST AND SOUTHERN SAVINGS-Tm Edinger Ave., HunUngton Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours through Aug. 7, U. S. Navy Combat Art, official selection of action pajntlngs and drawings. FlR91' WESTERN BANK-18022 CUiver Drive, University Park, Irvine. On exhibit during regular business hours through July, acrylic~ paintings by Robert Schepe. CORONA DEL ~tAR UBRARY-UO Marigold Ave., Corona del Mar. On exh.ibil through July during regular library hours, drawings by Malcom Cameron and the sculpturt .of Joan Irving. LAGUNA ART GALLERY--307' Clif[ Drive, Laguna Be.ach. All Calif, ExluDit sponscred by Festival of Arb: to run througb ·Aug. 30, noon to 6 p.m. AdmJss:ion is 50 cents. MARINER'S iJBRARY--2005 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. During regular liprary hours, the Jr. Ebell Artists of the Month exhibit featuring a collection or art from the lilsl l I-month's exhibits, through Aug. BOWERS MUSEUM-2002 N. fl.Iain SL , Sanla Ana. Hours: 10 a.m. -4:30 P.m, Tues. -Sat.; l to ,5 p.m. Sun.; Wed . and Thurs. eve to 9 p.m. No charge. Micrographic photos by Dr. 'Norman Hodgkin on view through Aug. 16; sculpture from Art West Association, and old silver from private collections. NEWPORT HARBOR ART htUSEUM~ Main St., Balboa. Hours: Wed . -Sun. l to !i p.m.' Monday 6 • 9 p.m. Currently on exhibit through J uly, works by .41 American scUlptors ·from the Whitney Museum of American Art. COM'A MESA UBRARY-566 Center S~.. Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular library hours through Aug. 15, oil pajnttngs by Louise Young. MESA ART LEAGUE--SIJ Cenler St., Costa fl.1esa. Hour: Sat. and Sun. 1 to S p.m. ctUlnuous exhibits ol art work in various media by Art League memben:. No admission charge. UNITED CALIF. BANK-.11139 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. On exhibit, during regular business hours, through Aug. 15. pastel, oil and acrylic paintings by Helen Patzer. CALIF. FEDERAL SAVINGS GAU..ERY-2700 Harbor Blvd., Cost.a Mesa. On exhibit during regular business hours, throqh July, oil paintings by Hazel McKinnon. SECl}IUTY·PACIFIC BANK-196 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. On ahibit during regular business hours through Aug. 15, oil paintings by Jane Huffman. Mi'SA VERDE UBRARY-2969 fl.1esa Verde Drive East. Colta Mesa. On exhibit during regular library hours through Aug. 15. oil' paintings by Anny fl.1ettl Kirk!. AVCO SAVINGS AND LOAN-.1310 Bristol, Costa ~1esa . On exhibit during regular business hours 'through July, oil paintings by Pat Ingram. CROCKER CITIZENS BANK-2300 Harbor ~lvd., Costa Mesa. On exhibit during 'regular business hoQra .. through. Aug. 15, oil j>alnltngs by 1tfarjorie Ludlam. / UB PUBlJC LIBRARY-..-s25 Main St., Huntington Beach. Hours : 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. t.1on, ·Fri.; 9 a.m. ~ 6 p.m. Sat. On exhibit through July. 400 works by eanr. artists in mariy media , sponsored by the Calif. Art! Commission. CAt.tERA WORX GALLERY-2400 W. Coast Highway. New· port Beach. Hours: Thu rs, , F'ri .. 5 · 9 p.m.: Sat .and Sun., noon to t p.m. This Gallery is limited to photography. Cur- rently on exhibit through J uly, work or W. Eugene Smith. NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK-1090 Bayside Drive, New- port Beach. On u hlb!l dwing regular business houn through Aug., woven will banglnp by Micki Lippe. MAJ\INERS SAVINGS AND LOAN-ISIS Westcllfr Drive. Newport Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours, oil and watercolor palfillng.s by Ruth C. Frymire, through Aua. 14. 'Bloom' Play Reset At Taper "Rosebloom," lhe prize-WiJ>. nlJlr play by Harvey Perr which was to have opened lut mmth at Ille Mark Taper Forwn, haa been rMi:lleduled to open on November 5. Rosemary Forsyth, Mike Kellin, Ron Rifkin and Rachel Roberts were to have starred in the four·character "Rosebloom." Miss RobertS, however, was refused permission by Actors' Equity to appear in the play &inoe sbe doer not have a "green" er resident alien card from Uie U.S. B....,.u of Jm. · mlgratloo. T!lll card pennlla nor><:W..na lo __ employ_,_ men! In the Unll<d Slates. Miis Roberta haa applied for the resident alien card· bUt spe<W permission II required from Acton' Equily lo .Uow her to appear in a play while her application II being -cessed. This permission was refused. The decision was appealed to the N.Y. Cooncll of Actor's Equily lint by letW &lld then by personal appearanct before the Council The appeal was overruled by a 10-I vote. Il was lm~ble lo replace Miss Roberb at so late a date and therefore the interests oC lhe play would best be served by poslponing tbe production unW later In the year. He emplwiud Miss Roberta' tJDi. que qualities and Uie special balance required by !he play and achieved in 'lhe castillg of tllese four dillinguisbed artisls. He added that hls casting of M.ial Roberts in the part had the wholehearted support of the other members of the cast and oC the playwright -who has final approval of ca.sting under the conditions of his contract. Pulitzer Prize winner Howard Sackler, whose play "The Pastime of Monsieur Robert" was to have opened on November 5, has generous- ly consented to the re-schedul· ing or his play at a future date. Sac kier a s s u r e d Dav idson that he_ bas his un· qualified support in the re- scheduling and the reasons for ii. Pau l SUls. whom the N.Y. Times has called ''the favorite unsung hero of the in-crowd" brouglll the legendary "Story Theatre" to Los Angeles for the nm time. Live Theater "Tbe FanWUckl" MwJcal fantasy on stage at San Clemente Theater, 202 Avenida Cabrlllo, San ClerMnte, Wed . -Sat at 8:30 · p.m. through Aug. 6. Reserva· lions -492-0465. "Oliver" • CAMPER -TRAILER RESORTS ARE SPRINGING UP EVERYWHERI! Rancho C.llfomla'1 B-rfleld C°""'ry 11 Mltlod Among Oak TrM1 Small Camp_e_rs 'In~ Mini-trailers and C,ampers Now Popular If there i.! a "trend" lo WHEELS '"d ,r,r:··~~,J ,· .. -·>' .. J;KJ····~., recreational vehicles we would like to · know what Jt is. For every lelter asi:ing about big motorbomes, or big: trailers, we get two or three enquiring what kind of load a small car can handle, and what's By JACK KHU.SS the best cac to get for this '-----------! purpooe. Sales of small folding campers are increGsing, not: decreasing. "Mobile Home - Recreational Ve- hicle Dealer re,. ports thal 1969 aales t 0 tale d U.CK KNUSS 107,380 ooiU, versus 96,495 in Statuesque Actress _ York In Giant Role 1!163, although these are not as popular in california. Here only 3,566 of these little units were produced, while '4,578 motorbo,µies and 4,908 van conversions were being built. This condition may change. Nothing beats a motorhome or van conversion for extended tours, although weekend cam- ping is 1 different matter. But what is needed fo r weekend cam ping is a variety or places to go: And these places s h o u I d , preferably, h ave a va ri e ty 'o f amusements. Everyone is not When titian-haired Francine cootent to enjoy the beauties York receives an acting assignment, it's generallf a ol nature while relasing. tall order. Most people who like a tent- Being tall -a statuesque trailer have families, and 5'8" -is t.be lovely Francine's often prefer the s ma 11, biggest problem. economical car, which means "Very few leading men want they can't pull a big trailer. a leading lady that they may In many cases they have no have to look ap to," said Miss place to store a big trailer. York. "So my dramatic ability but can get the folding type is oftentimes relegated to a into their garages. lesser role." N o t w i th s t anding. the In many parts of tile coun- talented Francine has landed try new, bigger and better what might be called her big· privately owned recreational ge!t part -that of a 72-foot centers, such as "Butterfield gianl in "Land or the Giants," Country" in S o u l ti er n which airs every Sunday nigh California's Riverside County, in color over Channel 7. are springing up. The b e a u t I f u I and For $5.00 a day an entire at the general store, teen recreation center, Jehu Saloon, snack bar, shops or the laundry. There's an 350 acre lake with fine bass flShing. Or ooe can always get crappie an<f blue gill iI troot and catfish won't bite. Boats are for rent. There's a fly casting pond, swimming pools, picnic area, horseback bicycle, hiking and horseback trailers. The tenter can rent a horse, or bring in his Cl""'". There's $1.S million invested in this cesort. but as it'' own- ed by Kaiser Aetna this is probably considered s m a 11 change. Parks such as this in many areas including Florida and New England, .are not only taking some pressure off publicity owned c:ampgrounds, but are creating an entirely new class of rec reation seekers. They have helped make folding camper owners: the youngest and b e s t educated of all trailerists4 campers. with incomes just below those of motorhome owners, according to ·the in· dustry surveys . The mark of th is class is t\vo or three children, a small imported car, a tent-trailer and other re c reational vehicles such as a boat, trail bikes,· or even a sail plane. With these possessions also comes an urge to go, and go frequentl y. They travel more often, though uswally fOf' shorter distances, than 00 con. ventional trailer or camper owners. curvact?Ous actress exercises fami ly can enjoy 8,000 acres her dramatic talents in an up-of ground, although it is easy coming segment or the hour· enough to spend a little more long series in which she reigns --::;-iiiiiii~iiiiiliiiliiiiiilmiiilmm.iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij;;:-as the head of a gang of l saboteurs. lltlDAL REGISTRY DANISH FUltNITUltl Musical version of "Oliver "in 'Land of the Giants,' my ACCISSOltlES IXECUTIYI GIFTS 00\ 1'\wurJfl!L Twist" on stage at the height is a great help rather Moulton Playhouse, 6 0 6 than the usual hindrance," Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna said Francine. Beach, 'l\ies. -Sun. at 8:30 Starring with Miss York In p.m., through Aug. 30. the episode, titled "Dooms-dantrth ccffee Reservations-494-0743. day," are series regulars Gary gcwde'\ ..Man ol La M•nc~" ~;!n.Kurtei~:'°~gr;~~ 2(,qQE.CoulHIAIOJ·• Cofona clol Mor Musical version of Don Don Marshall, Deanna Lund DoillJ 9:30 +oS:jo Tel : 673-'2.?tib Quixote legend on stage at and Heather Young. .1undova 11+oS &olA -Mas~•rChcl~ Orange Coast c 011 e g e =ciiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii;:iiii:iiliiiiii~iiiiiii'.iiiiiiiiiiiii<;;:;;;iiiiiiiOimiiiiieiiiiiiilii;;;;;r,1 auditorium through Aug. I at ;i &:15 p.m. Tickets at box office, 6::J0..8:30 p.m. berore perform. """""· "Slots" and "Tltt American Dream" Two one act plays are on slage at the Nifty Theater. 307 Main St., Huntington Beach at 8:30 p.m. Fri. and Sat. •tnrough Au g. 22. Reserv&· lions -833-4571. "S.poon River Antbolou '' On stage at lhe South Coast Repertory theater, 1 8 2 7, Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, Wed. and Thurs. throogh Aug. 27 al 8:30 p.m. Reservations -646·1363. "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern'' On sta ge. at South Coast Repertory tl'ttater. I 8 2 7 Newport Blvd., Costa Pitasa, Fri. -Sun. througfl Aug. 30 at 8:30 p.m. ReservaUon,s - 646-1363. ONNIN• AUG, JND Wat•r CelMt b., RON ROESCH E11cauttic, \.y MARK COOMER DAILT 0 11 t. S NOW. •• NEWPORT PRODUCE No. 1 IN NEWPORT BEACH!! w~w• Hcome f•rnovs for ttte fl,,..t produco at th• IOW9tt prlcnl We try hoNll wrrt •t the merket et 2 •. .,. 9Vtry mernlnt, buylnt th• flnnt produce a\oallabla. We ru1h It t. our storn. yO\I Mn"• It for lunch. It could"'' IN fre1h1rl look at theH typical spec:lal1, t!Mt h•v• macfe "'' famou1I LOOK' WHAT A FEW CENTS WILL IUY AT NEWPORT PRODUCE , .......... , ................... ... • Our Pameu1 Qu11ity • The Strike I• Over Our Famou1 Qu11lty : swfir°'coRN : ICEBERG' UUuCE : CARRDTs : • LARGE 5" • IA•s • ••ch 1 "" •--• 5• • • "hW• Jull>lrt." Nnl ~ ~ .... d e ,_ hi • • Llm1~1 DoI. • llmlt--6 • limit..,.. • • With Thia Coupoft • With Thl1 Coupon • Wit" Thia Coupon • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS EXPIRE AUGUST 5 These restaurant~ demand tho fine1t lOr their cu1tomers. Th•+'s why they fe•ture NEWPORT PRODUCE! P•troni1e them! ltfltsldres "On Tit• loy", Ollwtf'1 lomt ltef, Newport~ Plaa M•, Now 8 Loc•tioni; D"-•YI Sea Sltanty, Newport; ftt llff leet, Newport. "ORANGE COUNTY'S lASTEST GROWING PRODUCE ORGANIZ ATION" NB CIVIC CENTEfl GALLERV--lOOO)W. Newport Blvd., CH A LL IS Newport U.ach. On exhlbil during <Ol!ular business hours. G A L L E R I E S ...... 67U71S 67M711 67l·62t1 fhrOURh Sept., a collOCtlOtl of pliotos 8~lhered by the NtW· 1J90 s..tti c-t Hwy. port Beach Historical Society from 22 10U.rces, ahowlJ)i old · L ..... '"'' _ 49._14,7 Newporl Beach and Balboa. 1 1;.._.;.._.,. ____ _ ·- "35 Ytar1 of Produce Know lloW" t WEEKENDER OU ·T 'N' A B·O UT * NORM DAILY •lLOT 21J By STANLEY nnd ARLl!Y ~""1lVENS ORANG E COU NTY'S RESTAURAN T, NI GHT CL UB AND EN TE RT AINM ENT SCENE Ember's Shoreline Earf,Y blrd dinner from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Embers 1 Shoreline restaurant proved to be a delightful ex· perience. This elegant spot offers a delightful view of Ute ocean, a regal serene atmosphere, excellent service and cuisine. A complete dinner on this special menu, with en tree changes rugµ tty, ts $3.95. A UgbUy spiced sea!(>Od coquille began the meal, followed. by a tossed salad with a thick mellow dressing. The entrees this night were breast or chicken F1orentine and Veal cutlet Monterey with supreme sauce. Buttered French cut green beans and baked potato accompanied the meal. The chef responsible for this gastronomic delight i.rPhilip-Braggar, Who like most of the employes, bas been with the Embers sitce it opened three years ago. Our waiter, Gil Breitzman, another long time employe, has been a \Vaiter for over 32 years. His flawless service further enhanced an excellent meal. The Embers Shoreline is located at 1900 E. Ocean Blvd. in Long Beach. Reservations suggested. Benjies Stan Weinstein, owner of Benjies restaurant, 1828 North Tustin, Santa Ana, really means it when he says "Kosher style," his fried potatoes are called Jewish fries instead of French. Benjies speciality is the mile-high sandwich, a meal in itself. A catering menu is available from 10 to 1,000 r.ersons with special party buffet platters for small gatherings. Just about anyone can enjoy Benjie's fine food. Ne w Sizzler Manager A somewhat formidable reuow -certainly in the departments of body size and name pro- nunciation -recently signed on as new manager of the Sizzler family steak house in Costa Mesa. A genuine son-of-Hawaii if ever there was one, "GRANTS BRADFORD HOUSE" s p E c I A L Your Family Restaura nt SAT.-SUN.-MON.-WEO. NITES STEAK DINNER 2 ·~"s s300 s .... "' with foti•d , ••• ,, ,.1.d, cli11ic1 of dr1nift;, oniol'I riF19t, fr1ncll f,;,d p11t1toet, llof 111!1t encl SIN!;LE OlNNER-$2.2£ GRANTS HUNTINGTON BEACH BROOKHURST And ADAMS THE WINE CELLAR "A RESTAURANT OF ENCHANTMENT" 'A MAGNIFICENT WINE COLLECTION H BOB MOLINE Voca l Guitar RESERVATIONS ONLY DINNER FROM 6 P.M., WED.·SAT. NEWPORT llA.Ot, G\UIORNIA. 1107 JAMBOREE RD. PHONE 17141 644-1700 llqttr Jlnrsr llnn • * What's Happening At The Whit' i:torse Inn? * * New Luncheon Menu with table service * Group facilities for lunch * Monday night Special Complete Prime Rib Dinner ... $3.25 * Wednesdoy night Speciol Chompogne ond Strogonoff •.. $3.25 * Doncing lo Lee Ferrell's New Group * Exquisite Coloring _ 3295 Newport Blvd., Newport Beech Rtstrv•tlons 67~1374 he's G"°rge Kabollua, a Hilo born six-looter who arrived in the states about two yee.rs ago with an ·impressive background in both the food and enterlainment Industries. PLAIN GEORG E On first encounter we immediately trying .to call Jlim Mr. Kaboilua (however you say that) and settled or plain George. Which also seemed much better suited to his informal and persOQflble naturJi. But be did tell us one interest· .ing sidelight about his surname. It translates from the Hawaiian Jang· uage as "Two That Returned." oEo•o• tcA.HotLuA A graduate of the hotel and restaurant school at the University of Hawaii prior to taking the Sizzler post George was man'ager of Costa Mesa's A and W drive-in restaurant. ln the islands he held a number of management positions with several hotels, restaurants and travel organizations. . AN.ACTOR.TOO Hawaii has likewise been home base for much of George's considerable theatrical experience. A member of the Screen Actors Guild, his earl y training lncludedl drama classes at the university and a stint as production manager of the Honolulu Community Theater. A long string of stage credits includes roles as singer, dancer or actor in productions or "Showboat"' "Of Thee I sing," ''La Traviata" and "La Boheme." Motion picture appearances include "Surfer Go Go," "Hawaii" and "Kona Coast.'' 1 TV COMMERCIALS On television George has been seen in com- mercials for Kellogg 's foods, United Airlines and Dole Pineapple. He also has been a member of the Honolulu Youth The:iter and a U.S. Army Special Servioes u_nit in Germany. OIAMGI COUNTY'S MOST IU.UTIFUL llSTAUlANT THE OUKE MITCHELL SHOW Dencin9 To Thi lli9 l1rid Sound 11106 COAST HWY., SO. LAGUNA-IES. 499°2441 ~~~~~~~~ "' SZUB.VJ.TIONa (n4) Ms.Mil " -~~~~~~~~ .GRAND OPENING SPECIAL STEAK & EGGS HASH llOWN l TOAST SEI YID ALL DAY -DINNER SPECIAL- PRIME RIBS SOUP 01 SALAD POTATO • ROLL OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK - 7 A.M. To 10 P.M. LEE'S COFFEE SHOP 1902 H1rbor Blvd. 646-3484 Cost• Mesa (Corner of 19th And Harbor) (WTllTllMMl.111 I .I\ HANK ( SURANIE .... . PIAJIO W WORLD FAMOUS Siwtt 1912 ••• Exotit Pol)'11tsiaw JriNks stn'td i11" 1ropir"I pgradist IUPIRB SEAFOOD AND STEAKS LU NC HEO N SERVED 11:30 A.M. to 4 P.M. ru an athlete George has excelled . ln what's probably a record number of sports. Football, track and field (including javelir't, shot-put, sprints, discus, hammer and broad jump), baseball, volleyball, tennis, skin diving, swimming, skiling, judo, karate and handball .. A holder of American Red Cross instructor certificates in water safety and first aid, George no\v resides in Costa Mesa with his wife, Beverly, and two-year old son, David. LUAU SOON In the near future he'll have an opportunity to demonstrate his Ha \valian food flair for local out ''n' abouters. By staging a traditional luau at the Costa Mesa Sizzler. The restaurant already evidences one nice new ~ouch under George's guiding hands. Smiling bostesses greeting customers at the door Thursday through Monday. Depending on whether you like a late lunch or an early dinner, this family steak house and its companion edition in Huntingt~n Beac~ curren~y offer diners some excellent daily spectals. With a different one--served every day of the week Crom 2 to 5 p.m. oniy. SOME SPEC IALS Thursday, Friday and Sa.turday, respe<:tively, the specials -at a low ct.all y c:;ost of 89 ce~ts -are roas\ beef, mahi mah1 and lmported Danish ham. Others range from Tuesday's six-ounce New York steak for 99 cents to Sunday's steak-a-bob, $1.29. . ln Costa Mesa the Sizzler is located at the corner of 17th St. and Santa Ana, Hillgren Square. Tn Huntington Beach at 18582 Beach Blvd., Town and Country Center. Reuben's Tustin Combine three multi talented e x u be r a n t COSTA MESA GOLF , COUNTRY CLUB Speci1litift9 '" IAN9Um AND WI DDIN• 11c1n 10N1 Proudly Pre1ents George Tipton I Formerly et t he Le c .. t• C.C. I WED. & SUN. AFTERNOONS THUR S., FRI ., SAT. NITES ' ·...::.-............ ·---.......... _ .......... _ Happy "De1W. ..,.. .. Hoor, Moltd.., ttlni hfdey, 4 te 4 ALL FACILITIES OPEN TO PUBLIC -FOOD 1701 Golf Course Dr., Cost• MeN 540-7200 ir Every Evening s to 1 Is Fam·uy Dinner 1t Best. LOBST ER LOVERS Everyon• is telking about our gia nt Au1tralian Lobster T •ii 116-20 01. I I. JOIN THE ' BARSTOOL SURFERS AT OUR Cocktail Hour Every Friday 5 to 71 keduc•d Rife, ori Otlrilu Ent•ri•inm1nt St1rh 1f 5 ' r 11 , J-fere j r}ohnn 'l'.1 flo w O pen FINE FOOD AT FAMl(Y PRICES 11 A.M. lo Midnight -Mon. lhru Thurs. 11 A.M. to 2 A.M. -Fri. ind Sit. 725 Baker St., Co5ta MffCI Neer Corner of Bristol 557-9124 • • perf~rme.rs, each with, a long list of credits lo motion pictures, television, theater-restaurants and l~u.nges across the country and you have the ex· ~it1ng new sound of "The Rising Sun ." currently 1n the spotlight at Reuben's Tustin, restaurant. ~'~ Jo~nny Zorro, featured guitarist, ts an e,-. ~aord1nary musician creating many different sound innovations with supple lingers and tons of soul. The backbone ol this contempoary group is drummer-vocalist, Allen Breneman, who must have been born with drumsticks in his bands. . Jim Breneman, younger brother of Allen, con· tributes bass guitar ·and· a tremendous voice well suited to popular ballads such as "Raindrof.s Keep Fallin' On My Head·" "Didn't We Gir " and "Gal ' ' veston." Well worth a listen. Reuben's Tustin is located at 1513 N .. Tustin Ave ., Santa Ana . Beer Can Regatta New York city lays claim to being a ''summer festival." Looking around, we feel tber~·s a suf .. ficient number o!local activities to give the Orange Coast something of a ho1d on the same tiUe. One ol the most unusuaJ events hereabouts these. nights is Newport Beach's colorful Beer Can Regat .. ta. Staged every Thursday evening durlng the months of July and August. this festive and informal boat parade offers viewers a jolly respite from the day's ~ares. w The best place to take it all Ln ts Crom a ringside table at any of the fine restaurants along the regatta route which is in the rnain1cbannel of Newport Harbor. ~ontinued on Page 26 101 JOTH ST. NIWPOlT lliCH l l SllYATJ ONI 471..0JOO PRlt,iE EASTERN BEEF ' AGED & CHARCOAL BROILED Seofoods & Prime Lamb Speciolties OJMn From S p.m. Tues., thru Sun. f-,,11,,.J t: j..J ~p~~--"'. ~ POIC'f ~ ' DANCING 7NIGHTS JOE & HERB TRIO Wld,, S1t11., 1:10 '''"' HMYY Ral• THI. ~FRANK ROSOL IN';O:----• ..; • Wlttt !J CONTE CANDOLI ~ ~ IN JAZZ CONCEIT SUNDAY, AUG. J11d ' ..... ~-~ RED 'm\R'ON Thur.• Set. Dancing *'H• 8"d Me fOUf'SOMt• Coo.tccsa!Auft FOR RESERVATIONS 624·2700 .. ' ' ' I I I , I ' I I O.W.Y PILOT Fri;,i, JuiJ JI, 1910 FAMILY DINING COMPLETE DINNER UNDER $3 WEEKENDER OUT 'N ABOUT "OCEAN FRESH SEAFOOD" •••• V Optn 6 A.M. to 11 [.m. D•llV --IA LIDO, NIWPORT au H franeois' CONTINENTAL CUISINE F•mous For FLAMING DUCK Opon 11 :00 A.M. -Closed Mond1y HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIFORNIA 18151 BEACH BLVD. 842-1919 Continued from P•1• 25 Farrell's ParJour Each restaurant one enters bas a definite personality -a feeling ah9ut it which conveys a message. Some establislunents have gracious hosts, others make one fe"el insignificant -while ·still others are warm and cheerful. Farrell'& lee Cream Parlour lavishes warmth and cheer on it's customers (accompanied by a big ·base drumf, and adds a scoop or happy childhood memories on the house. SWEET SHOP The decor is that of a sweet shop at the tum of the century. The music is provided by a player piano and a drum, with an occasional siren to call attention to a birthday. The mood of gaiety is contagious and enjoyed by cu_:;tomers of all ages. AJma:-os at Newport Grotto The menu is so engrossing it is provided as a souvenir and orie bas a rather difficult time deciding which item sounds the most delectable. One becomes the "kid in the candy shop" and finally a choice must be made. Aside from the familiar ice cream concoctions there are in- novations such as "The trough,". "matinee idol" and one in particular, "Farrell's zoo,'~ wollld take the entire column to describe. It also takes two men to carry. The merry music of the Alonzo Brothers has taken Farrell's bas eight locations in this area. The over the Newport Grotto. Tuesday through Sunday particular Farrell'·s we mention is at 16301 Beach from 8:30 p.m. to ~()!ing.!. Th~ trio, with George .on_ Blvd., lluntington Beach. ba.ss a,nd organ, Ernest oliOrums and guitar, and above from left, play a variety of styles and will oblige with whatever request 'viii make you happy. TI!ejlewport Grntto.is.located ac 3333~\Vest Coasc Hi gh\vay, Newport Beach. ll====================~~R~1c~b~a~rd~w~h~o!h~a~n~~~e~s ]lh~e;:vfoc~al~s~an~d~p~l!a~ys~th~e~gw~·1a~r~~~~~~~~~~, Visit a bit of OM Jopon .. ·II THE BERL JN ER Ii Real p;;;;;.;;';;"";;";;";;"';;";;o;;ua;;s·;;;;; I [ OF CONTINUOUS MOVIU I I @MIYAKO ; · LUNCHEONS• DINNERS ·COCKTAILS KI 1·330.1 3.1 Town & Country, Orange' . sun day s~unch 3801 E.urColft Hlc111J.\Y 0.0.A -.MAI, CALDIOVllA P1u1n : (714) 675-13'4 PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS ................ ~® ••••••••••••••••••• ~ Caribe Room : PRESENTS : ENTERTAINMENT -DANCING • • BUFFET LUNCHEON • MONDAY thru FRIDAY • • • Songstress/Song Writer • KATE PORTER • • l :J0-1:30 P.M. Mon. thru Fri. • Monday thru Saturday • • • JACK • • COSTANZO • • •"" • GERRIE • woo • • • • • 21112 PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY--liUNTINGTON BEACH-536-1421 • ~································~ ''GRANTS BRADFORD HOUSE'' l' our Fu1nily Restaurunt EVERY FRIDAY s12' ALL THE FISH YOU CAN EAT wltll 'f'lftdl f'rfn, C,..,..,Y Ott llW, Ht! ... • •flttr", T.,,., - EVERY TUESDAY AND THURSDAY BUCK NIGHT YOUR CHOICE ... ,.,.,.., G.W.PrWC•k ... ......... J. "--.. ~ P.t ... ,......,.....,.11i.1t "' '"'""' C'ltt ..... .... It.ti • •wttw OPEN FOR BREAKFAST, LUNCH AND DINNER 1:30 •.m. to 9:30 p.m., Monday thru S•turdly -10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Sund1y GRANTS HUNTINGTON BEACH BROOKHURST & ADAMS Ger11wn Family R estuurant Cantonese food e1t here or t1kt home. Famous For SAUERBRATEN with POTATO DUMPLINGS o,.. Dellr f., DlllHI" fro"' 5 P.M. SATURDAY, AUGUST 15 ANNIVERSARY PARTY ASTORIA TRIO from BAVARIA 1:00 & 10:JI P.M.--a....,.etlon SIMJfftted for 4 or _,. Pffple. 11112 hec.11 llwtl., Te-& Co1111ttry Cuter Hoetfittto• Inell ''1·5100 CIOHd Mo11. CHILDlllN'S MENU ............. ~ ...... , SPECIAL ANNIYllSAIY COUPON F•itr Nltn -TliurMey tlir• Sahirday. D11f'i .. me11tli ef A119tr1t ltirj e .. di--lecol.,. tlM ac:olNI for t.1111f prlce! .................... , For The Finest Cold CULi, Pastrl~. Bffrs and Imported Wines.-Visit DER BERLINER DELIKATESSEN Only Several Doors From Restaurant In Town & Country Center Ope n JO to f.i -·Closed Sun. & Mon. -968-4300 Ntmpnrt ~rnttn SUNDAY BRUNCH FEATURING STRAWBERRY CHAMPAGNE ~ $225 IZ N••• ro 3 P·"'· Now Appearing ALONZO BROS. TRIO ~ TUESDAY thru SUNDAY 3333 WEST COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT BEACH Every Monday Is Family Day From 2 P.M. to 9 P.M. TOP SIRLOIN SPECIAL . . . . . . . $1.39 IKl11U. Wff Pot.to or FNM• hi• & Spoclol Sialor To•t --·------INTIODUCIN• SIDLERS' NEW DAILY SPECIALS MONDAY -N .. Y9'tl S... , , , . , . , , , , , •.•... , , . , ... ''' TUbDA Y -Gr.•114 SI~• , , , , , , , , , • , , , , , , , , , , , , • , , , tt11 WIDNUDAY -Slrtolo SNlllll ••• ···•·••••••••· ••••• S1.2t THURSDAY -l...t loof •••• , •• ,. ,, , , ,, , , •••• , , , , , 1t; rlDAY -H .. llt1t IM.W MClllO , ,, ,, ,, ,,,, ••• , ,, ••• It; ATUIDAY -0...1111 H.,. , , , , , ••••• , • , , , , , ••• , , •.•. lff SUNDAY -Steolt·A·lolt • , ••• , , •.••• , , • , , , • , , • , • , • S 1.2t S ~ll.VEO Fii.OM 2 P.M. TO 5 P,M. ONLY HUNTINGTON BEACH I COSTA MESA TOWN & COUMT•Y "ILLOll'N SQUA•I' um a-11 ,,...., mttu t . 1mi a~· AM 6Gof.,, CHILD0S POlTION HAI.I r•1c1 IClll ......... 121 PHONI IN ,,. ALL ITIMS AYAILAILI TO TAii OUT ST AG CHIJISE CASINO . 1.11 21st pl., Newport Beach ORiole 3-9560 o,.. Y .. lrHM DGD, IJ.12 -M . M Sat. 'tll J •·•· BAL-PORT LOUNGE PNHty PNMlth SUNDAY JAM SESSION 4 to 8 p.m. with the HONEY BEES HELEN •nd BASS Aho •PP"rl .. Tll•'·• Fri., •!Id Set., t I'·•· to 2 e.M. TRY OUR SUNDAY BRUNCH $1 ZS 1991 wlttt ._..., S.__,e, .._, or PGttlo, H_. Sr.we & r-r. 4507 WEST COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT BEACH 67S-4200 fJlie SetW has many moods Orange--gold sunny; blue-gray somber; Moonlight romantic; sprightly gay; Se rene ; stormy. Breathtaking! Reflect on this ever- shifting seascape from the best vantage point in La guna ViaOR UuGO IM Cliff Drive at Coast Highwa y Laguna Beach-494-9477 Open Daily Luncheon-O innP r Cock tails OPERATED BY FRED HARVEY "" J\mfac COMP<NY Like Roast long I.land Duck -Tournedo1 of Filet Mignon? -Veal Oscar? -Rainbow Trout? -Well, who doe1n 'tl!! These and many other enticing entrees are served seven nights e week at Bob Bums Rest- aurant. located in Fashion Island, Bob Burn• is more than just • "Steak and Lobster" restau. ronf. A selection of twenty carefully prepared entrees -accom pan ied by Bob Burns famous Cream Caesar Salad -wit/ satisfy the most discriminating palate. Open every night, Bob Burns does honor telephone reservations for people "on the go." For -those of you who are out for a leisurely evenin9, lounge enterteinment is provided nightly. I 37 FASHION ISIAND NEWPORT CENTER .. tw .. ,. •11ffwnt & ....... . ""'""' l"•rtldf19 111:..,....,,,,., ...... 2030• -----·------ Pizza Palace 16121 HCll'ltor Gt 1111-vot I Nert to Zocly'sl 839-7290 Wli HONOR; ALL PIUA COUPOttl SPAGHml SANDWICHES 1 SA.LAD· Im PlZZA FAMILY FUN Folk Mnlc Fri. ' Sot. OUR CHEF IS A REAL PRO. TRV HIS LOBSTER, IT'S 'THE FINEST OUTSIDE MARINELAND, STEAKS, TOO. AND A FIX-IT- V OURSELF SAi.AO BAR, TFIV OUR NEW COCKTAILS T OO, LI KE A FOOT OF YOUR FAVO RITE MARTINI, A GREAT DINING OUT V ALUE AND SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA'S MOST BEAUTIFUL OCEAN VIEW, ' I El\ITERTAINMENT NITELY, 'TAKE SA.N OIEGO FRWY. TO HAWTHORNE &LYD. ANOGOSOUTH TO MARINELAND DISCOVE" THEALL NEW --- • . • • , • • . . • . "' • • - [ • • -- • • • : ( BUBBLES THE CLOWN · CHILDREN'S PARTIES MAGIC SHOW -PUPPETS -FAVORS REASONAILE RATES "4-12'0 llCKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE ,.... ................ ......, -S.Wclcsy HAPPY HOUR Moh. th•u f,;, 5 to 6 LADlll NIOHT Prl. aM ht. 11 ,....._to 2 •·"'- Tet11ple Gartleu CldMe•e Re•t•urant 1500 Ma.nu (At Harltor) (.,q MeA .- 540-1'37 540-1'2J .. _. OPIN: 11 :JI •.& te 11 p.-.. ~ tin TllwM9r 11 :JI .. -. te J •• -.. lf'w., _. S..•r THE WHISTLING OYSTER .n;/ .. I , .. DAILY PILOT f7 Yout• Guide to Movies , • Gould Spotlighted Ill Getting Straight Edito~1 Note : Thi 1 mJddle~lass housewife who Vidal's novel stanin1 Mae movie . guide it prepared turns to drink. John Forsythe 1 West, John Huston and Raquel (>11 the jilmJ committte of and Sblrley JoDel. Welch. HarbOT COllncil PTA. Mra . Jouu (R): EngUsb film StrawbefT)' Statement (R): John ciark ii prelidtnt about an·bnmaturt art ttudeot A contused young man be- and Mrs. William W a r e seekin&' total freedom. She comes involved with a cam- 11 committee chairman, It dilcovers that life has mean~ pus revolution. Bruce Davison is intended u o reference Ing beyond pleasure when she and Kim Darby. -in dttermining suitable fills tn IOvt with 1 Negro Woodstock tR): Three hour film.a for certain a g e ctlntlnaJ. Genevieve Waite. film ol a music festival. grouin and , toiJl o~or M·A..S.H (R): lrreverlJ'lt MATURE TEENS weekly. Your oinii are comedy about the Mobile AND ADULTS 10Ucited. Mail them to Mr>-Army Surgical Hospital duriftg Aue of the Tbousud Daya vie Guide, care of the the Korean W&r. El.Hott Gould, (GP): Genevieve Bujold and DAILY PILOT. Donald S)lli.orland and Tom Richard Burton as A1111e * -Skerrllt. Boleyn and Kins Henry VIII. Myra Bft<ldarldp (X): Ca<:lu1 Flowrr I G P ) : Screen portrayal oI Gore Soplli>tkaled comody 1n which ADULTS a dentlst dr\fta his nune to Ape1 (G): sequel to .,Planet famous pirate. Dean Jones masquerade as his estranged of the A'peS" stan1fl8 Charlton and Suzanne Pleshette. wUe. Waller Matthau, Ingrid lletloo and James Francllcua. Tiie Bo1talb (G): Dlanly Bergman and Goldie Hawn. Let It Be (G): The Beatles comedy filmed In Newport The Cheyenne Social Clab at ease and in rebearaal. Beach about the SUoday aallor. (GP): Alter tho Civil War, P11to11: Salute to 1 Rebel Stan Robet1 Morse, stephanle a Texas cowboy Inherits a (GP): Portrait of General Powers and Phil Silvera. bordello in Cheyenne. James George S. Patton PoMyed Capilla Nemct..aad t 11 e stewart, Hemy Fonda llld by G<otge C. Scott. Karl Uade.,.1ter City !GI: Robert Shlr1ey Jones. Malden plays General Omir Ryan and Oiuck Connon star fte Crou ud Ute Swti--Bnldley. in Jules Veme science-fiction blade (GP): Story baO!d on 1111: A 8poee OdJuey (G): adventure. autobiography ol the Rev · P.on.un1 film about the S'lrin F a m I 1 y Roblaaon: David Wllkenon ml bis life history ot ~arth'J formation Walt Dlsney'J spirited tale ol among th'.e DII'COtics tm1'1 and and tbe development ol. man a family shipwrecked on a gang f.IJIUen in the New York to travel In space. Kelr Dullea, deserted island. Stars John slums. Pat Boone. G...., Lockwood. M"'· Doroth M~··'·e fi--"" u--(GP) .,._, _, ~, y -~ . ---~ '_..., Tiie Uadefe1ted (G): Post of a youn1 American'i stru&· C\vU War story cl. a friendship * gle to become a cftlmpion that . bloaoms between two Tht lttttr immedlotel11 skier. Robert Re«on:t. coloneli· (John Wayne, Union -after th.{ titlt indicote1 the .. • • SPECIAL ATI!IACTION THIS WEEKEND ONL 'f THE RAY BROS. Beyaod IM Valley o! \II• IJolh (X): All all girl rock trio s<>es lo Hollywood seekills thrllls and fame and finds dope, homosexuality sexual or. · gles and violence. '11le lllwaUIU (GP): Sequel -Rock HQdson, Coofederale), t'attno given the picture bl/ to "Hawaii" st~ Charlton who meelen route.to YWco the _Motion _Fictuu... Code. • Hestoo and Geraldine OLIPTul. · FAMILY ' The Motion Picture Codt - Now opo11 for S11nd•y Clt•111p•f,.. lr111tc.h I 0 to l AND DINNER 4 to 10 ,-.>o ·• 16903 ALGONQUIN STREET . !Of'f' PACll'IC COAST HIGHWAY & WA•HI• AYI.) HUNTIN!i.TON_HARIO~~ 846.3377 DON JOSE' NOW APPEARING ,VIC GARCIA LTD With Voc1l1 By GERMAINE e COCKTAILS e Enchilada ind T1co . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1 .35 Chili Relleno • Enchi11d1 •........... $1 .SO SMwd wftti Ike. ..... Tm.cllfn eH Saba 9093 E. Ad1ms (1! Mlgnoll1) Hunt. Be1ch 962-7911 ~Jol)u ~ :lO!J'~ FAMILY DINING Al Reasonable Rates ARTICHOKE APPETIZER COUNTRY FRIED STEAK BABY BEEF LIVER BUCCANEER CUT OF PRIME RIB STEAK AND LOBSTER CAPTAIN'S CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN M .. 1 .... Uttt.-Pirates Ultder 12 JOIN US FOR OUR BUCCANEER BUBBLE COCKTAIL HOUR Mon. fhru Fri. 4 to 7 p.m. In Our CROW'S NEST LOUNGE Jerry Lauderdale Entertaining Tues., thru Sat., 8:30 · p.m. to I :30 a.m. 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER Reserv1tion1 Acc1pted 540-8535 Bob and Carol ud Ted ind AUcf: ( R ) : Contemporary social Comedy eatirizlng mar· riage and fritrKWUp. Robert Culp, Natalie Wood, Elliott Gould and Dyan Cannon. Getting Straight (R): Elliott GouJd plays a veteran of Viet- nam who retllf'D9 to college and campus violence. Candice Bergen ro-tltars. ' Happy Endleg (GP): Jean Simmons portrays a bored Great Seafood! TALE/t!,WHALE AT THE HISTORIC OLD ~\UPi PAV/~ ~ti 673-4633 ~# 400 Main Blrbol Peninsull ' For on e egc;int evening Goach& GJiorses ,Superb Dining and Dancing SEVEN NIGHTS 6 P.M. lo 2A.M. ftlVIEftA ftESTAUMNT Contin1nt1I Cul1in1 Cockt1i11 Stn>tng L1'nchton and Dinntr Monda11 through Sat11rda11. Closed Sundays ~~~~~JI We •r• located next to tho M1y <;o. in South Co1st Pla1e. Gloomy Gus is Your Kinda Guy l:IJI S. ...... c....... 140.2141 ADEQUATE ,FACILITIES . AYAIL~BLE FOR EVERYONE Dinner Reservations Ac:c:epted Direct from tlae MINT ••• ia La• Vega, Ne., ... n GAINES STEELE & THE STEREOS NOW APPEARING NIGHTLY EXCEPT SUNDAY .. ~-----~ 125 Aveneda Esplandian-San Clemente 492·6103 Tbe Relven (GP): Steve Bl1ckbeard'1 GHst (G): And Rating Program mar M~ueen stars in the filmed Peter Ustinov rtars in Walt bt found pn the motion : venion cl FllUl.kner'a novel. Disney's adventufts Of tht picture pagt. 'Ibe hired man's oddyseeylr"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"'" ____ ._ ... _. .... .,.. ........... ;;;: leads him from a small town CALANDll ANTIQUI SHOW PllSIN1$ in Mississippi to the sinful AN OIANGI COUNTY PllST ~~ !% :':oo~~phls during "UNDER THE BIG TOP" Paint Your Wagon (GP): • t.!Milon :~":~~ ~~~~ -ANTIQU_E _SHOW ___ _ Clint Eastwood and Jean AND SALE J S.berg. A Walk In the Spring Raia AT THI SAN CLIMINTI INN (GP}: Romantic drama star- ring Ant'-Qullln and Ingrid JULY 31 & AUGUST 1 & 2 BerfE~NS AND ADULTS HOURS: 1 lo 10 P.M. SUNDAY 12 to 6 • Airport (G): Film version HWT.·101 M CALAPIA OPP RAMP IN u.ii CLIMIMTI or the belWelllng novel. Burt Lancaster, Dean M a r t 1 n , Nt A4 M.ltl Y" • Fr-.. hf S1 '-' A M~RRY DANCE OF THE ROOSTER Julian Amador, Conchita Atuilar Perform Padua Opens 'Harvest Festival' Folk Play • "Harvest Fetlival in • Spanish, is ver:; eaaily un- derstood and enjoyed by English speaking a'udienctt. It Helen Hayes and Van Heflin. Beneatlr. -the Planet el. the MIMEMllNOB RJR FMENT8 ANO \'OUNO PEUPlE All ACtl AIMltntO '-111 ..,.,_. SuttatM .... -----~-------------111111mo UMtr 11,_1,.. w· ·n ''""' ,.,. .. ¥ilt ..... -®••-.s1r,..1nu """ llllllt .., ..y .. __ ...... ·: ................... . -· ·-·---.... -·-----·----Jguala ," currently on stage at Padua Hills Theater is a two-act musical play which features the dances, songs. coetumes and customs of the people of Guerrero, a large, primitive state of Mexico. will run throush S.ptember·l~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~j 12, Curtain times are 1:301; The scene, set fn a market place, form! a colorful background for tbe farmers who come to sen their produce and stay to sing and dance tfleir village folk music. p.m. on Wednesdays through Saturdays, with matineet at 2:30 p.m. on Wednesdays" and Saturdays. Theater patrons allO will fmd the Padua Di!1lng Room serving M e x I c 1 n and American food w 1 t h en- tertainment by the players. Adjacent shops are open dally except Mondays, when the dln- ing room is ck>led also. SOUTH SW TROPKAl FISH Tropical Fish & Largest Selecllon of Supplieo ID the area. N .. IL11 ..... t'll •• WILIOtil, co"" MSIA felt"''"' ... ltd., •l'N1 ln'.Q, lllYtnld. Dr, -H.-t llHdl lblfllnd ttle ~I OH!ell MiM5M Young modems who enj())' wearing the loose, casual ckltbeJ of natlve styles will want to copy the simple but beautifully detailed dresses and blouses of the women of Guerrero, aJ seen on the Padua Hills stage. Padua Hllls is located on1~~~~~~~~~~.J Padua Avenue, in tbe foothilll/;: above Claremont. three miles north of Foothill Blvd. For reservations phone (714) 626- 1288. In this play, as in all that are presented at the year~ round folk theater. the cos- tumes are authentic to the setting of the play. Many are purchased in Mexico, then copied by the wardrobe mi.Stress and costumer of Padua Hills. "Harvest Festival in Iguala," although iresented in '"' BoKr "aousE Aff•r yov fl~• tho "i1itor1 fr<1111 b•c.~ •••f to Oitnoyl•nd 111<1 11ott1 hrry F1r111, top It o' 1f flto uitffll1..-.bl •• Title Changed HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Because of Indian objections to the tlUe of Anthony Quinn '• new comedy, "Nobody l.4ve1 a Drunken Indiail," the film has been retitled "Flap." THE NIFTY THEATRE presents IDWAID AUIM The Amerlean Dream ... IUIOT ,lllD'I Slot• JULY 24 THlli AU•. h FRI . & SAT., 1:30 p.m. 307 MAIN ST. HUNTINGTON BEACH For R ... rv1tlon1 Coll (714) 536-9151 211 2" r..,i. ......., -:.·=~"·=~ OLI.VER' FLING -·-·-• BOAT HOUSE ENTRTAINMINT • 7 Nl15H1S A WDll DANCING * HAP HALL DUO """ '91111 11...... .. ... ,..., ......... MON .. TID.-WD. * L1rry L1ka Sieaet Gu!Wilt R11r-ME11 Thuter ~,::, Cotta MEia 141 L 1M ~. Jmt eff Newpert ..._ DELANEY'S SEA S.H.ANTY ........ OtwJ• Ca•ty'1 Fhlnt OYSTER BAR E1ttern Bluepoint Oysters on Half Shell $1.50 Eastern Ch•rrystone Cl1m1 $1 .50 large Shrimp Coc~tall $1.35 M_, etMr W ....... 1 w.crt ... o,._ ,. I P.M. Entertainment Nightly By KAPPY At tt.1 Pit..o l1r '30 LIDO PAIK DIM NEWPOIT HACH '75·0100 STAlllN• ON ITA•I -· . BEN WRIGLEY OLIWll TWIST wnH Alt THI PUN OP A UYI STA•I • LAU.H AND MN• WITH OUYll AND fA•IN Al THIS A•I OLD TAU UNPOLDS TUESDAY Thru SUNDAY llRING THI KIDSI ... LA•UMA MOULTON PLAYHOUSE ... .__ ... --CUITAIN 'l ilt 494-0743 Al• COflDITfONIO r •••)'.cart •ctiv• w11r '°' mt1t ind boys corduroy je1n flares in navy and white Op•n S1111cl.y1 • , , for th1 S111111111r 12 fl Ii li111\:11119ffc1rcl • 1111rf1r ... ,.,. " 7 fn•l11 hl1M, 111wport llo1c.h '44-1010 .Oil -,: .. SO YOU WANNA RACE I FASTRACKS' OPEN Now •nybody with th1 racing urge c1n drive • ,.., c1rl The Sublru Mini-Rater on a rHI rffCf coune, FASTRACKI Top NASCAR drivers lovld It 11 01ytona. You will tool No 19e limit -No llcenH nec11sary. WHkly prl1e1 and trophies for bE1t tlm11. ...._. .. II S1 ,_ ... 1,.ctetM ""· Dflw fffrHff • ..., et PAStlACIU • N.STUc• a. ....,_ ..... ...,...e '"' et OT-.. c...., ........... •... ,,..,. • • • ' • ' • • i l • ' ' I . • . : • • • l • ' • ' • ' • '· l . j ~ .... • DlltY PILDT Frld1y, JulJ 31, 1970 • Your Guide to Fu1a \, . - Cowboys, Stampeding_ to Silverado Days r ~ I ~ ,'. " JULY al ... ~~-(C)(IO)..,.~. !:~,,~~) ...... . ..... .. (C) (30) Stu "•htn 11 Mtt Of thl• lffltrn Slldnt ~ tl'if thlt l'ICOrds the of(. fbt.fltld ICtMtilS of th• lndivid111r OodlN' pllY'f'L Sldeli1hb omrtd IMlucle their fl'fOl'itl PlltimtL \'.TUPnt,Y AUGUST 1 I,, I ) f/ •, I .... ( , I, ,..., (30) 1:00.-.. (C) ll:. ~.W ~OJ :;: L".:.'!: 't.::. (()cci """ WMl'• New (C) (30) "'Lon& liutt nd ltt S,,..c1t.• flln Wiil• 1.111-.... : 1--CCJ,M ,.. -(() "'"'"'' ~o!oti· • ,..... Sii llpenaD (,,.,, (Ii llfto!UiDa.'.'.. ~-1--·......... I~""-. WI• (C) . --(() (30) ..... (Cj t:ISC30)-(C) , -. (C) ,, •• -_,.. (C) (30) ,,. g ·-(C) ft1l9it "111•• .. (C) (60) ,...,, tlle ... (C) ffttlth• puts trt Ufld• Ronstadt, l:OD Tiit .lttMlt (Cl "' 8ob Cnnt, •nd Jane Honrd-m...... c.... MltllOf of "Pl•• Touch," • booll "U! C ........ 11! I .... _ ... , , n tmm 11t1ue.i.1 eou.e• ""' .lll'llii To ' ct) d ,,, "" '"-" .... '"" 37tll ann111I eon.,. All·S11r prM, l:JO 9 (fl 1111 ln117ta.d 111 .. ;- 11w froi, Soldltr fltld kl Ch~eo. Mf iiOui (C~ __ ~i 1!1,._pjtii .tilt~~-"" $tlll01"$ 19@ .. _ '"'!'-, .. cl the 1969 ..-apinst the ~ ., ., :• :· ·: KlnSN tftJ lllllfl, w\r1ners of th• · llowil:: "'Siii r..., Att.ct" (Id· Supll' Bowl. Tiie All.stars lllVe VMtUrt) ·~icllHI Fortll. "°" lint nine at th• pmiolll 36 m ClllCt li4 p111t1 •nd tild twtc.. Thi last CD Me.ii: "'Lid ~ W_. All.stir win "" ill 1963 when (weshm) •51-Jlm Divis. flMIJ' upset t!lt Gree• Ber Packers 9:00 II tit@ m tt. I. Pututtl' (t,! :· 20-11 O Morit: °'fOlll'll o.ni.c hint .· lni. .... 1 ... (C) (30) (1dvent11re) '50 -Dnid 8r11tt, .: lllJ fftll'ltil lhrtt•a (30) O @ (j) Nol Wfltrlh: (C) :• Lew .... t111 ?f'Js (C) (30) GI MGW: "Th IM'olt'i Afrlt1" . :·:: httn for &Mal 130) Wlr" (1dv111t111e) '6&-Ro<l Carn· I ....,. J4 (C) 60) ernn, John M111h. ... ,. ~ ...... (t) (30) C.lldMn J ..... ;: sm. ... • U.. (30) hRorMN Ut1111 < ,.1... -..w. ccr (30) •''° g; f!l :;':.'!.: ::,~r,i ~ n:': ~) (C) (30) !9l~.:::...,. (C) :: ::' ,!':., ...,(C)(()<'f'lO) (RJ °'°° ECIJ·mw""~'.::.(C)(C) '\. 111 °' Pott! ~ for four Cl) _ at •, 11'1 Kllf In tfolll'," : I _. . \.· i) Clll1ll .. UwlDr W•d (C) ,.. ( nsttm) '53-Rlndolph n. ..... West (C) (30) Scott, ln: Bl~tr. '· Sl11Ph•t1tl:t MW (SS) t!I MOWit: "1lle Awllrtn"' {1Mn-~ ·J:IO.ft (JJM turf (C) (30) , tur1) '50-John Canori. ' ID lllilO -(C) !601 <RI 1-• -' ""' To Llllllt. Tlmt to Cry." 10:30 ftfESeotbr"" (C) (C) ~ l!·ftl M4IN It ... {C) (30) Jim ~r. J1e.~~ (Id· :: rown, Plmel1pe1""",.1"ed Vin· venture) ;51-John lre11nd, Doro-ctnt Price com ' 111 ,,,.. ur1es.s th Malone Lawrence Tierney ~ Meredith, Stefanie Powtn 1nd Pit i a? (l)'1t1t1p tf Juncl1 (C) ~ Htlll)'. __,_ .. _ 'ood "'"'" G MlfflM $ lllowlt: "Cry TlffOI"' -· ~ (rnrsl ) '5&-J•m~ M•son Rod (dr1m1) '50-Stew•rt Granpr. ~ sttip~ • i1:ao I n~ ;r:.~,:ur.: ' llTd tr'°'""'..,. (C) (JO) blll~l'Jlittst>urfh Pir1tu n. Af. ""' -CIOJ . . •~ · lllt IMt (t). {30) Robert l1ntl 8~ ft,_~) Tho 11 di._ ''9U6 Kerchwtl: fJ ~ \JtJ Ctt '" JULY 31 ·AUG. 30 radlo operaton). wUI bold it! second annual Western. Jam. FESTIVAL OF ARTS-The Festival of Artl wllh 180 artists, boret! at Silver Lakes near Norco and Cclrolijl July 11· .. Aug. sculptors and craftsmen displaying their work on the festi· 2 .. Gates open at 5 p.m. The Jamboree is open Jo e~eryone 30 A with a 16.50 tab per persoo (chll<lren under 12;131. Cost tn. val grounds, will be open· t.hro\Jgh Aug. · t 8:30 each ctOOes two nights or camping, three meals including a Sat. evening the Pageant of the Masters will be performed on noon Hobo Stew and sat. night steak dinner. Tickets by mail the stage of the Irvine Bowl with live models posed and until July 24: write Comupac React Inc., P.O. Bo:r *3. Mont. costumed ln thirty paintings and sculptures as the creator clair, Ca. 9176.1. There will be contests and prizes galore, of the original work showed tltem. Vic Sc,hoen has composed a dance, free fishing and grass camping areas. special music for the period and mood of each work and the JULY 31 • AUG. z 23-piece orchestra will be under tiis direct.ion. Other features ANTIQUE SHOW -An ·antique show will be held In a red- of the festival include Rene's Puppet show, The Anna Mary and-white tent on the lawn of the 1San Clemente Inn, San Beck children's art exhibit, and Sunday on the Green. Ad· Clemente frqm ll-0 p.m. today and sat.; noon to 6 p.rn. mission to the grounds is SO cents for adults, 10 cents for lh ._ children under 12 years. Pageant of the Masters tickets are Sun. Adplission $1.25 at e enwance. $2·$5 Mon.-Thur.; $2-$6 Fri., Sat. and Sun. Phone 4!M-1147 ·JAPANESE VILLAofL! ~tUgroG~ps!9 and light tihows will for ticket reservations. JULY .31 • AUG. 30 be the "heavy happenings" at Japanese Villase on Sat. even- ings this summer, from 7:30 p.m. to midnight with the "Samu-ALL CALIF. ART SHOW-The Laguna Beach Art Association rais" and "The Prophets" performing· with the aid of Fil• Gallery, 307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach, is having its AU ment _ a light show. All this in addition to the other attra~ CalJ!omia Art Exhibit in conjunction with the Festival of lions at the village lncluding trained bears, a seal show, Arts during the run of the Festival. Gallery Hours are 10 _ -kar~xhibitions ~e_deer.__Eood...is aYailable.-6122 a.m. ·10-6-p.m. diily wUliQocent tours on weeltends at 2 Knott Avi.:-Buena Park. Phone 523-2381. · p.m. There are 74 works exhibited out of over 1,100 entered JULY 31·SEPT.1· by California artists. A tram shuttles between .the Festival DISNEYLAND suMME&-Disneyland ls c e 1 e brat in g and the Gallery during the complete run of the sbow. Tickets jls I5lh birthday with over SOO entertainers all summer to Gallery are 50 cents. long in the "Super Summer" celebr11tion. There will be JULY 31-AUG. 30 28 special shows and talent grotJps with "Show Me Amer~ca,'' ART-A-FAIR-The Laguna Beach Fine -Arts Association is musical comedy on the Tomorrowland Stage at 8 and presenting its fow"th annual Art-A-Fair at-1346 N. Coast High-10 p.m. Mon.-Fri. The Tomorrowland Terrace will have way, Laguna Beach, through Aug. 30. About 65 artists, "Sound Castle Ltd." with new sets, new costumes and sculptors and craftsmen will be showing their work. Hours : top rock favorites every evening from 9 except Sun. The 11:30 a.m.-10 :30 p.m. Admission 2S cents, children under 12 "Minority of Six'' will take over the Terrace on Sun. and free. may also be heard on the Tomorrowland Stage on Sat. JULY 31 ·AUG. 30 and the Plaza Gardens on Fri. The "Entertainment Com· SAWDUST FESTIV ~er 150 artslsts end craftsmen mittee" plays 011 the Terrace Mon.-Sat. afternoons. The will be displaying their work at the Sawdust Festival in the Plaza Gardens will have "Big Band" sounds for ballroom 900 block of Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, from dancing, nightly except Fri.. '"'ith leaders such as Tex 10 a.m. to midnight daily. There is no admission charge. Beneke,' Sammy Kaye and Harry James playing. Sunday JULY 31 brings "Country Jubilee" on the Tomorrow land Stage with NB LIBRARY FIL"fS-The Newport Beach Library audi~ a different group each week, drawn from folk-music experts. visual department in rooperation with the Santiago Film Jazz will be heard in New Orlea11s Square and aboard Circuit is presenting free films each Fri. at 8:30 p.m. in the Mark Twain. All this plus the 53 permanent run-filled the mall at Fashion Island, Newport Beach. This Fri. the attractions all summer long. Hours: 8 a.m. to 1 a.m. daily . Disney films, "Niok" and "Red Balloon,", will be seen. JULY 31 -SEPT. 7 JULY 31 KNOTI''S BERRY FARM -A Golden Cavalcade of Country JUNIOR TEEN DANCE -The Junior Teen Club of West-and Western Music will be staged each weekend at Knott's, minster will bold dances on moi: Fri. nights from 7:30 • 9:30 through Labor Day, Sept. 7, with showtimes -Fri. -Sat. p.m. in the Community Center, 8'lOO Wesfpllnster Ave., West-6:30, 8:30 and 10:30 p.m.; Sun. 5, 6:30 and 9:30 p.m. "The minster. Admissiun, 50 cents. "Pure JOy" will play for Sound Generation," a group or 24 young men and women dancing on Ju1y 31. from John Brown University, will present shows Mon.-Tbur_s • JULY 31-AUG. ! al 7, 8:30 and 10 p.m. Hours : 9 a.m.·11 p.m. Mon.-Thurs.; SILVERA.DO DAYS--lnternational ROOeo Association cow-9 a.m.·midnight, Fri . ..Sat.: Close 10 p.m. Sun. Admission $1 boys from all over the country will be competing in the adults, 25 cents for children 11 and under. No additional Silverado Days Rodeo to be staged behind Huntington Center chargP. for shows. 8039 Beach Blvd., Buena Park. next to the freeway, Beach Blvd. at Edinger, Huntington JULY 31-AUG. 9 Beach, Aug. 1-%. Tickets may be purchased at H.B. Jaycee DISNEY ON PARADE _ Anaheim Convention Center, 800 booth in the mall of the center. General adm. $2.50, adults ; w. Katella Ave., Anaheim. Performances Tuesday -Sat., $1.50 J'uniors ; $3.50 reserved seats. Pony rides in the m.all 8 1· ees t 2 Sat · 2 a"d 6 pm Su" Closed p.m .. ma 1n a p.m. ., " . . ... will be free. Fri.-Sun., July 31-Aug. 2, from noon to 5 p.m.: Mon. Tickets,. $2.50. $5.: (Children under 12 $1 less.) avail- the educated horse, "Serrano" will perform weekdays at able at box office or ticket agencies. 100 Disney characters 2, 3, 4 and 7 p.m. and at noon, 1. 2 and 3 p.m. Sat. appearing for the firsl time together in a li ve t\Yo-and-one- JULY·31 ~AUG. i haU hour show. It blends live production, sound effects, mo- WESTERN JAMBOREE -Comupac React Inc. of Pomona tion pictures, magic, music and lighting effects in a new Valley (a non-profit organization of volunteer citizen band fonn o{ entertainment. On stage through Aug. 9. TM ~ Ti.t Did Not Bum."I Ca rie:a·~-=:. Plyne &\lid. by Nancy Mflio. . ll:lO (fj)(J) Alllllicl• ........., -(JOI s.lec.W Fiii (t) (30) ( lil'ck Cl•~ hotls. Robin Mc· II) bWt .. *' (30) Jrlimst1 ind Norman Greenba11111 l 7:151-·-... ~I &:00 tit(l)Mt 11111 Slit (t) (30) 0 M1¥1t: (C) "Captain fro11 , .. --~.-~--, • DiNCi c:-1 (C} (30) lido" (1dvtnture) '66-steplltn ~ .±• - • To Toll "'f"" (C) CSOl '°"""' BIG 3 UNIT SHOW BALBOA 673-4048 Ol'EN 6:41 mr.t.n..a AUG. I TEEN CLUB DANCE -The Westmirmer Recreation and Par• Department will hold a Teen Club Dance in the com- munity Center, 8200 Westminster Ave .• (for Westminster teens) each Sat. from 8 p.m. to midnight. Admission, $1. for members. $1.50 for non-members. The "Ru:sh" group will play for lancing Aug. J. Or ; hlll (30) ''The Siient (!)Movie: "When l 111lt 11d DI-'• AwCll'd' Whi1tl .. ""' Crisis." Strlkn" (dr1m1) 'SS-John Miid· ~. {JO) Uft ftr Ttda7 (C) (30) son Marjie Millir. "ITS TOUGH TO II A lllD" : II) LllCtdtl (C) (l0) Ill"' ' PLU5 ! : 1:051 IMll• utrt (55) r, "J001 1 SPAC! ODYSS!Y" • • 1:30 al()) ••n's Hnn ft) ' n. P~ln • • (30) (R) ttoc&n't sdieml to llbo· IN • II&• • Gtrm•n lft1l'llllllltion lnlin 11GOI QI (J) 111t ...._. (C) •'LIT IT II .. It (lfymied tir • blall new offlm liiiiwlii'" ..,.,.,,. (11Mnturt) '401~==========~11 (Cliff NortDnL•l stl1•r 13. --Oowat-f11rbanks Jr .. MIOeltlftt IDllJ<Il lD-~., ._ ~I. {l) (90j ('R) "fhe.-Klnt of Den· I T..tro falt!UM lr---::~~~~---rn1rt." Tonr Francios.I •nd Sllsan • Dr••• di II S.Nnt Stint limes t rt jolnld llr &uests 12:1:1 9 (j) """°" Pibt•P (C) Jo•ph Cotten ind Marprel Leich· ~ov'J•: "'8orll lhckJm" (drt· IOR IN • st.Of)' of ttlt dllCIO'l'try of m1) 'SS-Mimi• Yin Dor9!1. In Indent tnd priceless manU· GI Movie: ''Tiit Min lflwMI" 3Cfipt. J (drama) '54---James MlilOll, I'"' . .., ..... <30l ""'a 9 m ""'"" (C) Dl¥ld frut ... (C) (90) Q MiMf: "Th• Hou11 on 92111 hM TOlll ~ (C) (60) Sheet" (myste!J) '45--lloyd Nl)- lflwlkll M11t1, (C) (30) (R) Ian. Slfne H.mo. Len Ch1ndltr tuesb. Q) Movll: '1'd:O!I V..tllfttl" (ld- iO) f'lllMr ffltllr (30) vtnfure) '54-Klrbr Grant. Los ......_ di Pnldle (30) IT"' Ylda Dlltintas 9'00 Ill! m Ill '""' -(CJ t:• Q!l (I) """ Q"" (CJ "'lllilliifl DIJ"' (R) (dra1111) '6S--1:45 Morii: "'nit SlorJ .t Dr. W• Ctof'lt Ptpplrd, (llnbel:ll Ashley, SIM", (dn11M) '"4---0lry Cooper, Roddy McOowtl~ Wnert; M•rsh•ll. l:CIOI .,..,.. ,.......,. CC) 11111 ...,_ '"' t601 · Dwblt flltft MIN! "'A Dnld ""*"" (C) (! 11() ipt c... ti "--"" (comedy) ( I Olbudi OnfflliW (t) '53--Mlck9' ~. Eddit Brttk· I "" (30) tn, E11h1e StlWll'L tC) "t•Aflllf" INdll (60'J (adventul'I) 'SS -Rtbert TIJ'lor, 1:15 lilledld rll• (C) Eli11belh Tl)'lor. ~!O al"° -''"" (Cl CJOl D IJli rn ED __ , ""' ) "lost Lodlet. found locket." tliSllC 1t> Chris Schenkel, Jim m Ntws (C) (30) McKay, 8111 Fltmmlnr tnd Henry "Inlctl• (t) lonctwrst rtport tht •dion In t!il Nlcm T.,.tin (30) thi1d and llMI rouncb of Utt ,..... W (C) $250,000 Wastchelttr Golf Clenlc 9@11:1 lncift'I Wortd from thl Wutchater Country Qub 160) (lf) "'Diffusion.• Anne in Htrrbol, ft.Y. 8)'roll Nelton lftd rter awlb • • 1ginr movie Dftl Mirr pmtid• lilt color CO!lt- star who ball • cllr«t1n to use menttry. old tedlnlquea lttlt will mtb ~er a;,s. dlt USA (C) s .... PATBOONE u'DMIWU. Exclusive Southern Calllornia Engagement ------~ .. 1-. """'"'•'• Now -Ends Tuesda'y _.,-~IOI Alf l'ICTWU 10 ••• ....,. AWARD ~MATIOff9 J[CH~ICOlOR • All• -h1 C•lor e PETER SELLERS "THE MAGIC CHRISTIAN" lot.d • GP AVG.1-30 BENEFIT FILM SERIES -A series of films to benefit lhe Laguna Beach Free Clinic Will be shown each Sunday al 7 p.m. in the Laguna Beach High School auditorium, 625 Park Ave., Laguna Beach. These are experimental films by ·student and professional fihnmakers. Tickets, by d~ nation, are $2 each or $9 for the series. All funds raised will go to the Laguna· Free Clinic. Available at the door or STARTS WED AUGUST 5 JEAN SIMMONS IN 'Jh. 11.,1111y /;11,/111.~" lkrnAnt " . . -l-TifE plANET ApES loot bttttr °" thl screen. 2:SO II ~ """"°' (C) nit I m""" ft) (60) 1968-69 world ch1mpions, winnln•r=~~~~~ii~~~iii~~~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~==~==::::;;;;;;;;;~ a...,. eo.. ute 1ricln tc> chorus •nd finlllsts 1n t1ie 3111 m. (R) "Cllndr end Ille Kid." " hn11tional to111pel:ition of ltte $o. lllfl"''" who lewd .ltftrny's Ille citty fin the PtueMtlOn ind Ell· ''''-"" 1~ """'' "" "'"'""""vi''"'-Quort• PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT! HELD OVER! ' • Cl llllril lplc:W: (C) "'TIM Tello• Sins!ng In Meriel, Inc., held In fiib lbfee" (carnedy) '65'-Rel St toub hst ,..,, wlll ptrfOfm. H1rrison. Shlrter Macl1lne. lnifid • C:.11 of tbt W.i (C) 8o-o. 1-t(C) I llllil'• Lw (80) Movh: "HtR'I f"11tt Mod Tr11 NII DWffllU (30) (dra1111) '58-St.phtn McH1llr, Yk I""" l:Oo T...0•-.tO (t hr) Morrow, Colln11 Gray • • , -(30) 1-(C) !~U-CCI · ••-"'"""' te ...... (C) S:OO lini no.-. Ottdotn (C) ..,... · M1ra.t Dllllll W. C. fWdt flll' flltlnl: U. lnitltio111I W. Miit (C) " Cln1 Cllllt • .... Mia" orn Kiii, and M Schoenfield Ill (COf!ttlM '39-W. C. f1elds. miktsidt for llw awtrlll of this I Mt ...... • Wd (t) swifrimin1 competltiOft from thl DI ,..... Satl (~) Olpmplc Swim St1dium. hll llldrl I Ill 0.. (:Kl) Outrudl Unli111ltM (t) lt:JO nm;r,_::n~ ttl -~~0~ich1ri (C) Dtlt~~ 1$ host• tonl111t. · • T11tro lkl Sabado 1J Mtvlt: "'Db Tide" (dr1me) '37 3:15 ( 0) Divtt & 5otiatll (C) -R1r Milltnd. frtnces F•rMll'. 3:JO 1St• ttunt D Mewll: (C) ........ ~ MOVlr. (C) "llllH el I llfllo (fOl'lllnct) 'M-E.Ms PmlfY, Gltn• f tr" (western) ·~1rty Ro!!· d1 F1r11n. Arthur O'Conntll. bins, Bob 81rr1n, Jo)u Rldd. tD MoN: "Clleclpoilt" (.ldwn· B W1p T11ln (C) ture) "57-'tdhony stMl. i Cllllh1't Gol&ltl How (C) II) N1tk11rt M (C) • TrMI lttt Wtrld tt) U:OD G c.11 ti ... Wiii . ..., '""' MllM4lllb <Q • For Top Sports Coverage • Read the DAILY ;PILOT I • SHOWING NOW! "THE MIND BLOWER OF All TIMEP' fj""'"q''"' woodltock wo1u1~G JW TUE MOVIE woRLP UKE 111 ' N• o ... A•rnrnM Ullllcr u Ut1'-'' W11t1 Ptrtllt er L.,•I OHN11tft -Pretf ff ..... llt .. lfll"ell •·•··································••·•······ at Sound Spectrum, 126$ S. Coas.t Highway, Laguna Beach: The Groove COmpany, 2303 W. Balboa, Newport Beach and at the Free. CUnic, 422 Glennerye Ave., Laguna Beach. , AUG.S-31 POPS CONCERT -Henry Brandon will conduct concerts at 9 p.m. every Mon. in Stage Court on Ute pedestrian mall at Fashion Jsland, Newport Beach. A 3$--member brass band will perform one' week and a concert orchestra on the alter- nete Mon. No admission charge . ·• JULY -SEPT. HARBOR CRUIS~ -Fully narrai~ cruises around New- port Harbor leave each hour, Il a.m.·7 p.m. and a moon- light chnse at 8 p.m., from the Fun Zorie Dock by the Ferry Landing on Edgewater Ave ., in Balboa. Boats cruise in sheltered water around the islands, viewing the homes and yachts or the area. Tickets, $1.25 for adults ; Children under J2 50 cents; kiddies under 5 free. Reservations- phone 673-0240. IS, QUITE SIMPLY, :::_, THE BEST AMERICAN FILM .;;-l'VE SEEN THIS YEAR!" :·;·;·,;:;" -tu11lllllWl:lllMllO.,u•arttE;.ro:111m;mar,•...rr1 Anlf'9111: NIJPBTm1llllflUEI; •Wiii & WON WEllES .U 11111. a!lltMIY .. UY l'mlllY•UU!Jlllll'lllUiUD'f Enlft•at ,,.,...., -IUl!-''-•1-~T-11--·--NO RESERVED SEAlS -FREE PARKING EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT • the ultimate trip , PLUS LEE MARVIN in "THE DIRTY DOZEN" BOTH IN COLOR · OJ:>EN 7:00 'M*A1 s•H' is whit the new freedom 'bf the screen is all 1tlout." -R!cllaHI SCll1cktll, Lift I._ PLUS! JANE FONDA ;n "BARBARELLA" ti 9QT~ IN COLOtt • OH:N l iOO 1 . . . Sy~via Stopped . By Amorous . ' - A~D Af i:15 ONLY .. . • "BEYOND THE VALLEY OF THE DOLLS" 16 & Ovar-All S.ats 1.50 ~*HR KIDS! * ~ ...... PAL SHOW SAT. 1:0 I , LOOK TO EQWARDS LUXURIOUS CINEMAS t.i~~~I~~ ·' • + •IACH , 11.T IU.1• • • •IT• C:Oll.tT ....... , • ............ PW\". M7· .. 0• • "UNf1folOTOM •llACN JACK UMMON'e SANDY DINN1$ Ii Hfhe .Out Of Towners" Pt.U$ ANlHONY 9UINN IN "A WALi IN THI • $PllN• RAIN" . , ' . Natives ~· ''THE OUT OF TOWNIU• IS SOMEHTING TO SU. WI Plr. Diet THEIE WON'T II a0oM IN THI AISLES FOi ALL THOSI •HO WIU FAI+ OFF THllll SUTS LAUGHING!" @I• 5th RECORD WE&K ' -2!1d TOP HIT . ' ANTHoNY QUINN ' INGRID BERGMAN ~ . .:.. . .A. the --'.Ill '• • •U.CH . T aUt9 #' • ,t~ Q-:~•m" ~ ~· ........ JglJ 17p11-•-w .. ., ~•~s~11 ""' lngo l'Rnings Pnllui:f :,,:· ~ NEXT ((\'1•i~f ,(,EXCLUSIW A'RiA ~ ft9 SHOWING -~:' 4n~2,: & All A'~ Admitted 2'05 East Coost Hwy, Phone 673-6260 Coron• del Mar • -- ' Frldoy, Ju~ 31, 1970 OAll.Y J!W6f • New Theat,er '70 Plays Announced OPENS JONIGHT "RllSINCU.NlZ & GUILDS111N ARI DIAD" ly Tom Stoppttd POR lll:llllll:VATtotfSI CALL.,_, 1127 H ........ I~ C.. ._. "S.-oolt ltfVEll ANTMOLOOT" lll:ll()PIMI AU9, I• ftD., TtlUlll:L OH.:i , t\1e rnesa '. .'.t' ,' '•, •,~'I," '.":)~\ 3 BIG ATTRACTIONS ~=-iB '"IWISS FAMILY IOllNION .. -c.tla11• Dii4-hM ? P.M. PltD\ISltl SHOAOIMElilTI Bun ~ • DMI! M1rt111 ,.Afltl"OltT" IOI c.i.r 11 PAMOUI ITAllS -'.·I =,) -.::tij, IXC:l.Ull't'I IHOWINOI CllM ...,._., t Ltt M1r•lll "PAINT YOUll WAeDW" 1.,J CllM' -·-"'DOWttMILl. llACftl" C8P) Ce1w l'ttlM111118 lfteAHMllfTI "THI n1tAWllltlt't' ITATllMftT"' tit) C9W' "MILL~TI" Qllr U .... 11M.-.. Wlfll, .... All C.ttf "tflMIJ llltW , ... """""" • ...., a..fl "TNI OllT Ofl f'OWMllll"' Ill ..... W•ttt • "TltU• MfT" COi Al c.IM' ._ ·--"'THI 1t•1V•1tl" I.,) _,_...,.. ............ "TM• UNOl,.IAT•D"' (8) Tale of Tplent , Jo Ann Pflug portrays Angie, an aCtress ...W.. .. comes the protoge of an unscrupoloua talent CDlldl on "Bracken's World" tonight at 10 on CNnnel "-' . Dil'ICt from Its Sensational Reserved Seat Er1MJ.cJ1lll•91 _ .. , __ ....,_ NOW! AT BOTH "The iplc AlnftM lklll,..:~ want;.it.•• but """ llld .. ruts to do..._.. EDWARDS' elNIMAS At Pop<ll•r Prlcoo ---ALL AGES ADMITTED Perent•I Dl1cret*' Suggest ad EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT • GllAND OPENING 011 THI ALL NIW ILIGANT I IU.UTIPUL ' CINEMA WEST #2 DIRECT FROM ITS . llCLUSIYE RESERVED-SEAT DIGAGEMENT ••• CONTINUOUS PElfOllJWICES AT POPULAR PRICES! ''.A Big Musical Hit- fn The Winner's Corner!" -"'CHER W/NSTOH,. "'" J'orll l'ott "Hilarious And Entertaining. In The Stream Of 'Sound Of Music'!" -JOY'!£ HA8(1t, """""•-'•• rim.. Syrtdic•t• "A Big Bawdy Rip-Roaring · .Musical! Howlingly Funny! See It!" -WAH0.4 HALE. N·Y ~ ,._, . Enjoy Thl1 RIP'Roarlng •• Musical In Stereophonic Souncl, ! ~ Sul!r P1n1vl1lan and In lr1 Orlglftal aftcl U11<ut PraHftlatlon l . I • I • • ;.~p --- SREAt sa•~ ·, ON OVER fl.OWING st oCK • • OF. TOP QUALITY < , lis.ED~ CA~ '68 ooo6i .': '. ' '" ; CHARQER.• ,; · ""'°'""tic, rllllip, •••• ,..,!nit • .~ ~·~t"'1yl ~l.C i ' 5 • '68 o·ooGE DART 1 DOOR SEDAll ttfdlo, l\"f!lltl'• I ullni"' fCll' 1'9111 ~· ••" ~·$1395 -'67 .PONt1AC • FIREBIRD v.a, •"*"'tie. ''°,,., ._.,.,, ~ ,,..... M•·~.-,395 • '69 PLYMOUTH SATEL~ITE t 'O!', H.T ...... ,1lltD·• radio, he<llel', P .S .. tactorY 1\r, 'flnYI '°" WSW, dill. ..,_i diicl· (XVIC oPI $2495 ' . . . ' } .. . . '64 KARMAMN' 6~1A . '. ' " ' ... A 1peecl tr•111'""'1on, ,i:..Slo ..fld he<lttr., 01UP 517), , 1 , • •s95~ ... ' . ~65 -~MBLER A.lllOl'·""'IC: 1r1n,mlll'°"' redlD. _11 .. IWI'• P""" ,_.-lflll, tClll 70ll · ' r • • -. .--:---.. ·- • .. . · . ! . ' • I ' a· t . . . ·--·-- -.. • .. , • 42' ¥1, C..1..0 Motlc. '"" """' ,,,,,,,,.,,, .. ,, ..... ·····••le' ...... C1al1el, ..,,,. ttlne ,. ·FULL • Frid.,-, July Jl, )q70 DAIL V PILOT :tl ... 1910 '· . '• • • · ., . S ATION SAYE . , •r•k11, relll•, c•r,1t·fle1r, rill $ IJllP 429.y4 ...... c,.l, .... tlc, .•JP F . •· ...... , ............ , ..... , .. ,. ....... , ............... ..... . ··-~..,."'-'.'. 58'W.NO.OJ7~KU0516 , . NEW1970 . ·MJJSTANGS . $ ... .~1088 • 1 ' , • I · B:IRG .. · • • • • • Let us htJp you rtau 001gt '(tilr buc!gtt ff yoii Itel ovtr loaded with • bills;¥ would lib to buy 1 new or M ~ar o,r truck ' I 1 (' ' ; ' · ' 142-661'1 · · • hr This ' . (All . ;4,.t110 · Free slrvit.', · ' --·--.. ) ( ,.. --- l • l!Hou~~s~•:!S~F~O~Rc;SA~LE!.'..11~HO~·~u~!s!!:E:!S.1F~O~RL;SA~L:!:E:......1~H~O~U~S:!E:!S.!F~O~R-=S~A~L=E~H~O::;U~S:::E:::S...:F:.::O::R~S=A:.:L:.::E;..0 -l;H:::O:::U;:.S'7ES:..:..FO=R..:SA~L·=-·.:..H:::O:::U.:;Sl:::S:..:..l'O.:;R::..::SA=LE=--1 HOUSIS FOR SALE HOUSIS FOR SAL~I HOUSES l'OR SALi G.Hrol laoo Generol 1000 Otn .. al IOOOOa.;.rtl 1000 Oanoiai -10000 .... ral 1000 A... I 1000 0-rel 1000 l~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiili•~~iiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiii ...,..ra -· Oanaril lOOO I' • " * * * * * * * 0 ES EVERYTHING I I DOVER SHORES OOYER SH R View -Pool. 4 BR. - 3 BaU.., FHA or GI NO DOWN READ T·HIS ' -- If you •r• in th• mari•t for a n•w ·hom•1 ~," -+li.S• ou+atandin9 cu1- +omiNCI bOfl'l•s, built by Fren.k H. Ayres & Son locatad 1n a prima araa, llary closa to Huntington Sta t• Beach. The hom•1 ar• priced "from $26,990 and vary in sit• from ] to 7 badroom1, 1400 sq. ft. to 3000 sq. ft., 2 'a nd ] car gara9a1, .l to 4 baths, .with shek• or Mh· · sion t11a roof, firaplaca1, und•r- ground utilities, concret• driv•· .ways, 1e M1b&illt-ins end basic ca r- ~atl"f~ Thar• i1 VA and. Conviin- -+iot1•~ fi"ancin9 availebl ... ·' .·; : ' Raitdte La C•nta Ayrn Homes Slaee 1905 M~alo. "1 ltook ..... t & A .... N. """"""°" laacll 11'4: 968-2929 714: 968-1338 . ' )1 '00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M. --------- ------------- Generol 1000 BAYFRONT LOTS from $42,500 to $175,000. BA YFRONT, Pier & slip. 5 Bedrooms, 4 baths, family room & dinmf area. Beautfiul .patio overlooking the bay. 135,000. · NEWLY LISTEb 2-Sl<>ry, beautiful<Bayfront with pier & slip. Patio cantilevered over the wa:ter. 3 Bedrooms & 2 baths Upstairs, 'inaid's room &, bath dowbstairs. Aslring ·$138,ooo. . SPACIOUS 5 bodroom hom•· Sunken living room overlooking Terrace & Bayfront. Excep. tionally large master bedroom ; dining room, 3 fil'eplaces. Pier & 1ijp. $165,~. _ BRAND NEW 2-sjDry Bayfront llome. 5 Bed· rooms, (\!z baths, family "'9QJ, formal din- mg room, ca,ntilevered_patio overlooking the bay. Your selection of carpeting & decor included in the asking price of $150,000. See a11.ent at #11 Linda Jsle, LINDA ISLE DEVELOPMENT COMPANY The 0.v•lopers of Lind"! l.1le ' 1.,.0 lay1id• Dr ive, Newport Beach 675-3210 '• . . 642-1235 Genertl 1000 •--------G•ntr•l · 1000 COSTA MESA .. • CHEAPIE ror '22.950 you get " doU houJe loaded with extru like de~~ to wall shag carpetl~ fhrou:&hout. brand new Wed kitch!n and bath, 3 bedrooms, Private back yard complete with patio . Low,. low ·down payment. \'Ou owe It , to )'Otlnielf to Stt J.b4 0111:. 2629.HARllO~ BLVD. •'. 5461640 OFEN EVES TILL a,30 4 LUXURY 'UNITS OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-S 324 ASTER STREET LAGUNA BEACH Superior quality. 5% Yn, old. NO.One over another NO-One under a.not~r Big level lot 75Xl20 BII stoves, 3 fine ttcfrig'c., beaut. w/w carpets & dra p.. es. lnd . priv. patios + baJ. cony. Quiet privacy. High income. Minimum w or k. r-.tirecle low int rate, Good lax 5hclter. E·Z Walk to beach & town. GLAD KERR O.Wncy R•al Estate 2828 E. Coast Hwy., CdM 67:hlnD 1000 A COURTYARD ENTRY •.. into the most striking 4-bedroom · home we've seen in a long time ... and \flth that ,FORMAL DINING ROOM you've been looking for! A family room with a magnificent stone fireplace, a · breakfast area and extraordinary mas- ter suite. SELECT NEIGHBORHOOD of well-kept lawtl!. $65,000. LINDA ISLE WATERFRONT LOVELYI · ... With a spectacular view of sunrise bver lhe Corona del MAr hills from a spa- cious terrace, balconies and TWO MAS.. TER SUITES. You'll !ind not only many aesthetic qualities in this fine home, but 'i very flexible -very workable -floor plan with over 3200 square feet. 5 Bed- rooms/4th baths, custom built by Grant Marline and designed by J. Herbert Brownell. (Pier & slip to be provided.} CALL TODAY l<> see this magnificent bbnle! $139,000. EASTSIDE RUSTIC ASSUMABLE IOW·interest Joan. Charm- ,jng 3-bedr')()m/1~-bath, cozy living 'room with knotty pine wall and brick fireplace. HARDWOOD floors and new carpeting. Pool-sized lot with alley ac- ,cns Lor y0ltr c;AMPER or BOAT, $28,500. . . I e . Colesworthy & Co. --- , IEALTOR Newport leech Office IOU lay1ido Dri•a ... 675-4930 · Ii * TAYLOR * b.u -now dn>oe• -new car-w .. t aide Froedom Hmno, · . "the" place to v• ,... ~ pet • ne.w paint. Now vacant juat painted and paneled. * ExelUng 2 story design. 2 story 17' front • ttady • aee thla trvt.ne Vacant Jor quick move-in. door, 2 story fireplace, even a 2 story Tenace home tJOWI $79,500. Hu l&ra:ie fenced yard. Own. boamed ceiling livin~ fOOJl\-.4 ,lledrooms, LINDA ISLE , • 14,3, ODrlGvalcnye CURT OOSlf, Realtor !'.:...will_·--~~ ~~-t1on.C&11 all with views. Parquet fioot family room. . Positively breathtaking! New-ottering of ona .... ,..,.,... ............. Luxuriously .carpeted, draped and land· of the most· beauWul homes on tbls ell!lu· Ivan Wella model home now "2-6f12 Ews 673-3f68 $21,500 scaped. $89,500. . . " -sive island. Arthitecbteddeslgned !'."lonlal wulth a..na>le 1tr hn-lo ... . 1130 w Cout !!;ihw., Call 6T.IS8 ·-"' > 2 'f:; entry1 S rooms a recrea on ~JJ&n$Y· .f. Bedroom, 3 · weekendl. * 2 Separate wings allow the master llllle, roo ' Colorfw, cUgnWed & graceful. By badlo..' car llVl'I" ¥00 living room , formal dining room, kitchen app · only_.~ may haft )'Ol.r Ptden ln- and breakfast nook on the :view to..,be com· ( ~-11MILE._LONG \fATER VIEW! doOn iD the lll*iou• Trtv- plele\y closed off from the famif1, room WATERFRONT-$15,000 ....,. -alrlwn ,..;tji and cbildrens bodrooms ar6und ·the pool. 81' nn chann~ with pier and dock. 3 bdrm. ~ ~· Illa!> -·"' This 4 Bedroom , 3 bath, 3 car girtge 2 sty. Beam ceiling. ·Owner will c!arry 1st =--~ '!'" ..::t! home less than a year old. Priced l<> sell T. D. at low tnt. rate l<> qualified buyer. IMog rm ...,., ~· at $115,000. . , , 1 Hurry! Won't last. By appt. View. Elqlertbr ca.rpeted, ROY J. WARD CO., Realtol'I ' RECOGNIZE VALUE? . ==::~ Dov•r .Shores Office See this just reduced 4 bedroom, 3 bath Open d•lty 10 to 5 1430 Galaxy Drive, N.B. 646-1550 Westcliff charmer. Located on best street. Near schools, shopping. '49,950 ' Ivan wens & Sons ---· --------- General . 1000 General ---Coldwell,Banker OFFERS: ~ ' DISTINCTIVE OCEANf'llONT + FAMILY HOME This 5 bdtm. den , fam . rm., form. dining rm., ex.P.ress~s dignity .& formal.it~. Sepa- rate children's wing with own s1ttmg rm. Grass terrace on oceanside. Beautiful sun- ny patio wit}\ large pool. $232)000 Kathryn Raulston BEAUTIFUL AND BIG 5 Bedroom (could lie 6 BR.}, form'1 din- ing & family rm. Gorgeous pool & plant- ing. 4 BaUls. 3 Car garage. Immaculate.· Professional decor. Asking $98,500 Mary Lou Marion HIGH IN DOVER SHORES Fani. rm. has wet bar & view, breakfast rm. has view, kitch. work area has view. View at nite is better than the day. "See for yourself.'' 4 BR .. 4 Ba. $97,000 Al Fink TWO INSURANCE LOANS Two homes : Broadmoor-4 BR. 2lh: Ba .. Fam. rm., View. Assumable at 6~%. $65,500. Westcliff-4 BR., 21h Ba., fm. rm., Fee land. Assumable at 51h%. Call now! $65,000 M. c. Buie REDUCED $3,000 2612 Lighthouse Lane. (Call for App't.} Beaut . .f BR., fam . rm. Harbor View Hills home. Owner anxious, submit offer (may lease/option) $64,500 Bud Austin SECLUDED RETREAT Lush shaded patio & sparkJ.ing warm pool on oversize Irvine Terrace lot -immacu- late 3 Bdnn. home w/family room. Some Bay view. S61 ,500 Mary Harvey ELEGANT SPANISH 5 BR . Owner says "SELL"! Distinctive split· level new home. Mexican tile entry, huge family room w/2nd fireplace. Formal din- ing. Prof. decor. Walled ~arden. Priced to sell at $56,900 Belle Partch CORONA DEL t.1AR Ocean & Bay view from charming home -3 bedroom, 2lh: baths, den w/fireplace. Room for pool in walled garden. 3 Car garage. ExcelJent financing. $55,000 Carol Tatum OCEAN FRONT-·NEWPORT Old beach "house needs paint & "TLC". R-2 lot. Could be good income property. 5 BR's. Located on beautiful swimming beach. $51,500 Cathryn Tennille NEWPORT DUPLEX Comfortable 3 bedroom 2 bath lower with fireplace, sharp 2 BR. upper with view. Sundeck . Good terms. Full price '49,500 Gene Vreeland ' OPEN HOUSE SUN. 1 • 5 2627 BUCKEYE. Large 4 BR, charming Eastbluff view home w/character. P~ fess . landscpd. & decorated. Formal din-rm. for entertaining. $48,500 llarriett Davies WE KNOW ITS TOUGH To find-. qu~lily·home within walkin~ dis- tance to \\iestcJW shops & Mariners School for W 950. Harry Frederick • BEACH BUY Mod . 4 BR . 3 Ba. 3 Car gar., on lee land. Unique upside down house I Huge L.R .. din. rm .. kitch .. 11-fBR & sundeck upstairs ; FR & 2 BR's down. Great beach area. 544,500 Bill Comstock IU.0700 644-2QO PARKA BO,\TI Or trailer or both! 3 bdrm., & family rm. view home on huee lot with ·easy ~access. Squeaky clean. Immediate po11es1ion. 308 La Jolla Open Sun. 1-5 :30 MOST DESI RAB LE AREA Popular Harbor View home with* bdrms. & faritlly rm. Pool size yon!, !Int 4'co" · Corona del Mar HI school. See toclaj!, ' ' 877 Sandcastle Open Sat-Sui! 1-5:~ SPACIOUS~ESS ' UNLIMITEDI A delightful aurpriae when you enter thls courtyard! 3 Bedrooms, dining room. 3 years new . Reatly a must see! $43,950 2039 Irvine Opep Sun 1·5:30 IRVINE TERRACE-$40,111111 A rare find in this exclUJlve atea.f'Large 3 bdrm. & 3 bath home w /near n.i,w ~ting. Sliding doors open to lovely reer ·patio. . . 1515 Bonnie Doone _Opan Sat-SUO 1-6;30 CORONA DEL MAR VIEW Near new 4 bdrm 11Broadmoor" tri-Jevi!I w/ family rm & formal dining rm. A superlative seUing with its gently terraced garden of tall trees & lovely flowers. $79,500 2716 Windover Open Sun 1-5 :30 EXCITING CONTEMPORARY Prime area of Corona del Mar! Custom bit. 3 bdrm home for present owner. 2 Years new. This is the unusual for the young at heart! 228 Goldenrod Open Sat-Sun 1-6 :30 IRVINE TERRACE Fantastic view of bay, jetty & ocean from living rm, master br le lam. rm. This 3 bd· rm home is beautifully maintained. Lge. H&F pool. Shown by appt. only. $87,500 BEACH BEAUTY..,.$54,500 Split-level 2 bdrm, 2 ba condo w/gorgeous ocean view. Swedish firepl. Near tennis courts & garden area. Electric kitchen. ''Our 25th Ye•r'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Reolton 2111 San JNquln Hiii• Road NEWPORT CENTER 644-ltlO * * * * * * 1000 Ganaral 1000 ---·----3 Bedrooms -2 Baths .;;;;;;;;;;;D;;;;u;;;;PL;;;;E;;;;x==I $700 total to move in 1::: "c::~;!. .,.:.::~ clu~. $21,500. Shown $23,950 by appl, NEED CASH! Roy J. Ward Co. EXCLUSIVE AGENTS 1430 GUax;y Drive 646-1550 (Opon Daily) :===-=-----0:. - HOME + BUSINESS A iolden opportunity for you -imagine an 84'x23.1' C-1 property with an extra 1harp l 8edr;oorn. 1% Ba.th home. Ovenhed dble prage + atorap praat, Located do'fmtowp Colla Meu. Low down }Jl.)'ment at $260 a moftlh at 7'*% int., with no Joan cbar&ea. Call now ..• (Clpon Evo1. 'Ill 1:3G) Now port at --- OCEANFRONT * CORONA DEL MAR Macn1ficent oeeanfl'ont bome Jun 'llrted l in ExclueWe Camli>-Shorel WJth ateps down to private community beach 5 bedrpoms, 6 baths Formal vltt dlnlftr room Livi?ll" room, family room Pool • 3 Car Pl'll&e A beautifUl home ln A fantt.Btic location 1232.000 *Mo Re&l-''Our 25th Y aar In th• Harbor Are•'' 673-4400 $)9,000 Ptck up the-phone and call right now. This home bu e\•erythlng you want • 3 large bedrooms, 2 bath!, double garage, completely fencerl yard, shake roof, wall to wall carpels, good Sent• Ana H•itht1 3 Bedroom home ln C.otta Owner will .ell FHA-VA. 3 Meu located on rUce tree- Bednn, 2 ba, 2>xJ> Uv. rm. lined ltfMt. Home haa huge + lg din nn., blt·ina, dble )'Ql"d tor the children. With gar. Nr. UCJ or trade for lit no down payment. and a 4 bedroom. $25,000. poaltive $2000 profit in 12 Costa Mesa area. H you're VA or FHA Buyers a V('f and can have $700 Juat listed ·this Spic & Span within 3 months, you can custom bit 2 BR, 1 BA home own this hOme, Call today. Hrdwd fin, f:rplc nr new It '''on•t last. crptl, drps, encl patio, dbl 2629 HARBOR BLVD. 546 8640 OPEN EVES TILL 1,30 HARBOR LIGHTS Plus the serene view of sa.11 boa.ts sa.11\ng In and out or colorful Newporl Bay, Cozy ear. Walk to shops. $22.500 1.IDO ISLE Immaculate 3 8tdrm. 2 bath homt,. Patio, tinplace, .... lY flalnted. Shown bJ ap. polntm.~t. $fil,500. Lachenmyer Rc,1lfor Living Rm.. formal dining 18EKI Newport Blvd., C.M. rm. large Fam.-Billlard nn. CAIL &16-3928 or 545-3483 with.we! bar. BeailWut Bil Open Evenings Kit. overlooking protected 1 .. ..,;,,,,,..!!!!!!!! .... !!!!• I brick patkl wit.h fish pond A'ITENTION Jr. Executivu. and lOlids of tropical now-You'll like W. 3 Br. borne; ers. Three Bdrm 2"' bath hu lge, entry hall, qiac. • hu,.· muter Bc:tnn 11ulte Ii kl~ • din v. rm.; ~""· • . rm .. month1, thla la the belt ~ vestment )'OU'll ever make. Prove It to )'OUl"Nlf now! Call ............ .. Nichols Real Estate --= ----= - Last ·Chance! We bave (2) .f bedroom homes • bath undl!r priced!! (11 at $34,500 conventional financing. (2) $29,00J ~ VA. cau us now and take advantqe of one of tbete exceptional bu)'I, All always • we have the homes! ~ )1~1·.s.i\ 7: r~~ ')~~ ,1i't ~' 546-5990 complete with Roman tub, open onto sluled Jana1, Garage off alley + addl· pet1. for entertainine A ftr. tlonal boat or trailer storage plan provide• family pri· I .,jjiiiiiiiiiiiii!i!l!!'!'l""'"- space, Top neighborhood • vacy at well. You should P OLI' · 10P quallf1 • top value. Only lff this, In cameo HiP-Have siesta after ~· on :::·:: L•BORDE, Rltr1 lands. Askin& $47,500. beautifltl SWUah patio aur-. SAN CLEMENTE, A cutt. roundin, ioraeoua pool 646-0555 Rei: mstl6 bit 2 Bt. borne: lie room.a. SrianilJI 4 bedroom court FOR THE PAMILY l"!•t 1toraae. S~: ldtch. yard; etc, "Red Tile° Roor' ON .ITS WAY UP feat~; aU thit AND a Modern kitchen, atep.down A large 2400 sq. fl. fa mil)' darlinc 1 Br aJlt. w/prlv. UviJW room. SEE TODAY • home with 4 bedroom1, 3 yard, which htlPI maJr.e YoW' Manana ma,y be too late. bath.1, famlJy room. Sannal p..yta, Priced m1111 Peml below dlnh1C, tllroe ..,. ..,...., MORGAN REAL TY martort al 135.900 CALLI 1""' ... !lo. OnlY ..... '° '7M642 '1$.645' Walker &. Lee commonlty pool, tonnlt $24 000 t'OUrtl and J)Vk. 0 n I y ' $12,!llo. t1a11 4 Bdrm. 2 i... l!Nl- 6714550 ' Owner dapcratel Prime 2190 HU'bar Blvd. It Adamt u •re• Orf!am all b.lilt·ln , !l4$.M9l. Open 'til t :Oll PM li!f.IM :::n... ~ r:-.:.: N~;~;;~.=~:::::: Clau:lfled't actk>n power. TARBELL 2955 Harbor Auime new VA 1oAn of For 11..n ad to 11ell 11..rou.nd nu; QUICKEi\ YOU mL m ,000. t~~. Price $(2,!00 (he clock. dial 642478. 1llE Qtl,OU.'R YOU CALL. Prine.. only. Owner 546-7759. Open Houses THIS WEEKEND ..., .... ....,~ .. ......, wf".,.. ttk ....... -....ldtt ... An tt.e ....... lllM4 Waw :! ::.,... Ill ,,....... ....... by edwartt.a .. alM- wWe hi te4oy'1 DAILY PILOT WANT ADI.,..,._ &kwl .. OpM ltona& for .... -tit ,.., .. """ tit lht ... latanMtfM Ill ttlk .. ru• .-II frWaY., HOUSES ·FOR SALE (2 loclroom) 328 Poppy Ave., Corona de! Mar • '} 675-3428 (SUn ~ (2 Bedroom & F•mily or Den) 2606 Del Way No. C, Huntington Beach 54~4 (Sun 1-5) (3 Boclroom) . 620 Seaward-(Corona Highlaqds) CldM 673-6510 (Sun 'l-5) 1019 Linden Place, Costa Mesa . } 543-9419 . .-(Sat & Sun 1().5 826 Darrell, Costa Mesa , ' 642-9730 eves: .548-0720 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 1515 Bonnie Doone (Irvine Terr) CdM 644-4910 (Sat & Sun 1-5 :30) 228 Goldenrod, Corona del Mar 644-4910 (Sat & Sun 1-5:30) 2039 Irvine Avenue. Costa Mesa 644-4910 ·(Sun 1-5.30) (l Boclroom &· Fo.mlly or Dani 335 Nassau Rd, (College Park) CM 545-2703 ' (Sat & Sun 10-6) 1100 Sand Piper Dr, Colona de! Mar 675-2787 (Sun 1-5) 433 16th Place, Newport Beach 642-8235 1701 Port Abbey, Corona de! Mar 675-3210 1760 Missouri, Costa Mesa 545-8424 (Sun 2-8) 216 Via Genoa (Lido Isle} NB 673-7300 (Sun 1-5) 308 La Jolla (Newport Heights) NB 644-4910 (Sun 1-5:30) *2048 Commodore (Baycrest) NB 640-3255 (Sat & Sun 1-5) (4 Bedroom! ***#5 Collins Island, Newport Beach 835-5164 or 673-9043 (Sat & Sun 12-5) 1130 Santiago Dr (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun} *1721 Galatea (Irvine TeITace} CdM 64z.6472; 67~68 (Set & Sun 1-5) ttll Linda Isle Dr, (Linda Isle) NB 675-3210 (Sat & SUn} 2627 Buckeye (E<lstblulf) NB 644-2430; 833-0700 (4 Bedroom & Family or Den) 1430 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shores) NB 640-1550 (Open Dally} *1749 Skylark Lane, Newport Beach 543-8281 (Sun 2-4) 1038 Sea Lane (Harbor View Hills) CdM 644-2540 (Open Daily) 1038 Sea Lane (Harbor View Hills) CdM 644-2540 . (Open Daily 1().6) 1507 Uncotn Lane (Westcliff area) NB 642-5200 (Sunday 2-5) 1124 Santiago Dr, (Dover Shores ) NB 642-5200 (Sunday 1-5) 620 Via Lido Soud (Lido Isle} NB 642-5200 (Sat & Sun 3-5) 1330 Galaxy Dr., (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun} *4627 Camden (Cameo Shores) CdM 642-82.15 (Sat & Sun) 1606 Antigua Way (Dover Shores} NB 675-3210 -(Sat & Sun) 17081 Saint Andrews Lane. HB 841>6381 (Set & Sun 12-4) *1915 Chubasco Dr., (Irvine Terr.) CdM 673-3211; 545-2300 (Sun 1-5) 2716 Windover Dr., Corona del Mar 644-4910 (Sun 1-5:30) 877 SandcasUe (Harbor View Hills) CdM 644-4910 (Sun 1-5,30) *2719 Albatross (Mesa Verde} CM 640-3255 eves.: 642-1155 (Sat & Sun 1-5) *1615 SanUago Dr., (Dewer Shores) NB 83H700 ; 644-2430 (Sat & Sun PM) 18212 Beach Blvd., HB . · 1162-1373 (Sat & Sun 1-5) (S Boclroom & Family Dr Don) 1536 Galaxy Dr., (Dover Shores) NB 64.2-8235 • (Sat & Sun} 6541 Jardlnes, HunUngton Beach 842-4455: 54().514-0 (SIU! 1-5) ***1014 Polaris Dr., (Dover Shores} NB, 64.2-8235 (Sunday) DUPLEX FOR SALE (2 & 3 Boclroom1) '20-426 Goldenrod, Corona del Mar 6711-2222 (Sun 1-5) 720 Orchid, Corona del Mar 675-1662 ' (Sat 12-3) · (4 BoilNtOm & Family) 2515 Windover, Corona de! Mar 644-1416 (Open Sun 1-5) 4 UNn A'ARTMENT FOR SALE . (t Boclroom1 Heh) 324 Aster St., Laguna Beach 673'1770 (Sat & Sun 1-5) * .... * ., ......... , ....... . * ....... w ......... DAILY PILOI * Frld'I, Jufy l l, 1970 ROUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SA~E HOUSES FOR" SAtE ~ HOUSIS 'Oii SALi: HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSH FOR SAL I HOUSIS ,0111 SALi ' l• -~ lllO ~tntrtl IOIDGtntrtl , lOID 0.-tl I* -· , l 11111--.------ Gtnertl lllf ,0-.1 ~ MACNAB • IRVINE FINER HOMES ' COUNTRY SHOWPLACE Thorobred horses, fruit trees, pool, mani- cured grounds & artist's studio, make tbjs h.ome a showplace of country living on beau· tiful Mesa Drive. c ustom built brick & wood residence of rural charm, has 7,000 sq . ft. un- der heavy shake roof, on 1 acre of land. $240,- 0-00. Call Barbara Aune for app't. 642-8235. WESTCLIF F 5.5% loan; spotless 3 bedroom, 2 bath; new kitchen, dining room, on large landscaped corner lot. Reduced lo $48,50-0. BAYCREST Reduced '4,000 !or fast sale. BeauUlu) 5 bed· rqom, 2'h bath, 2-story borne. For~ dining room, large breakfast area; family room with wet bar. Rooru for 'po\>1. :View from 2nd story balcony. This' home must be seen for out· slanding value. $89,80-0. NIWPORT BEACH Charming 2 • story English Cottage. 3 Bed· roo)ns & family room, manicured gardens: close to sboppin(: $39,500. Open Sat.; 433 16th Place. BALBOA PENINSULA POINT Unusual, custom built 5 bedroom home on 2 lots, facing small park -close to ocean, bay, tennis club & boat launch ramp. M·any extras. Property clear, just reduced to $95 ,000. EASTBLUFF CUSTOM Perfect 3 bedroom family home. Giant bed· room makes huge nursery or child's play· room; 2~ baths; dining room & family room. A must to see, with its' large trees. $49,950. Call Rick Macnab for app't. 642-8235. THE WAY OF LIFE ·Smart & luxurious -4 bedrooms, 3 baths; 2·story & surrounded by green grass, acres of trees & cool, clean air. $47 ,900. Call Char· lotte long 642·8235. BAYFRONT LOT On ~torning Star, at widest part of channel. Will take boat over 50 feet. The last avail· able. $68,50-0. Terms possible. 0 RVINE TERRACE 4 Bedroom, family room , den, formal dining .room. Beautiful yard with room for a pool. Low leasehold. $65,000, Call Irene Hudson . for app'I. 642·8235. ORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX In beautiful South side-3 bedrooms, 2 baths, each apartment. Ne a r exciting shopping. Great rental area. Price. $62,500. 602 Avoca· do. Owner anxious. Call Gladys Russell for appointment. 642-8235. MACNAl-IRVINE ar~lt . /?"afl,/. pr.~.nb UDO· NEW EXCLUSIV~I Exciting contemporary famUy ·home, choice corner, beautiful patio. $68,000. 620 VI• Lido Sol/P_ • · Open Stturdt y .& Sundty 3 to S ; ' WESTCUFF AllEA • PRICE IEDUCTION! T!)is custom home 'becomes more attractive at this new price. Exceptional value in this immaculale • J.>:edroom, dining room, family room home with large yard and d~ run. 1507 Lincoln L•nt Open Sundty•2 "' S DOVE:l SHORES· VIEW An elegant { bedroom, dining room, family room home. Adult occu~ied-move in con~ dition. · 1114 S•nti•go Drive Ope:n Sunday 1 to S ' j Office Open Stturdtyo .. Sundtyo PETE BARRITT REALTY 1605 Wtolcllff Dr., H.B. .... . ' 642-5200 --· - -. ---- • VA , 4·BR /No Dn Mesa Verde Because of urgency, ow~ will pay the points for ycu to USC! yoor VA loln.. This ni<.-e bon)e is located l bh>ck ''°"' ""'°"' and Ubivy -shopclin,g -0lose by. No dov.'n payment tiDandng 111 ycry rare in Me.JA Verdi!, so please call ri&ht IW)'l ! Nichols Real Esta(e 546-9521 • DUPLIX a;. 10 OCCtn. w,.. ,2 hathsj ~ .. d Cl'I. ~.sm. 'Br. lshwub. a.or,. wnua"' ..., Rttltor 67MUO MS-1564 .~ •.. Cost• Mtst n• rm. ...,.i • FHA '!tstlt Altnctive .S and tam.Uy with boat entrance ~~ mA loan to walk to stores, achooJ $2S,950 or offer. ........ a. OnJ,y Open .Evenings 0 -&~f·Sll --GE lllE ALTY -·-,Cll. $20,500 th with patio, 3 bedroom. 2 ba BUlLT-lN kitchen, I""~~...,...,~...,!!!!!!' I double 1ange, carpe tlnf, Costa Mesa .,..,.,_ N•..-Orang • Cout Channer ~:~· S2.~ do ... wl1I l Bedroom .• w lk & 2 i..tt. $23,soo a er lee NO DOWN VA At thlJ price you can't go wrong. It t\aa a double gar. age, terrific COVC!'l'ed patio, J:M3 WestdiU Dr 646-TTU M o~ ~T ... Ji jand &'Olle -notd tmalltr home, Bcau\ilut 4 bedroom' 2 1tory 111 l'OtltOUI cond ition • Formal dining. + family and kitchenette. Wot bar l-covered patio with view. Call 545-M:H South Ccast Realtors. WON'T LAST LONG! 3 Bedrm Mesa Verde J~ome, lar&e famil)' rm., dbil!I tire. place-, heavy llhake root &: lovely Iha&: crptg, On nice- b' landscaped lot with trail. er acce:u. Only $30.500. Call Ray Gault, 54Q.lll>l, Herl· ta.le Real Eltate. BY OWNER Custom bullt, • bedrm. fam. iJ.y room, 1 hie tireplaoe1. Thil beautiful home over- looks the 11th fairwl,Y of Mesa Verde Goll Coune. 6% assumable loan. 3tl16 Java Rd. 540-4095. $62,900. BY owner, 3 Br. 1% ha. tam. rm., lpl., bltns, din. nn. $29,500. 54.6-6059. --... Coll!f• Ptr~ 1115 G•n•r•I lOOOG•ner•I 1009 yards are beautiful. 3 bed. 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 rooms, 2 baths, Best yet, all OWN Home, Open 'til 9: 00 P FHA or G.I NO D West skle Freedom Just painted, and pane Vacant for quick mov Kb laf'&e lenoed yard er will pay points • Call • Needs quick action, BY OWNER S BR, i bath, La:. fam. rm. " PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES . OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY .. SUNDAY 26 Lind• Isla Driv• Corp· owned. 5 Br. 5 bath home facing Harbor Island. ':Jacuzzi & ·sauna. Comp. furn.. for immed. occup. W/dock ............ $200,000 n Lind• Isle Drive New 5 Br .. S bath home on lagoon. Marble entry, .wet bar, AM/FM Intercom, Huge rnstr Br. has beam cell. & own frplc. Large liv. & lam. rms. w/frplcs. w/deck ... , .. $185,000 ·Occupied-Linda Isl• Dr. Cust. 6 BR., sludy, 5 balh home w/3 irplcs., ctrc~ar sta.irway, decorator selected ~arp. & drapes. Shown by appt ••....... $210,000 terms available. VA·ntA. You can quallt.y lo own tbill house • $23.500. DON'T WAIT! $21,500 lled. @-in. Own. now Near everything! 1.faro' ex· '"" Remodeled balho • kit, Mall' BR looks thru f...sliding &le:as doors Into private redwood enclosed patio. 54f>.2703 -Fa rr""' W-Call 673-6568 eveninrs or N Wffkeods. __!!.POrf BMch 1200 2629 HARBOR BLVD. NEAT .. NIFTY 546 8'40 Only $23,500! 3 Bdrm. home, OPEN EVES TILL 8:30 2 cu ""8&•. 15.000 Down. LEASE WITH "'"" will """' ba!. " !%, $150 per month. OPTION Call: Potrick Wood 545-2300 4 FAM DR e Bill H•ven, Rltr. ' ' • 2Ul E . Cout, C .. f 67J.JZ!l J!o.I~1EDIATE POSSESSION! BACK aAY 4 Bed(m f. family hon~. on quit! cuI • elf' • !lat', Lowly area, close to Boys Oub. Owner v.111 consider ex. ehangt. Assumable 1st at 6~%. Little money needed to move $20,500 '"· siunn•·•· • h""' .... SELL FHA·VA Jean Smith, Realtor rooms. Double fireplace. 3 Bedrm, 1% baths. Nll!at all Built in desk. FOR!-.IAL achooll. Need.I tender lovin& 646-3255 DINING. Family room. care. Gourmet kltcMn with built. e KENNEDY DUPLEX -BY-THE-SEA ins, !\love In for option to &C-9130 Eves: 548-0120 Few feet from the wattt. buy money and Teasonable OPEN house-Westclllt • 3 Large 2 BR. newer apts, No. 54 : Waterfront Lots On lagoon. With plans . . . . . $60,000 rent. Call 64>1>303. i,. br, 2 ba, •pacioua living kitchen bu ilt-iM. Al~ FOREST E. OLSON rm, ...... brick lrplc, panell-fttll on yoa.ty 1 ..... ld•al No. 41 : W /76.2 Ft. of long water view facing Harbor lslantl. With home ....... $295,000 No. 76 : \Vide lot on lagoon ........ $85,000 No . 88 : Corner Point lot with 118 ft. of front- age. Long water view . Plans available. For complete information on 111 other homes & lots, c1ll: 'INC. REALTORS SELLING 7 7 CALL us· J.'OR AN APPRA1SA L O~' YOUR PROPERT\' Commtreial, Industrial or Residential. Ing, new crpts, d rps. for residents, Xlnt income covered patio. $30, 000 . potential Tax l!helter. For O\\•ner. 440 Cabrillo St. sale by OWl'l(l,r. Asking 646-4n3 $44,900. PrlncipUA only. Call ASSUME :'>\'-'% GI kMtn. 1900 213: 388-7156 daya. aq ll. 4 Br. 2 ba, ctt>ts, BALCONY BAY VIEW drps. bltn11, many Xtra.'I. In Newport's beautiful Bluff• $33,950. Total pmols $204. 1..'0mmuolty, Split level l hr, Owner, MG-3650 or MG-0847. 2~ ba eu1tom home.' Pool. RNlty Comp1ny 1080 B•yside Drive 675-3210 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR NO CHARCI::: IMMACULATE 2 yr old 4 Well landscaped, gret"n bell BR 2 ba, lam rm, nr So. location. \Valk 10 ¥Chools, Cout Plua. 15x38 patio churchs, shopll, &: proposed w I co v . 6 ~-7,, Io 11 n m.trlna. &low market at a..umablf'. By ow n e r . S40,500. Owner 644-2873 after ~1363 aflf'r 6 PM, all ~ pm. 901 Dover Dr., Suite 120 N•wport BNch 642-1235 , 833 Dover Dr., Suitt 3, H.B. . 642-4620 l~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!JW•lls·McCardle, Rltrs. 1000 Gtneral 10. $29,950 With 6314 Loan eautiful family home, entt-y hall, 4 bdrms., huge famiJ)I room, dining room, plush ;hag carpeting, qUality built· ·ins. Park-like yard. sprink- lers. 6~ % aMual rate Joan assumable. 540-1720 HALECREST JEWEL $26, 700 3 bedroom;. 2 baths. Take over 6% Loan """ ..... ""' -'=-$~7~9.~500-. --- HALECRESI" ··By • ..,,.,· DOVER SHORES /~ 1810 NeWpOrt Blvd., C.M. JOOOGentrtl 1000 ~77'29 Eves. 64W6M :~---jjjii-~~~-~-jjjiiijji~~-1,Reliable Service Since 1943 THE TOWERS LIDO WATERFRONT 4 hr. I~ ba, hrdwd Doors, Spectacular 4 BR, 3 BA APTS.-320 LIDO NORD ahake roof. bltns, panelling, home, 3,000 sq ft llv space, Only 7Eavailable. bPedanoramic bay & ocean NOW P.EDUCED TO ~~~s~.~~i;:t~~ prof. dee & 1mcpld. Rm for View. xclusive 2 room apartments. Ele-$150,*-Xlnt T•rms AW. CM pool, you own land. Only vators, terraces, Jacuzzi pool. 7% Financing 6 Beautiful units. 6 car ga. -$10,000 dn req'd. Jmm OC..'C. 'th 10% d Ver ct'al b ' $" 500 T 3 BR. i ha wffa m rm, new 1921 •-11 o N e o .w1 own. y spe uy. ..,, o rages &: utility room , with .,.n 8'° r., . . pen •• 500, •• Open Daily 1-5 P .M. 3121 W. Coast so ft. fi;onting on e.xcelleot cpts, d1'P8 &: bltns, ASS\lme Sat&: Sun ~... N rt Be ch GI toao S~ %, $19,500 ba!-I "'~:_:;::o·c,-.,,...._,,,,....,,,. n ·no, ., ewpo ~ . swimmine: bt!ach. Units are ance. Walk to OCC. 218 OPEN Sal. ' Sun. J.2.~ .No. newly furnished. Hahover Dr 5 Cotlh J&lahd. SpacKlUI MACNAB • IRVINE Bill Grundy, Rttllor · ""lory P'1'en<h R•&•ncy Re•lty ComFMnY S33 Dover Dr .. N.B. 642-46'20 ON BLUITS, beaut ~.o. overlooklna turning basin I ~·we sell • hom• •very 27 minutes" ARBitl.L itss Htrbor 642.ft35 675-3110 vu, 3 BR. park-like reAr North Bay. 4 brm, 3% ba.ths A home at I.his prict! in Costa yd,, fncd. Will finance rlght '-a living room u Ie.ra:e 1'fesa is hard to find, hl.\1 --ar -arr -----......._ ---. FHA LOAN pany. 1019 Linden Pl.. CM. u au outdoon. Small swim· op-n till 9 PM STARTER BARGAIN ONLY $17,900 here it i!! and it's nice, ~-U..V-__ISL __11.LlVz::'.::LWV ~ Bednn hOme, 1'• baths, 548-9U9 ming pool, pier, ' •lip has v.'&ll 10 wall carpet al! . G I hrdwd On. crpts, drJ>B, 4 BDRM -3 Datha. Westside $231,500. By owner. 835-5164 built-in kitchen, hard~ General 1000 etMra 1000 1.rplc. lorced air heat. C.M. S24,500 assume $20,500 or by appointment 613-904.l. noors, double garage, tori::.. $26,500. Assum!bl~ fllA VA loan 6% $167 mo pays ed air heat, corner lot, boat / /) '/ n /) loan S18.200, f:>% /q int.) all . ~9--0218 Agt. or trailer access. assume 2 Bed room ol..inda Jdle ~able. $157. p!!r mo. lncl 3 BR-2 BA·heavy llhllkNlttr. Jov.' interest loan • Sl90 tota1 • Pruv:, int, tllXCl'I, ln~. cor. loc w/00..t " trlr. monthly payment. Don 't watt CUtl"e! Large Baytront Home Wells-McC•rdle, Rltrs. space. FHA or Gl lin...,ava.il. to 1ee it. \Yilh Pier & Slip 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. By owner, $30,:llO. ~8776 At •73 Linda Isle 548-7'1'29 Eves. 644.()684 4 BEDROOM • family room Enfli•b Colm!ey fot"mal eBEACH BARGAIN• l l4 bath, 1700 Sq. Ft. DELUXE spaciOUI J BR " 2 BR fOW' • plexes. Excellent. Owne1 occupied and lax shelter property, $9,210 in- come, $75,000. SlS,000 Down. PERRON 642·1771 . HOUSIS ,0111 SALE - Ntw,OrtlMch 1111 PANOllA~IC Vl•w. .... ... nt At>I-' Lax 2 Br. 2 Ba. Boat doclc. $10M dn . or tr.de tor Hawali prop. ReaJk>r "6-0732 FABULOUS IM.)'View: 2 hOmes, by owner. IOU G&laxy Dr. ot ~ Kbip Place. 64&-<19&t l·STORY coDdOminiwn • lge rms ·~ J'eC'l"ffUon area, 3 patiofl, ~aut,I landlC&J)ed, ........ 4 Br, pool, Baycre1t-like rw:w, Fee tiUe, ,..U . .rm, gd loan, nr. schlt, &bop 5'3-,!281, •• DOVER SborH -<>woer $ br, bicy ~. imm. occ, rras, gd terms. 1112 Anticua Way. ..... l063 BALBOA • 4 Br. • $11,500 2 Lots! Frank Manhall "'ally sr..- Ei..EGANT Home, 2650 "' IL In prestige area, 3 hr, by owner. $'11,500. 642-5583. BLUFFS E-Plan. Great water view. 3 Br. tam. rm. Priv. yd. Xtru. 64f..-061. Ntwport Htlahto 1210 $5,0. DOWN 333 CATALINA Could be 4 large bedrms., now 3; 3 ....... modern kitche n, Move-in Sept, J. 148.500, OPEN SUN. l·S University Realty 673-0510 3001 E. Coe1t Hwy., CdM $5,0. DOWN VIEW Could be 4 larae bedrms., HOUSES ,0111 SAL i .. -,,;.+ CorOfte •t Mar SPECIAL! I HAR&Olll VllW HlkLS i Luxurloua 3 BR. I Ba., Id , cathcdn.1 cell.. an •ltt. : kltch.; heated, filtered poo1 : P1u.t bu room. 1t1a¥ NIUni• • exist, low tn1. ra te on Joi. ... ; App't. onl,y, DUPLEX Orui or a klad; i..t:y Hv. rm., '. Swedish fl'l'lc., 2 BR., 2 Ba. • PLUS l·Sty, 2 BR., 2 S.., ; frpl, Blt·ins both units. ~ App't, only, • • SEMPLE ' REAL ESTATE 2515 E. Oout Hwy. 6'15-2101 I . * Open S.t. 12-1 * : I no ORCHID t Dus:::' -2 """"'·· ' ' .\ · ba muslve trplc., : L blUn. kltch. + l BR. : ~ rear unit. Xlnt eond · 1 Aak. SM,9SO -terms: ' I f7S.1642 • I C-...-MAlmN~ ' ill·tUI l CHINA tOV• ' MILLION. VllW ' Overlookinc Harbor jetty ' Bille Pacific, A phiuani Ir .-xcluslve-community. 3 BR., Lara:e llv, rm., view NJ. • con.y, 3 garaps. Best buy , in the Cove at ~.900. ' ~a*-(,,! 'ill •EALTY .. "[111 ~[t'ltLJ~I ~l'\l l1fll't now J; 3 baths., modem I -='~:::::;::::========~ kitc.ben. G reat atorqe! $MONEY~MAKIRS$ l l\fove in Sept. 1, $48.500 2 New twin tri-plexes. Top Jo.· Univen.ity Realty sn:&,O cation, top return. 3001 E. Coast H1vy.1 OOl BEAUTIFUL N.8. Heigbt.s home--4 lge br, lge living room, frplc, family room, tropical patio. Sale or exch. tor 1m. home. 646-5383 BEAtrrlFUL home ln Nwpt Hg:t.s • 3 br, 2 ba, lg tarn rm wlhia lrplc. 64,2.-8912 --~-· Dovel" Shores 1227 *OLD WORLD* Exclwdve Dover Shores bay Jr mt. view home. Unique &: diHert:nt style. Built for beauty le convenient.. 4~ ba, 4 car gar, hi ceil'p &; many ex t r a features:. 4 New dUplues under con. sir., compl date Sept bl. So. of Hwy. Ou~ de-' •ian, food fine. 420-GS Gold-• tnrod. Open Sunday 1 to ~ DON V. FRANKLIN R••ltol" • 67).2222. Deluxe Duplexes Compl'1od by ..... 1. Corona del Mar -So. of Hwy . Crpts, drp1, self: cleanJn1 ovens, din rma, ... alk in closet!. Great nei1hbot<- hood! Walk to beach. Bu,t now It plck own colors. Owner/ Age:nt 644-0'S. SIG9,000. 548-1249 1:======== Unlvtrolty Pule 1237 BAYFRONT LDT • 21 If Btytldt Drlw l AIR-CONDITIONED i8 Ft, bu!tm.ad with pl" Be aure to see UU.11 IMMAC an!a. $2'l'.t,OOO (FM ~), UL.ATE home! 3 Bdrms. &: 8111 Grundy, Rltr. den l could easily ~ 4th 833 l)over Dr., N.B. 642-41211 bdrtn.J, 2% Ba., family rm, 1 w/wet bar. CHOICE green-PANORAMIC View of Ocff.n : belt loc. Priced right at "Harbor. Broad.moor 4 BR, : $36,950 wilh &ood terms. 2~~ BA Sep lam rm. Formal ' BOB PETTIT, Reeltar diflinc. 2515 Windover, Cd¥·'; "SINCE 1946" Open Sun 1-5 ; Dty• 133-0101 Nlghto HARBOR VIEW HILLS ·: YOU own the Jandl SUnny 4 br, 2 ba, 2135 sq tt bo~ ' 8 d w/exceptlonal view '15ltl25 '\ . r., in. or lam. tm. • • Encl. garden: cor. view lot. lot. Asking.$5.1,500, ; Nr. rec. center. Many ex-BY OWNER 644-2540 C IJ'a1! $39,SOO, gd. h-ms OWNER: Immaculate, i t ~187 A.gt Unitl, 2 Br'a ea , + peat ~ qrtn, bltlul, crpt1, drp1, ' Turllt Rock 1239 lrg lot, truK trees, hobb1. ' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Shop. $615,000. ~9103. * NEW LISTING * 328 POPPY AVENUE r -->· < BR Charmin& 2 br, view bonw. ormer uiuuel • ., tam-Like new, close to beach. Uy rm.; EXQUISITELY Owner 615..$128 DECORATED. Evmthing ========: BolliN Ptrilnaula 1• complete plus many, many extras. . .expensive uae of wallpapers, specil.l ot.ttdoor lla'htlng, profess. Jnacpd., W .. Bay, W~tel"frent trees ft; VIEW. Quick oceu. Beautiful, J'iewb' redec 4 BR pancy. $55,000. + bonus room. Pa~ : e Rttd Hill Rtalty beach-pier • slip, Sl15,000. : Univ. Park Center, Irvine Bill Grundy, Rttlhr : Call AeyUIJ¥ 83J..08a1 83: Dover Dr., N.B. 842-'620 ; Own )'Ollr hOme ror less than rent. Nice bedroom!\ 16' liv· Ing room. Washer dryer. refrigerator, 11tove incl. A rea1 barg1in and ifs R-2 ' Zone. Call 645-()303. . REST E. OLSON 2629 HARBOR BLVD. 546-8640 Eastsi~e, Cotlta ?tlesa hard· wood D90r hwne on large R·:'.! lot. Ideal lo buil<I an. other unit on rear of lot. Styltng:.for 'elegance 3 BR. fixer-upper at yester-$25,000. &4>:Z4G8 and comfortable living day's prices! Only $24,im 5 Bedrooms, 5 Balhs _ tenns. Steps lo ocean, Mt1• Vtnfe. 1110 ~~~~ !!!!!~~!!!!!!!!:: .: Beautiful cu11tom home, 4 B•ck Bfly 1240 Lido lilt 1:151 ·: BR, 3 ba, approx 3000 1q ft. BEST BUY BAYCREST L'IC. REAL TORS Lo~est Priced In MESA DEL MAR OPEN EVES TILL 8:30 Formal dining arta club &: tennis. Spacious ~':~~· Family CAYWOOD REAL TV $21,950 (Open Eves. 'til 1:30) 3 bedroom, 2 bath. large brick fireplace, Gas built· ins, Shing le roof, Double car garage. \Valk to all schools and large park. F1-IA or VA terms. $27.500. s-....... Newport OPEN 1-IOUSE this weekend 6306 W. Coast Hv.•y., NB 1111.000 • 541-l290 • Coll 546-2313 0 THEREAL "'-ESTATERS Custom Bu ilt •• f1irvl•\f 646-8811 Largr 3 Bedroom -& familj + carpets & custom drap. "~· Ncwtsl & finest blt.tn l•nytime) COMPANY kitchen. Shake roof, rock1'1"~~~!'!"!~~~!' I • < fireplace. 75.xl35 ~'. wi~IDocTOR SAYS SELL ''Ow 25th· YW boat gate and man1curild . In the H•tbor 1.Ate.". landscaping Full Pr i ce BeautifuJ 4 bedroom home 673, •44,00. • ""'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iii;;;;; i $38 500 Ou~tanding uwer with S23,DOO worth of im· . _ ,. FIXER-UPPER Ba~ iOcation. Call 546-llfil ,~vements,, including de-Glamorous FIVE 15) BEDROOA1S fOf' all details. IUX! 18 x 30 pool with Jacuz. $ho--'iffs Jy $26.950 wl1h big a~% :d -many many ~tutti. ~ GI Joan to take over. Needs E:JH • ALL this and NRAR the 180" Q Vi e r1tage Beoc~ """' v.A. i.oan cean 1ew clean up. paint & yard work, , •• ,,,,, but who knows. "your·· deal ~ SUbject to 6~ "Ai 1ruiual ~ Channing Oyster Bay Cokm- miar.: be the winner. eentage rate which can. be la: In Corona del Ptiar~ Spac. Open Evenings UIUtllod lr)t att)'Ofte. CAlL • loUI ll~ine room. butler's & .. ,.,... B/B Walker ..... _ lee ::.'7·~ =~ ·--Shorecliffs ~ '"""' h" ... """"""' & GE REALTY OPEN SAT /SUN. 1·5 Rea-oundeck up. Palloo. bakon- AllllM ltHMilr,tll ntREE lovely t-omes In this 2'/'!lO'Harbor Blvd; .•t Adam• ie1, BBQ. IA.qdaca~ Make exclusiVf' communlly wlth 545-{)465 Open til 9 PM olftt now. call 64S-OJOO, , priva" boach ''"'"'· S.. CLOSE IN FOREST E. OLSON Assume 6% FHA \Vestside-4 BR. • den • 2 hll ., 3 car gar. $24,000 11.t $D1 per mo, financed. Include& P.1.T.1. Cost• Mes• Investment 541-n11 NOW'S THE TIME FOR ' QUICK CASH Newport Beach Helen Andel'90n at Sharp four bdrm, tv.·o bath, UiC. REALTORS 249 E vining Canyon Ea111lde CM home. Larp "'""'""'""'""'-'""iiii•I :::.~~~·:::.~~· :~ $23,950 THROUGH A G\\-ner wilh I\ J[l'l"Ch thumb , hu 4 be<lnn home In Pfll'k like yard fnr sale. GOOD lfINANCING. GOOD VAL.. UE for GOOD FAl\llLY LtV. IN Gt Jean . Smith, Realtor f;j ll I\ ,\ Ill It II Ill'" I\ 1\1 ' ovenized double ga~. profcuionally landlcllped. alley attn1 for boat or trail- er. F:.xcellent Terms -ACT MESA VERDE NOW <! Vacant, rwty to move tb. M. M. LA BORDE, Rltr. On an extra wktc )Ot with 6t6-0S65 Eves : 642-1438 646-3155 room !or boat or trailer. 4 '::::::::=::::::::=.::;:I Bedrooms -l •10l'Y With CUTE & CLEAN I' NTA A CANYON heavy shake roof in excel· o......1 NA Jent 1 tion near 2 0 0 11 A very attractive 2 ~rm 5 ACRES & l!OnsES. Bc•ut. oca. . " &side home. H11rdwood CUl!tom ranch, pool, turn. couhes.. $33.000. To inspect firs bl.t£C k1tcbcn e.Uoy •c- guc11t h0u11e. Immcd. poslle$· ~11 JI ~. Room for bOe.1 <1r lrlr _likln. \VIII conJkler exeh~ oh IAfit! R·2 lot. Of\Lv $11 ,9'.lO. lmm'"'1'~ 3 bedn>om11om• DAILY PILOT -tftst'IJ1 painled tnrtde 4 cul. New ~ta t\ drapca, · nice r1mny room • tarp lot with rear a(."C('a, FHA or VA temu •vail. Call S<Hm. WANT ·AD 642-5171 MA IN REALTY C.H ,...,. Ga"ll· Ji40.U;1, altor1 ~7 Heritafiie neahorJ. BUSlESI' markctp).ct lfl -======== :.., .... ,,;,,...,.., .... ..,...,. Ads. Cheek tl~m now! j ----· ------ OWNER Wll.I; LEASE 0"10N lttajestlc 4 Bedrm, 1lmlly nn, Beparate dining rm + 3tx40 pool, 2719 Alb•tross Open S•t .. Sun I to S Ian Smltb.. Realtor CHOOSE YOUR TERMS Th.I• attractive ! bedrm home haa the mo.tt yoo'll rmi:t for the mooty! Good· location lor AChooll. GREAT landapl.ng with comer lot Md very br1ibt Ir. cbe«iul \ntttlor. Unbeatable temu1. nl.A-VA-Conwntiont.l or as. sum~ e:xiatinc 6% VA Jou. °"" S'<.500. ' • COATS & WALLACE , , lllEAL TORS 54141fl- (0pen Evtnlnfol Lge corner lot w/many la:e DOGS OR HORSE 0 ' • •:: trees. Owne:r 642-7136. Alsume $20,ooO, 6% % loan, pportunlty ~: payable Sl'13 PITJ. Full ·~ :. · OWNER'S SPECIAL! pr!~ $28,500. Subntit ?n 56' Lot with. room for poor.': 4 BR & POOL down payment. Modem 3 bedrm, charm.Int · 1~ 'iO loan, family room, 20282 Riverskle Dr. lamily rm home. Well pnc:. ~ Fee title, pme room, E. on Orchard off of Santa eel al $69,950. Auumablt lit,· In Blycre1t -Superb cond. Ana, then turn 1st street it 5%~. . : • ,._, • "•ht. Agent 675-1651. lean Smith, Realtor .. · A'M'RACTIVE duplex • 6 yn. old. Near oeet.n t\ bay. E•stbluff · 1241 ·: 2 I 4 br, l ha, 3 p&tioa, ...,255 .• lge 1araa:e. Furn.i.ned. By * BY OWNER * l,....., .. ,__.,.,_!!!1!!9:::· ,. ..... ;;;::'.:"';;:·;;;·"":::o·;,;•:;;,,,_;:::::..-i• •R.;...21\1 ~·h·· 1 ... ,b11am OPEN suN. 1.s :.: No F Ney S OG NS rm, .. ., c. iutc . w tns. 216 VIA Gl!NOA Just t!est valu~ • : dis-~~: ~: ::.-k.din rm. 3 BednlO"ls A family rooot. !; ti.nctlve, 10 cbannina. '° 1,;,;;;;;"';,:0:"°"~.,......,, 3 car a:araae. :: bft:al!tible, without a doubt BLUFFS: Condo 3 br, 2~.i $79 500 •. •-ba, Spilt lev•l, choice.I LIDO REA0LTY INC. .:.: one of our ...... st otlerlnaa. belt "' ~ B green , .-,-.r. y owner ,... • 3 Bedroom, 2 bath home 6#-4906 3377 Via Lido 673-.-.;•: with an entrance• that will .•, LUSK 5 Br, 3 Ba View, 45' lot·~.500 :• make Yotl feet Jlke you att $7500 d 3 br l % bL • • fOlnf out ol this world, at profe•. landtcped, xln't own. · ·:· on!,y $26,9fj0 "1th EZ tenna. cond. $57,500 By Owner, __ 6'1_>_2&43 __ or_"9'1_·_Ul5 _ _..i1 -· NOW'S THE 'i :.1 P.AIJL9WWd CA&llil.lll ....... .,y ••• 109.1 Baker, C.M. Coron• .tel Mar l250 • ·I *OPEN DAILY 1-5 * j: 4515 RoxiMlry Rd. TIME FOR ,. C•mH Shorts ' Tited ot the conventional! ·' $2500 MOVE·IN: Thrn tee this beaut. c::onte.m. ··! No other '''''""'""' P<.Y• all. ..,,....,, 3 BR .. conv, den QUICK CAS •.;, l Bed 2 •·th •·u ri h om e! MACNJt'JCENI' ""·~·"'p ee ·:1 ''GOOD auYS"' 12-4.800. big comer k>t, room VlEW + ltcludcd t\ private , REPOSS&SllONI ~ '!rutr~!:~· :~: :!k:1,~il»~ctd below THROUQH A:l 3 te S a..lroemsl Jlze btdl. Floor to celllna ,O.Ltrtey R••I Ett•t• •, N"'IY ,pallloed. ~ I Iireplaoo 21121 E, C...t ff")' CdM ., ~FOAL RIAL TY ~ ~;:;,=..!': ......... · .. 6n.ui.., ... • .... ·· .... -1 DAILY PILOtl 142-UNIXCILLID VIEW -: I f of Harbor Ir. OIX'an, Attr. TIRED of that old turniturt! apllt l~l home on R-3, 5100 WANT AD , lt'1 r .. lly not !hat lia.! ,._71 ll:l: I Mi-IUJ "'· h. lol, Id al for • Apt, I J units. $200,000. 2S01 Ocean to rtP ace. u11t watch the II )'OU ad In di(! clusifJC!d Blvd ., CdM.. By a,ppt only, lltrnllurt " 1n1ScellaJ1eO>Jg SECTION! Someone I I 8111 Grundy, Re•ltor 642 u71 mlumns 'ln the ClllWtd W(&!,C:hlllf , kit• II. DIAi 63J Dover Dr. .. NB S~l-4620 ..... Sf'ctkln. • ' M::2-.i6'18::' :::· :...::""'::':!.'!.' ___ _:_.,..,. .. ..,...,,.., .... ,. .. • ' .. - . . I HOUSI S POii SALE -Llf! l1le . 1251 OPEN HOUSE LIDO ISLE NEWPORT BEACH S&3,• lmmaculace lhrtoe bedroom and f&mUy room hOUle Gn 40' lot. The beamed ee:Utna llvlna:room with wood or ru bumlna; fittplaee opena to ~ apltk>t,q &nd IUM)' South Jll.tio. The aourmet kitchen feab.arel beaulilUI euatom natural \\'OOd cabtneta:, Tbtr. !'N.dor double OYtml, built ln mixer blendtr and food chop. per, KhcbenmrJd d.llhwuh- er, dlah mailer, llldin& 1 Wlvel. 'n'lt aame custom '~-~~---~-~.-..------.----·---~ ·-...........-.-.--...-----... ~-... ---·-·-------------- DAILY PILOT HOUSIS POii SAL« -lllNTALS -" I lll NTALS lllNTALS . RI NTALI llNTALS RliNTALS R L...,... ... .., 1iiS Hov1•1 Fuml...... Heu ... U~lollod Apn. Furnl1htcl · Al>fo. F""'l"'" A1>fo. Unfvmh hod ~to. .Unfvrnl1hod Ajm. Unfvmlohod -OC EAN VllW S-r ........ 2t10 Huntl"""" --J-N"'•""W ... ~.;.;.;..;;•.;. .. ;,;ch;.;.___,:420!=,_;.;N:;;!"P"=:.:."..: .. = .... ::.:..-::•::ll0:1C:1:Ht:.:•:.::Mo:::::H:_ __ s::.:1=00 Hullflp .a..ch __ ,...,.... -- 3 -211 both homo. I BALBOA ISLAND. A....,,, WATERfRON T Ooea.n A Cln)'On view 4edl:. 1 Br. apt., llPI f . Avail H Ufttl"lton H1rbeur Bliek fireplace, built • In Alli. Call ~1503 UllAlrn C Bt, 30' dock, Leue kitchm, low matnwiance DIX turn Gardtln Colta&e, or •ale. Open $Jll 9:30-4 :30. yard, tow fl1lfk 1tRet. 4 blJai trom heh. Pvt ,,_o0, ism Harbor Ln. 213: $34,gj(l, $100 wkly wtuW. 49Maoi' 3'f6.6MO. 2131 :m.59fl or AVAIL. now thru Sept. BBQ 213: GL 6-6456. ...,,iOtan llEAL ESTATE 1190 Glenncyrc St. under b-ee1. Sleeps S or 2 BR 2 ha Condo. 1 ml 4. Cdl!f. 6'f>578T to heh. Cpt/drp, fpl, blln1. PRIVATE entrance • room· 2\~ car en-: 3 Pool1, • ·-· •· h K 1 h Jacur,1, 11.una. teMil ct. __. .. na Q'<'ac ' 1 c e n Call Chuck, 826--4310 8-S ?>if· privilere1. 4~ 494-!M73 5"49-0316 SLPS 5 • students ok. Avail * OPIN HOUSl * Aur ~16, ,,,,. ~ Aur 10-' Daily Port&!lna t.aauna Hom~ & Buildinc Situ lO/Stpt f . $80. ~ Up N)'tt Pl. oft Cout Hwy. OCEANFRONT 2 Br .• alffpa Victnril. Beach Area 6; avail Aus. lit, Sl'ZS week. PLACE REALTY 494-S70f RKltor. 673--4330 2969 So, C.O...St Hiway e BALBOA 1 1-2 Br, S80 e HANDYMAN SPECIAL e • $150 wkly tor Sept. Alao 4 UNIT apt., ocean side of ~ monthly rate. &r:>-5810 hwy. approx. 150 yd&, trom UDO ISLAND Apt. Sleept beach. Groued $9,000 lut 6, $3)(1/Wk·mln 2 wk&, or yr, t ids. paint II: cleanup Yrl.y. leue. 6'1l-3MS F, 5: 30 le wkndt, 962-95l2 LUXURIOUS 2-story, 4 br, 2 ba, formal dln!ni nn, all modern conven. Walk to heh I 1ehools. ~ mo. -4. BR. 2 ba. dole to beach, all bltnl incl. ref. 'Pf<flo, fncd yard, irdru' '-water pd, 1235 mo. $!6-8221 3 BR. 3 BA. nr. be&cb Ir ~boob. S230 per m o . Ava.llable Sept. J. 536-tl29 Oakwood ... FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. I A 3 IR'1 Private pallo, pool • tndlv . la.undry tac. Near Onna"e Co. Airport t UCI. Adulta only, 20122 Santa Ana Aw. ~f"1', Mrs. Joaehlm, Apl 3-A .1... ,.,, ! f,' u 1 ,,, ... ( A v1 o o n , THE HIGHLANllR "Scottish Treat" 16161 P•rkold• Ln. Mfr. M1·1fft San Die'° frn"Y tc Beach Blvd, 4 blks So. to }Jolt, \V. on Holt 1 blk. Now l,2 Bil., 2 BA., lllm lA QUINTA HERMOSA or untlJm, afr.eohd, Hit clean oven, beam eeUlna, ••Modern Spanish" dlhwr, priv pr, elevators, 16211 Parkside Ln. U1en.p)' + 1wbn oooll Mgr. 147.5441 -t~·~ ~· s1Ab6J':i FURNISHED MODELS NOW OPEN Eut ot. 2600 Harbor ne..r Lush landscaping, cabana, covered court· .... ~~=-c~~~423 L~ds, sunken swim'g pools, BBQ's & roun· BAY ?tfEAOOW atnS. New exc11 APTS ''THE Ul TIMATE IN APTS" • cabmet work ia carriied out ln lhe COi:)' family room : that teaturt:a 1paCfo, for 1ter. eo and TV and counter top be.r. All brand new copper pipe plwn~lna ~hl'oulhOUI tbe enlli'e hotw, plus two Oftl'alzed wiJt:r heaters and toft water. Forced air heal. 01 tnt ... Pric. ""·500 WIU. RINT ALa TRADE U-u I 1-L-• S.nt• An• H•ltht• --?oUSSION REALTY 494.0TSl ""'USM n urn - a new way to live in Newport Beach · 2 BR 1165""'"'!.,B~ui:· 1 BR's-From '150 2 BR's-From $170·$175 WOod' panic, &hug crpta: All util. incl. Furn & Unfurn. ----HORSE property • Country * $33,500 * General )000 livina·-14 acre. 2 BR home priv. ,,_tlo, IOme w/trpla -· P<ro!, -wl!ey ball "' ... , Bluff 5242 Huntington le•c" 5400 Walk to beach. Xlnt terms w/detached rec l'OOtn + lt'• fµn , fine ?l~isbbon and prestige living, all in one.Juxmious package. That's Oil:· · \\I OOd Gardin Apa"r tments in Newport Baach. iuit minute• lrom Balboa's Biy and beaches. ftC blda bl ' -· " "'°1 " "• "'" e Nl!W DE LUXE e -NOW RENTING PLACE REALTY 494-970f l Bednn prlv home •• , .$80 out buildings. WalJed.in in- 2969 So.-Coul Hlway l Br C.M. lcld1/p!t •••• $116 nt'r yard w/poo! + com- tmg ll'ffn. Adults, no peta 38'i W. Bay, Open ~ 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for le&tc. BRAND NEW trc.'' • Lido Ille 11 truly lhe l1Jland L19un• Ni9uel 2 Br tum tot/pct OK. , .$125 pletely fenced outer yard. 1707 1 Br cozy cott, 1wm pool $1!15 Zoned A-1 for hor'se1 '- J BR utll paid .. , .... , • 1Sl.5tl barnyard animals. $400 mo, STAll*LET M7-l*S B""h St., Santa Ana Ht., ot charm. Privat& entrance LA.ST WEEK BY OWNER a.crou, lta own bri<IJ:e, com-3 BR, 2 bi, on cul-de-u.c, 545-a14S 1'htire's a '/1 million doll1r Clubhouse 'vith party room; billiards room, indoor golf <lriv- ing range, men's and Women's health clubs, saunas, tennis couris, resident 1ennis pro 11nd pf9 ·shop, and Olympic size pool .All th.is, and much more. just steps from. your proftiasion~Y.dlicorated aparlmenl. ~a1:li. 1\·ith .private ·balcony/patios. Air condit ion· i11t/fireplace1 opllonat l & 2 BEDROOMS QUlET adult couple only. FROM ONLY $155 2 &Inn, no pets. Drps, area. Large floor plans crpbl, dlhwhr, hNted pool. • F'ROl\1 $26a e Spacious park like grods 12-7 pn1 daily ftf&«l13 Incl spac. master suite, din · • rm &. dbl ga~e, auto door opener avail. Pool &: Rec. p&ete dub house taclllUe1, L:::e terr. lot. Nr iehool, $225 -3 BR. 1% Ba. Family home. Crpta, drp1, R/0 patio. ttnnil court1 a:Kl boat If.I'· Lake $27,900. 495-4284 de111, private beaches with I =::::;;=:==:;;;:;;::;;::="=o 9Wlap; 1Udt1, 1wimmlna: San Clemente 1711 ...... --....... all ._. ._ u. ot HISdentt SAN CI em e n t e Bluff cl ttdl tabulOUI bland. relidence -2 •tor)'. 4 hr, Blue .Bet.o:ln, Bkr. 6'5-0111 $16$ w/ prdnr • 2 Br. cot. tilt, bit.hi, chldm ok. OP'EN HOUSE 2 !ull ~ 2 hill bothl. Prtval< S.tvnlay & Sunday ttrtel to Mch, mqniticent Blue Bet.con. Bkr. 666-0W $12> • 2 BR. Dupkx. G&rqe, tots & pet ok. Avl now. --A!J1Uftbti2nd· view. ~.500. O•ner 1 tiJ 5 ' 71.f.tm-9300 or 492-2111 by Blue Beacon, Brk. Gtf>.-0111 4 BR, 2 bl. houae $m mo. 19072 SU~ H .B c h . 6i'3-6571 or 6(2..-0gj'.f. p.m. p.m. appointment, 110 Via Palermo St -==~== Lido ltl• Newport lch. Repttsented by Jfoward Lav.'IOO ITI4J 6Th-t56l S•n Juan --CNt• Mis• 3100 ~pl1tr•no 1115 GREAT COUNTRY UVJNG For Mle or lease by owner: 2 BR ~--• v.i-. Patio, crptt, luxury Spaniah rancho, ~ d acre. Oclll' &lr, •Wttiitn: rp1, 1tove, reflir. Ql rtet view, Beaches, marina, 4 h'Oplcal iellln& for adu11 s only. 1 blk to 911op«, SlOO to ml. KEEP HORSES! 9 $1!5 .~ ,._ rn ~· apt.clout room.1. frple1, ~ · _.._.... or ...,.._, ba1, beamed cathedral citll· 2 BR houM W/prqe &: 19, s car ..,..se. 20 mlnl. tncd yard, Cpts • drps, from Cort& Meu fl4.!500. S140 mo. J8l9 Elden Ave, Anady Appraised at $26,000 or $600. mo. ~ 613-S270 'A.net)' to co to any CI •t I 'o=-===P-=olnt===-==1-=7=-40 4 Bednn1, !arnUy rm in Mesa no money down. Gtt•l rear _ _ del ?tJar, freshly painted. yard with patio and tru1t NEW HOMES • $30,SSO Imm«dlate poue1Don. $250. •-H !> lly mo. Collep Rlb' !W6a&O ......... s. . ua:e m room. 3 e.ctrm, 2 bath, 1520 sq, ft, <>wnec v.·an.U: ac:Uon • lc•v· s.:-.. ocean view, nr new 3 BR. bome wllae fenced inf for Canada. Yacht ~. Sma.U lots. yard + 2 rm Me on back • CO'TS See at 34001 AttrtUo Dr. of lot. C10N to town. $11.:t. ~ BUU..OER ~ Call m.o&ll &. al.Jo new triplex $66,500 $250 · A'M'RAC turn/uni. 3 WALLA.Cl Jo~antuttc Bars:ain! Ulstm BR 2 ba tnhll>. Bal.cony, . llAL TOIS Cftlter patk> 3 Bd 3 B• + patio, pOOl. Avau 1/1. '552 Hamilton Ave. cum rm w/ltitcbn. I.Awl 9Gl-36f7 Huntlnt• 9Hch lot . Boat 1poe • .f96..3317 :I BR. -1999 Charle St. $140 Ml-4454 mo. No pet1, l child ok. lllY•rtld• c....,ty 1IOI 64i.2259 0 HD Tis POOL. l BR, 2 bA, p.la)Toom. C NDO 9 YUCCA v.ne, 3 br, 'lj; bl.. wet bar, ' o,>lc'•, Sop. B.r, $1fi,500 cptt, drps, bl)1c. alr eond. outside pool bath, &45-(J02S Br, Sl9,500 m ,ooo. <>wnr 213-944-3879. 3 BR. 2 ha, pr.. lenoed 3 Br, Sl2,900 RINTALI yd, y.rly leaae. $195 mo. Gr. S26,500 Hou••• P'umllhM 1 ,,.s1,,.3-5...;c.llc,,•·~~~--= For S•ll O r Leal• _:.;:;:::;;.:...;;,.::;~:;:;:;::...,_ S100 INCL utll, Small ! BR ~551J R..,t1l1 .. Shire 210S hou1e. Bed, 1tove, refril, C•llW.1 & W•tts, Inc. ROOMMATE •anted; 3 bdr 1,.-233-;l"'O.,-,ana"'=•,.,A_•c,,'',,,"'c-'-' -- houte. SU mo. 1 b1k to f BR, 2 BA, B2tnl. cpll, bM. 4131 River Att., NB. drp1, dilh'Nlher. Sclll, •hot>-2 STORY 4 BR. 2 bl, Jr tam trm .• e1ec Jdt., 2UWI 111. n. VA or n:lA terms. IHT-&507 Ew1: 431-31&9 eve1. plnc, trwy. mo mo. sn.- FEMALE or male. liz. to -&hare ocean view 4 br hie. N1wpert ll•ch - $125 mo. 239:> Pacific Ave. 865 An1li;os Way, NB Complete rec facilities M3-08i'S or &G.4429. 1\lanaied by Models open 10.7 dally L•1un• !! .. h 3705 LEASE 3 BR. 2~~ BA, servM:e porch, 2 patkal:, 0«&11 view, near school, be&eh. market. So. taeuna. $350 mo. $.30l7 evn. ..!!!!!!""""j!\'f.i""""'""""i:'~''lL~Ll~A~>~l~~~·AL~T~ER~S~COg.~ VILLA 'YARN ER $170 69)) Wan"ICr (st Edwards) 3 Br,, l~ Ba. pstio, bit-Ins, Coron• d•I M•r 5250 tn4) M2-001J crptt, drps. Ask about our l:;iiiiiiii~jjji;;ijjjijjji~ Atna:e'd by \Vm Waltel'll Co. dilcount plan. 8S> Center i• BEACHBLUFF APTS St. Ml-4340. ~--· New 2 Br, 2 Ba, Pool. NICE View '8R, fun. room home. Patio, deck, dbl pr., blt·int, Water 4 prdener paid. $285 mo. "2-4032 Oakwood Gatdft Apartment• . HAUOR GREENS ~ . D""w"" ,.u.., 8231 Ellis, GARDEN &: STUDIO APTS 8Gi477 or 847~7 * $300 MONTH • 3 BR. * 2 Bothl. VIEW PLACE REALTY 49"1G4 • BLOCK to BEACH! 2 Br. 1 ~ bath. Frplc, CrptA. SD> mo util pd. 644-.fUi' On 16th Street between frrine ud Dovl!r Dr. J 114) B.f?-8170 ~ptCiOYflhnUe.1 1: 2 ltdreom 1uit••· Fur11ialiM OF ••fllr•lUM. •1•• •• t .JJI.. Jaatdi•I• 0 C'*ll11C1 Bach. l, 2, s Bl\'1. b'Om sno. ON TEN ACRES 2700 Petenon \Vay, C.?II. 1 Ii 2 BR. Furn 6 Unturu 5t6-03i'O Flreplacu I prtv. patlcs I 2 BR, l ~· Ba. $ I 6 0 . Pocla. Tenn.ls • Contnt'l Bkfst. Crpt/drp patio pool hit 900 Sea l.a.:~e. CdM M+!!b11 SeacllU 'Mano~ Apt~, ~j fMacArth~ nr. Cot.st H=tl PlacenHa. :4-2682 a 1 k 2 BR -4100 Corona del M•r 4250 about our dlscounl • 2 b&, & 2 br, 1 L11un• Nl1uol 3707 * -S-U·N· _N_Y __ *_ LG . SPACIOUS 3 Br ·, bcba. Attnc. cl•an, l btk '° -:....--..::...----E Pvt studio rm &: bath, , ' Bath. h. Adults! \Vasher &. $300. 3 BR. 2 Ba., wahr., * ACRES * for mature worklna: woman .. E. 18th St. Adults, pvt. yrd. dryer avail $190/mo ONLY dryer, ~trla:. p.rdener turn. ,... 6i'~ zaraae. Crpts, drp,s. $175. AFT. 4:00. 213 : 431-1195 or NEAR Hunting1on Harbour New Triplexes. Qu iet srea. Lrg 1 BR's, Di1hwa1Jht:r. $150. Pel ok. !213) 592-:2623 or {Il4) 846-J5j9 LARGE 2 hr at beach-crpts, drps, bltns. 219 13th St. 2 BR unfurn, Duplex. Nr. beach. Adult•, 1 child. $1t5. 536-7646. 618 Geneva, H.B. ""=·"''99-======'=96-="""= * Motel·Apts. * 54<h'l116"' MG-4431 lo61"'5-""7_m~-----S710 Studio & 1 Bedrooms B•lbu 4300 $135 -2 BR. New crpts, l BR, newly deoor, nr. China. Santi An• 5620 S•n Clem..,:::;I;:;• __ ;,:.;;: LOW RATES PENINSULA. Pt Nice 1 Br drpl, eltt kitch. lmmac. Cove. Adlts. $160. 309 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;\ $225. Mo.-2 br., nr bch, frillc Day, Week or Month apt. $150 mo. u't11 pd. YrJy: ~ Peppertree L n · Fernleat, 673-JUT, 675-0629 cptt, drpt, 1towtttt. Sled-e Color TV Air Cond. No petl. 6~ NEW 2 Br, 2 Ba, S of Hwy. trw Realty 491-2529 e Pool A Phone Serv Incl *DELUXE l Ac 2 BR Garden Bllnl, frplc, patio, beam Dan• Point 1740 F'OR lease • Ocean view l BR 2 ha, cpt/dtp frpl, stv le refri&. S22S mo. 3.1122 Sllvtr i..ntem Dana Polnl RENTALS ..,., .. FurnlohM O.ner1t - e Afald Service avall Lldo ltle 4351 Apt& Blt·lns, prlv. patio, ceU, cpls, dps. $275. 54.8-79&3 l •Si111ll So. ot O.C. heated pool, frplc. Adulta. HUGE older 1 BR Best Faif'grounda AVAIL thru ~pt 7, 2 BR $145 mo. 546-5163 area. crpts, drps, siove & 2376 Newport Blvd. & den, patio Ii ~t park 2 BR, unr. newly dee Crpl re!rlr. SIM mo. 673-69M ~9755 Nr water at tenn11 ct. $950 d E 1 "~-' ' . mo 213· 781)...9712 eves rps. nc pa....,,., Spac. 3 BR, 2 ha, d11h1•:asher, MOTEL-APT$ · · · gmda. Adulta only. $140 mo. disposal, rettir, 1tove, 13-k & Kl h 2283 1'"ountain \Vay E. crptl, d""&. 675-~98 'w up. ta, td pool, Huntington Beadt 4400 (Harbor. turn w. on Wilson! l;:i~::..;::.;·•c::-7.7.:;::..,_~ air..cond, queen beds, ph __ ,.,;;_______ SPAC. 2 Br, l lh Ba. Adults, ~rv. Daily .lo: Wkly rates. I BR $135 • 2 BR $150 l·BDR..\f, Duplex. 41;e. yard. no pets., Step1 from ocean. ~ NC!'WpOrt 81Vd, at nat. 1''urnbbed.-overlooktnc Adults ol\ly. $ll5 Month $2>(5 mo yr. lse. 67~ * 642-2611 • be:aut. prden patio i htd 833-M l BR: crpts, stove, rebif B·Anu-ricard 1'.lawt~r Charv: pool. Adults. 1035 12th St. $133 · LARGE l BR, C?pta, $140/mo 702% Avocado, AVAIL Aui:. J. WUI show (acrou .from Lake PtrkJ drp1, bltns, patio, prq;e. 675-1299 or Ga-a'l.54. Just For oow. Fum. Stirdloo SUS. 5.16-<000. ' Adult~ no ..... 646-11'12. Alao 1 · BR apt. No * "IT'S HOME''* 2 BR. Unfum. Crpts, drps. B•lboa l1l1nd 5355 Sl'n•le Adults <hidrn/no ..... "'' ""· B. Crosby Pool. NASSAU PALMS, mi--,------• Apt 6, 2135 Elden, C~I ' STONEHENGE E. 22nd St. 6'2-3645 BAY VIEW 2 B1·, 2 Ba Lower South BAY Club is a whole $135/mo, Dix mob. home. :l BR, 2 BA, pool, dsh1v, 2 BR. Crpts, drp1, pool, Kids Duple..'<. Yrty leue. new way ot l~ desianed Compl. turn, htd I pooJ. 232U Florida 536-3107 ok. $1«1 + dep, 1998 ~1aplc, * Call 675-5201' * Just for alna~ J>IOPle. It'• Adults, No pet•. 4 Seaaon1 e BLK 10 BEACH • Quiel, A.pt l . 54tl-21JS fwl livinc with warm, dy. ~~ 2359 Newport Bl. snd·proo.f! New 1 Br $150. * iJiG 2 I J BR, 2 Baths. Hunt lngten Beach 5400 namlc rielghbort. J\'1 a Prv patlO, aar. Snal adults, Frplc, bltns, cpts, drpa, encl $150,000 Oubhollle w I I h 1 BDRM. }llrn Apt. Nl!w cpl. 202-A 14th. 53&--1319, pr., patio. 546-103.f I.;~~;;-~-~~;;;;;;;;;; health clv.b, 11.unu. •wim-crpm. $125 mo. Sirwle adult, 673-1784 Sharp 1 BR. close to occl· mine pooi, party room, bil. ma.le pert. 548--8522 aft 5 1 BR, new shag cupetin&, • UCJ, $130. Ref1 required. ON BEACH! lll.tda, Indoor &Oii drlvln&' pm. swim pool, walk to' beach. * * Call 545-4179 * * ranee. tennis oourb pro * SUS CASITAS Adults, no pels. $140 mo. e 1 BDRMS FROM $3X1 VILLA MARSEILLES BRANO N!W SPACIOUS 1 a 2 Bd rm. Aph . Adu lt Li ving Furn. la Unfurn. Db.hwasher . color coordlnat. eel appltanc.its • plush ~ carpet • choice of 2 color schemes • 2 batlis • stall &bowen • mlrTored ward· robe dool'I • ind1nct ll&:bt-h!c In ldtche~ • brealdut bar • hua:e private fenced ,,_tlo • plub f0ac.aptnc - brick Bar-8-Q's. Wle heal. rd pools &: la!lal, 3101 So. Brl.tol St. (Jh Ml. N. of So. Coe.it Plaza) Sant• An• PHONE : 5574100 S150 -LRG 2 BR. Stud» Apt, (Triplex). Family ala ldtch. w/bltns, crpts, dtp11, frplc., encl gar. 1 OI' 2. children ok. (Nr sch11) No pet1. 2230 S. Center St., S.A. Nr Warner, 557--6502 , tn;4§"!:W I SSS mo. «K-7655 e 1 YR ol-,-_--,-B-,,-, FEMALE 20-30 to br home $90. 5';.5811 ....... Ba f&m rm, din nn, crpU, drpl, dbl ,..,, puk • pool prlvU, kid• ~ l pet ok. S.WO mo/)'riy. lsf'. AvaU Sept.6'4-3W •bop and n!sidtnt tennis pro Furn. l BR. Apll, Mul!JI Tradewlndt Reali)' 847-&ill * LR.G 1 BR. Crpt1, drpa, e 2 BR 1,1 BA FROJ\f mo L•gun• Beach 570J Sinale, 1 Ir l Bedroom lux· only, no pett. 2110 Newport LGE 2 br, 2 ba, slutlio in :e«: $~~ul:·, no e 2 BR 2 BA FRO~f $2tll -------- ury apartments \vith all the Blvd., c.~{ . .,. 64l-9286, 1 unit bldg at beach. Adultl. . . a • 3 BR 2 BA FROM $380 * NORTH ENO * modern conveniences avaU. 219 1· h s r..-...~ra...,_ .ii.h h E.AS'T·slde Studio Apl : 2 br, at 1· ... _ narf •-h 5200 ........,l"' ..,. ........ "'" er O ahll!. Jo'urnisMd and unf\lm. ~-·, .. ~ COMPL~ELV ..-w....-. '"ac · heated p;iol-aauna-leMis nr of those n.re lo\'ely LOW LOW INTIREST Aodrt>om with JIP9,rklt plenty. Oo&e to Broadway 4: Golden Welt Collf!~. LIAOlllSHIP' '42-4466 .... ., '4>-ntt , BY OWNER: <t 2s&.unh1 + 11: .f, BR home, 2 yn old . Clo1e to a ll , $63,500/beat. Yr\f Inc $TSOO. 17212 A1h, 847-8891 arter 5:30 ASSU MABL E sv.~. LOAN $15.&. per mo pays everytbirc. &autlrUI J Bedrm w/l&rte kl!,, dlnln: area. Crptl, dfJ>I O'INOOt I. fnllhb' pai.nted. Only S27,850, C.U 147-8531. ijlfil t"ilA.lt MAfll OPEN 'TIL SOLD ~ Oauic ·1 br, 2 ba bNury Al 1naz \VUd ROit Lane. So. oC Warner, W, or Sprinjdalfl, A;pprallrd 111 $W,6> • load- ed w/quallty • Crpt1. d111~. lndlcpos: 6: decor. Submit •)IOlir own term1. Rttl Ea- tatir: By Mcya_y, 560458. Bt O\\INER' !«. ~ br. 211 ' "-· ltJI. tan1. 1'TI'\ A dinlna rm. Xlnt t."Ond. $44.~. 8461331 EMPWYED lady 1o share my home . All privl, Own rm 4 bath, STO mo, 5.f8..002t , t··". l'I ha, crpls, drp1, blllna, "'"'" cu .c.! I DR I ! block hop . ""' -~-rec root?M>Cf!an views ap s, a ping, re.frig, pool. No p e Is . Cozy BR apt. Suitable Jor _,-~ ..-._ .-.-tl 1 beaches, private, enclosed RENTS FROM .......,10 '""· Rik lro~ oe<an. 113' * OJl'iNDfj~ .. = ',.!';;,';"''· paUo, 1m Newport ...... *** VACANT *** ~ 81uHs, $32.S, 3 BR., pool. C1evidence 'ReaUM 61S-0044 SllO te $350 I BR. rum. apt. Adulll It mo util incl. 53&-20'10 7n AMIGOS WAY FURN, ai.o Avail. 830-4237 or 4!»4188 no pets. 691 A. Victoria, 1 BR. Coodo, n)cely rum. 2 BR. 2 be.. unit.a, unl\lrn. HUNTING $175 MO .• 2 Bedroom• NEWPORT IEACH Q.f, 54&-6138 Encl. patio. $150. Call Oul!kle livlnc areas and TON sn,; t.10 .. 2 BR . View ----·I WATER.FRONT -3 Br Ii:: dl!n, 2 Ba, frpl, wshr/dry, dlhwht, fncd yrd. Wl!ltel'. 33U Finley, N.8 . 3 BR, Jam. rm. bltl.n.s. 2,,, 880 Irvine Ave. sruo10, cpls, utU pd, Quiet 96.Z-9568 double 11rage1. $250 to $300. PACIFIC PLACE REALTY 494-9104 ::: ;t~ u:;:. ~·pl~~~ Irvine & I bth ~~:'1~2Zs Irvine " L1gun• Beach 470J ~~ ru OCEAN11~ AVE., H.B. REGAL Esl·rATE Leue. ~n '!"RR! I C MODERN 2 Bdnn ava'I ( •l 515-1417 ener• (714) MJ..0550 ".r... r. A \VOODS new CHARAUNO North end 1 BR Sept. lit. Ma.,·re adutll on'~ Ole. open 10 am-6pmDally 1 ---------1 4 BR .. 2\~ ha., bltn1, Steps luxury 1-2 BR. ail'o(l()nd. 425 upstalnapt,pa nor~m lc ly; 00 pets. ·;175 Mo .. 1111 AlanafM by Rtnt•I• Wanted SttO SutnrMr llt.1n11l1 2910 c=·~.;, Leaaes0.1290 SOUTH IAY CLUB ~:=~~~\Vay. 5'~ See ocean vlt~ trom 1.1; 8' nn & Jut + $50 deposit re-WilJ..JAM \VAJ,TERS CO. ·LAGUNA llACH &. sep din I area. \\alk to quired. Moorlnr av1U. For l:!'!!"!~!!"!!~~'l!!"!!!!!!!!!!!! CONDOM INIUM 3 Bdrm, 2 bl. Uuo. APARTMEN' JS I"' • UP. I • 2 BR ti'I" """"nt Bay bch, l200 mo, 00.tto 16 It. ,.,,..7506 0 CE AN FR 0 NT , ,;,w, Lovt.ly 81,.A , a_,. .. Villi 2 Refenuleff. 611 Tu1tln • • • Adults only, no p e \ s , Ulll pakt, avail now. 1192 2 BR 2 1undeck, heh. Newer spac . -~""" • 213: 31'1-0062 6-IZ-1.365. 13.J E. 18th. CM No . Coast Hwy, 4M-.f177 * · BA (2 1toryl. d1x 2 Br. bltns, crpts, drps, BR. 2 BA completely turn-==="'="='""===-ILJve wher e t ht fun 111 I BACHELOR apl, Fu, n, LOE 1 BRr. 2 blka to bch. Pltna, prlv, patio A bAJcony. lndry. Nr shops &: p~r. $1'15 lshed, linens, dilbf:a, etc. Unlverilty P'•rk 22SI Hoai hoap ana $115 mo und u1 \Vasher/dryer. Avail A»• 15. Drp1, new 'P.'/w cpl&, pool, Newly fun. S16.'i incl uW. · ' . · yr ro · Ad ts, baby ok. ... ... '-~• .. ~1 m 2 ,,,_, , s _. -...., Appl. only. 4247 Hilaria 53&-2131 Sept S. 4!JS..21~ AM ar 2 Bdrml. l·balh S210 REMARKABLY p ......... -""""' "'""..,.1'evt: ' .,._.'""''' ...,, \Vay, N.B. SfD-0083 l;;;v;;:";==,_=,.,-~ 837~1 a.nytlme. 3 BR. 2 &tha S32:> UNBELIEVABLY I &: 2 BR f\irn. Apls. Pool. 835-TVS? BLK to BEACH · Quiet ~nd- LAOUNA llACH s BR. l~~ Bath,, uz EXTRAORDINARILY Quiet. NASSAU Palms. 11'7 BAon1.oR apt. otar b4tt.ch, 2:!c~ ,!~~~:·.i~· prooflo! New l Br St.15.' Prv. CONDOMINIUM 3 BR. 2 ba, tam. nn U75 BEAUTIFUL J.~. Zlnd, Sl2-3SW ll ~· no ,pet1. $90 .mo. Avail .AUi 1 l chUd "":;k· pa: ':.ir;· 14sn~J adlilts, 1.ovd.)> BlUe Lqoon ViU•. l ~BR, 2~ bl. $340 V•I D 'l11rt Gar4en Apt1 I BR. No pets lmrotd.'oocup. 494-M.19 :m 36th St.~ . ri'i.178.f th. 530-1319. BR, 2 BA completeJy tum-e 'RED Hlt.L REALTY P.ttlq ereen. wt.terf'lll I SIOO mo lncl ulil S•n Ci.men.. 4710 LOVELY 2 fiR, 2 ba $l!l5,i,A::;1'TRA;;;i:ici:.-:,c:B"R'".'=S1"4"'9.-:3-:B~R~- 11Jhed, lil'ICM, riUhe1, 11tc, Uhlv. Park Center, Irvine ~~ ftowen e\~'btre, • 54.~·8354 * __ .;....______ Lae, ~n Sat I.: Slln. ~tar. $179. All extras. Pool. Kld.t/ \\'uher/dr)'llr, 2 pool1, ten. Call An,ytime &3J.M20 411 JO'll, ree. room, bUllardt, :l BR. crpts, drps. bltns, ne1\'-1 BR. Ill.'. rm, kit A: bath. 4228 llilarla Wa:-;. Ph: 213: petl ok. 17431...C Kttlson Ln nla courts, private beach. FOR ,.n•·•· In Un"··-•t 1fll!Q2'~8Sa~~ furn..unturn. ly redwlratcd. Adul li. $150. Ocean view, \Vlk to bch, 981-7039 847 ,,.,.,,, · A"ail A"" t• ... -pt, 5. ,,._~112 \&la 1"~nu Y • r. ~ Si""le1 b'otn ~ • -,_ • " P·"· •Turli Rock II ''"' ·• ..,1'7l62, 518-5221 <Nlo•l. 'ho pp In• • •ho w • * IAYfRONT * 1,:,..::=· .,.--~--A?o.f or Ul-0111 anytime. .. ... • e • ca : .......,, Set ttJ 3lOO Panona rtasiol'll.ble rate. 4fD-9996, " .2 !Ut, newly painted, retr11 .. a BOB PE'M'IT, Realtor Rd., 6'2-8STO. Between Har. N 'IOO 49i-5189 LUXURY AltTS. St•r" bltlna, l'OCI aar. $160. mo. Lido iyfrwtt-2 PMll "Since 1M6" bor il Newport • .2 RlrN. lttb ewpert B••eh -. r-J<!tch4nettte outle A --· RI NT•L• Ing .. •! $37S. * Ml-1211 Incl u~ Adults. no P<ta. 1 ·-·· Dl)'I 133-0lOl NO!h<• R£HT FURNITURE I------~ • -. Tndewlorls R>a\ty !Al~ by di:';, wttk or mo11th. BA YCLIFF MOT Aph. u .. rumlshecl UPPER du.Plex • s hr, 2 $18!1 ~-"-· ' • L 17 1DLldo0 SPl!~llDrlSNBH2!!_!: C•Nn• ~-' "er 22,. El bo. Walk to "-lo. YNzl> mo. -"~' 2 B•, 1'11 .... u1--.i •91 ""I "' * Ollttx:f OF TENANT * LO\\. WEEKLY RATES * Gtntr 1f 5000 Jeue, U40. ~ ba.1 Blk to bch. Adults only, RENTAL PINDEltS Fr•• To La ndlords 645.0 111 4JJ W. J ttti, c .... 111 ... DESPER.ATE! Please help -?o.tother w/4 older children need.I ho1.111e or apt. w/reu. rent or will mal'l&I' apt. Good reft. 968-3139 BUS, mvi needs 2-4 Br hse or apt, heh area. Prel. un- turn. yrly. "2-9271 U BR by Sept 1, yearly, nr school1, up to $450 mo. Bo:t ttf.1091 Dally Pilot e LANDLb Rb S e FREE RENTAL SERVICE Brok~r S.'W-11982 WEEKLY Rtnt&ll. w"ir. J:XEC. Tri-level vltw Imme. 2._llr:' Delivery Kllchen, TV'1, 1nald service. . no pet1. Allo 2 BR. ~plcx. From SlDO. NU!' 8tach Ii: Cm.t Joe .• ~ hr, 3 "' ram 1007' Pun:M Opti H@ated Pool. 536-8881 Room• fer Rent 5"5 Bl.)r! (1) tu&2f7 wkndl nn. 2 d9ckl, bffut. 1 Com;,.elf' 1 8; Apt : 6f6.3365 nOMD I I •1C1T Ntwpert H1l9ht1 5210 $145 - l liR. Pvt. f;U, & ;oo.\t~~~. prlv. tnlranc. 6T5-IOTr ' landlC¢, pool pri''· Ava II Low a1 $2l/mo. 2 BR UPPER·walk lo heh, lJ r•l.J-L I] I · ~-palio. All dlx ft aturta. 4· on beach. A._..il 1 hr u t BU< ti> ocran. 3 Br, 2 ' NO\Y. Chldm 01-::. Gardentr JG.Day Minimum $2.j() Incl util . Yrt)' 1vail APARTMIHT NICE 2 hr. PoOl, l>f.tio, pr, ul\lt bid.a:. 982--3121 or Au.gust. Rc~r. _.., Ca.II all 1ty Condomlnlun1, Sp41c. DANA POINT-OCEAN Vlf.:W A ..._,tr pd. GU-7928 w ::wis * WLOE VARIETY 9/l 714-67~704j, 2 13. •INDIRS blUll, crsi11ts, dJl>s, Adult., 14t-OOS7 6:JJ PM. 4M-M47" -•nda 1un'O\ln(li" ... bl.i"a. ~IOdem larrt 1 BR. houM ~~1 ,.., r no .... •• 64" -1 ....... ... ""' Stu J.fO yr I alt 2 b CUSTOM l'UllNITUR E .,.. -.... H .. ~ :::...~· -. ~ or NO DEPOSIT! 2 hr, I ba. 2 ~ Ul,300. ey owner. 11.epa: J, clet"'. kit , $140 1 'rr1 · ~l · r, llll l NTAl t"BR. tum apt. on Channel undl'ffdl of Apartmenta ~ 1 ChUd OK.. no pct.1:-E~t N.. Adults. slet-1,hi& rma c.1.1 tor appt. ett-5.1ill .,vt.a wti., Aduli.t, nr bc.h. ff&..1?124 1 O\'C, re ;, c, I&'· y11.rd 1,__ Wiled Now 11.,, 1 ~ mo. Very nltt, tum. • wkrl'.lt. Um.E lilt. Cut~ 1 BR. I: lf?'~ioo l\l•rfU*l'ite, •"·n-a11 \\'. 19th St., CM , M1·3~11 61~ \'early by o\vll(':r. Call '42MU -mo. B 1-5 6 3 O or apt, quit!, In ad ntlrhbrhd. f BR. Condo. Sale or t11e, SlZ v.·k. llpg 4. Yrty I .er. lll~a rt. l :CX> pm. i..,;;:7.:;;:_;=~==~~ l ~~""'!!"'~ ............. Jl •1t l ltAf SM! .._l930 Appt .. ~M!lll6 B)t owner. Elec bltns. penon or cpl t]f.$ mo, 3 BR, dln t play nru, enc ~Ff'olll $31.50 Wk. • \VINTER FU.."VrALS e NE:W 1·2-3 BR's. All bllns. 2 BR; llii BA, patio, pool.. PRY RM A ba "'/prv dN"ll· Jltefrif. Pools. Qbhef, mA 67>-ntl pallo, ct!.114.rM\ ok. »50 ltt. From SlG/mo. Lwrur)i Sin. Rent N0\\1 for Sept.I cpt/drp, pr, Nr. s. Cout PRIStlOE LOCATION ·~mo. MORA KAI "'-P'~· Ing nn. prv. t:nt . In prv • ...,.. Avail Aua: u. 4~11 LIBO, LIND.A lalt, 'layal~ ~~~· 6~ ale A,11, Complete maid Abbey 'Realty 6CW850 P\ua. ~19T3. 5f>m1 For~ .... dtll.lJCe 1*81,q ft ol Bta.ch Blvd, \~ blk horne. Colltit Prk area. •Y OWNEk.· ~ GI 1M.n. Dr • FtAln watemantl. -ttrvlce, houte•aru. liDtm, YE.ARLY 1 BR. F\irnbhed ' BR. 219 BA •Pt FrPic. on ~Id_ ~7'"9121 l .... S ..: rr,M, • •'1lc ofi.watu Lido bllrita. l1IM1 l•ltM JHS all utU, l'*t.ltd pool, Apt. Adul t.&, no pell. Co1t 1 Me11 SlOI ~ crpt., wtt bu, Pri 2W~~.:I Cpd\slt,'"~· Gtf'llt. ~LAR~G=E~.-p-1,-...,.--,,-pri-v.-cn· 10 lid'.! • toh'1. S.U,:ioG Bill G1\lftlbt JUtr. t0.-U111..E BALBOA TSLAND VILLAO! INN *Call STl-lUl * Mlcoakt 4blproUkUchen -.IJI nr ....... T to btech, trance. Work!~ man onb'. ~ 15.£ACX»I ~ . Modem 2 BeMtt. ' BJ\. 3 a... hOme. Llruna a.t:t. 0-(...Hll:& l BR. tum. Biie to beach. N~fE .2 ~· crptl, ~· dehwbf, dw 11\/tn, P90l Conv ;~~~ na pets, 67S-Ollii Costa l\t~N. 64S-i'?10-I. nMI llOR Br . .,._ Trplc. 11'1 """'""' Lo\~IY """°· AVll!. °" 7'11. I.ALICA INN Adullt. No "'"' A~:::· ,,...ll;J 5-.0.10 7ra112 . to-'1 oc$hl• • ._..uon. ~ I LY NEW AP'TS HR. """'°" '''""" Prh" auicK e "SH. "'1•. .... 1223, ( 113) -,, llOO Moot!t, Balboa 615-1740 ••. 4:00 P'"· >1~1810 ~-~. -• ,,,_ 221 m•/vp ""'. O<oon ...... I A 2 nn .• bo th' patio • •"'· T ,. ~UT, (Tt'l CT~ Wlinton Rea.I !:IQ.WI t1S..S.W. • .. --MMi2't 13.1 Amlp \Vay, NB BR I. 425 13th St. MT·staf $~ ~tonth. 67:\-6617 EV'tll. TH.ou "'H A HOUOAT PLAZA Coron• H I Mar 4150 I BR chlplex, C$Vdrp, 1tv, fill". next door M5 Amlaoe. 1 BR. N .. w. frpte. Near F1JRN motn. kltch pnw. w ~ Pt..ANN'IHC to mevt1 You'll 0 •I U f 3f75 DELUXE, s,,._ckNI l Bdrm. --~---ref. Ortrce 4 Knox, $120. Manqed by oce11in DAILY PILOT find in •m•alni numhtr el -~':.!~ ft Utft. F\trn Afl. ~ Plu• utll. 2 en. f'rpl, Drdrony, l22 SJ~ wtWA~ WALTERS CO UNO P•Uo. Adulta. hu!le1 only. 199S On.nae ho In ·~-~ ~--·••~ I •• I •• cp" d-H,.t-• ~ .'-p!o -•k. llcllotro-Sum''''' -to ' · BORG CO, 5.U-2379 A\,..., ~I. ~Ml Sl W ANT AD mu -•--· 0 •· ~. ·~· ~ ~ uu ~ r • ·-LARGE 2 BR. cpto/d'PI. ! DI\. trp\c, clj>r. drp• j>ool. 1.0VEt\' 3 b 2•c. " " Ads. Ow!ck thtm now. bl Una. v.·aJk bf:ach £: Ina. No chUdren • no pets. $1M wePk, avail ~pt J, ~. 1 child ek. 2214 CoUtrt St8 Amlp: \\!,ty Jr.A hinc N r, ""'' l'la• •1R~,\t . Coneenlal t m PI · lldlool1. USS mn. 982-...wl 1965 Pomona, C.M. $~'monthly. rn.-31145 Av,., Apl 2, 64tMJ621 4~ w &4.fo...0906' • ~. o~io~~! =~13· ~~rtm:-vd. ~l=' It ' .... " ............ --...-.. ... ~ frldot, July 31, 1970 DAILY PILOT ANNOUNCEMENTS . SERVIC~~1 !CTO~.Y SERVICE D•IRICTc!ll' ~~_£~fRECTOiY ]JOU & EMP'LO'IMlifT ond NOTICES • ~ 1---------Co rpe! C!Mnlne Ull Houllt1t • 6730 l'alntlng, · Jolt Wenltd, Mon M JA1;-;11;-~~oc~em~~IOlll5•~~M,~l~O~Al;;•;s1~ul'1~-5m~,.~nt~l~~64~l~Oil;fu~t~o;ri;"l!~I,;;;:-~64~90~,-o;N"ERS-;EClA.L , TRASR i: c~e cleao-up. -!.!J!!!!.!~ 4lSO --CAPTAIN • ' FRENCH 1-.. by I 500 "I· U. l'Q.. DI.,.... Mon. thr\I Suil. $lb a load. METICULOUS· PAINT. l.l<e-. Radar • Lon>\ · \I French .students. Bcglnnen C.~t OtfO'ltn. 187 2llt ntt Estimate. 541-5031 BLUE ,PUP SI'AMPS. JNS. ~ Yea.ra u ·p. aa1J or power. , . 'WANlED , . l l adul111. 642-3842, BAM· St .. Co&ta ~.~T. crew cot. students, lnt-ext Ptofesaional Sport Fllhlnc~ 12PM. REMARC Sfrvice11. 3 rooms HOUMCleanlnt '7~ bouse1. !Xp.1'.>ocits. 6Ti>5812 Gulde Mtxiean le Central ' OVERWEIGHT l 'ADIES SPANISH 1.ESOONS Ul.50. Full) -l'JWJ'!~· Housecleanil'I? TWO UCLA itudentl need Aml':rican waters • a1ao • O>Ilqie -Malo< will er.di! cards OK. 841-6688. WE'RE TH .,..,.,. Elp'd hou•• l1ct-111u1 ....... commor·. ' ,,-tutor. $t8-l 56(1 CARPE"I' Cleanl~. 10 yn painters Free e1l Ktn cla) pjJot, land A Ma. Ad. ' For weight reducing program to estab&h SERVICE DIRECTORY exper, lic'd, bonded. ,.,.. EXPERTS I "'4-3014. . ni inbitrative ,,...-•• statisU~ for npt~. anent weigbt ,~o~. . f'St. Call 842-1154. DUTCH Ma.int Strv, crpt No Wu~ Beet o.r rtferenceg. Wlite . conducted by qu ed ........ , 'cult.unsts. Accounting '500 clnr. fir wulllg, window * W"'L,AP R * Box M 100). 0.ily Pl1ot. l .,..,,...,.. 1---'-' ----"'"'-C L J & ""blnf. li4n'y van 'Beynto '" , """ . . -..... Must be a min.lmw:n of 20' pounds over· srARTING new \)qs? Bkkpg arpet ay "9 .... , 5r37·1SOB if l'IO ans tall alt 3_ When )'OU can "Mac" Treasurer/Controller . weight. ha~e transportation and not ·cur· Special-comp: service-at Repeir ._ HOMEOWNERS 548-1444 64M032 Part-Time , rently under doctor-ts cari. AD .inquirle.s com· prices :you can afford. t STILL have the Best deal ri•,, ,.~.~ • w••td, c, ... HOUSES, docb, boa t.s. CPA. provtn manqement • Wluiddya Want? Whaddyo Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURA~ BORN SWAPPERS '""•te•• -~'illenlial. ·~ .... t 00 ..-•••• .-... "' ..... "" h h skills, broad experience in · ''"' •t-> .., "'vu.u · · · ~ v. ~•. in town in Cvpet-Lioolcum· cle&.nf!d. wtlldows washed 4 a nyt ln1-.everyt me 'ASK FOR' MISS POWELL ·~' $37..S412 WANTED: Aeoounu ID book· Tile. C.A. Pa&e. 6¢2.-2070 general house .. clcanlnr n~bl,y painted. For ~ ~~~~o:l:lst ":8:1aici:. ' Special Rat• • S Lines -5 times -S buck.•· aULIS -AD MUtr 1111(\.UH keeping. AIR'._ NP,. payroll CARPET LA YER H Ts now available by an upand. estimate 6t6--9'lS2. tate develorntent. Sttvica 1-wti.r ,.. ~ ,. ,,.... >-WMI ,.. Wlfll ill trMe. )-YOUll: P'*"' ••fer .. , ... , ~ "-., _..,"1....._ :~~!~~'r!!!!!!!!~i!:~~~~~!!!!!!!!!1~·~·~r~1C~.~-~:~~~~~~rCARP~~ET~•~·~··~·~"'t",;c~:s.:v· ing proteu1ona1 Janitorial PAINTING . -Ext.·lnL is available in L.A. •00 0rance REAL SSTATE BUSINESS and • lngs, Call 64i-&164 M-rvice. Fot rast guarntttd yrs. exper. Ins. Lie. Free County arcu. Call .833-3402 J....fl!OTHINO POii: ULS -Tll:AHS OH\.Yl To Pl•ce Your Trader's Paradile Ad PHONE 642·5671 General FINANCIAL 8aby1ittln1 65.50 -service call ~7 est. Accou11t. Ceil I nr1 . 20 ac. 5 yr old Riverside. Orange Grovl!; manage-- me.nt free. $5,&>o ac. $76,00) eq~ Far: home, income, land. 4!»·2936. '67 f'ord Country sedan: v.a. p/1, ~. r/h. Trade tor ~r or tra,D8porta· don oar. 545-11)16 l<M'IY hlah deleri horn<, < lcrt'I, $30,too value. Ex· ........... ,.....- Newport -Laguna area. 49M746 01' "99-1331. 21,ls ac. near RANCHO CALIF. $5IXlO ~uity + $3500 .. &ood """ ...... Want: salt IAke City prop. lTansferred. Aif:. 646-0732. Antelope Valley, 1040 A lev. el to $36,SOO eq, FOR bch atta home, units or other, Alto San Diego cty, 117 D Camino, C.M. 64.6-5941 \Vestwood Village adjoining Wilshire 10 rm ho~. Want Newport duplex • triplex on water or near. $59,500 ttl'e &. clear. 494-7260 Mobilt' Home Site, owner's 30 acres. hi-de9UI. util's. E<t. $80,000. Free &: clear lor Orange Co. income or R·3 land. 96lh'l645 i;;du;i,-1e"'1-R_ent_a_I ___ &.;;.,....wanted 63115 tMTURE 'wdMEN .E!f':t•.1~!1 ~ M•" ae.ru,. s.:V1.. -'54S-5325=-="===== with Own car ELECTRICIAN. Small jobs. Carpeots, windows, noon. etc. ·flla&terint, P•tch, \ Prime 3 Start' commereial. FOR LSE: 5300 aq ft prime BUY er ' taise t ina 11 PROFITA'BLE WORK 1nainteD8.llCt &i re pa I r s. Res A Commc'l. 5484111 Repelr , 6UO CM. Owner 0rqoo bound • warehouse space • all or businolls. MottJ. mob i JI': in home of pa.rents ~ .FOR XLNT HOUSE trade for vac land, will car-part. Irvine Ind., Mr. homt ~retail traochi~. Parent& CONTRACTOR-LIC•D CLEANING. * PATCH PLASTERING abilftieS ry 1st TD, Call ~. _Bull_an1_546-"'51 ______ , Couple will lnvf:st lo.60 M. Babysitting Agcy * 642 .. 2192 * * Call 8J6.-064S * All~· Frte e&timites South Coa~ Real Es$38ta500to SMALL-wtl•S2SPtt llm<No.PIGn.))ail,yPilot * 842-55:!7 * JOE'S CLEAN S&RV. Call 5'0&25 CIJllimite() Waterlrnt lot, N.B. • mo. West 16th St., N.B. · OCC Studl':nt '!Vlnt.s .....,._, Floo ,.., ageDC'?f dear for small home or 646-1724 Opportvnlties '310 ....,... ... , rs ~ We do Everythlnr-Rea t: Plumltlnt - I ========= I roonl plus :salarv in exclt. --, ----=-----units. Hal Pincbi.n &: Assoc-Investment for bou-·-"· •" •-b-'I· CARPET VINYL TILE Comm. Ctte Est. 6-12-'lSSl. 1 • ""''"""' ...... ,,~ PLUMBING REP~ itl!s, Realtors. Lots 6100 40 ACRES (ZONED MOBILE ting. Exp"d., ref!S avail. UC CONTR. FREE EST. BAY &: Be~ch Jani~ No job tocramall TRISH HOP!l<INS : Call 615-4392 HOME) Dbl. st. frontqe. 613-5016 stru1ing Sept. l. * 540-7262 * Carpets, wl.odl>.,·~· dpora, 4B8 E. 11th, at lrvi.De, CM JUX:'REATIONAL CABIN. * $5,SOO * Next to $50. million Devel! BABYSrMlNG in rny home etc. Ret~CO!t1'J&C I. M6-l49J. • 603128 e '42·1470 E«:hange for car, boat, Vie\v -Level lots. EZ Terms Sac ~900 per/ac. Terms! infant to ~ yrs, Day, eves Furniture R~atorlng OAY}\'ORJC • Qe~ • Pool Service 6t10 •!!t!!!!!!~~!!"''!"'"!ll•'" trailer, paper or ! Pl.A~~~ tli,:-9704 688-2000, Eict. 9 day or eves. & wknds. Nr Victoria &: _a Rtflnllh1ng "75 fronifla. By ~.';" ~ hour. I---------ARE YOU ; Qwner.Age:nt -Harbor C.M. 64~1473 FURNITURE sir· . •• own tratwp. __ .... QUALIFI.ED In all """set ,..,.,, .,.,,.., 638-1370 Hilltop Laguna view Jot ... ___ 6320 IPl>Ul& .. -1 • -~ ...... 1•.aunFUL?? 11),.,.....,.,..or Quick Cash Sale $7850. ~V' te Loan BABYSITMNG by day or refinishiog. Housework. Expt~ .... ~. ot repair & troubleshooting. ..,-. Gift and country store, t9'-9T4S wet>k, Pacific Sands tract, * 642-9575 * -Own tl'ansportatiOn Ptumbillj", ~ltttric9J or It's all In tbe eye or tbe b&-, great location. Trade f<..' 1st TD Lo' an HB. Fncd yard & lunches. --· • 542-21'46 . mechank.,I, aJ90 exper. as holder. Cbt<:k the 1V cun.' van, camper or $2,500 Ac.rN.. 6200 536-7784 Gardening "80 Janitorial S.rvke pool consultants. Cootact mt. you watch and U: 10" equity. ------8% INTEREST WILL babysit. child ovC'r 3. Res. k Commc'l. 642-6824 Mr. Gleuon 763 Hud9on fttl you're as pretty u 1 646-5383 GOVERNMENT land, S5 an 2 d TD L my homf'. Duy!J, t'vl':s &/or * LANDSCAPE * Aw. C.M. 545-0'154 some ot tb6se people, call us. , waniod to .... , )xm>e, in acre. Writ" Land Padalgt, ft 080 wkn<l>. v~, H""'°r tl.S .. * GARDENER * Ironing '755 Re--'•llnt a CALIF. CASTING CO. San Gabriel Valley for ·4 1185 Arrowhead Ave, San NB 548-6641 Maint.-Residential comm'I. .,,_ br & den or 5 br home in Bndo 92410 Tenns based on equity. EX.PER. Babysitter offers cfean-up. Lawn removal & 1---k-l_,RD,_NIN_G_•__ -Reelr 6940 ls contJnu.tl'lf Its .earch for , CdM or Newport are•. 5 AC, uDOcveloped. Lake 642-~171 545-0611 servit'f' for 2 & 3 yr olds. install. Sprinldrs. Weed kill. ROOM Additiom, .... --s, evtrydi.y people who ha\'f'; 1.Ql~ usures apprec. Hunt fish. Servmg Harbor area. 2l yrs. 6'12-4224, Nwpt Hgts area. ing. Dl'signs. Lic'd Contr., Pick ~p Ha:om~~~ ~76tl remodel. Lowest 'Prk.'-:'"in I dellire-to work Oii TV or : 8 UNITS Inglewood plus Take over lo dn $IJ mo. Satt!!!EMolrlg7IhaS~O. BABYSlITING tttmy home. 12yrsloc.exp.5J6.12'Z> town. Lie. <'OJlt r actor. ;::':~~N~~t~,.!=. dear ~re. i~e. for 89'1'-8478• -• u-.::.:• days. Near ?omor. & 19th, AL'S GARDENING Janitorial •1t0 SU.-2988 * FOR ON CAMERA , land, house or bee.ch~ 11 ACRES-WESTC.M. A~MOlJNCEMENTS Fenced yard. 642-5108 tor Carden~ .I: small land-WORKERS Avaiii'ble: Any F1BERGLASS sbowets & AUDmON * erty. Equity $100,IXX>. Owner 646-7994 and NOTICES WILL babysit my home, scapi!"" services can &»-5198 kind of work, anytime. pUllmans. 536-8915 uk tor CALL (n4J 835-8282 OWNER ~ --Pomona Sehl, CM. Any &gt'. Serving Newport, CdM, Cos-Cleaning, lawn work, ete, Herb 10 Mt to 6 PM io Ou_t of State Prop. 6208 Found (Ffff Ad&) 6400 6:30 to ? 646-58S-1. ta Mesa, Dover Shotts, .BUicient, reliable. i t.SO hr. GEN'L -mod•!•· ...... -·lnL • ~·•··-' Lg. Lunmatk painting; t'or . Westcliff A k 1 ,_,__ N' holu ... .... ... ,._ A P~, 1, ca pa b I e " ' camper. Trade celling hi&:h NEVADA _ 1 acre in Z MALE poodlf'S 1 silvf'r. WILJ.. baby111t, my boo1r, tn · s or """' or JC No job too small • .,..'Oman to de> day work., walnut headboard bed, ni Charleston Park Ranchos. 1 blk, both wearing red flea vieinity of Edwards & LAWN .. le Garden Cate, 640-0015. Llc'd/insurtd. 675-8183. 9-5 wkdys, i.n exclualv• yrs. W/$15,00) eq .Improved aub-diviaion nr Mere. test c o l I a rs, v 1 c l n It y of Edinger. ll.B. 892-5209 beautification, ~in& le SP=AR=K~LE-c,:-:,,-,"'it<>"'n"·a"i"";-:;w"i•~--5-ysftotta, NB. Home ts M·l prop for ac. or borne. site. Future developmt!nls Worthington Dodge C.M. cleanup by college fllldent!. dow clcanin&: Serv. Win-Se* Int 6t60 large,_ but the 81 ii eood' .. :>45-0139 incrse value, Btrr MUsr 968-liM Carpentering 6590 Reas. 543-~. callna BrQs. dowl. rcsid .. c:omcl, const. --~------~'1l6 • SEU.. 646-1302. 2 SETS of keys foond in o-wSaN AND JAPANESE Gardener Mo. cleanup. Free est. 962-?6'll QUALITY you've al~ ays BABY SJ T-TE R p/tlme • ~ * * * * W ======== EatJtbluff V'l"tl actoM from A BUILDERSWARE Rate, Gen'! Clean-Up. Ex· , ~::.~.~n;:~lT6l dependable. AtlM: & IOme , 'j~!!!!!!'!i!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!JI!!!!!!!___ Mountain a Desert 6210 c.oron.. del Mar high school. Roo Add'ti Remodel per. Reas. Ji"'ree est. L1nd1capift1 6110 n....n.. A c " "~"' ,_.. evts. Downtown C.M. Own ' I~ ~ 644-0341 · m 1 on~ • · 60-22:39. MOBILE ii6M.E oWNERs-..,~ ..... e ve.. · · ...w-_.... trans. 543-3611 a.ft 2PM REAL ESTATE Offi-R-~al 6070 3 BR hse, 1 BR cabin. Furn. uig -Repai.n • Apt. , . G .... r.I •• ~· N ski 1.~ .,.000 F KEYS FoW'ld on beach vie. Maintenance -Cement ALS Landscap1ne. Tree Bond-Rock will hold your Tl'·, Ceramic 6974 BABYSITTER, live in, C.M. r Ju _., • • l&la.nd & BalbOa. Ioquirt \Vork. mnoval. Yard remodeling. rravel tight. For Info. .., Bar Harbor track. Own ~ R 5995 OFFICE SPAC·E Schaaf, Box 31• June Lake, at front cowiter Dally Hal Don Trash hauling, lot cleanup. 548-1265 or 548-5240 All for e Discount Tile Center e tr&nq>. Pb: 5416-6993 alt T Room& for ent in _C~•·,,,9.1529======== I Pilot, znt Balboa, 0N.B. 54S-0787 ~94·5301 Repair si)rnlden. 6'f3..U66 Butch PM ---------2023 So. Main, S.A. 546-1611 =,--,,.-,,..,,,.,_,,.--..,.---,.~ FURNISHED lal'gfl bedroom HUNTINGTON R. E. Wintld 6240 POODLE-type shaggy dog. CARPENTRY ~AP~G. ~~enlng, NEY.' LAWNS. re-seeding, All types of Ule -wall, floor, Babysit 3 kMh in our ~. in private home. Ideally HARBOUR found vie. I6th st. & Santa MINOR REPAmS. No Job prunuig.' tr1mm1ng •nd roto-tllling.rf'novat i ng, paUo, entry way•. balb &. Nr. Bushard i: BaM1na localed in C.M. 540-5615 l 11uites availab~ in Hunt. Ana. c .M. Call to Identify. Too Small. Cabinet in I ll'-renovaf\ng. Call af!er 5 p.m. clean-up. 89 T • 2~ I 1 or stiower. Expert initallatlon 962-5948 ' R W k ' 'ngton u--bo"-. "--~••alk CASH BUYER want~ R-3. ~"' ~!"" h 5'18-5209 84" ~~ . l do •$15 PE ee -up suu ... ,ou;;u-u R-4 2 acres or more. Ontnge .,........, "" a.res I;: o I er cat>lnct.. . · ,=:~~;:::·'<"'===;:;:=-or free lnstructiOns or BEAUTY operator wt t b w/kitchen. $35 per Week-up center. 270 IQ. It., 500 IQ'. ft., County, San Diego. Long ALL blk kitten, IO ..,,.ks. 568175, U no armver lea~ GARDE ~ ING : Land ' It yol.IQ!elfers. Complete lint' following, Wo l ror ~ ' Apt!. MOTEL. 548-9755 2~~;?;, ft. cau Ronn ,..~tt Beach area. Bryda Inc.. Found in Vic: ~Iaven Pl. mq at 14i-237?. IL 0. cleanu~ :;prknkr Y&ys, roto-MAID' S.ERVICE 6125 o! ac.daories Ii tools for Ing. Mesa Verde. Writie Box : pl.,.... ...,,..,,...,.1361 • 4i 0'f0"1361, R.E. Broker. (TI~) 545-3868 N. Bch. Ask for Ra ...... , Andet$0H {.......,;men! wor · ance y c mo SMald •·-·\-installation. M-1034, Dally Pilot, 2211 W. • PRN. ent. & ba., em ...,..y, H tingto. "--•-·-C ·~ "', ~-v ...... Bal~ BI·~ N "' h · un n n;u·uuw orp, 0, tn!l •=om ,._,and 548-4019 or 548-3484 Hal --~-t ....... "" ewport 1 non smoker. ...tc • pnv. .... •.ro.w..o "" · CARPENTER: Remo· ti e t, • Reskten It a_. .. ,,en s. * Verne, The Tile Mau * ' , l . await after 3:~ 847·2'l63 4~ Warner Ave., H.B. =w=lt=•~nda.=,,----~~ l'"EMALE brown It: black patio ~. t.'tmlent work UCI Grad Studenl wUI do Ph. 642-SBTl or &U-981'4 Cust work. lnatall A repairs. Beaeh.. I ' ROOM 1o rent w/ board, Finest Prestige Loe. TRIPLEX or 4-pkx, C.M., pup, 7/28, Vic: Nr. Slater & pa.iotirc. ND job too )'&rd "''Ot'k, your equip~m, No job to9 trn1 P laster p. BOOKKEEPER F/C walldnr dist. ti> Goldenwest Irvine Compl•x H.B., ors. santa AnL Box in Fountain Valley. M2-8'14& l!l'ttl.ll. Free est., ~1944 $2.SO/hr. :>48-6992 Mainten•nce 6121 tlo, Ltaltinc abOwer repatr. $TOO Ul:.~ eatab. New-. Colleae. $22 wk. 892-2941 ~ized ael'VlCe to fit 4348. Fullerton 926.14 BR & wht dog pt. Basset, QUALITY Woodcraft, •ml EXPERIENCED Japanese 847·1951/st6-0206 port oeacn Co. Very ~ Motels, Triller Courts 5"7 I WEEKL V Rates. SEA l..i\RlC MOTEL. 23O1 Ne-wport ::Jvd, Costa Meu. Income Property. 6000 *NEW 6 UNIT* By Builder. Near ocean. H.B. Also, new 8 unit I; 4 unit. * 347.3957 CUSI'OM 6 units • prlme 1oc. 0....'nef'S 4 , Br, den. 3 Ba ·+ 5 Jrg studios; tplcs, patios. Net $198,500. Owner """""· 3 Units, Income $39j mo, $35,jOCJ. Owner-Agent * 54>2486 • ---~~-~roparty 60~ OWNER selling, lease or trade business corner San Clemente l()[b(90: Two bldgs 48x45 .I: ~20. ample park· ing (Town needs Sea-Food Restaurant) ACl"OSI from State Park & Summer White House. $20,000 equity. 714: 74&-!00 STORE building, c ornet', good leases, 10% return. H.B. 5:£1459. Broker -Business Rental '°" )'OW' needs. Your own attice-BUSINESS and Rochester & 11th st, e:en'l con&tr. & carpentry. Gardener. ;C orr(ple te W A~f~ea~. dispoatn, CERAMJC tile custom work. ,ant worldnc ~ T• ~ .ee'y to answer your phone. FINANCIAL 642-4119 Free consultation & quote. Service. Free e11t. 54S-01'24. etc. · per ;_. ... ~ ""ee estimate. tits. Heavy constr. exper. ~... , . vaiJ Call Ke "'" ~ .. 540 ·-~ 642.275Q or ~ r Call ,,..,. Betty, ~~-"' .... se<: Y servtces • · FOUND • are.a. Beach Ir n ............,.., <>-'JQ;). GEN'L Ckan Up, tn:_e_. seN. 4~2'144 or 494437~ A"'.·-". A b b 0 t ..::.::::.:; )deal for mfg. reps, indivkl.1 8-0-,1-.. -,-,------Yorktown, H.B. s n1 a 11 CLEAN-UP jobs. hnulJng, weed kill, J'O~till. •vnnkl:rs P•inting' , --'.,_ • .., ult'.. bus. men, Klam. 54ilMi373. • .-. Siameee female. 536-1574 r.oncttte work. F'rf'e est. repaired. f>46..58'8 -·-,-~ncy. 23& W. W1Ptt,1 1 Opportunities -Paperhanei.nt 6l50 Trff Service ~ Suite 211. Santa Ana. Deluxe l·Rm. offtce ORANGE striped, s ho r t Small or big. fl48-780.I CLEAN UP SPECIAlJSl' Nr. Orange County Airport COIN LAUNDRJES ha.ired yng. cat. Vic Harbor Ne\v fence & repair. Odd YOU Supply The Paint. l BOB'S TREE SURGERY BOYS 13-16 & IrviDt Ind u.strial FRIGIDAIRE View Hills. CdM. G44-0076 Carpantering 6590 job~. Relis. ~ Br. Uv n-It Kitchen is back ottertnc the same Fountain Valley, Huntinrton Com I ~-d --C I y -• C · I ·~,. Fine Quality, Tree Service. Beach f.l'ea. Work eveninp. P ex. ...,..}'Ct, rapes. J ET.-ACTlON FOU~D. RilW in Food Giant CARPENTRY: Cab I nets' omp ete an11 are Painted, $50. Call 551-8638 * 5'0-3T98 * Earn $15-$30 wttk. ·~io ~~:,_,8~1.1:~!'fMo." Costa Mesa choice loc-ll<XXJ parking lot, Call &: kft'ntlfy, Room Additions, Patios. JIM S&483'l * PAPERHANGING Call ~41 ' _ ......... ll«V .... ..,. -pc,' mo net Minimwn 5'1)..1547 Any s~e job. Mike. 646-2576 _..,.,.. & PAIN'J1NG. .,. 968-2425 TREES, Hed.ces, trim, c.'Ut. ' fKlB PETTIT, Realtor $10,000 down payment, P~ET. identify, vicini-REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS ~ral Services "'2 !StumPI re.moved, hauled, 30 CAR WASH e 83.1-0101 e Santa Ana. AJpha Be. ta major ty Vista Haya. 646-5406 * CABINETS. Any size Job \Vall O••••-By Mach!"'"' R &: L painting interior.ex-yrs. exp, Ffilly ins. 64ii.4030 Full & P /Tlme !Ulta.J HILLGREN SQO. ARE _ .. 1.... t B 1 -~... '"" terk>r. We are reuonable. DON'S TREE SERVICE All Growth Company, S ~ · ,...,. cen er. 1' w ume Lost •-i 25 yrs exper. 548-6TI3 t'ast, low cost. driplesa M.>2505, 548..Q823 • '-· rn. .,.__ tiOll(I Oranre Co. 2950 Har. l!Kk) sq ft Deluxe OUices laundry. $39,000. Reasonable -GEN n. · dd b Fl'ee Est. t;ypes, ......,.; & ......... ,.,... l>-B\vd ~ ~. · t l med I · t • n.o:::palr, a · ca · * PA.PERHANGER * Etthnates. 642-5584. UUl" •• ....... ta mesa. • Avail. or m · ease .in erms. DJAi'10ND ~ngacement ring, Formica, paneling marlite. B &: B QUIK KLEEN one ot citiea busiest shOp. 3Z Wasben/8 Dryers rood OCC * 962-MOt * Recogni!ed Authority, Prior TREES & shniba: pruned, CARPEN1'ERS Is Cement: ping centers. Will divide. location $8000 FIP 'Small vie IK·Mart/Penney's. Anything! Dick, 673-4459 Instructor. 64&-2449 shaped, remove or replant Finishers wanted. Air-cond., music, paneling, down ~~nt ' Given me by my late hus-APT CLEANING -Painting INT. A: Exl. Paintinf. Local 25 yrs loc. 838-2528 aJt 6. Call 962-694$ crpts:, dl'P!l. Max. park'g ll COIN..O.AfA.TtC band 24 yrs ago. Am raising Cement Concrete 6600 • Rug Shampooing &: Lite rers, llc'd, IM., tree est. * CHEF * (s.cond) ma int. 270 E. 17th St., C.f.1. EQttIP?itENT, 1Nc. ~~~~~n S:. ~~'.er~;: 1 ~EeR~~~~;. 847~ MARC 1,.'aR Chuck. ~. Plumbing '890 FUU. TIME Air Bram 213: 651-2700 colle<'t 525-7833 v.·as lhe last v a Juab 1 e CONCRETE. All types. 1''tte FENCING . . ti PROFESSIONAL Palntlnr. ALLEY \VESf 2106 West CORONA DEL MAR AftiUate pc:!fie~ion "'"" had left. est. Sawinr. bttakifle, haul-ra1 ' ".f!pat lN, pain n;, Neat work. F"ine paints. 24 HR P\,UMBING Oceanfront. N.B. 6'75-lru Dl'<. office space. 2 Rme. ~ward. ~8-4~4 ing & skiploadillg. Service rene m:;i!oo Roller. bru,h, air. J e • & le REMOOEUJNG Crnd Or. Priv bath. New * READ THIS FEMALE Sla.ineae kit,, .f & quality. 543-8668 Bob. sprayill&'. accous. c.-eillngs. 557•9644 c.rpt. Patk'g, Util pd, $13;) mo. Beige w/bm markings. CEMENT WORK, no job too Ed's Cleaning Service Local rcrs .. Low prices. Rey mo. Owner. 673-6757 Give me % hour of your ttme Frnt. paws declawed. Vic: Small, reasonable. Free Carpels -Upholstery~ MT-1S58. _W;,.•;..ld;,.l;..n_v •. _____ m_5 --========='I and I 'll prove to you or your Balboa, 100 blk, Oceanfront Estlm. JI. StuUlck 548-8615 dows • Floor Care. 54 R:,Er""'IRE;:;o'-~p,~\-nt-,-.,~26~,.,.-,-I ...., WELDING br.nker thia is the best money Dr. 1123. Ph. 673-4133 or DECORATIVE CONCRETE H I' 6730 exper. Neat I.: honest. Non Aft . 5 & Wknda, 846-9116 lnduatr1•1 P'"flOrty LOTS -maker in the US. Prove me Lost & Found 'Dept. Police DRIVES-WAlJ(S.PATIO IU lftt Winker, call 53&-6801. wrong and I'll pay you $100 Station. REWARD! CAu. DON, 642-8514 T.N:T. Lawn' Ser V, I r.e. PROFESSIONAL, 30 yra exp. --Window CIHnlnt 6997 c.uh for your" hour. Min. SIAMESE cat (cross blue-*CONCRETE rk· tins Garage clean-ups, hauling paperhanging & palntitl(, !mum investment req'd $2150 point & seal PQint) male. wo · pa • & light movlfW. ~. from England. 963-1461 MARK'S Window Clean!f\i cuh or $850 down w/l(JOd Lost Jn the vie near Shan. drvwayi, etc.. L 1 c e n 1 e d · 531-3729 ==""'"-==c-:=-; I Service. For free estimates, · Phillips Cement. ~ ~=~~=~==-INTERIOR/Exterior, avg. 1 credit. Secured by 1970 car mn &: College C · M · . HAULINlo $10 ~ 1.0;0 Br. apt. Labor le material call 64~9;1 to be uaed in our rental sys. Re11t·ard! Day 547-9507 eve MORE Concrete patio for Clean up. Ttte Serv. Gen. $ST. 54S-l546 '-Jo=a~S-&~l"M~,~L~o=v~M~l~N~T __ tern: Sett program in. US M&-3708. l~a money, Artiatic setting. Pruning 64&-:1538, 543-3043 . . . (21 $17.~ each on Produe. tion Pia~. 7.f :< 135 each. Will consider trade. --BUILDING for investment clubs with S MALE A t redd' h-Lie .. call Max at 644-0687 -. TRADE. Painting by llcens Job W1nted, Men 7000 CLASS "A" MOLD MAKIR * Minimum 5 )ft aper. * Top ntes * Stff.dy overtimt * AU benefits APPLY PBRSONNEI.. DEPT. • 1100 M "ta1 Call n4· · ~ra ca ' is -MOVING, Garage clean-up ed oontractor tor tnack. RETAIL Location, C.M. 2>44 300.J 10 7!XXI SQ, ft, fol' lease, 10 c.a,pi · • yellow, silver jeweled col· Contractors "20 It lite haulini;. Reuonalili . tum. or t M:S-4558 ' Newport Blvd. F rn 1. lOc It. 835-254110 to 6 dally. Jar, from paw!\ declawed. F"ree esf tell 64!>-lli02 HOUSE need paint! Quality lntt'rior exterior. I t t e etrtimate. llef., reasonable l. M. Cox Mft, Co. 1505 E. WarMr, S.A. 546-2551 55xl:l>'. 2 bldgs. retail front -FRANCHISE Vic. Harbor View homes. tma ' · P>\INTING Strvk:c -rc.s~· bl ~ Sat Will iluild to •ult, 1 acre on 644-1479 CONTRACTORS YARD I Car. Cleant1p. Hal It cotn~ia.1, L0etJ " garage ctg, ..,.,..n VIVIANE WOODAllD Remove trees. tvy. tratb. & experkinct'd. R. LeBlanc -& sun. for i nspe c tion . Placentia. COSMETICS LOST • gray fMiaJ~ Manx GENERAL CO. Grade, backhoe, 96)..8745. ri.36-8919, 403 Memphj,·~ ,,U.B. "-A'-~""o Wtll..McCardle, Rlt rs. tiul cal. Vic M•""' Cir. k Add•"-ns n--~·,·-c:.c..:.:::..""'-"""'""""'i'-'-COSTA Mesa man. Exp. 30 '"~ A SUBSIDIARY Or _,, uv .• ,,..,.,.......,.., • .,. HAULING * FREE ESI' -~fcAdan1a Painf'i<Sdv. yr1, Sa I e I Efte'r-Mrmt. STORE-O~'Jo~ICE l8lO Newport Wvd., C.M. GENERAL FOODS ~:i;s'11orth, HB, 642-4!19:! J..ct1ldf'1lllal.Comm.,.'Cl.ll Ask lot Butch Inter. & l.X tl!t', S'pe<lial ratCll Wants &0methine lo do. N*ew~.;:c~:1sq:t 1 ,548-~Tl29~~~!!!!:EV<!!!!:•~·~-~~4 j No franchise tee, $500 min\. SM ht ,. poodl . L. : SJl-8699 •Bo led :.48-716;, or 548-32401 on-.pts. 646-3&t5 549-1514 """~' I : mum inventory Complete w ma e, v1c icense nc rioo-1200 SQ. FT. oUice alllO Commercial 60l5 1ra·n·rc nd ~ual gui Balboa Ial nr, Ferry land'g.1 ........... .,...,...,...,..,...1 600 sq, ft. 11tcre. $90 k $150. ~ at :0 COil: call collect Owner alll(low. Re w • • THE REM OD~,'* C 'I ·~ -10 J v 8. kl 1 ••• , 6~2398 Ji'l"tt ests • 100% financing "' • vwu-.w CHOICE ean an ic e 4.J.J Kif.Che arports • RETAIL store 19' x a>'. m.3310 LADY'S clotbea baf, lost M, garqes • <' Ccmme.rclal·relidentlal pro-• Cliff Dr, Reward! Complete Remodelhl(. 442 E. 17th St, Costa Mesa. perty on 19th St., C.M. w/4 CLEANERS le SH JR T * S48·2T29 * Qllllllty Contrac1<»11 oo.-1'rn-<l:z::;':;:4tl:::===::::::::: J br, 'l ba home, ~tot. Xlnt LAUNDRY pick-up station MY WAY all -I· t shoppi nt Ad-LRG AFGHAN MALE • CJU ty e Office Retttal 6070 for home optl'fltt!d bustoea. ;tloMl r:m ceforer. imall fWA'Brd. Vk. 19th St. C.M. repair. Walls, ce11in&, floors Offf!md at $26.~. Terms to pl&m hobb' d .....i...a Call ~1'233 etc. No job too small. 1----------1 qualified buyer. H. D. John-• its. ra.,... .... ' 54.l-1494 son. Bkr:646-8362. n11 Pia.· etc. OK fer hullband/wtre SIAMESE klllen, 6 wb old, I '"'===-~-=-= IN.M. S7.9SO Ot ofter. Aaenl Vk': CdM, ~. of hl#hwt.f, ADOmONS, L, T. eon. DESK SPACE 222 Forest Avenu• Leguno .Beech 494-9466 ccntia Ave .. C.M . 5'16-~ Hearlbl"Oken. 67S--R6S1 ~trucuon, 11ina:kl: or 2 stOl)'. Newport cent.er, 5X grou. _ __ Pi.ns, eatimatcs l laYQUts. • 157,. Rel . Sheller ll spen-ComJ)I. LETl'ER S hop. ••11r 847·15U DESK SPACE :11875 Beech Blvd. Huntington 8e<1ch 642"'321, Ext 276 DESK SPACE 305 No. El Camino Real San Cltment• 49Ml20 NEWPORT Beach dl!lwre ot· rloea. AJ.r.cond. Htcl. Priv. bl. i§OO W. Cout Hwy, 1 or 3 RM a.ultfl in lrv\ne lnd. Complx. $85 f\tm, flOO urtf. $46.9085 bnt 12-5 PM m1rneortaph/ett. Start own Pe rsonals ...,.,.., d&ble _ bll.t. wino cl.Ill. Will IM' --------_ Add!tionit * Rcmodl!'linz •-• s-mo Incl -a. ·• .... SSAG -& SAUNA Fttd II. Ctrwick,_Lic. 12 Ap1~. ln Newport P?lc" _, "''n. ..,.. """ Ii 15% Ret.-pool·blk. to M:h, + opt. '° bey. '46-0333 Iv. GRANO OPE:NINO. Lovely G'll-IDtl '* S49--2l'10 RealonomQ Corp. -""""""'==''"=-.-..,--,,,-,, a:lrla. EXPERT MASSAGE. Ca-t CINnt-"15 Commercial Bkr. Gf5.41Q) FOR SAL£: Eltdl»:lve KnU Ask about our Lu Vrp.s • ...._. ""' 5 storea, $110,000. --W. 19th St. Bethel Towm car-. ntr. ~1T6S A,t. 514 w. Hamilton, \~ ·~ MAJ' Hartlor Blvd. Sll.8CK'I \Viii llUbordlMle. 5CS-1"m --~~--Indus trial Rental -Nl"\V bid&. 1368 lo 2300 It, Nr. SPtr &. Fa\rvttw, I yr INN'. SUiiivan 543-2176 htrict Slq>; fftl'l.blltlhed vacatiol'll. 10 Mt to 2 AM, 1---------1 bua: in S.C. 49)..29&! or 1 DAYS. 2930 w. Coast llW)', .f93..47Q3 Newport !kach. 548-3008 0.,... S..V'loNlan can. ALroHDIJCS A.....,,,.... Gro.lnc $25,000 monthly. PhOne $42.7217 or write to Well Hlab. Bkr 536-145& P.O. Box 1233 Co&lll Mftll. Cemetery Lota 6411 '.rN:l. ~ ~~ CARP ET STEAM CL EANED REASONABLE RATES Aho c:AJ'1)CI IMlallatlon VERY well known rtllalll'MI • 92 teats. boor and wlne. $12,500. ll46-53S3 646-5971 ----· -----l·---------J 4 PACIFIC View Memorial STEA~t je-J <. .. tpt:\ c:letnl"', f"LORAL Shop. Be )'l'ltll' own bot;i. Beautitut, O!t•P· Hur- ry! Riil'. 613-2020 Parle Ct~tecy Iott • B)' Clarl\arc, Mtlon-wlde f'Acb. 54~ or 64l4084 i;ervk't. Jo~1~r t11I. 6<12-4t).),j ' ·-Alllf.JJ Wf,U ll·l CLEANING v.'Omlft • vaea.nt 11ipll. Dall)' work, P9f't time, ~p'd. aoolf wa&fS. Phxlt aft 6 pm. 557-6180 COCKTAIL waureu. exper. 22-30,. 3 day1 wk. i.nfftvw, 10:30AM,U:30 wkdt,)'&. Villa Nova, ll3l W. Cout HWy, !IB COLLEGE &iris • bMchl grads, Ml, p/tlme. Avr. $3 hr. No expe:r nece11. ,.. appt, Call Mh. M'UDei, 546-0170. t * COOKS. E!qlerlenced wheel man'** D~ASH. ER, Experitn<e<I. ~ppty. BLUI! DOLPHIN 335'\ Via Lido, NB, COOK, BROILER SAtrrE Stt Chet, BEN BROWN'S 31106 S. C:O.st Hwy. South1-no COOS (ftrntleJ A Waitma.: Full ti"\e<,, The 8rulk'b lfoutt, ~ Newport Jlhid, CM COOK .. Dinner HO!M p- r~•. • COOK '* Experie~ fU~ ,,.. time. Park Lido ~ nluctnt Hoapllll. ~ OENTAL ASSlSTA.tfT. Jll,rt tlmt Slt'a. •. • -rou·.,. l I - ' --.-;· ' ·-=·-,,,·:--t: ......... -,;t-· ,. • .... "PAJLY·PILOI ~ frldoJ, J~J.)1. 1970 .. .. ·--~. ~ IMPLOYMINT Jo&S.& IMl'l.OYMINT MERCHAHDld.,,Olt Ml.RCIWIDIJll f..ott. lilll!C!JAHDIS~.!'.,~· ·MIRC~DISI f Olt "llll(l!ANplst.fOlt ,,_. ~ . --. .SALi AND TUDI $-'ti AND-TRADI-S~ll AND' T.....if'\ SALi AllD t.a.A'DI SA\i /\tfD ·Tlf,j(bl '•• .,_. w-. 7180 Ja•• 4ttlr-. Wem. 1100 J1•1 ,.,_, WeM.. 7100 Ji~• -.,, w-. 7100' ~ · . ~ ~.;t.::;:;..;:;;:;:;,.;.:.;;;.;::_:-=:.•'.".n-.l '·fMl:.:: .. .:o;; .. ~1"'.-Mi~:;.·-"," • .:....'::--:::::-:::+-::"---'~"'"".....;':11:-:•-.I • • ~ • . . .. . , FumltuA IQOO •'flll'ftlture ... -.. ,..,.Solo · ~ -Mlecell-0~4L NUR8E lor tnlllt GlftL P'ridl:y kw aene'f&1 of. JiitOTEL Dtlli Otrk• all 'Salts • • § l . A. ? I MUST .U· Mule f\all Of ··--• alllO<. -~«Utlv• ..,.ufka. lie<, lypiuo, llll<c, u.lrey altlftt •..U.ble, """ -. ' u d F • . It I . .. • . • ,,._ . ;; M GRUS * .................... cam ..... add.•Pi:"-· -• • ...... -: ~ M·l0&1 IUFFl,IM'S ' se . 1rn1ture ~· e •• ~.-·i,1·~=~ ' ... ~-""""· . - -lo: &ox ... IOl6. HAIR """' wllh ..... ,,,.,. DoJ1y Piiot, N:B. N ..... ORT ' • .·• ' ' -. -L... ·-·· din ,.. ..• ...:.._ 'Jewolry o ....... O.Uy ....... 2211 w. Balboa, prelonid. s .. , MODEL ..... u"' """"'· ' ,&nr ' WE AIU Tl1E SALES OUtLIT FOR •. THl "" .. ~s 1'r:W..7~ .. .: .. " . . """""\' -. .. .. NB. · ohop. c,·,.,~·u Ha~ .J.<Uye ~ Mflr., -iftt.,,,lowl!>t , NATION'S LAltGtM'f llURNITURE • j lll--.w!Yet. cloeoralM 14'Katat·mountlngs e ,Cuttlnl equipment *** DISl1WAIMllt 1 r....,._, -. N.lr.'..wm· 'eppllc...n for LIASING COltPCMtATION ' •hi.1n.--.ictutt1. ' Jiwelet'l· !Oolo e 'Rcdhound supplies ·EXPERIENCED• " . • • Minlcurllt NEED °"' p1 otttee .lit!. • ...,,. • ,,., All '"" lhan ,,. • o;9.,,ietaJliie 91 cas!I~ supplies ' • •'UU. 'IUO: ' wanltd "" ~w ..loo, 'l)>p Gtnenl 0111 ... bpo•. "' ' I~ ... , "'L--. 3Boorns of E:umlture, complete. ' ,,_ old. ""'· pty., will M-·~·-Id J lr th d . .....,_ 'd ----· .,,, Mcr!l(Ce. -,'l'ltu..· ·,,p ~•un)'t)UIO ewe y your OSllJl t'' _ Apply • ,, pay, call , . ::. cot•lrucUOJt n!ll . ' Reg. '500 ............. , ...•. , !l.• ·~ New.. __ , . or·~ 1 ~ , • ., _ , SURF" suu.ot~.. HIAD LJI nNATOlt MD-sr~ .~p enwd!..b,~e._A~ -Sa~ 3 Sj>anis b spla1, 1 red,1green;1 anUqueW:ld, f.m-<>'MlN 1 ' .... v · •. J .,,,..., w ""'A·-H..v ro.8 --" .., __ .::_ ... !''-"'-'" ........ ino ~ ... , -• • •~ -•1 ...... DEACO 'S Bend!·,· P'le tn:11t , 1ut .our.· new store at , 1N'o~~.-pt;ue), ~-:;;:,e~;;'11:-~-;: P-106.lD.i!1.P..llotc.M. ' •EXPERIENCED 2 S~Wi·io;.;•,se&tS .. i.f;J'i'·~uq;Mfora~ ,1ai;ie, 8lrd1 •IA•~,o·ard , .210~1. 111h ·n ., #15, cosTA M1sA ·· NIWS""YS ·, -' . ·• ' " Am""'°'<.oto....,, holl ·;,..,, •·· l)JJlfW.lSHER...Dlnntr HOU&e C.ourt, San Oemente. • ~ ~ • ~ ... ~-A -~ .,. : .· •.•... ,., ................ , , .... , "'••· "' ........ . , -...:....-_'!. -"•• -'1909 , • -~~· ~ · b' .. ...., .... ,., .._ M-.CQml'l~ ..... cotfee ~· -·, ,. ~ """°' HEY GALS I ' ·. • '°"· t c:omoaey bene. lib ·1-Blue gl'Nn-•ofa le love seat. $411 ... ;. $1.,. -·'·_._ che·•.·-,~ _ , * """"' • ' . ·' DAILY. PILOT · I G f •-I t ~11 •1•• ,,.-~· -'~-N .....,. !of reen 10 a • ov.e sea . .., : .......... • -· ci\Oo! p;.. ""I• a .;• . r OOl<UT ............. morn-Expaodlnr ""i ...... l2 :_ai. 'F~;AiNcaVALLEY .. A.................. I 8' gr .. n "·gold-sofa. $279 •..•• ~.' .•• ·.: $7'. ~.....,:;. Wall cloo:k' mlse'. s.wi.i.·~n..-auo Siiorlint Goods -!:!~~ ~~ l~~: :ie~~~~:.· ~t hr';! i' Ar;::• 2 to~ PM ()nly ~ ~tue;'!o"r!l~e~::::.·:=::~~:~~.:::~;:::·:·Jr.: ~ninnclloo ~.~Ji~, 1:-~u~~ . SU~BO~R~.l' 10~ . 11JILSl-j;.M. • · • ."'"'.:... ,.._isn · NO. 1 FASll!l)N ISi.AND 3 &,old v,J'(l\'!Jlgb back Chairs. $l!19,. 1,$59 N ,' 'J'lllS SAT l SI/N: °"""' ..i, mU&s bultoft boltJ --.. lie new $40, ~!!.~~ Mtiled Jor 2 H~~ORKERS WANTED NhJht ~.i.ttor • ·NEWPORT BEAgt: Several overstuUed occasional Ch&irs ...••. .,. B&Jboi. Ave 1 Gmnd canal, O'Yt;c.lb •l.tna. 1 bl l nli • • •B-2Z:t• ~er 21. , <c'I-~• Ad~--) &xpttiena!d prefm'PA. f\all "-· Be-. 'ft-·-· at ... , , , . ~. , . , . , $10 • $1f ... .:_$2t ,,.. $l9 A $rff ... ; lJttle Bt.JQ · ,llJAnd 11de. heme; deollt?W It etc; Guar. MEN'S matched' ~ Doua Call M&-:li32 (.-. .. v~Oj!f ~· • umi, All c:Oinpafti MM.fits. --•v --Used m.atlrtSS &: -box apriQ.ga, xlnt cond. :. '.. SOmr antiques, dbtnruher, $44 cUb Ol' ama.11 pymta. Ford irorw $24. l'tr.t f1~1 -= R.usb ~at.mped. self 1 a·d.--• 6 ~· 1 • •1 ~ clockt, Chlrm, e-matched 56-1231, ' Wcodl$9e.th.646-4067 ' ~~~~gt~ ~~·~~~dONcn~eri~·ien :::.~p'ffm~w~r::. m:A.I.. ... ec 1 St~;·eoph~~j'~'Hi'.Fid~lit;·;~~d''& .. ;,:; .~~ck chain. mlsc.t====::;::==== '' CM A _,.,in 1-1 PM tv'1 ,.. I $159 • ..,. furn .. tot rtotah 4 m&n.Y Mualu1 . · ':':. :tt ·::bl:1::. ~~.:. ·~ &2J: Qto;i.Y~...., ptt90I) -'=--for Career cirl. ~ w:~ft :·p~uc c·o~e~ed' re~ihi~~·cbairs.:ri;a 1~· •1 ~I. I IMtf'VIMnh . 1125 Mlacelt.neou• · ' ....-.. .,..~,, • • $-· CAN coke madllnt. ~ driv. · Ad~ K1Mtit1, Inc • .:i1U•o "' OFFE Rl NG xi. •ac-flOW.CoutHwy,N,B, ,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,, ...... ;.f .... ,,· •••• ~ '~···· · ~ _., C h iENDPBASS AMPlJJ'JER. .1HJ.•Yl$!fori• St .. C.M. HOUSEKEEPER.. mi· amwoc1atio1J1 l am a ll ~Y appolttt. •• ~ 1 Emerson color TV in maple cabint. $595 un.,_.. Wft'""'· a• DELUXE 'JUCKENBAOIEI\ 561161 ter tor ~ Wn IChool-NlU)' to ~ •tudent m . , .... , .-, , , . , , ... , .. , , .... , . , .......... ,... ~~me:~ · BASS c urrA.J( • - ~I oppcn.i.nlcy emJ>19ytr -bllilrm. Sdtieo['.'Myt ~~ for fflht bou.ehmd SAILMAKEll. t r i m me r . 1 Portable B/W TV General Elec;."tric.' $\99 Lota ot mi9c. I t e m 1 • * 6'l5-6«M-* I ELECTRON ICS wpply =~cse,t\"ttiru J.int..:..!4~ .=o .' ~ ._.541-n97 "apholstererteworlc:'On ~I .....•.... , ................. , .. , ..•••••• $.St". 66-6920 . FENDER 12. atrilw .. au.itar I coupler salelman., lf. W. ti.ve owa ....,_ _.,......, · .interiors A covers. · l double gas oven for built-in iM">O., ••.. $100. R'" .. IMAG• .......... mo"-•.· -. .: ••1, ~--do >n ' I l --:r .-.. ..:a::::. -----... -----_...;,,,~---' • P,enaa.nent ""b, · ~ ,. · · ' •-i;I' · u11 .c. ~ .. ,.,. ~ieoi: A! ....,..,. .. Wrlaht Cn., 1770 Newport attee2iifta -----.~ ;;;·-·~lift: ¢alt or write • l gold gas range, 30 . $24Q .......•..•... ~9~ •Eftrythiflr to ..,1 AJao WlldwOOd, Fender Bl..., C.M. HSKPRS Emp)ff•,';;,a , .. O~NGE~C9AST u'& . ARROWH EAQ . I whlle gas· range, 36". '199 ......... ,~ •. $49. °"'"" • . -~ or ·n.w.' 5"l-33!17. ' ~ Georg• AUea 8)'lt.nd ~ JUNIOR -MARINA, Lake Arrowhead. • 3 bar stoo~s ., $19.95 •.. , .. , .••......... $7 ••· re:cordl, all t)(pta. Sat_ I ,HEATHKrr. sow an1p and ,, ~B .~·. 160.. S.A. I i::OWGE '7!4'.'·337-1501 . . --a chest of arawers ......... '. $29 ··$39 .. $49. Sun, l999 ll<>oemuy PL, ........ 1165. Glbeon M•iody-Electronics · -Enlineers • Circuit ·desi9t1 • M•gnelic dosi9n • Systems checkout :W7~ • ' m I SLJ1,{ G Y'M Diltributor. Several odd lamp shades, your choice 10c "· _CM, comer of a'.ltt\ 642-3398. JMkei w/caw $100. . DI ICT · Several table lam~s, end .1•.bles, coUee tables • NEIG llBORHOOD ' ""9504 Hou-, bl,b...Ot. ' netdt btlp to dft1)0Mtrate t" =:-===-=-=--= ~i:u:..c.r.c.n ;r-& h dbo rd od & d f $4 up GARAGE 'SAJ.;J!: • • I GUITAR }NIOfll. $2. ter. live ·tnr exp .. ft&. has the follO'Winf · world'• No. 1 exttruer I: e~ a s, I en s •..... rom • ..:._~· S A··· ...,.,, -.s363. 49&-5101 · pPpoJ1unitin Introduce ei:dtina', new 5 pc. Bedroom .seU~ complete .. i., ••. ,, •• ,., 1503 E. !"•~ · . · "be~i ll'OUP in my~· INSURANCE Cuualty Jt,r-n- cy, P:,rom. .del _Jllu , ,EX~ .,4.DMTN ISTR.A11VE PERIENC'ED, ~ NI J11Rr SECREl"ARY wk. Reply P.O. Box No. Starttnr aal uy '8'JO, F'or 1 CdM ewnina collere. Will work ' .~ and eve1, Will SLIM GYM RT If.ATH. No • ,, .. , ',", .. ,, •....... From $ff per ut up. Girl'• bike 1 • 'IV • Wuher C.M. ~· exper . .DHdtd. Shirley • OothH • Baby ·thiro • ..:;::===;;==::::;::= Graham '*7-iMtl or~ THE USED fURNIT!IRE 'FACJORY -Oil ·-. . Pl~--;: o., ..... tuo: SECltliTAltY INS 11uloor loulov•...t, Cott• Mue CAlt sale-w.. ""' ~y · SAVE NOW .. "''""'"· -·· et<. ....,, vie~ . PRESIDENT $41-'457 ..... --k• ........ , DURING SUMMER 194-2312 . ' INVENTORY do ,..,.........,. otnc. wori<. ,.. 0,., WMllltY• t4iM .• l.tvnle11 M , <I ..... IWM1ay1 • •·1 ~, ~-·.ee -. CLEARANCE SALE PART· TIME, approx, 20 h?1. ,,. . "'"" ' ......,.,..., .• ,., t ---klY houri flexible MUllt _ _ _ Vqinia .Pt, C.M. We have trade-ins. repos, NEA . SiiJFF :: ihorthand 100 ·wpm, IGOO F_ umiture , , IOOO 5 Mounted' new tires, Trim· rent ttturna A: floor models ~A~~Yd!~\ ~ •< llkt varie"' and ••-·re1, furniturt inirette reducirta couch, atr ot every modtl Hammond . r, ; e . '!"": .,, ~" · · Orian. Buy now i: receive rernauator, $10; • bednde I CAU. IN CONTIDENCE CONTROL ANALYST "Jftlllrs.tlon or dau scMd- C:alct!'ator or addinj: machine ule1 and aecretarial dutie1. experience, Mt18t be ta.mil. Prev:iou'1 llChoOI experll!nce lat with inventor)' • produc. helpful. Typina lktll1 of tfl tion control procedl!n!I. wpm, SH JM. Amlil>' to read and work type so ~:pm or better, Manyl;:;:;;;;;;;:;;;;:;:;;;;;;;:;;; OVER STOCKED cooler, appliance1, turn., extra dillCOWlt 1abli. ~ 1a~p. $5: 11oor coraeany beMtifJI such.· .. 1 ~.,. MUST SELL dilhe1, etc~ 25121 VJ& ~v-~MONO lamp, s2: we1;&h! tet, $2.SO; paid va~tionl. 'lick Jeave, SPANISH t'URNITURr; .&, Dana Point, 4~ in cOaoNA DEL 'MAR Ve~ni machine 0 ) ~· ' TODAY ; GATES LEARJET , coarounoN ·Sletlc ,,_, Div. wtth data 'Proetllin& re-SR. 1'VPJg'f ~ pons. P hyaicaJ inwntorJ Startin1 AJ&ry WS. Rect!p- ,...utred, heavy liftinc in. tionllt for admWatration duded. Contact ~ ottice1, hn'I)' typina and Ottltt. d~~ ·work. T)1lln& 11kfll 56 Wllft'· ' ~ medical and Ill• iftsw'. FACTORY Twlll!I $49.!fi, Fulla $59.~, DRYER, 1uilcue1, htehld, 2854 E Coast H ~ "'.,.. OU~r l,SllOtled goodJH: ' ~1 .o..•-~ ie· Send Queen1 $89.t.l, K:Rl $119.;w, _, .. ..i • wy, v•..._ CHEA.I?', ;:;:7i~ f,jjL..; Pn.m. OPEN TQ PUBLIC Twin Size Headb&ard, S'l.95, r-· ~~· ."::'ra;';'I~~~ Open M°" l 'Fi:i eves. 93TI Lltchtield 'i>i.. HQ Bent• 1013. Coata .Me.a, Md 2 WHks Tnindli'Stt.t "9.!li. Slffp-F RI-SAT-SUN. 113 PIANOS ft OR~ 962-1967 Calli 9205. er Sola.1 $169.95 A: Up, Studio Lark•-'", r"M. . NEW le USED · · ·Wholetale/lelow Cow:l>ta 189 95 ·-~ • v·-'"· ~ .... ~ SECRETARY bookkee • . DECORATOR Movina'. furn. a.in&ua .-.a.~ ""~aana . · ·" . ~·Tables p u}>; Wall 1belve1 SIESTA SLEEP. SHOP e Thomu Orians L. M. Cox Mft:'Co. f 186&1 Von. Karman Ave. 1505 I . Warner, S.A. !Nino, Calif. S28l4 546-lill INT'ERMEDlATF. .. • C:M.,. •.mllt. office, .. m-·~·iip{!otu '9!i"'up, urn Harbor B!vd-. CM . clotM1, pictures. intere1tina ·• !Oplti.11 ~ temauonal f1nn, creati~. · 64.>2160 1~ 128 Via Mentone, Udo e Kohler ,, Campbell NEW Queen siz~ mattren, box s.prings $75 Refrigerator wJbouom roll-oul Ittei.er .$65. 646-101~. U2 21st, CM TYPING.a.ERK, . + • <n•> 133-3740 -StarUni salary $47'. \ViU work in Personnel Office. B•ckiround Jn pe:nonnel and/or lnaunJICf: worlc, T)'J> coneenial environment. XJnt Go1llerl• Fur n ltur• 34~ Cst, Hwy, Dana Pt. Isl: 675-M COAST MUSIC u.lary A: stock. Call Dick 201J Pl•centl• 496-45.52 GARAGE S&lt; _ 9tT3 .As.ter NEWPORT le HARBOR 4 x I REGULATION poo.I lablt complete With all 'ac· ~sso~el. :xlnt l'Onrl., $35(1. I Equa.1 opportututy e:m.ployer Eqlaal oppor\Unlty t taPlo)'tt JNVENTORY·SHIPPING Jor Neu, S.-2516 • '4J..7130 Cr, F,V, T)pe'mlttt, vinlry, QMla M5 * ~1· '46-3629. ' ·• tJFCRETARY with &ood al· ~ ENGL.ANDER kh~-u bfd, bbq, pwr moy.•er, lkieril, Open 1M Fri 10-9 Sun U-5 . ti~ and dtsitt ~ ~· 17 PC. KING SIZI ~t:"'~ 1~,.; di:>~• I: misc, Fri. Ir Sat. WALNUT SPINET PIANO ~!~10!:'~P1= . Apply, GRlMES.SllEPARD 'BEDROOM' dttutt, wlattached n:ilr· lllajoll mi,,-,$495 lrlC. bench, iultar ~ EDlfOlt TRAINll =-ar M!ir .• N' 8 ' iq *ill 50 WDfn,, . Collel(f' J ournallan Major I · d LADY owr 40i r e , .&-.n • •-licants sheul4 preferred to llr'Ol'k .·atte:r w/pff90nllllty, up d 111 _,;.ct CletalfW MFG-RS. 20!. Paolartno, lA.rs:e' ! drawer dreuer, mlr. ror. Pair of twin bedl A;titlliincn 1100 de!., l lOryr wan-anty, * 675-6404 * IChool fw_SparfJlrma'• Pvb. Salel, ec>m* baclrsf'ound In P I Office licatiom, We publish newa. deoorafine. Know~· t:'i e(r7I~) ,_ ~-· • Cotta Mtu ror. 2 beddde ata.nda, Kine w /beadbolu'dii. Bentwood . H.AM?t10ND ORGAN DREXEL s---.. --.. , ' sro\El'AR.Y, e>Q>er. ~ .. •lze beadboud, frame. quilt. rocker; lamP'. marble cE" aµlo -.-·"·• •• Norse I onJv ·•1-inc hen-det ~ .. _..,._, ..... t-.~ -"--1.1 '-1--'· .. aauu ..,. I -~· -. .. ,.. " din'• HI WfbuUet, Dunoan JNlptl'S !or akindlvef'I, MOW BookkPC t. typq:. No --~ .....:__ ~· _ I 116eti1-1:. radio Contrlll OMckl smoking, STeady pltion ~ need xlnl: t;ypitt; llOnte-S/11, ~ ma ... .._, UX"I; • ,_,.,.... pedestal tabll', TV-2 mos auto wt11ber, Botti. .xlnt le wan-ant)' 1o train u ~ .ect'y. ew, etc. old. __ .. •Ml ,~ ... 1 OOULQ ··•ustc CQ. !".,">'1 ~ v.lue_UDI. ii4!U $Eim. 536-3630 <Hunt. BeacllJ O.Olce ot Spanish orvORCE FORCES ·SAl:.fl!! ro ... ;,,:"'~ .-...very, .,,_::': '"ll ~ ~ ,_ flltla '<r Modern Style 147-5066 ...,....,, "• ' ..... -N .• M~I g· A SACRti'ICE aiJe-fUrn. b&b7 ·~ .e:~tti~is. l!it111t w1 one ot ow: fin.eat PAn, TIME type, You mU1t have wrilten deCOh.Utlk ~iq.·m ·NWJll l_MM • ~nl ~yt"'.c. station att nt, ALL llOR $24' -e "MAYTAG Servi~ Mao, o: an, . , It ,._.... • ~ run ti~. '1-4:30, 3-U. Apply N do _, 10. 6' OLIVE Jl'Mn 2 cushion has w•shel'J 'dry-Amtt· • SCT-0681 '• ; "e~ m19C. PK:.. • tft ' -B oys bore o wn pm.a. o ... y.., mu. ~·..,cl ·-11•· -w · • --., , · , ·9tortlam Mr-appoint, either tor your,-ccilJ ... •p.. Bch. Good' iaJart I: tutqte. IVl!NING· WOlllK ' per· of for outaide publ~ Giw n!ls.: Writ. Daily · .,.. . .._.. W!LK'S·WAR!HOUSE ,_........,.,, ~ • _,, ... • chiul aeta .. Bst.'Guarantee. WURUJ'ZER.electric·Ornn Ricbtield. 200 W .. Coan $45, modern atyl.e ~ak. o;.11-&17 'mod 1 · 4600 . 2 NJii i ~ NEWf<'R~·' Bf~b T~nnls Hwy, Newport, Sat. 1-10 am liOO W, 4th St,, Santa Ana black fonnioa top, 2 v.'OOCI "'( ' • e : _ Club farrill)I or · st n c I r tlon,:You niUJ~ be<pre11:9red ·Pilot Box M·lDO't ' New factory branch opening to 1hoyl .. mple. of your , printed WC'.lrk, KnoWledce ot $3·.95 In Ordae "Ool.ln~. 'No exp. nee. Work &:10 pm'. I paste-up helpful, Phone Mr . Larte. ~xpandin1 chain neftl1 FOR INTERVIEW n ATION "i..___. __ , No. l Daily 9.9 Sal"' Sun ll-6 drawers, rna"19f4n&. chair WHIRLPOOL d~wuhrr. 6 boariJI, 25 bus cllivier, mernhen:h)p 'S4Sd,. 67~ •=_...,• .,. ·~ ~1 l'nO!! old under warranty aolkl waJnut w/ 'Jocked · · position 1342 No Coast roRNlTURE returned from ...... .J.:;Q'"'OU • • • • • ......... ,, 1.,:100,, eXt~...:-• roR . Sale: "· 11h oven 11.1 Holcomb, 642-4748. • rt/pt he:lp.· temp -': pe:rm. ~ CAlJ. SA'IURDAY i ENTJIUSJASf'JC ""'U"' .octy Alt »31>. • mo'• reldey. 10 AM TO 5' PM """' '~--Beech dllplay 1tudle1. model hoJn. KJNO ''" w"-• •·ad....____. Jo"'ront loe.dlllf. eutthla board ..... ~ '"' ,,,..., O'l c E •·--i• ._.,.,_ · .. .,, .. ,,., ....,...., top.~. ~m Lelli ~'Cost S3alCI .~ange, re c. ' · -•e SUPERVISOR, LVN or RN, n, ~raton cancellation, Ir triple Mr. I Mn. ~ner · · e ape • 1rone-r. 540-5396 .,¥ ·reci'd. tor arcttlttclural o t Ii c e. 858'..2170 Mr. Van --~;;77"84':;7W;,,----3 to ll: 30 llhift. P ark J.,ldo Spani&h lt Mtdlten-anean $@; blue plaid coucn J40; PHILCO "'to wuh~r 4' Pen-new • ucrilice ilt $600. · · Cotwaleact!ot Center. Ph: R D: FURNITURE aolkl · oAk ' cOffee 'table $30: •CR1t elec, dfyer, Groti-· BB-1.962 ~?~~G ;~~1 •P:u-,hin::: 1 Typlna, '°""' SH ,... i ,-,=--::=-,,'""°=:-· PORTI It 1 Artiltic ablllty d eal re'd. LVN •. ftliet week end.Ii, T '-Forquality'Hktt)',Gen-MUOC4. . 1144 ·N.wport Bl.; C.M. solid oak eJJd table $15. ~th fM SM., 841'~, ---....,.~.--.-.-.-I .2966 Peppertree.1.n, C.M. · • · every. nlte 'tU I 83'1-MST. · HAMMOND. ol1'lnwi.y, Y~ "l~~ H,P, ~ Johnaon . o .. e: .TELEPHQNE.ORDER DESK ' Wed Sat .l Sun 'W 6 KINO size Mtdit BR. set, ADM IRAL .Duplex ~~Reh1a-W . New ·•~used ~QI Repaired Work orders. $85. 6;2~,;;. :;e~1:i'an~~ I FT ~i\i~'m. Matching comp!. StUfftd 'chr, Buf •. 3 )Tl old $175, M-.ytq tnolt'mUn,<Best buys: in ~ 50.2765 . to 3:-30 ahift: PARK LIOO __ , ..... ,..,_, •~y in EXPER. production te:Ubo cbN'VALESCEltt CENTER ~""to rd;,~ 1ttt11. Apply ru s . Cout --;;;;;;;;;;;;;";;;;;;;~~'if!S;i -"-""-·-=_,.._ .... _Frt.~_Rri_•_. ';;tCH'i'iit'ilK~ EX p E.R IE NC ED auto Heavy AIR on B\D'l"OUSNI mechanic with own tooJ1. E.l..S C.omputer, Xln't co. 8uay 1hop, 1747 Anaheim bfone:fitL lime 9-lpm A 5-jpm, Ph: ktrn ~ham $20 each . and fet. Sofa b@d SiJ'Cet''lfW\JW wuher k drye!" S!a All So. cailf at:Schmidt Music · Sn.ck Shep lekery . $0:*4 . otti>man $7.SO. ALL IN :ma.chi~ wlcab. 25" .C!O!or Xlnt cond. 644-1568 . . Co,· lSO'l'·f.i .. Maln, Santa l u. WESl'INGHOUSE w._tw=r . l MU E, Coe11 Hwy. I' . GOOD CONDIT J 0 N, oonsole TV, All aood cond . .U~A 17 2-dr refria: • .., ~~19Xnlt cond. 5250 Ph. Corilh• del Mar Telephone Sotcitor1 842-2331"arter5pm 54&..0&38 freeser . Jee mat.r. aft.3:00 * PUNCH PllESS OPER. Charity appeal, Paid weekly, 8• SOF aed ·u NI DINETI'E w/leavea & 4 Avocado. Uke new. $250. 'OlltGANS , ~fUNTZ <I & 8 car 1te,reo. Apply: 32i N. Broadway, A, never u • qu 1 543--9786 • •I S80 6 V-12 V converter ''"'· with some •~t metal or Rm. 410, Santa An111, non.1, acotchguard~ $125; chain $40; Ma 1 chin i .- mal'trie produoll explir. Ap-TELEPHONE OPERATOR ¥atchln1: loveaeat S 7 5. cocktail A-2 end tbbJ, SOLID wtdnut desk 62" x L Discountl &i:>-3348 eve11. Aw,-C.M. ~Fee Relmbunedl FAT & UGL Y777 111on, ,.,..IF .. ""'"""'' JI you art, we probably can't ""' you. CALll'. CASTING CO. ls oantlnuin£: ita ll!:arch Jn On.n&:e Co. tor a variety of types, tor won: In mq, mo- 1 deldl&;, TV comm1'1, Ir Ind. tll1n11. Great pa.)'t .rrt. time. We are client paia, no fee. Not • achoo!. FREE TV SCREEN TEST PJI: C714J 8J5.a282 ID AM to 6 PM . SID BILLING Oerk. Call Loraine, 643-2710 -We:etcllH P4!l'IOl'll"lel Ageney, 2 0 4 3 \l.'Tstdlrt Drh-e, N.B. FOTOMAT·, DRIVE·THltU \\'ttU.ndl &: Standby A&e 11-25 Apply in penon Mnn • Tue1, Aua, 3 & 4 BetWffn 9 11.m-t pm 'I f'OTO~tAT 201 E. 11th St, C.?il. J'ULL or part time, ,.., qe Ii.mi\. men or \\'Omen In or..olfe CQ, In 1tart on 1 aroQnd floor, Oppor1'"'llle1 unttrtdted fn 1alet. Koe:kot t 11 t er p I a netary, Eileen • Waltf'l'I, 213/540-2219. f'tJtL or PART TIME. EARN UP TO 15 PER HR. ruu.m BRUSH c 0 . Nowptrl "erMnMI Atoncy U3 Dover Dr., ··N.8. '42·:1171 ,, ~ e MAQUNIS'l' e AU.-AkOUND ......... e Maids. experienced • Apply Ben . Brown'• 'Motor Hotel, 3llD6 S. Cout Hwy, South Laguna ply S.3:30 PM, Mon-Fri. 770 53G--8S37 ws.lnut. pertrct cond S20 ea ; 28" contemp, dnian, 5 WARD'S BALDWlN STUDIO Dlatttseed MAPLE HUTCft w. 1fth, C.M. ~ll pm Sat It Sun 20 PC. ''MADRID" Ulled cpt 40 )'(:Is $1 yd. ctrav.·~n $150, 646-4387 a.ft 1119 Newport c .M 64tisu4 C?oo<1 condition. 6U-Q2.4 RECEPI'IONiil' • Qook· 2lll Forest, Laguna Beach J litOOM GROUP . M&---<1957 4 PM. • · .',":;:"c:S:::'P~O:'=-,.,,,.-,-I keeper, medical of 11 c e. WAJTRES.S • F'OOD le FROM MODEL HOMES ~, -.,F=R"'t"'G'"'"I ~D-A_,.l "RcoE PRIVATE PART'I Schwinn swtm PKtt.cycle, Lqurw atta. Str.te qe, &: ~gf,~1A 1 I~~ a~~ Includes: Quilted lllfa .l Office Furniture I010 r.e I riaff\ltors, ipartment w&nlt to buy piano • UKE NEW! ~YU~~22u 8;, :11:: Beach. Ot11y you!\&' r-..x-. chair, 2 end .~bleJ A: co.ttee R.ettnld 3b60, wood deaks, ~~, ~ cordlt:ion. 125 ...,fcir CNh.-213:. 461·1423 MO. 548-33'.13 , per!~ FoxH nttd apply. table, 2 JamP'.', druser, rnJr. ~ MOVING-Hammond spinet Ff.RBERWARE rotiuerie, ·NQ 49M986 or fftMM5G 6PM-f'OI', headboa'rd, quilted box '68.~ • Refin'd wood arm USED appllulcu A 1V1 ·orpn. 1..owner, $740. lara:e a;iz:e, Jike new $35. ' e ·REAL ESTA TE 8.PM sprinp Ir matlftu, 5 pc rotary chain, $29.50 e We All suaranteed, Dunlap's, Call 6444904 545:0083 SALESWOMAN. Real op: . dlnina room; ta,ble & ' hi-have the lartest selectk>n 1815 Newprt. CM Sl3-TTS8 PIANO -Baldwiq Spinet. .fa YARDS new loam rubber portunity. Specw.llzed Beach * \i{,AITRESS • Expenencerl be.ck chalra. or Wied oW<:e fllrn In th.ii NUR new Whlripoo] deluxe Walnut Pert cond. S600~ ~e "1g ped. Retail SLZ nntals and Udo t Perrin~ only lor day Shift only, Ap-·COMP.ARE.AT $7t9.95 area, ... -"-A--·-962-1563 e\lt!a, yard. Sell 65c YfJ'd. fi73-8624 1ales. Top c:omm. bretk. ply In penon only '$399 • · , t.-lc :Mahan Desk wu,..,~ • ;;;~;-; Call Harry A n d er 1 on DELAN~YS SEA SH~NT\' No down Prnls. Ont)' $1.S mn 1800 Newport Blvd. 1200 MAID& Full time, 2l or 615:-1642 /evti Ms.-0308 6.'!0 Lido Parkh Dr~ WELK'S WAREHOUSE Ml-8450 REFRIGERATOR • lntenw· :R::•:::d;:i•'-----= over. Apply 1641. Newport RELIABLE altte:r '° come Newport lkac' 9&hf. 600 \V. 4th St. Santa Ana 2 \V.u..truT 60" ydesks: Uonel HaMater. Xlnt t'Ond. Jtadk> Bimini 5.50, 50 4 · MAGS • fit VW · or Ford Goodyear li~s:. • exit cond. $95. 675-8917 aft 6 pi;n Blvd., C.M'. Phone,..,...,, In for 2 chldm. El Toro * WAITRES.5 * Over 2l ' swivel, aide chairs. &-pads. $'15. Call 96z..8903 watt, ulled 4 times, lTh. ";,~~: N: A;:al~ ::.a;:~. day wk. 137--0339 ~~~~ g~~: ~~~ M~8:} SCRAM-LETS '675-4392; 6r;H422 .:;~nr·UHCI Up~1 631-lfM ~. 11~ ~· Course Rd, C.M. ANSWERS ~~· ~~~elx 6:·h~~rr:i'. ~* FJUGJDAIRE•• Televltktn MAN for delivery or * WANTED * upho~ $411 t!t., ~ $00 -Appliance11 and TV'•· Dead Endu·· Llcenaed rea) e1ta1e l&les. lillVed -Outdo -Belia -·~2547 l20l Buk toola &-; mtebanical people b' itlM!raJ real es-j ' "HJ BUD" G'•r• .. So1ia I022 NORGE W'asMr·. just bffn tate Ml time• howling tract mpup -• , badq:round ntt. Mlney T l 1 ' · As the blc nower .a.Id to overhauled. ln coqd order. D•v1•·1•owN CO ~ -. ' aa.tea, fulJ time or Sat. ' 1•-1·1u no "HI BUD " I'": "'-""' "''"'" "" .,.. " • •" Sun.·1; a.Jellady familiar'"" 1 e ww, , · e REf"RIGERATORs. =-=~=.-·~==""== SACRIFICE brand new blk 1' wht '19•• 'port. RCA 1V W /stand. i1uat 1ee. · to ':P' prec,._:$\00. '~ Tent. 9 x 12, rrttn Uaed twicf' S:iCI • 548-0282 • FOR Rent • Cabin • Mam· moth Lakes, &IP!. 7. tum., fti>k:, 5 Nltea STh. 531-3374 or~17eYea, UNlQlIE ~ K . emerald cut diamond 3 bquettH rold tirw." coat $1500 Se.c. $400. ~ \\', l9Ch., C.M, iii.::-... with area to hand1e rentaJs SOF>$: One t.bric1 day bed d~r, Bolton rocker . le KENMORE aut0· wuher. COLOR TV, need• picture • '46-168' •• ? tlibe1'9..1 c:omm.I, New office ~ ~U.S. One naupf\yde Miltc. . . Xlnt t'Ond, 3 eyde SM . .Free tube. Would be good set BRAIDED oviU reversible MAN To Utist mir or local : • -.. , ... ., • -w 0,-• ._ S&, both !\kt ne.w. 341 ~7P> delivery, MT~U5. 546-8672 w/11ttle wcirk. $50. Call 1 645-~ , , ,,,,,.. '"' ,........ woo ~ &'Pad, 11'xJ4', appliance store. N~at ap-Then 1ttp up to the rrowth ltiei. ~lonte V"''· CM CERAMIC kUn 1.10 volt,' "WESTINGHOUSE 11 cu f1 ~ eves, · 00 stain1 or spots $50. 2'14-4 pearance. 496-118! Mr ._ countl)' whl!n 'the mone.11 Riddle & Ro11 Reo1ltor1 111APL.E .bunk1, lwln A-dlb, Wl'Ol,lltlt irott_bed, Dre111tt, ·~~rat:Or, clean A: JOOd ~4 USED:TVI, Iris Pl .. C.M. fi4&..38e6. Wright t-to·am~only. . ro&d ancl excitement never MM E. Cit. """'·• CdM bods, d--(l heat 1 , Stove, Mile. lM Fort1t Ln, condition, $45. 5fs-.5306 For sale/rent. .. , .. -~ H .. HOTPO!NT Dlthwallhe.r. * M~N~~ER ,end. You set YoU~ own pace 67S.7225 dinette: Rd. 1tove, wuher -B. KENMORE , _,.,Mt,. 3 yrs. OUNlp'I, 1!1;, Newport. CA-I. good cond. $50. M11e lined * T• •1NEE$ -)'OUr own roels. :'fh!• re. WANTED: SKIPPER, for 15' ~l . , ' BARGAniS Ge.10tel t.AdJet Excellent t'Ondltlon $!.AQ. M&-7118 drapes flt be!ae/celerY _ ~ apected i.nd COl'Pll'l-lion motpr Bailer, Full time" NEW ·\Veet\fllhouse ·wuher clottiea S.12, hi chr, toyt, _Will deliver. 8.So-4370 19 .. zENrm TV w/ remote gin), 646-8402 Need t1lM tt) mtn lor de-will 1how how ,)'OU m4)' Phone 1.213 585.0l3l LA. ·a-drytt, 113 off;&' 1tereo, mi11e Sat. iw l rvine-A. =========-contro1.·must tell $-40. Call KlRBYVArutJMCLEl\NEit livery aoct .ita. Ste•~ r.rn· n!ach the~ __ r'u. u little Aak tor Yacht Intonnatk.n" Gire.rd & color 'JV, 23"; C.M. Antiques 1111 S57~:z3". • -Comp!. w/all ,,,,~. + n- J)loyfnfltt.·Mutt be nut Pd -,efJ9rt u .-..Ubl;. · I .. ~~• I I ,· aJllO Bale.twin orpfl, 8"-1017 DINGHY $25, refrlg, $12, ' ;=.::::,:::::===== u• - willine lo \\'Ork, T" •tart, YoU w l rter. Ve~ .... n.c.r•, 1~ dcl Vtty ..,.. ' SPANlSH • aold · cnilh-Stove 1l1,'la m. •be ~t JK>WED akio• v I c I or la n T1pe RHOrdor1 l220 :o~~1-~~ ':11w!~~Hct ,.,... lenalvf' llll• tratni.nc. And Must have own cu. Apply: Vflvet tofa-,\ loveM'AI 1 S\,5, dbl 'Pr~ A: matt $20. clllna ttblnet =.. 2 G.11 Acc-~llt ~-Tf82 fl.tr; Price ::";u ~ ~·d= :-1nt~,A~· Rm .f.lO, Yr new. $4~;i. Ca.II aft'. S 20ft Onyx, Bal. Isl. 673-M08. wudrobei , ha.ndrnaM llSO'a --A-IW-.-T-AP __ E_,_,_l>=ECK=-KA.llA$J'AN Rug 12xU, 'Ith -n•• MANAGER: '\l,'Onlllrl '°' rx-· i~ ~ UC ,; • ' _,m. 831~ BOX tnillt!r, molorcyde1, $50 et.. Drop lfoaf table, t.tOOEL X\00..12 ":: ~· Slee! 1~ :st&-67•(;, Co1ttroler . clus.ivt mM'• tbof>. lnqui~ + i:..w r:,;~:.n!b1, • MOV1NG. h101t Min ! s PArts. J.pc JectiolW It mile. handmllilie 1~·1 1 3 D, Atleltted tapes inc, • • 7 S-15. 6oMt-l500. • 451 s . <:out Hwy, !Hotel + v·onc OOtle 10 Home SchMl•lnstrvctlen 7600 Room• M' f\lrn, Xlnt t'Ot'ld, h.ehold IQOda. 422· Stewns ~ •SlOD• "'OOQ •toraae cablrwt ~1x-7'' ~~= d ~.:::' e.:;:;. Lqunt) ... Car Pl.an Available . • wrotl.;t\I Iron ylltd rum. St Apt A.-S.A. S46-897G. ' .'U"N"u"s"uTA"L.....,A"N"T•1"00~li'ili •s.&9741• x 19", 3 alldine .wood doors. el10t to becomr k\~ved wl MATURI. WOMIN +Be an tuOciate of 11. '\\'. CTVE YOVJt'OllLD A CR&. 988-«l!IO li"URNtTUIU:, be·dd tnc, ~rum. ind. mUd wal--========== -12>~·='=13-<624,c.;;;;_ ___ _ a npidly crowlnJ tm. ct.in wittl O'¥\ e.r ~I, fttpecttd C&ltt. ATIVE syMMEft: "Exp. LOVELY Virtue Dre:., dint!· Rofw:N1 hludtt. d I a he 1. 11.1t dr, HI, plcturt' 1ramn, CaMOr&I I , e POOL T~I.£.uted e t ...;.. cmf'tr J landr.epina PltOFITAaLE '#OltK Jl.E. Brolcer, tuehaft. ob:. Arts A et.rtt. te et. 4 chain A: 1 leaf. odd!!: t.nd el.ti.-~ SU'-c:loaka, e\a. . .A'.pjt ~·· 1.,.1pment l300 , Xlnl can;!. f150 --~ot -· In ()r. In -" ........ :• °"""' Hotltlo INll..-dw In mom. ..... 5-1. 1411. IU-1911'l , Ana ,C.M. ·R'INS'l' ......_ B-• · • 1$41-1211 • Af'C'l:O>.Xlntlal.aJy+com· PereM1 . :""$25..0IJ)n»Jol'~ 646.mo -2 '.If.WIN .tireda, complete, aARAGE eale·Mo1t~y naplt. ~· JMrn:, -(_AMERA.llimmtc:o......SLR, U~~ca..lllCC~~· PlllO' btneftta. $bnk•re--Babyalttlnt AeY . life and acc'khnt. ptANO LF..SSONS ·:Walnut dri.er. 1-f\dwi-bed, dotha. that• A: bcla. Mt ~lmr Ut 'Dtl .Mat, .c.M. 350 mm ttie flub $80. -. -· 1octudtnc ...,.,, ... • f!IUll1 • + un11m11t11 '°"",."' n" Beal--. . :r,_,, •lab• "'""' --642-<610 ~ Ln., c.M. !Mt-1463. 1G-1m . · • ftM715. * , ~13u lory, In contldenot to Box MARINI MICHANIC· ~@All &I.In:, ~adin.1 '* ~j(:. C.11 Bl'\k't' T SOFA w/mtlchlte" chair •GAR.AGE SALE SAT• ..4oNTJQU!; J)wllllh ~ . , . , WASHING m1chine, rerrt1,' I Mum. o.lly PU~ rru w. Needtd rlshl awv. A rne-+Bomia f1'1ftntlve Plan MG-4478 i.lter 6. ..tu bull!, $6.S, 3 drtwtr 1!M P~CAN PL. C,M,, ........ (If bnt otter. J"ftlne Ooeds-1 boo a btd,I, •c IM8J!W, ~. I 8a'lhae BMt., N.e. chanlc w/at llut 1,)'1'. ex. Step up now-Call; S\VT1\1!1.11NG ~ • )'Ot.Lr dtt..r. $2), '68-UTl. NUMEROUS BARGAINS. 644-6916 ·Divan. tv. 642-89111. 1 GINIRAL HILP.... per, In tr.Wd A wt.brd ·~ MR . CHUltCHILL PQOI.. Ve r -y experte~. *JJOVSEFUL of q u alt 1 y GARAGE ~11 wetk from ANTIQUE __, dl'lwer C:'Oft'I· 2 NEW 1urfbol.nhl .• , 7'8" 15 c.tJ N eroatop trffl'1' • U.JS llR ton. Sl&rt 11 Sl. per' hr. 1714) au.nu re:uonablt. Mrs. Bte rumt\ure. See Aue. 4, 5, ~pm 112 t-zne~t. BaJbos. mode .81t-ln ""'OOd htndle1. • 7'10". rut. Jll lt'Ol,jnd refrlc S150, 7· .ofa s1NJ, l P/11.,.., muried, dcp'Nl#bl~ Call Sally HU'I M0-fi055, SALESllEN'·TOp opportun11;)' 9;1121 5. Irvine Terr. 844-5111a. lsland. 5~75.1 \\o'ah1ut, ~. 541)...\171. --.hi.JM"a. SSS. &42-29($ · auto ~tihfr SUIC). ~- tr rm'• m:ldency l'f'll''d. Aa• COASTAL -AGENCY 1 w1pwlns carpe t It Pi;\JVATE 1 u tort n1 In KRQHU:R 10f1, 2 cf'l11.U-.. **GA RAO I S~Lll 1 • ORJENTA.L R1111t • Royal suru:·aoA.Ro 6'JO", very I llOLIDAY 1'1t~1th ~' • JJJ.,U. 2790 Harbor Bl. 0f Dra.111ry Dealer, Call Bob, ~•<\liW· Ctl"t1fttd teacher, be!@:. o\ oofft!e fJl,bte, Xlnc. t'RI • S(.T ·t Sl1N • Klrman, lb,~ A !lxJ2; alto Jood condllm. S!fO. Jne!'ft\it'rt !J,li: $380 or taJ11 MR.:;.::•..;Cl.A=;;.111<:;;.. __ .;;o.;o.:c.;;"";..: 1 OUw fH/hi Johll •11ail. 2l3: t&l)..mT tt•M• 1 thru 8. 54&·~ eond-$100 Jnr ~. 6ff...(m4. 421 Martutrite. Cd~f 1 ama.ller. Call ~ • 64-MS!M * o~r Jl")'rMntt. 646-ll!ll , -... --~ -' .. -,. -. -·--. ~--~ - -- ·:r-1 . .,..... _____ -' .. -' I --~o:c•·o:-00-0 o;:;:=r=-~ ""' -~ -· · · · ---~ · · • • ' ·-· .,. -.,.------.··· ...... ~ ... ---r.-.-..,. F•ld•Y. Ju~.!l, 1910 DAILY Pl~OT 1 MIRCHANDlll POR sAL'I 1'NO • TRADI • F~EE T~ YOU Pnl ... tlVllTOCIC• TIWlll'OltTATION·· · TIWISPOllTA'l'IOH Tlb\HSPO"'TA'l:-IOH -TRANSl'QllTATIOJ!I . TltMS!'Oll'ATION· T~RTiTICJH !!!f! · . lizs ~l'Mto ... Mii s~ .. ~ Ski a..11 -_, .. -tlomolO mo ~ .. , .. ,,.. ,,~ '!_rvdc• , ., !!!! l"''l"""" c.n - I M~1·-_. -~J~-:= MIN:-. "A£"~. It -C&tAll .. 22' --1<''00. s..-. boot 1145. -~· ~ ~· ' 1ll63 HONDA 61. M!n..-41lr '61 CHEV ·" T. C90d ..... AUSTIN HEAUY ~' ~._vi,._,.i.1 -. ...,. lov!nc bomu. ·""""· io-ble. $ ...,_ "i!>lo · .,,._ ·a.i Allo a· •Hldro K Both AC~ J'R.,.. e~cu ....-. fB, .di-lltblt 392 tbm1<•1--------1 2!i cu. It. •tde.b~idll "Ilia· •Pl"*' ...... ,.. uo. C!wnpihlood, $40. 1!WM844 -=iid. • oomp w/rqi&tndon ""' 10 x eo ~~ bulll "' Call !148-~ Mi· 6 ply tlru. -• ""-AUSTIN AMERICA heeter. Gold turYed aora, .Hi-)~ 7/31 1KC ~PUPs 1 *Ne# Ko"1le W flmft1' -.U ,i •• • 2 br, i '*-W/aiarly xtz:u. 19111 Yamaha 80 '· ' 3 me.tcbinJ end 'tables. but-· FREE~' __,. ~ble 8 • 'bni'. aaUtnc &loop, main• jib, 11' MINJ<SPORT: to 1\1> ~~!')pool ..... , r'f'sf1lau' r~7. Xlht eoP(f, Many ••tl... -~.ll=Ola")l,---.:V'"an-..,,=-:.,o--~~M~ fet. lamps &: much more to •"""" home fnod 4'iM1' $eo m'29f · Sall •"'W price oriJy '51-fl EviMlde w/tri.llet; elee. Ill,:... •~oo . Call Bob.~ tftdt. Xlnt. cond. ·--. Mlicl·i tC. 21111' K&tape., N.9 : Yll"lt Lab & Sbtebtrd .mb:ed • · .~ -\ • • . COO\P}itt_. • '· • '' •tart. tm• Aft. 5: 00 -_, _...~ c.f1 aft t. ..... All l4ocWa SAT UUN 10· s ' , ..... Swka. m&lel1"'l"<-~T!ON .-i ..... u.. Ii Bal ... :Ill •• A ....... ,, 9631051 ' ' SACR!Flc;E,;;:l\16' ,81cy!ine. Autq S.rvlc," 'WROUGHT Im\ .... turn. ~· 1' - ' 813 · 1 ·yr, ~· all· lhot.. *Hobie cala colon. Imm. 16' RUNABOUT, :mo HP all new -lture. Space & P.ortt · ,_ ,J..pl tslO ChM'• boUncj.nc ho ttlf, Part Schnau.r,_~-~r Reuonlble.6C-Qil...n. 5 ~· a.ev mUint mtr. XlnC end. avaU. A.dl.t Pk, N.B. 10.mln, --~ • _____ ..._ __ routier oven, ~ c.mera I: put ? ? Mlit q .abt 4 OLD Erelfllh tbttpl.loc ,.._, ... ~ CAP'N EDS Prked • quick Mle $$75. all« NJor -.,,q attu. ·~ VW _ ~~~. ~te '68 JEEP$"l'f!ft, Sa P• r • _t}rlllPLl l I !l tllPLll I ' I: projector. mltCb ~. mo'• old. Very lovable and ·~P.'0! .. ~1. ~ot:t_pt 28 W-. est:. Hwy, NB MSD+I ~. U 8-3763 642-9JOC ai.t; !f!&1 tri:lnt..cod !'/br.kff, ,-teer-De!rtfl;1111le.1,V6,. air, ncUo, Good condition ' A: CheQ.' pntle. 831W498 530-1536 • lllWW .,. ........... "'3 ~ ' CQMPL£n: CUltom SABOT e 14, SPEED lIDAT, «I H.P. W A/f.ER.f 1'0 ~·T mobile in&,. in&lt~.cylinder,.pedals hq.ba. wind\. radial.I, bitc)l., !100 W, ())ut Hwy .. N.B. ' 6'f5..-0823.J... FREEfil"'homt .J.lovable TOY ~.1rndli; ~· or'bu'Ud.')'OUrownfromour enr.,ntler eanopy.$250 Mine&. cabana. w/boat &;cablu.Bfftoflett. $2900 or ~t olftr.&a..fGi 561711 OXY.acetyleneweldlnratar: II> pretty, blue-srey flu.tty .ReJia. Black BelUUel: tlbtral&ii •Jmll in time tor * 847~ * doclc: l)W. Futn or unfurrl, 64Me6S~ot~m2 7l3/3'n-3Ul Authorb:H MG DeeC lVlctorre1ulalor,lllarri• .mai. ldttoo .,l ;noa , llOO-iUS.'3'1-9116 ~-SABOi' ,...i... ,615,M32.--· 4MAGS.wilbaoodyeattlrra R ,...., Vohl i..9515 ·66 AUSTIN H"1•Y 3000 ~tor, ~.raiox torch, ,5 .!197·1618 ~ .:-. ...813 G~T , Dt.ne AKC ,tau.n .u:;rttzne. Sabot hardware· ao.t y,af,.rt 9032 SACfUFICE ll'x56' Skyline, • flt VW or Ford. Xlnt. ec "· c Mark Ill. XI.NT condition, tlpa; 1 ..... _._ ·• FEM.u.E· ' rnO ;;ill. 'j -• wlcl. Show q\\Bll--Sabot ..,.., mut, with -' l'Oi>d.~ : I;!!-~"'.<'~ 6 GO-KART lo mH ..... -:.ALL. FQR S74.93!! ~ to Pt.-hi;ID)e, ty, 9Q...'63S . , booola. lee boe.tdl,. rudders HEAVY 'duty tandem '" * 962--7967 * friendly~ A .l oy1t,bile, SHERRY'S Peodlei , A~Fit\lahed u well winch U'ld brakeL Like Mini llb1 '275 FORD • eyJ. encine ~th WIMcCullOU&h ena. I start. IMW lAl:IIES d1amOnd dinner 61Wllll · . s. 7/31 :Adorable, Apricot toy,,. .... u . , Some f.a!tory new. 592-16tll . _...__. -.b'anl. completely re:bWlt. er, 1--.....,.------1 .. • • • • ,....... 11 ~n aftenlOOnl eves B M W ftn&, aet with 1~ karat BLK, Blk· le wht, a yellow, J50t All cok>f.a~.S46--2848 ,._ w;__."'"',_· 1 , • Bonini& 5 HP ~11ni bib 2.DaqftiU...·Bclt c;iffCll'1takeS Make Ofter * · -* - ---2dlamonclo will d•Hm ldliel lo""" • DALMATION PUP'S ~m~w: ml! !ilr.ff <C!4 Morine Equi p. 903.I . '. :·•x:.n~~.::i;;i '• ~. -Aft •• ,., 139-6S'3· • ~~t ~: ~ door; Both" fem I: µ'J;aJ_e. AKC ' 646.6?28 6ti3151. &f&.6219-MARINE •nctne, a\tv. v.s. --.i111;r <I INTm. Tra""lall 1966, 4 Larpst S91ectlon of ly to~ PSil. DaJbt ~T 494-3379 7131 BELGIAN Tttv Pupt, ~C, SAit:B6A"I: _ Rhodes dua w/MW velwt ,drive. S&iQ, FOR Sale: TY.'011\ti(i Tralleri, Travel M25 whetl. drh't, fUU pwr, air, ALL' l970 MOdels MUST find hcune '°" allver champ. pe.renta: Stll or co-N9.'M·xlnt bUy ())a.nk prW-&U-2.WJ -,. Bikes. S35 & $45, steno, hd coo.lillg, new AnYwhefell JU;A.TH model CW 14 gray Anlora cat, l yr, oliJ, own. matce ofr. 673--0.530 dent' J«l' Cralll atJide) • * st6-5'83 * -· ti':, ..!:, ~~~· Xlnl ~ cltiiemrnob~·~iver Vfiry aftee·ttonate. •sr •. BERNAJU>AKC• ComPus,._1 .,..lnd a: knot.·a..tSIJpMeorfntJ03'TAtp .Mini ,b,ike: ·,~hp 537~11 co '-"l"Y', ..,.......eves. IRANDNEW ~ff- w/ antenna, $40. 67f.$ll6 In 1~ yr Old 1 tOfts ehldrn. p.U.ey.-·we, dtcron 1111.t. Briccs Ir . StratfDn Xlnt • 9529 • 2500'• • HEATH model JO 17 3" AKCiliMltt IJcundzteift. ·.tri· · 1 •-rrs.210S -S2WlO eaih. O\yna F. BAL lilt i.Went wantsJ ,cqac1. SlOO. 96>-«117 • Campers All ~tpJ)ed' with automatic ·~omcope, wife ~· $10 colored. Love•_ children. BroMOn. Benton, Ca 11 t . JTIOOlin& ot dock tie 1or 1,., • , ~Str.eim LIM '70 , trans., whlie tinbh with ro~.,"" ?~,·125~.i! ~;._ ~ ~ ~·~ai:,.., ~ ~-·~~. 250 "'!" ~:" .. r~ ·~ =r~ ~,.1" noo ii~~.zt.~:·~. -~~-~~~- - Mn-'3' FLUITY cute kltt•n. altnoit •24.1 JSLANDER· Aux. HD, 2U: m.,.7403 ,, F.urwlnds•WHkender Tremenclout:Savl"fl on --·~'15" ~: 1 wka old. two dark mixed ~ -plley, curta!na, -~ ... BOA'!' slip, -... to ,.,_ nn.l'VV'1 . " ·'JRATEL -.. Low Mllttgt 1970 ~ .-. SIQ. COii ~ colon, 1 tlpr °""""' !;!!rs•~ '~•t· _!:° .. "':.' P~g~ oommodat• 'I>' ,..,_ 11i , · TlflNK · . "riali.El''SAL~' · Ex~tlvt Ctro $$$ \H-an..,.,or.., ·~~ 7/31 2 }fORS&S: 1 P.into rel4in& ,... mo. Balboa Penlnaula,· · OPEN ROAD . -•-- "t<"• u•-----,. S500 tft '3695. Slip avail. 673-6880 at'oker ' HO............ 13172 Harbor 'Blvd. .G. 1.fMufaeturen Gt .America'& -f.A'J'IO SALE-OD.OS.ENDS 's Pf:~i;:s ;t. Jc::!:~~ .:t ~~l~a.re P;JO. M'tllt tell, 197.o:nt bt 502'l. • ' ~~A.M'a. l~ 8lotk1 ~o. ot , -nnest LuxUry Rtcreatlon BUY or ~EASEEY -disbes, br.,...brac " wkdys. 25~ • 27' SLIP • ., • G.,..n Grove Ftffway Vehlcl... C. IOI ,AUTR old treadle sewkw machine ~rd, pt. collie, 5 wka: 'APP"~ Geldinf, fl€tut. A STEAL! MOST4SELLI S50 per mo. Main bly, •'fRICftl l~ 53714111 ' ''OVERSEAS DELIVERY SAT. QNLY! 63'.>i,) Acacia. 847--059!, 847~ 1111 marked, well.~· $250. 'tlLUDERS 16 675-8990 •• ' urulnlfM\ · VI Brand new 'f. camper special Sf1N'OT&1·1srs" ~·'• ,~. YOU~G,adult.~.cats. Call~ 1ncl.5hl'IMerc.motor WANT TO BUY': Motirinc ' inlUCllCMWY •. tn ARR~. ~EAf Travel Ford .ll[llitrlms·VS ·tuto AUTffORiZED * ~M82 * <>range, CaJiol) le tort~ MUST SW.. t ~Mil FvJl -..1-...nt or am, trimaran slip. NIW.USID.sllY T'rallttn /enc <med awn-\\'I.th 11' """ Open Road Sale1ePart-1•S.rvlce '"'""="'°"-;,---.---I llhel1 1 to 3 Y"9 9lOtl ~ .... ....," · • ~. Exe. New paint. Sat . . , BICY~ $13 .,up; ·1 1U • -• fi Arab 'etld: WinneT Wntem •••~,o~dedl! ~.....:... MUT9I s-n ft Pl I & sun 10-6. ·119( Auausta, camper. tJlx. boot, bumpeor, 1860 Lolli &ach 81\14. refr1it $50: CltMor TV··11f5; ~or ~93· · a le Halter. 5*-4'19& .IJlAn,.E;o .... .-~ ;l"9U"UUAI DOCK SpaOe Avail. Up to ..... ._. ._. ....., • CM $750 Shlll'-Lltt jackl, Bounce-Lone Qea.eh _ (213)r,!i91-8721 bll!; !~-TV'•· w "lip. TWo, .-. IOYlb!•, .... "•· i ltAN5flOiitAT10N -HOBIE CAfS :n"....,. ... ,_ "'11 '67 ,BUL.TACO 1969 ""AI.JO travel tnll•r-Away•. c1ooe<1 SW>d'l' S34 ui;t., Mai, °'9ta Mtta. lap ldtttns, lone hair, box 675-135.\ · .. $4695 ~" , ' "' • .. tramed. ll97-M8Cl.or '30--15'8 loetw ·I Yachts IOOO .NEW ali~ avail, tor 32' to DIRT SCRAMBLER ~ ~~~~ Total Prict DATSUN SACR.IF1CE! Sacrifice-! , 811 ALL 'COLORS 38'ilTO'powtror.U.-PUMPER-..carburetor de.yg;&f+.137leves. Gorgeous Autumn H ... KITTENS -Dom-A CAPTAIN CAP 'N EDS * ~ * Expanalon chamber, ...... 1961 AlUSTj)CMT 15' Lo-OPEN ROAD re tnlnk jacket. Sz 12. 1 mos Domestic, long hair, short Lloenaed • Radar •• Loran, :i.....i.., 'NB ... ~. rlma, UKE NEW! $300 LI-·. -~·r -nta1--•, ... ase so. HARBOR BLVD. Old ~-pric< 11000 Sell ... , box-·~ ••-13 30Years•vn,saUor-.". ~W.CatH~. V'W'"'" , ,· _37 "~ ft>"" .. v '""' AN•~ -•M" ... : . ." .':50' ... 4,... ,,.,,,,, · ..... r, u.-....""'• ~ -..-.... "-Boat Services "' Aft. 6:00 839-6573 _refri&, acceuories I nc I. SANTA AN ·, ............... 111111 _,..,.. - 1111 .,.. _..._ or 836-4493 811 Profesaioilal Spcft F;ilhinC KITE No. 00. Xlnt cond. (5 miles ao. o! Dtaotyland} ..,.._ __ -Gulde Mexican • Central Do)]j-lail-m•• • 1 >"· old Fiberrlau il Gelcot.t $!900 or otter. 6f&.314l days, (Tlf) Nl-tlll'• Nl-1118 Mite. Wanted 8610 2 male yn,r paraktttl for .,\merican witen • allo • Boom Va.rw '• UHer ex-**Repain**' 3>' SELF-contained Aljo ''LeaacrlnTbtt:.eaebOtiu'' i-.,,...---·---~home.' em 6 1 blue •. -ml!lt><nr • .......,_ -• ---,,,.. Eltimale• 548-1152 d,.., ~ llll95 '69 Chevy· 111·Ton ZIMMERMAN WANTED: Qld workinc cla1 pilot. land It .a, Ad-Nehllaear~'80(l.Ab.)otlme, .~28 With camper, low mileage. treadle sewing-machine. 6 mo old puppy am mixed ~~ ~· , f?S.4798 Boat Rtntal1 903I 1968 14\ .sLPS 6, xlnt 9Qnd, Automatic, eciwer steering, 2145., H~~: ILVD. MM828 breedabortbalrcdw/ehlld. Bell a# rtf8re'l'ICel. ~rite INTER.NATIONAL ' 1• No. try ;toJkld a ,cleane;r 1 for air cond. Dlt. Will take _..... .. -~-w~ANTE==p:--,~U~SE=D-=B"'LA""CK=1 ren -· Boa 1ll'.10IO.,ll<ll1 PllOL l4tl ""' ..... _.GU Kirby WANT lo 1 .... for 2 wka, ---. ca• In trado °'finance prl-l --,D:--o=T:-::D"A:-:TS=u=N:- OR.iENTAL DINING ROOM FREE to pld home· flu.ff)', 15~· LARSON 1/0 .Mere m with oompl~ racing Aur 2-15, SaU'-'t ln "Lido '68 NIMROD· Dehtxe. alps vale party, CaU 546-C052 or OPEN DAii. y SET. CALL 5e-1034 pktyful kittens. C.all aft.er 'cruiati, I& bp G1W "oild ·cev I: ·hwy• trlr, $1300 clUll, 14'~l&'. f73..0TOT · KAW.ASHKAI. a.S.A •• Mal-6, atv, icebox, din thl. $600. 494-9173. 5, 531-1631 . 811 hull: '& tth'. 1100. BonAI.. TIM6U-IM36. "'. Sacbo -Molo C=i -Du-'"3-Ul6 ' . ....N,.;--• ~. ~.~,-=o--=D,_--su· NANDDAYS Maehlnery, Etc. IJ09i LOVELY Jdttenatree to aood ·ear eooler, u vo. Sl5. Baby SABOT No. 3350. Xlnt cooo. a..t Chamr ton catl. , ew atsun 18135 Beach Blvd. Woodworking Ma~h. See A make offer. llilB Ohms W.:y-, C.M. 645-0991.. homet:. Auortf.d ·color 1. pllypen $5. Pvt P ty • Qwer.dolly-tiller extt'Mlon • Salea, m:vtce part.: Trajter1, Utility 9450 1600 OHC, Pickup 'With camp. Huntlnpm Beach 544-9424 8/3 , ~,.,_, :'. oor loc:ko • oe&t ""'" !w U-SKIPPER Dix. 3> Fl ACTION CYCLE · '" Sal• price l>l9ll di•. PT. Siamese call le kittens, e 1964 ••• .~tifi1\N. 171 .HP rowing· racq•IMI' _. Sf15, PEARSON ALBERG Aux. e WANT to buy J utility (# 67798) Will take car tn M2-T181 or 5$6'42 ·I look ·SiamHe bu{~ in ,y.a •G1"11",f SIS radio, ha.It Anytlme,675-4798 S,..W.na Sloop, ''FVN·N · ru Yorktown, H.B. tni.iler. W/without llcepse ,irade:. \Y!ll finance prlva'te '86 1600 ROADSTtR1 coJOr, 645-&l37 .·."811 tank,-~,,,.,vy top, Nil 1~. SNIP!: frblp o/plywood, SUN" In real Yacllfuw style 536-32'l3 'l'Je.:&n 10.7 plates. Caµ,548-8090 party. Call 5461053 w , • ~ ET baby rata blk • wht. ~ t9P .. ~· :r:· Trailer, cover. Fine cood. ~1~~~d~:;allha~~ '70 KaWasaki TrtiJC~• 1 , 9500 494·9m. silver finish w/black vh'>' 8 C&n;YDn -Dr. '~kdays ~ w .. , . • ~fake otter. 613-1191 or METRO VAN tnt'erior 4 •peed. Dlr., CRU INEED·--jd-.----lo-nced--yd.-t'"'W<698"' . 8/1 19' SEA RAY 19·59 '13'7.5028 • . :ooa~A~~ tJ 0~3 250 Sidewlnde-f, Street or 19&.1. ,..T buUun camper. 151) will take trade-or ··wry lovable curly blk A low ble AKC' Busdt ,._,.__JUr ,160 ffp 'M • COLUMB~ 36: Well. 9q\ll.p, 64$.2%72 Dirt. Like neW! 9,00o miles ,,,., '<-.; ', .stove, •\nk, )ce box. ance . private party • , · ~ • · · ere. on · moonrv 1i4 interest ' ' left on wetT&n ... ·• Movln& ~., i .,. ' c1u1~tlng, Jl'.fttllin&, ' bcq. 5f6.4052 or ~. A;.. tan smaller breed doe. Hound-2%. yr ""' w/dos -~~r. ~t drive , •l:Ultl. 1/S interest avail 47 IT Motorsailer. Dt.Y or , •;· ' ··l'l.-HI ' XLNT cond. '61 DATSUN w ... n. 96 hp ~,pberd type, houR bric. boule ~ -., w/trder, .U. Xlnt. eond. ~--• . Wttkly cruise.-. Skin dlvi"" Muit Sell. '174-2"5!1. ~ ~ ~n~ lal · i.-.__ -•v ·-SUZUKI -Ylot ·* 545-.7245, * 'auto trans, Pert. Sacriflce1 ~!'1' .. ~-"''·" D 1 :· Blk 6 Wbt T--iPanJel 7 Leu tban SO {!1'1. utt._1,..Ullt J:W.e.N . l2& ncnh sail or flahinc or 18Uinc·or Just •v . --~-':T· • eon. . Si5-1l'TM ca; ~ •n mo, A" ,.,._ tra.lned. Le&v· '4:to;Plll!'W:'Cell, M+-2!a_,·_· .,,..J:, Xlnt ...!-..I Fun"!' S7S day 01 • S300 5 dljjon, Nf w turn' IJi&n&ls. t ,vw '&1.CA~ER. xlil't cond.1=~1318==·=,_,=.....,= TO ... -...... ,;· U'U ...,.... d k ·-·· • ru I "-at for trail -_.,..., H1.... •·1"-' ' • •• ! ' I Pop t•~. te'nt,· Ju... rack, '6111' DATSUN 1600 rdatr, -pod home-2 ·maJe •cats -·-a. 8U-Jll&4"·-:-~;~ .irt.' BOSTON WJµLER: 40 l-.15 * * (213} 377.7991 , 13 wee • .,..,. ertWla e. , ""'° . ... ~-· .... 1970 , .rt-• y .. L SWne1e 1 part Burmete -"A..,fCT . t 1' hp' E:vlNa'ODE SELEC -Limit 1 people. 545-4&59 aft RPM". 5'>:iOtO belie 4 gpecla'.I heater, new tires. J'Ml,W maroon paint, S top11 ..,.. attectiom.te mQ be !JHREE lovable ,llllfflrr. .. pup-Triic.J.Jtet .. llde ~ nna: • 1514' SNIPE Wfl'RLR 9PM• I 1910 ~ CB 450.-l " ·o KS' $1695. Call Ms.--0206. xlnt c0nd. $1100. 49J-.l.023 thift.tqre~ ar ltpf!Jte-Di•• need fam ily. Very " Id. eood. $950. ~i'AST, Ct:R.TfE'tCA'J'.ED 2'r TROJAN tly bridfe ~ brkl. 1 J-wtca .old. TR C · 8' FULL dlb·over camper, * 1968 DATSUN 2IXX) * ' l)-. 644-2283 -!fl 5'0-00:IO· 8/3 61'.>m9 64SM6 or 494-W& cruiler-loaded•lpo g !IS day Sacrltice at $925. 536-2'W TR.A_ ~'.·•LALLS tact, d~oonlinuod "'°"'I. A.P'. wh11, roll-bw-, A-1 cond Mj" na~ is Oarlie and 1 Plrrm'ed 91e:pbe'rd, ·2 yn ·17• CABIN cruiser w/2 35 pt ~ralaq Family boat USO. wk. IU&-9000 I 250 Honu. ,9'mt-cbopped ':"','Y' Complett. $895. '.869 West & lo. mi. $2200.•673'-7fi70 I"m looking for a home w/a wl 2 hp!_. mDt pups. HP Evirtrude elec'. stB.rt gJp • $2100 32• 1967 CHRIS Reblt e111, ... ~ Xlfll topd, SCOUTS 18th SL, .Cos~a Meaa. ' ,_ firl, I'm pt poodle 391.548Q .1/3 ......,~.,,..2.ooBi(Wbftl , 548-UM or 6704795 CJW;' * I. * ,~ * II. + . · '66 VW Camp.,, Rebll ,ENGLISH FORD ·a: Cocker ~1 }'!' ol<\ Salt 3 Black kitMm, low.Ne -A · 'tflt trlr, Sl095 or trade, 1 , ¢.AL .. 20· $2"5 1!'~: 548-24.14 ,J '69 . TRIUMPH BoMel • AVAhJ.Bt.E NOW motor il very clean. S199S -~pper St0-3435 .. &/3 sw te t , b"o·x ·tr a tne d: '3;1ti1 / ·... 6'4-rolS * _ ... ___ 650cc Xlftt cond, mull .u. IMMEDIAB D&Ll'VE1tY or make otr. 64:>-1145 f I Beaut--male pure-bred am ·~ .. · .-~ · 8.{~ 26' -.DQUBLE ender-diisel l4', B,\NSHEE: 1.Y.J'., rtd loaf Storat• to4I $l02$ ~·)~7, 1 Teat Drive Ont Today· At I TID· ,~ CJn\per. ~N~W ~G~ i..e;,i.re<1 dolde 'yra, Iowa KITTENS, t.,bD< ...,., .. ~ · e1t1ne; outricren, 'n •'w • flOll -mol-all: * * '66 SUZUl<I X-4.-. lfg•tom 'Vory aoodl~~lon.-$250 DltASl!IREDUCALLCEDY cb11dn:n. ;\11 obots. Nu<! ad co1ico tmWe, box· trained, ·· l'allio, Nowport "'°°'""· 191-1391 SAILllOAT OWNERS Cleon 6 dePenclabla .-ft • -- home w/~ yd. 1-ti3Ul68 6 wkB. 133--2199 '1/1 smo. ~T 12' FIBERGLASS SNOW. Launehlnc il dry storaa:e. 536-1267 1 M t TO CLEAll ""'493 91>ARL!NGtlpHtriped'klt-44' .HOUSE-BOAT' Fully BIRD Good eonc!ltlon. llm N•wport Bl"'1., NB **YAMAHA 100 *'* ' 0 ors · Dune ·~~Gitt tS25 LARGE SELECTION We .are a variety of colored ten!!. 54&-M4!---~ -·" Ill ~· tor live-a-board. Sell $350. Call 546-0301 673-6606 ... $.100 Harbor Area'• ·only authorii. '69 CUSTOM made Meyers 10 cH'OOSE FROM: neuteit cats Who ownen LARGE palm ~ ttte, )'OU qr -· trade. 636-4043 or Vic:tory 21 Moblle Homes 9200 875-1'17ft ed International Harvester ?t1anx Dune Buggy, metal • Theodore have left u11 stranded. We remove. 847-tm' 1/1 543-2434 $1300. 64$.0'lOT 1970 KAWASAKI 350 ce Dealer, flake btue, dlrl A: sand ROBINS FORD aft: well behaved I-lonely DOBERMAN • teqiale: tree 27' x I' WOODEN bull· needs Fiber&la.u !: Gelcoat AUTHORIZED 1treet acrambler: 15QO 'm!, 845 Baker, C.Af. 54(1.5915 ~ .. ·_,Y· .. ~~!, leeal_ 117·3 ~~.·t~ . iJ60 Harbor Blvd. 1-3 )'J'S. ~ or 836-4493 to iood home. 6*Q9S . 1/1 work. COod far chu&eter ·* * Repairs* * REPRESENTATIVES FOR. $S50. 6'fl-Q94 • (Next to 4-Mo1I Llquora) ';.;,unt };J::"{:~ ~'° Coata Meia 6f2..0010 FREE to lovirc home · shiny GERMAN Shepard. temaltt ifiN(;..~ _ Ffte .Estimatea 541-1153 Comeij, Continental, l!ara· * 1970 YAMAHA ·ENDURO BRAND NEW ,64 VW Chassla, compli!tel"!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!I bll<, med " & mo. do&. puppy 4 "'°"old !168-5451 &/l Crullor SI o • P • Columblt 22 mount; C.nmll, Star, Sher-175 c.c Lo" "' Xtraa 1970 G M C 31. TON I' Shott, m.lxed breed. Ex· -. Inboard, top ahape, $5000. aton M1.nor, '1•~, Dual ph. ~ 6, -MW692 , · , , • 14 , front.end w/bralces, steer. tremcly friendly le playful. 90Fl' 11'8.Y Ir whtte kitten • ll'f3..M52, 6154980 ttYe• 1 645-0'1tl7 Wkle, ~ ' Brm.d-ine, malttr cylinder, pedal.I 951-3131 1/31 needl ·home. 494-5700 , 1/31 CANOE, like new, ·al l MALIBU ootriuer, Good more. , '68jRONDA 450, XJnt cond. CAMPER TRUCK le cable1. Best offer. l---,-,-1-R_RA_R_l ___ I Help,Pluae.-OWnen Moved ~ wood, 16H ~-. flbet'lian. Coat $!50 M~t cond w/new tail, S300 91' CMP."'91 MoWle H•• ~ aell !: ~lal M&466S or 648-m'l Nl'lt'(lm't 1mporta Ltd. (Ir.. left.me behind. I'm a I~ CM. M&-3231. 7/11 .• ~ $240. 642-8SM Best offe~. &l6-8iMt l2MI N Harttt &:A ' ! ~,,.,.emJ, ~ ~· • DUNE BUGGY: .... '"---'• _, .. utbar- 1 . . ' . . '69 · HONDA C& ••• , 350 V8, 4 speed, power •leer. Flbe~••• ·~ d::-:-V.,, -' able male dog very friendly 3 GEM IN I k i l en & • e 8' COLUMBIA DINGHY , 531-81a5 -tn Id! heat. • r;• uo:u -. -· ad home wile~ )'d. 54~ an • Xlnt.cOhd. $1'15. . Pow9r ·crv1 .. ,. t020 Xlnt cond. K' H 198 Cant, 1• cu•tom ~OU np, . VW-1600. X't'RAS P,Ltj:S I SALES-SERVIa..P.umJ ""'~~.,..,==.a= "'~ _.. •c. ..... 642'1434 , er, H.D. •hockll, H.D. 962-0692 3100 W Cout H 534-6498 PETS and LIVISTOCK . .,..s.3Jl3 . 21' ~S CniiMr, tef vp 12331 Beach Blvd., G.G. . new duh.-u ..,.u. r . apiinp, dual mlrron, etep S2600 •.• • . NtwPort 8'l&eh W'I· ' . J(lTI';ENS! 3 colon: orariae. -]ii-FiBERdt.A$' boit· for dtvlna:/IJ)Ort fishlQs, 530-:m:I 1965 YAMAHA YDS 13 '250 bumper, 750xl6 split rim CORVAIR powel'M dun e 60-9605 540-J7&t l!lack.-whlt• & black & PtJ1; Gtntrol w!ndahleldA-.$1155. Swiln . .,.,. cltpth ne t TIIE MEADOWS CC A.okln&'i250. · tobe type tires. #(6431!1, buggy, '""' l•gal. re(I .. Aulborl%0d l'emrl Dea1or ""1te:Mi.n36 &/3 •oodl•o-..,.115 ·ISO; ~alt. 6 Indicator, SIS. baipnk, ruu "' -" · -$2499 · plalff. chrome whl1, nU l;;:=::::ii:==::;;;;;=::;I 'A9 1STOCATS Jor s .. ·meseJdttent·l18 :15_ rr. Nn_ ...... par bull COVIi, iott"' uti'a equtp. '6l AONDA • . 'construetlon.$950.646--1.934. FIAT n-,.--·R.epJace .... nt • eost o/l9000 ' .. (with ~hbc of Truck & , ANtoerats. Call e v•a 547-38.51 ot 547·9591 '10" beam plus tt•4lt, S31"'JO cAm. 962-491l · (Irvine) ukina$300 . •nn K!'na:orRoadcamper,Serlal ~OLES.A.LE Prices on .6t,1~-~------I 67S-3558 111 el.BY Miniature'Duticb B~ 962--U3tatt1Pi3" · -' # • '67 Triumph Bonn.viii• •5.nSJ. •63 & 64 vw chU1Ji• ... _ - - -• HALF Siamese -kltte,.. 13 I: $2 .:z::za::=: U FI' .CABIN ·Cruiatr, 185 Reterva~ al'e!' ~ btlnc mo 548-81116 aft. 7 pm 'U"'IVER.SITY Compltte, ready for dune ~·-It - ' 16 wka old Zll1 Laurel Pl . .,, <* 546-9966 * Sollbool• 9010 hp ""' """'" Marine. 'taken 'In &..., ·c;...,... pper. .n bum. 54>6519, 116>J78t • _"FTHIAINi N.B. 548-9''9 813 Ju•l pain"!' t hruout. tine•<l<""l'!-parli 'Ill YAMAIµ z;o, 'fDS3 OLDSMOBIUE - Colt ll20 CORONADO 30 "'.-roct ...,,. .all around. at14851 J""""1 lloff C&d-,..,.t E x eel. Cond. !!850 Harbor Blvd. lmporltcl Autos f600 I .. · i.rve white slamese cat A 1 WILL SACRIFlCE $2300. rounded by Or&l'lp Groves) ,Sacrifice $300. SU..2302 , v .. , i$tO ______ ,,_ __ 1 put bunn•" " pedipee SIAMESE.,...,..,"'~-W/SJ;p. 645'>110 Call afi. 7,:IO p.m, _49.\-39911. In !rvlne. l'I!' !ntonnatlon, '7D Yamaha 1-...,, Cotta,..,.-: ' \4°i AUSTIN HlALEY ._IEDLAND'Eft'l : penlan male c.at1 897-5480 2 ina.lew, 2 temalea. fl.O. -._. KITE .' LATE, 7U. SACRIFICE fol' Quick Sale! call 893-5730, 531-85n ur .. nlras, 21" front e~ 151 fo;d Plck..up rn DARLING Cockap>o puppy ~. \v'ITR>J);ER. NICE. · 7:1• Jlalttc c:tulaer, twtn 531-8105, $495. Aft 6 pm, 673-60EIS ',) t~~ ~1etely, Wtd 11711 llACH'lHWf. JtJ tree: to aood home . 5484944 Volv.011 . q¥mer~. * * '67YAMAJIA~•. new rebu'\1\ enr.·New '6·2 AUSTIN ~HIW·USID-SDY. ~m 7/.51 00.1 ll2S .• HOBµ; ~cat w/tratl.er, Bia MS-1501 COSTA MESA $%JO'· ,, brakes. New 6 .ply ~s. . - - - - -J.KCWeimaraner.fem,m~ 'pear.~w.Wlf,hextru. WANTED: 10' Gl~spar MODELCLOSl~T •642·2S40*~ Newpslnt.LeuuWi1 ~/bOO HEALEY •--..,_.----. have a tenced yard. M0-1631. DOBERMAN male • 2 yr old, *. 8'11·2211 * w/5hp motor.-· , . t new model mobll11 ,tioma i"RIUMPH &:JO i!C it.reel bift. on .ena-. M~ Sell, M~ng., ·~ire ~s. \1.U AM) ewa. 7/31 ob school, rd b1ood llt.eo KITE a,No. 121, 2.iaila, pxl Call 673-9023 are being atteftd at ftdllC. Shaf'P eond '415 ' . 774:2115. PriCed to tell! ' -K1ti.,;...,.m.am.,.1ona halt Good guatd .... 5674790 "'nclfllon, !550, ~· 'rno,,AN cabin ..W..r, od P•lces. All.,. Ht up bf 543-7™ -" · "·191-l&oO 161' FOAD F-100 pickup • $1299 g ._ 1~. all colon, HM1B:1S aft. 5. * ~ -. _,_.. ,•-pe, ___ _.v _.. beatttllul Gn!enleat Partr. :1 t"" N-N Clo __ __,_ ':ri1J.&" whttl1, VS, ovefttrlve, BUI J • ·-t _... •• lJellCI.~ • ..,.. mile troni ocean. lfll'7 vn.•v,_. ~ mu-"; '\:'4!ian. $1750. '114: 546-am; .' on!UI • or 83M493 ' roNFORMATlON claues • , 'CORONADO 25 1 .~ •• $29!15. M'-]Jil. Take Newport Fwy ar 'liar. , 750ce. Like new. S&S0.1 J?b· ~2169 eves. , . B. 1. ~· car Center CUTES hep: er":· olpd u~;~ t:" :..:::_~ K: . W/Sllp. &fS-0810 •SKIPJACK. J>'. ttt Blvd ao. to 19th, then 842-nu . . t ''63FordPlckup 283.1 Ha • C.M. 5IM'91 8to .•pon W _1_ ••l/l nola ........... __ Udo-U: No. 2'14 Exe.~ •ll,.UW-Btldre-N.wport Deb wnt ., 1750 "'1ttlu A¥e. '61 SUZUIQ X-6 ~ler. Good oond . $650 · '60 But Ere Sprite -r.~ G Bl d _. .-· • ; See s.t A Sun 10 to 6 " * mo745 • Colt& Mesa eu.m Gd cond, m"1Y x~. $31! • ~ S125. • 548-3513 ,,.,.., -...ruen rovtt v • Ji'AN Palm • 5' hifh. You ~ Hound, 9 mo, 1194 Auguala, CM . $109$ or btt ofr. 546-1258 • $37-1777 (O"n Sundlys) 19th ma!<, AKC. A beaul do(. Spud Ski '"" -GOLDEN W•at Mobile Home '520 'di& It haul. 1012 W. MUat .ell, ·mUt . offer. Sabot ,• Rac1.n1 Schock ·, .'¥f -x 51', 2 br, 2 N, JSA 650 11: n $SSOli',~C~o~m~Pe~-~"°~· ~· --~·~520~C~t~m~pe~"~·~:.-~ill-" St .. C.M. 64i-M66 -eV6 No.""' XI.NT CO/ID drpll, """'· mriau•led 'air --' C.ll !4"1"11• '69 FIAT 850 FREE Siam... ma!• & WEST-Rl&h"nd Wht r ... -Red W/tnlU" 613&<.1 * CLASSIC *' riond. ·Appllanc<• 'will In. HONDA CL-90 • 11110 ltrm. "A' COMP' L[J'C SELECJIOU " ' SPYDER ' , 1temaJe, )IOU pay &hats. rlers Wht Scottln champ Metcall No. 821 ~Ue~ BnuUful Otri• Craft ().)r).. dude dlthwt.M'. Awnlns, .Atao.1' h)'l"Clplue A J blkn. ,. ft' 494-2023 '1/SI aire,' lllOIMlW,.P:.' AK c ; ftndltlon 2 .u.. '450, ttnental. ti' lpl!f!dboat. Tn•· aklrttnp, crpttd 'Porch, 54MTn. • Of CAMPERS AJ Lime Gl'ffn, ndlo. better, BLACR 'l\)y Collle ShepbOril, ......_ •ma or 391-1564 or beat otttt. '*'180 bot!-pl-, ront T·Blrd ....... ohed-Adult ,,... .. i-.-fill,;;;UM_;;.;,Pll,;.,..~!!OMO~~;w;~~lStlS"' compt. Exhaust. CYPS :US) ~ !tmt\e, to aood PQQOIZS lolf£ -· Jil , 00!.UMBIA '"Hacl•I •nc-j hra 0.W """'·new ~=-r,'R"!~~':~ ~=: 1'1•Ml'l67S . • TOTAL DISCOUNT PRICES" $1599 bdnl• .. NW5U an · ar lD1 ,., 1m: miNllrin ~ ~=~ .~=i ~llh.:i::; ltnctnn. 19361. Brookhunt, ~'1«11 cRbit · " • nu1 JOftel r~~m1.:.;:·~:.:~:~::~: ~~~:.:. ::'~~ n.--. H:ivERSNCl~LS·' '~~::it;~~-=~~~~p = .. ~~i~~~s ' ~t~ga,;.=.i XC\SIUN-uto~. *"" Olompicnt.-'..,.; ... u. ~ -15' •CLASC•aid boot. 100 NewU' wit1o -... oll&hll> '"'"°"""CB* te KING ·OFTJU:ROAD • DLX:CAMPER '68 FIAT 124 ' -pet • ....-a doc. Gld. i• . '' " " - ' RACING SA&OT t ' ·z...~t~ !."':: f:;~~.:n:itr WlxOM l'A!UNG llllO : ~ScGVmER • g~¥"'KINo ' 1 w ..... Air condlUonlorr. --· ~ 8/3 ' C&ll 18W"'-)Qnt ........ "150. •~fo c:rptd· 2 ' ..;.... .... ,,: 1-. P!'l<e l«ioo-!7000. RecluC. • -• • CHASSIS MOUNTS. CAMPERS (VWW 6411 Pl'lctd to ·"'11 MllTE c:o.t.1 ff'-ok! !amOlt, ~:~, PuPRiea; ""!li-;: LiblJ'i!~: No, 192. w I hwy ~ltr, •'many ,;_ c"1 !«cl•.,,,_ $40l)0.$5000. ' H10D~ de,!rt !.,~JI , . $875 !Ull2:J9~ • & blue .,.., 1 INf1I .,... ... .... J>tJ. blOOdltnt • -~. ,..m ottft'I rD-4122 ttlllOriea, Stt to •pprtel9te. BAY HARIOR m sc. ~ na-au. !,;&I , NIW u ont1 L . _ ~171 -113 1!11. -,. 1111.-llJt . 11195. ~I . 1425 Bak<f St., C.... MtM 646-<I024 1'\11.1.> CUOVIR CAM,UI , B. J. Sc>orto Car C.ot<r I AD0R.ABLE malt puppet SCH N A. U IE Jt S, min. , UQO 14 'No. il&fO w/trlr 16' DONZl1 2:25 hp J/O, JUJt SolilJ) Or lbrbot •nd San , ';It '68 YAMAijA }oq ~ * PROM , • 2833 Haitlor, C.flf. 5t!M'tl ·-rat • ....,..,._ &46-:llCI l/S '!em/male. I ~· AKC. X!nt ....-.!, ..... rla ., ...... traU.., A""""-Vary Dt.ao Fl'Wf. !IJ•> $4f>.9170 Dirt blk•. Good --EMPIRE CAMP.ER -~·.· ~ 'II& "IAT 850 SpJdor, J0.000 6 BL.ACK/whM• pet ratt. C..U .. 540-216' • ~·.Me-~ !" 6t6..-a 1llarp ¥4 tut, W..1680 t BR. untum 10X55 dbl., t!f. * ei67·9'5'f * ~ qll'•. TonneJu cover. thnn &41-.1219 • II! O£RMAN -· ,._, MJ!ST oOU, *t ..... £ IC!te 14' CLASSP~ald boa~ 15 1•n'4o, -• 8'> !!0-16. '88 HONOA 'IO W\~ lljllltr .So. Col, Dlocount Center 'whla. am/Im, Slebn> m•~ LOVABU: ""I ltmUt iliti<n 2 moo..Olcl , ' NO. Ill, -' "°"'' Xlnt HP ~I lee ,,.,,..., 214G.Oout Hwy, H8-l!<f ~ lalrt"I• X1!tl .cpnd· IOIJ N. Htrbor. $.A. e 139-1772 Or. $1400/bat oil", Pvt pty W-llll • _ -AIS $15 • * . .. -..n·a-.$CB.,fll&.411J. ,. tralltt -al Ip. aM all. !•00 ,.._ llDO_,._.U3 -~ . FREE TO :YOU . FERRARI • ·.DAILY PR.OT "F'~"' July JI, 197~ tiUldl'OlllTloti TRiHSllOiTATICilt: rRAHSPORTATIOH -TRAHSPOllTATIOH. -TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTAT!OJll TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TR_ANSPORTATIOll - !!0±1,.... A--lmportocl C.rs -lmporiocl Csrs HIO lmpomd Autos HGO lmportocl Csrs HIO lmportocl Csrt H10 1 PIAT MERCEDES BINZ MG TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN '-''41 Autos HOO .;;lm'-'po""-rted';.;;,.:.A;;:u;;:tos:.;;__9600~ ;mportocl Autos - IN COSTA MESA MG VOLKSWAGEN -/ ·1910 1'1AT ll4 Spydf:r -::.:::::=::==::,1 --------~p'Sd ."'°'~' ~ ...........,.. .... IN. '70 TOYOTA'S 1---,-6-7_VW ___ J.969Rad. SQUAREck~ AblulO. ''6 VW FASTBACK '69 VW . "'°" ''"'"· Prie«I ., • ..._ -· uo ~-,.. " JO. J..u&. ra • ~ ue. Radio (SJ...Z.624 ). tor quick aaJe • $1600. --:;A-;~lt .. ~.. lo •IOck.lmmom.te~. s\"::!fk New'":;:";w-'"'' $1111 .~:! -Fully <quip .... ••mis AMJFM • I must aeU. ()ayl: 714 : JAGUAR ''FRI .. ' • _. _ _ r ........ D """°· .... """"' '" Convert1b e 0«.2S12: .. ,., m: c1-<367 WLAnVln _ llK'-11: c:ond. lD,00? ~ on new Orange with brand new pals. H b U W \iW HIAD"'UAltTllS Nl!W MIDGET $1995 .._,,_,...,._ Lio. UEP<6< ley "'l> &1>rt1Xfnowe"""°; -Ir OUI' w.n-. ,~'25.w~:.:a.,~;~ ... 1=====---1 Lo19UN Beech $1695. Uc OYJ798 .., ~ ..... Tbaonlyauthadmd.J'AGUAR . 1IPll NACMu••~r:r.;. ~ 900 So. Cit: Highway t other tquo1re'backs . $ti99 l87ll BEAOI e~ 142-4435 Call: 833-2M7 -1n ........ -MmO NIW· .._y, 494-7~3 * ~100 to <hoots from, SON -~.,=,.vw= .. -,-.-a-e.-,-. - ....... o.m.-............. 1 1-::~;:;;;:~:;;;~ CHICK IYERSON CHICK IYER HUNTil!GTO« BEACH "'"' '°""· $895. SALES --:M::E::T::R::o:-:v:::A::N::---i~.~68~M~G~C!!:!.!l!G!!!T;t! ITIOIYJOIT,IAJ YW 5._3001 '!!. "., 67 '67 vw BUS '" V: ~~~,:, 100» SERVICE 19i1 "4·T built!n camper. • --54 PARTS Stove, aink. ice box. W"!tt wheeb:: radial tires, 1970 TOYOTA. WAGON • 9-303! Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 7 Pass. Just like brand new. ere-t! Cood til'l"s. radio. BAUER carpeting. panelling, bed. AM/FM radilo, .6 ~I .. aut~ 6ln Demo $1117 1970 ~~~VD. COSTA ~ . Uc. USL 699. new se4ta $475. s.i8-3ll3 BUICK Xl"I rood. m~tic lranlmiuu•i. low I OTHER DEMOS • '68 vw sedan, chrome $2099 'GS GHIA. 54.ooo "'""· Good * i:•i: ""'= * miles, Lie. XSS m_ "'T BIG SAVINGS '67 VW. ~I. radkl. Good . M'~-•· t . condition. MAKE OFFER! -'~ $2 "' run&, ... ,..,,m 1 r ~ 5 ' CHICK IYERSON 499 DEAN LEWIS '°""""'"· $1"'5. """""'· '""'""' '""'"'· 673-<747 or 542-1161 CHICK IVERSON 968-'1813 ch""" Take o v" YW '69 SQBK,litebl".rullyauto. 1966 Harbor, CJI. 646-9303 '63 J\.fICRO BUS: Red&: wht payments. Ste at 1825 W. ""'--' 12,000 mi's, U~ warranty, VW MS-3031 """'' 66 er 67 l I VOLKSWAGEN ' I '67 JAGUAR Cl'E. KG SaJes.-. ....... lmmediate DrliMJ'. new eng I: clutch. Immac. Balboa Blvd. alter S pm. U70 HARBOR BLVD. radio, XL.NT OONO. $2350. SG:ml Ext. 68 or 67 BIIL MAXEY llJOO °' make olr. 5.lli-0074 ... VW 2 d<. "'w yeUow COSTA MESA 833-l057 1970 HARBOR BLVD. '66 VW bus. rebU enj;, paint, ma.is &. headers. VW Bus -Brand nu eng I \\'ire wheels. AM/FM radio. lXDA 29.JI All - COSTA MESA ITIOIYIOITIAJ AM*/~~11~7 *Pty MU&l sell or will trade for 16], VW BUG l. trans, nu tires, xlnt cond, '65 MGB • - -..._....,_.. older VW + cash. 5f5.6.)l9 Red beauty. ~nt condi. must 11ell. $800. M6-Q619 VOLKSWAGEN V\V '61 Bug, @-13 Stmperlt tn, Mackafe map, AM/FM, wood trim I: wf'll. Air litta, toe lamp. Xlnt l'Ot'ld, Pvt Pt)'. 968-2138. '" vw RADIO, wlliie side walls, heater. mus-t tee to A9' preciale. $620. Ha r b or A1nerican 1969 Harbor Blvd. 646-0261 '64 VW BUG $499 100~ lin. available 0 .A.C. IONV-214) dlr. 842-1416 * "60 VW.CUSTOP.f INT. * Xlnt mech. cond. LIKE NEW! $550 or bit olr. 548.087> '61 VW Xlnt cond. NEW PAINT $500 642.fi678 afl 5:30 '65 VW Bus. sunroof, 1600 eng. $1415. * 537-lli? * new _l~1'lll[IL11 I _111 1l fl ll i I', 1•t IEACH BLVD. 1960 vw or 962-1782 tion. New valve ·jo~, ama11 Bill Jones ~te~ ~;. eokr, Hunt. Be.ch 1474555 _ New Reblt EJV!~ '69 vw camper, pop-up tent, down will tin. Pvt. Pty, dlr.11~m~po~rt~edi;;i;A~uta~s-~9600~~1miiiiiportocliiiii~~/j.~u,_~--iiiij•I :~ B. J. Sports Car c.enttr """'"Sl 499 1111111 N. ot(bmll:U.,..a11 Bdl S450 675-3518 am/fm 23,000 mi, xlnt cond. can Phil aft la AM 540.3100 : '8ll -' C.M. -'67 ~-rona NEW vw BUG $3200 o• be•t. 497-1061 or 491-1029. I $2995 1 'il JAGUAR XK-140 Bill Jones ""9 "r.ood Lil' Car" 62 Volks .67 VW -Great shape! Near- ; ro.dsttt, restcra&n nearly 3.100 w. Out RW7. f(.E. B. J. Sports Car Center;. Red -FubYtactory equipped. $55.89 pr. month Sedan. Ru~ good. $600 new brake& & tires. Best NEW 1970 ; c.o mp I et e, mechanically ~thorfsed MG ~'164 "833 Hartior, C.M. 54().4481 CVLK921) Will take car in e 645-0236 e om>r. 1164-6758 ( good. 847-ascB anytime MG'B trade or finance private par. $147.71 down Includes Fl ATS : •59 JAGUAR Marte IX, full '64 MGB ty. Call for appointment, tax & Lie, ! . p<l'We1', auto, -P trays, Wire wheels. CHCC-179> 1---·-----1 MS.4052 or 494-9773. dlr. VW LEASING 9600 lmporlocl Autos -Imported Autos ; XJnt -, 1oo1~ too» $1299 '65 MGB Roadster '68 TOYOTA CORONA AT I like •67 Rollo. $12)1). S.11-3'i6 Bill Jones Uke New! Ownod by little CHICK IYERSON "62 XKE Roadster. R/HL, B. J. Sport.s Car Center old school teacher from La. Sedan dlr automatic low VW ' Xlnt mech. cond. Nu pain 2833 Hartlor, C.M. 54M491 guna Beach. Black leath!l' mile~ radio heater (WX'J'. 1970 HARBOR BLVD.· : .moo. 968-2393, 517-33211 '59 MGA lntmor. Tonnea" "'""'· 087) Tak. older"" ior ~ COSTA MESA dlwit'etion.wbeeT-~:.. ex~t ~~ will !in pvt pty. CaU Pbll * '67 BUG: ,KARMANN GHIA . di -~ _,, -~ 10 XI I--· b-'·-M Convertible, 3 speed, !• will ti Pvt. Pb' dlr CaJI au am 540-3100. n ""'"'•new '"""''· ust ', ~67-KARMANN----G-bla-, -xl-nt clean ~· COXY819) Will Jim al.~ 10 AM' 49f.'15o3 ot 'ff TOYOTA sell ruso. ~~7891 mm take car in trade m-finance 54l).3100. COROLLA WAGON '62 VW Conv. Rebll eni:. ~~·~~·alt ,: private ~. can 546-4052 Logg•ge --· ,._, o:-· Briaht ydlow, $800. "~: COSTA MESA HONDA s:. 68 to Choose From All Serviced & Re•dy for lmmedi•f• Delivery 850 Spiders & Racers Choice of Color & EqulprMnt 32 to Choose From I' ~ ...,.. _.., · or 49f.9'l'13. 1969 MGB-GT, B.R.G. ·-• """ ..,.., Call 833-(1158 ' 133-""6 .::..==:.--~--1 AMIFM wire wheel.a trn-offer, xlnt. cond. Alt. 6 · : '63 MG Midget. -~nt cond, macula~. $2!llO or ~t o1-675-8917. ·~1395~, R&H, xlnt. cond. 1! MD.CEDES BENZ :: d:i ;:;;: t!meri: fer. 5'5-4.15' alter 1 pm. MUST sell! . 1969 ~a ' •67 MERCEDES 200 diesel cowr. $700. 540-4857 '69 ·MGB-Yellow, FM radio, Sprinter • like new-still --=~;.-=~c--'=-,,,· c-1 mint cond. Sacrifice $2695. wrapped. RIH, shag crpts. 4 dr. Xlnt lhape, new tirH. 1953 MC.TD. N~ eng, tires, ** 496-4661 c1eys only $1599. M&-1514 Call SJG.4776 '69 VW SEDAN Will fix dent. $500, a: take top,lldecurtams&:interlor.1=~-'--~,.-;~,.,,..~1-=========I over pymta. d.1)1: 545-71581 CLEAN. $1300 at belt ofter. '61 Conwrtlble., British Rae. Radio ,r,; !lUnroof lY00-7231. i ext 202/ eves .it l. &IW)&2 Jeny •••••. 646-0958 ing Green. See to appreciate TRIUMPH !'I zns-1958 a..ie Coup e. 1959 MGA convertible $1500.,. f I rm. N 0 W! ! ! _.. ,_,,.....,1 Call 673-0396 after 6. I ~496-:;;;15~22~Call~~an:':;y~tl~me~-==-=l;;:-;;;:;::-;i:;;:;:-:<;;;;;;: ' Show CU' \.'UllUo ""' ..... -., • I• 1959 TR-3, XLNT CQND. ~ pvt pty. 66-5211.. 5ll Narcill\ll, CdM . ... m SEDAN lllSO idc m $895 Ol'EL PRICED TO SELt., Pmect conditkin. Sacrifice. 64U71S ....... ...,, MUI! s.n. 49'-9'7'8 '67 oML KADm =;:;;===="'==~"======9900='12 dr .• • ....._ rwm "'1l ;U;socl;;;;C.;;;;;;'";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;9900;;;;;;;;;;U;;;socl;;;;;C;;;•rs;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:,I Priced .to $699 SALE Of OlfTSTANDIHG LA TE· MOOR PONTIACS 1969 GTO RMio, M•tw, ,.~ ttffrillt, fachNy •ir uoMitio..H & 'hlrH lly.ir•-tlc. ( YPU· ICM!. $2995 • 1969 FIREBIRD Bill Jont'S B. J . Spcrts Car Center 2833 Harbor. C.M. 541J.4491 New int, new reg grttn p&int. 4!M-5255 eves-. '&t Triumph Spitfire. Xlnt cond, Must sell MakeoUer~ $1697 Harbour V.W. 18711 BEA.Qt BL. 842443.'.i InJNTINGTON BEAOI 40 MIUS PER GAUON • Front Dhc lrabo • Foll Carpttl111 e .75 MP'll e 4 Sptt4 TniM. ONLY $1t26260 (#007496) . I. this wHkencl Also 124 Sports Coupe & Spiders L•rge Selection Choice of Colors Equipped As You Want ISER00117152) low as lOO's more for your trade in, forei9n or do- mestic. T•ke th•t short money uvlng drive to cool, smog frH COSTA MESA. ES •l•tlltlfu1 "-"'•,. 9t1011 I •i11yl l11t.rior, ..... ..+..~ tf1tMmi11i•11 I Pow•r rlttri~ • CONNELL CHEVROLET'S ' I . 1XltS·ff4)i ,79~ ., I -.;' ' " 1969 OJD 1 Door henlhip. R•tlio, IM•t._r, powar 1t•1ri1t91, power ili,I 'lirit" 'I 4-1(.ad ha111. 12,000 1nilo1 & b1laKo 9' fact.rt w1n 111ty0 .1l714°AFXI S2895 1969 GTO 1 D"' hanltop, llatlio, It.afar, p-or 1turi119, factory° air, 1tow cir "!"'lrra11ty, s,.rHiillfl '94 . 11,000 m!IM.I IM0671 $3295 1968 VENTURA f Deor haniltop. Factory air, pewar ... i11• tlaw1, radio, ho1ttr, power 1lotri11t & .. r1k11. A b1t11lif11I aqua oltt C, Ctl with ft clo!'l' warranty. I IHJ11) $2695 1969 BONNEVILLE 2 Dior hardtop. E1pra110 ~ow11 with full ,owar & .. li ck "'i11yl fop. Comp111y o.:ac• uti•t car witti S,000 111ilt1, 11073•51 $3495 1970 LE MANS 2 Doer 1pert hardtop. Ftclory air, .. lack •i~I top ••t r I 1p11kli"t ivory, Full w,,. r111ty, •uc • .cer wiftl l,500 1111.1 11229 I >: $3677 1970 GTO. Ch.Me fre111 TWO. F1c.t, eit i viw,I t,,_ "127-765) $3995 1970 GRAND PRIX S+.reo #eille, .,;,.yJ t•jll. pewer wi,.Jowt i ., •11ly 4,000 1111, 011 thi1 11tc1ption1I c.11, 1017-IEOJ $4895 1968 BONNEVILLE C~11p• w1tlt 1p1rklin9 t•ltl l11t1rior 1114 M1t-chl1t9 •i!l'YI l11t.rlor, •It colldltio1ti119, tvrlM h,..lr11111tic, I powor. IWX&.6 21 ) $2795 1969 GRAND PRIX Sj11•C.lol Rell.,. 9r1111 with llflViH l.l1ck leet+ier l11t1rlor. Show c.1r o,;9f111Uy 11lt• ln9 for 16,100. AM-F M 1t1r10, r1llye wh11l1, 9t0wt• wi,,..jew1, etc. l1l1nc1 Mfr. w1rr111ty ••• 1111 fllW b, VI, !I0\1.1701 $4295 1969 FIREBIRD i::.11v1rt. l111t. Mtted., RM/lleck 'foll' • i11 .. ,1 .... Seit! fll W ...... JIO v.1, t i• ceM .. 1NWM •rnri11t, lvrbo h,..r11111lie. ll.&.H.021 ~ $2995 rM;jROY CARVER ~ROLLS -ROYCE 2925 HARJ!OR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA ~6..C.C44 '60 PORSCHE Ca.broil&, 1600 l&lper, with bard top. N"!W engine, new clutch, new tires, new J)ll1M. AM/FM, just like new, can be teen at • Harbor Blvd., or phone 64"'~1982, 9am to 6pm '66 PORSCHE 912, !Hpeed. chrm whls, ~ radi:all, hn· mac. thruoot. Pvt pty $3850 firm. 64G-J040 $49JO for '69 Porsche 912. Xlnt cond ., k> ml. European purchased without dealer. Save to )'OU! 833-24(1 '60 PORSCHE, xlnt cond. Best offer. C&ll S44""18 161 Porsche 1600 Sl.895 Or Beet Offer 6'15-1323 Porsdle 911E. 1969 Must d, Best offer Pvt pty, 213/4JS.002.1 '67 Pon!che 911. S-spd Weben, Xhrt cond. * 833-1331. * pORSCHE Speedster, COUl'S Pittllis. $3200. 962-1563 eves. ROLLS ROYCE ROUS Royce 1949 Silver Wraith Hooper aluminum body itedan. Blk paint, burl "'alnut inlerK>r, tan leather uphols. Superb condl $5995. 675-1810 SUNBEAM -----'67 SUNBEAM Radio, l~a ler, ll\l'f'omatic trans. (VTL 302J Priced lo ... , $799 8111 Jonr~ B. ,T. Sports Car Ccnf('r 28l.1 ~larbor, C.M. ~91 '62 ALPINE -2 '°"'' good tire&. $2;11). 675-7216 aft 7:3G; 540-7740 e:c. 42 dayw • TOYOTA 'M CORONA mupe .. vtrc)ll to,, 1tandard tnlnl. Xlnt cond. PY1 pcy, S128S 833-1463. 1969 TOYOTA Coron& • 2-dr, ~nyl lOp, 4 1pd. Qiod eond. $1475. 846-4283 • 1961 TOYOT' A 4-dr !ff!dan $1350. Call li73-ti674 Cdl\.t CLEAN • SWEEP CLEARANCE SALE! ~ ' AL~ NEW 11970 CHEVROLETS ..IOHM CONNIU ''NO GIVEAWA'fS NO GIMMICKS" Impalas -Comoros -Chevrolet W119ons -El Gaminos -Trucks Demonstrators and Executive Cors. • , • Jv1t 22 Y 01rs of HoM1t De1Hn9, S1Uin9 Chevrolt h. DISCOUNTS GALORE -SAVE SAYE -SAYE -SAYE! BRAND NEW Coupe, tinted glass, ev•p. emission con- trol, AM.push button radio, citrus 9reen with green vinyl in- terior. Stock •105-4 I 530202 I, BRAND NEW 1970 NOVA 2 DOOR COUPE !~!:~ .~:::;',;,·~;; '~~~;: $2 5 62 ev1p. emission control, white wall tir es, l1r9e · FULL wheel covers . I l60TI 17 -'PRICE 3624). FOR RENT 26 ft. Horizon -Motor Home Air Conditioned A"d Fully Sslf Contslnocl, At Popul•r Pric•s. Phone Immediately For Re•rvatlona. Roger Miller~ 546-1200 ' • ·---- 1970 CAMARO FULL PRICE BRAND NEW 1970 FULL SIZED CHEVROLET WAGON ~::~,~ 91::~.'."'b:m~:.~::: $ 3 2 98 power steering, 250 V8 engine, A~ r•dio, vinyl in. FULL terior. 1907) 11117161. . PRICE CHEVY BLAZERS· 1971 VANS CARRYALLS-4 ,WHEEL DRIVES Now For lmmedl•te Delivery At Connell Chevrolet, Call Ron Kr•nt, Truck Department. -. .. _ -- . ' .... .,. .. ...--~-.,--.·-·---or-\,...'""''"" "",,.-r--r; ••.• ,..~··+-.----·~· --~·~· •.•-" ................. ..,..,.,, .......... ,.,..,.... __________ _ TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION Tll.ANSPORTATION •. TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSl'ORTATION Imported Autos -I"''°"" .\ulOI HOO Imported ~ · HOO Anti.-, ci.111ct HIS Ama w......i '100 UIM C.ort 9'IO Uaod Cori -·--= --·-------"-" -·;c..;;=---= VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWActEN VOLKSWActlN .• 10lUl Coupe, <bury IMPORTS WANTED CADILLAC TATION DAILY I'll.OT TRAN P R ~U"'Md=.C.;.o"'rs.._ __ ..;"°'.:.:.:: Uaod Cort CON11NINTAL DODctl - • '67 YW --------1 bo<t;r. '5.l Mere. ens .. not Ora..-Countlel Large Selection ~~'.~2,~.;.:. BILL™~OTA * ,.., lmrnodlot. '61 Chev Non II '& CXltl'J'll<ENTAL. toll '63 DODGE Dute;. Of VW Ca -.. ,..,. -e-..s. ,........ Sele * 2 doo llk .._:_., , 1_ tea.tins, ad cond. nf'W tlrn. \'ertlble. JVH. A 1110 . ''5 VW S!'DAN Ra~· &tnroof (FNC 445) .• $987 Harbour V.W. 1sn1 BEACI BL. 842-4435 1-IUNTINCTON BEACll '63 VW IUCJ MECHANIC SPECIAL Lie, OKC-612 $1" CHICK IVERSON vw S9UARE IACK Lla;ht bliJe, blaclc tnter1or. AM/FM radio, sold new A: RrVlced by UI, 100% fUll'- anlee, partJ &-labor. 30 days or 4.000 miles. Lie. USP 219. $1699 CHICK IVERSON vw 549-Xl31 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '61 VW SEDAN Auto.. stick mill & radio. !XDC61.Ll. ••tn, -~-~-~==,...,.,....,,...--1 R. n.:i:'. ~~kr-Ifft CADILLAC PARTS r. ' ---· -· ""'1">· l*IO. ~7 S.t Ftawi.. ... unu .. all y Yaa ll'ombfl W'T PLYYOUTl:I f, dr Sedan. Air condltloner XEY 931. only dean. T•cbtt drtven. $495. • r· • • ,... c:i-1c. Ideal tor -Ttwmtaa1oo $1099 liESi v-·· Exc"t 1118. •9<-te:!t. ·-· New & Used ...-. RwlO ...n. mo New Cora -Bnlce• CHICK IVERSON Full aqu1p. ~ Oply "'"":-cc.n..=-,-. ..,.1u1~, -,....~. lmrnodlot. Doll-y Jinn. ·-Attention G.l.'1 Drum• vw ST.000 mu.. -· s..I57' a~. -ml. $1100 otr CHICK IVIRSON WOODY. WAGON: -Pon-lladlator wlndohleld 1tlck<r. Pr 1'1>'· VW • tlac. Drlvlue Oood. a..1 ol· Thlnldhr ol buy!"" an aut.. Front and Rear Bumpen !l4J!lll Ext. 86 or 6! COIVA• .,,_..1' · '' ftr. M&-M50. Cbli& Me•. mobile after retumina: from Radio 19TO HARBOR BLVD. '63 DODGE Dart GT, Mr 5&3031 rxt. es or· 6T M · ~~~~-·~:1.~~ to~~~ Duhboard Equipment . COST~ MESA ·ea O:irvair soo. Hdtp. Xlnt cond. seat onv. l.9TO HARBOR BLVD Ra. Cars, llocl1 "20 ...................... -P.lo:JIU . ... .......... .,....,1u1a_ *·MAKE 01"F1R * .67 Ma-·· 211r"""· uoe... .. 5'6-1782 .. ___ COST __ .. _MES __ 4 __ • 750 cc Formula race car for • job well doqe. Let ua 1212 South Roa st lllftl W.™3 • 1963 oo"oo"'E.-"'-=• VOLVO • tnler. belp aelect )'OIJl' new carr or Santa. Ana "Bucket 1eab automatic, Dlr., 1983 Monia. Automatic. ftCOn-6. atlck, rum aood. 61S-5S8f uaed. autolnobtle. can ror Qo ,SG.3.1» After 5 p.m. power ateertnr. alr cond. 1 owner. First clul ape: 1 -'=$!0=. 5'0-34'3====== I -~ pointment, 5'6-«m or '85 CALAIS Coupe, blk. Jan. One owner CTPJ' 681) wiD 67S-190l I' ~ - -A~ Wonteol t700 '94-9773. dau .t•P F=•• .,..._ Fact. tUe ""da or l!nance pri. ''1 Corvolr $2ro FORD 'Y'oc" .. INv'ft! WCIAPAYSTHOP ..... ~. all pwr, cnllM vale-· Call -.. ""w/wh! .. Int. tc-™O -------V' UMd C•r1 HOO coritrol. Mint condition. fM.9713. • --FORD 6 eyl. enstne with .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 '19111 ..... -'62 CHEVY Se~·· s21 coiv1111 yw. _e::'.".Plt""' .. buut CREDIT PROBLIMS? Automatlc. Radio A heater. .,ooo. ~. ..,, _, MUST SELL 2 ...... ""'·Mak•"""' '!II CORVtTI'!:. ........... ~·~-~~--~~-· "FRlmLANDER" w. co,,, con1..... r:· ..... ~roRI> ···-~ M9-30l1 Ext. 66 or 67 $1576 for med can Ir trudm ;Jttat C F FlawlKI '65 Black C6d Ox\-548-4987 attrr 4, A&k for bl.lanced blue printed q. ·l>Q , ......,.. •"""• ~ ... ......, '" Up ~ ~---·-·-----~ ··~ I 1970 HARBOR BLVD. call ua for tree a&ttmate, vert. New tires, tull lratbtt, Ron. ""' ""'..un cam, _,..by _., .,.. ..... .,. .. u.u. .... n • COSl'A MESA 1 dr. Demo, GROlH Nlt."llllftl rT Blue Chip Am S.IH """ ot soodle~ on1y $lSliO. "' CHEVY Mandello, ..,...,'-!, CnJc 'cw SlS. Ind ..... trana. ,63 vw H b * $2750 * ""'IAULLI 2145 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Call 5'S-Ii16. , ... _ '""''""'" map, blue atrffk nctrw ~-attet1-. at ew1. V W '42-'700 * l4Mm ... SEDAN .. Viii "" SA~CRIFI .. -~~· ............ va.1 .. "'"'"" • lJt!O 1'0°" "" ·. -Low mllrs on rebuilt rfl&ine, ar our . . .. .,. •ac:M tMWY • ., AU: fir Sllll u ....... -e .im-~ OOI) ·~ nrw clulch, oew brake1, NIW.UUD-SMY. lG11 Bw::b ~-maculate! Pwr, 1t~. air. ':..:n bt1t ofter aft 1:00. ::.:.. tell fol' $ 3 5 O O • fee to~ · . ""'"'· P'rlecl oondltloo. Can l87ll BEACH BL. "2-44.15 --.....-..-. H--CREDIT A . ,...,,.,_ -mi. 673-3245 ... srtN-. be 11Mn at 2089 Harbor . ~ PROBLEM? =:::::::;:.:,,::;::::::=:::.,,:::=;;:I •gs IMPALA PIS, R/H Gcod urv\Y • YeUow '96 l'ORI> !!00-&utDmatlc. new Blvd , •• phone 64>1982, HUNTINC'roN BEAQl '63 VOLVO MT-lll87 KI 9-3331 CAMARO cond. STOO ... a..v.lle conv. l-uthacl<d._ 396-•"""'· 4 U-. ....... , llHda pa.Int. !lam to 6pm TOP DOWR NEED A CAR7 P/S RH od $12IXI "" • l'a<!lala, "'511, MT-MU WANTED '67 vw CAMPER P1eoo-s eai• Mana•" . ., CAMARO Rally s ..... 642-3478, ~f;.M"" . . ~:.r\e0f ... ~1'f',;: "'""""·511"".,"'F...i~=o-·R""""""'BE,.._,."""'-=-1 I'll ...... top dona~ for _,,,r Pop foJ1"1i!,i1.111per fully eq~tp. Radio, beater, .C·ipeed O'll'er-for fitS.0466 xlnt cond stick ps r/h '62 IMPALA i dr HT tact Owner flTS-1285 _,., ~ ... VOLKS~WAGEN lod "~:.. peel_ hn~~-late co~ltion. drlw. Red ln color. rFIM CLEAN USED CARS 1-========I ' ' ' ' ' ' . 642-&HO after T PM ' ~-......., 100% f1nanc1ng available. 39)) BUICK $l500. 644--043T air, auto, 327 eng nds mme ''3 CORVE1TE ~rt-tood and uk for Ron P1nchot. O.A.C dlr. (OSH-4S9J See Georae Ray '69 CAMARO V-8, 18.000 mi, work. $250/bnt. 982-1712 ot cond. Wpd. C..U. aftrr &, '68 TORINO OT eonvt. *- 549-3031 Ext, 66-67. 673--0900. S42-l416 $1399 THEODORE or!r owner like new $2395 54&-6519 m.60'18 CI. V-8, J)llf)b, Air. Mutt ' SQUAREBACK. 17 ODO .~==-~~-~ Bill Jonea ROBINS FORD '62 ELECTRA 220· L;ahl blue or be1t. ~ · MllJTARY • beln& """''· ', ee!I • mlloo -· 6G-1911 69 ' '67 VW-Blue r/h, interior w/ be!~ vinyl top. New '61 Chrvy JmpalL $450/ CLEAN 68 Vettt 471 Qin. TUrn thole Wbitt EllpMnll mi, btlce. radio. Warranty! I exterior &: ~ll&' All in toP 8. J. Spotts Car Center 2oa> Harbor Blvd. tlre1, new paint, new uphoL CHEVROLET best oUer. Xlnt con d. wrtlble, AM·l'M. Must Sell! into cub tbru & DI.lb PU6t $I950. 642-27"'a.1 cond. Must ~ kl-ap-2833 Hatbor, C.M. SfO..M.91 C.olta Meaa Rebuilt q. $600. Must -~2996 ~000 rnl. 5.W-8159 Dlme-4.~ ldll PlWI' WANT AD! 642-56711 proclate $1395. 6n-251' VOLVO BUYERS 6'l-OOlO 1-=~=~=~-to approcla"'t IM>-1'62 'ti5 CHEVELLE. Deluxe f 1969 EL CAMINO.Man>0n, Imported Autos -lmportod A-HOO Imported Autos -lmpertOd A-HOO Before yoo •Im any purehue WE PAY CASH '86 SKYLARK G.S., p/•, plb, .U. 6 cyl. Power ......... V8, l<pd, p/1, IDMeau =::==============~ t;~-------~-;;;;.iiiii~iiii~i'" I order, for a new or ti8ed -auto., AJC, excellent con-Good cond. 54>405I covtt, xlnt cond. I.owner, r-1' Volw, "'"""" -RW FOR YOUR CAR dltloo. many exlu•, • '68 CHEVELLE • Xlnt lo ml. I"""· 675-8'00. you $$$. • . 847-8848 cond. Best oUer over fl.200, '66 EL CAMINO 32"1' autom•· SliP INTO SOMETHING COOL WE'VE GOT1 THE IEW . TRIUMPH SPRFIRE Ml 111.I . . I AllD, THE TRIUMPH IGT~+. AID THE TRIUMPH TR-6. I YOU DRIVE.THEM. JHEY DOll'I' DRIVE YOU. STOP IN TODAY PROVE IT TO YOURSELF FRl1Z w ARREN CONNELL ... RIVIERA, air """"· 513-J657 lie, ..... air, air -· new SPORT CAR CENTER ""'°· mac wbeela, Sllarp! '64 IMPALA. Full ... -.; ""''· Xlnt oond. Orr. owner 710 E. lat. Santa Ana CHEVROLET ..._..,... l:!I to 5:>J g day• --· Goin& ;n 11'95. 54&-1289 547-0764 2123 Harbor mw. '62 BUICK Special Skylark Navy. call: 96~ '65 IMPALA Stn Wm, p.1., VOLVO eo.ta Mesa Ste-UGO convertible, a:ood cond.IHon, ,56 CHEVY, x1nt oond. 6 p,b., fac air, l\lftlP nck, WE PAY 1m. 64f..2'66 cyl '"' oddlt. 1175 or beat new pa.Int. 1 owner. $12IXI 1-DIMO er Best oHrr. 83S-613B "" . '67 WILDCAT oUor. 54 .. 1907 ''142'' .....•..... $2"9 TOP DOLLAR iI650 846-6120 ,67 EL CAMINO: 327 e"'•, '62 CHEV Station Wagon, V-8 • 9Pfflf, radio I: beater. • For clean, ult'd ears ... Stick 9hlft ·excel!, condition 4740. 1800 E q.e. tor clellv-JOHNSON & SON e 195' Buick Spoclol auto/ft'"'" 11.500. 642-2'6T • $450. 546-7045 an.t 6 pm ery, Oveneu dd Spec1alist. LmeoLN ?i'ERCURY $100 cuh 846-2407 .~<'<ll::;;alt:::.;6:::'"'=,..-~--'69 EL ~'"'!NO 307 v • EA LEWIS -Harbor Bl c.. ========I '64 CHEV 11 NovL Sett otter """'11 ' ""• D N -vd., .i.. I Mickey mini bike 3 bp auto, ma.al Ii: tonneau. """Harbor, c.M. ..._9303 m PAY rop ooLLAR __ c_A_D_1LLA __ c __ 1185. 89,...n ===*,.83='"'=98=-*== '65 VOLVO 544 u =1;'!'~5:,.~ IS57 COUPE do Ville. -• '68 CHEV Impala 6- Sed.n, 4 speed_ All oria:lnlll au us tlrBt 1hape. Best oUrr over $200. ~r wagon • air, full (RlW S37)~ Take amall BAUER BUICK 642-3259 powtt, 6~ dmvn. will tin. Pvt. pty_ dtr 234 E. lTQI St. * '66 CAD. C.O.V. * '65 OIEVY lmpela. Wqon. CHRYSLll '68 CHRYSLER NEWPORTER Call Phil a.tt 10 am 494-1029 Costa 1.1el8. 54&-TJ6$ Lo mi & clean. By O\VNEJt Lo ml, new tirH, Xlnt t"Ond. .o•;..' .::546-3;:.:c!OO:.:.;.· ---~: \~Cal=I ;642-5611;,;;:,:;;A=chule=='L=.!.z===64<-05==:";;::== Asldni: $1000. Call 962.--0953 F\111 pown-, fact. air cond., -MUSI' Mll! '64 :P,falibu SS IAndau top. Priced for qul.ok _s;-:""::"::::c:":-"::::::::-:::"::'-Dl;l:::m::?"":::::":::"':.::A::utw::;::_..;HOO::::::.,.::lm:!:!:"°':::".::"'=..:::A:::utw=._'600=::::i 4 ""· 171S ..,., <2'11'11A> RACING "BOSS 41t" COMP:.~ .... ~ In $1595 MUSTANG A: t 'M. 2 d Bel Aitt <S3XXI Kelly Wholesale Price> Stick shift. I-ONner, less than ou · r., ' BILL JONIS '4.IXX> miles, Very pov.·ertul. V1. 4tu:I016, 492-9136 B. J. Sports Car Ctnttt Blq.. w /black .intHior. 1963 Cbtv)' ll SS 28SS Harbor, CM. 5iCM491 course cond. See it at 251 E. Whitr eonwttlble $500 ,69 QffiYSLER N~r, Bay St., C.M. M2.--f736 or Beil Offer 548--1131 2 dr, &ir, p/i, p/lr, rlh, MUST sell, 1962 MGA, iood P1LOl' WANT ADI IG-!ITI Any reas. off'. 847-5901 A BUG WITH FACTORY INSTALLED .AIR CONDITIONIN~ . . ' . . TRY ONE·.,-BUY ONE HARBOUR VOLKSWAGEN U7 II IEACH -ILVO. · • HUNTIN6TQN IEACH ' 141-44J(' cond., beat otter. call M7-4Tra, before l p.m. weekday•, an y t i me 9100 NowCars 9IOO New C1r1 weekends. ; ttllflU • 111, Porsche 1963 F. Well kept car, $2400. 536-8510 art. 6 pm. l2>fi Palm, H.B. FRITZ WARRDl'S SPORT CAR CENTER Antiques, Cf111lc1 "15 19'0 roRD coupe, xlnt ~. 710 I. ht St. S1nt1 Au 547.0764 I M111t 1ttt to apprec. * 546:3374 * 9900Uaod Cors 9900Uaod Cols OUR SALESMEN ARE ON THE BALL! ~~ ( (r.:::s:::. ... -. ~ ~-. THEY HAVE TO BEi WE'VE GOT THE FINEST SEL.ECTION OF BMW'S IN ORANGE COUNTYI Stop in ond -tha comploto lino of BMW's. All colors, models, r•ady for immecll•t• delivery. '62 PORSCHE MECHANICS '66 VW $895. SPECIAL! $1795 R•dlo, h•1t1r, 1C:OflO"''I H•• perfict body, lfltirior, cf1poMl•~illty. Yo11 c:ouldfl't ru11111,.9 9,,,, b11t 1111th li9Jit~ _,_,_,_.,_tt_•_• _b•_••_•_''-· 1_su_,,_,_1 --- T111c:Ji1nic1I w1rlr. R.1cfi1, Ji11t1r. f0519) '69 vw s1595 ~~-~~;,,., .,,,, .... $1495 r1cf lo, Ji11f1r. A·I 1h1p1. fWYN901). ~-~----~--- Aufcim1tic 1fick 1hift, r1cflo, h11t1r, look• •"' driYe1 lilr1 • ftf.fory fr•1lt '"' """". '57 vw $647 ------------I Pi,k u11.H•t ,.,. •nti111 with '65 PORSCHE $299. 5 • IOO'l t U•t1ntt1 on r.•'" · l r1ncl "'w 1ngin1 11of • incl l1b•t, f•t 6,000 1nl 11 ,, ll'ln• on Ill k•cU1, !.11t1r, & 1111rtt"1. M1t wht•lt, wlcf1 ••tl1. im1111c:11l1t• thro11tho11t. Petf1ct c0Mlitio11I fNHi '''' Whot o bot11fy! (0021 1. ~~;.~..... ...... s1495 .t..N.., •"••'· ,,,.u ... t "'""" c0Miti111. IXS:Zl741. lee BerloUl'• -~=-T&M MOTORS IDll GARDEN GROVE IL vi>. IALU OHM IUNDAf PAITS, SllYICI tun .. THUii. TIU ltlt SJ4oHl4 IV. a. i. flf .._., lfMMt ·Can an, automatic transmission from Muncie find happiness in COSTA MESA? It can in a DATSUN DATSUN alM glvn you thoM All·ArMrfcan favorites: NEW 1970 DATSUN PICKUP s5 703 PER MONTH ,_ $57.01 '"' .. 011tfi for ]6 m011fh1, fot1I c11li prtco i1 $1049.21 l111l11cli .. t111 I lic11111 SJOf.21 clow11 pty· lfl lflf, llal1.-co of $1740, totol firio11ci119 ch1r9• of SJIJ.01 1t 11,0l 'K ttle of i11toro1t. T1t1I "'•f1rr1cl p4iymont fllric1 $1162.JJ, No. 4602. A 96 hompower overhead cam engine the moll powerful In its class. · Safe ·stopping front disc brakes. lndependtnt 4-whael suspension (sedans only). .UP to 25 miles per gallon. A load of extras at no extra cost. .... ._ .. -....a-- ZIMMERMAN 2145 HARBOR BLVD. 540-6410 ' I JOHNSON & SON LINCOLN-MERCURY: · THRll GINERATIDNS IN THI AUTOMOllLE IUSINISS .. • llG SELECTION llG SAVINctS ON STATION WAGONS 1970 MERCURY- NEW MDNTEGO STATION WAGON MONTIGO MX VILLAGER Save$ S 'II COMTIHIJtTAL """'· """""' •Fr ••1t1111n1o fltl ,....,, MMtthli ctM!flM. lllC ,... '88 cov••• ...._ "'"'" 1ac..,.., •Ir CMflt"""'9. ,... ............ ....., ....... ,.. .... .,,,.. , et, •lftfl M . UtlU m1. ·-f'OltO c-try ..... vu ' ...... ..;... ""'" ~·"· •Ir aflll., ""' r1lli. ITDI 111'1 '88 TOVOTA cenu 1-. t ....,, ,...... """'· ,,,... Mii-... , M .... ti,..,, llft1 lltWI OVXI 9"J. '88 COUeA• A .... trMe ......... '""1!11, , ..... ftHIW, u.M ....... OtlU Mal, '17 ...... a-. .,.... fHtll'Y •Ir c"""91Mlllf, ...., • ....,,... ,._. ...... ,... ... llll't#· IUTK 1•1 •• MlllC. C9"lr ,., ,, ....... , .......... .., ...... trlM.. Ml ........... " tlr. *MM .. ,.. • .tlll. UM lllW. UtlU 1141 $3876 '217& $1176 $137& $217& $22711 $AYE MONTEGO 2 DR. HARDTOP FULL· FACTORY EQUIPMINT INCLUDING: AUTOMATIC T11ANSMISSION, P 0 WI ll STl&RING, TINTED GLASS, AM RADIO. #OHDIL591534. '"" , .. a &.le. '86 •UICJC lkyltltl I..., HI,.... """"'if ..... ll&H, ............. '82 T .. 1110 C-, • 1,. --..... --.-.................... :H10Tm1 '8& CHIV, lllllJllll I Dr, M.T, ..... :~ ~ 11f CWl-:ror.r.'"' ....,.... , ..... ••· 1ff·M .. CUOY .... _ $1171 UV U"':: "......,, ,..,. 11r e111111t= , C••J":z.' ,..._, '°""· llelltltltl """' '87 Of'IL •ALLVI (WOI tu) 'IT CH•v. 11'111111• ' Or. M.T, \I .. , ..... trtfll .. tit ""'" f'.f ., •&H, llltflo ... ('tel ''1tl '88 ,LY, .. ........ .., ........ 1-.. ,,.,.,, •It, , .... ,..a llOOtlt, cn11 ..,, '88 00091 Cl!•'"' .., ........ ........, ,..,...,, •Ir ....... ;..w =.':'1,.:;:"".-"=4'~:;t1•:=; . $10Tt $1171 $1171 SAVE NOW IS THE llST TIME IN TIN YIAllS ,TO· IUY A LINCOLN · MIRCURY l'llOOUCT ·iob.D.BOD•SDD LINCOLN CONTINENTAL .• M.l!RK Ill • MERCURY• COUGAR °'--ty'aOWaat --,.._ Dlr<ct u ......... ..., .... 1 ... 2626 HARIOR, ·COSTA MESA 540.SUO 54o.56J5 , <I Miio So • .i Son DI"° Ptwy.) ,, ---------~-----------.....--------~-...-~ • • DAILY PILOT f..Wq, July 31,, 1970 ) • · WE .DON'T CARt WHERE YOU'VE BEEN OR WHAT JOUiVE•.BEEN OFFERED -YOU'RE ·1 . . SURE TO GO FOR OUR OFFER! DON'T SIGN ANY ORDER WITH .ANY DEALER ON ANY . . . . ' • • • NEW CAR· UNTIL YOU HAVE BEEN QUOTED DUNTON FORD PRICES. BRAND ·NEW 1970 CUSTOM RANCH WAGON . . FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING, 190 2V I cyl .. crui1·o·m•tie tr•n1mi11io11, vi1•bility 9ro11p, pow•r 1f11ring, pow1r t1ilg1t1, pow1r front disc br1•11, tinl1d 911111, h11vy duty 111•~1Hi011, cl111I r11r 1111 1114al1r1, AM, r1dio, 5-1711:15 white 1ide will lir11, body• 1id1 111ouldi119, vinyl IUND NEW 1970 -.MUSTANG . . · 2 DOOR HARDTOP $2499 · ' elus '"" & ·11c,nse · i1111rf1, c1rpeted 1t1tio11 ~19011 , floor, wh11;I ~ovtrs, ,'4 door 6 p111. #OJ70Yl511"42. ONLY 250 C.1.0. engine, fuel eVop~r:ated emission control system, whitewall tires. (CFO 1L135127) A ~ .. Pirone 546~7oJ6-.: '56 FORD ... St.tion W•gon. v.1, •utorn•tic fr•n•rn i11ion., r•dto, h.••t•r. l ie. PUT 021, SAVE HUNDREDS 6000MILE 1970 DEMONSTRATOR 1 SALE · ·-· All 1970 De•enstraters are ·removed· from •• ,. •vice at approx. 6000 mlles. These 1970 Penis have had thelP. 6000 mlle check•up and are ready for lnunedlate delivery • All Models To Choose From Most Cars fUU Y EQUlf'PED • T-Birds •Tari nos• Mustangs• ~alaties • Foril LTD's ' Coupe, £ cyl., 1tlct"1hift. r1d io, he1ter. lie. NPU 590. BOND NEW 1970 TRUCK & CAMPER 8 ft coMver, sleeps (6), 2 bc.Kner stove, water ionk. SO lb. ic:t bo~ screen door, full insulation, , queen size bed:Truekhos heavy duly springs & 1 tires, guoges, large mirTors. (52969) Phone 546-707 6. 78 1 ' '67 FORD Fairlane 2 cir. h•rcltop, v.1, •uto. tr1ni., polllf•t tf••rii19, r1dio. l ie. UHL 517. $1395 -'61-l"ORD -GAlAXIE "' dr. v.1, euto. fren1 ., power •t•erin9 , r1cl io. lie. lGT 761. '67 GHlt-YSLER Cont. V-1, power 1teeril\9, r1clio, he11!1r, • wheel cov•r•. Lie. UBM 17]. J67 MUST-ANG Coupe t999 r1d io, he1ter. l ie. TWl 21 l . 6 cyl., eulo. tr11n1 ., 1ir conelitio~in9 '64 PLYMOUTH . ' r1dio, h111ler, 11 ii 1p1ci11. SMM 293. '68 vw R1dio, 4 1p1ed, lie. VHV44t. 166 ~~·~1 ~·~· '"''" ,,, .,,,;,;,.;,,, $1783 pow" ''"'''" ,.dio, "''"' li<. SBN 10. • _ , '63 ~d~H~~~,~.~~~~~•tm, ,.d;,, $693 h•1ler. w/w lir11. Lie. KIN 726. '64 FORD GALAXIE 2 Jr.., v.1. 1ulo. h1n1 .. power 1te1rin9, r1d i1, he1!1r. l ie. ONZ ~92. '65 FORD . v.1. eulo. fr•n• .. feetory 1ir conditioning, pow1r 5'11rin9, r1dio, <4 dr. •ed1n. Lie. NFWJ4J, ' • .. !)i:Wl,k«•!l• .... 4 -a--tto=; • • M*:dlfZt'Z'S't So t•). '65 MUSTANG CONY. . . <4 •P••d, 'poWer 1teerin9, r11di1:1. White w11l11 •. Lie. ZSJ 955. -'68 FORD L:TD v.1. 1uto. tr1n1, f1ct. 1ir, pow1r 1l1•r, pwr !di1cl br1k1•, r1dio, w/w tire1 , Yinyl roof, tinted 91111, wh••I cov1r1., l ie. VRG 11 I. '70 FORD VAN V.I, 1ulo. lr1n1 ., .;, conditionln9. r1tli1, low mile191. Lit. 51754F. '63 FORD FlOO 6·cvl., 01tic• 1hift. l ie. 11010. '65 FORD F600 Stake lie. No. 145J5F. '68 International Jeep R1d io, 4 w~eel elrive. lie. XOC 194. ' 167 ~.~~-~.~~ .... ., ,,, "'d'""''•· $2089 , redio, he1ter, coupe. Li e. TSN074. ' '66 DODGE ·DART St1tion W19on. 6 Cyl., 1uto. lr1r11 ., r1dio, h11ter. lie. SVU 300. '65 T·BIRD 2 cir. HT. V-1, 1uto. tr1n1, f11ct 1ir, power 1teerin9, r1tlio, h•1ter, w/w tire•. tint1cl 91111. wh1el cov1ri. l ie. PEI 611. '68 FORD XL 2-Dr. HT. v.1, f1ct. 11ir, power 1!1eri119, pow1r window•. r1dio, heet1r, w/w tir11, tint•cl 91111, wheel cov1r1. Lie. VSY 651. '67 T·BIRD toupe v.1. f1cloty 1ir, full power, r1dio, vinyl root Lie, TGY 199. '69 MUST ANG Mach I v.1, 4 1p11d, power •••• ,, pow1r tdi1cl br1•11, r1clio, iter10 tlp1, rn191. Lie. ZOY 1"41. ~259.4 • • Fri.Uy, Ju~ ,1, 1970 DAILV Pl.LOT . TRANSPORTATION UHll caro , TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTA.TION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION fRANJltoRTATION TRANSPOflTATION -1--------UHll Con _ , ;~::-:-:c:..~-==-=:r.-~""':c."'n===°':'.-....:._;.;.;::.:c:..:..:"==:.;.;:;:.:..--~-=:.:c:: • ..:,:.:,::. ==,:. ____ .:.::=c.:::::,.:.::::.:.::.:.:::::,_::_-1 -UtodCan ..... __. ' . FORD '65 FORD Squire· W..-. V-8, ..,..er ~. automadc trim., Ni<:<',.,._ 1GJ't 119) . ' $899 Bill Jone. B. J. 9poita car Omttr 2833 Harber, CM. 5tOM91 '&& FOl8 RAllCllERO ~ can ' MUSTANG PON'UC 1--- '69 TORINO ~=· ... 11oa MERCURY .. lllJSTAllGI ... .... • ... I -r.M --------· .. ... au wqon, FUll power, air, ----..:...... --- AJl/FM.390q.I-'67"• tclalr --·-.-I ... _ ...... 1.1,0lO mL 13200 MDII boo ol -+ -.... • • ... -...... Dir. '61~!9 .... -~ ... ---oft •• ,.._ .... __ ... -'1fll•nd. -..... --L--n ''4 F AIRLANE 4-dr lleClai.n.. Dir., 9la,vl. .floP: dlan. u )QI • '-6 cyL 1tlck. 52,0llO ml~. Will .ftnd CVOOHI). wlli take * '15 MUSTANG ..... or 494-9'1'Tl. • = .... _ m -Ln. '"'1n 1n<1e ... .....,., I'd--....i • e·ro CONY. cc;:";'·======= I .. ,. ....,,, 5IMZi2 "'_, -•:» -er._• blk 100. PIS, PIB. -M1'm. ...t , Att~ B:sttlle.nt cond MUil LINCOLN l9lt PARKLANE 3 dr H.T. '16 lllJSTAfiG, ~ 'Sol! o.t;,, 18,000 mi, '94-5139 _ _;:;.;..:.;:...:,.;::..;_~I --Low red. ulo. -· .,.., mL oft l. WHITE '61 Uncoln 4 ctr. milnp. PIS. Air.~. See tD beUIW. $llSO. =,.."'~='==-c-e-.-.-.-.-v-lll e FOU 6 cyl Automatic. (2 dr '68). sed&n. all power, air ClOld. MUil be aeea tD ~. -.,,. • GM"t., new motor, m. Ol Wlll take car ln tr.de u good titts. Prest~ car for &H-ll91 •• MUSTANG • Yt, l4P. -. lie f..8pd trans, fae mq finanoo pr f v ate party. oo1y $500. Call 5«8-1444 '61 COUGAR a,a:i> miln. RIK. RuD1 Good. Good rub-whirs, buckd 81!ats, full pwr, 1--~ 546-41152 or .~. R/H, PIS.. ~I top, im· be!' $950 or mUI •oder. 1!;0 or trade, 642-1137 '69 SHELBY GT 350 Con-MERCURY ""''· llBlil. Ml weeend. -'"' BONNEVl!LE, 2 d•, w~, air, 1llpe declc, mai 53&-2366 '«l 2 + 2 FUd>aclt • 4 ~000 rnl, nu tires, air, p/1, ~i.:...... U,000 mi 's. $3111X). 'tM M~. w/alr. new apd, air, xlDt • cond. $1150 ~b, $2700 or make offer. ""'"""" pa1n1. Shaip' "'95. MUST Ali& or on.. . .....m_. "°·""":=..::134,:.:2~~--- ·67 FORD Cortina GT Must stS-2981 '65 MUSI'ANG VS. kpd, 1989 GTO . Convert. Auto. Sell! Excellent cond. Make-'67 COUGAR, $1!195 .. Camel '** 1!16'l MOSTANG 219 Styledwhk.Metlculous P/1, P/ disc brka. Great oiler: Under Blue book. color, loaded. Priv. pty.' 4 spd. Xlnt cond. care. $1050. M5:36t5 cond. Low prlce. 54&-6123 646-6826 61>-28'11 • $1350. 540-5923 1951! PONnAC Runo xlnl. OLDSMOIU $1!i0. ' DAYS ONLY. can 60-9964 CM. :::-:::-....... --'"--....:.~c;...:;.;;..,.;,_ ____ ....:.:.,,; _______ 1'61 CUTLASS Supreme. ==-"=='="~~-~- ......,, Blqe ...... -?.~, Staci • ~....,Al ' ~:·-Loaded. Anzlo1111 LAl.""l"""'_.y ean. r, CONNELL CHEVROLET '69 IMPALA CUSTOM Cl'£. RIUI, auto., P.S., factory air. 100% factory / guarantee up to 50,000 mJ. remabUns. Spot ttee l v!DI!._~ Unusual buy. CYKNCX58) $2699 10 QTHi;;itS TO CHOOSE FROM AT SLIGH'fLY '69 :~~ ':."':.s.HARDTOP ' $2699 Vinyl roof, P.S., R•H. automatic, factory air. Factory guaranteed up to 50,000 miles. (ZVL180) '68 CAPRICE 4 DR. HARDTOP $2299 This is one of the nicest cars anywhere. R&H, , auto., P.S., factory alr.1009(, Dlr. 30 day ruaran· · tee. Remaining fact.ory ~-This la no mia· print the price is i2299. (yyz555) '67 CAMAIO 1 • $1599 The rliht one. 2 Dr. J;iardtop. Power 1teerlng. · auto.,.AM·FM radio. (TYT571J. Several others, some with 4 speed tram. · '6'9 OLDS CUTLASS S CPI. $2699 Has cverythirlg, ah-, auto .. P.S., radio. New color, fully dealer guaranteed 30 days. You can't believe · it, the price is only $2699. (XSR604) '69 z .21 CAMARO 4 speed, sport 11trlpe, 290 h.p. The right one. Factory fresh, huggtt orange, Radio. 19,000 1, mile car. ( YR-W923) C.onvertible1 air cond., P.S .• radio, auto., :t0,000 '68 PLYMOUTH FURT Ill mUei: bigh m color and a real nice car. The prtcf= is' right. CZZD786J 2,730 miles. New car condition. New car cuara.n· ·10· MONTI CARLO · tee from the'factory. Auto., power atttrlng, air, 1' • the whole blL Be first. (173558) 'b5 COIYAIR 2 DI. H.T. A real nice car. Stick shift, radio and JU cheap. "(HOY303l '66 TOYOTA CORONA 4 [)oOr. 3 speed. radio. Sharpy. Low. low prlce. (TFAlll) ' ' $2699 $1499 $3599 $199 $799 '69 TOYOTA CORONA $1399 · ~J'.ck shift, iU&rantee car -30 days 100%. '66 IUICK RECTRA 22S $1 599 CU.tom 4 door sedan. Factory air, radio, electric eve.r,thlng, full power, gorgeous car. Weekend . spec al. Oh yes, 100% JO day guarantee. CUSD620)t '65 PLYMOUTH SPORT FURY Sharp, Sharp, Sharp. ~ Door cpe. Console, bucket ~ / :.;eata, power steering, aul.omatic, radio. Needs a 1 nice home. (ATB361l. Sure, It'll guaranteed too. $1199 Et C•minos--Rancheros--Trucks .1968 EL CAMINO Air conditionff, aulom•lic, pow1r 1t11rin9, r1dio, fra1h c•r. 120112Gl. ' . 1969 EL CAMINO ~ Po•er 1fMrlt19,' 1utom•tit tr•n1m!11ion, r1dio, 1howroo111 fr11h. lllll6AI'. 1'67 RANCHEIO Powor 1leeri119, radio, aufematic, air to11ditionln9. Nita. (I 22JJAI. nn RANCHERO 'Autom1tic fr1111mi11ion, powor 1!1erlng, r•dio. Ra•I nlca car. 1964 FORD YAN Air conditioning, •ulomotic tran1mi11ion, radio, r11I cl11n. 19'5 CHM 1/1 TON Sflck, VI , radio, real nica tr11tk. 1521267), 196' CHM 1/1 TON VI, 1tick, ona owner n1w cir trad1·in, Suri• nice truck. 1$207961. ., lHI CHM 'I• TON Plcluitt c1mp1r. R1dio, \II, 1uch 1 riica lfock. With '•r without 1h1l1. 19S711Al. nu CHM Y• 'ION Pickwp. R1dio, power 1l11rin9, •Ulom1ilc, air conditionln9, cullom c1b, h11...., duty thru.eul, id11I for up lo 10 fi. c•rnp1r. !US1710 ). CONNELL CHEVROLET 2m Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1203 . t ndc. j2!;0~ 64<-008!, RAMBLER '86 n>n.<m ml. new tl.rts, vir1)'i top, 112to. Best offer over $900. 6G...flll95 i>5 RAMBLER 550 Sta. Wag. '62 • 98 FUU.. pwr, air, v.a. auto. Sacrllice. $575 or new tires. Irnmac. To dote bst olr. 962-{)842 an estate, $550. MS--0376 =~======I PLYMOUTH T·llRD PLYMOtml '65 Fury l. 4 dr HT, aood oond. Pvt ply. !500. 644-&01 Sot only. e '62 T-BJRD, all &: air, runs pxl. 646-1561 '57 T·BIRD, &: '60 Ford Starll.ner $1800/both. Good ' Cond. ~2S14 or ~201.S '64 PONTIAC Le Mans 6 cy1.. & bbc11e1s. o.. will VALIANT tnde tor Van. 5'6-0510 -- ,64 CATALINA 4 cir auto, '66 VALIANT, Xlnt cond. P/S.' P/B. Vtty aood cond. $750. Must sell •.. leavina $t90. 675-tM5 f91' Peace Corps. 675--7948 ,_New Cara ''SPECIALIZING IN QUAI.l'fY'' 'JD RIVIERA Full,_...· fodory olr, 126721 MAHUFACTUltEltS' CAI IUSEDI 54795 PLUI I MOii TO CHOOSI PIOM Af llMILAI SAYIN•S PRESTIGE CARS AT SENSIBLE PRICES 1969 FORD TORINO SQUIRE WAGON J _5 I VI •11tine, tuto!!_'t•tic tT1!!_!:111itlion, r_1di.,, .1a.J1J1r, powar ,faari119 ind dl1c llr•ka•, pow., window, pow1r tail9ate wlHow, foctory oir conditionlnf, 2 wa., t•il t•*•· Jv1t 14,lll fllllH. l1¥aly rneHow tro•n with •irnul1t.4 w..d traio panalhtt pl111 caatr1•tl1111 •II ¥in.,t intarior, Fact.rv. w1"•irlv a¥all11M1. !ZED7441. $3295 • 1969 MUSTANG 2 Door h1Ntop. Thi• di•rnond Liva auto1110Llla h11 tho JSI 01111in1, outom•fic tran1rni11ion, power •*••ring, powtf' 'i•c Lfele•, r•dio •nd ha1t1r, f•ctory .;, condl· tiOnlnt 1"4 b In f1nt•1lic c1ndillon. Dri'fa th is one horn1 todoy. IZNV 6151 . $2695 ' . 1969 CONTINENTAL 2 daor ha1•cHop. 6oW 1.+arior willi darl ¥inyl top o!ld fllatdtl11t c111t.1t1 lnl1rior. H11 full power ~uipll'lont plu1 factorv olr t"4llitio11ing, pow1t doOr lotkt, AM-FM r1dl;e_ 1M hot only 12,41 ] 't'lrf car1fully drl ... 111 111ila1o IYWT 2261 · $5195 • 1968 BUICK SKYLARK Cu1torn 2 door h1rcltop. v.1 a11tlne, 1ute11'11tic tr111•· .ll'lin ion, rMio ancl haatet, powor llMrlnt, 11!d ,.._,, llr1ke1, f1ct.ry air c111cUtioni119, • ),..,,1., '"'rt Migo ••!Id oirhri• with Hck•ki11 'fill'ti roof. 1\i1 011a o-"' tlr ·w•• told 1M1 11n>lt ... here. low ll'lllt•t•· ITVM 141 I. $2695 • 1967 CONTINENTAL 2 4oor haNtop. YH'll jw1t h1¥• to••• ffllt 1111 +. roally Leli1¥a It. Full power eqwipmanl inclwdlng 1lactri1 ha14 r11t al'HI reclining ~111itt•r 1a1f, •vt.ll'l•fit air co ... i• tl111!11t, tier•• t1pe 1y1I ... , 1t1W•r door loclit o!ld ••· boll • .,.w. low Ma ..... '"' )4,102 Mil••· IYWS61JI $3195 • UICK In C TA MESA ·-- l ' I ~ ;I ~· ... ;i-. -, -... . -· &.i ~~ • er~. o n o: ~ n •• 0 • -.,, -· -· -· n •• " .. 0 -:i. : r ' ..z .. i ~i I ~ ·~ •• !. ~ !. • • •1< J • • I~ ..,. .. , l! -... jJ~i ~ ti}sf ~ 11~:~ ~,1 1 "U ,_ N ~·• ! ;ll!!J ~·i ~ IP J II ) E -Z a e; i z ~ -• ~ n 0 c: ~ :Ill IP . · 1 aJ J~ ·If. i-I'"~. -.... :jii Iii() i ·-0--1· K JI u 1$ j' I ii! j~ ... l" :I: l~n -•' "' 1~0 .z•·z ~ ·~ ....... ..~-Ill :a &~~ !'~ !Q . i,. Ill ,,. n "' ;;: ' Iii I ~ • JI< i • ~ ! I . iliili ; , ii I: 0--1·1 -.o }?I co ~·! .1 "(• •• iii - ..,. JIJ • ,. ... 1JJ i.: 0 co 1l~1 l < ~ ·1 ~· Ill ~h i ii co •fl ~ ~~~ .. n ::!! ,. Cit ... IC» ,. -< Ill c: Cit Ill IC» n > ,. Cit ~~~. f l •·p . w · 11=s 'I ... '~· ;f :g ·-i!i a J . ., ••.. ~ JJli r f iJ ,, ) I "' :z: >. ~ .,, • '" Cit .... .,, '" z n -,... -z '" Cit ... -- , NIW .1970 . , ··" ~ .. "• HAll D TOPS FAST llACKS ·CONVEllTllL'IS . • 'r ' ' MACM.-l's · IOSS'S , . EVERY NEW ·1970 IN STOCK I. MAVERICKS sg· goo FA~~~~y . , INVO I C I . ' . . . . . . EVRY NEW .1970 IN STOCI!: '.~ · .. FAKONS·.··· · ~· sg··g· 00 1 OVE R '.' . . -~~~1~~;. -· ·-----·-· ... ·-· ·...;;;. ___ .. #. ho • } .m.t~llllw~,197.0 IN ,ITOCI(. · · ;EVERY, NEW ,1970 '.IN ~ •· f • '°I J <. ., IHUNDiRBIRDS · -!!fl.Ill·,·· --T.·'. l" •. ifl:' OVER -OV l,R ·. _V .'F A CTO R:V • sgg :eo: FACTO ~:>,· ' --: . }NVOICE , • , • INV)O ·i c ~·._1• ~\ f ' . ·-- . EVI RV:-NEW"ll70. IN STOCK . POSl11YIL'f\ NO ~D . .. GA~IE 1 SOO!s DEALD C.HARGUI $99.· o ovi11 ' FACTORY ' ··, INVOICI ~STAFF .CAR SALE---~ • . . ... ~~------.,-,!!". ~,~. -~.: .. . ' ) . llG SELECTION OF' EXECUTWE •CARS AND '' • I, ,. l ! .t. l . ' • ' . IMPOl:TANT -· · , DEMONSTRATORS NOW SWHED TO •FINAL . •. DUI TO ~IECIDINTID RESPONS.1 TO Ou R"' OVlll INVOICI CLIAll-l:IP. ~· " ·KIC ll'.olll' ~ WE•K, WE HAVE J¥TENDID' THIS ALL .OUT .. SALI THRqUGH'• .t' 'SUNDAY, MJ9UST'2 •• COME IN IARLY WHILE MODILS, ·COLOR, AND OPTION -- ,. . ' ' Year. End Cleii'Cdce Prices. SELICt lONl'ARE CCIMPLIT-E. ' · •. RENT A CAMPER 0.lini:• 1tlf &Ollt•i11.d eamptrs fl~1·1r1Jtw ho ... et for ftn1jJy f111 e11 • f•rnily llud9tf. R111,..,, .,,,.._ ...i,..,, .+.I•• 4111~ car . ,, . AMERICAN EXP RISS ,r· · .. ·tAUSTANG . SALE . 20 to chMM from. ''6 thru '70..._..a.. .(eup•1,.MNtops, cen- ..tlble •ml 2 + 2 ~·-o.-wtlh'4 ........ ~··•Ir - dltfonlnt and automatic rnolltlt. :r • EXAMPLE: -~-: 1966· MUSTANG HARDTOP . b:cell111f e:el'IC!itiOfl, Vl, eute1111tl1, rdle, ~t.r, ,,._., stetrillf. fSV,;4,), . '66-· CORVETI'E~ ~-. Sti119rey. 4 lf"'lcl, i11 ••cell111t . 1011clitio11, ISUl941l, '64 ' KARMANN GHIA Coup•. 4 •P••'• r19'i•, 1i11f1r. fSQW919 l. '6. 9 ~o~~c.~~.~~,~~!!~1''"'"· 52398 tio11i119, ~ucktf ••eh, power 1f1•ri119, p•wtr elite ir1li1•, redio, h11!9f, 2 I ,000 flli111. IXSllU't ·---· _ _ _ . . ' . GOODYEAR· ·TIRE . CENTER .. . ' ALL SIZES e SPECIAL TAKE Ol'f PllCIS ·e ILEMS e POLYQLASS WIDE' OVALS e TRUCK AND CAMPER . . TIR,S. N .iPAAE NOW !!OR A IWI VACATION! ~ ' ' . A THIODORI llOllNS llCCUJl1.VI LOOK FOR 111£ DIAGNOSTIC CENJ(R SEAL OH 111£• ~D! · . ·1,00% PAATS AND ~ • WARllANYY ·~ MILIS, OR 90 ,~YI · . . . . ... ..... • .... , .. ,.... ............. Ii ... 1 ....... .. ... _ .... ___ ..._. __ ... __ ,.... .... ._ ... .......,., ... I ' ·1. -• ~ . . . . •• C"!IVRON PftlONAuDD RNA .. q_N6, . , • . . • .1 • • Ut •~r fi11111c• •11'trl1 h1l11' .,.. d,h,f tlM •. ~~'.,o'ft,i, ·: I +ft• t•rm• Y.•" wa11t ft P•Y· ·w, fi11•11J:! _tftr~u~ •-•~..:•'If Amtric.t, FerJ Mllfor Credit Co., Ne ... port ~eti911I l 111ly. S1c11ri+y Pacific l 111lc, U11i.U C11ifort1i• l111lc. ) .. /, ,~.,, • • " '.J\ (r " . \i'i.. ' M ' N-Y-.MANY MQll- TO CHoOSE .RlOJI .... . .. '.~., . . ;· -.. '6 .. 7 CHEVROLET -MALl•U ·,·.':_ .• ,.,_·''ITTs~ 2 J,,; HT. Y-1, •~N .• •&H, ll'•••r 1t11rh11i • fTY;W'914l $1:4)M -~-~"7ij WE , .. PAY. '69 ~~~!~.~.~ti~.~~TOP 523" TOP s $' ..• . ' -. 68-·-~~-~-:~-~-y:,:-:::A-•. ~-.,,-.~--~-M-P-'-.-E-R ---'$'-'-7-.·9-_S ..... '. ~· FOR CLIAN UllD CUI '70 ~,~!~.~'.~.~ $,~ al.. l lk• 11ew. IYWT2•7 ) 077_ . . s.•--An-w .Brown . ."",6_l __ FO_R_D_L_T_D _____ s~_.....,....-.-.-· ..... ""' .... • Factot>y-alr, P.S., P.B., auto., __ _ '66'MllCURY 51799· ,' .. . 2 o •. v.1, '""'' ,,,, .,,,., P.s .~;· · 1' ~ · • Colony Park 9 p1.as. wa,on. . ~· ft.-'.......;_'-'-,;_, -"-'''-"-''-· '-"-"-"-" ~·-.;,: ·__,.~•~-'---·._ • ........J·:...r.:...-,: __;:: 7 ... '68 JEEP' JEEPSTER $26~9 JW{. <sAA020> s7· 99 '69 !,~~.D,_ c~.~ •••..• ,,· .•.•. ·.,,...... s3· ~. 99· . ., .. w.~.,.. 4 whe.l ~rive. 'YI, Atll co~D., '63 PORD COUNTIY S9Ulll 11 , • •1i1t•., l'IH. tWWJ26Sl, Wqon. V8, factory air, auto.. AM -FM 1 .. r••• P'.S., P'-"i1c 1Jreke1, P'.wilHlow•, P.S P.B RlH. OKL&f&) r•111 1i11cl•r of f•ct.ry w•tr•11tv ev•il: 1540ASHI I 69 '·~~~~~i~f.~~~~~~~~s ~s3699-'67 PO~TIA~ 6T~ ' $1~89· . s· . I 66 ~.~~~!~,!,~!!!~1~'1'9• 51299 ·. 1t.•ri119, p•w•rlili1c br••••. li•• 11•w. CXW~1•21, •, .Aut~matic, RA:H, P.S., air low 111il•19e. 111.UUJIJI.. . . . OLDS ST ARFIRE ' $ ju""zil<,"/"•· vinyl""''-".' • ' . FL . ' COUGAR ~ .,, . ' . ,. .-,,199· ... •' ,. : ' I 63 2 ;,.,,HT. "" ,. • .,, f.,~.., ,,, ugih'•~'t•. ' 695 .. _____________ ... v 2 o,, H.T. Ful•"I '''· ,;\;., Rl~.:'..s... . ·, , IWX&292) Sitt~~,... n ......_can Mf4)Ct tt IP'Nr 111e. P'-cli11 ire•e•, .,;11yl roof. IUZF<tll ) . • 1 ' , • I, ' ctvmr..-I ' to I I n PARTS-SERVICE HOURS ( .. 7 AM To 9 P'M MON 7 AM To· 6 ...... JUI-Fii • • .. -4 ... • -'.--~~· _.;:.:.:_~ ---.'It..•.' ' - . ' PARTS DEPT. ONLY 8 AM-to 6 P'M SATUf'.olAYS ·~ • l