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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-08-05 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa.. ' • • • l .C ·s 0 -. . . f ' * * * * * * * *' * * * • • • Disneyland Yippie .. ln: DAILY PILOT A Put-on or Invasion~ * * * 10' * * * * WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUSl'. 5 .. 1970 Mayor of Seal Beach Ousted by Bosses ·. Baum Retains City Post ' But Fired as Pharmacist By l\UDI~ .. ..,. hit. "" ... ·1'•10< Jotortan ' A. II.Um' Tuesday became tho third man to looe bis job Jn Seal Beach since tho poli~cal tempest began sweepttig through the city. He's still mayor. but he no longer employed as a pblnnacist for the Seal Beach Leisure World Golden Rain Foun- dation. The mayor called his firing "an obvious Will Yippies ·~1 ake Over' J Disneyland? By CHARLES H. LOOS 91 Ille D1ib' .. lilt Sl1H The Yippies are coming, the Yippies are coming. .Right here to Orange County. In fact, to Disneyland, to storm the bastion of all that is Wbole.!ODle on Thursday, lbe anniversary o{ the Hiroshima A-bomb. It's a (check one): \ a) Fact. (b) Rumor. (c) Giant Put-on. (d -Nobody Seems to Know for Sure. (e) None or These. tf you picked (d) you're as close to the real answer as the (a) Disney brass. (b) Anaheim Po)ij:e ~p!'fllO<nL (c)Los Angela' Free Press, wtiich ap- parently start.d the whole thing in the first place. form of lotimidation and retallaiJou of lbe crudest . type." Ilia ............ be llid, can ·be traced directly to the !iring or City Manager Lee Rim« and City At· torney Jltn Carnes July 27 -action which be lnlijated. The official reason !or his termination, Baum explained, was that he failed to resolve a conflict of interest prohibited in the bylaws of the foundation. The specific infrlictioo cited in the notice. given to Baum by the foundation Friday was that the rules governing the fotmdation prohibit employe.s h&ldiag jobs with other firms or agencies doing ~with.Leisure World. Since the retirement. community con· t.tacts fo'r Police.and fire services Baum's ""' role as mayor was held to be in violation, the DAILY PILOT was told. Jack David, admi11istrator or the Golden Rain Foundation, could not be reached foc comment. "The foundation as well as the people In Leisure World were aware that I was running for council," Baum said. "Had there been a real conflict of in- terest everyane would have been aware of it." He pointed out that he was nominated for mayoralty by Councilman Harold Holden, pasl president of the foundation. The action was seconded by Lloyd Gum- mere, a former foundation director. Rapin g, Shooting Victim Rem~ins In P()Or Condition "Aug. g, Disneyland, Yippie Intern•· tional Pow Wow," proclaimed the Free Press in a recent edition. The wofds were arranged around a smlling picture o( Mlckey Mouse holding a top hat in one hand and an automltle rifle A 17-year-old Pico Rivera girl who in the olher. was raped and shot along a lonely road A story appeared on the same page aouth or San Clemente last week ft!· undtr the headline .. Ylppies a L mained in poor condition today, still Disneyland." unable to relate critical information to .. ·• .while they will now let "')'OU investigators probing the brutal attack In °with )ong hair, etc.," the artk:le by her husky assailant. ~'.tlleJl.!m~ay not ltt you ill without Miss Suaan Prjce, who '"""Pied a a t1 et, But as old proverbi~ •l ride fron\, ._ > Q>rona de! ·Mar street goes "tear' down ~ wt-dMal '-corner·wU tmG driven to the b:s Pulgas us.• :, Road by .• ·the Latin-type auspect, was A call to Free Press officts i!' an de,cribed as in poor but stable condidi:m effort to shed more light Oil the •t SOUth Coast Community HosptLal. gatecrashing impllcatlon' prochx:ed 'lifll~ A singi& slug fired by the 111spect in the wa)' of hltd'informl).tion. .1' rernaini .,lodged in a critical area of Dlaney brass and >Anaheim police a],lo the girl's 'neck and surgeons have not appear to be short on bard iofonnatioa· yet. decided on a lime when it will about the n.unored invasion. be removed, hospital aide.a: said. "All we hear are rumors," U)I)' say. ™ girl related some infonnaUon to One unconfirmed rtj>Cl'I 001 m the Newport Beach police last Friday in Disneyland Hotel bad~Ylppie luder Jerey a brief Interview, but slnoe lhen bu Rubin or the Ch~ Seven cbeckb)g been unable· to assist San Diego sheriff's in for an oven)lght stay this week and investigators because or her condition. then checking out again Without leaving Tht only leads which police have a forwardipg addresa. gathered lhUJ rar 1 are a delc.ription of Olmey officlall and poUce aay they the suspect'• -c.ar -a green, nearly are no( iporiDC the nnnors and .,.. new Old.mobile CutJau -and a possible prepatff to hlhdle any eventuality. first name or Fred. However. the amUSf.lllenl park will The man was described u Latln in tpeo Thurtday at the usual hour on appearance. ~ and in hi4 mld 20s !See DJBNEY, p,,. I) or tar)J> 30s, police' lllld. .. j •I t l Backslider • OAIL"l'•Plt OT'"""'" -~ ...._..,. •• MlcbeDe WYD:De, 10, Newport Beach, rives as she makes waves in COl'Qll3 <lei Mar High School swimming pool. What. after all could maie summer more refreshing than a backward slide into a cool pool. Airport Report ·Ripped By Pilots, 'Homeowners 11y ·PA'l111Clt llOYLE .. ... Dlllr "'" '"" A report recommending expansion of Orange County Airport drew vigorous atl.acks' from ·bomeownen and· pilots at a Tutsday meeting. ol• the °".OJ!&• Coonty• Airport-Commission. 'lbe, 'meeting', scheduled as a public discu11i90, drew a Jtandir)g-room-only crowd c( lrale dtimls. It was the third time the-commls.rion had met. to discuss the Parsons report. Tbe report which t.ost Ute county 1140,000, -Uipltog t h • number of rughts at Orange County Airport in the next seven yeara, 11pendlng i1&1milUon on terminal and runway ex- panalon and budgetlng mllllona mo<e to acquire or IOWldproof Ml homes 1too1 the fllllhlpath . The a~ence was made qp chiefly of Tustin and ~_.-( B e I C h llomeownen who live 1loc11 the landhl( -( ~nd Ulreoll Dlgbl path. One aucb homeowner ,was Dan Emory. chairman' ol tht Mr1'ort Noise Abatement • CommHte'e or"flfewpott: Beach, Who ajt- "1Cl<ed lbe ·report..in i,chnical ,grounds and d1atlenged · anyone 1•m 11how that ·my figures.are Jiu accUrate1 thin thole in the report." · · ' Wlth a pi...,.lafion <JI alides showing ma~ and .graJits Of nolse cOntoun, he charted that part.a Qt, the report "are a fraud .'l He said tl)e report recommended-1 load factor of 7t perctnl tot commerciil aircraft taking off at Orange Colmty Airport. He alleged lhll "llUCb ' a load factor wottld 1lowt the climb-out rate m the alrcrall and "drag the Impact area S,200 fett down ~e ba1." He ~tel' this WOil!~ place homes 1long Dover ' Shont 1nd on Botl>oa lt1and Jn (8-Allll'OJIT, Pan .. SJ ' Judge Sticks to Guns- ~ . . . ··:. . I . I . ' ' ' • ~ej~~s 2nd ·~~slrial;Bid LOS ANGELES (UPI) -SUil<rlor court jixfie 'aiuta ii. •Older tilciay denied . .a. deftnle motlori for a miatrlaJ jn tbe T,at.e-LaBlanca mur®r case'bUed on:PresJdellt Nixon's remarQ.;.~1118 flUill cif <Cliorles· M811am.· <J!efat";d *ilry Page 3). · ' , , ' Juoge Older said °'l't 'he w.., }atlsfied about · the jurors hearing the eaae are "able and willing to be ralr and im- part.ill" in deciding a venti~ for the hippie. leader and three YOWlC women codefendnats. .. The time bas come to pl~t this In 'its pi-oper perspective," i.Judge Older Aid. Ttte judge sa,ld it was not Important whether ,Manson had deliberately invited prejudice by holding up a new11paper in front of tbe jlU')' Tuesday with ~ Lenore Romney CCrtain Vicior In, Prim~ry Test . ' DID MANsON PLAK TOWARD A· Ml~T.R IAL? SE,E PAGE J fleadline, '"'MAMOD Guilty, NI 1: o D DeclarU." "'i'tse. importint point I! wbether the memtlers of the Jury are· capable of rendering an impartial verdict in th.ii case," he said. "That is why I called them In heN ye11terday one b.r one and a!ked them whether lhelr ability to return 1uch a verdlc\ had been impaired by tho ;,,. cident. I am satisfied it was not" With the jury out of the courtroom, the defense began the day with the motJon for mlntrlal for all the defendant& oo for mistrial for all the defendants on dent of Ult United States COOSUtated "Prejudlce of lhe moat slgrtiricant klDd." Deputy district aftorne'y JAaron Stovitl said that Manson had clearly tried to establish judicial error, . ''It's · the same lhing as · if he· tried •to escape or got up and 5'id he W&Jlted to be given ft>e death penalty a(ld then Jask for a mb1trial/' Ste'(itz: said. "We're 1all aware thal 1 Mr. ?t11nson is ·caUinl the shots !rt this · case and be called !them ·yesterdfy. \ ey Tbt An0cl1ted Prt1111 . "Y.'hether Mr. Maimn w.ants ·to er Lenore Romney' appeired · a-certiiin 'not II is the Intention of the peop)t winner today In her bid for · the to proceed "'.Ith ~ trial." , Republican U.S. Senate nomination from Arter ~ JUdge s ruling the Jury--wp Michgan one of four statu holding brought in and the three young wcmen primary 'elections Tue!lday. defendants suddenly ~ up and bep.n Mrs. Roomey's opponent; State Sen. chanting some 90lfg about President Ntz.. Robetl.lluber, said at midmomlog .th>t .-0~,a!Jd,!llo.lrJlull~ "''I/. h "i>rtP.ari to <:OOCed•• .victory I ·. '1!tltf '"' ~stq~i MC . " i: ~~.M~eilr..i"f Wife 'ill .J.ltctitga'1'i. 'bi~n.Jl>< ~Ill> JY"'-0•,tliil\P .t fonN"·-·govitqtr--a?ML~.,maentl U.S. re~~· hell -testimon)'.··"8tW· . ~tall o(!b¥in&. ~lunlfl ~vetop-ammation._. . . :1 ' , • f mfn~ He 1 said be exllf!Cted to seo1 " , ~ .. ~ Mr~. Romney a telegram of con- gratolations later today. Huber's announcement came as elec· tion retumll gave Mra. Romney 52 per- cent of · the votes cist in the race. With 79 percent o( Mio:hlgan'> 1,04! pretj.Dctl reported, .the. unofflc~I count was 150,482 for Mr~-Romtle•· ,.-ri 232,8&1 _fgr Huber. In the other three states • Tue;.i.,, tho' uilolrlclal c ·these Tesult.si In major races: 'l'laries >iiawed MiueM'I: Sen. Stuart Symln&ton was I landillde victor In his bid for tlfe Democrttlc nomination to hl1 fourth . tenn th ~ Sen.ate. Hl1 November GOP opponent wtn be Atty: Oen.. _JOOn DB• rorlb. All 10 ·1ncum-..... II"'"'""' ~ nine ~rets and one Repubrlcan .._ won renomination. With 95 percent m the atata'a 4,241 pr!<tnCto counted. Symingtoo rolled up 313~11 votes to a total of ~,040 f<ff four opponents. DanforUI picked ·up lS&,019 votes al D0,'11 •cast .In a1 Uu:et- man race. 1taa1a" Atty. Gen. Kent Fttmll Wll a runaway wtmer over foir OpporH'Jlll' for the Republican ll"~l namlni- llon 111d the right II> metl-lncumbiOI (Sol .ROllNl!Y, Pip S) • ' ''C'e1W. we.tier' ' I I Thoae luyt hoy!• diy, of + 11u.mmer continue Thdnday with lbw etoud11 Jn 1the morning and filtered· sunshine alterwanl. Temperature' 1Jteratlon1 will be ·minimal. ' I • • • DAILY PILOT s '-l-~hor.e -Control Nears? ' Senate Vote Delayed by Badham Move 111 THOMAS FORTUN& a1 IM o.11r.....,. Sl•ft •, SACl\AMENTO -A bill putting 1,100 :.:'miJe1-.f ~Uforuia coaslllne under ,Jlate plaruq and '""""' authority Wll IJ> '$provofl G-30 Tuelday by the Alsembly. I: , But the blU ..., not otot to the Senate becable th• leader oi the opposltlon, Assembl1mao Robert Badbam ( R - Newport BeadlJ, ga .. llOllce he will seek • vote on reooo.sidetatloo later this --A first vote on lbt. bill resulted ln a 3J..3t deadlock: rune days ago. But opponents -an alliance or con- servationists who said the measure didn't do enough and conservatives who ca11ed it all lnvasiao of -ty ri&Jl'-1 .- failed to clupllc>te last-·· W.ogth. I 'Qie tt-'on Jtom lhe "anU" block at eoaqirl!<d ol conaervatlollllts who decldoll Ille bill by Allemblyman P<te Wllson (R-Sa.n Diego) wu the best they could get UllJ ye.ar. Three other bill& even more strongly regulative of the coaatline ~ve been either killed or pig""*'led. 1'ie ell)' government& or llunllngton Beath, Newport B<ach, Laguaa Beach and Sy Clemente have supported the Wilson bill as beln( the best of the lot from thetr staodpoiuL It provklu for the leut i~poe:ttlon cJ state authority Into tra:dltioaal cl\y planolog and zoning ,... .... The Wilson bill provides for more city and cotmly government represen. taUon on regional boards governt1.1g coasUine development than did the other billa and it Umlts the d<finiUoo ol \he cout&I JOrie lo J..000 yards inland lnsteJd ol ball • mile .. did -bill """ ooe mile as did another. Orange Cout Alsembl)'lll<ll Bldham ·· Harbo1· School Tax ·Boost . Lower Than Anticipated ' By STEVE M11CHELL .... De9I',... ·~ ~a& ln the Newport.Mesa Uni- fi .. Sdlool lltlUtcl wUI lace a -U.. er-Jn their school· tax nte inltead of ao aotldpeted 7keot rtaa arlllMllY pndlctod for-year'a lcllool-. 1be dtclaloo to . ... 1-<£ Ille • pennlsstve .,orrlda _....i 1n ,.._ nwy by -ia_... -dlfttC • pill>lle heorfng of dlatrid - Tu"'1ay · I ' The tax tale 'for ' J970-7t In ·O>sta ~tesa will be $5.11 per 4100 .-aed · valuation-compand with $4.M in 1969, , ln Newport Beach it will be $-t.7'1, com- pared to $-t.33 last year. The board considered action on a surpW& o( 2J. cent& which came about by an uneapedtd Ii.ti In useued valu ... Uoo. Memberl decided that seven cent& would go to t.orrect teachers salaries and (or program improvemenu. 1be remain- ing 14 cents would return to the district tupaytts by lowering the allowable O\'errlde to 44 cents. Prior to the budget deci!ion, several teachers and homeowners addrused the board. Brad 'lbunnan, prtSident of the Newport,Mesa Educatloo As.soclaton '1at.ed. ~ b:Jve yet to make a decision · as ID whe~tll< board ls a tar«fented board. an educaUon board or JOn>ething else.. Teachers are golng to make a at.and 1n this dlsU'ict sooner or later. Ar• YO!! 1011tg Jo '""" belJnd tl\em ... not.r! !J.L ·1.J.. .....-• .,. Corona cl<! Mar Ill sclii>ol t~acber Reger Wetsa told the board, "Americans are the blggest spenders tn the werkl, From that heritage 1 feet the question "8 not how much or the taxpayer•' mane; ls to be spent. If this board does not feel the money would be spent wisely . on teachers salaries, return il to the • .taxpayer11. 3 LITTLE LINES SELL BIG ITEMS These three lilUe lines furnished the advertise.r an evening of enter- tainmenl (the phooe kept ringing until 10 p.m.) and -of course - sold the merchandise: ST 0 V E & })ip;lalre rehigpr•tor, Good cond., both $15, XXX•XXXX. The ad drew more than 50 cans. The gtove and refrlgerat.or were sold al the asking price. What more can you ask! Can a DAILY PILOT ad-visor and line up !Orne phone calls on whatever it Is you have lo 9!:11 . The direct line to re.suits b 642-!678. DAILY PILOT .. ...,." .... ......... (.. c ........... "-"•• ..... . .. ...... "....., -._ ... R•D•tl N. W•14 1'rl'""'' •NI 1'111111 ....... J••• R. C11rl•T "J am conOdeot the majority of the lupaYUI will support the boanl ii they -· lo lfend Ih• IJlOD<Y Oii educallmt." Be addid tbal the -morale ID Ille dflllld la dropplDc rapicDy. "To ' -tba _.,. to -wmild alao dn>p lbe , e!!lrimry , lo lllla dJaltlcl'I educltkla Q1111m," he llld. Don l!nddl<ttoa. -Ave. r<altor, ura:ed .that the money be returned to lbe lal<payets. "The ·teachers in thi11 district have never had· it so good and the t.axpayers · have never had it so bad " he said "It's time to cut , out the' frllls Th~ taxpayers• backs are nearly broken'" Following the public hearing, ~lee Donald A. S~1ua:1 explained that the ~dd.11.ional f890,000 wa s not an increase m funds . "We havt ,no real increase In funds Taxea are going to go up 00 maue~ ~~t Ibis board decW:le.s upon." Sometmes we Jose sight of the ract that non-teachers and tu.payers are also affected 1¥' Ihe budget. not just !he teachel'1,'1·Straus1 saJd. . 'Ibis staj:.ement prompted grumble11 and . hisses from teachers ih the audience ::J~ ~Chairman Bud Franltlio cur. shalply, .~e_sa~~.f~~ Pl.fins Big Trip . Calta Mesa City O>uneJlman AJvin L PinkJe:y has an •ppolntment to ~ the d .. tlat. but fl won't be llie pulling teeth to get him on the way. The dentist is: h1s son, U.S. Navy Cmdr, Virgil Pinkley, stationed at the nuc~ear submarine ba3f: at Rota, Spain. PiU!ey and his wffe Lucy wtll shut down ·lbeir pharmecy for Iwo Wffka depariln; Sept 2 .. Yisll aon, dlupter.in'. law and three grancldilldl'eo. , · F~o!..._ councilrnen &ranted bl m pennwaon to be gone from city business for two weeb -· lCll&ut be has been :a~ from the store· in n ~rs -· .Mooday ll!ght. • Plnklty'1 lougest previous absenoe was four daya. · Marilyn's Death Remembered HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Elghl years ago today Marilyn Monroe, last of the grt!at movie sex symbol1 died alO'lle in her bedroom of an overdo&e or sleeping pills. Her tomb al Westwood Memorial Park still receives 1 fresh vase ol roses three times a week !tom ex~usbaod Joe DiMaggio, the Hall of Fame Yankee &lugger. Saloons and Robert Burke (11.Hllntingtoo Besch) 'were amonc those who voted againn the bill b;ecause thty believe It interferes with pl'OilerlY ~ts. Bldlllm ,,.,. all privale Jll'O]ltl'IY ii In Jeofardy "loilf jl>i coast and title eompenial have·qu.jtiefttd whether they can tmµre It. lie says b;,, C011'1ilu~y 'Jiia Iradl- tJooally opposed re .. Go.al prtrmft.tnt and tbeni iJ no assurance Qr&n"-. County wUJ be represented on 1 foukounty reglooal board. In earlier debate, Badham said. ''Increased beach access -this Is for people who dirty the beach. Yoo should see the beaches of Southern Callfilornia Monday • .mornlog alter all the COi> etrv1Uoallts of the 1oland come to ••• Utter our' beaches." Burb said u be undustands the bill upper Newport Baci Bay could be filled wltb sill by 1 flood and local agencies not be able to dttdge It cut wilh011t state approval. lie said, "ft migbt be inletpnted so you can't plant a tree lhal mterfere.s with the line or sight between the highway and the ocean." In arguing for his bill's passage Tues· day, Wilson said, ''There ii only ao much coastline. It is unique. It Is limited and when It Is gone it is gone. Time and space are running out." Assemblyman John Stull CR-Leucadia) cbarged the measure wu "the imposition ol a drastic ~ JOCial ·system oa real e.state. It is not a conservation bill, but rather a land immobilization bill." He said creation of the regional boards would mean the power ol local govern- . ment would be -r•turned over to i new, idealist.ic·lype group." * * * Coastline Bill To Standardize Developments Tf the coastline preservation bill becomes law this is what it will do: -Provide for development or statewide planning standards for coastal develop- ment. -Create five regional b>ards that will have authority to enforce the statewide lltUdardJ by holding veto power over coastal develapment. -Any developer, public or pri'Vatt. of ;topcllJ for 1,000 ya.la iolind• and ll>tft miles out to ... wUI baye .. have approval of the regional )loard. Ur1>an and c<lllllllUCiaJ areu will be~ ,, -'Illa~ _.in, Orang• Co<mty "'aalllne will also laka to the cout of Los Angeles, Ventura aod'Stnta Barbara counties. PtrpOle of the legislation Is to r.ecfuce reAtrlctioo of accw to publl< beachllncla, interfenrx:e with the line of •ilht to Ihe ocean and Wllle<e""'Y cired4lDa and filling. From Pqe l AIRPORT ••• the Impact area and they, Loo, would hive lo be boujht by the CO!Jlty or soundproof ed. · Emory also charged the report based Its combined noise e1.posure le-Yel (CNEL) analysis on a year's average noise and not on the peak flight perlod of the year, u be said a CNEL evalua- llon required. Emory said U the evaluaUon had been baaed on the peak filght perlod, the nolae figures would have been blgher jn the report. This would cause the 6S CNEL noise contoor line in the ParsoT11 report to e1t.end to Dover !bores instead of tlop- plng at the begloolng of Upper Newport Bay, bringing more houses into d')e pro- posed Impact area, he contended. Emory a1'o char1ed that If tbe· airport service was tripled to 62 OJghll a day, the effect on speech Interference would be such that Dover Shore!i residents' ''\•oices and ean: would be reode.red useless for 1.1 houri a day." · Return V>U 1''1:..--0-•I ,,,.,..... 1h•flt•I K•·~U 1:.itor Taverns Can Be 'Bars' Again t " .... ... • t • : • • \ Tliio"''' A. Murtll'hi11, MMllllll Edii.r l ich•r4 P. N,lf ""1Jll ar.,.. c-tr f!dl"' """" C•I• ~: U WUI .,, $.1 ... 1 ....,.,1 ''""' nn wut '''"' hwlcw1• .....,._ &NCI\.: m ,,_.1 ..,_ M"""""..., MM:~1 11VJ ••tell ~ a.. V..-.. l JU H""" ti Canl'"' ltHI SACRAMENTO (UPl) -For the man who values the trad!Uon of the Wild West, sipping a cool martini In the subdued atmosphere of a cocktail lounie just never made IL lt didn 't compare to-a shQt of red eye at the uwdust·floott.d comer uloon. Well, the saloon iJ making a comebfick ln Cllifomla. Gov. Ronald Rea1an wu ·oet today to alp al a opeclal ceremony ID his ·-a bill mailng It .Jea•I qala for 1 drinilDg utablllhmeot la call Jllelf a "saloon," "baJTOOm'' or "bar." AD three terma have been banned from tavern tlgnJ 1\noe ahorUy 1ftu the r<pul of ProhlblUoo. Allembtymao JoM T. Kno• (0-Rlth· mond). introduced the meuure 11\er he received a letter from Don Br•dley, who matlll'd former Gov. Edmund G. Brown's unJUCCenful 19GG re-elecUon campaign. "Wouldn't you like to be known a11 the man who brought the 11loon back to C.lllomla!" l,.plored Brlldl-.y. '"01llli o( the loa>la !hat would be, d r u o k tn tribute to your leglllatlve 1klll1 ••• • the pusage or such a bill wlll certainly place your name among the Jrnmortals," The Legislature pro.t::rlbed the word "saloon" be.cause of public feelings that lt would recall memories of sleazy pre- Prohibition swinging~oor gin-mill• and 1920s speakeasies. It called to mind im· ages of gambling, prosUtulion, ga_na:sters and bootlegging. When lawmakers In 1935 drew Up laws to govern the liquor industry after It again became legal. th'y strove to keep the business ''clean." ''To those who are old enough to remember back to U\e pre-ProtUblUon days, the saloon has a rather ~flnlte meaning,'' wrote Sen. Andrew. R.. Schot- tQ' of Merced, a member of the Senate committee on iotoJ.icaUng liquor in the J930s. "ll was a pla~ the prloclpal part of which, outside of the liquor It.self, was Oie mahogany bar with the Iron foot rail and lh~ cuspldon, and Is not lo be eonfustd with the modem. •Uf"pluou1 cocktalJ lounce1, t.o which lht yo1111ier ...-11oo bu become ac- customect. •• Di%%ging Heights It's not a super swing -it's just a dizzying Illusion created by look- ing up from the floor of an oil derrick during drilling operations at Lake Barre, La. The swing is a Flexsteel rotary drilling hose which carries drilling mud into the drill assembly. Re sident Livestock Poses Pro bl emf or Park Preserve By TERRY COVILLE •I 1111 D1lh• ~II*! St1!1 City engineers are boning up on the latest phases in ecology because they have a problem in Huntington Beach -they have to separate the weeds from wildlife in a 11trip of land destined to be a wildlife preserve in the central park. A number of residents have cumplained lo the city al:loul the land west of Golden West Street and near the Fran· ciscan Fountains homes. They said :ipiders and bugs were lnlesting the area because of the "weeds and trash in the wlktllfe area." "First we plan to go in and clean oul the lruh left by people -furniture, tires and other items dumped there and In the drainage channel," City Engineer Bill Hartge explained today. But when it comes to clearing out weeds and ridding the area of vermin. the dty en&ll>l!U can only llCl'atcb his head and 18.)', "We're studying the prob- lem." The problem Is that the land is destined to become a "natural preserve" in the central park. Bugs, weeds, field mice may all be a part of the local ecology whJch ctty officials don't want to disturb . "We ~ eliminate the algae in the drainage channel, but we'd have the health . department and lhe Fish and Game Department on our backs for dettroylng ecology," Hartge said. The drainage channel separates the large field from the back walls of the Franclscan Fountain homes. The field currenUy serves as a large playground for area children. Two youna:sters, Don and Daria Secord , ages eight and nine, recited an im· pressive list of wlldllfe they find there. ''There're snakes, gold fish, crawdads. frogs, turtles, tadpoles, jack rabbit!. weasel!, mice, bats, catfish and baas," said Don, after he stopped hunting crawdads in tbe drainage channel Tues· day. "We don't want it cleaned up. Jt's a fun place to play in," chipped in Darla, as she pointed to a path of tunnels and forts the children had made in the eight.foot high grasses. "They could clean out the trash though;' DQri said, a!Ler lhinklng a minute. Hart.ge offered another possi ble solu- tion. "\Ve have to keep a service road> along side the channel. Perhaps we can use it as a barrier to keep the bugs from coming over to the home!." t 'ro1n Page l ROMNEY ... Democrat Robert Docking In November. Docking had no primary opposition. The state's five GOP House members were all renom inated. \Vith all but about 150 of Kansas' 2,916 precincts reporting, Frizzell had 126,132 votes to 70,869 for ruck Harman. Three <1thers in lhe race trailed far behind. ldabo: Gov. Don Samuelson won the Republican nomination for a second term , beating Dick Smith o( Rexburg. Cecil D. Andrus was nominated by Democrats to oppose Samuelson in November. The slate's two congressmen, both Republicans, were unopposed in the primary. . . With 879 ol the slate's 890 precincts counted, Samuelson had 47,157 votes to 32,984 for Smith . Andrus led Vemo11 F. Ravenscroft 23,931 to 23,193, with a third candidate on the GOP side far behind. From Pagel DISNEY ... a "business as usual" basi~. Disneyland officials oote wryly that ~y have dealt successfully in the past w1lh any number of bomb threats (so far, all have been phonies). uncounted grad night soirees and even a couple of adult conventions they'd just as soon forget. They figure the park's attractions will charm whatever Ylppies show up. Besides, they add. the walls that divide Disneyland from ·the world are 16 feet high. Fire Bombs Hit Enemy In Cambodia PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (UPI) - Four U.S. Air Force jet fighter-bombers today bombarded Communlsl lrwpa l'llh napalm, firt bombs Jo a direct suprt missia,1 for Cambodian soldiers battllng for control ol a highway JuncUon. UPI correspondent Kent Potter wll- Ml!ed th< ralcl oo the ouWllrtl of Stooo, 35 milei northe1st of Phnom Penh, and overheard radio conversations betwec,1 an American pilol and a Cambodian field commander directing the air al· tacks, The question of direct American air support for Cambodian ground fcircts has become a matter of debate in Washlngton with some congressmen clalmlng such misslons are beyond the bound! of Preside.at Ni.Ion's Indochina pollcies. U.S. headquarters ln Saigon bu declined to anOOUOCi! the raids officially. Potter said the raids this morning lasted 30 minutes and were Down in two flights by four U.S. Air Force FIOO Supersabers, a relatively slow jet which was used extensively during the Korean war for support mbtion11. Potter recorded a radio conversation betwee1 an American forward air control ( F AC) pilot and a Cambodian ofncer on lhe ground with both men speaking in Engliah. The Cambodian pinpointed the location Of Communist positions and the Supedsabers roared in to drop IO 250-pound b o m b s and canisters of napalm and rake the area wilh 20mm cannon fire . The targets were about 500 yards from lhe Cambodian lines. "All riaht, you can proeeed if }'Oil wish now," the FAC pilot radioed to the Cambodian commander. "\Ve are going to stay here for a few more minutes in case you need any help. There will be another rustic (code word for forward air control pilot) in 20 more minutes ." M!Utary officers said Communist forces were entrenched in Skoun and its outskirts but that Cambodian soldiers still controlled parts of the town. It >... is near the junction of Highway g and Highway 7. South of Phnom Penh. on the Kirirom Plateau, Cambodian spokesmen said 1 .~ Communist soldiers have ~en killed in a series of air strikes, some of them apparently nown by Americ1n pilots. ff * * Allies Waging Mass Offensive SAIGON (AP) -The United States and South Vietnam are waging a massive alr and ground offensive along 200 miles of the Laotian bonier trying to bloclr: North Vietnamese troops and supplies destined for South Vietnam and Cam- bodia. The South Vietnamese command an- nounced that several thousand troop..'! from its 1st and 2nd infantry divisions and a marine brigade were conducting "several operations" along the border from the demilitarized zone to polnta soothwm or Da Nang. Other sources reported that U.S. B52 bombing strikea in the Laotian panhand1e had been intensified during the past few days. A spokesman said the ground opera- tions had produced no significant results yet. probably because the monsoon nlns in Laos have slowed Nortb Vietnamese activity. Countian Dies in War The Pentagon Tuesday reported that Spec. 4 Roger J. Carr of Fullerton has been killed in action in Southeast Alia. He was the son of Mr. and Mr1. Wllllam F. Carr Sr., 2019 Carol Drive. I y~~ CONVENIENT TERMS BANKAMERICARO MASTER CHARGE • for Mother or Grandmother Fr1>m l to 9 GENUINE Birthstones 1roc1fully set in 14 Kt. whttt or ytllow 1old ••• Tht special romtmbranco from wery mtmhtr of Iha family ••• from U9.00 J. e. JJ.ump~~ie j J eweferj 24 YEARS SAME LOCATION !Ill NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA 'HONE 14e.1401 • J I 'I , I ,.-, \ I ~ • .. Bqntingto~ Beaeh Today's Fbtal •· .N.Y. Stoclu · voe. 63, NO. 186, 4 SECTIONS. 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, AUGtlSr S, ·1970 TEN CENTS. Seal Beat!h Mayor Fired By RUDI NlEDZJEUKl ti "'-Olll'f Pll1l Sllff Mayor Mort.on A. Baum Tuesday became the third man to lose his job In Seal Beach since the politlcal tempest began sweeping through the city. He's still mayor. but he no longer employed as a phannacist tor the Seal Beach Leisure World Golden Rain Foun- dation. The mayor called his firing "an obvious form of intimidation and retaliation of the crudest type." His dismissal, he said, can be traced directly to the firing ol City Manager Lee Risner and City Al- Judge torney Jim Carnes July 27 -action which he lnitJated. The official reason for his termination, Baum explained, was that he failed to resolve a conflict or interest prohibited in the bylaws of the foundation . The specific infraction cited In the notice given to Baum by the foundation Friday was that the rules governing lbe foundation prohibit effiployes holding jobs with other firms or ageocies doing business with Leisure World. since the retirement community con- tract& for police and fire services Baum's role as mayor was held to be in violation, the DAILY PILOT waa told. Jack David, administrator of the Golden Rain Found&Uon, could not be reached for comment. "The roundallon as well as the people in Leisure World were aware that I was running for council," Baum said. "Had there been a real conflict ol in- terest everyone would have been aware of it." He pointed out lha.t he was nominated for mayoralty by Counctlman Harold Holden, past president of the foundation. The action WU SfJCOllded by Lloyd G~ mere, a former toundatiori director - Served wiUt the notice and attacbed severance pay checks Tl.leaday morn. ing the mayor said, "l can't sa.y that it was totally unexpected but I didn't think they would be so crude aboui it." He s&d he receiv'ed a nolke F'riday from the foundallon which utaed -blm lo resolve the conflict either by qulttJna as mayor or as pbarmaclst While the furor COt1tinues tn the dty, Lee Risner, the deposed clty·ma-r. said this morning be would agree to · work as a eomullant Aug. 10 in ttto: (9" BAUM, P1ce l l Sticl{s to Ruling Manson Request for Mistrial Denied Again DARIA AND DON SECORD ENJOY QUIET MOMENT AT POND (n Huntington Beach, Se~r1tlng the Wildlife From th• Weeds Resident Livestock Poses Pro bl emf or Park Preserve By TERRY OOVJU.E et fllt Oii"' Plllt 11111 City engineers are boning up on the latest phases in ecology because they have a problem in Huntington Beacb -they have to separate the weeds from wildlife in a strip of land destined to be 1 wildlife preserve in the ctintral park. A number of residents have complained to tht city about the land west of Golden West Street and near the Fran- ciscan Fountains homes. They said spiders and bugs were infesting the area because of the "weeds and t'rash in the wildlife area." "First we plan to go in and clean nut the trash left by people -furniture. tires and other ilems dum~ there 3 LITTLE LINES SE LL BIG ITEMS These three little Jines furnished the advertiser an evening or enter- tainment (the phone kept ringing until 10 p.m.) and -of course - &old the merchandise: ST 0 V E & Ftigidalre refrigerator, Good cond .. both $75. xxx-xxxx. TI1e ad drew more than SO calls, The stove and refrigerator were sold at the asking price . What more can you ask? Call a DAILY PILOT ad-visor and line up some phone calls on whatever it Is you have to sell. The direct line to results is 142·5678. and In the drainage channel," City Engineer Bill Hartge explained today. But when it comes to clearing out weeds and ridding the arf'!a of vennin, the city engineer can only scratch h.is head and say, "We're studying the prob· lem." The problem is that the land is destined to become a "natural preserve" in the central park. Bugs, weeds, field mice may all be a part or the local ecology wh ich city officials don 't want to disturb. "We can eliminate the 1:lgae in the drainage channel, but we'd have the health department and the Fish and Game Department on our backs for destroying ecology," Hartge said. 'fhe drainage channel separates the large field from the back walls of the Franciscan Founlain homes. The field currentl y serves as 11 large playground for area children. Two youngsters, Don and Daria Secord. ages eight and nine, recited an im- pressive list of wildllf~ they find there. "There 're snakes, gold fish. crawdads, frogs, turtles, tadpoles, jack rabbits, weasels, mice , bats, catfish and bass," said Don, after he stopped hunting crawdads in the drainage channel Tues- day. "We don't want it cleaned up. It's a fun place to play in," chipped in Daria, as she pointed to a path of tunnels and forts the children had made in the eight-foot high grasses. "They could clean out the trash though," Don said, after thinking a minute. Hartge offered another possibJe solu- tion. "We have to keep a service road along side the channel. Perhaps we can use it as a barrier to keep the bugs from coming over to the homes." LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older today denied a defense motion for a mistrial in the Tate-LaBianca murder case based on President Nixon 's remarks about the guilt of Charles Manson. (Related Story Page 3). Judge Older said that he was :;atisried about the jurors hearing the case are "able and willing to be fair and im· partial" in deciding a verdict for the hippie leader and three young women codefendnats. "The time has come to place thi!I in its proper perspective," Judge Older said. 'fhe judge said it was not import.ant v.rhether Manson bad deliberately invited prejudice by holding up a newspaper in front ol the jury Tue.sday wit .. tbe headline, "Manson Guilty, Nixon Declares." • · "The important point is whether the members of the jury are capable of rendering an impartiiN verdict in this case," he said. "That is why I called them in here yesterday one by one and asked them whether their ability to return such a verdict had been impaired by lhe in· cident. I am satisfied it was not." With the jury aut of the courtroom. the defense began the day with the motion Cambodians Get Help From U.S. In Napalm Drop PHNOM PENH, Cambodia {UPI) - Four U.S. Air Force jet fighter-bombers today bombarded Co1nmunist troops with napalm fire bombs in a direct support missiCll'l for Cambodian soldiers battling for control of a highway junction. UPI correspondent Kept Potter wit- nessed the raid on the outskirts or Skoun. 35 miles northea st of Phnom Penh. and overheard radio conversations between an American pilot and a Cambodian fie ld commander directing the air al- ta cks. The question of direct American air support for Cambodian ground forces has become a matter or debate in Washinglon with some congressmen claiming such missions are beyond the bounds of President Nixon's Indochina policies. U.S. headquarters in Saigon has declined to announce the raids officially. Potter said the raids this morning lasted 30 minutes and were flown in two flights by four U.S. Air Force F\00 Supersabers, a relatively slow jet which was used extensively during the Korean war for support misaJons. Saloons Making Comeback No w 'Cocktail Loultge' Not Only Place to Ge a Drink SACMMEN'l'O (tlPll -For tile man wbo v•1aes ~ u.e tradtt1oll'' or the, Wud we.st, sipplf!t a cool ·martini in the subdued. a~pliere of' a ~tall lounp just ne'ter"nlade it. 1 • • Jt diqri~'t compare to · 1 1t1hot' of red eye at 1he sawdu.st.floorcd coraer saloon. w~. the oaloon ls makllll a comeback In Cllifomla. Gov-Rooakf Reagan was set'today to sign at 1 special ceremony In bis offiet a bill making it legal iaain. for a drinking eatabliahment lo cell itaett a "saloon," "barroom" or .;bar." All three terms have bctn banned from tavern signs since shortly after the repeal of Prohibition. AssemblymAn John T. KnoK (D-1\ich- mond), introduced the measure aner be receiYed a Jetter. from Don Bradley, wM managed ·fonner Gov. Edmundo. • Browil's unsucCeuful 1966 re-election campaign. "Wouldn't you like to be known as the man who brought the saloon back to C1:Uforni11?" implored Bradley, "Think of the toasts that would be d r u n It In tribute ·to your legislative skills • _ • &be passage of such a bill wUL certainly place your name among the immorUls. '' The Legislature pl'OICribed the word .. saloon" because of public feelings thAt it would reC'aU rntmories of sluey p~· l>rohtbltion· ,awlnging~ gin·mllls and 1920s sP'ake.1tSlu. It called io mind lm- IJ!" of rambling. proalltqtlon, 1angs1trs and bnotleggina. When lawmaker• In 193S drew up laws to govern lhe liquor industry • afler it again became legal, they atrove to keep the business "clean." "To thoae who are old enough to remember back to the pre-Prohibition days , the saloon hu a rather definite meaning," wrote Se.n. Andrew 1l Schot· lky of Merced, a member of the Senate comtnJttee on Intoxicating liquor in the l9SOs. "It was a place, the principal part of which, oulfllde or lhe liquor itself, was the mahogany bar with the iron foot rall and the cuspidors, and Is not to be contused with the modern, sumptuous cocktail lounges, to which the younger generf.tlon has become ac- cuslomed. '' , for mintrial for all the defendants an for mistrial !or all the defendanLs on dent of Ule United Stateil: constituted ';Prejudict of the most signillcant kind ." Deputy district attorney Aaron Stovltz said tliat Manson had clearly tried to establish judicial ettor. "It's the same thing as if· he tried lo escape or got up and said he wanted to be given the death penalty and then Giant Put-on? DID MANSON PLAN TOWARD A MISTRIAL? SIE PAGE 3 . ask for a mistrial," Stovitl said. "We're all aware that Mr. Manson is calling the shots in this case and he called them yesterday. "Whether Mr. Manson wants to or not it ls the intention of the people Disneyland Preparing For Y~J!Pie 'Insurgents' By CllAJILEslf.toQs - .. 1M O.ll'f .... Sl,9ff The Ylppies are coming, the Ylppies are coming. Right here lo Orange county. Jn ract. to Disneyland, to storm the bastion of all that is wholesome on Thur.iday, the anniversary of tbe Hiroshima A·bomb. It's a (check one ): (a) Fact. (b) Rumor. (c) Giant Put-on. (d) Nobod)' Seems to Know tor Sure. (e) None or These. If you picked (d) you're. as close to the real answer as lhe (a) Disney brass. Cb) Anaheim Police Department. (c) Los Angeles Free Press, which ap- parenlly started the whole thing in the first pl°"'. "Aug. 6, Disneyland, Yippie Interna· tional Pow Wow," proclaimed the Free Press in a rec1!nt edition. 'fhe words were arranged around a smiling picture of Mickey Mouse holding a top hat in one hand and an automatic rifle in the other. A story appeared on the same page under the headline "Yippies at Disneyland.'' ". _ .while they will now let you in with long hair, etc .. " the article advised, "they may not let you in without a ticket. But as the old proverbial saylng goes , 'Tear down the walls that divide us.' ,, A call to Free Press offices in an effort to shed more light on the gatecrashing implication produced little In the way of hard information. Disney firass and Anaheim polire also appear to be short on hard information about the rumored invasion. "All we hear are rumors," they say. Consolidated Court Marshal Bill Gets Okay Legislation authored by Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Huntington Beach) to copvert Orange County to a consolidated court marshal operation, as in most large counties, has been signed Into law by Gov. Reagan. A head marshal with an assist&,nt marshal and Lhree inspeclor depuUes will be hired When the consolldatlon goes into effect De(:. 1, according to Judge Richard Hamllton, chairman of the county Municipal Judges AssociatJon. Marshals of the five tounty municipal court. systems act as balutfs, transfer prisoners. serve warrants and serve subpoenas on witnesses among other duties. .Pre11ently there are Uve head marshals for the fJve municipal court systema Jn Cost• Mesa, Laguna N I g u e I , Westminster, Santa Ana. and Anaheim· Fullerton. One or them will be promoted to chfef marahal and make bis offloe • in SOn!a Ana, the c:Ouhiy ... !. Th• other outlyln1 offices will be retain~ •' One unconflnned report out or the DilneylaDd Hottl bod Ylpple Jeader Jem Rubin of th• Cblcqo Seftll cbeckJnc in tor an overnight stay this week and then checking out again without leaving a forwarding address. Disney officials and police say they are not Ignoring lbt .rumors and are prepared to handle any eventuaJlty. However, the amusement park will open Thursday at the usual hour on a "busi~ as U.S!,!•l" basis. Disneyland of!k:lal1 note wryly that they have dealt succcssfUUy in the' past with any number of bomb threats (so far, all have been pbonfU), uncounted grad night soJrees and even, a couple of adult conventions they•d just as soon forget They figure the park's attractions wlll chann whatever YipplM show up. Besides, they add , the walls that divide Disneyland from the world are 16 feet high. . Lenore Romney Cel'tain Victor In Primary Test Bj Tbe Associated Press Lenore Romney appeared a ctrtein winner todlty lh her bid for the Republican U.S. Senate nomination fr~m Michgan, one of four states holding primary elections Tuesday. Mfs. Romney's opponent, State Sen. Robert· Huber, said at midmorning that he was "preparing to concede" victory to the Sl·year-old wife of Michigan '! fonner governor and present U.S. secretary or housing and urban develop- menL Re 1aJd he expected to send Mrs. Romney a telegra m of con· gratulations later tOOay. Huber's announcement came as elec· tlon returns gave Mrs. Romney S2 per- cent of the votes cast-In the race. With 79 peraent of Michigan's 6,G14 prte~ts reported. tne 111\0(flclal coll!ll was ts'i>,492. for Mrs. Romney and 232,883 for Hljber. Tn the other three stales wtth primaries Tuesday, the unof~clal' count showed these results fn maJDr races : Mt ..... rl: Se~. St\1111 Symington WU • i.n&llde victor In bis bid for the Democratic nomlneUon to his fourth· term in the Senate. H1s November GOP opponent will be Alty. Gen. John Dan· forth . All 10 Incumbent c<ingrtnmen - nlDe Democrats and one Re.publican - won renomlnauoq. ' With 95 pe.r<lent of the etate's 4,246 precincts COWJted, Symington rolled up 363.811 votes to a total ol 44,040 for four opponents. DonfOrth plclted up 158,019 votes of 220.307· cast tn a thr~ man race. • to proceed with this trtal.n After the judge's rullnc the jury wu. brougbl in Ille! the lbree young "°""'" defendants suddenly· stood up' and began chanting some song about President Nm..• on and their ~t. Order was-restored .and Linda Kasa-- bian, the key witness for the prosecution resumed her testimony under cross-ex· amliiauon. V all.ey Fluoride Issue Revived By Di.s8enter Fluoride i3 still ... -bi f OW>tli#' v~. Jf!bn Harper, lb&" )one._ mtmber ot the ctty COllbCll to . opimt lts pl,octmeni In the city water supply, revived the -Tuesday lllg)lt. ••At our next session -Aug, 18 - I want lhe council to consider placin& lhe fluoride question before the voters In an election," Harper told fellow COUI)' ctlmen. "To avoid ~ngthy dbcusslon, we might limit the subject lo the merlta of n election and not the merits of fiuoride. • be added. 1-larper's stand followed requesls b;y • six individuals to have Lbe council mike the nuoride issue an election. ' "We 're getting a distasteful reputatloft in this town of always peUtioning," Mrs. Jan Wilhelm said, referiing to the peti- tion currently circulating calli11g for I. referendum on lhe fl uoride issue. ..I don't think It's necessary. This ma~ should be left to the people. "It seems to me that ir someone wanted to change the status ot 9ur water they should have had to · petitloll; not us," added Don Crane, 9514 Gardenia Ave. No action was taken by the council Tuesday except lo place the election request on the Aug. 18 agenda. 116 Bodies Recovered BASSETERRE, St. !Gtts, 8.W.1. {UPI) - A total of 116 bodies have beea recovered in the sinking of the ferry boat Christena that .sapsized saturday between St. Kittts a,nd NeVls in the Caribbean, the harbormaster'a oflfce an. nounced Tuesday. The office also issued a revised count of survivors of the disaster, Ii.sting 91 counted on botb Islands. Orange Coast Wea'tlter Those lazy, hazy days of .summe.r continue ThUisday. with low clouds in the morning aqd filtered sunshine afterward. Temperature alteraUona will be minimal. INSIJ)E TODA V Ctrtat monu.factiirers ·Qoino .map. crackle, pop over nutrf.. tio!I cnlldam. Thcu glv• tllflr vftwa On PdQt JI. ' . 'J Di.llY PILOT H w_,, "-s, 1970 DAil.'( ,llOT fftff l'M .. CYCLE ENTHUSIASTS LET HUNTINGTON BEACH CITY COUNCIL KNOW HOW THEY FEEL Ace S.tterfield, Kmneth and Robert Schm11ll (from left) LiJten to Proposal for Mini-bike P.1 rk II Field Studied Mini-bike Park Plam Offered in Huntington ;Minlbike rider1 mai ""9fl ride aroqnd II In '\11 014 oil field .In downtown tlngtop ~· BarriCades mey be put up to cf~ a trail area and some of the lots garded t.o create hilly terrain. "I'he idea was one of two pl8JUI ese.nted by Parks and Retteation · ector Norm Worthy to city councilmen wef.i: to provide a public riding ror ininiliike enthusiasts. ~ idea was to work out arranaement with Daft.England, who ' ai..·~ private Huntingtoo &ad.I de P On Totlbert Avenue, to create ""Ir!<'-'"' minibikes. order. Victim n&7.i fd~ "" t for Thursday 1'. funeral service is scheduled Thurs· !Y morning for a slain Costa Mesa man whose husband is accused of • dering her and wounding a family ' uaintuce. ftube111 Corrales, 37, of 238 Fairway , Costa Mesa, was to be named y in a fonnaJ complaint charging with the death of his 36-year..old · e Sylvia. Rites for Mrs. Corrales, shot to death y morning in the family home, be conducted Thursday at J 1 a.m. tbe Bell Broadway Mortuary Chapel, Mesa. leaves four SOfJS, James, Daniel, vid and Cervando; two daughters, thy and Donna, and her parents, " and Mrs. Francis Rice of Huntington llcli. tons David and Cervando are by her • nd husband, who was arrested ' tly after the death of Mrs. Corrales 'be drove through Newporl Bea.ch. .. fe is al!I> charged with the attempted · rder of Tom Newhard, 37, o( 17145 • l.I Maria St., Fountain Valley, who ' shot in the left arm ud stomach . DAILY PILOT ; OAANGS: C.IJAIT l"UaLJoHIHG COMPANY aobtrf N. W.oi Pr•'ilW>I •N P"'°'- Jttk a. c .. ,1 • ., \tic.4' '"'"--....... ,,,.1 ,,,,_.,... ··-1ho"'•I J>,, M11rphi"' M-litrt Eo<19r J>.!1n Dirk ift WKI O·•-C6un1y E<1•1or Alb1rt W. ''''' Auoc.1111 E•ltor Hdfi1ttH h•• Office 11115 l••ch Bo~l••••,j .)C.11119 A,jdrou; l'.O. 101 7,0, f2641 ottwr Offlus u...,.. •••"" m ., .. ,., "'-. '*'•MINI. no Wu! l•Y S!rttl • N......, .. _,,. JUI Wat a11t101 a:1o111cw~ ._ cie..-11: :m NMlll fl C1onlM 1tu1 As Worthy .cave his report, severaJ motorcyclists aat quietly ln' the aijdience clutching s"" calling !or. • pu~llc motorcycle park. , The placards carried slogans like "Lei H.B. Take the Lead in Cycle Parks" and " '70 is the Year for Cycle Parks.'' Worthy heads a commitlee charged with the task of finding a location for a minibike park. He said the commitLee will report to the Par.ls aoc4-Recreation Commission with a definite -proposal Aug. 12. Worthy e~lained that the oil field course WOOif put the nlnibike track next to the parks and recreatioo depart. ment buildibe on Orange Avenue and. 111h Street. The plan involves barricading city •lnetf.!rom l"h 'lo ;l2nd streelJ from ~cl!1'! r ·r r· Mio~~~~~ from the streets throough the lots," be saj4. "We cooJd grade these Joli to prov·ide some hllla and dales." : Ask.Id . whether the parks and recrea .. tion staff would mind the minibikes buzz. ing by their windows, Worthy said that proper muffling systems would be re- quired. Worthy said the operator or the Hun· tin&ton Beach Cycle Park had a 40-acre lease but was using only 20 acres. The city eould lake 15 acres and build a minibike cOune, by sperldJnl •bout ll,500 on grading. ''This would· allo"' Eaglaocl lD COO· oentr,te OQ h\5 Tr and da~ A racing ~ and give us a minibike track without having to pay anythl.Dg on the lease," he said. Worthy also indicated ijlat there could be advance registraUon to decide how great the need is for such a park. The parks chief added that his com· mittee had ruled out a ror.mer dump near Edison High School as a possible JocaLion afler receiving a 11:...name peti- tion objecting to thal sl'le. Eroded Beaches Replacement Job OK'd by Board A $1.5 million project to replenish eroded sand in the SumeL Beach-surlside area and in West Newport was approved Tuesday by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. 1be project by the U.S. Army Corps or Engineers is to get under way Oct. 1 and be completed by next February. The lat.est oC periodic sand replenish- ment projects Js a necessity now, ac, cording to Ed Koehn, chier of engineering for the COrps' l..o8 Angeles district. He noted that last December the Surfside area, with its beach lined by bomes, began to experiena! accelerated erosion and, that iI left unchecked the situation would be cr~tlcal by November. Ooe and a bill million cubic yards of sand will be pumped over the earth wall from · the U.S. Navy Ammunition Depot entrance and spread along the buch, Orlll(•· Cowjly Dlr<dor ol Harbo<s, Beadla and l'aru llennclb Sampaoo aald. The Newporl end of tilt proj<d will see the placemtr1t of 100,(1(1 cubic yard! of sand betw.., ~wport J!ier and 36th Slrett where U,. buch la n1rrow ; con- structlon of a nibble mound 1roln at 32nd Slttet, and placement of rubble aroond metal groins at tOth and 44th streets which have deteriorated and bcalmf! hazardous. Sampaoo said he dldn 'I know ju.sl y.•here. along the beach the Cofps Is going lD borrow lhe Newport !'Ind, bul he ts •ure it "'1111 be "iodd ocean 11nd rathtt than dlrtJ river a and." Beach Trustees To' Fight RuJing On Principal Trusteea of the HLtllUngton Beach City School DiBlrict decJde4 Tuesday night to .appeal the Superior Court decision forcing them to accept Mn .. Charioma Schwankovsky as .a principal in their district !or the 1970.71 school year. "We're going to tau the case lo the appellate court," S.A. Moffett, district superintendent, said this ,morn- ing. Superior Court Judge Robert Corfman ruled last week that (he district had not given the former LeBard School prinCipal sufficient notice be f o r e demoting her to a classroom teacher. ~udfe Corfman granted a writ of man-<We Qtqqi.ring the district to rei.ost.ale t.l(t.' SdrWankav9ky as a 'Jrinctpal in the diJtriC{ jhough oot .......nly at I.he ~ l1tti>ol: . ~ The boltd"'of trustees demoted Mrs. 'Scllwan!< .. sl<y !lay 13. ~ has ~ lllot l'bprges -not ~'"'\;ll::!f~..£.uo~ unfounded. Moffett has said action against her was taken after three years of atudy of her performance in LeBard School From Page 1 BAUM ... proceedings against the Marina Palace, a teenage dance hall , charged with allow- ing disorderly CQnduct. 'l'he hall , operated for the past five years by Mary Robertson, wife of former Seal Beach gambling entepreneur Bill Robertson, may lose its license if Ule charges are substantiated. Critics of Baum have suggested that Risner was fired so the Robertsons would not lose the license. Risner and former City Attorney Jim Carnes will aid tbe city staff in con- ducting the hea ring, the former city manager said today, although the pay has not yet been agreed on. . Baum Tuesday told members of the Seal Beach Proteclive League that be was unalterably opposed to gambling. Gambling has been an issue during the current controversy with some Baum detractors alleging that he is tied lo gambling interests. ..There were all kinds of rumors that T was going to bring topless waitresses and bottomless bars inlo the city but I told them l would lead the fight as long as I was mayor," Baum declared_ Risner, who also spoke at the meeting , altended by more than 500 persons. denied all charges surrounding his dismissal. They inc luded fallure to provide the city oouncil with the proper fiscal reports and absenting himseU from city hall on his own business. Trash Pickup Fees to Rise Trash collection fees for Fountain Valley will jump from $1.25 a nlonlh to $1.60 sometime in September. , City councilmen approved the rile change Tuesday night . granting a ~nt Increase for Rainbow Disposal Company, and a lfkent increase lo cover the city's cost in sending out the trash bills . Rainbow Disposal had requested a 50- ce.nt lncrtase, but counclfmen turned !hat down. An exact date for the st1rt or the new rale was not set. CoU11tian Dies in Wai· The Pentagon Tutsday reported that Spee. 4 Roa:er J. Carr of Fullerton Pas ~ killed in action in Soulheaat Asia. Re was the son of Mr. and Mrs. W,llllam F. Carr st .. 2011 cirol llrlve. Residents Irate Over Teen Center The storm over Founlaln Valley 's Teen Help center blew into city CQUncll chambers Tuesday night, upsetting tempen and drawing angry comments. City councilmen agreed to seek a firmer band on activities at tbe center, but not before they had a few angry exchanges with the audience. At least half-a-dozen businessmen and residents criticized the Teen Help center for lack of organization and super-Vision. It is located in the middle of a neighborhood shopping center at Heil Avenue and Bu.shard Slreet, where R>me residents and busineasmen have complained about the large gatherings of teen-agers drawn lo the center. "J'm against the teen cener. I'm against the youth who congregate there. My wife has been insulted ro many times she won't come down to the shop," Dennis Suw, operator of an electronics repair shop, told councilmen. "I no longer have a business because of it," l!ald. Harry Brusnahan, operator of a laundromat, which he closed Tues- day. Jn an angry retort, Councilman Ron Shenkman said, "I've sat here listening to you people deride, chop and cut down -but I've never seen mosl of you before. The only time J do see you is when there is something to CQmplain about. "We have an uncomfortable situation here. I'm nol saying there isn't a pro- blem , but I am saying it's magnified . I object that businesses which were failing long before the teen center arrived are using il for a scapegoat,'' Shenkman said. Gene O'Connor, operator of an in- surance agency and a critic of the teen office, said, "I want to make one thing clear. We are not looking for a legallly to pull their license. I would help them, but there is no room in this facility to substitute good manners ror bad behavior." Arter the discussion and tempers had cal1ned, Shenkman asked far a full report, wiili suggestions for solutions lo the problem, be made to the city council at Its ne:rt meeting. Shenkman, who actively works with !he teen center, said plans are already under way to form a committee to give it more guided direction. Slim Oasses Slated at YMCA The Orange Coast Two-Step has Hun- tington Beacb women moving to the left and the right. Not politic.ally, but for the pW'pcse of exercise. It and many other wacky exercises are currently offered in a YMCA - sponsored "sllmnastics" CQutse each Tuesday and Thursday rrom 7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Teacher Mary Lowell say11 the eight· week course is designed for women who v.:ant to firm and lone muscles and trim away those extra inches. Included in her arsenal of exercises are the Belly Wbopper, Duck Walk , Crane, Abdominal Joy, and the mighty Earth Tremblor. The classes are under way now at lht YMCA's multipurpose room, 17931 Beach Blvd., but another eight-week session is planned this summer for women who want to get in from the beginning. U.S. Jet Crashes ZARAGOZA, Spain (AP) -A U.S. Phantom Jel fighter-bomber crashed on a guMery mission in northwest Spain today, killing lhe two crewmen aboard , the Air Force announced. It said the Phantom carried conventional weapons and crashed in an uninhabited area. Bi Bo Serrano Serrano billed as the educated horse shows a silver touch by figur- ing the 'weight in troy ounces of the silver bar held b_y Eug~ne Cerarden, 2. (left) and his brother David, 4, of 8431 Rellly Dnv~. Huntington Beach. The bar, which weighs 184 .50 troy ounces and ~s valued at $369 , will be offered in a drawing ~aturday at 1 p.m. · '" the Huntington Center maU . Serrano is appear1~g at the center daily as part of the Silverado Days western celebration. Fountain Valley Church Aids Gas Station Appeal The First Christian Church of Fountain Valley stood up for a gas stalio~ Tuesday night. The gas stalion won. City Councilmen voted J..2 lo overturn earlier planning commiSllion denial or a gas stalion on the southeast corner of Magnolia Street and Talbert Avenue. Humble Oil plans Lo build the gas station in conjunction with a small shop- ping center planned for the corner by Taylorson Development Company. Church members, more than 30 strong and led by the Rev. Arthur Reese, supported the gas station appeal because lt would allow a land swap giving the church property along A1agnolia , south of the sbopping cent.er. .. This land swap will enalile us to eventually build a walk-in, drive-in sanctuary and a third building for a teen center,'' Mr. Reese explained. Mayor Edward Jy.sl and Councilman Ron Shenkman opposed the gas station and supported lhe planning commission's contention that the corner was "a poor site for a gas statioo because of the number already existing." Clinton Sherrod, city planning director. said thit would make the Talberl- Magnolia mtersection the first in Foun· Planner, Park Boards Get Pay Planning and parks commissioners in Fountain Valley have been put on lhe ci ty payroll. The city council authorized payment of $10 per meeting to each member of the city's Planning and the Parks and Recrealion Commissions, wilh lhe amount not to exceed $20 each month. tain Valley with four gas stations. lie also said there are 14 gas stations along ~lagnolia and Talbert within a mile of the intersecUon. Councilman John Harper led tbe coun· cil support for the gas station. •·1 lhink. privat.e enterprise should decide v.•here lo put its money. It's not the government's responsibility lo decide whaL co mmercial enterprise will or will not make it." Councilmen Georije Scott and Albert l{ollinden both denied ShenkmRIJ'S a1·· cusation thal their votrs '"'ere influenced by the presence of lhe church mem· bership. "I looked at the pros and cons of the situation and think this stalion would be an asset to the community," Scott said . Marine, 21~ Dies Of Burn Injuries A young Marine corporal who was carried from the bla zing wreckage o{ a KC 130 fueling tanker five days ago al El Toro died early today in Orange County Medical Center. Cpl. Kenneth Metzdorf, 21. whose base home is less than a mile from the fiery crash scene at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, died in the intensive medical care unit to Vihich he wair admitted Thursday. He lcavt:s a widow and two children . Hls skipper, Isl Lt. Roger \Y. Mullins. 27. of Huntington Beach died In the crash. Three fell ow crew members were hurt. -- $54 .40 8~&~ for Mother or Grandmother From I to 9 GENUINE Birthstones gracefully set in 14 Kt. white or yellow gold . , • The special rtmembranee from every member llf the family.,. from $29.00 CONY!NIENt TERMS J. C. fiu1nphrie '.! Jeweler" 24 YEARS SAME LOCATION IANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE llll NEW PO RT AYE. COSTA MESA PHONE 641.340 I - I I I j I J I 1 I OK'd b11 Senate = I Bill to Protect l,_QOO ~iles Of · State Shores By mOMAS FORTUNE .c .... DlllY "9t lteff SACRAMENTO -A bill pulling 1,100 miles or California coaslllne under state planning and ioning authority was ap- proved U-30 Tuesday by the Assembly. But the bill was not sent to \he Senate because the leader of the opposition, Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R • Newport Beach), gave notice he will . seei a vote on reconsideration later this week. A first vole on the bill resulted l.n a 31-31 deud!Ock nine days ago. But opponents -an allianct. o( coo- servationistJ> who said the measurt didn't do enough and conservatives wtto ca lled ll an i'tlvaslon of property rights - failed lo dupllcate last week's strength. The erosion from the "anti" block was comprised r1t conser'\lalionists who decided the bill by Assemblyman Pete Wilson IR-San Diego) was the best they could get this year. TI1ree other bills even more strongly regulative of the coastline have been either killed or pigeonholed. . The city governments of Huntington Beach, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and San Clemente have supported the Wilson bill as being the best of the lot from their standpoint. ll provides for the least imposition of state authority into traditional city planning and zoning pol'•ers. The \Yilso n bill provides for more city and county government represen- tation on regional boards governing coastline development than did the other bills and it limits the definition of the coastal zone lo J,000 yards inland instead or half a mile as did one bill 8Yld one mile as did another. Orange Coast Assemblymen Badham and Robert Burke (R·Huntington Beach} were an1ong those who voted against the bill because they believe it interferes with property rights. Badham says all private property is in jeopardy along the coast and title companies have questioned whether they can insure 'it. Ile says his constituency has tradi· tionally opposed regional government and there is no assurance Orange County will be represented on a four--col1Jlty regional board. In earlier debate, Badham said, ••increased beach access -this Is for people who dirty the beach. You shou ld Coastline Bill: What It /tleons tr the coastllne preservation bill becomes Jaw this ls what It will do: -Provide for develop1nent of statewide planning standards for coastal develop- ment. -Creat.e five regional boards that will have authority lo enforce the statewide standards by llold1ng veto powe r over coastal development. -Any developer, public or private. of property for 1.000 yards inland and three miles out to sea will have to have approval of the regional board. Urban and cummereial harbor areas will be exempted. -The regional board goY\:.'tning Orange County coa11tline will also take in the coast of Los Angeles, Ventura and Santa Barbara counUes. Purpose of Uie legislation is lo reduce restriction of attess to public beachlands, interference with U1e llne of sight to the ocean and unnecessary dredging and filling . see the beaches of Southern Calififornia ti1onday morning after all the con- servationists of the inland come to ..• Jitter our beaches." Burke said as he underst8Ylds the bill upper Newport Back Bay could be filled with sill by a nood and local agencies not be able lo dredae it out without state approval. I-le said, '1lt might be lnte;preted so you can't plant a tree that in terferes with the line of sight between the highway and the ocean." In arguing for his bill's passage Tues- day. Wilson said, "There is ool y so much coastline. ll is unique. It is limited and when it is gone it is gone. Time and space are running oul." Assemblyman John Stull (R-Leucadial charged the measure was ••the imposition of a drastic new social system on real estate. lt is not a conservation bill, but rather a land immobilization bill." He said creation of the regional boan:ls would mean the power of local govern· ment would be "turned over to a new, idealislic-type group.'' No End Seen to Strike By Sheet Metal Workers The month-old strike by about half or Orange County 's sheet metal workers rloes not appear to be near seltlemenl. Officials al union headquarters in Stanton say they have been spending 12 to 1-4 hours a day in negotiatioos but no agree- ment is in sight. Allies Waging Ma ss Offensive SAIGON IAP 1 -The United States and South Vietnam are waging a massive air and ground offensive along 200 miles of the Laotian border trying to block North Vietnamese troops and supplies destined for South Vietnam and Cam- bodia . 'The South Vietnamese command an- nounced that several thousand troops from ils Isl and 2nd infantry divisions and a marine brigade were conducting "several operations" along the border from the demilitarized zone to points southwest of Da Nang. Other sour~s reported that U.S. B52 bombing strikes in the Laolian panhandle had been intensified during the past few days. A spokesman said the ground opera- tions had produefd no significant results yet probably because the monsoon rains in Laos have slowed North Vietnamese activity. Panther Ne,vton Ordered Freed OAKLAND {AP) -Black Panther Par· ty leader Huey Newton was ordered freed on $50,000 bail today pending Newton's relrial en v o I u n tar y manslaughter in the 11117 shooting death of an Oakland policeman. Alameda County Superior Court Judge Harold Hove set Sept. 25 as the date when a retrial date will be determined. While lawyers we~ In the process of posting bail, a crowd of 3,JO Panther sympalhtr.ers stood nullilde t h e courthouse shouting-, "We Want Huey Now !" The judge said Newton would be retired on a voluntary manslaughter charge, as to try hln1 agaln on a murder charge would constitute double jeopard,)'. • AOOut 500 of the 950 sheet n1e ta1 workers in the county walked off their JObs on July I when their contract ex- pired with the i'6-member Sheet ~1etal, Air Conditioning and Heating Contractors Assn. ISMACH L The association is•one of the three groups of the 106 contractors employing sheel melal workers in the counl y. One of lhe olhcr groups, the United Sheet Metal Contractors Assn., never was slTuck , acrordfng to association president Jack Kinney. The associalion, c1nploying about 300 workers. negotiated a new t.'<lntra ct with the sheet 1nelal workers in mid-June. The contract provided for a $4.95 hour· 1y inc rease over a three.year period. Before the strike, the hourly wage for sheet metal workers was $7.06, according the Sheet Metal Workers Union Local 420. But Sf\.1ACH was struck on July 1 when a new agreement cou ld not be reached. A spokesman for Sf\.1 ACH., Mike Ottman. thought one of the problems with the negotiations were terms ap- proved by United Contractors. "When they reached the $4.95 an hour settlement in the middle of June, we almost had an agreement for $3.10 an hour," Ottman said. According to Ottman. some individual members or SMACH have reached in- terim agreements with their workers, and the contractors are ba ck in business. But he said that SMACH sllll has the bargaining rights for all of its members. The third ''group" -the independent contractors -were struck 1in July I. but most of them ha ve. since negotiated with the union for the san1e t.enns a5 Un ited Contractors -$4.95 an hour in· crease over a three yea r period. Marily11's Death Remembered HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) -Eight ycar11 ego today Marilyn Monroe, last of the great movie sex symbols, died alO'lle in her bedroom of an overdose of sleeplng pills. Her tomb al Westwood Memorial Park still recetve1 1 fresh vale ol roses three time1 a week from ex·husband Joe DiMaggio, the Hall or Fame Yankee 1Jugger, H DAll.V '1LOT i Mistrial Manson Plan~ Judge Questions Jurors After Manson Displays Headline LOS ANGELES I UPI l -During the noon receu 9f the Sharon Tate murder trial T\Jesday. defense lawyer Paul Fitzgerald was as.ked U il was likely Charles Manson himself might try to cause a mislrlal by shouting to the jury that President Nixon considered him guilty. "He might very well ," FltJ.gerakl replied. "Manson might do anything." During pretrial hearings, Manscn Wlll noted for his outbursts, and earlier Tues- day be had addressed the cou rt, asking to defend himself. Prosecution lawyers have complained Manso n's remarks to his lawyers sometilnes can be overheard by jurors. When the jurors filed in for tl'le af. ternoon session, another defense at· torney, Daye Shinn, w_as sitting at the cou~I table, thwnb1ng through the sports section of the Los Angeles Times. He rose to jOin other lawyers in a bench conference, leaving the newspaper spread out on the table. Manson leaned over, picked up the newspaper, and folded it so .that the headline on the front page, which read, ''Maf\SOn Guilty, Nixon Declares," was Oil top. Slowly he turned . the newspa~r around so it was upside down lo hi!I eyes, ihen llfted ii up, and held . it in front of a pile of books, displaying it to !he jury. A woman juror in the front row gas~d. Deputy District Allomey Aaron Stoviti, standing al the bench, was listening to the attorneys <.'Onfere~ with his head cocked and his back to the bench. He saw the newspaper in ~1anson's hand. "Your honor ~" he shouted. A bailiff, William C. Murrey, jumped forward and grabbed the newspaper from the tiny defendant's hands. Manson smirked, stroked his beard, and looked over al his three female codefendants, who giggled. The state's star witness, Linda Kasa- bian, who was waiting to resume her testimony, turned to her lawyer . "Did you see what Charlie did?'' she asked. After a hurr1ed conference with the lawyers, Superior Court Judge Charles IL Older called a recess and sent the jurors to lhe jury roon1. Then. one by one, he called them in and asked 1f they had observed the incident . Most of them said they had been ab le lo read the headline, bul all said they would not be influenced by, it_. . One alternate juror. John Elhs, said he read the headline Manson held, •·nut it didn't matter, since I saw it yesterday on a newsstaOO." Ellis said he had g\in1psed the newspaper while being driven back . to the Ambassador 1-lotel r.ionday evening 011 the she riff's bus, despite elaborate precautions ordered by the_ judge to insure no jurors saw the headlines. The bus was driven lo the hotel by a circuitous route intended to bypass newsstands. Tuesday morning they were driven to court i11 a bus with the windows shaded. Older asked each of the 12 jurors and six alternates to repeat the oath they too k when they were sworn in as jurors, promising to consider only evidence presentod in court and not to be influenced by anything else they might see or hear. Car on Freeway Kills Doctor, 23 An Orange County Medical Center phyiscian who got out of his car to question another motorist after a minor traffic accident was struck and killed by another vehicle on the Garden Grove Freeway in Orange early today . Offie£rs said Dr . Victor f.1anget, 2.8, of Garden Grove, was involved in an incident of minor nature and pulled his car over to the liide of the freeway. lfe was struck as he walked around the vehicle. The driver of the car which struck the doctor was not held. Gunshot Deatl1 Of Youth Probed Cypress police and coroner's deputies today continued their investigation into the death of a youth who may, they said, have bttn "fooling around" with the gun that inflicted fatal head wounds. Jeffrey Alan Livingston, 16, of Cypress. died Tuesday In Los AJpml\os Genera l Hospilal four days after his body wa11 discovered by friends on the bedroom floor of his home. Officers said lhe youth was shot throuah the te.mple. A small hand gun was nearby. Italy Cabinet Picked ROME fUPI) -Premier _ d~signate En1\ho Colombo today began choosing a cabinet to present t.G parliament as the 32nd post-fascist aovernment of It- aly. Colombo won 1pproval Tuesday night from lhe four parties he hopet will collaborate in a center-left eotlltion with 1 program that can be 1pproved by parliament. U~IT ....... TATE MURDER DEFENDANT MANSON DISPLAYS NEWSPAPER HEADLINES TO TRIAL SURY Judgei L•ter Rec•ssed Court to Question Jurors; Prosecution Asks if M•nson Pl•nnint Mi1trlel --- 1/2 OFF MEN'S REGULAR $100 SUITS I SPORT COATS, ALL WOOL, DACRON/WOOL SLACKS, FAMOUS PERMA-PRESS REG. $9-$12 5.99 SWEATERS, FAMOUS WOOLS AND BLENDS REG.$18 $5 SPORT SHIRTS, SHORT SLEEVE PERMA-PRESS REG. $7-$8 2/$8 SWIMWEAR, FAMOUS MAKE-TRUNKS AND SETS DRESS SHIRTS, LONG SLEEVE, WHITE & COLORS DRESS SHIRTS, LONG SLEEVE, FAMOUS MAKE TIES, GREAT COLORS, GREAT SELECTION BELTS, BIG VARIETY, GIANT SAVINGS REG. $4-7.50 1.99·2.99 ANAHEIM ONLY! THURSDAY7 P.M. TO 10 P.M. ONLY! ) Do\11.Y PILOT Wed-, Auolol 5, 1970 . .. ............ Y-of Hcmolwu would ltolm car back, but he'• COlll:el1led ab<M the brief· c left in it. Yates, a doctoral o..,.tle m tbe Univenity o! I'-. sAl4 the briefcase coo- l a year'• ....arch on to:li· • ID a pablic plea to the auto be albd only for the return brlefcue. .. . .------ •• Tllq 1PJ """""' -do<r ltmlge • tllillg• to people, ""' 11111 Ir - 1o ... What -lo bl a mot11kr in t11a Tyl«, T«. dly J)CU'k Ir only s-.-.~k1 Mi.kt Dance tnside a plaJI· o"°""4 1tru.cture. • The men who work at nint J*lp and paper mills tn Britilh Coi.mbia art a.siting for four moathl of maternity leave as ou of their contract demand.I. A.Uhough tht Pulp and Pa~r , Work.tr• of Canada hai only a Mftd.Jul. of womtn among (ti 6,000 ~mbers, the union want• ftlCIUrnity leavl!! txttruUd to tht nwn. Union official.I say that »Mn a JMm~r asked for time oft a fn.o 11ear1 ago 10 he cotdd mind tht cl~Udrtn wh ile his unte toGI tn ho$pital having a baby, Ul4 compa n11 re/used. • Dorothy Ann Schurk went to po- lice bead.quarter& to claim her car. l.....,d, she got a ticket for neg11· gent driving. Police said she was tbJown clear when the car bit a guard railing-and then lunged ov• It. Egypt Guns, Israel Jets · In Combat 11Ju.l ........ - E1)1111an gunners rallied artillery men. "' !Mleil ~-Ill_ the s. .. c...i ..... today &lid llraell wuplanes rlruCI: bock In the '17th -Uve da7 · ol air raids In the aru where the United &tit.el ll trying to eltlblisb a ..-nre. Other Irraeli jets atuck<d targets In JC1111an In wbal _. dl!9Crlbed u r<prisal raids for Arab perrilla ettaclu oo l.mdl farm oommunuw, Grouod 1kirmilhin1 wu reported aloog llrael'r border wilb Leblnln. 'Ihe combat wu over'lhadowed by a doepenlnJ rift In the Arab world ovu the U.S. plan for lllddle Earl peace. Iraq lmplled tlllal F.cYPI'• ~ to llghl led II to acc<pl the -.0 caU I« a ceel&!lre and negotiations under u .N. auspl-. Em>t cooveoed a unity conference of Arab stata In Libya today but Iraq boycotted It. A Cairo communique 11ld Egypltsn art1ilerymeo opened fire on braeU pog1. tions in the northern &eetor of the Suez Canal ••0ne Israeli tank was dea:troyed and Its occupants killed," it uicl. The Cairo announcement said 26 IsraeJI fightf:r-bomber1 ' IWept over lbe canal and attacked F.pptle poritlool Ill the northern and southern sectors. "The Israeli planes were met with heavy ground fir<," an Egyptian spotesm.an a.aid. c'Two of cmr 10ldier1 were wounded in the air attacks.'' In Tel Aviv, l.mdl headquarterr raid other fttb.ter-bomben struck 111 t o northern Jordan at 10 a.m.. to bit "ter• nrist leri.U" for aa hour In ftPl'lral for guenlJla am,. of a klbbuls about II mllos rMh d the Sea ol Glillee. Israel ,.Id an Arab aqen1lla wu ldlled fn club with an tsra'tll Army patrol lhiJ morning In the !oolbilts of Mt. Hermon on the Lebanese border. Two other guerrilla.I were reported kllled In a clash between the Dead Sea and the Sea of Galilee. Baghdad radio broadcast a series or deounciaUon~ against Cairo this morning 81 the Iraql leadership joined AJ.leria in boycotting a meeting in TriPoll, IAya, of the -.necJ Arab "coofroilllllcin" 15t.ltes. The meeting of defense and foreign mJnilters of Epp!, Jordan, ,Libya '-nd tbe Sudan opened ifter a two-day delay IO the Libyan premier, C:OJ. Moammar Al-Khada!i, C01114 al!empt to llOlve Iha Jraq!.F.rJpllu rilt. lllt --•• I.amoureaux, 82, Di .. CLERMONT-FERRAND, France (AP) -Luclen. Lamour'eul, 82, wbo was finance mini5ter when France fell to die Germon& in 1940 died today alter a heart attack at bJs home 1n the vlllage of Creu11er.Je.Vieu1. · 'l'rflffie Stopper . An Oregon Contractor building a oew road bas found a good way to get motorists' attention by blrlng Jennifer Hummel to wield slow and stop sign1. Male drivers don't seem to mind the Inconvenience any more. Fewer Than 24 States to Allow 18-year-old Vote WASHINGTON (AP) -Lerr than hall of the 41 stafa lbat do DOI eUow 11 year olda to vote have lndlcaterf o., will comply with the lows vOUng ap In the -ledenl Vo41Dc Rights Ad, Al\y. General John N. Mitcbeil slid lndey. ~ from the 50 stat.! to • letter aent out by Mildlell Lut month b""'ltit out that 20 states w111 allow 18 year olds to vote in all electlonl after Jan. 1, 1971. TWo states -Georgia and Kentucky -now permit 18 year olds to vote. In addition, between th.rte and 11.% states with the litera:y or aood<hMacter poll tuts may defy the new law's ban on sucb voting requirement., Mitchell said. That provision of the law went into effect June 22. the date President Nixon l1gned the bill. Mltcbell wrote governors of the 50 st.aSel July 11, seeking written usuranoet by last Monday they would comply wllh all provilioor of tile act. MitdleU raid _..,nate lepJ aclioa woold be taken aoJnsl thole who 111bmlfted a neg•Uvt --... lllled to rupond. OC mOll immediate imporlrnce ts IUlplMion of ltteracy or good character tub: 1n the 14 states which have that requirement. Eight of the states - California, Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, New York. Oregon and Washington -have agreed to suspend the literacy tests, Mitchell said. BFK Jr. Nabbed Shriver' s Son Also Held i11 Drug Raid HYANNIS PORT, Mm. (UPI) - -... Kennedy, II, -of the llio New York aenator, and R. Sargent Shriver W, 17, son of UM former am- bassador to France, were arrested Tues- day night 1n drug raids, It was disclosed today. The two boys were among 17 persons seized in raids by local police in the Hyannis Port area, according to authorilalive source:i. The charg~ ln· volved marijwwa, tbe sources 1aid. The raldl were staged at several spots 1n this Cape Cod resort community. Authorities said the youths who are not juvenile would be arraigned loday in district court. The juveniles are. to appear Thunday in the juve.nile seuioo of the aame court. Under st.ate law, juvenile court pro. ceedings: are privileged. MassachUJetta law states that persons under 18 are considered to be juveniles, Young Kennedy is the second oldest &o n or Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (0.N.f .), wbo was assassi nated in June, 1968 while campaigning for the presidency. Shriver is the son or R. Sargent Shriver, who resigned earlier thll year as U.S. ambassador to France and is campaigning around the country in sup- port of Democratic candidates seeking election. Celia's Wake Leaves Rain Southwest Showers Follow Swrm; Su1111.y Elsewhere 'l'emperaturn Celia NoW Rain Sto,rm ' . ' Nine Killed • in CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex. (UPI) -Tbe rema1ns ol bun1cane Celia, which at Its beig)d devastated ""°"" of towns from the Gull COast to the MeJ:lcan border, today dumped heavy rains and threatened llub flooding in far west Texas, 700 miles: from the sea. Celia, pacldnii winds of !SI miles en hour, churned from the gull of Mesico and cul 250 mil .. tbroogb Tull Mon- day, killinl nine -· demolishing almost every town in It.a path and cauaing milliom of dotlan in damage. Celia turned Into • ram 1110m1, carrying u much moisture as it did wbeo it first hit land but without the hurricane winds. Rains of two iocbes were common Uvwgboul rporldy PoJ>Ulaled wort Tex- as aod the El Paao Weather Bureau. illued llub flood _wamlnp !or the big bend country of Teua. Streaml were running at flood stages and several roada were undtr water, but there were oo injuries or exteohve damage. Along the cout and In Col'pul Chrilb, however, there was such destruction that Gov. Pretton Smtih called Celia "the most diaastroua storm to hit the Tel<l!! Gulf Coast in modern Times." Virtually every community in the path of the atorm when it was at ita peak was demollahed. The worst hit cities were : Corpus Christi -Four de.ad. Nearly Texas When Hurricane Hit every building in the dty of 201,MI WU damaged. No flecCridty. No WI~. Damage eslimlt<d at '308 tn11Uoa. Ono thousand injured. Ar1111181 Paar -Four dead. Mlljqr or minor damage to every ~ Jn town. Almolt no drlntiDI water. Bathing prohibited by Jaw. Mathis -One dead. Damage estlmakd at $1.$ mUlloo. More than 20 percent of the residences and 50 ~ of the bnsi""f.56 damaged. 4 In addition to the nine penons killed as direct result of the bun1caoe. three ' other• died of beert ottaclu in Corpul Chrisll during Monday's storm. "Hurrlc8.ne Celia may prove to be the mOll disutn>UI rwm 1o bit die Tens Gull Coast in modem times," Gov. SmlUI said to a telegram to PrfS!J.,,t J11xon req11e1Un1 the coast be dOcwid •federal dlsalter area. ... .. :~ "I don't guess there's a buslnes! !n town le!t," said City Clerk Billie Joe TeMill ol Odem. "Just about everything WU demoli$hed." "°"' ~· a eorr.;s Christi telephone opetator. aaid · 'Our house trailer exploded when tt lint hll We can't flnd anything . Not even the refrigerator. We can't ev~· find the refrigerator door -only a shell." Robert Wage1 b;is ~i(e and lilt seven childron rnqved to lbe cout relqltiy from Denver. "We've always wanted to live OD the water," Mn;~ Wage aaid. "But thl\ ls a little too much waJer." 4 of Sextuplets Succum~ ROME (UPI) -Foor of the aextuplela born three montba irematurely to a pr<Vi011117 child!.., liallan houaewlle died urly today wllhin U hourr of birth. Doctors 1aid tbete wa11 UtUe chance the two survlvhlg .inf•ots would live. Mn. Antonio Petrone, 35, gave birth to three boys and three girls, Italy's lint sutupiets, in a 35-mlnutt span 1uesday night and war reported in good condlUon. She had been treated with a fertility drug after 11 chHdJess years ' of maniage to a MO-a-week laboret. One boy &lid ooe gb1 dled Uir!t hol1n alt.r birth. The dealha of, soother boy and _girl were annowiced at mi<!Jnom!nc- 'lbe surviving babl~ were; kept ~er C0111tant walch in Ol)'CeztWled , In- cubators and were reported breathlng laboriously, neither of them weJl!)llng more than tWQ pounds. Petrone vbited his wife In her room this morning and held her hand as they chatted. Other women patients in the hospital gathered aorund ber bedside in a gesture of sympathy. 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 placfug 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 should I put my savings with Mutual Savings and Loan Association? A. We asked our own account holders for the answer to this 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. Q.How big is Mutual Savings? Mltll WW Prec. A.We're called ''The Big M" because we have over 440 million dollars in assets. H1ry ·~ ............. Ulllf VI"' l1elt """"' I\., .... .,..,.. ,..,,. .....,"" _..,.,. ... 11 ii.tt ... '''-,.., Mil .,..,.,,.,, """ kNSI• l't. c..1111 ..._ ......... ,_ .,._ " IO 1'. !11lfftlf .........,,,.,,... '"'" fl'M 41 11 .. Wli.t' ltmHW1llWll ... Sun, Moou, 'l'ldu WIDHl:SOAY ~ t>i.h ,,,. ,,,,,. 4' ffCOnd IO• . •1'1 '""· t I THUtSDAY '"" llltll '" ........ 1•1»1,n1 .... .-w lew ........... f:U1.m. f .7 MClf"4 llltll •. . ... ll;»a.1111.. • •• ........ ..... '·• ' , ..... flU'J.fll• J.1 """ •1 .... f 1111.m. ..,. r:• ,,,,., Miii -..,.. f:lllA .... •1lrp.M. fJ .S. Su111•ar11 ,,,,,.. Ill tfll N lkift llM """"W• 11ff., 1111 -• todff, ~r• ....... Ill Kllfill'lll ...... TM l'MWltlllll ol HvrrklM Cll11 ,._11111 Mllwlr •-,_.....," H•• Mu· lcit '°"""" _..... .. Art-. ,_,, MMI lllullftf"«1M •OM _,,,,,. Tt~· It Inf Nftt Ill ... tNtll Nlw Mloko 11141 Ari-. ,.,._ldtflt Nllltllll Tue11M~ c1Kl1rtd -·I MIUlll , •••• <<1111111•• I m1lor 4l111ter ''"• ''"'"' r-11 '"""' for r.lllt from 1111 1H1rrlc1"''' d..,•111· I~, Al ltlll ll!llt' "TIMI W11fl kllitl:I •nd mtl'I fl>tn 1,000 lftl11•H II'( tl'lt ·-· lall.,11111 show"' •-r-1H fretl'I ~ IOU"*'" midwttl '-1111 IOUI~· •" 111111 tl'l9 Alll'!llc Cl•lf lodl,, flml n lft •It• "41 IA lllt Olntr•• lllf '°""""" Jtitkl& Albuc1Ut'11UI Andlat"' All11111 81k1r&llllcl 81wn1rck 801 .. ·~~ CMc:1'° Clrtel11n1!1 CltvlltP'IO Dell¥tr Otlrtll Eu•"• For! Wort~ F'"9SNI ··-HoM!ulu Huiston lt;IM1$ City L11 V1'911 LCllAllHlft M f1"'I INC~ Mllw"*" MlllMADOllo Nirw Orluiu. New Y~ 01kllN:I Om•~· ''-"' ltotiltt l"~H.o.!Phl1 P"-"I, Pllhhv•tl'I Port11"" lted 1 1 .... 1 ·-Slrrl"'•11i. sl 1.111111 llll 1,,.._, Clf'f' S1110lff0 Sin "•-.C:ltco $111•1 l•rfMI•• S1•1'!1 -•M T-J... w.~ ' " .. .. a " " " .. " " '" .. u " .. .. " " .. " " .. " ff " " " " .. ff .. .. .. " .. .. "' " n " • .. • " " M .. .. " " .. .. " ff " .. .. " • .. ·~ " " n " y .. .. " ~ " .. " .. .. .. n .. " " .. " " .. .. • '" n .-" Q. Where are your offices? A.Mutual Savings has offices in Pasadena (head office), Glendale, West Arcadia, Covina and Corona del Mar. RobeltD.A.- Yk1 Pmidclfl 4 Maa1w1 MUTUAL SAVIN&S --=;....;.;;..i COllONA DEL~• 216] Baal Cpeet Hii11""1 I ,j 11 I ' I I I • \ I . I ' ~ I• I ·I t I New ABM System Started by Army UPI T1l""'9 .. WASHING TON (UPI) - The Army bas started work ' OD a new, Improved an- UJ;la.111.Jtlc missile s y s t e n1 designed to ~place Safeguard, lhe 16 billion IO 110 billion ABM system tt has just started to build. The new system, . dubbed "Hardslte," woukl cost the same as ·or • Uttle more than SalefU•nl. the weapon which has provided a plat!orm for the mWtai-y rpendlng debate throu&h much of the 91 st Congress. Existence of the new ABM sy!tem was di.Klosed in .secret testimony by Army research and development official.I to the House AppropriatiO(l.S Com· mltl ... Qpponenlo ol the ABM 1ay the admlnilb'ation should atop work on Safeguard now and devote its rtsources to the new Hardsite '!lystem. But Army o!fllcats say if they keep doing that, they will never 1et anythin1 built. Riot Troop s 1 Arrest 20 SEN. FULBRIGHT SCORES rv COVERAGE CBS President St•nton Wa its Turn to Reply In Ireland Two Network Chiefs BELFAST. Northern Irel1r.d (UPI) -Br!Ush troops cha1g- ed into crowds, bloodying head& and arresting 2 O persons, Tuesday night and loday in a crackdov.11 <>n Roman Catholic mobs that I have attacked them with I stones and bottles for six con· sccullve nights. Def end TV Coverage WASHINGTON CAP) Televl11ion network chiefs urg· ed Congress today to quit thinking about getting Into the newscasting business a n d leave the job to the pro- fessionals. ln testimony for the Senate Communlcatio111 CommiUee, CBS preiident Frank Stanton and NBC presidenL Julian Goodman oppoaed a bUI by Sen. J. W. Fulbright {0-Ark. ), to require broadcaslers to give prime time to the Senate, HOUJe and judiciary, They said broadca s t newamen' present a fair. balanced news report, and described Fulbright's proposal as "dangeroualy almplistlc," unnecessary and pouibly an lnfringemerit upon a free pren. Sen. Edmund S. MU!kie !D· Maine), however, b a c It e d Fulbright by saylflg television distorts compllc'ated national IMUea and that Congres' should have a ch~nce from time to lime to address itulf directly to the public as the prealdent now does by custom. ''The people heve a right to be informed of the prevail· Ing congressional altitude on the aignlfic1nt n a t i o n a I iS!ues." Mu.sk:ie said. Goodman replied : ' ' W e believe that the goal or public understanding is best met by letting broadcas1ers, rather tban legislators or regulal.Or.!1, judge what kind and com- bination of programs will most fairl y and fully cover a particular isaue. • ' Broadcasl organizations have no political aim1. Their ne\\'smcn -by training. background and approach - are concerned with reporting events and exa mining is.sues aa profes.sional joumall1ll, not with winning votes or elec- tion1." Stanton said broadcast news Is not perfect "Bul it is most certainly more satlsf11ctory than It would bl under any system in which n e w 1 judgmenls are made b y government official! or dlc· tated by leg)slative or re11ulatory formu)as.'' Soldiers expressed In· creasing bitterness a n d frustration al the tactics of the Cal.hqllcs. An Army spokesman said severaJ soldiers were Injured by the latest stone and bottle barra1e from the crowds in the Catholic areas or Belfast. Twenty-rive were i n j u r I! d ~londay night. There was a brief outburst Tuesday night in Londonderry , where mobs attacked army patrols and set fire to two buses and three cars for use as barricades. Though the disturbances Tuesday night v.•cre mild com· pared wtth the five previous nights, the soldiers SWUYll their clubs with abandon and used nausea gas to dlsperse crowds. More States Might Lo se House Seats Bomb Re~alled WASHINGTON tUP ll - The 1970 census, when finally labulated. might put Alabama and Oklahoma among those states expected to lose a e-0n· if'Wlonal seat, a House sub-Thousands Tour fl iroshima committee predicted Tuesday. lflROSHJMA, Japan (UPI) it at 200,000. The congressional deleaa· _ Visitors from almo!I. every "There has been a !harp lions or the two statea had comer of the world toured increase in the number of been expected to remain Hiroshima today on the eve foreign visitors in rtcenl unchanged in 1 projecl\on of the 25th annlver11ary <>f il.3 weeks," said Yoshi mi t 1 u made by the Hou.~e Cenaus destruction by the first atom Kosakai. historian In the and Stati11llcs Subcommittee bomb dropped Jn anger. Hiroshin1a Peace Memorial last year. Museum . ''Visitors ere coming But preliminary census Hotel• and boarding houM!s from pracl\cally every country returns now indicate Alabama reported capacity bookings. 1n the world:" and Oklahoma might join ~1any of the roreigner! CAme Th · l p Iowa, North Dakola , Oh1'0 and from the Expo '70 world fair e tourists went o eRce at nearby Osaka . Park to see the only building Weal Viraln!a in the tabulation preserved in the slate of in the lo11s of one seat each At 9 a.m. Thursday, the destruction left by the gen-when the nation's 435 e-0n- e11ct hour when lhe U.S. B29 baku (atom bomb) lhat the greulonal di1trlcts are reap- Enola Gay dropped the first United Statet dropped on Au&. portioned on the basis of final atom bomb, thousands in 97 fl h I Id Htroahlma's Peace Park w111,_6_, _11<>_. ________ <_0_llll_r_•_s._•_•_P_•_ne_H_._1 bow their heads to mourn the de1d. The exact number of . persons killed by l h e Hiroshima bomb never has been determined. The United States estlm1ted the death toll 11 80,000. The Japanese put * * * Bontb Site Rally Slated LQ.S ALAMOS, N.M. (UPI) -Peal't adVt>Cates were 11thering today ror an anti war rally at the site where acientllts gathered HCreUy durln& World War II to build lhe firat atomic bomb. Loi Alamot, a remote mount1ll'IOUll c om m u n I t 'I 1ll1htly older than the 1tomic .,. It .. hered In, I• )he 11rae1 of I t~ay HlrOllllml day demonritr1tlon. Clly o1nc1a11 uld Ibo ...,,. munlty's pollce rorce ha betn alerted and IS state poUcemen have betn 1~ationed throuihout the oommunlty of 11,000 penons. WHnRN STAn UNIVIRllTY COLLEGE OF LAW In Orange County now acc•ptlng men •nd women whe •r• eltheri ._, ..... ,.,...tof_..,....._ ..... ....... , .. ,,.,, •• _,, ......... ...-.4 ........ .... ''"'IMt<Htl ""'*Y .. ·r ... • .. ....... (r.118Ht ......... lty .... lM IL.I. ,.._ -W ...... fo ' _. J .... lllM d•-• J~----· ....... -tl ... Apply Now for September 10th DAY OR EVENING CLAIHS •"'•., ........ ,_ Wwwllw .. ~ • 100 I. lroalrhur1t Aftahelm Phone 635-3454 Uke Safeguard, the ntW ABM -now In UM: "coacept formulation" stage -would prot<ct u.s. m1 .. n. •lloo against a pre-anptlve Soviet atrtke. The differenc. woukl be that "Hardsite" W®ld eon. sist oC more, but smaller •nd cheaper, radars and corn· putera than those belnc used by Safeguard. The radar~puter u.nlb, which guide Sprint interceptor missiles. would be s o numerous that It woukl be unattractive for the Sovlet.5 to try to knock lhem out. ~ Safeguard radars and computers are large ind ex- pensive. Some scientists fear they would mike easy , al· tractive targetl In 1 n y Russian attempt to overwhelm the ABM. and then paralyze the tttalialory ml53!.les in their Sil<lS. The Army officials, led by Assistant Secret.ry R. L. Johnson, said they reeocnlud this as a IX>S3ible deflcJency if the Soviet! lncreue the accuracy of their missiles and the number of re-e nt r y vetucles each missile carrits. '\ Nixon Meets ' U>ngo Chief • w-. """'" s, 1970 OAILV I'll.OT I 11 Perish in Blaze ; Building Destroyed in Minneapolis MINNEAPOLIS, Mlnn. (AP) wu le.53 severely damaa:ed. a coiled-up rope at the wllt- -Eleven men, moat of thtm A prtllmin1ry loss estimate dow. ' tlderly, died In • blue tlllt wu PtJI at ltlll,OOO by Lee He klcilld out a wlndo!i. swept a three.Jtory building J . Schoepboerster, F 1 re threw out the rop6 and alld in downtoWn MJnneapolll early Department supeni.sor ol in-down the rough brick facbJ.C ' today. Four perlOnS Witt vesU&aUons. of the buUdfn1, hJs baMll hospliauted In crtuc1l con-1 ............ Lan•-'•rf, '!. w"A smarting With burn9 a! t- dltlon. · -., ....., ' •N lande<l on the ~dewalk "i F~ lflcl I Id · occupied a third-noor room, led u"' o as sa nine fire ~engine• w1i to :_. others escaped, one by cllmb-was asleep w h e n the fiNi scene. ~ , broke out. ing down a rope strung oul The buildlna housed th .from a wtndow on tbe top "I awoke aod s me 11 e d busioesses on the first fl floor. smoke ," he said. "So I opened and had 33 unit.a of roopis The blue 1pparenlly started the door and I could hardly and 1partmenu. on the se~ in a wooden outside stairw1y see the corridor light, it was and third floor. Loca~ I on the back, firemen said. so black." the 200 block of East He •· ~ cause was not immedt1te -He said be knew he'd never Avenue, it wu DOt far l ly kDown. Tbe lnterklor ol the make It down the stairs, so I.he ~tlsstsaippl River, trl~ Congo President J o a e P h second and third floors were he kicked his w1y into a va-secllon of small bu!i~ ~1obutu , in this country trying deltroyeji but the first floor cant room ne1t door and found and rooming bocuel. ·!fS: to interest American [•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.~ WASHINGTON (AP) buaineumen in his Alricao : OLYMPIC POOL rJtil homel1nd, has a booster In T & Pr lde I NI • The ''MARATHON SWIM'' Is In Its 10th D•r.· The k ldt Have Swvm • es n xon. • 9441750 Yardt (SM Miies) 260 Cont nuous Houral ' C:,~0" .. ;0~;:1r m~~~~!.~.'. : HAVE YOU IACKID THIM WITH YOUR lor American enterprtoe, bul • DONATION? wo ,,. ,,.,, f•11'4~""' let w ...... Sift• 1••• -~.~o~k~~u~~1~e:y s~~~!: ~'::t'~~~-~-~-~~~~~~.~~: .......... _ ........... -··-·-·-·····-····-,··-···················-·-······· : • for ochieving t balanced • ADDlUC: l v·i,f iiTA° ... PO.O°L· .. ··-···· .. --·-······--p:c;:·-a;~ .. too····················· ; : budget and • favorable bal. • F o U ~DAT Io II Coste Maoa, Cillf. 92627 ·'W ance of trade. ·• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' • a • • • • • a r : I ' Get the pleture. Face up to the full·color Polaroid Land Camera at any one of United States National Bank's 58 con· venlent offices. It's a snap. In just 60 seconds your picture will be ready for your ap· prova l. Then it's chemically lami nated into your FaceCard, the safest, most convenient Master Charge card yet. If you al ready have a Master Charge, replace It with a new • FaceCard. It's absolutely free, of course. Should you lose you r FaceCard or have it stolen ... it's still safe. Any attempt to break the seal destroys the usefulness of the card. No cred it card ls safer. Or more exclusively you~. It provides quick, positive Identification wherever and when· ever you need It. Merchants glance at your FaceCard. Then at you. And quickly know you have a face to be trusted. .. If all this isn't enough, we give you an added bonus. Wltfl our FaceCard, you get the option of our Bonus Balance Check Plan, which lets you write checks for more than you have in your account. Apply for your FaceCard today. It's a snap. UNITED 68 1 conv£nlent focatfons 81'.M'BS M•-'•"•'-~"""'~":"''"'fodo"I '"""~~ Cost1 Miii Olli .. 180 N1Wport llvd. South Cout 'l•tc1 33U lrlotol Street I ' " '~ . ·~ . ·•· -. ' ' • ' . " • ..ill ~ 'ol [ . ··~ , .. ' •' ~~ . .. ,., • " " , I " • ' ., . • . ~ • • • . • • • • ' • ' -' ' • • ~ r j • • .. Aft,'\' PIL!I ~Q'G&lll PAGE • Sex· Education Hassle ·· Allor -moolhs ol heated debate. the Hunt- lnlloe BMch Union School Diltrict sWI deean 't know whit to to about sex educatloo -for adults. back lo lit• drawill,( boards and try again. but COJllild· • erlng the general •iluetloa In the clllilricl It would be a llltile effort. It looks as ibough lmn1ly IUe and aex education is dead for lhe moment. 'l'lliJ may not be so imP'lrlant for the adults. But It ii not In' the best interests or Ill• A cllluns committee •PJ>Olnted to develop a pro- ,,_ for famQy IUe and sex .clucatlm, has f!nilbtd Its wort. wtlh Its momben dividing' into two• camps. Tb• comllllttee. because of Its· Jilli! pe'i:sooallty. was forced · to hand over two C<Jllllictlng reports to tho district's board of'llustees. • children. The 1$mernber l'lllljorily sot up lS Pill•• o( plde- llnes for a program of family life and sex education - ._sec11y for adults. The U.member mil>OrilY lu!ned In a seven-page document ripping apart the majority ""°"-, The deep split on the committee alone is enough to confll&e the sex• education picture beyond understand· ing. • . The majority reporl is heavily ~·eigbted with mor- al!zinlt llomili6, wives' tales and questlouble Anfonna- tion. The only sayiag tac.tor about ii ii that it's in- tended f0< adults ·who probably wouldn't attend such classes BJlYW->'•. l ' .. I ,,. ~ A1 one ~ U..,majoajy report Mt• c~ ii completely lieelill1 and·leadi to ·i09d ~ishmen\S In society. Fnr ~le ,...,id cate to c!!l;!lege lhe pOint .. ' -few people would find it ~t to them or to the ~ • program in the scliJOts: 'Ille JeS!ion isli't:wry relevant • ID a study of fam!IY life and iex educatlcn. " The biggest·1 fault of the ·majority report· is its in- accurate lei!al Jnd me_cnc;11 lnfonnatfon and )ack ol ob- jectivity. SuggesUnJ ·• !Owty oath !or family life taacben seems..8f11incall..i.for provisjoa. - Worthwhile Expenditure? ~ Almosl s!Qlullaoeovsly, the cilies ol lluntlnJl(on Beach and Fountain ValJey have acted to improve their imaie. Both bave pUblished newsletters. This method of keeping the citizenry informed of lbe dbiri~ of locaJ government is gaining favor witb many commWlities . The contents of the newsletters are similar in that both contain a light feature story. a breakdown on the newly-accepted city budget and a roundup ol park de- ~ velopments. Fountain Valley's 6-page newsletter cost $1,200 to • priht and $300 to mail to 7 ,500 homes. Four issues per ,year would come to 16,000, l>ut the hope is that includ- !Qg the letter In waler bill mailings will reduce mailing • Costs ... ·The ~ge Huntington Beach letter, with lt'"6er qual\ty pru.t!ng, Cl>ll $1',ISOO -$500 to print and •1.100 to mail to ij!l,000 homes. The hai'd challenge facing such newsletters is pre- s_entirig information of significance and interest to ciU· zens without falling into mere puffery or munJcipal projects and per,50nalities, while avoiding aspects of city afiairs on which the councilmen -the publishers -are in disagreement. • l ~ '. . ........ ,~,~ . ~ dD1q, .. /1"~ The U..member minority grouP' makes some justt.. fiable criticism of the majority report, but minority members deserve their share of critidsm too. \Vhile spending considerable time and paper attackinlt' lhe majority stanc:r. they failed to develop a solid set of alternates for the sc:jlool district to consider. The easy recommendation would be to simply go Citizen response eventually will indicate whether the newsletters are a worthwhile expenditure for better communication. H ~MAN, SOME !'EOPLE 1Al<E ROCK CONCERT5 l\TE~~ll~." Decries Ilse of Movie Stars as Pawns ~ral Values MwtT~ke • Dear Gloomv -, t Gus: . 'Polit·icians Insult California Voters~ TJ>p Prioritx A minis1er ln SI. Paul lw 3*ed me '° comment on what be calII uh WdRn ol the left" he .... reariJli it. ugly btad todoJ IJI our eountry. He""" thal the.,,........, -aod . ~ ol the left" ... becombll • -· of faadsm .. the ril)lt. 'lllo(O II no doubt Ill ~ mlad !bat this Lt~· II is ai-t wvilabl<. Ever ,anct: the bulk o( what is lmowD as . '<pie lelL" embrac<d Man!Jm- ~ • half-c:entwy ago, the teo- deac)>'.bas aln7a bom iher<. ·. 'IU·IEEDS OF abooluliml are deeply ~intheMan· ~ llOll. u L<oiD bad llwd, l am COD~ he •'OOld have pu......i • poliey liWe i... diaboUc than Stalin did~ TrWl<y had W00!9"~ despilt bis aiuiOpolitanism. he "Wld have been as ruthless and doc-trinaire u the Georgian peasant who took power. T1le ooly hope for the "Neor j.ef~ • IA my opinion, is 1 total break 'With Uw: formulations rl the Old Lefl While Man' critique o( ..cial illju-and inequities· has much to recommend '1 -in the line o( the Old Testament prophets -his programs and p:>licies are oot only economically irre)evant to- day, but hiJ l!IOcial and poUUcal tberApies ar~ more tiUillg than curln1. THE YOUNG PEOPLE l mosl admire. today are thoM! who have brokea •way • ''ltm lo llunlington Budl City Admhl~, ·lloyl< Miller for wearing a wig and making no bones about jt! That takes more courage than facing up to an ira- scible city C011nCiJ « an angey citizens committee. More, bakl- beaded men should ""'" up IA> reality. • -w. R. lt ftls ............. ,_,.. ........ ----... .. .. . ,... .,...._ • ._. .... °""p ... from aJI ~boolele 'ldeololia, J. •• ~ "human penon't ..ti~ "1he 1t1te .. or "biJl«y'' as lho' ll,!jnin ol ooeiety. They ""' ·--Jn the bM .,,.. highest """'" of tlie 'llOrd: ilnowing u .. 1 it ~ts man d6thing to galn control or ·me slai if he bes his own soul ii the process. . 1'he "racliealism" of M.arxism-Leainism Is not really "radical" at all. Jt wants 1o transfer power. not to lessefl or redistribute it; it imagines lhat a restructuring of society will somehow lead to a restructuring of personal reia. tions -but using ugly and hateful means to achieve good ends can result Olly in I perversiOI of ~ ~· WITHOUT A DEEP Infusion or 'U,e religious spirit (in ill molt universal, and least eectar\an, se119e). leflism ca.n be as perilous and pernicious as rightism. Uoless some absolute moral valuet take prlo<ity ''"" tacti<s aod •'}JOdieocy .,,.. the seizure or power, then nvoJUuo. must inevitably llegaerate . 1 n t o _....,. '"°" reaction. Ev«ything must be plaoed at th• service of man; man must not he subordinated to some ideology that pushes him into the German gu-dtamber or the Russian concf:ntratio1-t::dtnp or the American ghetto. Wicked acta cor- rupt the most noble of h1tentioo.s, and out of the crucible of hate, no Jove can come. , To the F.clitof: • What an insult that the politicians In California think the voters are so 5LUpid that all lhey have to do Is brag •boul how many big name stars are on their bandwagon. It seems that most of the people worrying aboot the 13 year olds getting tbe vot.e, are the same ones thet don 't gtve a thought as lo the capabilities of the candidates, but merely foUtw ,.tJicbever one can boast the biggest and most of Hollywood's pborues. I, as a young voter, under 25, regard the lac:ticl ol Ranald Reagan, and Jess UnnJh, u an insult to' my intelligence. and will not vote until ·thu disparity is rectified. J FOR ONE consider my right to vote a very real responsibility, and although J have long enjoyed the efforts of those in Hollywood lo produce en- te rtainment, 1 become atanned when the people over-identify w i t h en· tert.ainen, and al)ow them to have such a strong hand in deciding the outctime of eledions. l'm well aware or the fact that entertainers have the right to vote just u I do, but J don't th~k that they lh:Juid be used as pawns m the batUe to win the minds and vote s of the muses. I just can1 underaland how the peopl• of the slate of CaUfomia can stand by and see tttis happen . But it seems that Ute people are ready for this type of popularity contest, or the candidates wouktn't attempt this type of massive ....,,.b. GARY L. SJLLE'IT 'J'ht? Dlsf?Gaf? of War To the Editor: Schmitz and Leadership No one able to read the English language can fail to applaud the column (July 27) by Sydney Harris, "Stampin_g Out the Disease of War." Perhaps it is his best piece of writing yet and certainly one of the top few to appear in the major press of this area. It ls much too important to be mere~ glanced al over a cup of cofftt and tossed in the waste bin. • !top. John Schmllz b .. oppooed to 1ovemment it must be unewhat "erri- bal'TUling for hlm to ,.,._t lhe 35tb ~1<1111 Dlatrtct In the U.S. - or~taliveL • But be was eleded"llllln! thln.1 month 1go by the ultr1-eon&tt'\J1tlft c6r... &tituency o( 0rlDC't and rural San Diego count\es t.o p to Wubinit.on and vote •·no." tt bi eu1tomary for U.S. senator• and repreaentatives to announce fet!eral proj- ect& and grants that go to some agency <1r group in the.ir st.ale• or districts. Thll ta a pracUct designed to have t0me poUUcal fallout beneficial to the. po!iUclae maklnl the announcement. MIL SCHMJTJ Dl!lCUNED to make the official -I Of • SU m!lllin lederal .,.. te Ibo Sall Jnoti11M at£j Jolla !or -'""""-..i atudles. ~--' •• .,.. -the .,.......,.., " 1 CAN ti.EARLY remember back a :' ,!, quarter of a century when, sitting a few yards off the beach during the ~ invasion of two Jima and W!ltching the behind the grant "Government should stay out of t.bt contraceptl~ business," sdiinilz iaid. Population control Is a legitJmate con· cern of government if the prospect or t.oo many people is going to have an adverse effect on resources and add to the misery o! all. Mr. Schmitz speaks about lht lm· morality of government's concern In this field. ll seems lo us profoundly more immoral for eovemment to do not.bing and for leaden like Mr. Schmitz to evade their respollllbWty to load. Dlll1 Callfoml•• El Ca)Oo methodical slaughter or good young men, l vaguely conceived some of the thoughU Harris' article so classically articulates, hert briefly paraphrased : · Governments-are all against war - unless they can get their way by no other means • • • Until nations are willing to give up some of their power, as cilies and states defer to their naUonal governments, then there Is no way to avoid force and vio\e~ among nations , • • But govemmenl.s are so fixed in lheir rule they will not willingly relinquish It ••• lt is therefore left to the peoplt living under governments Quotes •: .-------·· 0-l'ftl-------. Glean Strahl, Uvermore -"Now Is the Ume for each ctlizen to do all he can to reverse the trend toward 1narchy so apparent recently." l i she tllinks I am. Frankly, Georp. J .think this woman ha1 designs on me. HANK T. Dear Honk T.: God, tt'a a1moot lr1Chienlng to come up ipiDl_t a mind with the dtp<b& ol tnllglll and percepaon )'OU have! Unfonunalei1, I ha•t,ellher lo<t -lhe """'1d pare ol 10W' le!W w don't-nd )'OUr problem. . -~ . - llarry Pre1ton, Hohywood -''We've been ~ afraid of psychological damage to our chHdrta from discipline that we've ended up with a sick young society.•• Becky Fruler, Montclair, junior hl•h acbotll 1htdeaJ -"Saluting t.he nag 13 a prlvllege for me : it symbolize' ure. Ubercy, b1ppinOS1 and nUl!ous lraectom.'' \ l\failhox ' . ' . " .. Lttterr tram Tt'atkn art weJ.come. Nonnallfl writni should convey thtif' mu309e1 in 300 word.I or leis. Th.! right to cond.!nat ltttef'i to/• fPC« OT tUminatt libtt ii rtatTW AU !et- ttr1 mtut inch«it' fignature and mm:J.. ing addre1.t, but namt.t may be with.- held on request ff nfftcintt rec.Ton i.t apparent. Poetry wiU no t be pflb. lUht cL lo inaugurate a trans-national orga.niza.. tion ror the protection of an peoples. AT THE END of WWII, with the stark horrors still fresh in mlnd, tM nations set up the U.N. to establish international Jaw and order. Now, unhap- _pily, the shortness of hwnan memory and the perversity of national leaders have pushed the U.N. onto the side.line. Every little nation is free to tool up for nuclear war, And the superpower1, which have virtually targeted in an ICBM on everybody's chimneytop, fu'Vle for an explanation as to how they can spend the largest share of the national wealth lo protect their citizens, but can guarantee that, in a hostile exchange of weapons, only a quarter or a third will ''su rvive." NATIONALJSf\1, at which doorstep a large part or the blame for WWII is placed , flourishes apace. We can only marvel at the infinitely diminutive minds which can conceive the harshest kind <>f domestic law and order while s i mu I ta neo us I y merchandising chauvinistic claptrap wbich promotes in· ternaUonal anarchy. Going beyond Harr\s' column, where do we Stt the genesis of an international movement? Where are the youths with the guts and wisdom to mount ii? How can they hope to reach the citizens of the totalitarian nations when they get shot down in the streets or a free nation ? \\le can imagine that the last words of tl10Se who perished in the firestorms or Bremen and Hamburg and Tokyo may have been something llke "Where did we go wrong'!" We can ' be sure that law and order among the nations will prevail. The only question is whether It will come about before or after WWII!. ' ' OURTIS F AERMIN 'T/1e Plain Tr1llla' To the Editor: .. The Plain Truth'' provides a bockgN)Und understanding of problems. It also sugge.~ls solulions. This kfud of free service might provide an effective means to solving many of our pressing problems. . True progress is almost impossible unless we understand the cau1e1 of prob- lem! -and the efJfld.s of different altempts at solving tbtm. This lDc:ludes examining our own beliefs for ll[tll-in· te:nlioned, but possi bly misguided lcllons. Too often different groups (in IJPPtalfng for our support) glOM over incnrrK1. Ideas ""'r may have. ~tOST PEOPL•; "'ill support a;ctions lu-lhe be.Uerment of society lf thtse. acUoni1 don 't damage their secur1ty or tdlgnily. • Horb<rt W. Anmlrong's pllllo>oJtiy set.ms too good to be true. He aets joy trom giving. He said Lhal tetclifnJ how lo live (the purpose o( U(e; We valut!t as dla:Ungulthed from the falte. and the cause11 of right rt&ulta P' life) has cbanaed aed enriched thol1oandl of ' Jives. His radio program, "The Plain Truth,'' began 36 years ago. Ambassador College in Pasadena was founded 22 years ago. These are noncommercial and nonprofit. His radio program is on .KGBS (1020 kc) Monday lo Saturday at 6 a.m. and Sunday at 10 a.m. AMBASSADOR COU...EGE mails "The Plain Truth" magazine free to those vr'ho request It. They will not accept money for it. Nor will they send copies to anyone who has not requested it. Unsolicited Orumdal support comes from those who believe in what "The Plain Truth" is givJng. Magazine articles cover infiaUon, men· tal ilJness, the modem Romaas, u fe driving, how to have a happy family, reclaiming the desert, decline of the merchant fleet, sex education, pity the poor criminal, why today's youth is disenchanted, the endless war, act now on pollution, are food additives safe, Biafra, must Ame rica police the world, and build joy in your marria1e. SOME OF 111&E articles are (o the.ir other magazine, "Tomorrow's W()l'ld" -which it more religion oriented. Ambassador College provides free booklets on almost any conceiva\lle ac- tivity, These ioclude child rearing, the Seven Laws (If Success, Our Polluted Planet, Famine and 'Jbe New Morality (sex eduction). These e1cellent services can help us solve our problems. LEONARD WRIGHT llntlt?rpahl Po1tmt?n To the Editor : M a letter carrier's wife J want to add my two cents to all the ruckus about post.al operations, I have come to one general conclusWJn after four yejlrs. The reason the Post Office is so outdated is that they can't hold any young men beciuse who can raise a family on what 'they pay? What young man will stay wllh an ouUlt that refuses to grow with the times, the reason for this being that aknost all of your letter carril!l's and clerks a~ old retired folks who have a pension coming in and other u.sets they have bulk up over the years through other joO.. LOOK AT YOUR local mailman. I bet. he's at least over 40, more 'likely 50 or IO. lf they would pay enouch to get and hold young men I bet you will start to see some ch:anges made. Why don'l they change It from an old 11iolks home to a paying Institution! By the way.· If anyone has noticed, the rest of the pay raise that was promised h&!m 't come througti yel. If it does il will be a pleasant surprise to me . These people want your life's , blood and expect it for nothing. Woukl JOU believe they even want. to govern your personal life when you art off tht job? I say phoo<y on lbem. SHARON JONES Thanks Front Vt?tt?rans To lht Editor : In behalf of tht veterans at the V.A. Hospital. Lone Beach, and I he servicemen at lht Navy Hospital, Camp Pendle.ton, I wish to p.1blkl1 th~ the Laguna Beach Fe1Uv1I ot Ar1I bO.rd for Its ..zeneroslty In provkUna lOI ticketl to Lltt'"Page.ant of Masten. 1'htle men, many Of whom are recovering from hlUle wounds, will Iona; -tho -.. ~ Ibo be..utul cll.y and tho !rlendli-ol ila people. I aa.Q'fitr a lllow of hmlda aa. to the war In which they participated and found they were about evenly di'rickd between Vietnam and World War II. THERE WERE A few from the Korean conflict but no patients from WWI. I also want to thank the hard-working and gracious ladies of the American Legion and V.F.W. Auziliarie.s for lef'VinC auch 2 fine dinoer. Lagunans do care about our disabled veterans and servicemen a.a: lhown by their cootinued intetat in their W9lf&re. Thanks for your coverage of the evet.. 0. W. PRICE Servk:e Of'fioeT American Legion Poat az -Found Littlt? Fault To the Edltori:. A rocenl (July JJ DAILY PILOT editorial concemina &ehoo1 superin- tendent. salaries 1ugg'ested tbal the Hun· Wigton Beacli City School board wu not pleased with the job being don• by the administrators. As a member ol the board who· has attended au public and ei:ecutive meetinp, I can say that the board has found little fault with the actions of the administration dur:lnc l~ last year. ~re has been c9ntroversy over 90ml actions of the admtnistraUon and board, but this is commm in all dellberationt concerning educattaoal p r o g r a m a • personnel, governmsit aid. budgets, t.ax rates and other aNas or responsibility for school trustees. .. THE ISSUE OF mooey and how to use it most ElfecUvely is the cmcei u that continue• to face the board MCh and every year, In the past few yeiu'a generous raJses have been given and Ill< !ee1ing ol tho board ,...,. to be that eome reatrainl has to be used in determining .salary increuea in tbe future. The smaller salary incruae for administrators was a result of this philosophy and had nothing to do with rtetnt conlToVf!rsial actions taken by the administrat\on. THE EDITOR.IAL. also suggested that large salary increases may be~ a;lvtl\ becau¥ distrK:t administrators are able to pasa ta:r override and bond elecUOM I do not beJieve that this in Itself J~ ~ valid reason for grantiog."large 111uy JnCT<ases. In the pa.st we have-been Tea.9on1bJJ IU<.'Cellful in bond and tu. overr)de eleo- tions beca11Se the community as a wtxu has been salisfted with the way tJlf!: district is being run . AJ our diatrlcl contil)UCS to irow at a very rapid rate the board must make ever1 effort to provide a good education ror our students., keeping in mind " u r responsibility to the taxpayer. JACK K. CLAPP ----Wednesday, Augwt 5, 1970 ' Th• tdiloriol -or u.. Dollr Pilot uelcl to jnJorm and .um- ldole r<fld<ra. bp J"'Uf!IUl!ll thif netotpcJer'I opiniom and com- .... tol'I "" tovic• •I lnur<a1 """ llgnj/lcmlce. ~. prooidlng •• fort<'!' /or UI< •r,..tuion ol m.,r f'fOdC'rs' ~nfofta, and br prttntmQ thf divert• i:ft• PGlftll · Of illfo""'d obi-.. ond IJ)Ol«-.i oo lopjcr o/ U.. day. 11ober1 N. Waed, l'ltbll1hor • ,, Fo1111tain Valley Today's Fl•al ...... . . • VOi.'. 63, NO. 18.6, 4 Sa:TIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1970 ·' r , Seal Bea~h Mayor Fired By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI • tlM DlllfY ,..... 11.tf ~1ayor Morton A. Baum Tuesday became the lhird man to lose his job in Seal Beach since lhe political ll!!mpest began sweeping through the city. Hl!!'s still m11yor, but he no longer employed as a pharmacist for the Seal Beach Leisure World Golden Rain Foun- dation. The mayor called his firing '"an obv ious form of inlimldation and retaliation of the crudest type." His dismissal , he said, can be traced directly to the firing or City Manager Lee Risner and City At· torney Jim Carnes July %7 -action which he lniUattd. The official reasoo for hi.s termination. Baum explainl!!d, was that he failed to resolve a conflict of Interest prohibited in tbe bylaws of the foundation. The specific inlractiOI) cited In the notice given to Baum by the foundation Friday was that the rules governing the foundation prohibit employes holding jobs with other firms or agencies doing businelllt with Leisure World. Since the retirement community con· lracts for poUce and fire services Bawn's role as mayor was held to be in violation, the DAILY PILOT was told. Jack David, administrator of the Golden Ra.Jn Foundation, could not be reacbl!!d for comment. "The foundaUon aJ well as the people In Leilure World we~ aware that 1 was ruMin& lor council," Baum said. "•lad lhere been a real confUct of ln-- terest everyone would have been aware of lt.'' He pointed out that he was nominated for mayoralty by Councilman Harold Holden, past president of the foundation. The action was aecoqded by Lloyd Gum· mere,.a former foundation director. Served with the ootice and ilttacbed !everance pay cbecb TUesday morn. ing the mayor said, "I can't llY that it wu totally unexpec&ed but I didn't think they would be ao crude about it." He said he received a notice Friday from the foundatioo which uraed b!m to molve the co•flict either by qllittlna as mayor or as pharmacist • While the furor continuer In the city, Lee Rbner, the depo.1ed cft.y manager , said this morning be would 'agree to work as a consultant Aug. 10 ln the (See BAUM, Pap I ) Judge 'Sticl{s to Ruling Manson Request for Mistrial Denied Again DAILY l'ILOT S,_., ll'hl" DARIA AND DON SECORD ENJOY QUIET MOMENT AT POND In Hutttington BNch, Separ•tint the Wildlife From th1 Weeds R~ident Live$tock Poses Problem£ or ParkPreserve By TERRY COVILLE .. ,,. ~llJ l'lllt 11111 City engineers are boning up on the Jale!t phases in ecology because they have a problem in Huntington Beach -they have to separate the weeds from wildlife in a strip of land destined 10 be a wildlife preserve in the central park. A number of residents have complained to the city about the land west of Golden West Street and near the. Fran- ciscan Fountains homes. They said spiders and bup were infesting the area because of the "weeds and trash in lhe wikilife area." "First we plan to go in and clean out the trash left by people -furniture, tires and other. items dumped there 3 LITTLE LINES SELL BIG ITEMS These three litlle lines furnished the advertiser an evening of enter· talnment (the phone kept ringing until 10 p.m. I and -or course - sold Lhe merchandise: ST O V E I:. Frigidaire rcfrlgerator, Good cond .. both $75. XXX·XXXX. The ad drew more than SO calls. 111' stove and refrigerator were sold at the askirlA: price. What more can you ask? Call a DAILY Pll.OT ad-visor and line up 80lTle phone calls on whatever It Is you have to sell . The direct line lo results is 642-5118, and In the drainage channel, 1' City Engineer Bill Hart.ge explained today . But when it comes lo clearing out weeds and ridding the area of vennin, the clty engineer can only scrat.ch his head and say, "We're studying the prob- lem." The problem is that the land is destined to become a .. natural preserve" in the central park. Bugs, weed!, field mice may all be a part of the local ecology which city officials don't want to disturb. "We can eliminate the algae in the drainage channel, but we'd have the health department and the Fl.sh and Game Department on our backs for destroying ecology," Hartge said. The drainage channel separates the large fle1d from the back walls of the Franciscan Fountain homes. The field currently serves as a large playground for area children. Two youngsters, Don and Daria Secord, ages eight and nine, recited an im- pressive lisl of wildlife they find there. "There're snakes, gold fish, crawdads. frogs, turtles, tadpoles, jack rabbits. weasels, mice, bats, catfish and bass," said Don, after he stopped hunting crawdads in the drainage channel Tues· day. "We don't want ll cleaned up. It's a fun place to play in," chipped in Daria , .as she pointed lo a path of tunnels and forts the children had made in the eight-fool high grasses. "They could clean out the trash though," Don said, after thinking a minute. Hartgl!! offered another posstbll!! solu- tion. "WI!! have to keep a service road along side the chanMI. Perhaps we can use it as a barrier to keep the bugs from coming ever to the homes." Lbs ANGELES (UPI ) -Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older today denied a defense motion for a mistrial in the Tate-La.Bianca murder ca.se based on President Nixon's remarks about the guilt of Charles Manson. (Related Story Page 3). Judge Older said that he was satisfied about the jurors bearing the case are "able and wilting to bl! fair and im· partial" in deciding a verdict for the hippie leader and three young women codefendnats. for mintrial for all the defendants on for mistrial for all the defendants on dent oE the United States constituted ''Prejudice of the most significant kind." Deputy district attorney Aaron Stovitz sald lhat Manson had clearly tried to establish judicial error. "It's the same thing as if he tril!!d to escape or got up and said he wanted to be given the death penalty and then Giant Put•on? DID MANSON PLAN TOWARD A MISTRIAL? SEE PAGE l ask for a mistrial," Stovitz said. "We're all aware that Mr. Manson is calling the shots in this case and he called them yesterday. "Whether Mr, Manson wanl.1 to or not it is the intention of the people "The time has come to place this in it..s proper penpe.ctive," Judge Older said. The judge ·said it was not important whether MaDSOD had deliberately invited prejudice by holding up a newspaper in front of the jury Tuesday with tht headline, "Manson Guilty, N I 1 c n Declares." Disneyland Preparing For Yippie 'Insurgents' "The import.ant point is whether the member! of the jury are capable of rendering an impartial verdict in this ' case," he .said. By CHARln> ff. LOOS ti IM O.ltf ,1191 Slaff The Yipplea art coming, the Yippies are coming. "That is why I called them in here )'e!terday one by one and asked them whether their ability to return such .a verdict had been impaired by the In- cident I am satisfied it was not." With the jnry out of the courtroom, the defense begaR the day with the motion Cambodians Get Help From U.S. In Napalm Drop PHNOM PENH, CamOOdia (UPI) - Four U.S. Air Force jet fighter-bombers today bombarded Communist troops with napalm fire bombs in a direct support misSion for Cambodian soldiers battling for control of a highway junction . UPI correspondent Kent Potter wil· nessed the raid on the outskirts of Skoun, 35 miles northeast of Phnom Penh, and overheard radio conversations between an American piiot and a Cambodian field commander directing the air at· tucks. The question of direct American air support for Cambodian ground forces has beCTlme a matter of debate in Washington with some congressmen claiming such missions are beyond the bounds of President Nixon's Indochina policies. U.S. headquarten in Saigon has declined to announce lhe raids cfflclally. Potter said the raids this morning tasted 30 minutes and were nown ln two fllght.s by four U.S. Air Force FlOO Supersabers, a relatively slow jet which was used e1tensively during the Korean war for support mis.!ions. Right here to Orange County. ln fact. to Disneyland, to storm the bastion of all that ia wholesome on Thursday, the anniversary of the Hiroshima A-bomb. It's a tcheck one): (a) 'Fact. (b) Rumor, le) Gianl Put-on. (d) Nobody Seems to Know for Sure. (e) None of These. If you pi cked (d ) you're as close to the real answer a.s lhe ta) Disney brass. (b) Anaheim Police Otpartment. (c) Los Angeles Free Press, which ap- parenUy started the whole thing in the first place:. "Aug. 6, Ols.oeyland, Yippie Interna- tional Pow Wow," proclaimed the Free Press in a recent edition. The word.s were arranged around a smiling picture of Mickey Mouse holding a top hat in one hand and an automatic rifle in the other. A story appeared on the .same page under the headline "Yippies a t Disneyland.'' ", .. while they will now let rou in with long hair. etc.," the arltcle advised, "they may not let you in without a ti cket. But as the old proverbial saying goes. 'Tear down the walls that divide us.' " A call to Free Press offices in an eff11rt to shed more light on the gatecrashing implication produced little in the way of ha.rd infonnation. Disney brass and Anaheim police also appear to be short on hard information about the rumored invasion. "All we hear are rumots,'' they say. One. unconfirmed re~ out of the Di.meyllnd Hotel had Yipple leader Jerry Rubin of the Chicago Seven chedting in for an overnight slay this week and then checking out again without leavin& a forwardli\g address. Disney officials and police say they are not Ignoring the rumors and .are prepared to handJe any eventuality. However, the amusement pa,rk will cpen Thursday at the usual hour on a "business as usual'' basis. Disneyland officials note wryly that they have dealt successfully in the PJ.ll with any number of bomb threa~ (so fat, all have been phon1es), uncounted grad night solrees and even a couple of adult conventions they'd ju.st as soon forget. They figure the park's attractiona will charm whatever Ylpples show up. Besides, they add. the wall! that divide Disneyland from the world are 16 feet hlgh. Lenore Romney Certain Victor In Primary T~t By Tbe Aasocla&ed Press Lenore Romney appeared a certain winner today In her bid for Lhe Republican U.S. Senate nomination rr~m Michgan, one of fo¥r states holding primary elections Tuelday. Mrs. Romney's opponl!!nt, Slate Sen. Saloons Making Comeback Consolidated Court Marshal Bill Gets Okay Legislation authored by Assemblyman Robert Burke (ft..Huntiogton Beach) to convert Orange County lo a consolidated court marshal operation, as In most large counties. h11s been signed into law by Gov. Reagan. Robert Huber, !18.ld at m1dmoming that he was "preparing to concede" victory to the &!·year-old wife of Michigan 's former governor and present U.S. secretary of housing and urban develop- ment. He said he expected to send Mrs. Romney a telegram cl con· gratulallons later today. Huber's announcement came as elec· tion returns gave Mt!, Romney 52 per· cetlt or the votes cast In the race. With 79 percent of Michigan's 6,044 precincts reported, the unofficial couot was 250,492 for Mrs. Romney and 231,183 for Huber. No w 'Cocktail Lounge' Not Only Place to Get a Drink SACJ\AMENTO (UPI) -For the man who values the trad.iUon of the Wild West. sipping a t'OOI rnarUnl ln the .1ubdued atmosphere or•a cocktail lounge just never made it It didn't t.'Ompare to a. lhot of red eye at the sawd\m--ftoored comer saloon: Well. the saloon is maklo;: a conieback In Clllfornla. Gov . RDN11d 1leag1n was M!t tod~ to stan at• a speciil ceremony In his ofrice a bill ma.king il leital again for a drinklrig utAbl1ihmerd. to call It.sett a ''saloon," "barroom" or ''bar.'' All three terms have been banned from tavem slgllll 1lnoe thorily after the ttpeal ol ProhlblUon. AIJ.'SM\blyman John T. Knox (0.Rlc~ mond), lntrod\JC'ed lhe ·meuure after he received a letter tram Don Bradley, who managed fonner Gov. F.dmund G. Brown's unsuccessful 1968 re-election campaign . "Wouldn't you llke to be known as the ·man' who brought the saloon back to Cillfqmla?" Implored Bradley, "Think of ~ toast. lbat would be d r u n k in tn'but.e to your legiJlaUve skills -.• the passage of such a bill wUI certainly pl•ce·yout name among the Immortals.'' The Le'gl&laluno ,,_r1bed the word ""loon" becOUI< ol P"bllc leellnp 11111 it would rtc1U memories of sleazy pre-- Prohlblllon swinsJng-<loor gln<nllll !Pd 19208 lpeakeules. lt called to mind im- ages or gam~llna:, proatttution, gangsters and bootleallng. When Jawmaken In t• drew up laws lo govern the liquor lnduatry aller II aaain became legal, they strove to keep the business "clean." "To thoae who are old enough to remembl!!T back to the pre-Prohibition days, the aaloon has a rather definite ml!!antnat' ttrOte Stn. Andrew R. Schot- tky of Mereed. a member ol the SttT•le committee oo 1ntox1catin& llquot! in tht 1930s. ' "It was a place, the prindpal part· or whlcl). out.Ide ol the liquor illell, was lhe mahogany bar with the Iron fool rail and lhe cuspldor8, and is not to be conf~ Willi the Jnodern, sumptuous cocktail Jounces, to whJch the younger Qtne.raUon hu beoome IC> custom ed." A head marshal with an assistant marshal and three inspector deput;es will be hired when the consolidation goes Into eUect Dec. t, aceordlng to Judge Richard Hamilton, chairman of the eounty Municipal Judges AS80CiaUon. Marshals of the flve county municipal ci)urt systems act as bailiffs, trsnsfer prboners', serve . warrints and serve1 subpi>enas Ol1 witnesses among other duUes. 1 PretenUy there are live head mantmls fOC' the five municipal court systems In Costa Mesa, Laguna N Lg u e I, Westminster, Santa An•, and Anahelm- Fu~too, One ot tllem will be promoled to Blft£ 1111nhaf aod make bl.s office In .. ~nta • ~na, Jlie county oeal 'Ille olllor,outlyb\a ottlcea wW be rdallled. tn the other three states wltb prllTllrles Tuesday, the unofflclal count showed these mulls In major races: Ml1tourl: Sen. Stuart Symington wag a landslide victor. in his bid for the Demotr1Uc nomlnaUon to hll 1ourth ttrm .fn Ufe Senate. Hls N'ovtmber GOP Oj)ponent will be •Atty. °"'' John 1lan· fotUfl Aft to .JncQmtient COflgrtSfmen -- ntnC .Defnocr•t• 1nd one 'Republlean - wOh' rel'ftJmlnatlon. ' With 9& percent of the 1 state's' 4,246 ]>!'eCincla coonled, Syml....., rolled up SQ,811 •otcs ' to a t0t.1l of 44,040 for lour opponenb. Danforth picked up 158,019 votes ol SI0,307 cast Ill a lhree- ma'n race. ' • to proceed with th.is trial." After the judge's ruling the jury was brought in and the lhrff young womeo defendant..s suddenly stood up and begao chanting soml!! song about President. NU. on and their guilt. Otder was restored and Linda Kas1t- bian, the key wltnus for the proRCUtion resumed her testimony under cross.ex· amination. Valley Fluoride Issue Revived By Dissenter Fluoride ls still an issue in Fountaln Valley. John Harper. the lcne member of U. ci(l council to ~ its placement i11 the clcy water supply, revtved the issue Tuesday night "At our next session -Aug. 18 - I want the council to consider placing I.he fluoride question before the votert Jn an election," l[Arpt!:r told fellow coun- cllmen. "To avoid lengthy dlscus.sion, we might limit the subject to the merits or an election and not lhe merits of fluoride ," he added. Harper's sland followed requests by six individuals to have the council make the nuoride Issue an election. "We're getting a distasteful reputation in this town of always petitioning," Mn. Jan Wilhelm said, referring to the peU. lion currently circulating calling for a referendum on the fluoride Issue. '"[ don't think it's necessary. This matter should be left lo the people. "It seems to me that if someone wanted to change the statw: of our water they should have. had to' peUtion, not us," added Don Crane, 9514 Gardenia Ave. No action was taken by t~ council Tuesday except to place the elect.ion request on the Aug. 18 agenda. 116 Bodies Recovered BASSETERRE, Sl. ~Hts, B.W.i. (UPI) -A 1atal of 11s bodies bate been recovered in the sinking of the ferry boat Christena that sap1lzl!!d SaturdAy betw«!n St. Klttts and Nevis in the Caribbean, the hatbormaster'1 o(lfct an- nounced Tuesday. The office alJO issued a revised cou nt of survivors of the disaster, listing II counted on both islands. Orange Cout Thosl!! laey, hazy days ot summer conilnue Thuraday wlth Jow clouds in the.morning and fUtered sunahlne a!terward. Temperature 1lteration1 will be mJnimal. INSIDE TODA Y Cerecd monu/act"rerr going 1nap, crackle, pop oVtr nutri- li.cm crlticirm. Thtt1 Qivf thtir iiiews on Pao• 11. =-1 , ............... ~ ::=;w,." tJ .... ,,: Of'.~ II •,• Mtrtrlm 1 .. ,, .... _ II -.... ·-. """'-'• ....... ,,.. --.. I I OAJ(V ~llor " IMf\.Y PILOT Stltff 1'"'- CYCLE ENTHUSIASTS LET HUNTINGTON BEACH CI TY COUNC IL KNOW HOW THEY FEEL Ace S.tterfteld, Kenneth 11nd Robert Schm11ll (from left ) Li1t.n to Propos1I for Mini-bike Park 011 Field Studied Mini-bike Park Plans Offered in Huntington . • Mlnlbike riden may _, -.....,,., ts In an old · oiJ fle1d ln downtown unllng!on Buch. ' Barricades may be pUt up lo close a trail area and some or the lots to create hilly terrain. The idea was one d. hro plans "',!=~ by Parks and Recrut:ion )il Norm Worthy to city couocilmen weeil to provide a public riding for rolnibike enthu.<iaru. • The second idea was to work out arrana;e.ment with Don-England, who ates the priva!O llimtington Buch e Psk on Talbert Avenue, to create j'·IJ>an~. 1roct for minibikes. As Worthy ;pve ,his repor\, aeveral motorcyclists sat quietly in the alldl~ clulthin.g sign calling for a public motorcycle park. The placards carried slogans like .. Let H.B. Take the Lead in Cycle Parks" and" '70 is the Vear for Cycle Parks:' Worthy beads a committee charged with the task of finding a location for a minibike park.. He said ,the committee will report to the Parks and 'Jletrtation Commissioo with .a def mite propoaal Aug . 12. Worthy explained that the oil field course would put the minibike track nert lo the i+rb and recrtatioa de~ ment bulldini on Orange Avenue and · 17lh Street. d V• ..;TW11. The plan involves barricading city ur er lCu.u~ stceets 1roro 11th to 22Dd streets from } . ¥JiciaJo ~ .. .., .... unmd· Bit~ ~ ·~· ·~~~~:Ly,;~~= from the streeta throough the lots,·• he said. "We could grade these lots t for Thursday l• provide some hills and c1a1.s ... Asked · whether the parks and ~a- A" funeral service is scheduled Thurs- y morning for a slain Costa Mesa man whose husband is aCCUJed or ll>Jllr<lerin. g her and wounding a family ualnluce. &bell Corrales, 'n, of 238 Fairway lace. Costa Mesa, ~·as to be named y in a fonnal complaint charging with the death of hi.s 36-year-old . e Sylvia. Rlt.s for Mn. Corrales, shot lo death ood•y morning in the family home, · be conducted Thunday at ll a.m. the Bell Broadway Mortuary Chapel, Mesa. She leaves four &er11, James, Daniel, and Cervando; two daughters, thy and Donna, and her parents, • and Mrs. Francis Rice of Huntington h .. Sons David and Cervando are by her nd · husband , who was arrested y afler the death oC Mrs. Corrales he drove through Newport e .. ch. He is also charged with the attempted rder of Tom Newtard, 37, ot 17145 Ui Maria St., Fountain Valley, who as shot in the left arm ud stomach. DAILY PILOT CMAHGE CQAIT l"Uall.H1NG COM,.ANY R•b11t t-1 . W•td ...... loftnt •1111 .. _.v.w J tck R. Curley V1<1 ,...nloMnl •r.11 ...... Jl'•I '°' .......... T~orn•1 l(,,,.il l!.0111• l~o"''' A. M11rphi11t Mt,..9""9Ell- Al111 01rki11 Wtr.1 0.1• C-ly Ed•llll' . All11rl W. l•l•t Aawclltt l(llltor H.....,...._.Offic• 17171 l11tlt loul1v1 rtl ·M1i1l111 Add••t•: P.O. hr 790, t2'"' "'"'°"'-l..ttUlw •••Cit: m .. _,, ,,_, caatl Mal: no Wu! ••v 11rfft ........... to: n11 Wftt aelMt ......... • a111 C...,_,..1 )IN Nttln fl Cttnllla lllMI • tion staff wou1d mind the minibikes buu~ ing by their windows, Worthy said that proper muffling systems would be re- quired. Worthy said the operator of the Hun- tington Beach Cycle Park had a 40-acre lease but was wing only 20 acres. The city could. take 15 aqes and build a minibike course, by speilding about $2,500 .. grading. "'This wou1d allow England to ~­ centrate on his TI' and class A racing courses. and give us a minibjke track -.i.'ithout having to pay anything Oil the lease," he said. Wocthy also indicated that there could be advance regLstratioo to deeide how great the need is for such a park. The parks chief added that his com- mittee had ruled out a former dump near Edison High School as a possible location after receiving a llS-name peli· tion objecting lo that site. Eroded Beaches Replacement Job OK'd by Board A $1.:S million project to replenish eroded sand in the Stmet Beach-Surfside area and in Wttt Newport. was approved Tuesday by the Orange County Board of Supervilcn. The project by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers ill to get under way Oct. l and ~~led by ne.xt February. 1be latest or periodic sand replenish- ment projects is a necessity oow, ac- cording to Ed Koehn, chief of engineering for the Corps' Los Angeles district. He noted that last December the Surfside area, with Its beach lined by homes, began t.o experience accelerated erosion and that if left unchecked the situaUon would be critical by November. One and a half million cubic yards of sand wW be pumped over the earth wall rrom the U.S. Navy Ammunition Depot entrance and spread along the beach. Orange County Director of Harbors, Beaches and Parb Kenneth SamP3M said. 'Ibe Newport end of the pro)ect will see the placement oi l00,000 cubic yards of sand between Newport Pier and 36th Street where lbe beach la narrow ; ccn- slrucUon of a rubble mound groin at 32nd Stret~ and plac<ment ol rubble a.round mttal groins at 40th and 44th streets which have deteriorated and become hazardous. sampson said he didn't know just where along the bench the Corps is golng to borrow the Newport sand, but be is 1urt Jt will be ''good ocean .1and rather than dlrty rifer sand." Beach Trustees To Fight Ruling On Principal Trtl$lee! or the Huntington Beach City School District decided Tuesday nlght 1.q aw.al the Superior Court decis.ion forcing them to accept Mrs. Charloma Schwankovslcy as a principal in their district for the 1970.:71 school year. "We're going to take the case to the appellate court," S.A. Moffett , district superintendent, said this morn- ing. Superior Court Judge Robert Corfman ruled last week that the district had not given the former Lehant School principa1 suUicient notice b e f o r e demoting her to a classroom teacher. Judge Co rf.man granted a writ of man· date requiring the district to reinstate )jrs. Scbwi.nkavsky as a 1princlpal in tl!o 4.lrld, • though nol nlCessat!Jy al lhe same school The board ~of trustees demoted Mrs. Schwankovsky May 13. She has declared that. .cbirges -not s~ified ~by eitbJr ~~ -bipuaht' .gm,i t..t bj !bf>.aift!Mllraliort ,..,. unfounded. Moffett has said action against her was taken after three years of 11tud)' or her performance in LeBard School. Frotn Pu9e l BAUM ... proceedings against UV! Marina Palace. a teenage dance hall, charged with allow· ing disorderly C1>nduct. The hall, operated for the psst five years by Mary Robertson, wife of fOrll)er Seal Beach gambling enlepreneur Bill Robertson, may Jose its license if the charges are substantiated. Critics of Baum have suggested that Ri sner was fired so the Robertsons would not lose the license. Risner and former City Attorney J im Carnes will aid the city staff in con- ducting the hearing, the form er city manager said today. although the pay has not yet been agreed oo. Baum Tuesday told members of the Seal Beach Protective League that he was unalterably opposed to gambling. Gambling has been an issue durlng the current controversy with some Baum detractors alleging that he is tied to gambling interests. "There were all kinds of rumors that f was going to bring topless waitresses and boUomless bars into the city but I told them I would lead the fight as long as 1 was mayor," Baum declared. Risner, who also spoke at the meeting. attended by more than 500 persons. denied all charges su rrounding his dismissal. They included failure to provide the city C1>uncil with the proper fiscal report!i and absenting himseU from city hall on his own business. Trash Pickup Fees to Rise Trash collection rees for Fount.a.in Valley ·v.·ill jump from $1.25 a month to $1.60 sometime in September. City councilmen approved the rate change Tuesday night, granting a ~ent increase for Rainbow Disposal Company, and a IQ-cent increase lo cover tbe city's cost in se.nding out the trash bllb . Rainbow Disposal had reque!led a 50- cent increase, but councilmen turned tlllt down . An exact date for the lllrt of the new rate was not set. Countia n Dies in W er The Pentagon Tuesday reported that Spec. 4 Roger J. Carr or Fullerton has been killed in action in Southeast Asia. He was the 60n of Mr. and Mrs, WlllJam F. Can' 5r., 2010 Carol Drive. Residents Irate Ove r Teen Ce11ter The storm over Fountain Valley's Teen fle/p centtr blew inlG city council chambers Tuesday night, upsetting tempers and drawing angry comments. City councilmen agreed to seek a firmer hand on actlv!Ues at the center, but not before lt1'y had a few angry exchanges with the audience . Al least half·a~ozen businessmen and residents criticized the Teen Help cenler for lack of organiiation and Stlpervision. It is located in the middle of a neighborhood shopping center at Heil Avenue and Bushard Street, where some residents and businessmen have complained about the large gatherings of leen-agers drawn to the center. "I'm against the teen cener. I'm against the youth wbo congregate there. My wife has been insulted so many times she won 't come down lo the shop," Dennis Suggs, operator of an electronics repair shop, told councilmen. "l no longer have a business because of ii," said Harry Brusnahan, operator of a laundromat, which he closed Tues- day. Jn an angry retort , Councilman Ron Shenkman said, "I've sat here listening to you people deride, chop and cut down -but I've never seen most of you before. The only time I do see you is when there is something to complain about. ··we have an uncomfortable situation here. rm not saying there isn 't a pro- blem. but I am saying it's magnified . I object that businesses which were failing Jong before the teen center arrived are using it for a scapegoat," Shenkman said. Gene O'Connor. operator of an in- su rance agency and a critic of the teen office, said, "I want to make one thing clear. We are not looking for a legality to pull their license. I would ·help them, but there is no room in this facility lo substitute good n1anners for bad behavior.'' After the discussion and tempers had calmed, Shenkman asked for a full report, with suggestions for solutions to the problem. be made to the city C1>Uncil at its next meeting. Shenkman , who actively works with the teen center, said plans are already under way to form a C1>mmittee to give it more guided direction. Slim Classes Slated at YMCA The Orange Coast 'J'wo-St.ep has Hun· tinglon Beach women moving to the lert and the right. Nol politically, but for the purpose or exercise. It and many other wacky exercises are currently offered in a YMCA· sponsored "sllmnastics" course each Tuesday and Thursday from 7:30 p.m. lo 8:30 p.m. Teacher ~1ary Lowell says the eight. week course is designed for v•omen who v•ant to firm and tone muscles and trim away those extra inches. Included in her arsenal of exercises are the Belly Whopper, Duck Walk. Crane, Abdominal Joy, and the mighty Earth Trembler. The classes are under way now at the YMCA's multipurpose room, 17931 Beach Blvd.. but another eight-week session is planned this summer for women who want to get ln from the beginning. U.S. J et Cr ashes ZARAGOZA , Spain (AP) -A U.S. Phantom jet fighter-bomber crashed on a guMery mission in northwest Spain today, killing the two crewmen aboard , the Air Force announced . It said the Phantom carried conventional weapons and crashed in an uninhabited area. CONVENIENI TERMS BANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE ' • Bi Bo Serrano Serrano billed as the educated horse, shows a silver touch by figur- ing the 'weight in troy ounces of the silver bar held ~Y Eug.ene Gt!-rarden, 2. (left) and his brother David, 4, of 8431 Reilly Dnv~. HunUngton Beach. The bar. whi.ch weighs. 184.50 troy ounces and ~s valued at $369, will be offered in a ~rawmg ~aturday at l p.m .. 1n the Huntington Center mall. Serrano 1s appeani:ig at the center daily as part of the Silverado Days western celebration. Fountain Valley Church AUls Gas Station Appeal The Firsl Christian Church of Fountain Valley stood up for a gas station Tuesday night. The gas station won. City Councilmen voted 3-2 to overturn earlier planning commission denial of a gas station on the southeast corner of Magnolia Slreet and Talbert Avenue. Humble Oil plans lo build the ga s station in conjunction with a small shop- ping center planned for the corner by Taylorson Development Company. Church members. more than 30 strong and led by the Rev. Arthur Ree!e, supported the gas station appeal because it would allo\v a land swap giving the church property along Magnolia, soulh or the shopplng center. "This land swap v."111 enable us to evenlually build a walk-in, drive-in sanctuary and a third building (or a teen center," Mr. Reese explained. Mayor Edward Just and CoWlcilman Ron Shenkm an opposed the gas station and supported the planning commission's contention that the corner was "a poor site for a gas station because of the number already existing." Clint.on Sherrod, city planning director, said this would make the Talbert· Magnolia intersection the first in Foun- Planner, P a rk Boards Get Pay Planning and parlt.s commissioners in Fountain Valley have been put on the city payroll. The city council authorized payment or $10 per meeting to each member of the city's Plsnning and the Parks and Recreation Commissions, with the amount not to exceed $20 each month. tain Valley with four gas slations. ll~ also said lhere are 14 gas stations along Magnolia and Talbert within a mile of the intersection. Councilman John Harper led the coun- cil support for the gas station. "I think. private enlerprise should decide where to put its money. It's not the government's responsibility to decide what commercial enterprise will or will not make it." C-Ouncilmen George Smtl and A1bert Hollinden both denied Shenkman·s ac- cusation that their vot7s were influenced by the presence o( the church mem- bership, ·•I looked at the pros and cons of lhe situation and think thls station would be an asset lo the commWlity, '' Scott said. Marine, 21 , Dies Of Burn Injuries A young Marine corporal who was carried from the blazing wreckage of a KC 130 fueling tanke r five days ago al El Toro died early today in Orange County }.1edical Center. Cpl. Kenneth Metzdorf, 21, whose base home is less than a mile from !he fiery crash scene at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station , died in the interuiive medical care unit to which he was admitted Thursday. He leaves a widow and two children. !{is skipper, Isl Lt. Roger W. Mullins. 27. of liuntington Beach died in the crash. Three fellow crew members were hurt. -- &»4&~ for Mother or Grandmother From I lo 9 GENUINE Birthstones aracefully .set In 14 Kt. white or yellow gold ••• The special r1membr1nee from every member of the family ••• from $29.00 H YEARS SAME LOCATION IB2l NEWPORT AVE. PHONE 5~8-HOI COSTA MESA •' 3 l 3 • Newport Beaeh EDITI ON Today's Flaal ·. N.Y. Steekl VOL 63, NO. ·18', 6 SECTIONS, 96 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, AUGUSTS, '1970 Assessments Up, School II)' m:vE Mrl'CllELL ...... Dell'r ......... Taxpayen in the Newport-Mesa Uni· fled SChool District will laoe a 44<:mt fn. treaae in their .school tu nte instead of an aiftlcipated 7kent rbe ... tglnally predicted for'nexl year's school budaet. The decision to use les1 af the permissive override approved ln Febo- ruary by district taxpayers came durlnC a public hearing of disbict lrUll«I Tueoday, Tbt t.u rate for lflG.71 tn Costa Airport Report Under Fire By PATRICK BOYLE .... h!fJ ... ., ... A report recommending expansion of Orange County Airport drew vigorous atlacks from homeownn and pilota at a Tuesday meeting of the Orange County Airport Commlsslon. 'fbe meeting, scbeduled as a public discussion.. drew a sta.nding·room-only crowd of irate citizens. It waa the third time the commission had met to discuss the Parsons report. The report which cost the t'OUnty $140,000, recommends t.riplin1 t be number of flights at Ol-ange County Airport ln the nest seven years, spending $J6 million on tenninal and runway ex- pansioa and bud'geUnc milliou more to acquire or soundproof 141 home! alooc the ffightpath. The audience was made up chiefly or Tuafin and Newport . B •• < b homeowner• who live alq the landini and takeoff flight path. Ont Slleb homeowner was Dan Emory. chaiimaii of !be Airport Noise Abatement Committee of Newport Beach. who •t· tacked the repart in technical gouodl arfd challenged anyone "to ~ that my figures are less aceurate than those in the reporl" With a presentation of slides showing maps and graphs of noi.Je contoun. be charged that parts of the report "art a fr41ud." He said the report recommended a load factor of 71 percent for commercial aircraft taking off at Orange Cowty Airport. He alleged thit &ucll a load factor would slaw the climb-out rate o( the aircraft and "drag the impact area 3,200 feet down the bay." He said this w0t1ld place homes along Dover Shores and on Balboa Island in the impact area and they, too, would have to be bought by the county or iOUndproofed . ·Emory also charaed the report based It! combined noise exposure level (CNEL) analysis an a year's average noise and not on the peak flight period or the year, as he said a CNEL evalua- tion requited . Emory said if the evaluation had been based on the peak flight period, the noise figures would have been higher in the report. This would cause the 65 CNEL noise contour line in the Panons report to extend to Dover shores instead of stop. ping al the beginning of Upper Newport Bay, bringtng more houses into tbe pro- posed impact area, he contended. Emory also charged that il the airport service was tripled to 12 Oigbts a day, the effect on speech interference would be such that Dover Shoreti residents' "voices and ears would bt re~red useless for 1.2 hours a day." Another J1resentalion attacking the Parson! report was made by Jose Ortega, an acoustical expert with Paul S. Veneklasen and Associates. ~e1a will be $5.ll per $100 assessed vahlaUoo Gm!Ofired with $4.61 In 1969 . ID '"Nttn>Oft Beach it wUI be $4.71, com-Jiored IO 14.» lall year, The board considered actlon on a surplus ol. 21 ctntl wblch came about by an unezpected rile 'in uaesaed value~ tion. • . Memlflra· dtClded that seven cents would to to cornet teachers salaries and for program improVements. The remain· ing 14 cents would return to the district yers by lowerlng the allowable Backslider • override to 44 cents. Prk>r to the budget decision, several ~achers and homeowners addressed the board. Brad Thurman, president of the Newport.Mesa Education Assoclaton stated, "I have yet to make a decision as to whether the board is a tax-oriented board, an education board or somethl.llg else. Teachers are going to make a stand in this district sooner or later. Art you going to stand behind them or not?" Corona del Mar High School leacher Michelle Wynne, 10, Newport Beach, waves as she makes waves in Coroea del Mar High School swimming pool. What. after all, could make summer more refreshing than a backward slide into a cool pool. Mesa Spouse Arraigned As Wife's Funeral Slated A Costa Mesa man was driven past the mortuary where his dead wife lay awaiting a funeral and arraigned on murder charges today as a result or her fatal Monday morning shooting. Ruben "Corrales, 37, of 238 Fairway Place, was named in complaints ~sued by the Orange County district attorney, charging murder and assault with intent to commit murder. He is also accused of seriously woun· ding a family acquaintance, Tom Newhard, 37, of 1714S Santa Maria ~·· Fountain Valley, shortly after Mn. Cor· rales was shot to death. He was expected to be tnmr~ed from ·a h<llding cell at HarPor Judicial Dittriet Court to Orang9/'0ount.y Jail this afternoon to await 'a preliminary hearing date. • Rites for Mrs. SYivia Corrales, 36, who was !hot in ,..the chest and neck Monday morning 1ollowlng an argument, ' , • will be Thursday at 11 a.m. In Bell Broadway Mortuary Chapel . She leaves six childrea, sons James. Daniel, David and Cervando, plus daughters Dor6thy and Donna, and her paren ts, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Rk:e of HunUngton Beach. Sons David and Cervando were fathered by Corrales, while the other cblldren were born to a prior marriage. Mrs. Corrales will be buried al Harbor Rest Memorial Park, Costa Mesa. P olice Check Theft Newport Beach police today are in- vestigating the theft Tuesday of $225 from Richard's Gift Shop, 3433 Via Lido. IY1vestigators said the suspect ap- parently en.tered the store's business of· fice during business boors Tuesday and took the money from the safe. Roa:tr WelN toid I.he board, .. Americans are the' bl&iest spenders in the world. From that ~heritage I feel the question is not bow .much of the taxpayers' money is to be spenl. If this board. does not feel lhe money would be spent wisely on teachers salaries, return it to the t.axpaytn. "1 am confident I.be majority of lht taxpayers will support the board if the:)' decide to spend the money on education." He added that the teacher morale In the district i• dropping rapidly. ''To City Wants To Cut Bay High Rise By JOANNE REYNOLD6 Of .. Dtfl'I' ...... "*"' DevekJprnent of high rise apartments on bay lront property in Newport Beach will be stopped if planning commissionrs and city COWlcilmen have their way. In a joint study session held Tuesday night the seven commissioners were directed to study the roning which i& lakl out around the bay with the possibill- ly of changing it so that no high rise construction will be permitted in the future. Mayor Ed Hirth said he brought the matter before the joint session in light of the Ba1boa Qay Club's pending hearing' on a variance for a high rise apartment building on thelr property. Coundlmen are scheduled to hear the case Aug. 24. The planning com.mis!ion recommended denial of the use permit in July. PlaMing Commissioner Gordou Glass said zoning ordinances .ti.lcb allow high de!l!lty rosidenlial bulldtnp -be viewed with the character of the city in mind. "W~ ahould concern ourselves with preserving the areas within the city that give it its character. Places like Newport Cente.r . and the other open spaces are probably all right for high rises, but I don 'l feel the bay front is the place for them," he said. Glass said that m06t bay front property -particularly the Bay Club's location -It ls not desirable lor high rise apart- ments. "Tht BBC is not a club, it's a housing project. And it's a poor place to have a lol of people living. There's onJy one street, there are no Intersections and no residential support facilities," he noted . "And if we allow one al the Bay Club. there's a danger that other land Clwners along Mariners "'file (West Coast Highway from the Bay Club to the Arches) will do the same with their land ," Glass said. City attorney Tully Seymour told the aroup that it is possible to change wnell in the community interest. After a 30 minule discussion of lhe possibilities or repealing existing iones, Hirth directed planning ccmrnissioners to make a thorough study of the malter for acUon by the city council. The problems of littering caused by take out food stands and establishment of procedures in prezonlng and an- ne,;:ations were also discussed al the meeting. Commissioners will study the feasibili· ty of having all take out restaurants print their names on their wrappings and cups so the litter can be identified. Suggested by Planning Director Larry Wilson, the purpose of the plan would be to encourage proprietors to pol}ee their own trash. Ortega said the impact area Walt greater than implied in the report Ind said if the flights are tripled, the imp.ct area would ea:ten6 to between Lkio laJe and Balboa Peninsula. Tippie-in Big Put•on~ ,,.--= Dis neyland Preparing for Giant Co n frontation 3 LIT TLE LINES SE LL BIG ITEMS Thea< thr<e llUk JU-flor1lllbod the adverliaer an evening 61 '"'*' tainment (th phoee kejlt rlnPia: unUI 10 J!,Ji.) and -.of coune - !Old the men:handlsf , ST 0 V E l ,Friptaln refrl1r.rator, Good cood., both $15. :OCC.·X:XXX. The Id drew more than 50 calls. lly CHARLES B. LOOS .. 1111 OlllY l"ltM St"' The Yipples ..., coming. the Ylpple• are coming. Ricbl bare to Orange <Jounty. In fact, to Disneyland, to storm the bUtiol> of all lhar Is wholeoome on Thund«Y, the annivuaary of the Hiroshima A-bomb. ·U't a (check one): (a) 'Fact. (b) Rumor. (c) Giant Pukm. (d) Nobody Seems to Know for Sure. (e) N""" of The9e. . If you picked (d) you'rt as close to the real aoswer as lhe (1) Disney bruo. (b) Anaheim Police ~parlmenl (c) Lot Abgeles Free Press, which ·~ parenlly llarted the "hole thing in the first ploce. The stove. and refrigerator wen sold at the l!king price. What more can you u\c1 Cali a DAILY PILOT ad-visor 'and line up SOJfle phone calls on whatever it is you have to 1ell. The direct line to results Is 142-S671. "Aug, 6. Olsoe.yland, Ylppie lntema· ttooal Pow Wow,., proclaimed tMe Free ' !'ms in a -.1 edition. The won!• '-----------' -arrlllf<d .......i • omlllq plclurt or Mickel' Mot13t holdlnc a top hat in one hand and an aatomatic rifle in lhe other. A story appeared on the same page under the headline .. Y\ppies at DimeylaJ>d ••• .. , • • wbllt they wtll -· let you in Vr1th Jong hair, etc. t'' the. article advbed, ,.they may not let )'OU'in without a tk:ket. But aa Iha old provvblal saying goes. 'Tear down the walls that divide us.' .. A call to Free Prt8s offices in an effort to shed more light on the gatecruhlng implicatk>n produced litUe in the way of hard information. Disney brass and Anaheim polk:t also appear to be short on hard J.nfonnaU~o ai<>Ul the rwn.ored invailbh., j'All we hear art rumor11•·1Uiey say. One unconfirmed repart out of tl'tt Dllneyland Hotel bad Ylppte ltader Jerry Rubin of the Chicago Seven checking In for an overnisht stay this week and then checking out again without leaving a rorwarding address. Dimer ofllclall and police ·"Y lheJ are not Ignoring the rumon and are pre~ to~ any eventuality. . Howem, the emuaement-park will open 'nlunday at the usual · boor on a "bU!lness as usu1l'' basis. · • Disneyland oUiCtals note · "ll'.11 that they have dealt succes9fully hr the· past with •!!>'. number o( IJomb 11\mls (ao rar, all have been phorUes). uncounted grad night soirees and even a couple of acfu1f conventions they'd Mt· u -. ~ ., · .. llllDJ· ncure the park's attractions will charm whatever Ylpplcl ' a)low up. Beald,., they add, 0.. wins that divide Disneyland ~m the world an 18 ltet \tati. Tax allow the morale to drop would alto drop the e{flclency 1n UUs disllict's education syatem," be .a.id. Don Huddle.sl.oo, Harbor Ave. realtor , uried that tbe money be returned to lhe talpa.ym. '"The te.a.cbers In this dl!lrict , have never had It IO good and the taxpayrrs have never Md It 90 bad," he said. "It's time to cut out the frills. 'ftle talpayers' batks are nearly broken." Following the pubUc hearing, Trwitee Donald A. Str11uss explained that the Queries .Jury additional '890,000 wu not an Jncreaal in funds . "We have no real incnue tn funds. Taxes are coins to go up no mauer what this board decides: qpon.." "Some1-we Joie ~ght of the la<I that l'IOl't-te4'Chen and· tupaytr1 are a1Je affected by the budget, not Just Iha teachers," Str;wss sald. This 3tatemmt pnJmpted crumbles and hisses from teachers In the alldienc9 which Board OWnoan Bud Ftantuacur •. tailed sbarplJ. Judge Rejects 2nd Mistrial Bid LOS ANGELES (UP() -Superior Court Jud&e Charles H. Older today denied. a defeme motion for • mistrial in the Tate-LaBianca murder ease based on President Nixon's remarks about the guilt of Charles Pttanson. (Related .Story Page 3). Judge Older said that be was utislied about the juron bearing the case are "able and willing to be fair and im- partial" in deciding a verdict for the hippie leader and three young women codefeodnats. "The Ume has come to place this ln its proper perspective," Judie Older said. 1be.Jud&t said it was oot important whether Mamon had delibua~ly invited prejudice by holding up a newspaper in front of the jury Tueaday with the he.adllne, "Manaon Guilty, N 11 on o.ctar.a." ·-important point is -the member> or the jury sre capable of rendering an impartial verdict in this case," he said. "That ls why t ca lled them in htre yesterday one by one and asked them whether their ability &o return such a verdict had been impaired by the m. cidenl I am satisfied it was not." With the jury out of the courtroom, the defense began the day with the motion for mintrial for all the defendants OP for mistrial for all tbe defendanll on dent or the United States con!lltuted "Prejudice of the most sl.gnificant klnd.'' Deputy district attorney Aaron Stovitz said that ManJOn had clearly tried to establish judicial error. "It's the same thing as if he tried to escape or got up and said he wanted to be given the death penalty and then ask for a mistrial." Stovitz said. "We're all aware that Mr. Manson is calling the shots in this case and he called them yesterday. "\\'hetber Mr. Manson wants lo or not it is the intention of the people to proceed witl) this trial." After the judge's ruling the jury was brought in and the lhree young women defendants suddenly stood up and began chanti!lg ~me song about President Nix- on and their guilt. Lenore Romney Certain Victor In Primary Tes t By Tbe A111Gdated Pre11 Lenore Romney appeared a certai n wiMer today In htr bid ror the Republican U.S. Senate nomination from Michgen, one of four state,, holdi.ni primary elections Tuesday. Mrs. Romney's opponent. State Sen. Robert Huber, said at midmorning that he was "preparing to concede" victory to the 6l·year-0ld wife of Michigan's former governor and present U.S. secretary of housing and urban develop- ment. He 18id he expected to send Mrs. Romney a telearam ol <.-OO. sratulations later today. Hubet:s .announcement came 11 elec.. t'lon returns gave Mrs. ltamney 53 per- ttnt of the' votes caSl In the' r•ce. With n percent of Michigan's 11044 f)l'e<!lncu rtpurttd, th< unol!lcl•I <qunt Was 250,492 (or Mrs. Romney and 232,883· for HUber. tn lhe other three 11tste1 with primaries ' Tuesday, the unofficial count showed ih~se'result! in major races: Minutel)tan II Fired ' ' VANDENBURG AFa (UPI) -A com- &at crew laUnched a Minuteman U Inierconlnental Baillstlc Missile Tuesday In an operatJonal test down thl 'Alt Force's Western test ranat. Beach Saving Plan Approved By Supervisor8 A IL< million project to npleoiab eroded sand In the SUnaet ~ area and in West Newport waa approved: Tuesday by the Orange Coullty Board or Supervison. · The project by the U.S. Army Corpe ol Englneen Jj to get under way Ocl. I and be completed by out February. The latest of periodic sand replenisl>- ment projects ii a nectss"ity now, _a_~ cording to Ed Koehn, chief of encineerinC ror the ~· Los Angeles district. He noted that last December tbt Surfside area. with Its beach lined by bomea, began to e:q>erlence acceleratea erosion and that if left unchecked lbe situation would be aitlcal by Novembef. One and a half million cubic yard! of sand will be pumped over the ea(tb wall from the U.S. Navy Ammunitjoft Depilt entrance and spread along Ille beach, Orange County Directoe of Harbors, Beaches and Parb Kenneth Sattlll'On said. • The Newport cod of the proJe<t will see the placement of 100,000 cubic y8"b of sand between Newport Pier and 3&lb Street whett the beach is nanow· con- Sll'UcUon ol a rubble mound ~in at 32.nd Street, and placement of rubble around metal groins at 40th and 44tlt streets which have deteriorated and become hazardous. Sampson said he didn't know just where along the beach the c:orps ia going to borrow the Newport sand, 00' he is sure it wUI be "good ocean llDd rather than dirty river sand.•• Newport Beach city officials are lliU angry that the Corps widened the betteb at the westerly end of the city With mud and rocks hauled last winter frOm. the entrance to the Santa Ana River channel. The federal government la putting up It million of th<> $1.5 mill.Ion expense ror the project. Two state qencia will contribute $334,000 and· county gavem- ment $161 ,000. The county will be reimbursed 1107,00t by coastal cities and private landowner&. Oraage <:ouc Weadter Thoe• lazy, buy daye or . summer conUnue TharldllY with · low clouds in the morning anct • filtered 1un1hJoe afterward.·· Temper1lure tlteratiOns will b9 minim al. INSm B TOD-''Y Ctrcal tiwmv/actvrn,. going map, crockll, pop oucr ""n;: ... Uon crlUcltm. They Qiv• thtlr vlew1 on Pagt 11 . -- • -· I OQ.Y PILOI • Irvine Ba y Plan Called 'Only One' ' ' o.Praetical Alternative * * * * * ~Says State Land Official Press Release Irks Hirstein ' ' one Orqe County supervbor bet•l<d another fOf' .. running off at the mouth" Tuclday ill a Daro up IJ1!t preceded another W split vote on Upper Newport Bay. By TOM llARLEV ............ ' l Stale t.awtl Commlslkln ot'f~1l to-liq del.-i lho !nine Compony plans fer a..eJopmcnt of tbe Uppor Bay. H• .W ft WIS tbe only proposal 00 whK:h • slat< .,_,, could aet in lbe light ~""! County's need to raise funds other nt m t.ht area. that hf. became COn\1lnct.d b'I 196"7 that the Upper Bay land uchanlt woold ..,.,,.. tncrwed public access to the area &lid provide boating facilities and a recreatiOn eavtronment unavailable under the bay's existing condition. The St.ate Lands Commission approved the uchange ol U7 acres o( county-()Wn· ed tidelands hr 450 acres of Irvine Company !J!iands in November. 111'1. Hcr1i& had voted a1ainst tht sw1p in IM with the comment. thlt the trade was .. less than ideal.. for the people " °'2oge Couocy. Sllpervbor Willlom Htrslein Io I d Supervbor Robert Battln he doesn1 Ilk• belnl "ticked In the leeth continually." He refened to a Battin prtss relea se chargtna: three supervisors are cheating the public because of speciaJ interest loyalty 10 lhe Jrvtne Company. ~ ellloor Francis J. Hartig ~ loltlfioll, Ctal lrvltle plans met all jlolit eiittrla Ill lad ucban&e matton. --'-• -lbe coodlllon °"' such c;;.;. ~ -be in the st&tewlde lllnUin said lit thinks Battln'a c!iar&., have polJtical implicatiom. "I'm not nmnillg for olflce. Mr. Hlr· stein," replied Bl.ttift. ~~ bis earlier teslimoey Horl!I dmled· -<).,.. quesliaoin& by _..,... allcrney Plillip Berry -changes In .U.le t<!mllltatmion in the 196M7 porlod -1 the rtpl........i <i ~.by men with "dlU<rlnf Political plllloaophles" inJluenced hil change of heart or his sub.!leqUent ac- Fire Bombs . !Seal Beacli. Hit Enemy In Cambodia . Mayof Loses ti~ ... were DO ot),.,. feasible alternativu." be said. "We can dream ol Utopia but there's alw1y.s the problem ther Job ol practicability to t.ake into account." Hortig staled that he had contributed ' .. ..,. --to a "Jtrongly nfplive'' staff report By RUDI NIEDZIEl.UI ~ -which hatttd the Upper Bay trade ~ter JIRN .i ..,. DeWY P>llM 1"" a commissioo hearing into the pro~! OM PENH, Cambodia (UPl J - yor Morton A .... Baum 1\Jesday in 19fii. Four U.S. Air Force jl!'t fighter-bombers • thlrj lo ~ bis job He co1'firmed for Barry tha1 he• had today bombarded Communist lr""I" with ~ Dee":: ~iliclJ tempest read an ppinioll issued by ~ altarney napalm fire bembs in a direct support nwpn, tllroUP thO dly. general' a ~ priof to ~-., mi!slon ·for Cambodia• 50ldlers baWing .... , still ...,.., but he .., Ion&"· in whidl.~ \Jpper ~Y · lfea:ribed, for coatrol of a highway juoction. • as • Jbarmacist for the Seal under post-trade cmditions, • beoonnng 1 ..;..,_--.. Golden Rain Fewr-a captive walerwl'f in which• public"use UPI correspondeot Kent Potter wit-~· ---.. -would be restricted. . oessed the raid on lbe outskirt! ol.Skoon, n. mQOrcalledbilfiring''anobvjou.s· 11Qt· same optruoo caJl«f tor a>m. 35 miles DOl\bwt of Phnom Penh, and of intimidat.km and · reta.li&Um of mission actlell .Gft ~ tJppd-Bay pr~1 ' overhe1rd radio coovusations between •. crude.st type." His dismWal. he 00.1Y after -'ot.bet\ 4UetnaUvts Wbk:h ' ail American pilot and a Cambodian $ can be traced diredly to the firing might afford p,t.t,r ~ic UJe have · ity Manager Let Risner and City Al· ~ ~~gbly lnvestJftted a.ad. .. Jound, lie.kl commander dirteUng the air al· y Jim 'Carnes· July rr -action unpractible ' by lbe State Lands Div~ tacks. be 'initiated. t That opinf<lt stressed that every action .. The question of direct American air offiClaJ reason for his termination, of !-h' commis.s1on must be taken with support for Camt>od\an ground forces eiplained, was that he failed to ~ view ~ pl"f.9C!l'Yation of .statewkle public has become a matter of debate in ve a ..amflict or inter'e5t prohibited mt8'Ut m thll Upper Bay. Wuhington with some 7.'.Wm.n ~ oI the foundation.. Hort.ig told Bt:rry be w1s unaware specific infraction cited in the Orange County had raised !pOl"t than claiming such misslon.s are yond the given to Baum by the foundation $100 million for capital prQ}edJ without bowxil' of President Nixon's lndocldn.a Wll tW tM· nlll govemiJ:it resorting to bond issues. "" • poU'Cies. U.S. beadquartien in SaigOn bas '""""'tioo prdlibll -'ltloYO• holding The utcllllve officer ..... tedty told decllned to allllOll!l<e the raids offldall•. with -firms or ag<ocies doing Berry lhal ilellber be nor lits .Wf had ' -Leisure World. '· been offered'.Uy acceptabf altema.Uve ~-aaid the raids ~ Jl\Ol'lling 1111 retimnelll ....,,.llllity coo-plan ol development by Orange County. Jbliil;a' .minu1's and wife floWii In • for police &lid fire ...me.. Baum'a Bortlg dmied Berry's suggestion 1j>1L bro fll&hts br lour U.S. Air Forao FtOO ' u m&)'OI' waa held to be in violation, .. a show of force". by the ~ Ccm~ · Superubers, .a relatively slow jet which DMtY P1LOT wu told. , , ~ ~ hlnt-to 1erite bis 1MI opfn!e was ¥5fd:.YeiJ during the Korean ~~ • ~ 1 ,., '~~·eonveriadon "kk ~ d~ t , ...... ·, "~ ' I!>~, ,.· the~ ~ ' ' -iturtbir b:':' ·~ ' ·can forward air cuitrol ezp ol 'IJttrna~f methods of (FAC) pllot and a Cambodian oUicer development. on the ground with both men speaking pointed Cltlt that be was nominated : m11yoralty by Councilman Harold past pruldent ol lbe foundation. action .... """"'1dfd by Lloyd GuJD. a former foundation director. ~«I with the notice &lid allacbed pay cbecb Tueoday morn- • the mayor &aid, "[ can't uy that ,... tot.ally unupedal but 1 didn't they would be &0 crude about Swimathon Still ' Has· ·Big Pull For Fund Drive in Engli~h. The Cambodian plnPQinted the locauon Of Communist positions and the Supedsabers roared in to drop 10 250-Pound b om b s and canisters of napalm and rake the area with 20mm cannon fire . \ The targets were about 500 yards from the Cambodian lines. _"All right, you can proceed If you wish now," the F AC pilot radioed to th~ Cambodian commander. "'(e'-are gomg to stay here for a few -IDOCe minutes in case you need any h.elp There will be another rustic (code werd for forward air control pilot) in 2D min minutes.'' said he received a notice Friday lbe foundalioo whicli urged him ~Ive the con!lict· either by quilting yor or as pharmacist. le the furor continues in the city, Rimer, the deposed city manager . this morning he would agree to as • consultant Aug. 10 In the ·ngs against the Marina Palact, age dance ball, charged with allow- ~i.sorderly conduct. ha11. operated for the past five by Mary Robert.Ion, wife of former Beaeb gambllni: entepreneur Bill , may to&e ils license if the es are substanUated. ·ucs of Baum have suggested that was fired eo the Robertsons wouJd :Jol;ethelic<nse. DAILY PILOT .: ; 01t.u1Ga c.oAS1' l"USUIHIMG COMl"AlllY a.i-t N. We.4 T"-"'•• A. Mur,lilM M ........ E~hi..' lll•MM f..rl11111• frtcwpwt 9NCll Cltp t:•itw ---• UI I w ••• a.n ....... ,.,..,. : M.nt .. M.,...., r.o .... j 11&. t lNJ l '1*'- ~--1 -w.th,..,.. L...-...01 DI"-' A-11w•••-Seed~ 1Jl7J '-"" .......... $M~-w.rtflllc-N .... '. ' '!be awimolhqn ts 1111 )1& las! lap. , Al 8 o'ckd.'tbis mom.tng tbe1vohmteer swimmers had !za mll•1 to 19 · 1n lbetr one milliot>Yard · swbn aL the l!"'l'O'I Beach Swim Club, but the Olympic Pool Foundation bad alrriost •.ooo to go in their. $87,500 hmd drive. Thie {oundatX:in is raising money to help pay for an ot'ympie--sil.e pool al Newport Harbor High School to be used by the communities: of Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. The Newport-Mesa Unified School District and the City of Newport Beach are paying 75 -per~t of the $350,000 cost, but the remainder must come from the community. ~ swimatboo, which began al noon July 25, is scheduled lo eod tonight at about 6 p.m. Mike Ashe. chalnnan of the foundation, is scheduled to swim the last 25 yards. He will be preceded by the mayors and city councilmen of the two ciUes. Tax-deductible donations may be sent to the Olympic Pool Found.Ilion, PO Box 800, Costa Mesa. Consolidated Court Marshal Bill Gets Okay Lea:ialation authored by Auemblyman Robert Burke (R-Huntinfton Beach} to convert Oranie COunty to a coosolldated coa.rt marshal, operation, as in mosl large counties,. has been siped into law by Gov. Reagan. A head marshal with an aulstant mar.hal and lbrtt hupector deputies wilt be. bind Wb<n lhe CONOlldlllon goes Into <!!eel Dec. I, according 10 Jud&• Rlcherd lllmilton. c!Wnnan ol lhe county Municipal Jud,.,. "-l•lion. Manha.ls of the five county munkipal court sy1tems act as baUUf1, lr1nsfer pri1c>ntn, serve waJTant.s and 1trve subpoenas on wltneues among othtr duties. Presently there arc flvt head marshals ror the five municipal court systems in Costa Mesa, Laguna N i a: u e I • Westminster, Santa Ana, and Anaheim· Fullerton. One of lbem will be pmnoted to d>le( morJ\111 and m1t1 hif plllce In San<• 'Ana. the coun(J MaL ..'lbil other outlytnr ofllw wiD be r<talDed: Military officers said Com munist forces were entrenched in Skoun and i~ outskirts but that Cambodian soldlerll shll controUl!'d parts of the town. It is near the junction of Highway 6 and Jilghway 7. South of Phnom Penh, on the Kirirom Plateau, Cambodian spokesmen .said I 500 Communist soldiers have been killed in a .series of air strikes, .some of them apparently flown by American pilots. Tire Shop Theft Jails 2 in Mesa A Coata ltfesa. service station owner and his emP_loye were arrested Tue5day after a policeman tracing theft of a ll80 tire shop tool found them wl~ an identical one, officers allege was covered by a fresh coat of paint. John J. Padilla, 31, or 2301 W. Borchard St., Santa Ana, and George R. Davis, 19. of 3126 Bray Lane. Costa Mesa, were booked on suspicion of borglary. Officer Bill Bechtel questioned them Bl Padilla's Chevron Service, 2925 Bristol St., following a complaint by tire shop owner Dl!'Witt C. P.1oSier, of ~1osier's Coast GeneraJ Tire Service. 585 \V. 19th SL Repossession Sparks P rotest A Cost• Mesa policeman following a report ol a woman creaUng a disturbance, Tuesday found her sitting on the hood of he.r car, disturbed because ll was about to be repossessed. She ~tayed put during the confront.aUon In the 600 block of West Wilson Street wh!lt Offletr A1 Muir checked 'with Chrysler Credit Corporallon to mate sure It was a legitimate case. The 26-year-old woman W83 linelly persuaded lo climb down and seek tecal counM:I. The reposse&sor took her car '"" to await the paym~ts in arrun. 'II• WIS "1!00. lllitd to llOl!f)I police next Urne of an lnltnded repossesaiob • . "No, but you're cwUnually running off at the mouth ," Hirstein shot back. "At lea.st I think befcn I open my mouth." Battin responded . "I hope you do," Hirsll!'in countered. Hirstein and Supervisors Alton Allen ind Wi!Uam Phillips 1gain voted down Battin and David Baker Tuesdav as the t~'O asked colleagues to file 'legal acuoo against the lrv.i ne Company to determine existing public acnss rights to the Upper Bay. The m.:we £allowed urging by the Orange County Grand Jury that the board launch court action to determine Saloons the pubUc'1 pruaipUve rlab.Lt (ri&hts based on historical use .). The board majority contended it would only conlusc the e.xl.siting law.suit to determine the con.slltutiooality or the land exchange between the o:>Unty and the Irvine Company . Phillips said Ballin was asking them lo throw oul years of work on the mere chance that there are prescriptive rights. But Baker countered puscrlplive rights should be determined before the county ts locked into the trade. The Battin pres.s releue that ired Hintein read: Return ").ooklna Into Ute Upper Newport Bay land exchange ls like traveling through Dante's Inferno : the clORr you get to the core, the more rotten and the more corrupt things become." It stated the public is being cheated for the benefit of a private land owaer because three supervisors have a greater loyalty to this special interest than lo tbe public. "ApparenUy these three supervisors see nothng wrong wlth paying their friends with public funds for something &he public may alre1dy own," Batlin asserted. Tave rns Can Be 'Bars' Again Irvine May Support New Freeway Bill SACRAMENTO (UPll -For the man who values the tradition or the Wild West, sipping a cool martini in the 5ubdued atmosphere of a cocklail lounge just never made it . It didn't compare to a shot of red eye at the sawdust-Doored corner saloon. Wtll, the saloon i! making a comebaek in Califomi1. Gov. Ronald Reagan wu set today to sign at a specia) ceremony in his office a bill making it legal again for a drinking establishment to call ibelf a "saloon,•• .. barroom" or "bar." All three terms have been banned from tavern signs slln shortly after the repeal of Prohibition. Assemblyman John T. Knox (0.Rich- mond), introduced the measure after he received a letter from Don Bradley, who managed former Gov. Edmund G. Brown's unsuccessful 1966 re.election campaign. "Wouldn't you like to be known as the man who brought the saloon back to California?'' implored Bradley. "Think of the toasts that would be d r u n t in tribute to your legislative .skills •.• the passage of such a bill will certainly plaCf, your name among the immortals." The Legislature proacrl.bed the word "saloon" because of public feelings that it would recall memories of sleazy pre. Prohibition swinging-door gin-mills and 1920s speakeasies. It called to mind im· ages of gambling, prostitution, gangsters and bootleggin8. When lawmakers in 1935 drew up laws to govern tbe liquor industry after it again became legal, they strove to keep the buslne.ss "clean." ''To those who are old enough to remember back to tbe pre-Prohibition days, the saloon has a rather definite meaning," wrote Sen. Andrew R. Schot- Ucy of Merced, a member of the Senate committee on intoxicating liquor in the 1930s. "It was a place, the principal part of which, outside of the liquor it.self, was the mahogany bar with the iron foot rail and the cuspidors, and is not to be confuled with the modern, sumptuous cocktail lounges, to which the younger gener11tion has become ac- customed.'' An Irvine Company spokesman said Tuesday the firm would consider sup- porting legislation to change the roule of lhe Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Beach. if a bill now under consideration contained provisiortS for an alternate alignment. The Irvine Compa11y is opposing a bill authored by Assemblyman Robert Badham {R·Newport Beach) which would delete -the freeway entirely between Beach Boulevard in liunUngton Beach and the southerly limits or Newport Beach. Gilbert W. Ferguson, Irvine vice presi- dent of corpoi'ate communications, i1 a statement inadvertently omitt.ed from Tuesday 's DAILY PILOT story said : Complaints on Chinchillas Surprise to Mesa B1·eeders "The Badham bill totally eliminates -with no provision for rerouting - the freeway ~hrough Newport Beach. Many people are not aware of this. The bill does not call for studies on an alternate alignment. It it did. our opposition might be tempered. But as it stands now, we cannot support the bill. It is incomplete. "If the desire of the bill's proponents Is truly to reroute the lreeway west or the Upper Bay, as we .suspect it is, then the legislatioit should be amended • to allow the Highway Commission lo open--new route-heari11gs Jn that area . We would .support such an amendment." The first time chinchilla owner John Cutler heard any complaints from his neighbors about his chinchilla hutch was when he read about It in the newspaper. "She never said a word to us," he said, referring to his neighbor. Mrs. Charles Cockle. Cutler. of 396 Ha milton St.. Costa Mesa. was referring to Monday night's city council meeting when Mr, and Mrs. Cockle complained about the smell of his altl!'gedly illicit operation. Cutler said George Skeilh. deputy health officer for Orange County. came out to inspect the operation and found no foul sml!'lls. "We clean the cages once a week." 116 Bodies Recovered BASSETERRE. St. J(;ilt~ B.W.I. (UPI~ -A total of 116 bodies ·have been recovered in the sinking of the fl!rry boat Christena that saps.ized Saturda y between Sl. Kittts and Nevis in thl!' Caribbean , the harbormaster's ofifce an- nounced Tuesday . The office also issued a revised count oi survivors of the disaster. listing 91 counted on both islands. Cutler said. "and we spray all or the cages with disinfectant." Cutler, a self-e~ployed carpet l1yer, has about 50 ol the little, gray animals in a hutch in his back yard. Since the Cockll!'s' complaint lo the ci ty council, he has been visited by Dick Dahill of the city building'depart· ment. He said he did not let· Dahlll inspect the operation on the advice of his attorney. He said he wa.s not aware of the city ordinance. allowing only three pets to a household nor was he aware that he needed a pennit for his farm. "I misread the law in the begin nine." he admits. "I looked at an old map of the city and thought that I was in a different zone than I actually live in." He says he has invested al lea.st SZ.000 in his chinchillas. but he has not made a profit yel. "I am just trying to leach my kids about animals,'' he says, "and .show them a different way of life. I don't want to hurt anyone or get anyone into any trouble." He says he is going to apply for a home occupation permit to operate the chinchilla farm. and if that fails, he says he will just move to the country . Neat Mesa Crook Robs Apartn1 cn t A burglar who neatly knifed out a rectangular hole to unlock an apartme~ screen looted $876 worth of belongings from three Costa Mesans Tuesday, police said. The victims were Jeff Walter, 19, Corr nie Noordman, 18, and Donald Glymph. 22, of 2450 Newport Blvd., according to Officer Dave Dye. Tbe victims said they lost such things as jewelry, cash, stereo eqWpment, clothing and a .22 caliber rifle. U.S. J et Crashes ZARAGOZA, Spain !AP) -A U.S. Phantom jet fighter·bomber crashed on a gunnery mission in northwest Spain today , ldlling the two crewmen aboard, the Air Force announced. It said the Phantom carried conventional weapoms and crashed in an unlnhablled area. The Air Force located the crash site at about JS miles northwest of the U.S. Air Force base at Zaragoza. '54.40 B~Matff/ for Mother or Grandmother From l to 9 GENUINE BlrthstonH 1racefully set In 14 Kt. White or yellow aold •.• The special remembrance from every member of tht f1m ily ••• from $29.00 CONVENIENt TERMS J. C. .JJun:-phrie ~ JeweferJ 24 YEARS SAME LOCAllOtol PHONE 641·!401 BANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE I Jill NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA New ABM System Started by Army V,IT1~ SEN. FULBRIGHT SCORES tv COVERAGE CBS President Stanton Waits Turn to Reply Two Network Chiefs Defend TV Coverage WASHINGTON (APl -prealC!ent now does byQ,l.Qm. Television network Chiefs urg. "Th: people have 'r'rlght ed Congress today lo quit ~o be inform~ of the . prevail· . . . . , 1ng congreSS!Onal attitude on thinking ~bout getting into the the signiricant n at i 0 n a I newscasting business and issues." Muskie said. leave the job to the pro-Goodman ' replied : ' · We fessionals. believe that the goal of public In testimony for the Senate understanding is best met by Communications Committee, lettinR broadcasters, rather CBS president Frank Stanton than legislators or regulators, and NBC president JuUan judRe what k.ind and com· Goodman opposed a bill by bination o( programs will most Sen. J. W. Fulbright tD-Ark.), fairly and fully cover a to require broadcaster& to give particular issue. prime time to the Sen.ate, ' ' Broadcast organizations House and judidary. • have oo political aims. Their They said b r o a d c a s t newsmen -by trainlng. newsmen present a fair, background and approach - balanced news report, and are concerned 1vith reporting desa-lbed Fulbright's proposal events and examining Issues as "dangerously slmpli!tic," as professional joumalist!, not unnecessary and possibly an with winning votes or elec- infri.Dgemenl upon a free tions." prea Stanton said broadcast ne>A'S Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (D· is not perfect. "But it Is most Maine). however, back ed certainly more satisfactory Fulbright by saying television than it would be under any distorts complicated national system in which n e w s issues and that Congress judgments are made by 1hould have it chance from government officials or dic- time to time to address Itself lated by legislative o r directly to the public u the regulatory formulas." Bomb Re~alled • Thousands Tour Hiroshima WASIUNGTON (UPI) - The Army has 1t.art.ed work on a new, improved an- Ublllhtlc missile system . desljned \0 replace Safeguard, the M blllion to 110 billion ABM system It has j111t started to build. The new system, dubbed "Hard1ltt," would eo1t the same as or 1 little more than Safeguard, the weapon which has provided a platform for the military spendlnR debate through much of the 91st Con~s. Ellst.ence of the new ABM system was disclosed In 1ecret testimony by Army research and development officials l.o the House~ppropriallons Com· mlllee. Opponen11 ol Ule ABM ~ the admlnlltl'ation should . stop work on Safeguard now and devote ils resources to the new Hardaite system. But Army offilcals say tf they keep doing that, they will never get anything built. R . T. I iot roops Arrest 20 In Ireland BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) -British troop!! charg· ed Into crowds, bloodying heads and arresting 2 0 persons. Tuesday nlaht and today in a crackdoYln on Roman Catholic mobs that 1 have attacked them wit h stones and bottles for si1 con· secutlve nights. I Soldiers expressed In· creasing biUer~ss and frustration al the. tactics of the Ca.holies. An Army spokesman said several soldiers were injured by the latest stone and bottle barrage from the crowds in the Catholic areas ol Belfast. Twenty-five were i n j u re d ~fonday night. There was a brief outburst Tue1day night in Londonderry, where mobs attacked army patrols and set fire to two buses and three cars .for use as barricades. Though ; the disturbance!! Tuesday night were mild com- pared with the five previous nights, the soldiers swung their clubs t,1.•ilh abandon and used nausea gas to disperse crowds. More States Might Lose House Seats WASHING TON !UPI) - The 1970 cenaus, when finally tabulattd, might put Alabama and Oklahoma among those states expected to lose a con· gres.slonal seal. a House 1ulr committee predicted Tuesday. HIROSHIMA, Japan (UPI) it at 200,000. The congressional delega- -Vislton from almost every "There has betn a sharp lions of the two states had corner of the world toured increase in the number of been expected to remain Hiroshima today an the eve foreign visitors in recent unchenged in a projection of the 25th anniversary of its weeks," said Y o s h I m l t s u made by the House Census deatruction by the first atom Kosakai , historian in the and Statistics Subcommittee bomb dropped in anger. Hiroshima Peace Memorial last year . Mu"1lm. "Vi1itors are coming Bul preJ;m,·nary census Hot.els and boarding houses reported capacl1.y bookings. from practically every country return!! now Indicate Alabama 1 1 · in the world ." and Oklahoma ml11ht j<lin Many o the oreigner!I came Th · p Iowa, Nor" Dakota, Oh1'0 and from the Expo '70 world fair e tourist! went to eace u• at nearby Osaka. Park to see the only building We.rt Viralnla ln·the tabulation preserved in the state of in the loss , of one seat each At 8 a.m. Thursday, the destnJction left by the gen-when the nation's 435 con-u:aet hour when the U.S. B29 1 d' Enola Gay dropped the [lrsl baku (atom bomb) that the gresslona 1strlcts are reap- atom bomb, thousands in United States dropped on Aug. portloned on the ba!lls of flnal Hiroshima's Pt.ace Park win,_6_· _194_5_· ________ 1_97_0_11;:.gu_r_es_, _the__.:.p_an_•_l •_•_Id_. _1 bow their heads to mourn the dud. The exact number o ( pmon1 knled by l h e Hlroahlma bomb never has been determined. The United States estimated the death toll at 80,000. The Japanese put * * 11 Bomb Site Rally Slated LOS ALAMOS, N.M. (UPI) -Peace advocates were 1atht.rin& today for an anU war rally at the site where aclenllsb gathered secmty durlJll World War U to build the Ilnl otomlc bornJ>. Loi Alamo&, a rtm01e mounllinoua c o m m u n I ty •lllfill1 older than the alomlc ap ~ uahtred In. 11 the tara~ of a two-day Hlrolhlma qy demonstration. • City official! tald IN COn'I· . munlty's police force hu been alerted and 15 st.ate policemen have been stationed throughout the community of I!,llOOpmons. WESTEllN STATE UNIVlllSITY COLLEGE OF LAW In Orange Co•nty now accepting mett and women who •re elthori f -'' wllti 2 ,._, If .......... , ... ~ .......... ,.01 .... e ..... ,, .................. ...,.._ .... ..,......, ................ _ ........ ,,.. ... ,...,..,,..., ... . T"" It.I • ..,__ M _....."' 4 _,"' ~11 .. ,._..,, 1.~ .. -~.1-..... - Apply Now for September 10th DAY 011 IVINING CLASSU • 1001.-ldl- Anllhelnt Phone 635-3454 Uke 5aftguard, the ""' ABM -now In the .. _. formulaUon" lta!p -would prOlecl U.S. mlnlle llloo against a prwmptlve biet atrike. The difference would be that "H'ard!llte" would eon. sist ol ,more, but !mailer ind chtaptr. radars ind com· pukrs than those belnf UMld by Saleguard. The radar-«1mputer unlta, which guide Sprint interceptor miasiles, would be 1 o numerous that it wou\d be unattractive for lhe Soviets to try to knock them out. The Saleguard r1dar1 and computers are large and e1° pensive. Some scientlsla fear they would make easy, 11· tractiv~ target.I in a n y Russian attempt to overwhelm the ABM and then parllyu the retaliatory mtulles In their silos. The Army officials, led by Asslstant Secretary R. L . Johnson, said they recognited this as a possible deficiency if the Soviets increase the accuracy of their missiles and the number of re -e ntr y vehlcles each missile carri~s . ----:.. ---·. - IWlY Ill.OT $ 11 Perish Blaze • ID • ' 'Building De1troyed in Minneapolis MINNEAPOLIS, MIM. (AP) was ltss teverely damaigrd. a coiled-up rope at the win-! -!:leven men, most of them A preliminary loss mi mate dow. • ~ elderly. died In a him that wu put at 11,.,,000 by Lee He kicted out • wlncbr, 1 swept 1 thrte-story bulldlnl J. Schoephoerster, F 1 r e threw out the rQpe and did In downtown Minneapolla early Depar1mt!'!.t supervisor of i~ do"'n the rou.h brick fachai today. Four persona were vesUgaUons. ol tht bulldinc. hll hatwi' • hospitalized in crtuca.I con-Larry Lancadorf, 4&, who 11narUng with burns as ~ dlUon. occupied a third.floor room, landed on the stdewallt ~· ; Fite officials said nine rtre englnet walled to ,, othf.n neaped, one by climb-wu uleep when the fire acene. .,~ broke out. • N • · M t Ing down 1 rope strung oot The building housed thm IXOD ee s from I window on the lop .. , awoke and s me 11 e d businessei ()fl the first Ooor noor. smoke," he said. "So I opened and had 33 units of rOOQJS Co Chi f The blaze apparently 9tarted the door and T could hardly and apartments on the secotie1 ngo e Jn a wooden out.side stairway see lhe corridor liRhl. it was and third floor. Located JR!d on the back, firemen said. ao bl1ck." the 200 block of East HenneP'lkJ1 WASHlNGTON (AP) _ cal.13e was not imJMdiate-He 1aid he knew he.d never Avenue, It was not rar f~, ly known. The lnterk>r of the make It dawn the stain, so the MWissippl Riwr. fn .:., Conao Presklent J o a e P b second ind third floors were he kk:ked his way into a va-~ion of •mall busi~ r Mobutu, In jiis country tryin11 destroyed but the fint Door cant room nest door and found and rooming houlet. · :o~~ le lnlerut America nl• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ii "1.!l busUies&men ;, hu Afrlcan1• OLYMPIC POOL ~ homel1nd, has 1 booster in •. •'r. The "MARATHON SWIM'' la fn lt1 10th D.y. TM kklt H•ve Swum Pruldent Nixon. • '46,750 Yard5 (534 Miies) 260 Continuous Hovrtl -• c.~:."' .. ;ot,.:_\.~~~~"'u;,• HAYE YOU IACKED THEM WITH YOUR • lor American ent•~"·· but .• DONATION? · •' -r ~ Wo oro 11% No4.. ••Wt t .. • -.... ,.ur S.S.00. • he told Mobutu Tuesday night • SID.....,1M.OO., dOMtien today. '• he'd like to learn his secret • NAMIE .................................................................... -·········-··-····················· .. ·-······· • for achieving a balanced • ADORE~ L y·M·p·j· J,:···p 0 Q.L .................. -···--·············--······ ·············-·········· · a budget and a favorable bal. • F 0 UN 0 AT I 0 N Costa p~~~al~r.> 92627 :. aoce of trade. ... • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ,: ;.. • I isa Get the picture. Face up to the full-color Polaroid Land Camera at any one of United States National Bank's 58 con· venient offices. It'$ a snap. In just 60 seconds your picture will be ready for your ap· proval. Then it's chemically laminated into your FaceCard, the safest, most convenient Master Charge card yet. If you already have a Master Charge, replace it with a new FaceCard. It's absolutely free, of course. Should you lose your FaceCard or have it stolen ••• it's still safe. Any attempt to break the seal destroys the usefulness of the card. No credit card is safer. Or more exclusively YoUrs. It provides quick, positive identification wherever and when· ever you need It. , Merchants glance at your FaceCard. Then atyou.And quickly know you, have a face to be trusted. If all this Isn't enough, we give you an added bonus. With our FaceCard, you get the option of our Bonus Balance Check Plan, which lets you write checks for more than you have In your account. Aeply for your FaceCard today. It's a snap. UNITED 68 convenient locatlont S'TAT'.ES NATIONAL Mlll'llllr ir.dlrtl ci...a l111111nct cetMntlDft ,., 'tdf.Nl llMIM $)tltei'I .B..AN"K Costa Mou Office 1145 Newport 11..i. South c-t Plan 3333 lrlltol StrHI • .. .. •• ... I • ' . . ~ ,,.. I , •)• -·. ·~ .. 'Q .· ·-• .. . '• . . . .. . • . •' ....... : .~ .J.;.. .. ,·.·~ . . . : .r-:;. .•. ., • - ~ . , . .. . ' .• •' " . • ,, - ' \ • • -• r D.'11,Y PILOT EDJ10BJt\L PAGE ., ' . A Poor Airport _ n ,Cport An tnterim report on a master plan for county air t• tn_.i.Uoo lsn't getting very good reviews. • It has been called "nolhing more than an armchair }• atuc!y•• and ''a literary disaster!' • Newport Beac!I city officials have derided it. County ~· Airport Colnlnissioo member.s criticized ll. f\ couple of • county supervisors also have indicated their displeasure -alljl Ibey budgeted $140,000 for it. So where did Ralph M. Parsons and Company go wrong? The reaction indicates pretty clearly that they miss- ed the boat by not taking into account the opposition of Harbor Area homeowners to Orange County Airport ex- '" pansioa. • • .· . . There js no indication in the report the airport con· aollant& ever checked with homeowners in Newport Beach, Costa Mesa or Santa Ana Heights. Yet Ibey found lime to survey the needs o! the people who use. or 4ireetJy benefit from, the airport -the busin .. s ad-jaceot to the airport. The inescapable fact is the noise irritation of nights over homes is very much a part of the equation for any solution of the airport's problems. . A Parsons firm spokesman defensively replied to aJrport commissioners that his company was oot hired by the COllllty to study neighborilood attitudes. sun the report notes that it will cost the county an estimated $8.2 million to bulldoze 256 homes south of ~ · the runway and soundproof 385 others to meet new state aircraft noise standards after the first of the year if the ·-· Parsons recommendation for airport expansion is fol· lowed. as the $9.6 millloii tbt woi.11!1 bave ,to'be spent lo ex· paod the temlinal to 'baJld1• S. 7 million ~u•lomers per year (compared to.Jes• llWI 900,000 customers itow) and more than '6.'t:i lllilJioli!'whlcb il would cost 1o ex· tend the runway and 1i>9ve the coolrol tower to open the airport lo larger jets, That makes the bill for buying or rebuilding homes a pretty big part of the financial equation. Further, there is good reason to believe the stand- ards for "acceptable" noise poUution used by Ute Par· sons people in projecting the number of homes that would be damaged are on the low side. Governmenlal and judicial acknowledgment of noise pollution damage is increasing rapidly. Even slightly tougher noise rules could increase condemnation costs tremendously . Then there is the sitn-ple fact that homeowners' lawsuits for noise damage totaling more than $30 million already are hovering over the countif. The words of the Parsons report speak for expan· I sion of the Orange County Airport. But an analysis of the premises Of that report -and of the major factors ft does not consider -argue emphatically the other way. One aspect, of the report. however. confinns what the supervisors and all others have known for a long time : • ""'• ,.y,AUL:t::..1~ .. . How much is the $8.2 million? It is almost as much The county had better move with great speed to develop a good supplementary metroport elsewhere in the county. And we'd better plan our air service growth around commuter connections to Los Angeles. Ontario, Palmdale and -eventually -to a Camp Pendleton airport . N ~Mm, SOME ftOPLE TAl<f ROCK (0NCERT5 ~ITE~All~ ... Moral Values -... ·· M·ust Take T~p Priority (. A minister In SL Paul bas asked me to comment on what he calls ''the fascilm of the left'" he sees rearing ii. 111'1 heod today ia our country. He feell; that the .. preuares. coerclon5 and ~rles of tbe left" .,. becoming • milflir·ima&e of fascism .. the right. 'J'W1e is no doubt in my nUad that thiJI is !ll'ppeoing. It is almost lnevltable, Ever ~ the Wik of what is known left" embraoed Manlsm· a half-century ago. the ten. always been then:. ;f 'r8JljEED6 or aboolutism.are deeply plaDl8t.;n the Man· iisl-1.eipist soil. If Leriin:jlad liv.d, I am convinced he would have pursued a policy little less diabolic than Stalin did ; ii Trotsky had despite his litanism. be bave been as rutbless and doo- lrinaire ~s the Georgian peasant who took power. fit. r ~-~ ... The oruy hope for lhe "New Left," tn my opinion, is a total break with lht !onnutalions al !ht Old Le!t. While Marx' critique of toclal injustices and inequiUes has much to recommend it -in the line of the Old Testament prophets -hi11 program! and policies are not only economically irreleva'lt to- day. but his social and political tber11.pics are mCft killillg than curing. THE YOUNG PEOPLE I most admire today are those who have brokea away Dear GlooD)y Gm: Ne]llPOrt lleach has one service station owner who charges a doJ.. lar for air and water you put in yourself, if you don't buy gas - even ii your tank is full and you 're a regular custome:r. Bet hiJ fran- chise won't last Jong. ~.S.T. tMs ~ ,..,.... ....,,. "'""'" .. --..ttr ....... -·-•If ..... ....... _ .. ...., ... ..,."". from all obsolete'_ ldeolo&ies, who eee , the "human perma" ,and qot "the state·• or ''history .. as the tuJcrum of aodety. '111ey are·mstentialistJin the best and highest sense of the word: knowing tt..at Jt profits man nothing to gain control or the state il he loses his owo soul ia the process. 1be "radicalism" of Marx.ism-Leainism is not really "radical" at all It wants to transfer power, not to lessen or redistribute it; it imagines that a restructuring of society will somehow lead to a restructuring of personal reia. tion.s -but using ugly and hateful means to achieve good ends can result ORiy in a perversio1 of those ends. WITBOVT A DEEP lnlusioo o! tte religious spirit (in its most universal , aod least sectarian, sense). Je[tism can be as perilous and pernicious as rightism. U.nless some ab®Jute moral values take priority over tactics and expediency and the seizure of power, then revolutioa must inevitab1y degeaerate lo t o repff:Ssion aod reaction. Everything must be placed at the service of man: man must not hP. subordinated to some ideology that pushes him into the German gas-chamber or the Russian concentratioJH:amp or the American ghetto. Wicked acts car· rupt the most noble or i•lentions, and out or the crucible of bate, no love can come. Schmitz and Leadership !lop. John Schmitz Is "' opposed In government tt must be somewhat em- barr&saing for him to T<!J"""'l the 3Sth ~ District In the U.S. House or Bepresentattves. But be was elected more than a month 1go by the ultra-eonaervative ~ &tttuency of Orange and rural San Diego counUes to go to Washington and vote •jno." It is customary for U.S. senators and representatives to announce federal proj. ecta and grant.I that go to some agency or croup In their states or districts. This ii a practice designed to have llOme JOlilic.al fallout beneficial to the po~D making the announcement. 11111. iiCHMm DECLINED to make 1"6 o!&:ial anllOUll<ement of 1 $2.3 mllllA!>Jederal grant to the Salk 1111tltuta at tl'10Ua !or -laUoo amtrol &IUdles. lie ~'t •-"Ith the phllosoplly .. behind the grant. ''Government should stay. out of the contraceptive businesis, ·• Schmili said. . Population control ls a legitimate con- cern of. govermnent ir the prospect of too many people is going to have an adverse effect on resources and add to the misery Of all. Mr. Schmlti speaks about the im· morality ot government's concern in this field. Jt 6eem$ to us profoundly more immoral for government to do notlling and for leadtta like Mr. Sch.mill to evade their responsibility to lead. Dally CalUOrnb_n El c.)on she thinks I am. Frankly, George. I think this wontan has · desigM oo m~~ ' HANK T. Dear Hank T.: Gad, it's almo<l frlghttnln& to come up against a mind wUh the depths al lll!ight and perception you have! Unfortunately, I havc ellber lost the oecond page of your letter or don't undmiand your problom. Decries Vse of Movie Stars as Pawns 'Politicians Insult California Voters' To.the Editor: What an insult that the politicians: in California think the voters are so stupid that all they have to do is brag about how many big name stars are oo their bandwagon. It seems tba~ most of the people wonyiog about lbe 18 year olds getting lbe vote, are the same ones that don't give a thought as to the capabilities of the candidates, but merely follow whichever ~ can boast the biggest and most of Hollywood's phonies. J, as a young voter, under 25, regard the tactics of Ronald Reagan, and Jess Unruh, as an insult to my intelligence, and will not vote until this disparity I! rectified. I FOR ONE consider my right to vote a very real responsibility, and although J have long enjoyed the efiorts of those in Hollywood to produce en· te.rtainment, J become alanned when the people over-identify w i t h en- tertainers, and allow them to have such a strong hand in deciding the outcome of elections. I'm well aware of the fact that entertainers have the righl to vote just as l do, but I don't think that they should be used as pawns in the battle to win the minda and votes of the masses. ¥ I just can'Lundentand how the people of the state af California can stand by and stt this bappen. Bul it seems that the people are ready for this type of popularity contest, or the candidates wouldn't attempt thi! type of massive snow job. GARY L. SlLLETf T he Disea se of War To the Editor : No one able to read the English. language can fail lo applaud the column (July 27} by Sydney Harris, "Stamping Out the Disease of War.'' Perhaps it is his best piece of writing yet and certainly one of the top few to appear in the major press of this area. ll is much too important to be merely glanced at over a cup of cof(ee and tossed in the waste bin. 1 CAN CLEARLY remember back a quarter of a century when, l'iitting a few yards off the beach during the Quotes Glenn Strahl, Livermore -"Now ls the time · for each citizen to do all he can to reverse the trend tov.•ard anarchy so apparent recently." Harry Preston, Hollywood -"\Ve'vc been so afraid or psychological damage to our childre• !rom discipline th Rt we 've ended up with a sick youag society.'' Becky Frazier, ri.1onklalr, junior high scltool student -"Saluting the nag i!i a pri vilege for me: it symbolizes life, U~rty, happiness and rellglous freedom." Mra. Amold W. Jones Jr., SF 1oclallte, modtl, cfvk: worker -"The. most precious thing is using tJme well. Too many people confuse that with saving time." Herbert KobJ,.1ulbor •ud lcbool crltle -"Teachers and their admlnistretors must team to slve up their control over the lives of their stude11t.s anil learn to participate with their students in all raoets or school life . . . The voluntary yleldltlg of power seems . . • the 01dy alternative ln the schools 11nd the society to I.he seiiure of power -that ls, to revolution." ! ' M~ilbox ' ' ' ~ .~.~ .... Letters fram reader1 are welcome. Normally toriUrs should conve11 thrir messages in 300 word! or less. The right to condense letters to fit $pllCt or eliminate Ubel U resm;ed. AU kt. ters must include signature and maiZ.. i11g address, but ncm.es may be toith.- held on reque~t i/ sufficimt rt4.1'on is apparent. PoetrJJ will not bcr pub- lished.. invasion of two Jima and watching. the methodical slaughter of good young.men. J vaguely conceived some of the thoughts Harris' article so classicaUy articulates, here briefly paraphrased: Governments are all against war - unless they can get their way by no other means , • • Until nations are willing to give up some of their power. as cities and stat.es defer to their national governments, then there is no way to avoid force and violence among nations . , . But governments are so fixed in their rule they will not willingly relinquish it ... It is therefore left to the people living under governments to inaugurate a trans-national organiia· lion for the protectioii of all peoples. AT THE END ()f WWII, with the starK horrors still fresh in mind, lht nations set up the U.N. to establish internaUona1 Jaw and order. Now, unhap- pily, the shortness of human memory and the perversity o( national leaders have pushed the U.N. onto the sideline. Every Huie nation is free to tool up for nuclear war. And the superpowers , which have virtually targeted in an ICBM on everybody's chimneytop, rumble for an explanatlon as to how they can spend the largest sha re of the national wealth lo protect their citizens. but can guarantee that, in a hostile exchange of weapons. only a tart.er or a third will "survive." NATIONALISl\f, at which doorstep a large part of the blame for WWII is placed, nouri1hes apace. We can only marvel at the infinitely diminutive minds which can conceive the harshest kind of domestic law and order while s imu It aneGu s I y merchandising chauvinistic c\aplra p which promotes in· ternatlonal anarchy. Going beyond Harris' column. where do we see the genesis of an international movement? Where are the youths with lhe guts and wisdom to mount it? How can they hope to reach the ciUiens qf the totalitarian nations when they get shot down in the streets of a free nation ? We can imagine that the last words of those who perished in the firestorm s of Bremen and Hamburg and Tokyu may have been something like, "Where did we go wrong?~'_ We can be sure that Jaw and order among the nati()fls will prevail. The only question is whether it will come about before, or after, wwm. CURTIS F AERMIN l111derpald P ostmen To the Editor: . As a letter carrier's wife 1 want to add my two ctnts to all the ruckus about postal opcraUons. I have come lJ) one general' conclusion after four years. The rea50f\ the Post OHlce is so outdated ls that they can'L hold any young men because who c11n raise a ramily on what they pay? What )'oung man.. will stay wltb ao ouUi' that refuses to grow with the times , the reason for this being tKat abnost all of your letter carrierS and clerks are old retired folks who have a pension coming in and other assets they havt built up over the years through other jobs. LOOK AT YOUR local mailman. I bet he's at least over 40, more likely 50 or so. 1f they would pay enough to get and hold young men I •bet you will start to see some changes made. Why don't they change it from an old !olks home to a paying institution? By the way, if anyone has noticed, the rest of the pay raise , that was promised hasn't come through yet. •tit it does it will be a pleasant surprise lo me. These people want your life's blood and expect it for nothing. Woukt you believe they even want to govern your personal life when you are of( the job? I say phooey on them. SHARON JONES Thanks F rom Ve terans To the Editor: Jn behalf of the veterans at the V.A. Hospital. Long Beach, and t he servicemen at the Navy Hospital, Camp Pendleton, I wish to publicly thank tbe Laguna Beach Festival of Arts board for its generosity in providing 100 tickets to the Pageant of Masters. These men, many Of whom a~ recovering from batUe wounds, will long remember the pageant. the beautiful city and the friendliness of ils people. 1 asked for • show of hands as to the war in wttich they participated and found they were about evenly divided betwetn Vietnam and World War IL THERE WERE A (ew from the Korean conflict but no pattents from WWI. I also want to thank the hard·working and gracious ladies or the American Legion and V.F.W. Auxiliaries for serving such a fine dinner. Lagunans do care about our disabled veterans and servicemen as shown by their continued interest in their welfare. Thanks fqr your coverage of the event. 0 . W. PRICE Service Officer American Legion Post m 'The Plain T r uth'. TQ the Editor : "The Plain Truth" Pl'(IVides a background understanding of problems . It also suggests solutions. This kind of (ree service might provide an effective means to solving many of our pressing problems. True progress is almost !Jnpossible unless we understand the .causes of prol>o lems -and the effects of diUerent attempts at solving-them . 'nils Jneluctts examining our own beliera tor welJ·in- tenliooed. but possibly misguided actions. Too often dlf!erent fl'OUP' (in appeallnf for our aupport) &1065 over incorrect ideas we m1y have. MOST PEOPLE will supPOTt llction. fo, the bett<rmenl ol '°"'ety U lhese actions don't damaae their .security or dignity, . • ' Herbert . W. Armstrong's pbilot!oplly seems \oO good to be true. He ie!o joy f'rom giving:-He Yid that teachi.n& how lo Jive {the pul'J)Ose of life, true values as disUnrufsheti from the falst , and the causee or ri&ht ruulta in life} has changed and entlched thou.sands of lives. Kls radto progrtm, ••Ttte·Plaln Truth. '1 btgan 36 year• W · Amba~sadoc' College ln Pa.adena wu founded :II _._.. These are noncommercial and nonprofit. His radio program is on KGBS (1020 kc) Monday to Saturday at 6 a.m. and Sunday at 10 a.m. AMBASSADOR COU.EGE mails '"The Plain Truth" magazine free to thooe who request it. They will not accept money for it. Nor will they send copies to anyone who has not requested il Unsolicited financial support comes from those who believe in what "The Plain Truth" is giving. Magazine articles cover inOation., men- tal illness, the modern Romans, safe driving, how to have a happy family .. reclaiming tha dt$el'l. deCline of the merchant. ft~t, st;z education, pity ~ poor criminal, wby today's youth j9 disenchanted, the endlt:ss war, act now on pollution, are food additives safe, Biafra, must America polioe the world. and build joy in your marriage. SOME OF THESE articles are in their other magazine, "Tomorrow's Wcrld" -which ls more religion oriented. Ambassador College provides free • booklets on almost any conceivable ac- tivity. These include dlild rearing, lbt Seven Laws of Success, Our Polluted Pl~t. Famine and The New Morality (sn eduction). These excellent urvices can help U! solve our problems. LEONARD WRIGHT Raquel Wekh To the EditDr: 1 dlsagr'ee wlih those who were anxious to welcome Raquel Welch to Newport Beaclt. It str°"es me as belll( hichJy inconsistent to 01 one hand bemoan the towering of America's moral values, and on the · other hand run gushing to welcome the star or M y r 1. Breckenridge &o our city. Miss Welch willingly and knowingly Jent her talents to a senseless. plotless piece of nothing that eiploits the lowest tasles of mankind. And she'll gladly make a fortune for it! She should be equally willing to aceept the scorn ol people who feel that obscenity and freedom are not synonymous. SUCH AN understanding publication u L1fe magazine hu crltlched Myra Breckenridge u an "unforgivable movie, a CONummate exercise i• vulgarity,'' that has absolutely no redeeming social value. That's enouah for me . J'lf draw the lint there and will not patronize the movie nor in any way glorUy the people who made it possible. Jf we really care, this is ol.'le way to reverse the moral decay that is trip- ping our country. JIM WOOD --~-- Wednesday, August 5, 1970 Th• •dllorlat paa• •I u.. Dtrilv Pilot 1eek1 to infcmn a.tld ittm.. •lak reodtra by pre1mtfng this """'!>Ol>'r'• opln!oftl and com- mcilta'll oil top1<1 •I "'''""'t on4 rigniflcan<•, bu f)i'ooldi•q • fonim , /or • thf: ezprenion of our Ytodtrs' opinf(}1'lt, and br prtt•ntfn~ the divtrst t:ltw- pofntl oJ fnjoTmed ob.servers !ltUl apobtmen on topics of tJ~e dov. Robert N. Weed, Publllller ' ' 13 Today's Fi.I VO[ il. NO. 186, 6 SECTIONS, 96 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDA 'V', AU$1JST 5, ·1970 TEN CENT$ . - Asse·ssme.n ts Up, School By STEVE MITCllEIL .. 1111 Dlltf """ Mart Taxpayers in the Newport.Mesa Uni· lied School Di.Strict will face a 44-<:tnt in· creue In their achool tu rate l.nste:ad of an anUcipated 74-cent rise originally predictea for next year's school budget. The decision to use less of the permi.uive override approved ln , Fetr ruary by district taxpaytn ~ during a public hearlrtg of · di.sffict trustees Tuesday. The tu rate for 197G-71 bi Co.!lt:a· • City Aides Unhappy: No Raises A group or Costa Mesa city emp)oyes who won 'l share in pay raises approved by the city council Monday made tl clear today they are unhappy with the outcome. Based on a survey among 16 ol.her cities in developing guidelines for the 1970-71 salaries, clerical workers got no increase. ··-Ele ven percent of th' stall got nothing," complained one woman. ''That would be about right,'' said Finance Director Robert Oman. Ht explained that a comprehensive salary and job classification study con- docted last year by P u b 11 c Administration Service spelled out the major day Imbalances. .. We brought everybody up to the market value last year," Oman con* linued. "Th.is year, we just upgraded them from there.'' Nol everybody needed to be upgraded, he asserted. He said the clericaJ staff was shown to be getting proper salaries compared to the 16 cities used to bring wme other job classifications to the 1970-71 going rate. "When people don't get a raise they aften think there's something wrong with the system." Oman added. A t<ital or $212,140 was appropriated by the city council Monday to cover the salaries during the comin1 year, but this includes figu ring in a reduced work week for firemen. The cash amounts to $184,640, while $27 ,500 will cove r cutting lou r hours rrom firemen 's duty weeks effective Jan. J, Oman explained. '.fakin1 this in to consideration , the 11~rage pay raise -for those empJoyeg who got them -amounts to 4.0Z per· cent, computed without considering the firemen's shortened/work week. Excluding police, fire and cammun* nfcat.lons department personnel, the total wtighted-average Increase in pay for other employes will be 4. 77 percent. Some clerical personnel complained that • salary story Tuesday made it appear they were included in that 4.77 percent figurt, The percentage wa s only for the total who did get rai ses. Minuten1an II Fired VANDENBURG AFB (UPIJ -A com· bat cre.w launched a ~inuteman U Interconinental Ballistic Missile. Tuf!day in in aperaUonal test down the Air Force:'• Western tut range. M~ will be 1$.IJ per 1100 ass.....t valualion compared tilth '4.el in 111&1. In Newpart Buch tt will be '4.11, com· pared to '4.D last year. The bowd considered acUon on a surplus of 21 centa which came about by an unexpected rise in assessed valua- tion. Members decided th.It seven ce.nlll wotdd go to correct teachers salaries and for protrain• Jmpro\oemenls. The ,.,..;,,. jog 14 cents would return to the. district tupayers by Jowering the allowable B~kslider , override to 44 ce.nts. . Prior to the budget declalon, "''""' teachers and homeownen addrwed the board. Brad Thurman, president of the Newport.Mesa Education Assoclaton stated, ''l have yet to make a decision as 1<l whether the board i.s a tls:~rien,ted board, an education board or something else. Teachers are going to make a stand in Ulls diatrict soone.r or later. Are. you going lo stand behind them or not?" Corona del Mar High School ·teacber Michelle Wyn·ne: JO, Newpart Beach, waves as she makes· waves in Corona d'el Mar High School· swi.mm.ing pool. What, after all, COUld make summer more refre!hing than a backward slide into a cool poot_ Mesa Spouse Arraigned As Wife's Funeral Slated A Costa Mesa man was driven past will be Thursday .at 11 a.m. in Bell the mortuary where his dead wife lay Broadway Mortuary Chapel. awaitint: a funeral and arraigned on She leaves sil: children, sons James, murder charges today a! a result of Daniel, Oa11id and Cervando. plus her fatal Monday morning shooting. daughters Dorothy and Donna. ·and her Ruben Corrales, 37, of 238 Fairway parents .• Mr. and Mrs. Francis Rice Place, was named In complainta issued of Huntington Beach. by the Orange <::ounty district attorney, Son! David and Cervando were cha rging murder.and a!sau1t with intenl fathered by Corrales, while the· other to cammft murder. children were born lo a prior marriage. He is also accused of seriously woun-Mrs. Corrales will be buried at Harbor ding a family acquaintance, Tom Rest Mernorial Park. Costa Me11. Newhard, 37, of 171,,•$ Santa Marla Sl.. fountain Valley, shortly after Mrs. Cor- rales was shot to death. He was expected to be transferred from a holding cell at Harbor Judicial District C.Ourt to Orange County Jail • this afternoon to await a preliminary · heatjng date. Rfu lor Mr•. Sylvia C«ralet, 16, who was lhot in the chest and neck Monday momlng lollowing an argum<nt, Police Check Theft Ne.wport Beach palice. today are in- vestigating the theft Tuesday ol $Z&5 from Richard's Girt Shop, Jt33 Via Lido. lnvellUgators uid the suspect ap. parently entered the store.'1 bu!lneu of· nee durl111 buslneu hwrs Tuesday and look lhr mone.y from lht safe. Yippie-in Big Put-on~ Disne y land Preparing for Giant Confrontation By CHARLF.S ff. LOOS ..... Dalff f'li.t IJitl The. YlppieJ are coming, the. Yippk!1 art corning. Right here to Oranae County. Jn fact, to Disneyland, to storm the ba!tion of all that 11 whole90me on Thursday, the annive.rsary of the lllro&hima A-bomb. ~~~ :~~ ~":~~r. (c) Giant Put~ (d) Nobody Seems to Know for Sure. tel Nont of These.. If you picked (d) you're: u close lo the re.al answer u the {a) Dlloey brus. (bl Anaheim Police De~artment. tel Los Angeles Free Prw. which 1p- pArently started lhe whoJe thing in the first place. "Aug. I~ [)lgneyllnd, Ylppk: lnle.1'1\1· tional Pow Wow," proclaimed the. Fret: Pre11s In a recent edition. The words were. arranged ar'Q\lnd a 1milin1 picture of MJcby MOUR holding a top hat in ·ODe band and an automatic riRe In the other. A story. «we•red on the same page undtr tho headline "Ylpplea a t Disneyland ... ". • .whllt they will MW Jet you in with long hair, etc.," the arUcSe adviled, ''they may not let you in wttbout a lic'ket.. But I! the old proverbial a«ylr!.g gores, -rw down the watla thal. divide ... ... A call to FrM Preu ornce,, in a.n effort to shed more. light on I.he gatecrashing implication produced little in the way of bard lnfonnatlon.. , D!Jnoy bra11 and An>helm pol!Ct also appear to be Ort on.bard 1nlorm1tlon about tHe MnOred 1nvuion. "AD we hear are rumort,'' they uy. One unconfirmed report out of the. D~neylaod uoc.J hod Ylpple leader Jef1'7 Rubin ol the Chlcaao Stven che<:klnc in for an overnlabl ltay thil . we.ek and the.n checking out1again without leaving a ror.rann,. lddrw. D1lney olficlall and pollco ,uy they are not lgnortng the rumors and are prepared to handle any ttentU1fity. J.fowe.vtr, the amusement park will open Thw'ld.ly at the usual hour on a "bu.tineu aa usual" bull. Dllneyland olficiall -wryb< that they have dealt sucta1fully \n the pa1t with any number of bomb threats (to far, all have been phorues), uncounted IJrld night soirees and eve.n 1 couple or adult conventiorui: they 'd just •s IOOfl forget , Thty figurt the park" 111'act1ons wm thann whatever Y.lpple!J show U'p. Bealdel, they add, tho walls that dJvlde D!aneyland from the woild are 1' lee! blah. ,,,. ' Roger Wo!JI told the board, •Americans .,. the biggest spenders In the world . From that heritage I feel the question is not how much of lhe taxpayen' money is to be spent. If thb board does oot feel !be money would be spent wistly on teachers salariu. return it to the taxpayers. "I am confident the majority of tbe. l!1payen will OJpport the board U they decide to spend lfie money on education." He added that the teacher morale. in the dlatrtot is dropping rapidly. "To Airport Report ' Under Fire By PATRICK BOYLE .. .... o.111 ,..., llafl A report recommending expansion of Oranit County Airport drew vigorou.s attacks from bomeowna and pilots at a Tuesd.ay"Dl.eeting of the Orange County Airport Commission. The meetina:, scheduled as a public discussion, drew a standing-room-ooly crowd or irate citiuins. It was the third time the commiMlon had met to discuss lhe Parsons report. The report which coat the county $140,000, recommends tripling the number of nights at Orange County Airport In I.be nes:t seven years, spendinc $16 million on terminal and runway u- pension and budgeting million.! more to acquire or soundproof Ml homes along the flia:htpath. The audience was made up chiefly qi Tustin and Newport' Bea < h homeowners who live along the landina and llbofl fliaht path. One such borie.owner was Dan Emory, chairman ol the Airport Noise Abatement Committee of Newp>rt Beach, wbo 11° tacked the report In technical froundl and challenged •nyone "to show that my figures are less accurite than those in the report." Wlth a preseqtation of slides showing maps and graphs of nolu contours, he charged that parts ol the report "are a fraud." He said the report recommended 1 load factor of 71 pe.rcent for commercial aircraft taking off al Orange Qxmly Airport. He alleged that such a load fact<ir would slow the cllml>oot rate of the aircraft and "drag the impact area 3,200 feet down the bay." ffe sald tbl! would place homes aJong Dover Shores and on BaJboa Island in the impact area and they, too, would have to be bought by the county or soundproored. Emory also charged the report based Its combined noise e.xposu re level (CNEL) analysis on a year's average noise and not on the peak flight period or lhe year, as he said a CNE'L e.valua- tion required. Emory said lf the evaluaUon had be.en based on the peak Oight period, the noise ngureii would have been higher in the. report. This would cause the 65 CNEL noise contoui line in the Panon! report to extend to Dover shores instead of stop- ping at tht beginning of Upper Newport Bay, bringing more houses into the. pro- posed impact are.a, he. contended. Emory also charged thal if tht airport service WI! tripled to 62 flights a day. the effect on spee.ch Interference. would be !uch that Dover Shores residents' "voice! and ears woold be rendered URles1for1.2 houri a day." Another pruentation attacking the Pal'80nl report was made by Jose Ortega. en acousttcal expert with Paul S. Veneklasen and Aa!odates. Ortega said the Impact area was greater than Implied In the report and said if the nights are tripled, the impact area would extend to between Lklo l!le and Balboa Penlruula. 3 LITTLE LINES SELL BIG ITEMS 1'hete throe lltU• !inti !Umbhed the ldvertiler an evening or enter· talnmenl <lhe phone. kept ringiDf until 10 p.m. l and -of COW'M - aold the merchandise: ST OVE 1-Fr1P'aJ~ ....,..,...,,,, Good "2!'d·· both $15. X'X'l•XXU. The ad drew more than SO cal11, The stove and nfrJgerator were sold at the asking prtce. What more can )'OU uk! call 1 DAU.Y PILO'T . ad-vii« and line up ...,. phone call! on wtiaie.ver It 11 you have lo ecll. The direct line to results is SU-lfll. ' ' • Tax Down allow the morale to drop woold al>o drop the efficiency in tbil di!trict's education system," ~ said. Don Huddlelton, Harbor Ave. realtor. urged that the money be re.turned to the tupayers. "'The teachers In this rtissrict have never had It so good and the tupayers have never bad It so badi" be. aaid. ''lt'1 time to cut out tbe. frills. The tazpayei'!' backs are nearly broken." Following the public hearing, Trustee. Donald A. Slrau.u nplained that the Queries .JUt'fl additional MI0.000 was not an lncrta!e in fuods. "We have no real UK:ruse ln funds. Taxes are IOf.n& to p 11p no matter "'hat this bot.rd deddel upoa." "Somelmes ... laoe light ol the la<l that .... 1eac1>en and taxpayers .,.. a1oo affected by the budget, DOI jl&ll Iha teachers, .. Stnmss said. -This statement prompted lfUlDbles and hisses from teachers in the audienCll which Board Chai<lnao Bud P\'ankpn cur- talled 1lu1rply. · Judge R~jects 2nd Mistrial Bid LOS ANGELES !uPl) -Superior Court Judge Olarles H. Older today denied a defen5t motkln for a mlstrfal in the Tate-LaBlanca murder case hued on Prestde.nl Nls:on's remarb about the guJlt of Charles M.....,. (Relaled Slory Page S). Judge Older ¥Sid that he was saUsfied about the jurort heartng the. case are "able and willing to be fair and im- partial" in deciding a verdict for the hippie leader and three young women codefendnats. "The time has come to place. this in Its proper perspective," Judge Older said. 11le judge 1ald it WIS not important whether Manson bid delibentety invited prejudlco by holdln1 up a nt"'f>llper in !root of the jury Tuelday with the budllne, "Ma-Guilty, NI• on ~~port ant pol~ It whether' !ht ...,,,hen of the jury 111 ~le of . iimdarills an 111\P.rttol Vtr1llot In 1hil cue/' be old. "'11111 Is why l called them In here yestmf41 one by one and ul:ed them whether their ability to retum such a verdict bid been Impaired by the II> cldent. I am satisfied it was not." With the jury out of the oourtroom, the defe111e began the day with lhe motion for mlntrtal ror all the defendants on for ml:tlrlal for all the defendants on ·dent of the United States constituted "Prejudice of the most signlncant kind." Deputy district att<imey Aaron Stovltz said that Man.!On had clearly tried to eatablish jud.lci1l error. "It's the same thing IS If he tried to escape or got llP and 11.id he wanted to be l!lve• the death pe"'lty and then Lenore Romney Certain Victor In Primary Test By The AsAOClate.d Pres1 Lenore Romney appeared a. certain winner today In her · bid fot the Republican U.S. Senate nomination rrom Mlchgan. one. of four states hokll')I\ primary elections Tuesday. " \ Mrs. Romney's opponen~ State. Sen. Robert Huber, said at midmoming that he wu "preparing 1<l concede" victory to the 61·year~ld wife of Michigan 's fonner governor and preaeot U.S. secretary of houstnc and urban develo~ ment. He 1ald he expected to tend Mrs. Romney 1 telegram of con· gratulaUons later today. Huber 's announCenwint·came as e.lec- tlon retum1 gave Mrs. Romney 52 per- cent of -the votes cast In the race. With 71 percent ol Michigan's 8,1)44 pr!clncll reported, the unofficial count was 250,492 ror Mr!. Romney and 232,883 for Huber. Permit for 2nd Home Approved A Japaneae family hu !ln~won permlssk>n to buJld a new, seCQO on the.tr Jot in Cotta Mesa\ ~:i commod.ate friends IOOl'I moving ~ Unll«I Stal ... Mr. aQj:I Mrs. Robert N. lahlhara, of 1997 Orange Ave., were granttd a ione exception pennit Manday night but the council voted 3 to . 2. on • spilt decl!kln. The ?'tlldence wUI t,e at ;11 E. 20th St., although· Mayor Robert M. Wil>On a~ Councilman Al vin L. Pfukley aaid they ,believe the lot is too email. "That area Just won 't take two homes," said Mr1. Ethel Overly. 221 E. ®lb SI., wbo proltlted lbe decillon. • • ' . ask for a mistrial," Stoviu aakl. '"We're. all aware that Mr. M&DllOft is calling the lhob in ~ .... and he ca1kd them yeslerday. "Wbethfio Mr. "Malwoo wants tO or nol ii ii the lnteoUon of the people to proceed wllh 1hll trtol." After the judge's ·ruling the jury wu brought In and tho three young women defendants suddenJy stood up and began chanting some song about President Nil- on and their guilt Order wu restored ud. Linda Kasa- bian, the key wilne .. for the proseadlon resumed her teslimOl1)' uoder _,,. amlnllion. Split Streets To Get Sti1d}· In Costa esa A 11&1.Jdy on the ~ o( rnakint certain street names-particularly tho5e traffic arteries croul'W the len&th of Co&la Mesa -uniloru'} bas beta un-- dertaken with a re.port doe In October. Costa Mesa City Council memben ap- proved the probe 11uggested Monday nJgbt by Councilman William L. St. ClaJr in a memo mentloning several specific of· renders. . "This causes undue confus.ion and should be alleviated as IOOn IS possible,'' be re.marked. An intercity study is currently in pro- gms involVing Colla Mesa and Newport Beach representatives, wbo hope to maQ some. of the boulevards crossinc into each community identical ln name . St. Clair said Monday that one of the worst offenders locally Ls P'atr Drive. which beromes De.I Mar Avenue and then lapses into Univenity Drive. He also mentioned Bristol Street, which becomes Palisades ftoad at Ill In- tersection with Newport Boulevat"d. "This should probably be changed to Bristol Street," he. explained. He also poinled out that Victoria Strtet becomes East 22nd Street and that West 18th Street turns Into Rocheater Street, both at the Newport Boulevard ln- terseetion. ..Probably Rochester would be best, 11 we already have an Eat J8lh Street and il does not tftD jotn West lath Strtet. which really Callie! confusion,"' St. Clair added. He requested an . investigation by ·u. city Planning Department with a report b8;Ck In IM> day1, or about early October. Those laiy, haiy d1y1 of summer conUnue Thttraday with low clouds in the morning ·~ fll\,ered 1unlhloe alterward. Temperature alterations will bt minimal. \ INSIDE ~D,\ Y ertal '":'1!'-U{ildvrtr1,ooino • , ~over n.utn. li9n . TMi/ oill< thtlr l1itw1 on Pcrg~ ~J . ...... ~ MtM• '' ,.~ ti .-.... t•r-Ctnotr u ~ .,_.. Mor. ClleCllllll U• I N•li.u! ttm U tt .. 11,... II.. .. ... ~ I' Ctw1k1 A .,..... ....... 4 ~ ...... , .,,.111 Ote9'I NftlcM II Of. 1'9lNft>fwl 11 IHltlll'llM ..... I INldl , ,...,,..... ft.ft '""'""'"•• i.n '~ n ,.,.._. 1 .. ,. ""'""'1 ,.... ""'*-• W..fllltt • ........ .....,.. ................. ""' Mil... • _.,.. "'"' .. c Irvine Bay Plan Called 'Only One' :No Pr~ctical Alternative Says State Land Official t By '!'QM BARLEY Of .. ....,,,...... • A sate Lands Cammlulon ottlclal to- £ dlleoded the Irvine Compony plans development or the Upper Bay. He tt was I.be only pl'Of)OS&l on wtllch Ile state agency could act in lhe light ~-0nnat COw'lty's need to raise funds IOt 111.Y other uar of the area. t'El«llUV.· olll«r Franeil J. Horii& U. ite.tilied that Ji'vlne plans met all !iatt crittrii in Land exchaDge matt.en. flilool tl1<m . the c:ondltlon that IUCh .~ SWlpS mUll be in the statewide iu!>Ue lni,ttat. And be alllnned his earlla" teotimooy ' ' ~eal Beacli . 'Mayor Loses _Other Job By RUDI NIEDZIELSltl 111 -. o.itr r111it 11• ,Mayor Morton A. Baum Tuesday the th1nt man to lose bis job IW lloadl since th< potiUcal te-t nOepmg through the dty, He'1 still mayOr. but be no longer ployed as a pharmacist for the Seal b Leisure World. Golden Rain Foun· Uon. ·The mayor ca.tied his firing "aft obvious of in.timklat1oa 'arxl reta.UaUon af e crudest type." His dismlJSaf, be ·' , can' ~ lr~ced dlrectly to· the lirlni . Olly Man•gor Lee, Rl.m<r aNl City Al- y Jim Carnes July 27 -aeUoo hlcli he 'JniUaled. '&be ofndal rtuon for his termination, explained, was that he failed to ve a conflict of Interest prohibited the byllw..s of the foundation. the specific infraction Cited in the given to Baum by the foundation ay Was that the rules governing foundalion prohibit employes holding with other firms or agencies dolng lwrine" WUh Leisure World. S'mct the retirement community con- ods fo~, and fll'e services Baum '•· as . "' held to be in violaUofit fie DAIL ·'1'(i.q'I! was .told. , ~ack DaYld. -·lor of the den Rain Foundatlon. could not be ched for comment. "The f~n u well as~ ~~I• 1-tiJure·;w-11! -awn tl1I!; I ruMlng tor counc1i." Ba Um sald. Had there betD a real conflict of in- . everyone would have been aware il" Re painted out that he wu nominated mayoralty by Councilman Harold olden, put president of the foundation. action was seconded by Lloyd Gum- ere, a former foundation dirtctor. ~ Served with the notice aOO auached ~ranee pay checb Tuesday morn· the mayor sai~. "I can't say that wu totally unexpected but I didn't they would be so crude about • ""i. He said be received a noUce Friday the foundatlon which urged him ruolve the conflict either by quitting mayor or as pharmacist. Whllt the furor continues in the city, Risner, the deposed city manager, this morning he would agree to . ~ u a consultant Aug. IO in the fl'i1C«dlng1 against the Marina Palace, teenage dance ball, charged with allow- dl.sorderly conduct. 'I'he hall, operated for the past five jetl11 by Mary Robertson, wife of former ~l Beach gambling entepreneur Bill :t\abertson. inay lose Its license if the ~es are substanUated. crtucs of Baum have sugge&ttd that mer was fired so the Robert.sons would lo!< the liooiu. l. l ; ~ -. -. :, ; .• DAILY PILOT OllAHGE COASf l'U.L1$HIHG COM~HY ••Mtt N., W•--' ...... IHlll .... .,._la_ J,,. R. C11rf•Y T~•"''' A. Mv•rhin• "' ..... "" ••tll>r c ......... Offl•• JJO W•tf l1y Str11I M1ili11t AJ4r1u~ P.O. lew I l•O. •2•11 0--........ tudlt 2211 -· ......... """ •• u.i-•N<ll: m "-' •-Hwitlfll*I t1tct1; 11111 11.te'I .......... Sfll ,..._. .. , aJ ,....,.. El c.tilliof ~-I DAILY ,.II.Of, .... wtlldl 1' ~ N ....... ,..,..,.,, to. f11191WWI lflily tKllli """' .. , ... ...,_ _..,.., .... L...-,_.,_ tl ...... t heel>. C:-,. M-. KIMlllltll~ lk«ll .... .._ ..................... lfl , .. ftl-..i ... llW.. ~ll'lfl C.MI "'*lhi'llrot ' ~ ,.,....... ........ ire II HI! W.01 ··--.... ~ ... .,., ~ .... .,. W.1 ,., ........ Cilltt ..... T ........ (7141 6'J.lf,JI om11 .. ....., ... '4J:·••1• ~""'· tt11, °'..... ~ .....,]"""" ~r. ... Mwt ""'""' IM111tr1t-.. ~ """"' .. ......,........,.i, ....... _, ... ~.i....,... ..... , ...... ........ ~ ..... ,-. ~ deA ,_,.,. .,_N 11t Nt""'' a1u t1 ..., c .. ll ..,..,.., <.1t111<11W11 lwhl:rlll..., 'Y '.ttfolilr'tul IN"lfllyt .., lllfill u ... -•111¥1 .:'~••••·a.-,_..,,,. that he became e-0nvinced in 1967 that the Upper Bay land exchanae would ensure increased public accesa lo the area and provtde boattng facilities and a recreation environment unavailable under the bay 's ex.Isling condition. The Stale Landa Commission approved the exchange of 157 acres of county-own- ed tidelands for 450 acru of Irvine Company uplands in November. 19S7. Hort.ig had voted against the swap ln 1966 with the comment that the trade was .,less than Ideal" for the j,eopJe of Orange County. Hortig denied under close questionln& by homeowners• attorney Philip Berry that changes in stale administration in the 1966-67 period and the replacement of commissioners by men with "differing political phiJosophies" influenced his change of heart or his subaequent ac- tions. "1bere were no other re as i b 1 e alternatives," he said. "We can dream of Utopia but there's always the problem ol practicability to take into aceount." Hortig stated that he had cootributed to a "strongly negative" staff report which balled the U~r Bay trade after a con:untssioo hearing into the ~ject in 11166. lje coofinned for Barry lhal he had read ~ opinion issued by the attorney general's office prior to the 1967 decision in whlch the Upper Bay wa1 described. under post-trade conditions, as beeoming a•captiv• ~aterway in ,V.:~Ch public use would be restricted. That same opinion called for com~ mission actioo on the Upper Bay proposal only after "othef altematlve1 which might afford greater public use have been thoroughly investigated and found impractibJe" by.the State Lands Dlvlslon. That opiJlioo Stressed that every actk>n of the commission must be taken with a view to preservation of statewide public interest in the Upper Bay. Hort.ig toJd Berry he was unaware Orange Comity bad raised more than $100 million for capital project! wilbout resorting to bond Wues. The E:UCUilve officer repeatedly told Berry that nehhe.r he nor his stall had been offered any acceptable alternaUve plan of developnent by Orange COunty. . H9flii deoled -~'s suggestion Iba! ••a show.of (Orce" by the Irvine: Compaay had .lecf ·\i9 to revlsa-hi! 1166 oplntow cm tbe tJpPel ''B=deal. 1 ~~fl!. "~··conlloullli "que!tlohlDg th~ esbon that'the"1"11ne Company bad halted the agency's further ~xpJoraUon at alternaUve metbods of development Swimathon Still Has Big Pull For Fund Drive ~ ~imathon Ls on i~ last Jap. At B o'clock this morning the volunteer swimmtrs had 28 miles to go in their one million-yard swim at the Newport Beach Swim Club, bot the Olympic Pool Foundation had almost $80,000 to go in their $87,500 fund drive. The fol¥Xlation i:i: raising money to help pay for an Olympic·size pool At Newport Harbor High School to be used by the communities of Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. The Newporl·Mesa Unified School District and the City of Newport Beach are paying 75 percent of the $350,000 cost, but the remainder must come from the community. The swlmathon. which began at noon July 25. is scheduled to end tonight at about 6 p.m. Mike Ashe, chairman of the foundation, is scheduled to swim the last 25 yards. He will be preceded by the mayors and city councilmen of the two cities. Tax-deductible donations may be sent to the Olympic Pool Foundation, PO Box 800, Costa Mesa . Mesa's Pinkley Plans Big Trip Costa Mesa City Councilman Alvin L. Plnkley has an appointment lo see the dentist, but It won'L be like pulling teeth to get him on the way . The dentist. is his son, U.S. Navy Cmdr. Virgil Pinkley, staUoned at the nuclear !Ubmarine b&te at Rota, Spain. Pinkley and his wlfe Lucy will shut down their pharmacy for two weeks, departing Sept. 2 to vl!lt SOil. daughter·ln· law: ond three gran<lchlldr<n. Fellow councilmen cranled h I m pamiasjon to be gone from city business for lwo weeb -longest he has. been away from tiWI stc:n in 37 years - Monday night Pinkley'• ionge.st preYioUS absenct wa.s fOW" days. Countian Dies in War The Penta1on Tutsd1y reported th•t Spec. 4 Roser J. Clrr of FuUerton has been killed in action In Soulhu't A1i1 • Ile WU the Ion of Mr. Ind Mrs. Wiii it Jn JI', Carr Sr., 2019 Carol Drive. * * Press Release Irks * * * Hirstein One Orange County supervisor berated another for "running off at the mouth'' Tuesday in a flare up that preceded another 3-2 split vote on Upper Newport Bay. , Supervbor William Hirstein to I d Supervisor Robert Battin he doesn't like being "kicked in the teeth continually." lie referred to a BatUn press release charging three supervirors are cheating Lie public because of special i.ntere.st loyalty to the Irvine ~Y- liirstein said be thinks Battin'• charges have political implicalions. ..l'm not running for office, Mr. Hir# stein," replied Sattill. Fire Bombs Hit Enemy In Cambodia PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (UPI! - Four U.S. Air Force jet fighter-bombers today bomn&.rded Communist troops with napalm fire bombs in a direct su~rt missioo for Cambodian soldiers battling for control of a highway junction. UPI correspondent Kent Potter wit· nessed the raid on Ltie outskirts of Skoun , 3S .miles northeast o£ Phnom Penh, ,and overheard radio conversations between an American pilot and a Cambodian field commander directing the air at· lacks. The question of direct American air support for Cambodian ground force! has become a matter of debate in Washinglon y,·ilh some congressmen claiming such missiom are beyond the bounds of President Nixon 's Indochina policies. U.S. headquarters in Saigon has declined to announce the raids officially. Potter said the raids this morning lasted 30 minute! and were nown in lwo flights by four U.S. Ait Force FlOO Su~rs.8~~ a relatively s~ jet which ~u usta ej,ensively durbli the KOrean war for support mluions • • • Potter recorded a radii conversation betweeo aa American forward air c6ntrol (FAO} ·Pi>W and1iit • Cambodian officer on lhe ground with both men speaking in Engli~h. The Cambodian pinpointed the location of Communist positions and the Supedsabers roared in to drop JO 250-pound b o m b s and canisters of napalm and rake lhe area with 20mm cannon fire. The targets were about 500 yards from the Cambodian lines. ."All rig~t, you can proceed if you wish now. the F AC pilot radioed to th~ Cambodian commander, "We are gomg to stay here for a few more minutes . in case you need any help . There will be another rustic (code word for forward air control pilot) in 20 more minutts." Military officers said Communist forces were entrenched in Skoun and its outskirts but that Cambodian soldiers ~till controlled parts of the town. It, IS near the junction of Highway 6 and Highway 7, South of Phnom Penh, on lhe Kirirom Plateau, Cambodian spokesmen said J soo Communist soldiers have been killed, in a serje!!_ of air strikes, some of them apparently flown by American pilots. Tire Shop Theft Jails 2 in Mesa A Costa Mesa service station owner and his employe were arrested Tuesday alter a policeman tracing theft o( a $180 lire shop toot found them with an identical one. oUicer.s allege was covered by a fresh coat of paint. John J . Padilla, 31, of 2301 W. Borchard St., Santa Ana, and George R. Davis, 19, of 3126 Bray Lane, Costa Mesa. v•ere booked on sus picion of burglary. Officer Bill Bechtel questioned lhem ~t Padilla's Chevron Service, ~Bristol St., followin~ a complaint by tire shop owner DeWitt C. M<>sier, of Mosier'-' Coast General Tire Service, 585 W. !9th St. Repossession Sparks Protest A Costa ~1esa policeman following it report of a )'Oman cre:aling a disturbance Tuesday found her silting: on the hood of h<'r car, disturbed becauSt it was about lo be repossessed. She stayed put during the confrontation In the 800 block of West Wilson Street whllt Officer Al ~tulr checked with Chrysler Credit CorpcraUon lo make surt it was a legitimate ca.st. The 26-ycar-ald woman w1111s flnall y persuaded to climb down and seek ltgal counSf!I. The repossessor took her car &\vay to a1vail the payments In a.rrcars. lie was aJ.so asked to notify police ncx1 lime of an intended repossession. "No, but you're contlnu.1lly running off at the mouth ," Hirstein shot back. "At least I think be.fore I open my mouth." Battin responded. "I hope you do," Hirstein countered. Hirstein and Supervisors Alton Allen and William Phillips again voted down Batlin and David Baker Tuesday as the two asked colleagues to file legal action against the Irvine Company to det.ennine ei.isting public access rights to the Upper Bay. The move followed urging by the Orange County Grand Jury that the board launch COW1 action to detumine lhe public 's prescriptive ri&hls \riglll& based on historical use.), The board majority contended It would only confuse the exlaitlng lawsuJt to determine U}e CONtituUooallty of the land ezcban&'e between the county and the Irvine Company. Phillips said Battin was asking them to throw out years of work on the mere chance that there are preacrlptive right!. But Baker countered prescriptive rights should be determined before the t'Otlnty is locked into the trade. The Battin press release that ired Hirstein read: '"Looking into the Upper Newport Bay land exchange is like travellpg through oailte's Inferno : the closer you 5el to the core, the more rouen and the more corrupt thing.s become." It slated the public i.s being cheated ror the benefit of a private land owner because three supervisors have a greater loyalty to thi3 special interest than lo the public. "ApparenUy these three supetvlsors set nothng wrong with paying their friend.1 with public runds for something the public may already own," Battin asserted. Saloons Return I ·-Taverns Can Be 'Bars' Again Irvine Mav • Support New SACRAMENTO (UPI} -F'or the man \Vbo values the tradition of the Wild \Vest, sipping a cool martini in the subdued atmosphere or a cocktail lounge just never made it. It didn't compare to a shot of red eye at the sawdust-Qoored corner saloon. Well, the saloon is making a comeback in California. Gov. Ronald Reagan was set today to sign at a special ceremony in his office a bill making it legal again for a drinking establishment lo call itself a .. saloon," "barroom" or '·bar." All three terms have been banned from tavern signs since shortly after the repeal of Prohibition. Assemblyman John T. Knox (0.Rich- mond), introduced the measure after he received a Jetter from Don Bradley, who managed former Gov. Edmund G. Brown's unsuccessfu l 1966 re-election campaign. "Wouldn't you like to be known as the man who brought the saloon back lo California?'' implored Bradley. "Think of the toasts that would be d r u n k in tribute to your legislative skills .. , I.he paasage of such a bill will certainly place your name among the immortals." The Legislature pl'O!Cribed the word "saloon" because of public feellnp that it would recall memories of sleazy pre- Prohibitioo swinging-door gin-mills and 1920s speakeaste.s. It called to mind im- ages of gambling, prostitution, gangsters and booUegging. When lawmakers in 1935 drtw up laws to govern the liquor industry after it again became legal, they strove to keep the business "clean.·• "To those who are old enough to remember baclr. lo the pre-Prohibition days, the saloon has a rather definite meaning," wrote Sen. Andrew R. Schol· lky of Merced, a member of the Senate committee on intoxicatina liquor in the 1930s. "It was a place, the princlpal part of which, outside of the liquor itself, was the mahogany bar with the iron foot rail and the cuspidors, and is not to be confused with lhe modern, sumptuous cocktail lounges, to which the younger generation has become ac- customed." Freeway Bill AA Irvine Company spokesman said Tuesday the firm would consider sup- porting legialation to change the route of the PacHic Coast Freew1y through Newport Bee.ch, if a bill now under consideratioo contained provisioAS for an alternate alignment. The Irvine Company is opposing a bill authored by Assemblyman Robert Badham tR·Newport Beach) "'hich would delete the freeway entirely between Beach Boulevard in Huntington Beach and the southerly limits of Newport Beach. Gilbert W. Ferguson, Irvine vice presi· dent of corporate communications, i1 a statement inadvertently omitted from ·Tuesday's DAILY PILOT story said : Complaints on Chinchillas Surprise to Mesa Breeders "The Badham bill totally eliminates -with no provision for rerouting - the freeway :hrough Newport Beach. Many people are 1101 aware of this. The bill does not call for studies on an alternate alignment. If it did. our opposition might be tempered. But a:: it stands now. "'e cannot support the bill. It is incomplete. '"If the desire of the bill 's proponents Is truly to reroute lhe freeway west of lhe Upper Bay, as we suspect it is, then the legislatio• should be amended to allow the Highway Commission lo open new route hearings in that area . We would support such an amendment." The first time chinchilla owner John Cutler heard any complainls from his neighbors about his chinchilla hutch was when he read about it in the newspaper. "She never said a word to us ." he said, referring to his neighbor , lYirs. Charles Cockle. Cutler. of 396 tlamilton Sl.. Costa Mesa, was referring to Monday nighrs city council meeting when Mr. and Mrs. Cockle complained about the smell of his allegedly illicit operation. Culler said Geo rge Skeith , deputy health officer for Orange County, came out to inspect the operation and found no foul smells. ..We clean lhe cage!!. once a week," 116 Bodies Recovered BAS.SETERRE , St. Kitts. B.\V .L (UPI ) -A total of 116 bodies have been ,...r.ecovered in the sinking of the ferry boat Christena that sapsized Saturday between St. Kittts and Nevis in the Caribbean. lhe harbormaster·s ofifce an· nouncl'11 Tuesday. The office also issued a revised count of survivors of the disaster, listing 91 counted on both Islands. Cutler said, "and we spray all of the cages with disinfect.ant." Cutler, a self-employed carpel layer. has about 50 of the little, gray animals in a hutch in bis back yard. • Since the Cockles' complaint to the city council, he has been visHed by Dick Dahill of the city building depart· ment. He said he did not let Dahill in!pect the operation on the advice of his attorney. He said he was not aware of the city ordinance allowing only three pets to a household nor was he aware that he needed a permit for his fann. "I misread the law in the beginning." he admits. "I looked at an old map of the city and thought that I was in a different ione than I actually live in." He says he has invested at least $2,000 in his chinchillas, but he has not made a profit yet. ·•1 am just trying to leach my kids about animals ... he says, "and show them a different way or life. I don't w1Mt to hurt anyone or get anyone into any trouble." He says he is going lo apply for a home occupation permit to operoi te the chinchilla farm, and if that fails, he says he will just move to the country . Neat Mesa Crook Rohs Ap~rtment A burglar who neatly knifed out a rectangular hole to unlock an apartment screen looted $376 worth or belongings from three Costa Mesans Tuesday, pollet; said. The victims were Jeff Walter, 19, Con. nie Noordman, 18, and Donald Glymph. 22, of 2450 Newport Blvd.. according to Officer Dave Dye. The Yidims said they lost such thing.~ as jewelry, cash, stereo equipment, clothing and a .22 caliber rifle. U.S. Jet Crashes ZARAGOZA, Spain (AP) -A U.S. Phantom jet fighter-bomber crashed on a gunnery mission in northwest Spain today. killing the two crewmen aboard, the Air Force announced. 1t said the Phantom carried conventional weapons and crashed in an uninhabited areoi. The Air Force located the crash site at about 35 miles northwest ol the U.S. Air Force base at Zaragoza. $54.40 8J~c9jemzl for Mother or Grandmother From 1 to 9 GENUINE Binhstooes 1ra~fully set In 14 Kt. white or yt11ow gold .•• Tht special remembninc1 from t'ltry membar•f the family ••• from $29.00 CONVENIENI TERMS BANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE J. C. fiiimpfu.i e ~ Jeweferj 24 YEARS SAME LOCATION PHONE ,0.)~01 JUl NEWPORT AVL CE>j{A MESA I 'I I I New ABM System Started by Army ll,I Tt~ WASHINGTON (UPI) - Tbe Army hlS 1t.arted work on • new, improved an- dbattl1tlc missile s y s t e m • desJined to replace Safeguard, tht IS billion lo 110 billion ABM system II bas jUJt slartod lo build. The new system, 1 dUbbed "Hard!lte," would coet the same. u or a litUe mons tban Salefl:lard, the weapon which has Provided • platform tor the military spending debate through much ol the 91.!l Congi<ss. 1 Existence of the new ABM syatem was disclosed in teertl U!.slimony by Army ~ and development oflicial.! to the House lppropriation.s Com· mittee:. 0pp0nent.s of the ABM aay the adrbinl.straUon ahould stop work on Safeguard now a nd devote its resources to the new Hardsite system. But Anny offllcala say If they keep doing that, they will never a:et anything built. SEN. FULBRIGHT SCORES TV COVERAGE CBS President Stanton Waits Turn to Rt ply Riot Troops Arrest 20 In Ireland Two Network Cliiefs Def end TV Coverage BELFAST, Noilhern Ireland (U PI ) -Brilish troops charg- ed into crowds, bloodying headJJ and arresting 2 0 persons. Tuesday night and today in a cracltdown on Roman Catholic mobs thal have attacked them with stones and bottles for sil con- secutive nl1hts. WASHJNGTON (AP) Television network chiefs urg- ed Congress today to quit thinking about getting into the ne'A·scasting business a n d leave the job to the pro- fessionals. lo testimony for the Senate Conununications Committee, CBS president Frank Stanton and NBC president Julian Goodman opposed a bill by Sen. J . W. Fulbright (0-Ark.), ta require broadcasters to give prime time to the Sena~e. House and judiciary. They said broadca s t newsmen present a fair. balanced news report, and described Fulbright's proposal a.s "dangerously simplistic." unnecessary and possibly an infringement upon a tree press. Sen. Edmund S. Muskie ( D- Maine ). however, backed Fulbright by saying television distorlll complicated national issues and that Congress should have a chance rrom time to time lo address il.!elf directly to the public as the president now does by custom. "The people have a right to be informed of the prevail- ing congressional attitude on the significant n a t i o n a I issues ," Muskie said. Goodman replied : ' ' \V c believe lhat the goal of public understanding is best met by letting broadcasters, rather than legislators or regulators, judge what kind· and com- bination of programs will most fairly and fully cover a particular issue. · ' Broadcast organizations have no political a~. Their newsmen -by training, background and approach - are concerned with reporting events and examining issues as professional journalist!, not with winning votes or elec- tions.u Stanton said broadcast news is not perfect. "But it is most certainly more satisfactory than it would be under any system in which n c w s jlidgmenls are made b y government officials or die· lated by legislative o r regulatory formula.!.'' Soldiers e x p re sse d in- creulng bitterness a n d frustration at the tactics of Lhe Catholics. An Arn1y .spokesman said several 50Jdiers were Injured by the latest stone a'l'ld bottle barrage from the crowds in the Catholic areas of Belfast. Twenty-five were i n j u r e d Monday Jliibl. There was a brier outburst Tuesday night in l..()ndonderry, where mobs attacked army patrols and set fi re to two buses and three cars for use as barrlc1des. Though the disturbances Tuesday night were mild com- pared with the. five previous nights, the soldiers swung their clubs with abandon and used nausea gas to di1perse crowds. More States Might Lose Hou se Seats Bo111b Be£alled WASHINGTON (UPI) - The 1970 census, when finally tabulated, mi1ht put Alabama and Oklahoma among those states expected to lo~ a con· grwional .!eat, a House sub-Thousands Tour Hiroshima committee predicted Tue!day. HIROSHIMA, Japan (UPI ) it at 200 ,000. The congtel!ISional delega- -Visitors from almost every "There has been a sharp lions of the two states had comer of the world toured increase in the number of been expected lo remain Hiroshima today on the eve foreign visitors in recent unchanged in a projection of the 25th anniversary of ils \veeks," said Yo.shim its u made by the }louse Census destruction by the first atom Kosakai, historian in the and Statistics Subcommittee bomb dropped in anger. Hiroshima Peace Memorial last year: Hotels and boarding houses P.1useum. "Visitors arc coming But preliminary census reported capacity bookings. from practically every country returns now indicate Alabama Many or the foreigners came in the world." and Oklahoma mi5ht join from the Expo '70 world fair The tourist.! went to Peace Iowa, North Dakota , Ohio and at nearby Osaka. Park to see the only building West Virginia in the tabulation preserved in •the state of in the losa of one seat tach At 8 a.m. Thursday, the destruction left by the gen-when the nation'.! 435 con- exact hour when the U.S. B29 biku (atom bomb) that the gres.!lonal district! are reap. Enola Gay dropped the first U 'led Stat dro ped A portioned Oil the ha•'• or final atom bomb, thousands in ni es P on ug. .., Hiroshima 's Peace Park will ,_6:..., _19lS_. ________ 1_rro_l.:iguc...r_e_;,••_lh_e..:pc...a_n•_l_u_i_d._J bow their heads to mourn the dead. The exact number persons killed by t h e Hiroshima bomb never has betn delennined. The United Stites e1Umated the death toll at 80,000. The Japanese put * * -{:[ Bomb Site Rally Slated LOS ALAMOS, N.M. (UPt) -Peace advocates were gathering today for an anti war rally at the site where 1clentilt.s gathered secreUy during World W1r 11 to buJld the tir1t 1tomk: bomb. Loe Alamoe:, 1 remote mountainoul c o m m u n I t y slletilly older lhln the 1tomlc age. it Ulhered in, ls the larltl of I two-day Hiroshima dly demonstraUon. Clly oftlcia~ sal~ the com- mu.nlty'1 police force has been alerted and 15 state policemen have been alatloned throughout l.ht community or l!,000 pmons. W15nRN STAn UNIVlllSITY COLLEGE OF LAW In Orange County now ecc.,t1n9 men •nd wemen who .,. etthen • -ti wllll I ,._ .t 1111pl ... h ...... ......,., .. ,, ... . _,,_. .............. .,...,_ ... .......... ... ..., .............. "' .... It.. .. •11a I , • ., _J l N lt.L ..,,_ -N _,,.,. ht I _. 9' -1 tj-tl•1ot11 J ....... ,, .. -~. ) ....... -v .... Apply Now for September 10th DAY OR EVENING CLASHS • 100 s. -khunt Anllhelm Phon• 635-3454 n. --"' ll.L., j,0. ""II M _.....,. .,_ ...... .......... "'" ' -,..,_ "" ..... (91 .... "" , .... _..._ ..... ~ lo!' , ........ "" t.llftr~i.. °"'" --.. i.11119 .......... Ctllllnlt. ...... ..... 1~ .. , .... Uke Safe,uard, the MW ABM -,_ In the .. _ rormulaUon" llqe -would prot«t U.S. mlalle llloo against a p~•e SOYlet strike. The dlft'erence wmld be that "Hanbite" woold con. sist of more, but 11maller and cheaper. rad an and com· puters than tho'" belnc used by Safeguard. The radar<0rnputer unit..!, which guide Sprint interceptor missiles. would be ' o numerous that it would be unau.ractive for the Soviets to try to knock them out The Safeguard radars and computers are. larae and ex- pensive. Some. scientlsts fear they would make easy, at- tradjvt! targets In a n y Russian alt.empt to overwhelm the ABM and then pualyie the retaliatory missiles in their silos. The Anny official.!, led by Assistant Secretary R. L. Johnson , 11aid they recogniud thi11 as a posaib le deficiency if the Soviets increase the accuracy of their mil.!lles Ind the number of re -en t ry vehicles each mi~ile t'arrits. Nixon Meets Congo Chief WASHINGTON (AP) w-..... , .. 5, 1970 DAILY PllOT 5 11 Perish ' Bu'i.n.IL Destro y ed Blaze '~ in Minneapolis !f • Ill ?,tlNNEAPOUS, ~11M. (AP). was less severely damaged. a coiled-up rope at the wlz>. 1 -Eleven men, most of them A preliminary '°"' e11timate dow. elderly, died in a blaze •thel waa put at Sle.cl,OOO by Lee He kicked out a window, twept. a three-story building J . Schoephoerster, F i re threw oul the rope and slid In downtown Minneapolis tarly Department supervisor of in· down the rough brick facing today. Four persons were veatlgaUons. of the building, his haoda hospitalized in critical con-Larry Langsdorf, 48• who smartin11: with burn~ a.! he dltion. landed on the sidewalk while. Flrt officials so id nlne occupied a third-floor room, fire engines wailed lo °'1 ollitfs tscaped, one by climb· Y!'Ba asletp w ht n the fire scene. broke oul. ing down a rope strung out The building housed three from a window on the top ''I awoke and s me 11 e d businesses on the flrsl floor noor. smoke." he :iaid. "So I opened and had 33 units of rooms The blaze apparently started the door and I could hardly :ind apartments on the secord. in a wooden outside stai rway see the corridor light , it was and third floor. Located iai1! on the back, firemen said. so black." the 200 block of East Hennepirt1;i1 cause was not immediate-He said he knew he 'd never Avenue. il was not far ft'Of\!c 1 ly known. The interior of the. make it down the stairs, so the P.11ssis:ilppi River, 1n 't' Congo President J O s e P h second and third floors were he kicked his way into a va-section of small bu sine~•. '-tobutu, in lhi.! country trying destroyed but the first floor cant room next door and found and rooming houses . • ' to interest A mer i ca ni• •-• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~;,; bu•inessmen in bis African : OLYMPIC POOL ' :·.~ homeland, ha1 a booster in p Ide l Ni.I • The "MARATHON SWIM" Is In Its lOlh Oey. The Kids Hive Swum • res n on. • 946,750 Y1rd1 {534 Mlle1 ) 260 Conti nuous Hou ri ! • c!~:· .. :°' ,.:1 Y 1n::~~.~~ • HA YE YOU BACKED THEM WITH YOUR • , for American tnterprlse, but .• DONATION? W• •r• 1••t. fun4N-4fen't let u1 down. ltnd your SS.00. • he told Mobutu Tuesday night • $10.00-$100.00 or doNtlon t911•Y• •. i he'd like to learn hi.! secret • ~A.00MREES·s······················-···············-········-··-··----···---··-·--·--·--·-··-·-----··-·······---··-·-·····-···· a , for achieving a balanced "' .................... ·· · ............................................................ ·······--·-······-····· ' • OLYMPIA POOL P.O. Box 800 e. I budget ind a favorable bal. • · F 0 U N 0 AT Io N Cotti Met•, Cilif. 92627 •• ' 1nce of trade. .~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • l'-f is8Sl18p. free. Get the pictu re. Face up to the fu ll·color Polaroid Land Camera at any one of United States National Bank's 58 con· venlent offices. It's a snap. In just 60 seconds your picture will be rea dy for your ap· proval. Then it's chemically laminated into your FaceCard, the safest, most convenient Master Charge card yet. If you already have a Master Charge, replace it with a new FaceCard, It's absolutely free, of course. Should you lose your FaceCa rd or have it stolen , •• it's still safe. Any attempt to break the seal destroys the usefulness of t he card, No cred it card is safer. Or more exclusively yours. It provi des quick, positive identification wherever and when· ever you need it. Merchants glance at your FaceCard, Then at you. And quickly know you have a face to be trusted. . If all this isn't enough, we give you an added bonus. With our FaceCard, you get the option of our Bonus Balance Check Plan, which lets you write checks for more than you have in your account Apply fo r your FaceCard today, It's a snap. UNITED 68 convenient locations SJ'AT1.ES NATIONAL .._.._,.._..0..-....._.°"1JOftUMtndftdlnlR.eww~ B.AN"K Cost• Moso .9fllce 1145 Newpf"rt Bl vd. South Co11t Pl111 3333 lrlotol StrHI . f I ' ' ·• .- -4·'-' ; ~ ' ' l J ·1 ,. '1 j. • to! • • • • ' I ,, L • -. • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE A Poor Airport ~eport An interim report on a master plan for county air traruportaUon lsn1 Relt!ng very good reviews. lt has ~n called "nothlng more than an armchair study1' and "a Hlerary disaster." Newport ee.<h city officials have derided It. County Airport •Commiss!oa menlbers criticized it. A couple of cou.oty supervisors a1so have indicated their displeasure -and they budReted SJ40,000 !or it. So where did Ralph f\1 . Parsons and Company go \vrong'° The reaction indlcates pretty clearly that they miss- ed the boat by not taking into account the opposi tion of Harbor Area bomeowntrs to Orani:?e County Airport ex- i>anslon. There is. no indication in the report the airport con- sultants ever checked with homeowners In Newport Beach, Costa Mesa or Santa Ana Heights. Yet they found time to survey the needs of the people who use, or directly benefit from, the airport , the business ad· jacent to the airport. I I ! The inescapable ract js the noise irritation of nigJtt.5 over homes is very much a part of the equation for any soluµon of the airport's problems. f A Parsons firm sPokesn1an defensively replied to airport commissioners that his company was not hired by the county to study neighborhood attitudes. I Still the report bates that it will cost the county an estimated $8.2 million to bulldoze 256 homes south of the runway and soundproof 385 others to meet new state aircraft noise standards after the first of the year if the Parsons recommendation for airport expansion is fol- lowed. How much is the $8.2 million? It is almost as much • Moral Values 1 Must Take Top Priority lf'~ Sydney .J: Han:i~· . ~ , . , A miniSter in St. Paul has asked me IA:l comment on what he calls "the fascism of the left" he secs rearing its ugly head today in our country. He feels that the "pressures, coerciOlll aod ·bigotries of the )ert" are becoming a mkror-irnage of fa!ldsm on the right. There is no doubt in my mind that this is happening. Il is almost inevitable. Ever since lhe bulk or what is known as "the \eft" embraced Marxism· Leninism a half-century ago, the le.a· dency bas always been there. mE SEEDS OF absolutism are deeply planted in the Marx· ist·Leninist soil . Jf Lenin had Jived, I am convinced he '4·ould have pur sued a policy little less diabolic than Stalin didj if Trotsky had wo1 out, de.spite his ~oPolitanism, he would have been as rothless and doc· Lrinaire as lhe Georgian peasant \\'ho took power. The ooly hope for the "'Nfw .Left,'' i11 my opinion. is a total break with lhe fonnulations of the Old Left. While fltarx ' critique of social injustices and ineqWties has much to recommend it -in the line of the Old Tes!f't•1e:1t prophets -his programs and policies are not only economically irrelevan t lo· day, but his social and political then-ipii!s are more killi11g than curing. THE YOUNG PEOPLE I most admir e today are those who have brokeJI away Dear Gloomv Gus: \Vhy don 't crlpers like B. G. (Gus July 29) quit complaining about Costa Mesa 's new poUce hellcop- ters and be thankful for all the good they do. One of Chief Neth's "whirling toys" saved a baby's life, for instance. U tbe griper hates police, next time he needs help, let him call a hippie! -J. A. M and 8. S. M . Tllll ...,_ f'tlllKft .....,,. "'""" .. lllK•Mrl,, .... ef Wit -lf•1r, .._. ____ ......,~INllr, .... rrom all obsolete ldeok)gies, who ste the "human person" and not "lhe stale" or "history" aa the ftdcnun of society. They are eXistentiaUs' in the bedt aoJ highest sense ol the word: knowing that it profits man nothing to gain conlrol of the state if he· loses his own soul ill the process. The "radicalism" of P..tarxism-Leairusm is not really "radical" at all. It ¥i'ants lo transfer power, not to les.>e11 or redi stribute it; it imagines that a restructuring of society will somC'~• ·V lead to a restructuring of personal rt:•a. lions -but using ugly and l\at1.·ful means to acltie\'C good ends can result only in a perversion of those ends. \VITUOUT A DEEP infusion of tte reUgiou.s spirit (in its most uni\·er1'31. and least sectarian, sense). le(tism c0tn be as perilous and pernicious as ri ghti.s1n. UnlC'ss some absolute moral values fake priority O\'er ta<:.tlai and expediency a.net the scirure of po\ver, then revolutio ft must inevitably degenerate i n t o repression and reaction. ~\erything must be placed al 1li~ 8f'1'\'icc of man : n1a11 mus! not h .. sub:irdin::ited to so1nc ideology that pu~hcs him into the Gern1nn gas-cham~,c:­ or th ~ Russian <:once11ltatlon-camp or the A1nerican ghetto. Wicked acts cor· rupt lhe most noble of intentions, and out of the crucible of hale, no love can come. Schmitz and Leadership Rep. John Schmitz ls so ' OPROsed to government it must be somewhat em· barrassing for him to represent !be 35th Congressional District in the U.S. House or Represe.ntative.s. But he was eJected more lhan a mont h ago by the ultrt-consenative coo.. lt.ituency of Orange and rural San Diego counties to go to Washington and vote "'no ... It is customary far U.S. senators and repn:sentaUv.ea to announce federal proj. tell and grant.II that go to some agency 91" group in the.ir states or districts. 1'btl ii a practice designed t.o have fOme _polldcal fallout beneficial to the poliUclan making the announcement. MR. SCHMm DECLINED lo make thf.. dUcill announcement of • fJ .3 JnJftkWl federal grant to lht Salk Institute atJ,a Jolla for population control studies. Hi cltdn'l •IP"<' wHh the phllotophy , ' , ' ;it , Guest Editorial ~'1 4---atl'., i.=;_ {: • .. .... behind the grant. "Government should sUiy out of lhe contraceptive business."' Schmitz said. Population control is a legitimale con· cern of government if the prospect of too many people is going lo ha1 e an adverse effect on re.sources and add to the misery ;of all. Mr. Schmitz speaks about lhc iln· morality of government's conc:ern in this field. It seems to us profoundly more • immoral fur govemmenl to do nothing and for leaders Uke f\fr . Schmitz to evade their responsibility to leltd. Dally Californian El C.)on ·----:------B11 a-,.,e -------, 0urGe<WP: " When J.ft1 wife was aut 0( town : a few daYJ Ille buuUlul diVon:H tt''ho llm next .. door kept coming , """ °" one pmm oiler •nolh<r. l: alw•YJ .... r1ns the ~ pogsl· i ble minlakirl, the lliblelt poMlbl• i: blou1e 1od the 1<rlnl polSlble I:' p«!ume. Sh< would all clown. I-someti,,,.. r11J!t nm to me on the 1<111, an.r ltll me i-creat she Utlnb I am. FTaM!y, Georre. t think Ui.s woman has delilM .. me. HANK T. Dur Hink T : Gtd, lt'1 almo1t frlihtening to come up a'ainst 1 mind w1lh I.he deptho of tn~ghl and perception you have ! • Unfortw11tely, J have ell her IOlt the lfCOl1d J>li• of your leltcr or don 't undentlftd fOUl" problem. as the $9.6 million thal ..OUld have lo be apenl to ex· pend the lerminal lo handle l.J million customen per year (compared to less tQan 900,000 customers nowl and more than $6.8S tJlllllon which ii wo.uld cost to ex· tend the runway and mO\'e the control tower to open the airport to lar11ter jets. That makes the bill for buying or rebuilding homes a pretty big part of the financial equation. Further, there is good reason to believe the stand· ards for "acceptable" noise pollution used by the Par· sons people in projecOnt the number of homes that would be damaged are on the low side. Governmental and judicial acknowledgrrient of noise pollution dama,11:e is increasing rapidly. Even slightly tougher noise rules could increase condemnation costs tremendously. Then there is the simple fact that homeowners' lawsuits for noise damage totaling more than '30 million already are hovering over the county. The words of the Parsons report speak for expan- 5ion of the Orange County Airport. But an analysis of the premises of that report -and of the major factors It does not consider -argue emphatically the other way. One aspect of the report, however, confirms what the supervisors and all others have known for a long time : .., .• ,. MA"->~l""° The count:v had better move with l{reat speed to develop a good supplementary metl'oport elsewhere in the county. And we'd better plan our air service growth around commu ter connections to Los .<\ngeles. Ontario. P.almdale and -eventually -to a Camp Pendleton airport. c ~MAN , SOME fEOPLE /AKE ROCK CON<ERT5 llTE~ALLY." Decries Use of Mo V'ie Stars as Pawtas 'Politicians Insult California Voters' To the .E<filA:lr: What an Insult that the politicians In California think the voters are so i>tupid that all they have to do is brag about how many big name stars are on their bandwagon. It seems that most of the petip~e worrying aboul the 18 year-olds getting \he vote, are the same ones that don't give a thought as to the capabilities of the candidates, but merely follow whichever one can boast the biggest and R'l(M;t of Hollywood 's phonies. I, 18 • young voter, under 25, regard the t.actk:s of Ronald Reagan, and Jess Ulµ"Uh , as an insult to my intelligence . and will not vote until this disparity is rectJfied. J FOR ONE consider my risht to vote a very real responsibility, and although I have long enjoyed the efforts of those in Hollywood to produce en· tertainment, I become alarmed when the people over-identify with en· tertainers, and allow them to have such a strong hand in deciding the outcome of elections. I'm well aware of lhe fact that entertainers have the right lo vote just as I do, but I don 't think that they should be used as pawns in the batUe to win the minds 8.nd votes of the masses. I just can 't uoderstand how the people or the slate of Callfomia can !land by and see this happen. But it seems that the people are ready for this ty~ or popularity contest, or the candidates wouldn't attempt this type of massive snow job. GARY L. SILLE'IT Tl1 e Disease of War To lhe Ulitor. No one able Lo read the English l<lnguage can fail to applaud the column (July 27) by Sydney Harris, "Stamping Oul the Disease of \Var." Perhaps it is his best piece or '~riling yet and certainly one of the top few to appear in the major press of this area. ll is much too important to be merel y glanced at over a cup of coffce and tossed in the waste bin. I CAN CLEARLY remember back a quarter or a ctntury when. sitting a few yards off the beach during the Quotes Glenn Strahl, Li\·ermort -"Now is thf. time for each citizen to do all he can to re.verse the trend toward anarChy so apparent recently." HIUT)' rteston, Hollywood -"We've been so afraid of psychological damage lo our childrea from discipline that we've ended up with a sick YOWIR society." Rec-,. Fruiet. l\lontclalr. junior hlJh tchoel sludenl -"Saluting the flag is a privilege for me: it symbolizes !He. liberty, happiness and religious freedom ." l\lrs. Araold W. Jones Jr., SF socialite, model, dvic worker -"The most precioiu thing is u&ng time well. Too many people confuse that with savin& tlme." Hert.rt l<otd, nlbor 1od tclllol CTlllc -"Teachers and their administrators must learn lo Q:ive up their control owr the lives of \heJr student& and learn to partlclpatl!I with their students In all fact.ls of school Ufe .•• The volunt11ry ylekUng of power seems , . . lhe only 1ltemaUve in the aohools and the &0elety to the seizure of power -lhat 11, to revolution.'' Mailbox • Letters /tom readi"rs are welcomt. Norma!ly writers should tonvey thtir messages in 300 words or Uss. The right to condetJ.Se letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reseroed. AU let- ters must include ftgnature and mail- ing address, but t1amts may be taiu.. held on reque.i' if sltfjident ?'eGSON is appare11t. Pottry IOill not be pub- lishfd in\·asion of lwo Jnna and watching the methodical slaughter of good youn& men, I .vaguely conceived some o( the thoughts Harris' article so classically articulates, here briefly paraphrased: Governments are all against war - unless they can get their way by no other means . , , Until nations are willing lo give up some or their power, as cities and states defer to their naUonal governments, then there is no way to 1 avoid force and violence among nations . . . But governments are so fixed in their rule tbey will not willingly relinquish it . . . ll is therefore left to the people living under governments to inaugurate a trans-national organb:a· lion for the proteetion of all peoples. AT THE END of WWII, with lhe stark horrors still fresh in mind, the nations set up the U.N. to establish international law and order. Now, unha~ pily, the shortness o( human memory and the perversity o( national leaders have pushed the U.N. onto the sideline. Every little nation is free to tool up for nuclear war . And the superflowers, which have virtually targeted in an ICBM on everybody's chi1nneytop, fumble for an explanation as to how they can spend the largest share of the national wealth lo protect their citizens. but can guarantee that, in a hostile exchange of weapons, only a quarter or a third will "survive." NATIONALISi\f, at which doorstep a large part of the blame for WWII is placed, IIOOrlshes apace. We can oo.ty marvel at the infinitely diminutive minds "'hich can conceive the harshei.t kind o( domestic law and ortler while s i mu I tan ea us I y merchandiling chauvinistic claptrap which promotes 1.,. tcmational anan:hy. Going beyond Harris' column, whert do we see the genesis ol an international movement? Where are thP youths w\lh the guts and wisdom to mount it? How can tt:ey tlope to reach the cUizens of the tot:ilit.arian nationll whoa Ibey get shot <IOWT1 in the streets of • free nation? \Vr can imagine that the last words of those who perished in the firestorms of Bremt:n aod Hamburg and Tokyo may hflve been something like, "Where did we go wrong?'' We can be sure thol law and order among the nations will prevail. The only question is whether il will comr about befort, or after. \VWlll . CURTIS FAERMIN t'"derpalll Pe•t- To lhe F.dllor: As a letter carrier's wife 1 want to add my two cenu to all the ruckus about postal oprratlons. T have come to one general conclusion after four years. The res&0n the Post Office Is so outdated is that they can't hold any young men because v.·ho Can raise a family on whtt thty pay! What youn1 man will 1lay with an oulfil that refusea to grow with the: limes, the reason for this being that abnOBt all of your letter carriers and clerks are old retired folks who have a pension coming in and other assets they have built up over the years through other jobs. LOOK AT YOUR local mailman. I bet he's at least over 40, more likely SO or so. If they .would pay enough lo get and hold young men I bet you will start to see some changell made. Why don't lhey change it from an okl folb borne to a paying institution'! By the way , if anyone has noticed, the rest of the pay raise that was promised hasn't corm through yet. If it does it will be a pleasant surprise to me. These people want your life's blood and expect it for nothing. Would you believe lhey even want to govem your personal life when ·you are off the job! I say phooey on them. SHARON JONES Thank• l'ro'" l'erera111 To the Editor: In behalf of the veterans al the V.A. Hospital. Long Beach, and t h e servicemen at lhe Navy Hospital, Camp Pendleton, I wish to publicly thank the Laguna Beach Festival of Arts board for its generosity in providfug 100 tickets to the Pageant of Master1. These. men, many of whom art recovering from battle wounds, will long remember the pageant, the beautifuJ , city and the friendliness of Its people. r asked for a show of hands as to the war in which they participated and found they were about evenly divided between Vietnam and World War II. THERE WERE A few from the Korean conflict but no patients from W\VI. I also want to thank the hard-working and gracious ladies of the Americ&n Legion and V.F.W. Autjliarie.s for servinc such a fine dinner. · Lagunans do care about' our disabled veterans and servicemen as shown by their continued interest in their welfft'e. Thanks for your coverage Of tht event. 0. W. PRICE Service Officer ~rican Legion Post 2Z'l 'The Pini" Truth' T<> the Editor: ,;The Plain Trulh" .provides a background understanding of problems. It a!so .suggests solutions, This tlDd of'free servi~ mlgh~provide an elfecUve means to solving many <>f our piessinc problems. True progress l! almost Impossible unll!:M we understand the cauaes of prob- lems -and the effects of different attempts at solving them. This includes examining our own beliefs for well-fn- tentioned, but possibly misgufded actJons. Too often differeot groups (in appealing for our support l gloss over incorrect ideas we may have. Mon' PEOPLE will JUpport acti~s for tbe bettenneot of IOcltty if tbese act.ion.\ don 'I damage their teCUrilJ or dignily, Herbert W. Arm~-·, pllllooophy Sttms toO good to be trut. He &Ml joy '""" gl•lng. He ,.Id that lHchlna how to live flhe pUfPO" ol IUe, true vall'!s aa distin&uishfld lrom the false, and the causes of right results In life ) hai1 chang«I and enriched thoumuMis ol llvcs. His radio proar'"m, "The Pli1in Trul.b," began 36 years 11go. AmbAS!lllOor Colle~e Ul P.-oa WN lounded :II ,.... op. I These are noncommercial _and nonprofit. His radio program is on KGBS (1020 kc) Monday to Saturday at 6 a.m. and Sunday at 10 a.m. 'Ai\1BASSADOR COLLEGE mails "The Plain Truth" magazine free to those who request it. They will not accept money for it. Nor "'ill they send copies lo anyone who bas not requested it. Unsolicited financial support comes from those who believe in what "The Plain Truth" is ,giving. Magaiine articles cover inflation, men- tal illness, the modern Romans, safe driving, how to have a happy family, reclaiming the desert, decline of the merchant fleet, sex education, pity the poor criminal, why today's youth is disenchanted, the endles.s war, act now on pollution, are food additi•es safe, Biafra, must America police the world, and build joy in your marriage. SOME OF THESE articles are in their other magazine, "Tomorrow's World" -which is more religion oriented. Ambassador College provides free booklets on almost any conceivable ac- tivity. These include child rearing. the Seven Laws of Success. Our Polluted Planet, Famine and The New Morality (SU eduction). These excellent services can help us solve our problems. LEONARD WRIGHT Raquel Welch To the Editor : I disagree with those who were anxious to welcome Raquel Welch to Newport ~each. II strikes me as being hi.ghly mconslstenl to 011 one hand bemoan the kiwerin,g of America's moral values, and on the other hand run gusltlnl lo weLcom.e the star of M y r a Breckenridge lo our city. • Mi5.'I Welch willingly and knowina:ly lent her talents to a sen:;eless, plotless piece: .)( nothing t~at exploits the kJwtst tastes of mankind. And she'll gladly make Iii fortune for it! She should be equally willing to accept the scorn of people who feel that obscenity and freedom are not synonymous. SUCH AN understanding publication as Life magazine has criliciz.ed Myra Breckenridge as an "unforgivable movie. a consummate exercise i• vulgarity." that •ha! absolutely no redeeming social value. 1'hat's enoUgh for me. I'll draw tbe llne there and will not patroniu the movie nor in any way glorify Ow people who made-it possible. If 'It'.' really care, this is one way to reverse the moral decay that is lriP- Pirl& '!"' country. JIM WOOD -----Wednesday, Augusl 5, 1970 TM cdilorial poll' •I the DoHr Pilot see1" to inJorm pd 1ti~ ul4tc: f'eadtn .b'1 prfU'ltinO Ual.s ftnotpaptr'1 oplniont and com- ~ .. lopjca oJ l•tcr111 Oftd ""1>Ulicancc. br p<oOO!lt!Q • ftm1m for Ch< e.tpreUfon a/ our rt<11Ur1' opinioni, aM bf prr1e-11ting th~ dio.r1i i:few. point.i of informed oblC1Wrt mid 1pokeimen on topici of tM doy. Rob<rt N. Weed. Publlaher --- I Saddlebaek Today's Fl•al EDl1'10N VO~. 63, NO. 186, 4 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, AUGU!W 5, '1970 TEN CENTS Judge LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older today denied a defense motion for a mistrial in the Tate-1..aBianca murder case based on President Nixon's remarks about the guilt of Charles Manson. (Related Stocy Page 3). Judge Older said that he was satisfied About the jurors hearing the case an "able and willil!i to be fair and im· Clemente Maps Plans For Surplus San Clemente's city council, faced wilh an unexpected surplus of tax revenues and a philosophy to keep the city tax rate at a minimum, will map plans for setting the levy tonight. Faced by an Aug. 31 deadline, coun- cilmen are expected to order the drafting of an ordinance setting the rate for action at a meeting two weeks away. But the exact figure nf the rate still Is uncertain, because of recent in- formation that the city's assessed va1ua· lion has risen by $7 million. Revenue lrom that increase could mean as much as $60,000 in increased income to city coffers. No indications thus far have come from councilmen on how the new income might be used -or U the rate will come down. Before the announcement of the in· crease ln tar revenue, councilmen had agreed that their budgd. deliberations be done nuder the assumption that the last fiscal 'year's rii.te of $1,,37 per $100 o( a~d valuation would remain the ~ame. OnJy a minor decrease of a penny-or-so had been proposed as a reduction on some land--0nly levies in lighting main· t.ence districts. Instead or lowering the tar rate, the funds could assist in: -Augmenting a massive capital im- provements project list calling for street construct.ion, parks, water and light facilities or sewers. -Assisting in lifting a five-year-plan of street maintenance and repair from the ground. The plan, outlined by the city staff would run into millions of dollars. -Adding to funds needed lb expand the city's volunteer fire department to a full-time force with 1 new head- quarters. -Paying the estimated $200,000 bill for a new community clubhouse. -Restoring funds in several it.ems cJf the new city budget where categories were cut during study sessions. The restoration could refill items ln staff, capital outlay or supplies. One aspect of the new funds and tM tar rate which councilmen bear in mind is the earning power of a penny's addition to the levy. A cent on the tax T&te rai!les slighlly less than $5,000 in Tevenue. Lenore Romney Certain Victor In Primary Test By The Associated Press Lenore Romney appeared a certain winner today in her bid for the Republican U.S. Senate nomination (rom M1<:hgan. one of four states holding primary elections Tuesday. Mrs. Romney's opponent, State Sen. Robert Huber, said at midmorning that hf was "preparing to concede" victory to tile 6l·year-old wife of Micbtian'i former governor and present U.S. secretary or housing and urban deveJo~ menL He said he expected to eend Mrs. Romney a telegram of con- i1falul1Uons later \Oday. H.uber's announcement came as elec· lion returns gave Mn. Romney 52 per· cent of the votes cast In the race. \Vllh 79 percent o( Michigan's 6,044. precincts reported, the unofficial count was 150.492 for Mrs. Romney •nd 232,1183 for Huber. ln the other three stat.el with primaries Tuesday, the unofficial count showed these TesultJ in major rtcet: Ml1toUrt: Stn. Stuart Symington wa.'J 1 landslkte victor 1n his bid for th! Oemocr•lic mmtnation to hla fourth term in the Sentlt. His November COP opponent will be. Alty. Oen. Joh n Dan- forth. All 10 incumbent congressmen - nine OemocTals and one Republican - (SU ROMNEY, P11e ZI Rejects partia~' In deciding 1 verdict for th• hippie leader aild three young women codefendnats. "The time has come to place this in its proper peripeclive," Judge Older said. The judge aaid it was not important whether Mal'l90a had deliberately invited prejudice by holding up a newspaper in front of the jury Tuesday with the Sleepy Art Lover DID MANSON PLAN TOWARD A MISTRIAL? SEE PAGE 3 headline, "Manson Guilty, N i 1 on Declares." "The important point is whether the members ol the jury are capable of rendering an impartial verdict In this case," be said. "That ls why I called them in hert ~ynthia Daley, 18 months, snoozes during tour ol Art-a-Fair grounds tn ~una_, while mother, Mrs. Philip Daley o.f Beµflower watches artist William Persona at work. Art-a-Fair, one of three art festivals currently under way in Laguna, continues through Aug. 30, at its' N. Coast Highway location. Other shows are Festi\'al of Arts and Saw· dust Festival. Both are holding forth in Laguna Canyon. · Laguna Subversive Probe Data Secret for 2 Years U • current subversive activity in- ve!ltigation in Laguna Beach prodias any substantive infonnation, tbe public apparently will not learn about it for two more years. 11tis was the assessment Tuesday of Jud Baker, administrative assistant to Sen. Hugh Burns. Burns. who is retiring, heads the Senate Fact Finding Sub. committee on Unamerican Activities. A subcommittee investigator working for Buml! has been in the area gathering infonnation about persons and organi:r.a- tiona in the Art Colony. The principal use of such infonnalion, said Baker, is for a bieMial report on subversion. One was released this week so another won't be forthcoming for two years. Baker said the investigations are done because probes of the FBI or other law enforcement agencies are not made pubLic. "The theory is that the pUblJc has a right to know, that is tile basis for the biennial re}XJrts," he s e i d • ''Unfortunately, a vast number or people don't take the thing seriously." Baker said this is to get away from lhe "circus" atmospher'e of public hear- ings. The subcommittee's purpose, he said, is to w.x>ver facts "concerning lhe infiltration and organizational efforU of unAmerican philosophies." He '8id this is not necessarily con- fined to Communism. Occasionally, said Baekr, information gathered by subcommittee investigators is turned over to· other agencies such as the FBJ. The most recent report of the sub- commitlee maintained that the Com· munist Party has staged "an a.stouncling resurgence" in the: U.S. Mistrial Motion yesterday one by one and .asked them whether their ability to return such a verdict' had bttn Impaired by the In- cident I am sallsfled it was not." With the jury out of the courtroom, the defense begu the day with the motion for mintrial for all the defendants on for mistrial for all the defendants on dent of. the United States constituted "Prejudice or the most significant kind." Deputy district attorney Aaron Stovitl • said that Menson bad clearly tried to establl!h judicial error. ''It's the same thing as If he tried to escape or got up and said he wanted to be given the death penalty and then ask for a mistrial," Stovitz aaid. "We're all aware that Mr. Manson is calling the shots in this case and he called them yesterday. "Whether Mr. Manson wants to or not it ls the Intention of the people to proceed with this trial." Alter the judge's rullng lhe jury \vat brought Jn and the Ulree young women defeodanta suddenly stood up and began chanting some song about President Nii:· on and tbeir guilt. Order wu restored and Linda K~ bian, the key witness for the prosecution resumed her testimony under cross-e1- a.mination. Yippie•in a Pnt•On? Disneyland Hotel Preparing for 'Invasion' By CHARLES ff . LOOS .. ""' Dtfty , .... Sllll The Yippiell: ani coming, the Yippies are coming. RJght here to Orange County. Jn fact. to Disneyland, to storm the bastion of all that is wholesome on Thursday. the anniversary of the Hiroshima A-bomb. It's a (check one): (a) Fact. (bl Rumor. (c) Giant Pul-<ln. ( d) Nobody Seems to Know for Sure. (e) None of These. If you picked (d) you're as close to the real AMwer as the {a) Disney brass. (b) Anaheim Police Department. (c} Los Angeles Free Press, which ap- parenUy started the whole thlng in the fin! place. "Aug. 6, Disneyland, Yippie Inteme.· tional Pow 'Wow." proclaimed the Free Press tn a recent edition. The words were arranged around a smiliog picture Tax Decrease In Lqguna School Budget Laguna Beach Unified School District trustees Tuesdax olgbt approved a $3,158,481 budget and an II~ot tax rate decrease for the 1970-71 fiscal year. Tbe rate decrease was mt.de possible through a 14 peiunt climb in-assessed valuation. The new budget Is up $216,106 !rom last year. While the vote for the budget was unanimous, trustees remarked in- Wvidually they would liked to have seen aome changes in certain areu. In other action, the board: --Grant.ed approval for the high school teltbooks for the 1970-71 school year. Supt. William Ullom noted lbat a few persons did review the books, but lhat DO objections were raised. -Approved two summer workshops, one at Top of the World Elementary School, and one at Laguna Beach High School. . The work5hops wlll allow various teachers and school principals to confer on school procedures before classes begin this fall. -Approved a ~quesl from lhe Associated Student Body to send 10 elected ofilcials to the California Associa- tion of Student C.Ouocils s u m m e r workshop at UC Santa Barbara, Aug. 2'-28. '1be district will pay transportation costl for the trip. Other expenses will be splil between the participating 3tude:nta aod the ASS. Minuteman II Fired VANDENBURG AFB (UPI) -A com· bat O'eW launched a Minuteman fl lnterconinental Balllstlc Missile Tuesday in an operational test down tbe Air F(ll\te'a Western test range. of ~1.ickey Mouse holding a top hat in one hand and an automatic riOe in the other. A story appeared on the sa me page under the headline "Yippies a t Disneyland." ". . .while they will now Jet you in with long hair, etc.," the article advised, 1'they may not let you in without a tick.el. But as the old proverbial saying goes, 1Tear down the walls that divide us.' " · A call to Free Press offices In an effort to shed more light on the gatecrashing implication produced Utile in the way of hard information. Disney brass and Anaheim police also appear l.o be short on hard lnfonnaUon about the rumored invaskm. "All we hear are rumors," they say. One unconflrtned report out of the Disneyland Hotel had Ylppie leader Jerry Asks .Judges' Aid Rubin of the Chicago Seven cbeckini in for an overnight stay this week and then checking out again without leavin,( a forwarding addre.M. Disney officials and pollct say thei are oot ignoring the rumors and are prepared to handle any eventuality. However, the amusement park will open Thursday at the usual hour on a "business as usual" bas.ls. Disneyland ofriclals nole wryly that they have dealt successfully in the psst with any number of bomb threats (so far, all have been phonies), uncounted grad night solrees and even a couple of adult conventioru they'd just u soon furget. They figure the park's attractions will charm whatever Ylppies show up. Besides, they add, the walls that divide Disneyland from the world are 16 feet high. ·Laguna Seeking Teeth In Animal Control Laws By RICHARD P. N,ALL Of .... Del" ,, .... ll•ff Laguna Beach c¥y , officials will ask for help from the-two local munlcfpal court judges in seeki ng means to put teeth In their existing animal control laws. Council discussion ol do1s and related animal-control problems indicated Tues- day night that this will be one of several measures tried to better control animals. Olhers likely will include: -Renewal of the: contract with the Society for the PrevenUon of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) on the understanding the SPCA will receive more money and provide more service. -Purchme by the SPCA of radios for trucks so police can assist animal control officers when they need help. -An increase in the $3 pound fee for strays that are picked up. -An educational program. including brochures, to ecquaint dog owners with pertinent Jaws. George Crosier, SPCA representative, recommended that Laguna ban dogs from the beach as do other cities such as Hermosa Beach, Manhattan Beach and Redondo Beach. This, he raid, would facilitate the pre> blem of giving citaUons. Crosier said if an animal control officer cannot get I he owner of an unleashed dog on the beach to sign the citation until police arrive, the dog may be back on the leash. If a dog is taken home and the owner Is not there, he said, the court will not accept the aiatter without the owner's aignature. Hence if the owner slams the door on the animal control of- ficer, said Crosier, he bas no case. He said of 37 cases brought by the SPCA in Beverly HUis last month, not one was ditmlssed. "U we can work out a good arrangement wilh the court," he said, "we can get the job done." Crosier said he ls not trying to take people to court, mentioning senior citizens who had inadvertently let dogs escape. Mayor Richard Goldberg said the law must be applied · equally to all persons. "Fine," Crosier said, "but let's talk to the judge." Crozier said his department now rerelves from the clty $478.50 monthly: and asked that this be doubled. · He estimated his department is putting in 80 man hours on animal control for the city each 10 days. This includes a patrol six days a week, seven hours a day. This service is to be increased. The SPCA in June picked up Tl stray dogs in Laguna and in July, another 73, He said many people didn't bother to redeem their pets . Dr. G. R. Ekeberg, a veterinarian. said the SPCA answers only about 50 percent of its night calls. She said dogs run rm all the time in places such as Canyon Acres Drive. She sald a dog attack can be lethal. She said the SPCA .-rs cooperation and backup from police. She also suggested the license fee be doubled 1o 110 r.,, dogs (15 for spayed le.males) and said 70 percent or the dogs on the beach do not have a license. She asked why a person should pay for a dog license If the dog .ii cs.. ANIMALS, Pase !J Oraage Sal.oon~ Making Comeback Crosier said the SPCA needs four or five persons willing to testify in court that the doe is a nuisance. He Indicated this has been difficult to accomplish. The SPCA officia l saJd stray dog com· plainta have bee n dismissed In th~ loca l court one after another and called this ''a bit ditcouraging." Weadler Now 'Cocktail Lounge' Not Only Place to Get a Drink SACRAMENTO (UPI) -For lb< man wbo values the tradition of the Wiid West, 5ipping a cool martini in lht subdued atmosphere of a cocktail IOUt1ge just never made it. lt didn't com~ to a shot of red eye at the sawduat-Ooored corner 581oon. wen, the saloon ii makiOM a comebJCk ln California. Gov. Ronald Reagan was !Jet today to sign at a specia1 ceremony in his office a bill making. it legal aglin ror a drinking utabllshment to call itself a .. saloon," ''b..-room" or "bar." .All three t.erma have bttn banned from tavtm 1lgn1 since shortl1 after lht repell of Prohibition. A.1semblyman Jotm T. Koox (t).Rich- mond), inlrodu«<I the m<asun an.r bt r«e!V<d • letter from ~n Bradley, wbo managed former Gov. idmund G. Brown's unsucces&tul 1966 re-elecUon campaign. "Wouldn't you Uke to be known as lhe man who b.rought the saloon back to C.llfornlt!" lmplor<d Bradley. "Think or the toasts that would be d r u n le. in tribute to your legl&Jative alc.llls •.. lht pu111e of IUCb 1 bill will certainlY place your name among tbe lmmort&li. ~ The Legislature •protetibed the word "saloon" becaute of public feelings &hat it would recall rnfn'IOriei of aleaey prt- Prohlhltion swinging~ ahwnltls and 1920s apelkeasies. Jt ca1Je4 to mind im- ages of gambling, prostltuUOn. gangsters an<I bootlegging. When lawmakers In 1~ drew up laws to govtrn the liquor lndultry aft.er it again became ~gal, the)' ltroVe to keep the buaines.a "clean." ''To those who art old enough to remember back to &he pre-Prohibition days, the saloon has a r1ther defilllte meaning," wrote sen. And~ R., Schol~ lky of Merced, a -of'lhe S<nat< commi~ on lntoxioeUnl liqwr in the lilOs. "It w., a place, 0.. principal part ol which, outsldo ot the uqu... llJtll. wO. the mobotloay bOr willl the Iron foot rail and ·the -.pklon, IDd it not to be . conlUled with the mod;e.m. sumptuOus cocklai! loqes, to .which lhe younger 1eneralioo h.u become 'ac> custoratd. '' Woman Routs Tliief at Door TO&Ca Brondgee:st, ·n, of San Clemente may not have a phone. but she 1tUJ has .a hearty set ol v9C1i cordt. The c)derly resident at tl3\I W, Catie · Mariposa used them early lhb morning to root a prowler who beat sin her door. The woman told poJJce an unldentlf\ed man ·pOUndtd on her front door at 1:$3 1.m.. then beaan walklnc to the back of her house. . So ahe opened a wlndow and bellowed _ for help. , Several nt':lghbors called police. The man fled. • • Those lazy, hazy days of summer continue Thunday with Jow clouds in the morn.Ing and filtered sunshine afterward. Temperature alterations will be mlnimal. INSIDE TODA 't' • f SC At111et1 • siudenu · A • · t ..,... . • irpor • Cof C Plans ·Drive R~port . - i .. Against New Left · Vnder Fire • 'Llgun1 Beach Chamber of COmmerce ~sident Bernard Syfan ,.1d 'l\resday qauWttlon Is progressing with plll)I )On_d several malllnis lhls fall to • blab r;cl1l>ol student•, explllinlc& t.ctiel 1n4 umanlpW.aUve ltehni· ues" "-U>e New J,.eft. 'f'Jbe Chamber has 1*n eollecting ney for the past two months. We w have well over $1 .000," Syfan ex· alned. A total o1 $2,SOO iS !l«ded the series of s1J: mailings. .. The ma.lllngs are aimed at the majority ' high IChool students who are "un- . " an4 lean neigther to the Jeft the righl Each malling will attemPt eipose .a particular aspect of the n Left an~ hoW the movement is :·~lww Goes On -~fter Burglar ~Hits Lag unlt 'l'ht !bow went on at the Laguna oultoa. Playhouse Tuesday ni~~~: . ~ a frantic day that bad members s<urtying lo Hollywood rent replacements for an estimated ,000 lo 18,000 worlh of "°und equipment ved ,by burglars, The daring burglary, whldl ten the w lbuter il'ldpt!rative in tbt sorind parlintnl according lo a.ssislant dtr.o- r ~rd Dow, wu discovered at :30 Lzh. Tuesday by iechmcaJ ~or· ames Stewirt. It oCcurred after mili-' • t Monday. ' A detailed Inventory ..UU Is being de, aa:Ording lo Playhouse Manager lclt Seymour. but the Initial list Included 1SOO .SOUJ'<I mlut panel. stereo tape rder, ampllfiert, a playbact syttem, p e a k e rs , microphones, headphones, bles and electrical conntttol-s. Detectives noted some slmilarfty to theft of St,600 worth of sound equlp- enl trom the Laguna Beach HJgh School uditorium on the wee.II.end or July lS.19. The Playhouse burglary appeared to ve been engineered by someone iliar with the location of the equip- nt. police said. 'Ibe Playbouse, usually dark. on Mon-- evapfap. was the scene this Wff.k a drUs rehearsal for the new tut f "Oliver!" but cut and crew piembe.rs d lei\ by midnight, a spokesman said., Ori_ginaJ invoice value of the tnissing uipm'"l 'f""dllli lo Pi11Ybollle ol· .:i=..~f.!:,=-~~ had been purchased during the n of the mlJljicaJ to correct iOUnd hie.ms. It was estimated the ultimate could reach $6,000. Technicians worked throughout the day identify and re-connect dozens of wires t had been cul by lhe burglars. By curtain time, the only evidence trouble visible to the audiela: wu presence of a technician operating m&iesblll IOWld mi.1lng panel in the or the auditorium. unshot Death f Youth Probed Cypress police and coroner's deputies rontlnued their invesligaUon into e death of a youth who may, they _ d, have been "fooling around" with gun that inflicted fatal head wouods. '.Jefftty Alan Livingston, 16. or Cypress. · ed Tuesday in Los Alamitos General pilal four days after his body was vered by fMendJ on the btdroom of his home. Offlcm: said the youth wl!'I shot gh the temple. A small hand gun nearby. DAILY PILOT --._ .... c... ,._ s. a ir ••• OF:ANGI CO.UT ~01.tSHu.G CQIU'AHY •• ._.,. N. W,ittl ,.,._..... .... """"""' Jee• L c .. 1,,. VUl'Hi -... ~ ....... ,,, .... , ic ...... ... w n-,, A. ...... ,..; .. M. ......... I!.,.. lit.~•-' '· Ntft 1-0r-c-tr ....... ....... ~~'-Mnot: llt Ilk.If ...,. ~ tf.._1 .. "°' Dll .... , ... , ............. ........ ._.l llt'-IA-JM!I 411 a-1\, !IVS 9-......_. S.. ci.-.ot1 a ...,. II C.... .... D&.11..Y ~-.OT, .. •:.Id II ~ Olf .. I"""" ........... ,.,. ~ ,_.. ., ......... dlMt9 w ~ ~""' ........... a.. ................ ~-~-....,.-.--.................. a.t ......... CM.-, ............. -.. .,, .... ...-. .,..._, ............... Jll Waf a..a-.c.. ...... T...,__ ff14t MMJJ1 c~ '1 l'ilh 1 ""2M11 5-Cl 9 .... ,.. ·~ , ........ .,,....,. ~ ""' 0...., ca.it ... a s f 4 ~. -._ , ...... ......_. ........ --· .._. .......... .... _.,..•IP ...... -..... ........ _....,,... __ ..... d.-........... ,...,.... .... _..0.•~~I .~ .. ......... It• _.,,,, .Ml _.. .... ___,, ---- • working on college campuses throughout the United States, Syfan said. "The informaUon bullellns we r e prepared by the Campus S l u d le s JRJtitute, a San Dieg<H>ased educatlocial research organization. . The maillfl&S. ace e1pected to belin sometime. this fall after $Cbool begins. S}'fan said that school officials have been ln!Dm}ed ()[ Q>e planned mailings. ' "The mailings have nothing to do with the school," said Dr. Robert Reeves district curriculum director. "ll II fl0i our program and we are ln no position to accept qr reje<;l lt. "At pur schools we're ttaching our kids to i!blnt crtUcally and to see all lbe fac~. Anything that wlll help us with that ts fine as far as we m concerned." '.Reeves speculated that the maillnis will provoke discussions in some of the classes at the high school. In_ a ~tochure describing the mailings, the tnstitute noted that in one independent researeh study, _the mailings wett fOU'tld 10 shUt 40 percent of the recipients away from the New Left. ~ f_irst mailing exposes the ir. rat1~naht~ and superficiality of the 'New Left Philosophy and actions," the brochure states. Second mailing com. pares the tactics of the New Le.ft with ~·''methods and objectives at the 'Ra. tional Majority.' " -- Subsequent mailings delve into the ~e~ tor cqUege unrest. the wo'rk that .1~ betng dooe by American cor- porations to help solve human problems ~ a IO-Calltd m,anual of tactics. ustd by the J'jew Lett to recruit studenb for lb causes. Rap~g, Shooting Victim ' Remains In Poor Condition A 17-year-old Pico Rivera girl who was raped eel shot along a lonely road south of San Clemente last week re- mained in poor condition today, still ~It to relate critical information to investigators probing the brutal attack by her husky a...ailanl. . Miss SUllD Pri<:e, wbo acctpted a ride from .• Corona de! Mar street corner was thtn driven to the Las Pulgas Road by tbe,p.Latin-type suspec;:t was delcn'bed as in' PoOr but· st.able oo~tion at Sooll\ Cols! Cooununlly lloopllal. <!\ ~-..,._Ind » Ille ~ retna'!ts, lodged ln a critical area of the girl .s neck and surgeons have not yet decided on a time when jt will be removed, hosptta I aides said, The girl .related some information to Newport .{Jeacb police last Friday in a brie.f inlerview, but since then bas been. unable to assist San Diego sheriff's investigators because: or her condition. The only leads which police have gathered thus rar are a descripUon or the suspect's car -a green ~rly new Oldsmobile CuUasa: -aod a1 poulble first name or Fred. . The man WM Oe.scribed I S Latin in lppearaoct, husky and in his mid 20s or early 30s. police said. F ro'" P a ge 1 ROM NEY . •• won renomination. Wi.th 9S percent or lhe state's 4,246 precrncts counted. Symington rolled up 363,811 votes to a Iota! of 44 .040 (or four oppanents. Danforth picked up 158,019 votes of 220,307 cast in a three. man race. Kansas : Ally. Gen. Kent Friuell v.·as a runaway winner over four opponents for the Republican gubernatorial nomina- tion and the right to meet incumbent Denu~ral Robert Docking in November. DocUiig had no prim&ry opposition. The state s fi~e GOP House members were all remm1nattd. \Vitb all but about 150 of K1nsas' 2,911 precincts reporting, Friutll had lZS,132 votes to 70.869 for Rick Harman 1'tlree others in the race trailed fa~ behind. ldUo: Gov. [Qi Samuelson won the &:publican nomtnauon for 1 second term, beating Dick Smith ot Re1burg Cecil D. Andrus WU nominated by Democrats to oppose Samuelson In November. The state's two congres.smen. both Republic.ans, wue unopposed in the primary, With 179 of the state·s 890 precfnC't.!I counted, Samuel.son had 47,157 \'Otes to Sl,914 fOt" Sm i l h. Andn.L1: ltd Vernon F. R.1-..-..n 2l,ISJ ID %3.113, wit h a lhird candidate ca Ult GOP aide fir bebiod. Marilyn's Dea th Remembered BOIL YWtlOD (UPI) -E1aht )'Ql'S agn lodq IWil1a -lu1 ol the great IDO\-ie ... .,._ died alo!ie ll1 ber bedroom al aa o.'ef'dole of lletpiQ& pills. J:ltr tomb at .,.estwood Memarl.aJ Park stld receives a frtiih Yue of f"05Q thrte limes a wee\ frca e:s-laliband Joe lliMaqio, the HID al FlllDe Y..W llouer . By PATRICK BOY.LE .r ni. 0.111 PllM Sid A report recommer14ing eipansion of Orange Couoly A.iJll9C1 drew vigorous aitacks !rvm homeowners and pilots at a Tuesday meetlng of the Orange County Airport Commission. , The ~ting,• 9Chedttled as I i>Ubl~ discusSJon, drew a standing.room-only crowd of irate citizens. It was tbe third time the coounission had-met to discuss 1~ Parsons rtport. · · The report Which cott the county $140,000, recommends tripling the number of flights al Orange County Airport In the next seven years, spending $ti million on terminal and runway ez. panslon and budgeting millions more t.o acaqulre or soundproof' $41 homes along the flightpath. · The audience was made up chiefly of Tustin and Newport Be a ch homeowners who live along the landing and takeoff flight path. O~e such homeowner was Dan Emory. chairman o{ the Airport Noise Abatement Committee ol Newport Beach, who al· tacked the repart in technJcal grounds and ~ha!Jenged anyone "to show that ~Y figures are less accurate than thO.!le 1n the report." With a presentation of slides showing maps and graphs of noise contouri:'-he charged that parfs-of the repart ;,are a fraud." He said the report recommended a load factor of 78 percent for comlflercla/ al.rcraft taking off at Orange County Airport,. He alleged that such 1 load rac'f_r would slow Qle . cJimb-<lut rate of me aircraft ~ "drag the Im ct area '3,%00 feet down the ~y " pa He Said this would. pf ace homes· alorig Dov~r Shores and on Balboa Island in !he impact area and lbey, too. would have to be bought by the county or soundpropfed, · . Emory ~so charf:ed the report baaed lls com bl.bed noi&e eJ:J>()sUre i Jevel (CNEL) 11-n3.Jysis OD a year's a,verage noise and not on ~ peak fllght. period o_f the ye~r, as he said' a CNEL evalua. hon required. . ·Emory said if the evaluation had been ba~ on lhe peak · flight period, lhe ~·se figures would have been higher in the report. ' This w~uld _cause the-6S CNEL noise cootour line m the Par"IOns reparJ lo e~,Lend. to Dover shores mstead of ato~ pmg at .the beginning of Upper Newport Bay, ~nnguig more houses into the pro-, posed unpact. area, he contended, E!aor7 aloo•charged tfiai' if the •lri>ort servjce wu tripled to c rughts a· day the effect on speech interference wtluld i-~ .such that Dover Sho!lS reikienta' , , voices and ea1'.. w~ki ·be rendtrtd . ~lest ~ .14 houl'l a dll)I." AnotMI' presentation attacking: the Parsons report was made by Jose Ortega, an acoustical expert with PauJ S. Veneklasen and Associates. Onega said the impact area 'was greater lhan implied in the report and said if the flighLs are tripled, the impact area would e1lend to between Lido Isle and Balboa Penin!ula . .Representing the 0 range County Pilo~ Assoeiat.ion , President 3 a y Hamilton said the airport was designed for general aviation and sbouJd continue !o be used for that purpose. H~ said the .3:iryort was running out of Ile-down factlities for private a.ireraft and .~at the Parsons: report made no prov1s1on for increasing such facilities. Ma rine, 21, Dies O f B urn I n juries Fro1n Toro Crash A young Marine corporal who was carried from the blazing ~ka.&e of a KC 130 fueling lanker five days ago at El Taro died early today in Or&n&e County Medical Center. Cpl. Kenneth ~tetldorf, 21. wbose base home is Jess than a mile from the fiery crash scene al El Toro Marine C.Orps Air Slat.ion, died in the intens.lve medical care unit 10 which he was admitted Thursday. He leaves a willow and two cbJJdren. His skip~, Isl Lt. Roger W. ?ttulllns. 27~ of Huntington Beach died in the crash . Three fellow crew members. were hurt. Still on the critical list loday al OCMC v.·ere : Capt. Robert Walls Jr., 23, of Tustin. and S/Sgl. Kenneth C. Davis, 31. of Santa Ana. ~taj, Waller Cytkewk:r, ~I . or Mission Vlejo. is recovmng raptdly from less serious injuries . Ca r on F1·ee,vay Kill s Doctor, 28 An Orange Couniy ~tedical Cenlftr phyisctan •·ho got out ol his car to q~stlon another motorist. after a mloor t.n1fic acckient was .struck and killed by another \·ehlc'e on the Carden Cnrn Frttway in Orange wly today. Offict:rs satd Or, Vktor M1nget. 21. or Garden Grove, was invoh'td In an incident of minor nature and pulled his car ovtr to the side o1 the frft•IY· He was st.ruck as he "'alkfd arvund the vehrcle. 11»e drh'tr ol Ule car •hlc:h llruck tht doctor Wll DOC beJd. . ' ' .Shore Control Nears? S~pat,e Vote Delayed .by Badham Mo ve llJ' 'TllOlllAS 1'1lRTUNE .. ... Dllll' ""' ll1tf SACRAMENTO -A bill pulling 1,100 mlle.s of Callfomla coastline under state plannlng and zoning aulhotity was ap- proved 42-30 Tuesday by the Assembly. But the bill was not sent lo the Senate because the leader of the opposition, Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R - Newport Beach ), gave nolice he will seek a vote on reconsideration later lhls week. A first vote on the bill resulted in a 31-31 deadlock nine days ago. But opponents -an allia.nct ol con- servationists who said the measure didn't do enough and conservatives who called it an Invasion of property righls - failed to duplicate last week's strength. The erosion from the "anti" bklck was comprlsed of conservationists who decided the bUJ by Assemblyman Pete WUson (ft.San Diego) was the best they eould gel this year. Three ol.ber bllls even more strongly regulative of the coastline have been eiL'ler killed or pigeonholed. The city governments of Huntington Beach, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and San Clemente have supported the Wilson bill as being the best of th·e lot from their standpoint. It provides for ~he Ieut Imposition of state authority mlo tradltlonaJ city planning aT!d zoning powers. The Wilson bill ,provides for more c.itr and county government ttpresen- ta lion on reglooa.I boards governing coastline dtvelopment than did the other billa and it limits lhe deflrutlon of lhe coastal zone lo 1,000 yards lnlaDd instead or half a mile u did <>De bill IDd Coastline Bill To Standardize Devel opments lf, the coastline preservation bill becomes law this Is what it will do: -Provide for developmeol of statewide planning stalldards for coastal develop- ment. -Create five regional boards that will have authority to enforce the statewide standards by holding veto power over coastal development. -Any developer, public or private, o( properly for 1,000 yards inland and lbree miles out to sea wlU have to have approval of the regional board. Urban and commercial harbor areas will be exempted. ~The regional board go~ing Orange County coastline will also take in the coast of Los Angeles, Ventura and Santa Barbara counties. Purpose of the legislation Is to reduce restriction of access to public beachlands, Interference with the Jlne of sight to the ocean and unnecessary dredging and filling. one mile as did anothef°, Orange Coast A.sstmblymen Badham and Robert Burke IR-Huntlngton Beach l wert among those wbo voted against the bill because they believe il interferes wtth property rights . Bad.ham says all private property Is in jeopardy along the coast and title compaTLles bave questioned whether they can insure it. He says his constituency has tradi- tionally opposed regional government and there ls no assurance Orange County will be represented on a four..county regional board.' In earlier debate . Badham said. ''increased beacb access -this is for people wbo dirty the beach. You should see the beache.!I of Southern Callfifornia Monday morning after all the con- servaUonists of the inland come to •.• Jilter our beaches." Burke said as he understaflds the bill upper Newport Back Bay could be filled with silt by a flood and local agencies not be able to dredge it oul without state approval. He said, "It might be interpreted so you can't plant a tree that interferes \vith the line of sight between the highway and the ocean." In arguing for his bill's passage Tues· day. Wilson said, "There is only so much coastline. It is unique. It is limited and when it is gone it is gone. Time and space are running out." Assemblyman John Stull (R·Leucadia) charged the measure was ·•the imposition of a drastic new social system on real estate. It is not a conservation bill, but rather a land immobilization bill.'' He s.aid creation of the regional boarda would mean the power of local govern- ment would be "turned over lo a new, idealistic·lype group.'' Trailer Park Developers Seek2ndHeari11:g Today Cambodians Get Help From U.S. In Napalm Drop Another continua.nee will be sought tonight before San Clement's city c.oun- cilmen in the appeal for a mobile home park wh1ch would replace I.he Harbor Hills Golf Course. Rel Wood., representative of the COAl.emporary Mobllebome Corporation of Newport Beach, said today be would ask for lhe second delay in the public hea ring becaUJe of the selection of a •ew ~gal representaUve for the firm. Rodger Howell, a partner in the legal nrm ol Rutan and Tuck.er, will assume Consolidated Court Marshal Bill Gets Oka y Legislation authored by Assemblyman Robe.rt Burke (R·Hunti.ngtoo &ach) to convert Orange County lo a consolidated court marshal operation, as in most large counties, has been signed into law by Gov. Reagan. A head marshal with aa assistant marshal and three inspector deputies will be hired when the consolidation goes lnto effect Dec. l. according to Judge Richard Hamilton, chairman of the county Municipal Judges AssociaLion. ~farshals of the five county municipal court systems act as bailiffs, transfer prisoners, suve warrants and serve subpoenas on v.·itnesses among other duties. Presenlly there are fi ve head marshals (or the five municipal court systems in Costa Mesa . Laguna N i g u e I • \Vestminster, Sanla Ana , and Anahetm- Fullerton . One of them will be: promoted to chief marshal and make his office in Santa Ana. the county seat. The other ouUying offices will be retained. the position as spoli.esman for the developer, he said. The Contemporary firm lost ii.<! b i d to construct the large terraced park on the gol.f links last month after protests were filed by nearby homeowners. Contemporary appealed the com0 miSllion denial, alld the aClion had been scheduled for a city council meeting in mid.July. A contiJluance to the hearing was granted with the event set to resume tonight. While Contemporary drafts il.s new approach to the thwarted plans for the park on the land In the northeast port.Jon of the city, yet another ill-fated mob ile home park proposal by another finn is undergoing the same reshuffling. Lincoln Savinp and Loan, which had won planning commission col'!sent for a park near the Shoreclilfs Golf Course . late r lost the chanct in a hearing before the city council. Aides of the savings firm have pro- mised a new application for a modified plan. They have met with members of the council to discuss the idea and also haye Oowfl some city officials to inspect a similar modular home develop- ment in Sherman Oaks. f'ro1n Pnge J AN IMALS •.. to be banned rrom the beaches and parks. Goldberg showed a ml!ssive file of letters on dogs. He suggested that they be: banned from the beach certain hours such as 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. C.Ouocilman Edward Lorr said that licensing of dop i.!1 done because the)' cause certain problems. "not because dogs have rights ." PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (UPI) - Four U.S. Air Force jet fighter-bombers today bombarded Communist troops wilh napalm fi re bombs in a direct support missi0t1 for Cambodian soldiers battling for control of a highway junction. UPI correspondent ~enl Potter wit- nessed lhe raid on the outskirts of Skoun , 35 miles northeast of Phnom Penh, and overheard radio conversations betwee-,, an American pilot and a Cambodian field commander directing the air at· tacks. The questlon of direct American al,: support for Cambodian ground force.!! has become a matter of debate in \Vashington with some coogressmen claiming such missions are beyond lhe bounds of President Nixon's Indochina policies. U.S. headquarters in Saigon has declined to announce the raids officially. Potter said lhe raids this morning lasted 30 minutes and were !lown in two flights by four U.S. Air Force FlOO Supersabers, a relaLively slow jet which v.·as used extensively during the Korean war for support missions. Potter recorded a radio conversation behvee-,1 an American forward air control lFAC) pilot and a Cambodian officer on the ground with both men speaking 111 English. The Cambod ian pinpointed the location of Communist positio~ and the Supedsabers roared in lo drop 10 250spound b o m b s and cani!te.rs of napalm and rake the area with 20mm cannon fire. The targets v.·ere about 500 yards from the Cambodian lines, "All right, you can proceed if you 'vish nov.·." the F AC pilot radioed to the Cambodian e<1mmander. "We are gohig lo stay here for a few more minutes 1n case you need any help. There: ~·ill be: another rustic (code word for forv.·ard air control pilot ) in 20 more minutes ·· -·- &~&/eaa! for Mother or Grandmother from I to 9 GENUINE e;rthstonts cracefully set in 14 Kt. whit1 or yellow sold ••• The special remembrance from every membtrQf the family ••• from Ut.oo CON\'ENIENI TEAMS J . C. ...lJumphrie ~ Jewefer3 24 YEARS SAME LOCATION IANKAMERICARO MASTER CHARGE 1121 NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA PHONE 548-HOI ( ( --·~­. . . . . . ... .. . . .. ·,•'1'··,-..... • Lago11a Beaeh TQday's Fl•al :N. Y. Stoeb VOL. 63, NO. 186, 4 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST S, 1970 TEN CENTS Judge LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older loday denied a Cefense motion ror a mistrial in the Tate-LaBianca murder case based on President Nixon 's remarks about the guilt of Ctlarles Manson. (Related Story Page 3). Judge Older said that he was satisfied about the jurors bearing the case are "able ind willing to be fa.it mi im- Dress Code Out This School Year Students at Laguna Beach High School will spend the ~71 school year without a formal dre$ code, after District trustees Tuesday night granted an ex- tension of the "Dress Responsibility'' proposal. The measure states the "matter or dreM is best decided in the home, by the studea.t. and his parents. Those who do not accept the responsibility of their dress and cause the learning process to be disrupted may be referred to the administration by the teacher In charge." The no-dress-code proposal w a s originally approved by the board for trial during the fourth quarter of the school year this past spring, wilh the stipulation that the new program would be evaluated at the close of school. Tbe results of that evaluation were used Kl making the latest decision. The only dress ru1es that will remarn in effect at the school are those required by state law. For example, st.ate law requires that all studentl wear shoes while attending school. • The new dress measurt will be en- forced Jhroogh the high sc:hoo! student court. If a teacher finds that some form of dress is disrupUng classroom activities, the student will be turned over to the court on the first offenae. The court will dlscus.s the case with the student and decide on guidelines that will bring the dress to acceptable standards. On the second offense the dress pro- blem will be discussed in a conference bet\\-'een the student, parent, court of· ficial, and school administrator. Students committing a third offense will be referred to the administration for action. The success or failure ol the new dress measure will be m o n i t o r e d throughout the year by the high school Student Congress. Polls will be conducted by the student government sampling the feelings of students, teachers, administrators, cam· pus visitors, members of the community, and parents. A record of all cases concerning dress code enforcement also will be counted in evaluating the new program. Lenore Romney Certain Victor In Primary Test By The A1sociated Pftaa Le.oore Romney appeared a certain ;,r;inner today in her bid for the Republican U.S. Senate nomination from 1'1ichgan, one or four states holding primary elections Tuesday . Mrs. Romney 's opponent, St.ate Sc~. Robert Huber, said at midmorning that he was "preparing to coocede" vicWry to the 61-year-old wife o( Michigan'• former governor and present U.S. secretary of housing and urban develop- ment. He said he expected to send Mrs. Romney a telegram of COO· gratulaUons later today. Huber's announcement came as elec- tion returns gavt lttrs. Romney 5l per- cent of the votes cast in lhe race. With 71 percent of Michigan 's 6,044 prtcincts reported, lhe unof:ftclal count "'as ?SO,.f92 for Mrs. Romoey and 232,8&3 Cor Huber. In the other three st.ates with primaritt Tuesday, the unofflciel count &howed these results in major races: tttl1&0Urt: Sen. Stusrt Symington was a landsUde victor In bis bid for the Democratic nominaUon to his fourth t.erm I.II the Seoate. His November GOP opponent will be Atty. Gen. Jolin Dan· rorth. All 10 incumbent congressmen - nine Democrats and OM Republican - {S« ROMNEY, Pl('-I) Rejects partial" in decidJng a verdJct for the hippie leader and three young women codefendnals. "The time has come lo place this in its proper perspective," Judge Older said. The judge said it was not important whether Manson had deliberatdy invited prejudice by holding up a newspaper in front of the jury Tuesday with Uie Sleepy Art Lovet' DID MANSON PLAN TOWARD A MISTRIAL? SEE PAGE 3 headline, "Manson Guilty, Nixon Declares." "The important point is whether the members of tile jury art capable of rendering an impartial verdict io this case," he said. "That ls why I called them in here ' Cynthia Daley, 18 months, snoozes during tour of Art-a-Fair grounds in Laguna, while mother, Mrs. Philip' Daley of Bellflower watches artist William Persona at work. Art-a-Fair, one of three art festivals currently under way in Laguna , .continues through Aug. 30, at its N. Coast Highway location. Other shows 3re Festival of Arts and Saw· dust Festival. Both are holding forth in Laguna Canyon. Laguna Subversive Probe Data Secret for 2 Years If a current subV@J"Sive activity in- ve!tigatlon in Laguna Beach produces any substantive inrormation, the public apparently will not learn about it for two more years. This was the assessment Tuesday of Jud Baker. administrative assistant to Sen. Hugh Burns. Bums, who is retiring, heads the Senate Fact Finding Sub- committee on Unamerican Activities. A subrommittee investigator working for Bums ha s been in the area gathering infonnation about persons and organiui- lions in the Art Colony. The principal use of such inronnation. said Baker, is for a biennial report on subversion. One was released this week 80 artither won't be forthcoming for two years. Baker said the investigations are done because probes of the FBI or other law enforcement agencies are not made public. "The theory is that the publi<! has a right to know, that I! the basis for the bienniaJ reports,'' he s a id. "Unfortunately, a vast number of people don't take the thing seriously.'' Baker said this is to gel away from the "ci rcus" atmospbere or pubUc hear· ings. The subcommittee's purpose, he said, is to uocover facts •jconcerning lhe infiltration and organizational effor'ts of unAmerican philosophies." He said this is not necessarily corr fined to CommuMm. Occasionally, said Baekr, inr.rmation galhered by subcommittee investigators is turned over to other agencies such as the FBI. Tbe most recent report of the su~ committee maintained that the Com· munist Party has Nsed "an astounding resurgence" in U1e U.S. Mistria·l Motion yesterday one by one aod asked them whether their ability to return such a verdict bad been impaired by the in- cident. 1 am satisfied it was not." With tho jury oui of the coort.-oom, the defense begu ~ day with the motion for minbial for all the defendants on for mistrial for all the defendants on dent of tbe United States constituted "Prejudict of the most significant kind. '1 Deputy district attorney Aaron Stovitl said that M&MOn had clearly tried to establlsh judJclal ·etror. "lt's the same thing u If he tried to escape or got up and said he wanted to be given lhe death penalty and then ask for a mistrial," Stovllt said. "We're all aware that Mr. Manson is. calling tlle shots in this cue and he called them yesterday. "Whether Mr. Manaoa wants to or not it ts the Intention of the people to proceed with t.hla b'lal." After the judge's ruling the jury wa1 brought in and the three young women deftndanLs suddenly stood up and began chanting MJme aoog about PJQident Nii.- on and their guilt. Order was restored and Linda Kasa. bian, the key witness for lhe prosecution resumed ber testimony under ctOUG• ami.oation. Yippie•in a Pnt•On~ Disneyland Hotel Preparing for 'Invasion' By CHARLES H. LOOS -4 tllt O.llr Piie! ll1lf The Yippies are coming, the Yippies are coming. Right he.re to Orange County. In fact, to Disneyland, to storm the bastion of all that is . wholesome on Thursday. the anniversary of the Hiroshima A-bomb. It's a (check one ); (a) Fact. (b) Rwnor. (c) Giant Put.an. (d) Nobody Seems to Know for Sure. (e) None or These. If you picked (d) you 're as close to the real answer as the (a) Disney brass. (b) Anaheim Police Department. (c) Los Angeles Free Press, which ap.. parenUy started the whole thing In the first place. "Aug. 6, Disneyland, Yippie Internl· tional Pow Wow," proclaimed the Free Press In a recent edition. The words were arranged around a smiling picture Tax Decrease In Laguna School Budget Laguna Beach UnJfied School District trua:teel Tuesday nJght approved a $3,158,489 budget and an ti-cent tax rate decrease for tbe 1970-71 riscal year. The rate decrease was made possible through a 14 pera:nt climb in assessed valuaUon. The new budget is up $216, UIS from last year. While the vo!e for the budget wu unanimous, trustees remarked in· dividually they would liked to have seen some changes in certain areas. In other action, the board : -Granted approval for tht high school textbooks for the 1970-71 school year. Supt. William Ullom noted that a few persom did review the books, but that oo objections were raised. -Approved two summer workshops, one at Top of the World Elementary School, and one at Laguna Beach High School. The workshops will allow various teachers and school prlncipa1s to confer on school procedures before clas.ses begin this fall . -Approved a request from the Associated Student Body to send 10 elected officials to the California Associa- tion of Student C.Ounclls s u m m e r workshop al UC Santa Barbara, Aug. 26-28. The district will pay transpartation costs for the trip. Other expeME!S will be split between the participating students ind the ASB . Minuteman II Fired VANDENBURG AFB (UPI) -A com· bat crew launched a Minuteman Il lnterconinent.al Ballistic M.tssile Tuesday in an operational test down the Air Force's Western tes.t range. of Mickey Mouse holding a top hat in one hand and an automatic n ne in the olber. A story appeared on the same page under the headline "'Yippies a L Disneyland. '1 ". . .while they will now let you 1n with long hair, etc.," the. article advised, "they may oot let you in without a ticket. But as the old proverbial saylng goes, 'Tear down the wallll that dJvide us.' " A call to Free Press offices in an effort to shed more light on the gatecrashing implication produced liWe in the way of hard WormaUon. Disney brass aod Anaheim police also appear to be short on hard lnformaUon about the rumored invasion. "All we hear are rumors," they say . One unconfirmed report out of the Di.meylaod Hotel bad Ylppie leader Jerry Asks Judge•'· Aid t Rubin .of the Chicago Seven checking In for an overnight stay thls week aod then cbecldng out again without leaviq a forwarding address. Disney olficlals and police aay they are not Ignoring lhe rumors and are prepared to handle any eventuality. However. the amusement pa.rt will open Thunda:y at the usual hour on a "buslne.85 as usual" basls. Disneyland officials note wryly that they have dealt su~fully in the past with any nwnber of bomb threats (ao far, all have been phonies), uncounted grad night soirees and even a CO\lple of adult conventions they'd just 'as soon forget They figure the park's attractions will charm whatever Yipples show up. Beside!, they add, the walls that divide Disneyland from the world are 16 fe.et high. Laguna Seeking Teeth In Animal Control Laws Br RICHARD P. NALL Of tllt> Dt/IY ,,.,. Sf•lf Laguna Beach city oWclals will ask for help from lhe two local munlcipar court judges in see king means to put teeth in th eir existi~ animal control Jaws. Council discussion of dogs a:nd related animal-control problems indicated Tues- day night that this will be one of several measures tried to better control animala. Others Ukely will include: -Renewal of the contract with the Society for the PrevenUon of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA} on the understanding the SPCA will receive more money and provide more service. -Purchase by the SPCA of radi os for trucks so police can aulst anlmal control office.rs when they need help. -An increase in the $3 pound fee for strays that are picked up. -An educational program, including brochures, lo acquaint dog owners wilh pertinent Jaws. George Crosier, SPCA representative, recommended that Laguna ban dogs from the beach as do other cities such as Hermosa Beach, Manhaltan Beach and Redondo Beach. This, he said, would facilitate the pro- blem of giving citations. Crosier said if an animal control oUlcer cannot get the owner of an unleashed dog on tile beach to sign the citation unUJ police arrive, ,the dog may be back on the leash. If a dog Is taken home and the owner Is not there, he said, the court will not accept the matter without the owner's signature. Hence If thr. owner slams the door on the animal control of- fJcer, said Crosier, he has no case. Ht uid of 37 cases brought by the SPCA in Beverly Hills Wt mon.lh. not one was dismissed. "U we can wort out l good arrangement with the court," he said, "we can get lhe job done. '1 Crosier said be Is not trying lo take people to cour.t, mentioning senior citil.ens who had inadvertently let dogs escape. Mayor Richard Goldberg said the law must be applled equally to all persons. "Fine,'' Crosier said, "but let's talk to the judge." Crozier said his department now receives from the city 1478.SO mooth11 and asked that this be doubled. He estimated lilir'department is puttina: in &l man hours on animal oontrol for the city each 10 days. This includes a patrol six days a week, seven hours a day. This service is to be increased. The SPCA in June pi cked up Tl stray dogs in Laguna and In July, anotbet 73. He said many people di<in't OOtber to redeem their pets. Dr. G. R. Ekeberg, a veterinarian, sa id the SPCA answers only about 50 percent of its night calls. She said dop. run free all the time in places IUCh as Canyon Acres Drive. She said a dog attack can be lethal. She said the SPCA needs cooperatloQ and backup from p;>Uce. Sbe also •uuested the license fee be doubled to $10 for dos• (~ for spayed females) and aid 70 percent of the dogs on the beach do not have a license. She u ked why a persoo lhould pay for a dog li"'"8< H the dog ii CSee ANIMAU, Page I) orai.ge Saloons Making Comeback Crosier said the SPCA needs four or five persons willing to testlfy in court that the dog is a nuisance. He Indicated this has been difficult to accomplish. The SPCA official said stray dog com. pllintl have been dismissed In the local court one after another and called thls "a bit dlacouraging." WeatJler Now 'Cocktail Lounge' Not Only Place to Get a Drink SACRAMENTO (UPI) -J<~or ttie man who values tbe tradition of the Wiid West. lipping a cool martini in the subdued atmO!phert. of a cocktail lounge just never made it. It didn't compare lo a shot of red eye at the sawdust -Doorld comer saloon. Wei~ the saloon ii making a comeback in CaUfonlla. Gov. Ronald Reagan wu set IDdllY to &lgn at o lf)lclal certm0ny in hla ofnce a bill miking it legal ag_aln for a drinking establishment to call-itself-1 "Woon,'' ,..barroom'' Or .. bar." All three term. hive been banned from tavern signs since shortly after 111< ttpeal of ProhlbJUoo. M!iemblyrnan John T. Knox (l).Rlch· mond), Introduced tbl measure after be received. a letler from Don Bradley, who managed former Gov. Edmund G. Brown's unsuccessful 1966 re-e.JectiC>n campaign. "Wouldo't you Uke to be known as lhe man who brougl\l the JNoon back to California?" Implored Bradley. "Think or the touts that WOUid \It d r u n:k In trilMrto to .,..,.-1q1o1o11,.-•JdJJo ... the -of such a bill w111 ... rtahlly place your name amoag the Jmmortals.'' The Legislature pro.::ribed the wqrd "aaloon" becaule or publlC feellnp tllat it would recall memoriea or sJeaiy ~ Prohlbilloo IWlnging-<toor 1i1M11llll and J.9205 speakeasie.t. It calltd,to mind 111'6 a.ges of gambling, prosUluUon, gangster• and booi~gglng. When l1wm&kera in 1.93$ drew up Dr • to govern the liquor industry afte r H again became leglJ, Ibey strove to keep the business "clun." "To tho.se who are old enough to remem~r back to the. pre-~lbitio(l days,.~ saloon has a rather .definite ~." wrote S.11. Andrew R. Scllot- tty o/'-~ I •rn<Olb<°" or fho Stnole committee •• lntoxl<atlng Uquo~ tn the. ll30o. ·. ' ' "11 wu a pla~t. the prli>dpal flllrt of .which, ~utside !If the Jfquor 111<11,' wa 'Iii mahojilifDaf wtlh !be lion foot "'" and tlie cmpldon, and " oot lo be conlllled with tho modern, swnpt.uoua cock.lall lounge.a. to which :.c.::~ i•n<r,at)oll' ..... ......,. .... I ' • Woman Routs Thief at Door Tosca Bn>ndgte.st, 82, of San Clemente mar not have a phone, but aha l"'I has a holtly ..t ol vodl cords• • 1'I< elderly mldeni It iU\\ W.'CiJie Marl~ used them. wry this qiomlnf tb .rotit 8 prowltr 'who -be~t on hCr door. · The ~an told pop~ an onldentided mln pounded•on htr 'f.ront door at"J :S3 a.lll., llltft 1>eg111r"'tllfting to' the back of h<r houst. . So lhe bpened a window and bellowed. for help. 's.ver,l ·Mlfll!ban e1iled police. ·The man fled:. • Tho.. Illy, buy c!aYa of summer continue Tburld•y with low ~oud1 In the morning and filtered sunah.ine aiterward. Temperature alterations will be minimal. • =~ ,2 DAllY Pll.DT SC .. CofCPlans Airport Drive Report Against New Left Under Fire •' • J...au.pa Beach c.bamher ot Commerce • Prtsldeot Bernard Syfan said Tuesday !tus organization is progressl.ng with plans ~to send several maillJ'lp this fall to t1-) hllb ICboOI •IW!ents. uplain~ '!tht tad1cl a.Dd umaNputative tecbol· ·~ quts" ol llle New Left, By PATRICK BOYLE worklag on college campuaes throuehout ..... ~ "" stM the United States, Syfan said. A report recommending expansion of ·•:rtie information bulletins w e r e Orange County Airport drew vigorom prepared by the campus Stud i es altaclc! from homeownen and pilots at Institute, a San Diego-based educational a ~y meeting ot the Orange C!ounty research organiza.Uon. Airport Comml.s!lon. ·• "1be Chamber has been collecting ;.money for the past two monthis. We 1.J'IOW have well over $1 ,000," Syfan ex· "plalood. A 14tal of $1.SOO is .-led fOC' the wits of six mailings. 'The mailings are expected to begin The meeting, tcbeduled as a public sometime this tan after school beglru. discussion. drew a standing-room-only Sy(an said that school officials have crowd of irate cttiiem. It was the third been informed of. the planned malHngs. lime the commimon bad met to discuss "The mailings have nothing to do with tbe ParsoDJ report. the school," said Dr. Robert Reeves, The report which cost the county 'Die m.ailinp are aimed at the majority ,.. hill> ochool otudeoll who .,. ...... • _., and lean ooiglller to tbe Jelt ~ tbe riCIJl. llocl> ,mailing will aUempt ~ Upo!!e •. puticular a5P0cl of lbt -; ew Left ud bow the moverpenl is district curriculum direct.or. "Jt is not $lf0,000, recommends tripling the our program and we are in no position number of filghts at Orange County to accept or reject it. Airport in the ne:tt sevtn years, spending ••At our schools we're leaching our $1' million on terminal and runway ex- kids lo think critically and to see all pansion and budgeUng millions more the facts. Anything that will help us lo acquire or soundproof 641 homes along ~ith ,that ts fine is far as we are the rn1htpaU1. ~Show Goes On concerned." The audience waa made up chiefly ~ves speculated thiat the mailings of Tustin and Newport B ea c h will provoke discussions in some of the homeowners who live along the landing classes at the high school. and takeoff flight path. "" ~.After Burglar -:Hits Laguna l~ a brochure describing the mailings, One such homeowner was Dan Emory the institute noted that in one independent chairman ol the Airport Noise Abatemtnl research study, the mailings were found Committee of Newport Beach, who al- to shift 40 percent of the recipients tacked the report in technical grounds away from the New Left. and chaUenged anyone "to stmv that The_ 1.irst mailing ., p 0 s es "·-ir. ~Y figures are less llCCUT8te than those t all uic In the report." ra wn ty and superficiality of the 'New Left' philosophy and actions," tbe Wilb a presentation of slides showing The show went oo at the Laguna brochure at.ates, Second malling com-maps and graphs of nqtae cootoun, he *-fllybou&e Tuesday nlabt. but pares the i.cti.cs_ 'Of the New Left with charged that parts Qf' the rep:ITT "are .._.,_. frantic daJ that had" theater ~''methods 2nd obJective1 of the 'Ra-a fraud." , members scurrying to HolJywood Uonat Majority.' " He said the report reCt>mmended 3 rent replacements for an estimated Sub5equept mailings delve h:lto the load factor of 78 percent for commercial ,000 to-'1,too worth of JOund equipment reasof!' fo~ co~ege unrest, the work •l.rcralt taking ·off &t Oran&e. County Yed bJ burglara. ~t .rs belll( d<>pe by Amerlcan cor-:1reon: He alleged U:iat such. • load 1be. dlirfnc: blUgla.ry, which Jett the poratJons to help solve human problems aclor would Slow ~e rclimb-out rate w ti.at.er iotperll.ive in the IOGDd and a JO-CalledLlj'nual o{ tactics used' of tbe sircratt and ''drag the impact .. ......;, -~·-1o· ..,·~-~dlnc-. b th N area3-ree1~-•'-bay." ya> .. _. .... -..u.n,,.... _... 1 e ~ to recruit stUcltnts .-uvwq uie Ricbi.nl Dow, was ~ al tor its caules. He aaid this would 11laCe bomei a1ong :30 a.in. Tue5d.ay by 1echnical d1rect.or Dover Shores apd On Bl.lboa Island in ames Stewart. tt occurred after mid. the impact area .and they, too, would Monday. , R • Sh , h .. e lo be bought by the county or A cfdiiioil inventory , llill b .btm& apmg, ooting soundproofed. , ~ 'to Playbowe )tanager Emory also charged the report based tck seymour, but the lti1til1 Uat incl~ v· . R' Its combined nois"e expo!ure level 1!11111 iloW!d mmr -~· steno ta~ ICtim emains !CNEL) analy•~ flri • year'• average -' ; ampll&rs, a playback ,Ysteol.4 noise and not on the peat flight perlod peak er s, microphones, headpboDtS, I p · of the year, as he said a CNEL evalua- bles w electrical eonntctol'!. n ~r Condition Uon required, DetedM:s noted some. similarity to Emory said if the e'valuation bad been tbl;fl of Sl,&00 worth of IOllDd equip: A 17-ye~-old Pico R~vera ajrl who ba~d ?n the peak flight perlod; the t frotn the Laguna Beach High School , • ~LSe , f1gures would have been }ligher uditorium on the we:ekcJld of Ju1y la-19. was raped and shot alone a.lonely road !JI tbe report. . The playhouse burgllry appeared lo south of San Clemente .la.at eek re-This would cause the 65 CNEL noise ve beeft eog~ by someone mained 10 poor condition ~ay still cont.our line in the Parsons report to · · ·With the Jocalitn of the equip-unable to ·~te: crlUc.at,infonnit~n to ~~"""Dov~ ~res htead 'Of itop- t, !:said ~ invesUga~ probing tht brull.J attack --~ begmrung of lJpper ~ 'f1ie use, usually dark on Mtift by herb~ assailant. f ng more hou9f lnlo 1 .. 1pro- y ev , was the scene this week 1 Miss Susan Price, who accepted a E area, he colde~ed, a dnD rehearsal for the new Wl ride Imo> 1 Corona deJ M>r street mory aloO cbar&td that ii the .itport "Oliveri"' but <:Ml and crew member& comerns.~ dr1 en to lhe Lj:s PU 5etVJCI ... tndM, .. a lJ • day d \ett by mldn\&llt, a spok...., said. -.,by ··""-Lati:i~ll!~t 1!~~ ~ :" .r:r ::' ·~ in rence would orig ~ . J .., ·~1ay =, · & but • ~ ;.,,.,cm . ;. '.f:..~~ J!f.. · ,c . ..s, i;..;o. , nre<1 ; th•' '" ct ""= 1· •~iy." · ut addltRmal m1croph0ries 8N! otileth1t remains lodged In a critical area of P!sonser re~~n~hon ~tackt.s the s had been pun:;hased during e the girl 's neck and liurgeons have t 0 . as m e "J Jose or the ml.lllical to correct ~und Jet decided on • a time when it :ii S r~:~~~s acou~~xpe~ witJ.t Paul blems. Jt was estimated the ultimate be removed, bospit,al aides 11id. ·Ortega ,:~ a~he lm act · could reach $6 IXXl The .&irl related som · l r t pa area ' was Tecbnlclans wor~ throughout ~ ~•Y Newport aeacb police e I~ or;',~tf:; ·1~ :fda~r ~~af~ig~~~ ~p~ ~an~ identify and re..cob~ tu~ 0 wires e brief interview, but sinct! then ha~ area would extend to betw~n Lido~~ t had been cut Y e rg an: been unable to assist San Diego sherill's and Balboa Peninsula a e By curt.aln Ume. the only evidence investigators bec.1use of he dJt' Re · · f trouble visible to the audlerce '!as The only leads which r =~ce io~ve Pilo.:'"es:~:~at~~ 0 ran I e County ~Mt 0~ ~h.n~i~r;:t~~ gathered th~ far are a description of Hamilton said the ~~:O~es1~~ tor the a:Uton:~ the ~p~b·n c~ .. 1 .. ~ •• green, ~rly for generaJ aviation and should continue unshot Death . f Youth Probed Cypresr police and coroner's deputies y continued their Investigation into death of a youth who may, they d have been "fooling around" with · fiun tt\at inflicted fatal heact wounds. . Jeflrey Alan Livingston, 16, of Cypress, 'ed Tuesday ln Los Alamitos General ospltal four days after his body wos · ered by friends on the bedroom of his borne. Offkt:n aaid the youth was shoL rough the temple. A small hand gun u nearby. DAILY PILOT ...,.... .... . _.. ... .. ·--....... ,.., c:-. .. _ s.. a. ..... R•ll•rt N. w •• ; ... u.11Mn1 ...., """"iw.w J.,~ •. c.,,.1., \l'iu "'II otftl -0.-•I M~ i1r. .... , 1(, •• :1 1.•11.,- llr.et.i•• A.. M11'11hin• .......... f•I"' IUd11r4 P. Hi ll 141,1111 Or .... c-ty 1.•1..,. o ..... C.1"9 MUI: HD Wl'tf ..,. 1"111 Nt-t 14(11: :1711 Wltf .... , ....,_rll L'911M 1..0: m ,_, A- Mllltt~ '91K1'1: 11111 ..... ..,..._.. .... Cllf9lao .. : ~ ....... II c,_.,. «ul .. ~w ~uw e .... u~ -,and 1 pouible Lo be used for that purpose. ftrst name of P'rtd. . . H~ said the airport was ruMlng O\Jl . 'J'be man \'IS ~escr1bed ~ Llli!I In Of tie-down faciliUes for private .tt'crait appearance, busk; and ln his mid 20s and .~at the. Parsons report ma'de 00 or early sOs, pollee S;l!d. prov1s1on for increasing such faciliUts . F rona :Page l RO MNEY ... won renomination, Wl.th 9S percent of the state's 4,246 precincts counted, Symington rolled up 363,811 votes to a total or 44,040 ror four opponents. Dan!orth picked up 158,019 votes or 220,307 cast In a three- man race. Kansas: Atty . Gen . Kent Frizzell was a runaway winner over four opponenls for the Republican gubernatorial nomina- tion and the right to meet Incumbent Democrat Robert Doc.king in November. Docking had no primary opposition. The state's five GOP House members were all renominated. With all but about 150 of Kansas' 2.916 precincts reporting, Friu.ell had 126,132 votes to 70,869 for Rick Hannan. Three others in the race trailed far behind . ldabo: Gov. Don Samuelson won the Republlcan nomination for a second term, beaUng Dick Smith or Rexburg. Ctcll D. Andrus was nomina.led by Democrats to oppose Samuelson In November. The state's two congressmen. both Republicans, were unopposed in the primary. With 179 of the slate's 890 precincts counted, Samuelson had 47,157 votes to 32,984 for Smith . Andrus "ltd Vernon F. Ravenscrofl 28,931 to 23,193, w JI h a third ·tm1Jd1te: on the GOP slde far b<hlnd. Marilyn's Dea th Remembered HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Elaht Y"" aao today Marilyn Monroe. Jut of lhe grut movie sex 1ymbot1, died alane In htr bedroom of an OVf!tdose of iileepln& pllb. lier tomb at Westwood t.femorlal Ptrk rUIJ receives 1 fresh vise ol roses three times 1 wetk from e:s-husband Joe DIM•gio, lhe Jl all of Fame Yankee .aJu11er. · Mar ine, 21, Di.es Of Burn Inju ries Fro m Toro Crasli A young Marine corporal who was carried from the blazing wreckage of a KC 130 fueling tanker five days ago at El Toro died early today in Orange County Medical Center. Cpl . Kenneth P.felUSorf, 21 , whose base home is less than a mile from the fiery crash scene at El Toro Marine Corps Air SlaUon. died in the intensive medical care unit to which he was admitted Thursday. He leaves • widow and two chUdren. Ills skipper, Isl Lt. Roger W. Mullins, 27, of HunUngton Beach died In ·the crash. Three fellow crew members were hurt. Still on the critical list today at OCJ\.1C were : Capt, Robert Walls Jr., 21, of Tu slin, and S/Sgt. Kenneth C. Davls, 31, of S1tnta Ana, Maj. Walter Cytkewlcz, 41, of Mission Viejo, is recovering r1pldly l'rom less serious injuries. Ca r on Freewa)': Kills Doctor, 28 An Orange County P.tcdical Center phyiscian who got out of his cir to queation anotll<'r motorist after a minor traffic accident ~·as struck and kUled by another vehicle on the Garden.Grove: Frttway Jn Orange early today. Ofrlc:ers said Dr. Victor P.1anget. 23, of Garden Grove, was Involved In An incident or minor nature and pulled hia car over to the side of the freeway. He was struck 11 he walked around the vehicle. ) The drivC'r of the CM which slruck tho doctor was bol held . ' - Shore Control Nears? Senate Vote Delayed by Badham Move B11ROMAS FORTUNE .. .. Da9t Plillf Sllff SACRAMENTO -A bill putting 1,100 mlles ol California coastline under lilale planning and zoning authority was ap-. proved C!-30 1\Jesday by the Assembly. But the bill was not sent to the Senate because the leader of the opposition, Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R • Newport Beach), gave notice ht will seek a vote on reconsideraUon later this wee:t. A first vote on the bill resulted in a 31·31 deadlock: nine days ago. But opponents -an alliance of con- servationists who said the measure didn't do enough and conservatives who called it an invasion of propWy rightl - failed to duplicate last week'11trength. The erosion from the "anti" block was comprised of conservationists who decided tbe bill by Assemblyman Pete Wilson (R-San Diego) v.·as the best I.hey could get this year. Three other bills even more strongly regulative of the coastline have been either killed or pigeonholed. The city governments of Huntington Beach, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and San Clemente have supported the Wilsoo bill as being the best of the lot from their atandpolnt. Jt provides tor the le.a.st impor;ition of state authority into trad1tlonaJ city planning and zoning powers. The Wilson bill provides for more city and county government represe~ talion on regional boards governing coasUJne development than did the other bills and it limits the ddinilion of I.he coastal :z.one lo 1,000 yards inland instead of h1U 1 mile as did one bill snd ---.. __ .__,,,, _! Coastline Bill To Standal'dize Developments 1£ the coastline preservation bill beeomes law this is what it will do: -Provide tor development of statewide planning standards for coastal develop- ment. -Create five regional boards that will have authority to enforce the statewide standards by holding veto power over coastal development. -Any developer, public or private . of property for 1,000 yards inland and three miles out to sea will have to have approval of the regional board. Urban and commercial harbor areas will be exempted. -The regional board go~ning Orange County coastline will also take in the coast of [.(ls Angeles, Ventura and Santa Barbara counUes. Purpose of the legislation ls to reduce restriction of acceas to publlc beachlancls, interference with the line of sight to the ocean and unnece~ary dredglng and filling. one mile as did another. Orange Coast Assemblymen Badham and Robert Burke (R-Huntington Beach ) were amon& those who voted against the bill because they believe it interreres wllh property rights . Badbam says all prival.e proper~. i! Jn jeopardy along tlie coast and title companies have questioned whether they can insure it. He says his constilul'ncy has tradi- tionally opposed regional government and there is no assurance Orange County will be represented on a four-county regtonal board. In earlier debate. Badham said, "Increased beach access -this is for people who dirty lhe beach. You should see the beaches of Southern Calififomia Monday morning afte.r all the con- servationists of the inland come to ..• litter our beaches." Burke said as he understands the bill upper Newport Back Bay could be fil~ed with silt by a flood and local agencies not be able to dredge it out without state approval. He said, "It might be interpreted so you can't plant a lree that interfere!! with the line of sight between the high\\.'aY and the ocean ." 1 Jn arguing for his bill's pass age Tues- day. Wilson said, "There is O'llly so much coastline. It is unique. It is limited and when it is gone it is gone. Time and space are running out." Assemblyman John Stull CR-Leucadia) charged the measure was ''the imposition or a drastic new social system · on real estate. It is not a conservation bill, but rather a land immobilization bill." He said creation or the regional board! would mean the power of local govern- ment would be "tu rned over to a new, ide'alisti c-type group.'' Trailer Park Developers Seek 2nd Hearing Today Cambodians Get Help From U.S. In Na palm Drop Another continuance will be sought tonight before San Clement's city coun· cilmen in the appeal for a mobile home park which would replace the Harbor Hilla Golf Course. Reg Wood, representative of I.he Coatemporary Mobildiiome Corporation of Newport Beach, said today he would ask for the second delay In the public hearing because of the selection of a •ew legaJ representative for the firm. Rod&er Howell, a partner in the legal firm of Rutan and Tucker, will assume Consolidated Court Marshal Bill Gets Oka y Legislation authored by Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Huntlnglon Beach) to convert Orange County to a consolidated coort marshal operation, as in most large counties. has been signed into law by Gov ..,Reagan. A head marshal wilh an assistant marshal and three inspector deputies will be hired when the consolidation goes Into effect Dec. I. according to Judge Richard Hamilton, chairman of the county Munici pal Judges Association . Marshals: or the five county municipal court systems act as bailiffs, transfer prisonen, l!lerve warrants and serve subpoenas on witnesses among other duties. PreaenUy there are five head marshals for the five municipal court systems in Costa Me:1a, Laguna Ni g u e I, Westminster, Santa Ana. and Anaheim- Fullerton. One of them will be promoted lo chief marshal and make his office in Santa Ana, the county seat. The other ouUying offices will be Tetained. the position as spokesman for th e developer, he said. The Contemporary firm lost its b id to construct the large terraced park on the golf linki last month after protesis were riled by nearby homeowners. Contemporary appealed the com· mission denial .. alld the action had been scheduled for a city council mttting in mid-July. A continuance to the hearing wa s granted with the event set to resume tonight.. While Contemporary drafta its new approaCh to the thwarted plans for the park on lhe land in lh• northeast portion or the city, yet another ill-fated mobile home park proposal by another flr1n is undergoing the same reshuffling. Lincoln Savings and Loan, which had won planning commission consl'nl for a park near lhe Shorecllffs Golf Course. later lost the chance iri a hearing before the cily council. Aides of the savings firm have pro- mised a new application for a modified plan. They have met with members of the cou ncil to discuss the idea and also have flown some city officials to inspecl a similar modular home deve lop- ment in Sherman Oaks. Fron• Page 1 AN IMA LS ... to be banned from the beaches and parks. Goldberg showed a massive file of letters on dogs. He suggested that they be banned from the beach certain hours such as 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Councilman Ed\vard Lorr said lhttt licensing of dogs is done because they cause certain problems, "not because dogs have rights ... PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (UPI) - Four U.S. Air Force jet fighter-bombers today bombarded Communist troops with napalm fire bombs in a direct support mission for Cambodian soldiers battling lor control of a highway junction. UPI correspondent Kent Potter wit· nessed the raid on the outskirts ol Skoun , JS miles norlheast of Phnom Penh. and overheard radio conversalions belwe~ an American pilot and a Cambodian field commander directing the air at- tacks. The question of direct American air support for Cambodian ground forces has become a matter of debate in Washington with some ccrogressme n claiming such missions are beyond the bounds of President Nixon's Indochina policies. U.S. headquarters in Saigon has declined to annoimce the raids officially . Potter said the raids this morning lasted 30 minutes and were flown in two fJights by four U.S. Air Force F'JOO Supersabers, a relatively stow jet which was used extensively during the Korean war for su pport missions. Potter reCTJrded a radio conversation betwee11 an American forward air control IFAC~ pilol and a Cambodian officer on the ground with both men speaking in English . The Cambodian pinpointed the location of Communist positions and the Supedsabers roared in to drop Ill 25().pound bomb s and canisters of napalm and rake the area with 20mm cannon rire. The targets were about 500 yards fr om the Cambodian Jines. "All right, you can prOcecd if you \vlsh now." the r· AC pilot radioed to the Ca mbod ian command er. ··we are got11g to stay here for a few more minutes in case you need any help. There will be another rustic (code word for forward air control pilot ) in 20 more minu tes." ". $54.40 c5f1md£,zr Meaa! for Mother or Grandmother From l to 9 GENUINE Birthstones aracefully set in 14 Kt. white or yellow gold ••• The specia l remembrance from every member C>f the fam ily ••• from $29 .00 CONVENIEN1 TERMS J. C. J.lu~phrie ~ J eweler!> 24 YEARS \\ SAME LOCATION 'I., IANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE 1123 NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA PHONE 648-340 I I Laguna Hunting Citizen Ideas On City Manager Tbe Laguna Beach City ~ncil ls the final authority in seleetiOn o( a new city manager, but suggestions from interested group!. or individuals as to qualities they would like to see . in a manager will be welcome, CounCJlman Roy Holm said Tuesday. Holm and Councilman Char\lon Boyd have been named by the council lo set up initial screening proceclures in the recruitment of a replacement for City Manager James Wheaton,. ~ho retires Aug. 22 to take over a s1m1lar post in Corona. Noting Interest er.pressed in selection of 1he new manager by lhe Chamber cf Commerce and other groups, Holm * * * ACLU Asks Role In Selection Of City Manager Jn the wake of Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce discussion on helping selec- tion of a new city manager, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is lobbying along the same tack. Thomasina Gunn. ACLU are a chairman, has requested a mecling with members of lhe city manager selection committee that has the job of screening candidates. The ACLU request is in the form of a letter to Councilmen Charlton Boyd .and Roy Holm . "The purpose of this meeting is lo discuss with the selection commiUee cer4 tai• attributes and qualifications we fee l are essential in the chief administrative officer of our city," wrote Mrs. Gunn. Chamber directors on July 28 were told that the chamber has a responsibility in helping select a new city manager. Dave Phillips, chairman of the in· dustrial relations cnmmiltce, proposed a blue ribbon commiUee to determine the wishes of the people and advise the screening group. James D. Wheaton. city manager of Laguna for eight years, i.s leaving this month to become Corona ctty manager . Chambe r President, Bernard Syfan said at lhe meeting that lhe chamber could suggest particular qualities it would like to see in a city manager. The chamber is going lO set up its recommendations to the screening com. mittee formed by Holm and Boyd. Panthe1· Ne\vton Ordered Freed OAKLAND (AP) -Black Panther Par· ty leader Huey Newton was ordered freed on $50,000 bail today pending Newton's retrial on vol tin I a r Y manslaughter in the 1967 shooting death of an Oakland policeman. Alameda County Superior Court Judge Harold Hove set Sept. 25 as the date when a retrial date will be determined. While lawyers were in lhe process or posting bail, a crowd of 3~ Panther sympathizers stood outside the cou rthouse shouting, "\Ve Want Huey Now !" The judge said Newton would be retired on a voluntary manslaughter charge. as to try him again on a murder charge would e-0nstltute double jeopardy. • said, "By Jaw we (the city council) can't delegate the authority to anyone else. In the Jong run it's up to the five councilmen lo hire the manager, but it's certainly conceivable that groups or individuals could suggest altributes they would like to see in a manager. or even suggest candidates -it's wide open." He said letters with suggestions could be addressed to the counci.1. ·Describing the screening procedure, Holm said advertisements for the po6i· tion will appear in the International City Managers Association newsletter Aug. 15 and in Western Cities Magazine Aug. 18. "We expect to have a lot of responses by the first week of September," Hofm said, •·and hopefully will be able to make a selection by early October." The two councilmen will do the initial sorting of responses, placing them in two piles, one for those that don't seem to warrant a follow-µp and the other for those that seem worth investigating. ''However," liolm emphasized, "both piles will be available to all the coun· cilmen and if one sees what looks like a promising application on the 'no follow· up' pile, it will simply be moved to the other." The applications, he said, are regarded as confidential and will be available for inspection only by the councilmen and the city manager's secretary. "' "This is standard professional pro- cedure," explained Holm . a personnel evecutive himself, "to protecl applicants who may already be established in good jobs and would not want to jeopard ize their posilions by having it known that they are applying elsewhere." After initial screening, some of the more likely applicants probably will be interviewed by phone, Holm said, and an indeterminate number will be brought to Laguna Beach ror interviews with lhe council as a whole and ~·ith the retiring manager, if they wish. "It's also fairly typical," he added, ''to have a semi-social get-together with one or two leading contenders and local people from the community at large, the business community, civic organiza- tions, the educational field and so forth, to obtain their reaction." The ultimate decision Is made by a vote of the council. Unlike appointments to the Planning Commission and certain other bodies, a city manager is not appointed by the mayor and approved by the city council. The actual appointment is made by majority vote of the council. "We or course hope to rind someone who will be acceptable to everyone and will warrant a 5-0 vote,'' said Holm. "A potential manager probably wouldn't feel too secure with a 3-2 vote so we want very much to find one everyone agrees on." Laguua Vi sit Costly For H 1111 tington Mau A brief visit to Laguna Beach Tuesday left Hunl ingt.on Beach s u r f b o a r d manufacturer Robert M. Lohn $300 poorer. Lohn told polit~ he parked hi~ car in the 200 block of N Coa st I lighway shortly after noon. returned '"'O hours later to find O;ieves had broken into the vehicle, ren.oved 1wo surfboards valued at $125 each and seven stereo cartridge tapes, worth about SSO. Wtdlltlday, August S, 1970 L DAIL V PILO'!' '~ Mistrial Manson Plani> ' Judge Questions Jurors Afte~ Manson Displays Headline LOS ANGE!,ES (UPI) -During the noon recess of lhe Sharon Tate murder trial Tuesday, defense lawyer Paul Fitigerald was asked if it was likely Charles f.fanson tll.mselr might try lo cause a mistrial by atlouting lo the jury that President Nlxon considered him guilty. "H.e might very well," ;'!ttgerald replied. "Manson might do anything," During pretrial hearings, Manson was noted for his outbursts, and earlier Tues-- day he had addressed the court, asking to defend himself. Prosecution lawyer-1 have, complained Manson's remarks to his lawyers sometimes can be overheard by jurors. When the jurors filed in for the af- ternoon session, another defense ak torney, Daye Shinn, wr.s sittiri& at the counsel table, thumbing! through the sports section of the Los Angeles Times. He rose lo join other lawyers in a bench conference, leaving the newspaper spread out on the table. tt1anson leaned over. picked up the ne"·spaper. and folded it so that the headline on the front page, which read. '·Manson Guilty, Nixon Declares," wa.s on top. Slowly he turned the newspaper around. so it was upside down to his eyes, then lifted it up, and held it in front of a pile of books, displaying it to the jury, A woman juror In the front row ga:gped. Deputy District Attorney Aaron Stovitz, standing at the bench, was listening to the attQmeys confereoce with his head t'OCked and his back to the bench. lie saw the newspaper in Manson's hand. "Your honor!" he shouted. A bailiff, William C. Murrey, jumped forward and grabbed the newspaper from the tiny defendant's hands . Manson smirked. stroked his beard, and looked over at his three lema1e codefendants, who giggled. The state's star witness, Linda Kasa- bian, who was· waiting to resume her testimony, turned to her lawyer. "Did you see what Cha rlie did?" she asked. After a hurried conference with the lawyers, Superior Court Judge Charles 11 Older called a rece.ss and sent the jurors to the jury room. Then, one by one. he called them in and asked if they had observed the incident. Most of them said they had been able to read lhe headline, but all said they \11ould not be inOuenced by il. One alternate juror, John Ellis, said he read the headline Man.son held, "But it didn't matter, since I saw it yesterday on a newsstand." Ellis said be had glimpsed the newspaper while being driven back to the Ambassador Hot.el Monday evening on the sheriff's bus, despite elaborate precautions ordered by the judge to insure oo jurors saw the headlines. The bus was driven to the hotel by ll circuitous route intended lo bypass newsstands. Tuesday morning they were driven to court in a bus with the windows shaded. Older asked each of the 11 juror! and six alternates to repeat the oath lhey took when they were sworn in as jurors. promi!>ing lo consider only evidence presented in court and not lo he influenced by anything else they might see or hear. Ita ly Cabinet Picked ROME (UPl I -Premier -designate Emillo Colombo today began ~hoosing a cabinet to present to parliament as the 3200 post-Fascist ~vernment of It- aly. Colombo won approval Tuesday night from lhe four parties he hopes will collaborate in a center-left coalition with a program that can be approved by parliament. UP'IT ...... TATE MURDER DEFENDANT MANSON DISPLAYS NEWSPAPER HEADLINES TO TRIAL .JURY Judg• Lat•~ RecesHd Court to Question Jurors; Prosecution Asks If Manson Planning Ml1trlal 1/2 OF·F MEN'S REGULAR $100 SUITS I Dana Point Harbor on Move SPORT COATS, ALL WOOL, DACRON /WOOL SLACKS, FAMOUS PERMA-PRESS REG. $9-$12 5.99 Construction Ahead of Schedule at Marine Complex The \nitlal Dana llarbor contractor, who has spenl years building the major slructures of the harbor, has packed his men and cquipn1enl and gone hoinc, Harbor District spokesmen said today. The new workmen are well ahead of 8Chedule on the next phase of lhe huge marine complex. And while the new workers dig tren- ches and string electrical wire through miles of underground conduit, some unexpected bonuses to the wat.er-loving public have arisen. Bathers and 11urlers who have used Doheny State Park Beach have been saving the $1.~a-day admission lo the sands. thanks to the harbor. The hundreds of freeloadcr11 -who apparently cause little concern among stale park rangers -use the expanses of the harbor as a parking lot , then 11cramblc down the base of a jetty for the free lrlp to the good surf of Doheny beach. Another bargain -lhls one lo the yachtsman -has been avallable for months. The harbor is the only county boat launching facility (public or private) "'here a boatrr can drop his craft Into a marina and park his car and trailer for nothing . . And reaLde.nL harbor enginw' Jaclc Rain~ said tOe practice. tnvolvts an estimated 300 to 400 boatownen 1 day on weekends. The yachtsmen are braving their share of handlc11ps, however. ).1ounds or dirt crealed by the utility I \vork change by the day and cause some dust. "But lhcy don't mind ," Rains observed. In the water, hnwever, downs of boatowners new to the harbor haven't · learned the location or some underwater rocks In the navigation channels. "We hear of a lot of scraped boat bottoms and hangups on the rocks," Rains said . But no serious mishaps have occurred yet, a11d the rocks will be removed Jn e<1mlng weeks under a contract award· ed by the Army Corps of Engineers, Rains said that other than ;'installing a few light bulbs:• 11etcr Klewi! and Sons -the firm which built the superstructure or the new harbor - is finished under it.s C{)nlract with the county. And after lhe utillly and grading por· lions are completetl this summer and fall, the major work at the harbor will come from contractors hired by leasees who will build the commercial faclliUes. With all schematic drawings but one approved by • special counly screening committee, few design hurdles remain before the individual project,, begin. llarbor District spokesmen said the only fac.llily which will rema in unbuilt in the nexl year or ~ will be a boat rep.air and hauling yard. It was the only parcel which had no bidden by potcnlinl tcsaee• who Jrub- mllted expensive offers for their leases. "We've be<ln so bu~y processing the real of the plans ror the facllltlet, we haven't lhoughl of readvcrllsln1 for the boal yard," a district aide said. The plans and specifications for the Individual nlarine businesses are being scanned by a special committee which includes heads of several county agen- cies. The chairman' Is Kenneth Sampson, director of harbors, beaches and parks. Probably the longest-awaited business to be built at the harbor is the marina lt.!clf, which ulUmately will have dock space for thousands of small craft. And because of rapid completion of lhe utility phase of the harbor work, lhe marina Install ation wlll probably stnrt sooner than expected, Rains said. Workmen are expec ted to start dock lnstallatlon in the eastern wharf of the twin-basin marlna befo·re the end or the year. •·Because they don't have any dredging to do. the dock and float work should progress pretty fast," Rains said. It is projected that the first boat.. being tied to permanent berths could arrive at the harbor weeks before the 1'1ay, 1971, deadline. "By rummer, you won't even recognize this place," Rains u.ld. Even the resident tnglneer will have left by then Rains -who has bten the re~ldent engineer through four aolkl years of con~trouction at the harbor -will be out of an assignment. "It dotSn't bother me a bit, though,'' he Mkl Tuesday. "After four ye11:r1 of thil hard work, I need a rest. "And J think I'll l•kfl one," he aald. SWEATERS, FAMOUS WOOLS AND BLENDS REG .$18 $5 SPORT SHIRTS, SHORT SLEEVE PERMA-PRESS REG. $7-$8 2/$8 SWIMWEAR, FAMOUS MAKE-TRUNKS AND SETS DRESS SHIRTS, LONG SLEEVE, WHITE & COLORS DRESS SHIRTS, LONG SLEEVE, FAMOUS MAKE TIES, GREAT COLORS, GREAT SELECTION BELTS, BIG VARIETY, GIANT SAVINGS REG . $4-7.50 1.99~2.99 ANAHEIM ONLYI THURSDAY 7 P. M. TO 10 P.M. ONLY! 1 .. __ 1 ..._ Y-of Honolulu 'WOUid lilll".1111 lll.oleD car back, but h•'• mlie .-cenied about th• brief· left in it. Yates, a doctoral at the University of aaid Iii• bdefcue coo- ' a ,....... nseareh on toll· • In a pillllc P1• to th• auto .. uted only fw th• retum brier.... • • • • Th<r aav _..., -do<t •'-' IMtlQt to poopr., bt4 lllft ft - loot. Whal --to b• • ~ i11 CM T11ler, • Ttz., dtt1 park if onlu ~-old Milu Dance inride a play· grovnd structure. • TM men who work at nine pllip and paper miU. In British Coltmibia art a1king fot four JnOMhl of matemit11 Uavt 41 OM of their contract demands. Although th.t Pulp and Paper Worlur1 of Canada hM ont11 11. ltoM.ful of women omong it& 5JJ00 members, the union wants WMJttmitJI leave e:z:Ceftded to the ""1l. Union official.$ 1<111 that IOMn a member ulud for timt ofl a fnD 11eor1 ago 10 ht could wdn.d tht' children while his wife ms rn. hospital having a baby, '111 compant1 r e/wed. • Dorothy Ann Schurk went to po- lice lleadquarters to claim her car. lnolead, she got a ticket for neg\i· gmt driving. Police Hid she was lhrown clear when the car hit a guanl niling-and lhen lunged over it. W-.-S,1970 _Egypt Guns, Israel Jets · . In Combat BJ Uallod Prell - ~ llllllltl'a rained anllleiy tbellJ on Israeli troop1 in the Suez Canal zone today and Israeli warplanet struck back in the '17th <.'OJlSeCUtive day of air nldl lo the area where the United stal<t 11 trying to eslal>lisb a ~- Other laraeli jets attacked tarsets lo Jordan in what were ~bed u r<prila1 nldl let Arab penllla altacb on lllraeU farm .....,.mltles. Grouod aldrmllh1nc wu reporlod aJ<q lllrael'• border wllh Lebonon.• '!'¥ combat ..., overshadowed by a deepenlnc rift In the Arab world over the U.S. plu ·1or Middle East peace. )\'aq in!plled lh<t Egypt'• unwilllqnesa to fight led It to a<cept the Amerie1n call for a cease-Ore and negotiations under U.N. ausplcts. Egypt convened a unity conference of Arab states 1n Libya today but Iraq boycotted it A Cairo communique said Egypttan artillerymen opened fire on Israeli pool· tions in the northern sector of the Suez Canal. "Ooe Israeli tank was deslroyed and It& occupanl! killed," II said . The Cairo announcement said 2S Israeli fighter-bombers swept over the anal and alla<Rd Egyptian positions In lbe northern and southern sectors. "Tbe Israeli planes ~ere met with heavy ground fire," an Egyptian 'J'rllftle Stopper An 0!'1!gon contractor building a new road has found a good way to get motorists' attention by hiring Jennifer Hummel to wield slow and stop signs. Male drivers don't seem to · mind the inconvenience any more. Fewer Than 24 States to Allow 18-year-old Vote l[IOkesm>n said. "Two ol our soldi"' WASHINGTON (AP) -'-· ••·-half were wounded in the air attacks." ....._,. «JGll In Tel Aviv, kraell bt.adquartus aald of the 41 state.I that do not allow 11 other llgbler-bomben struck In t o year olds lo volt have indicated they aort.bern Jordan at 10 a.m. to bit "ter· will comply with the lower voting qe ~-•-" I ..... in lbe new ledoral Voting Rlghta Act, ••--•eta -or an ~ lo reprisal Atty. General Jnllll N. Milcllell Hid for &U!'fllla ~ al a l:lbbuls aboul II mlleuwtb ol lbe Sea ol Galilee. ~ fnlm 1he 50 stales lo a lsraeJ said 8D Arab guenllJa WU tilled letler -oul bJ MlldieJJ last monlb In clash wilb an Israe1J Army patrol •-"""I out lh<I 20 •!ales will al~ lbls momlng lo lbe foolhilb ol Ml. _...,.. ~ Hennon 00 the Leba:oeae bcmer. Two 18 year olds to vote in all election& other guerrillas were reported killed in after Jan. 1, 1971. Two states -Georgia • clash between the Dead Sea and tile and Kentucky -now permit 11 year Sea or Galilee. olds t.o vote. Baghdad radio broadcast a series or lJl add.it.ion, between three and li.1 dtnunciations qaJnst Cairo this morning statea with the literacy or good-character aa the Jr.aqi leadership joined Algeria poll tests may defy the new law's ban In bo otting on s:uch voting requirements, Mitchell JC • meeting in Tripol4 Libya, said. 'lbat provision of .i... law wen! of the ~ Arab "C<lllfronWlon" "~ ttates into effect June 22, the date President . Ni1on signed the bill. 'Ibe meeting ·of defense and foreign Mitchell wrote governors of the 50 mlnisten of EaPt. Jordan, Libya and states July l&, seetn .... written usurance1 lbe Sudan opeood" a!ler a t"if'<lar del11 .... •·• """' "" the Libyan (ftmler Col. Moanunar ., .... ~Y they would oomply with AJ.Kbadafi COldd. a~pt to '°'ve tbe all p:-ovisitms of the act. Mitchell said Ir~ rlll. llil -lall<d. OJlP!OJH'lale Jeial 1C1ioo would be taUn , ~ tboll wbo submitted • nepttve ~~ or failed Co respond. L 82 Di' "'Ull most lmmediale Importance Is .amoureaux, , ell suspenBlon of literacy or good characler a.ERMONT.f'ERRAl'<D, France (AP) -Wclea LamoureUJ, 82. who was finance minister wbeo France fell to the Germans tD 1940 died today after a heart attack at his lone in the village of Creuzier-le-Vieux. tests In the 14 states which have that requirement. Eight of the states - California, Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, New York, Oregon and Washington -have agreed to suspehd the literacy tests, Mitchell said. RFK Jr. Nabbed Shriver' s Son Also Held in Drug Raid HYANNIS PORT, Maa. (UPI) - Robert F. Kennedy, lf, IOll of the late New York eenator, and R. Sargent Shriver Ill, 17, son of the former am- bassador to France, were arrested Tues· day night in drug raids, it was disclosed today. The two boys were among 17 persons seized in raids by local police in the llyannis Port area, according t o authoritative sources. The charges 1n· volved marijuana, the aources said. Tbe raids were rtqed at several spot. in this Cape Cod resort community. Authorities said the youlhl who are not juvenile would be arraigned today in di.strict court. The juveniles art to appear Thursday in the juvenile session of the same court. Under state law, juvenile court pr~ ceedings are privileged. MassachusetU Jaw states that persons under 18 are f.'Onsidered to be juveniles. Young Kennedy is the second oldest son of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (0.N.Y.), who was assassinated In June, 1968 while campaigning for the presidency. Stiriver ls the son of R. Sargent Shriver, who resigned e.arlier this year as U.S. ambassador to France and is campaigning around the country in sup- port of Democratic candldales seeking election. Celia's Wake Leaves Rain Southwest Slwwers Follow Swrm; Sunn.y Elsewhere c-t.1 (].S. Sum .. •rlf 'J'emperat11ra Albullll-tf'lll11e Mdlor1ee "'""'' 8•k•rt*'-kl 8li.m1rdl; .. ,~ '""" Clllc"o Clnc:IMtll c1 ..... i.no:1 o. ...... , Dttrolt £11...._1 ForfWOffl'I Frnno ---HOMlul~ HovtlOll IClnMI Cf!y l.11 Vftt• "'-" Mltrnl kK11. "'""" ,,.., .... .. . " n .... .. " " .. u .. M .. l l J1 .... .... " d .... .. " " d .... .... .... 101 ,.. 11 ,, " .. " .. Mart llfl~ _,.,.., U1N w,.. Mflt .. !ht N llol! llMI ...,...,.,, 111111• •nl _,,_ ,_.,, Ttiu~ .......,.. Ill ~lllflill l l'NI. Ml!wdM ,,.,,.,,..PDll1 NllW Orl111U HllW Yoiit ....... Om1/\1 " " ... ti ,. I.iii. wlrldl ....... ... """"'*-'*"l '*"""" ~ ... 11 _,.,. Ill •It-tDdlJ ... TIWnolly, Hlltl -~. CMti.i ,.,,,....,..,,.. ,.,_ ,_ .a 11 , .. t!NM ,.,..,,.,,.._ ,_ '""' ., .... w., .. , ......... ... 81111, Meo11. Tlda W•l*UOAY '~ hlttl .......... 111•1.M. ~.• hoMI low . .. .••.. •;G •·"'• t.I TttUllDliY f\fft 1111111 , ........... lltMt.ft'I. ~.J '"'' ................. Jilfl .11'1, •• , a-If llltlli .. .. .. • . .. ll:IO .,11'1. • t ..._ ,.. ............ •:u,...,, '·' ~ ·•-•:111.111 ..... 71 .. ,.M. ... IMI t:tl 1.m. ... f;U '·""' TM ,_nit If Hvrrk11W ('411 nw'l'lll!I .._,., tYW _....,.n Hew M111.• ~ ...,.,,. .....,...., Ari.,.... 1'-llf'I .... """""''ttottrl• •trtcl Wlltfnl ,. ••. K 1M H!"lt of -lhlrn H..., fM•lco •MArl-.. ~IOtllt Nlxllfl lWW.W 4«11rtel' -•• too11h r.,., c9"1nlln 1 ll'llfot" 41Mlltr lfN, lrlll"' f11Mr1I lllfldl te-r rtlltf k'flftl t111 11.11rrlc1,,.•1 c11Y11l1· !Ion, Al flftl nl,.,. P1•.on1 w1t1>U!RO Inf IM'rt 11'1111 l.oot lnlurH Iii>' l~I ....... k.llltnid .,_.,. -· -ltd l1111n 1M tDllll'lffn mldw+fl 10 fllt 141111fl. "'' .,., ,,.. All111llc CM., todew. ..,,,. ,..,,. ••• lt!I In 1t1e &w11rt1 .,.. ..,.,,., ........ PIM llo01el Plllf•lltlllll!t P'-nl~ Pllhbllr11' Portl1nd flfl! 91Utl ·-$1(rllflt"lo St. LOI.lit S.11 I.ale• Cltv $1n l'lletc1 $tn P ... nclKct ..,.,. l•rlM•• 5ttlllt ,..,_ llltl'Tn•l w-- " .. .. d ... 11 J1 ... '" n u JI " N " .. .. " .. " .... " d " .. ., " .. ., " .. H " Ill II •·· ,. -Celia Now Bain. St·orltt Nine Killed in Texas When Hurricane Hit CORPUS CHRISTI, TtL (VP[) -The "'IOlin< ol hunlcaae Cella, which at HI height devutaled ...,.. of towna from the Gull Coul to the Mulcan bonier, todaJ dumped heavy ralna and thrulened flub floodllll In far wtll Texas, 700 miles from the sea . Cella, packing windl of Ill miles an hour, churned froin the gulf ol Melllco and Clll 250 mlleo tbftllllb T<sas Mon- day, tillln& nine -demollshlng llmoat every town lo Ito path and causlJll ml!Uom ol dollars in damage. Cella turned lolo. rain -wrying as much moisture u M did wbeo .ii Ont bit llnd but -the bunl<ane winds. every building In the city or 201,141 was damaged. No electtldty. No water. Damage estimated at PIO mUlion. One lboUland Injured. Aranaas PUI -four dead. lllajOP • or minor damage to every bulldinr in town . AlmoBt no drinking watu. Bathing prohibited by law. Mathis -One dead. n·amage e.stlmatlld · al IU mtllloo. More Ulan :Ill percent. of the ,..ldenca and DO porcent of the bu.sinews damaged. In addition lo lbe nine peraon1 killed as direct result of the hurrlcane, three othen died of heart altacb lo Cori>a• Chrllll during Monday'• storm. "Hurrtcane Cella mar pnive lo be lhe most dl5astroua atorm lo . hit the Texas Glllf Clout in modern Umel,'1 Gov. Smith said in a telegram to President Nixon requesting the coast be declared a federal dlauter area. "I don't guess there's a buslnds \Ir• town left, u aald City Clerk Bil~ Joe Tennill ol Odt!m. "Just about everything w(is •olished. '1 Irene ""'w_nuams, a Corpus Christi telepbooe ~tor. said "Our home trailer eiplodea when it flral hlL We can't find anything. Not even the- refrigerator. We can 't eYen find the rtfrlgerator door -only a shtlf." Robert Wage, his wife and till .even children moved lo the coaal rec.'eqtly from Denver. "We've always waoted to Uve On the water," Mn. Wage 1aid. "But. &h1J is a llWe too much water." Rains of two inches were common throulJ>out <perlely populated well Tex· as and the El Puo Weather Bureau issued Oasb flood waminp for tbe bi& bend country of Teu1. 4 of Sexlµplets Succumb Stream.J were running al flood Wiges and aeve.ral road& were uodet water, but there were no injuries or uteMive damage. Along the coast and lo Corpus ChriaU, however, there wu tUcb destruction that Gov. Praloa Smith called Cella "the most dlaa8lrous tlonn to hit the Texas Gulf Coast la modern Times." Virtullly every com:nunity in the path of the storm when it wu at ita peak was demolished. The worst hit ciUel were : Corpus ChrlJU -Foor dead. Nearly ROME (UPI) -Four of the sexlupleta born three months prematurely to a prevlou11ly chlldless Italian housewife died early today within 12 hours of birth. Doctors said there was lilUe chance the two survlvini Infants would live. Mn. Antoolo Petrone, ~. gave birth lo three boy1 and three lirls, Italy'• first aenupleta, in a 35-minute apan Tuesday night and was r<porled lo good condition. She had been treated with a fertility drug after 11 childless years or marriage to a $4U.a·week laborer. One boy and one girl died thr~ hours aller birth. The death> of 'IJ1lllber l\OY and girl were announct!d it midmorning, The surviving babies were kepc. under constant watch .in oiypn-filled • in- cubators and were reported breathtng laboriously, neither of them wetpine: more tban two pounda:. ~ Petrone visited his wife In her room Utl.s momlng and beld her hand as they chatted. ()ther women patient.. in the hospital galhered aonmd her bed.ddo in a gesture ol sympathy. 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 1T11Jre interest than banks and will be 1T11Jre 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 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. 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 (helld office), Glendale, West Arcadia, Covina and Corona del Mar. Roba\D.A- Vicir Prtsidtld 4 M ... ,wl MUTUAL SAVINBI CORONA OIL MU• 2167 EM Coast Hllh"'Y ' 1 I 1 San f;lem~nte Cap.istraiio ' EDITION I l ' . • ' VOL 63, NO. 186, 4 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEl;>NESDA Y, AUGUST 5, 1970 TEN CENTS Judge . LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Suptrlor Court Judge Charles H. Older today denied a defense motion for a mistrial in the Tate-IABianca murder case based on President Nixon's remarka about lht guilt of Charle! Mamon. (Related Story Page S). Judge Older said that he was satisfied about the jurors bearing the case art "able and wlllin& to be ralr and lm- Clemente Maps Plans ? For Surplus San Clemente's city council, faced with an unerpected 1urplus of tax revenues and a philosophy to keep the clty ta:r. rate at a minimum, will map plans lot setting the levy tonight. Faced by an Aug. 31 deadline, coun- cilmen are er.peeled to order the drafting or an ordinance setting the rate for action at a meeting two weeks away. Dul the exact figure of the rate still Is uncertain, because o{ recent in- formation that.. the city 's assessed valua- tion has risen by f7 mlUioo. Revenue from that increase could mean as much as lfl(l,000 in increased income to city coffers. No indications thus far have come from councilmen on bow Ute new income might be used -or if the rate will come down. Before the announcement ol the In- er.ate in tas revenue, couneilmen had agreed lllat (heil' 1>114111 delll>erallOtll be done nuder the autlmP,ion that the last fiscal year's rate ol $1.37 per flOO ol assessed valuation would remain 1118 1ame. Only a minor decrease of a penny-ar-so had been proposed as a reduction on some land-anly levies in lilhtin& main· tence districts. Instead o! lowering the tax rate, the funds could assist in: -Augmenting a massive capital im- provements project list cplling for street construction, parks, water and light facilities or sewers. -Assisting In llfUng a rive-year-plan of street maintenance and repair from the ground. The plan, ouUined by the city stall would run into mill.jol'l3 ol dollars. -Adding to funds needed to expand lhe city's volunteer fire department to a full-time forct with a new head- quarters. -Paying the estimated $200,000 bill for a new community clubhouse. -Restoring funds in several items (If the new city budget where categories were cul during study sessions. The restoration could refill items in staff, capital outlay or supplies. One aspect of the new funds and the tu rate which councilmen bear in mind Js the earning power or • penny's addition to the levy. A cent on the tax rate raises :dighUy Jess than $5,000 in revenue. Lenore Romney Certain Victor . In Primary Test By Tiie Asaoclated Preti Lencn Romney appeared a certain winner today in her bid for the Republican U.S. Senate nomination from MichKan, one of four states holdin& primary elections Tuesday. Mrs. Romney's opponent. State Sen. Robert Huber, said at midmorninc th1t he was "preparing to concede" victory tn the 61-year-okt wife of Michl&a11'1 former governor and present U.S. teeretary of housing and urban dfvelop- ment. Re said he upected to send )fr1. Romney a telegram of con- cratulations later today. Huber's announcement came u e~ Uon returns gave Mra. Romney 51 per. cent or the votes east tn the race. With 11 percent of Michlcan's 1,044 precincts reported, lbe u.nofnctaJ count -.·as 150,4112 for Mr1. Romney and 132,113 (or Jluber. In the other three statu with prtmariel Tuesday, the unofficial count showed these resultl in major races: Ml1totlrl: Sen. Stuart Symlncton WN 1 landJJlde vtW>r in hb: bid for the Democratic nomination to his fourth t«m In the Senate. Hit November GOP opponent wtll be Atty, Gen. JOOn Dan- forth. All It Incumbent congrusmen - nine Democrat• and one Republican - tS.. ROMNEY, Pqt II Rejects partial" in deciding a verdict for . the hippie ieader and three young women codelendnals. ''The time has come to place this in !ls proper perspective..'' Judge Older said. The judge said It was not Important whether Manson had deliberately invited prejudice by holding up a newspaptr in front cl the jury Tuesday with the SleepJI JI.rt I.over DID MANSON PLAN TOWARD A MISTRIAL 1 SEE PAGE 3 headline, "Manson Guilty. N i s o n Declares." "'Mle important point i3 whether the member• of the jury are capable of rendering an impartial verdict in this case," he said. "'That is why I caUed them In here Cybt.hla Daley, 18 months, snoozes during tour of Art-a-Fair grounds jn Laguna, while mother, Mrs. Philip Da1ey Qf Bellflower watches artist William Persona at work. Art-a-Fair, one of three art fesUvals currently under way in Laguna, continues through Aug. 30, at its N. Coe.st Highway location. Other shows are Festival of Arts and Saw- dust Festival. Bot!) are holding forth in Laguna Cany<>n. Laguna Subversive Probe Data Secret for 2 Years If a current subversive activity in· vestigation in Laguna Beach produces any substantive information, the public apparently will not learn about it for two more years. This was the assessment Tuesday or Jud Baker, administrative assist.pnt to Sen. Hugh Burns. Burns. who is retiring, heads the Senate Fact Finding Sub- committee on Unamerican Activities. A subcommit~ investigator W1>rking for Burns has been in the area gathering infonnation about persons and organiza- tions in the Art Colony. The principal use of such infonnation, said .B~er, ts for a bieMial reJ>Orl on 1ubversiot\, One was released this week IO another won't be forthcoming for two ·years. Baker said the investigatlona are done because probes of the FBI or other law enforcement agencies are not made public. "The theory is that the public has a right to know, that is the basis for the bieMial reports," he s a i d • "Unfortunately, a v8.'lt number or people don't take the thing seriously." Baker uid this is to get away from the "circus" atmosphere of public hear· ings. The subcommittee's purpose, he !'laid, is to uncover facts "concerning the infiltration and organizational effortJ of unAmerican philosophies." He said this is not necessarily coo· fined to Communism. OceasioQally. said' Baekr, infonnaOqn gathered by subcommittee inveatiptora is turned over to other agencies suah as the FBI. The most recent report of the sub- committee maintained that the Com- munist Party bu ltqed "an astounding resuraence" In the U.S. Mistrial Motion : yesterday one. by one and asked them whether their ability to return such a verdict bad been impaired by the in- cident. I am aaliified it was not." With the jury out of the courtroom, the defense began the day with the motion for minlria.I for all the defendants on for misU'iJI for all the defendants on dent of the United States constituted "Prejudice of the most s.lgniftcant k1nd ." Deputy district attorney Aaron StovilJ said that Manson bad clearly tried to establish judicial erTOr. "It's lbe same thing as if he tried to escape or got up and said he wanied. to be given lhe death penalty .and then ask (or a mhtrial," Stovlti aa.ld ... We're all aware that Mr. ~1an90ll is calling the shots in thl.! case and be called them yesterday. "Whether Mr. Mmsoo wants to or oot it is the lnte.nUon ol the people to proceed with thls trial." After the judge's ru.li.D& the jury wa.s brought in and the three young women defmdants suddenly stood up and began chanting ..... '°"' about P,.sidonl Na. on and their guilt. Order wa.s restored and Linda Kasa.- bian. the key witness for the prosecution resumed her testimony under CT05Wl• aminalioo. Yippie•in a Put-On? Disneyland Hotel Preparing for 'Invasion' By CHARLES R. LOOS • ""' a.If ... , .,.,, The Ylpples are comtng, the Yippies are coming. Right here to Orange Coun ty . In fact, to Disneyland, to storm the bastion of all that is wholesome on Thursday, the •nniversary of the Riroahima A-bomb. It's a (check one.): (a) Fact. (b) Rumor. (c) Giant Put-<1n. (d) Nobody Seems to Know for Sure. (e) None of These. If yoo picked (d) you're as close to the real an.swer as the (a) Disney brass. (b) Anaheim Police Department. (c) }.(is Angeles Free Press, wllich ap- pvently started the whole thing in the flnit place. "Aug. 8, Disneyland, Yippie lnterna· tional Pow Wow," proclaimed the Free Press in a recent edition. Tbe Yi'Ords were arranpd around a amilln& picture Tax Decreqse ~. 't In La~Ulfa School Budget Lquoa Boch Uuil!Od School Dlatrid trustees TUetdaJ night approved a $3,158,4!9 budget and ao 11-cent tax rate deere.ue for the 1970-71 fiscal year. The rate decrease wa1 mada pouible through a 14 percent climb in usessed valuation. The new budcet is up '211,108 from Jut yeJir. While the vote for the budget wu unanimoul, truateu remarked in- dividually they would liked to have teen some changfjl in certain areas-. In other acUon, the board: -:Granted approval for the higll school textbooks tor the lflG..71 school year. Supt. William Ullom nOted that a few perS:Qna did review the books, but that no objeetlom were raised. -Approved two summer workshops, one at·Top of the World Elementary School, and one at Laguna Beach High &hool. The workshops will allow various teachers and achoo! prlncipala to confer on school proctdures before classes begin this fall. -Approved a request from the Associated Student Body to send IO elected officials to &he California Allocia- tion of student Cooncils s u m m e r workshop at UC Santa Bar~ara, Aug. 26-28. The district will pay transpomlion coats for lhe trip, Other expense• wi.11 be split between the participating students and the A.SB. Minuteman II Fired VANDENBURG AFB (UPI) -A com- bat crew launched 1 MJnuteinan ll W.rconlnenlal Balllstlc Mlalle Tue!day in an operational test down the Air Force's Wellern test range. of Mickey Moose holdiJc a top hat in one hand and an automatic rifle in the other. A story appeared on the same page under the headline "Ylpples at Disneyland." ". . .while they will now let you In with long hair, etc .. '' the article advised, "they may not let you In without a ticket. But as the old proverbial saying goes, 'Tear down the walls that divide Ui..' " A call to Frfle Press offlctS in . an effort to sbed more~ light on the gatecrashing impllcatlon produced litUe in the way of hard Information. Disney brw and Anabelm pqlice aliO appear to be short on hard infonnation about the rumored invasion. "All Y1e bear are rumors," they say. One unconfirmed report out of the Dllaeyland Hold bad Yipple leader Jerry A.1k.1 ludgea' Aid • Rubin of the Chicago seven eheckine. in for an overnight stay this week and the.n checking out again wilhout teavin& a forwarding address. Dis1:1ey officlals and police say they are oot i1noring the rwnors and an prepared to handle any eventuality. Ho't\o·ever, the amusement park will open Thursday at the usual hour on a "buslness as usual" basis. Disneyland olficiats oote wryly that they have dealt succearuUy in the pa!t with any number of bomb threat! (90 far, all have been phonies). uncounted grad {ligbl soirees and_even a couple of adult cooventions they 'd just u soon forget. They figure the park's attractions wm charm whatever Yippies sbow up. Besides, they add, the walls that divide Disneyland from the world are. 16 feet higb. Laguna Seeking Teeth fu Animal Control Laws By RICHARD P. NALL or tll• o.11r ~"' ,,.., Lafllna Beach city officials will aak for help from the two local munjcipal court judges in seeking means to put teeth in their existing animal eontroJ laws . Council discussion of dogs and related animal-control problems indicated Tues- day night that this will be one of several measurt.!I tried to better control animals. Others likely will include : -Renewal of the contract with the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) on the understanding the SPCA will receive more money and provide more service. -Purchase by the SPCA of radios for trucks so police can assist animal control officers when they need he\p, -An increase In the $3 pound fee ror strays that are picked up. -An educational program, including brochures, to acquaint dog owners with pe rtinent laws. George Crosier, SPCA representative, recommended that Laguna ban dogs from the beach as do other cities such as Hermosa Beach, ManhaUan Bcactr and Redondo Beach. This, he said, would facilitat~ the pro- blem of givtng citations. Crosier sai(i if an animal control officer cannot get the owner of an unleashed dog on the beach to sign the citation until police arrive, the dog may be back on the leash. If a dog Is taken home and the OWller Is not there, he said, the court will not accept the matter without the owner's signature, Hence if the owner slams the door on the animal control of· flcer, said Crosier, he has no case .. He said or 31 cases brought by the SPCA In Beverly Hills last month, not one was dismissed. "U we can W«"k out a cood arrangement wllb the court," be said, "we can 1et the job done ." Crosier said he is not trying to take people to court, mentioning senior citizena who had inadvertently let doas escape. Mayor Richard Goldberg said the law must be applied equally to all persons. ''Fine,'' Crosier said, "but· let's talk to the judae." Croz.Jer said hLt department now receives rrom the city $418.50 month1J and asked that this be doubled. He estimated his department b pu,ttinf ln 80 man hours on animal control far the city each 10 days. This includes a patrol six days a week, seven hours a day. Thia service is to be increased. The SPCA 1n June pict.ed up T1 stray dogs in Laguna and in July, another 73. He aaid many people didn't bother io redeem their pets. Dr. G. R. Ekeberg, a vettrinari.an, said the SPCA answers only about $0 percent of its nighl calls. She uld dop run free all the time in places 1ucb as Canyon Acres Drive. She said a dog attack can be lethal. She aaid the SPCA needs cooperatioa and backup from poll~. She also suggested the Uoense fee. be doubled to 110 for ...., (IS !or spayed females ) and said 70 pertenl of the dogs on the beach do no\ flave a license. She aslied why a per~ ahould pay for a do& n.,.... lf the dee if (Ste ANIMALS, Pap I) Saloons Making Comeback • Crosier said the SPCA needs four or flwe persona willlng to tesilfy in court that the dog l.!I a nuisance. !re indicated this has been difficult to accomplish. The SPCA official said stray dog com· plaints have been dismissed in the local court one after another and caUed lhi1 "a bit d:isetura9ln1." • We•dler Now 'Cocktail Lounge' Not Only Pl.ace to ~et a Dr:ink SACRAMENTO (UPI) -FOi' Ille man who values the t.radltton of the Wlld Wl!lt, sipping a cool martini in the aubdued abnosphert of 1 cocktail lounge just never made IL It didn't compare to a ahot of red tyt at the sawdust-floored comer saloon. Well, the saloon Is maldng a comeback, In CaJlfomia. Gov. Ronald Reagan wa5 Bet today to sign at a .special ceremony In hi• office 1 . bill maldpg it legal aga1n for a drlN;lng tltabllshment to call lt&elf a "aaloon,'' "barroom'' or "bm"." All three l91N have been banned from tavern 111111 11nce ahortly after tbe repeal of ProhlbiUon. Auemblyman John T. Knox (D-Rich- mondl, i.olroduced OJe mu&ure aft.er he received a lelW' from Don Bradley, who managed fonner Gov. Edmund G. Brown'• umucce11ful J966 re-eleetloR campaign. ''Wouldn't you like to be known as the man who brought the taloon batk to CaU!onda!" Implored ltrad)ey. "Think of the to.•ts Ulat would be d r u n k In ,lrlbute to your legielaUve !'!kills .• , the pwaae or such a bill will certainly place your name among the lmmortah." The Legislature prolCt'fbed lht WOfd "saloon" because or pubUa leellnga that it would recall memorlel of sleazy pre. Prohibition awtnglna:-doot gln-millJ and 1920s 1peakeuiel. Jt called to mind Im· ages or gambllp&, pro_stltullon, sanasten and bootlegging. When lawmakers In 1135 drew up law1 lo Sovern the liquor lqd111try alter K 11ain became' lttal, they atrove to hep the buslnep "clean," "To thole who art old enolijlh to remember ba<k to Ille p,...ProjtiblUon days, tt>e 111oon hu a rather defintte meaning,'' wrote Sen. Andrew R. Sthot-- lky of Merced, a member -or the Senate commit.tee on intoXicatinf: liquor ln lhe li30I. "It "'' • place, the pr~lpal part ol whifh, Olllllde 01 Ibo Uqoor" ltHlf, was the m100g'lny bar wilh the Iron fOOI roil lod tho OUIPidon, ond II not lo be nonluled with thll modern, aumptuoua ooell.lall loun1e11 to which the )'Otmpl l'OOrtlloo Illa become I<> CUltomed." Woman Routs Thief at DoQf Toeca Brondaeest. U, of San Clemente may not have a phone, bot lhe stllJ ha1 a hearty set oI voCal cord1. The elderly re.oldent «I 111\i W. Colle Marlpooa used IMm earl,Y th~ piorl)lns to rout 1 prowler who beat on her door. The woman lnld pollct ~· nnldenUfld man poundfdl on her fr~t doqr at, I ;3' a.m., then bfean walklnf to the back of her house. So Ille opened • wlndow Ind bellowed for help •• S.veral nel1hbora called po!lce. The mao fled. Those lazy, hazy dayi or summer continue Thursday with low clouds in • tbe, morning "*"d filtered suostilne afterward. Temperature altcrationa wllJ be minimal. INSWE TOD~ l' c~rtal mpnu/acturera Qoino snop, crackJ~. pop owr ""'"' tJon critirum. They gfwt their v(ewa, 011 ~aai J l . ... 11... 11 Cllltwflll II C.•r-. c-" CMclltlll u. • =~ 11-: '"""""' .. .... ""1 'le•• 11 ...... ·-' ll ... 111 :IHI.+ l+K ,.... 14•11 -. ... .._,, . -. ' I I ~ ' ~ '2 DAILY ,.LOT • SC 11111!.t -Stlldent• CofCPlans - Airport . Dri¥e Report Against N~w Left umie r: .. Fire :taauna llelcll Chamber of Commm:e ll<ltnt B<roerd Syfan ,.Id Tuesday Of'lanilaUon 11 progresaing wlth plaoa settd several .mallln.P this: f~ . io hllfi .,bool llUdenls. explainlllJ LtCtic!I and ~manlpulati9e t.echni- •" ct the New Left. ~••The Chamber hu been collecting ney for the past two months. We b1ve weU over $1 ,000." Syfan ex· \..ct. A l4tal of 12:soo Is needed the series of sil mailings. · !he mailings are aimed at the majority blP ICbool studenta who are ··~ l(ec:id~· .. and lean noiglber ta the left • the rigbl. Each Dllllillg will allmlpl • expose. a particular aspect of the ew Left nd .bow lhe movement ls how Goes On .. A fter Burgla1· :'H tf,s. Lagunci The --Oil al the Laguna aulfoa Playhou!e Tuesday nigbt, but alta-4 lrantic d>y lhat bad tbeo\er oiemben sciir1}'lng ta Hoilywood reot replacements for an estimated ,"'1 to l&.000 wol1!1 of aound equipneot ved !>)( bur&lan. Tbe ~ burglacy, whlcb left the thelltr b>opeiaave ;,, the lli>und ~B"'11· acoordlO( ta ..,1stant direc-Wdmd Qow, wu '~ u ::!O a.m. ~ .117 tadinleal -· . SW.art. ~It . occumd arter mid-· ~y. . . A delaDed lnventori tUJI' ·11 being ' ede. ~""'-ta Pia""""'° )llanq<r ;;,.~ tlle '!nlilai Ustindt\ded' ~ "°""" .mlUr .panel, stereo tape ;..,,1er, ·amplill<rl. a ptayba<:k system_ p e ai e I. s , microphones, headphones, 1 and electrical conoectors. : working on college campuses throughout the United Stites, Syfan iald_ ·•'lbe informatioa bulletins we re lriPared by the Campus S t u d i e s ' iu!ftut., a SIA Dleg<>l>aMd educ<Uonaf research oraanil.aiion. 1"" lll&l1lnis tr< upecled lo J>ecl• someUme this fall aft.er school begiru. Syfan said that school oflicl.als have ~ inf~ ol the planned mailinj!s. 'Ibe ma1linp have nothinc to do with the acbool," 11aid Or. Robert Benes dlltcict curriculum director. "It is noi our prqgram and , we &re .In no position to ~ or l'!ject it. ••At qut 9Cbools we're le.aching our kids to think critically and to see all the 1.aots. Aln'thJng that will help us with Uiat , ii ftne u far 'U we are concerned." ·.Reeves !peculated that the mailings wdl provoke discuss.ions in some of the classes at the b.igh school. ~-a brochure describing the maiUngs, the insUtute noted that in one independenl rele&J'd:t study, the mailings were fb<rnd to sblft to peNleDl or the recipients away from the New Left. ~ first mailing e J: poses lhe Jr- rationaJ.lty and superljciality of the 'New Left' JJl>ilosopby and acUons," the broc:huie stat.I. Second mailing CORI· -!be lacti<s ol the New I.ell with U..."ipethods ,..t ob)ocljv,. ol the 'Ra· Uona! Majority.' " Subsequent mailings delvfi into tht ~ lof coUq:e unm:t, the work t 11 being done by American cor- porations to help 'Olve human problems ~Dd • SCH:alled manual of tacUcs used ~y the New Left to recruit atudenls for tt& causes. Rap~g, Sh@Qting Victim ·Remains In Poor Condition ; DeteCtivu ooted some similarity <o ' tbdl .of $1,IMXI worth of aound equip-A 17-y~-old Pico B.ivera .n .. J wbo ent rrom the Laguna Beach Hlg)I School . -iloriwn on the weekend of July 18-19. ' waa riped and shot alone • Joaely road The Playhouse burglary appeared to south of San Clemente Ja& week re- ve been eagioeered by M>meOne mained in poor conWuM today, still with the locaUoa of the eqwp-~ble to _nlate critical infonnaUon to e t iltlllt llid. ' In -••tlo!J! bl tho/ ·~ Pbijibouse, usually dark on MM-'~ b;t;;.6~ ~1i~agnt. l brutal attack: y e~ was the sceoe Utls ~ Mia:s Suaan Price wbo accepted a a dress ~ fOr the new ca.st ride • .from ~ Coron'.. dtJ Mar atreet ''Oliver!" i>uc Cast and crflW ~ ooc:uer 'f'U ~driven to tbe .i.s.Pulgaa d left by rnldl>lg)lt, a spoUm>an ~ -by tbe 'l.atln-type suspe(t was ·~~"'""" ·~'7. qi the 4 ;~.m.,=~iiditroa . ~ . .:~~~~ ~ -~ l!y~iUa]>Jd t addJlwnll mfcrophones""' ~':ther remains lodged in a critical area of had been purchased during the ~ girl's qeck and surgeons have rJOt or the ml.Wlical to correct ~ yet decided on a time when it will Jerna. lt wu estimated the ullimate. be, removed, hospital aida said. could reach ",000. The (i.rl related some Wormation to echnicianS worked throughout the ~ay Newport Beach Police Jut Friday in identify and re.connect. dozens of wires a brief Interview, but since then has t had been cut by the burglars: been unable to .auist Sao Diego sheriff's By ~ Ume, the only. evidence investigators because of her condition. trouble vlSible to the audierce was The only leads wWch police have presence of a technician ope!ating gathered thus far are a descriptloo of makeshift ao~ miilDi panel lll the I.be ~·s car -,. a green, nearly of the auditoriwn. new Oldsmobile CuUau -and a poulble unshot Death f Youth Probed Cypress pol1ce and coroner's deputies y continued their investigation into death of a youlh who may, they d, have been .. fooling around" with gun that WUcted fatal head wounds. effrey Alan Livingston, 18, of Cypress, TUesday in Los Alamitos General pilal four daya after his body w;is overed by friends on the bedroom of hJs borne. rs uld the youth was shol rough the temple. A small hand gun nearby. DAILY PILOT --· ._ ..... C-M- " ............ ......... _ s.. er 01 1 l•b•rf H. W114 l'ru'""'tollll'"""'.,.. J,,t. I . Cu•l•y Vb ,.,N!Mnt ...ii 0.-fl .. .,....,. l~o111t1 K•t"ll 11•11 ... lh,,.,.n A. M•rphifl• .......... Uller licli•rl '· Nt tl a..111 0r ... c.u..ir £d11er Offk" • c.J8 Mnlll ~ Wedi .., ,,....,. ~ tudl: an W•t .. ._,...,......., ........ ...at!ml'-.tA-lllilAI 41., hedll 11111 kM:tl .......... IM~ •Mwflrllil0n!M9• ... flnt name or Frec:I. , . The man wu ~bed u Latin in •ppearance, )wskY and in hia: .mid 20.s or early 311a, police laid. F ront P .. e I ROMNEY •.. won renomination. WJth 95 percent of the state's 4 246 precincts counted, Symington nilled' up 363,811 votes to • total of 44,<HO for four opponents. Danforth picked up 158,019 votes of 220,307 cut in a three- man race. Kuaas: Atty. Ctn. Kent Frimll was a runaway wiMer over four oppooents ror the Republican gubernatorial nomina· lion and the right to meet incumbent Democrat Robert. Docking in November. Docting had no primary opposition The state's five GOP Houae members· were all renominated. With all but about 150 of Kansas' Z,911 precincts reportlna. Frlnell had 121,132 votes to 'lO,aGt for Rick Hannan Three others in the race trailed fa~ behind. Jd ... : Gov. Don Samuelson won the Republican nomln.UOO for a second term, beating Dick Sm!Ul of Rexburg, Cecil D. Andrus was nominated by Democrats to OPJ)Gse Samuelson Jn November. 1be state's two congressmen, both Republlcan.s, Wtre unoppo.sed in the primary. With In ol the stat.'1 890 proctncts counted, Samuelton had 47,157 votes 10 3219M fDt S m I t h , Andrus Jed Vernon F. RIVen:IC!'Oft 211,'31 to U,193, w It b a · third and.ldJte cin the GOP alde far bthlnd. Marilyn's Dea th Remembered HO!.CYwooo (UPI) -Ellf>t )'<•rs •r• loday Mui(Jlo Monroe, lut of the areal movie 111 1ymbola, died a lane In htr bedroom 9' .. overdoce ol afeeptnc pl111. ' Jler tomb it.Westwood Memorial P•rk stlll receives a freah vase ot rosea three llmts a week from et·husband Joe DIMaulo. lht Hall ol .Fama YlllM< 1luger. By PATRICK BOYLE " ... 'OlllY ...... ...., A report recom.mendJng expansion of Orange County Airport drew viJ(lt'Ous attacks from homeowners and pilots at a Tueadiy meetlJI& of the Orange County Airport Com-. . -me.ting .. scbeduled .. • publU: dlSCUSSlon. drew a standing·room-only crowd ol irate citizens. It wu the third time the eomn;tlssion bad met to discuss the ParlOns 'report. The report which cost the county lt40,000, reeommends tripling t h e number of flights at Oran1e County /Jrport in the next seven years, IPf:nding $11 ~Won OD tennhtal and runway f:I• PIJWOb aod budgeting: millions more lt acquire or IOUndproof Ml hOmes 1long th• nlghtpath. 'Ibe auctieace wu made up chiefly of Tustin and Newport B ea c h homeowners wbO live along the landing and takeoff flight path. O?' such homeowner was Dan Emory . chairman ol the Airport Noise Abatement Committee of Newport Beach, who at- tacked the report in technical grounds and ~hallenged anyone "to show that !11Y figures are Jess 3CCUrate than those 1n the report." With a preseatation of slldet abowfng maps and graphs of noi.le cantours, he charged that parts of tht report "are a fraud ." He said the report recommended 1 load factor of 78 percent tor commercial al.rcraft taking off at Orange Qxmty Airport,_ He aJleged that, such 1 load fa~tor WO~ sJ~ the, -climb-out rate or the aJrcraa 11!'4 "drai the impact area '.200 feet down the b,y." He aaid this would.J>Jac;e homes ,..a.looc ~er Sbor~ and OD Balboa laland in the impact area and they, too, wou.ld have to be· bought by tbe county or SOU~dproofed. · _ Errio.~1 abo charaed the report based lls combined no~ HJ)Ofure , level <CNEL) analysis OQ a )'ear'• averaee no13e and not on the peak flight. period "! the year, as be said i CNEL evalua-tion required. Emory said if thte ~valuation had been based on the peat fl/ght period, the ~ise figures would ha'{e. beeo hiaher in the report. ' This would cause the 6$ CNEL noise contour line in the PllJ'IOns report lo e~ ta Dover-.,~· If ·top. "* lbe beglrutlng of per • ~;Milling more hou into~ po8ea fn'i&iact area, he co ed Emory a1Jo dlarg..t that if u.; ~lrport service wu tripled ·to f;1 tligbta • day fie effect on &peech Jnter!erenoe would ~= ~"\..~• r~· .~ .. ~ ... rid Another presentation attackinl the Parsons report was made bf. Joae Ortega, an acoustical expert with PauJ S. Venekiasen and Associates. Ortega said the impact area was gr~a~r than. implied in the report and said ii the fhght.s are tripled, the Impact area would e1tend to between Lido Isle and Balboa Peninsula . Reptesentin~ ~ 0 r a n g e C.OUnty PUot.s Association, President J a y Hamiltoo said the m,,ort was designed for general aviation and should continue lo be used ror that purpose, He said the airport was running out of lie-down facilities for private llrcraft and .that lbe Parsons report made no provision for increasing such facilities . Marin e, 21 , Di.es Of Burn lnjur i.e s Fro1n Toro Crash A young Marine corporal who was carried from the blazing wrecklie of a KC 130 fueling tanker five days ago at El Toro died early today in Orange County Medical Center. Cpl. Kenneth Metutorf, 21 , whose base home is less than a mile from the fiery crash scene at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, died in the inteMtve medical care unil to which he was admitted Thursday, He leaves a widow a11d two children. lfu skipper, l!t Lt. Roger W. MuJlins, 27, of Huntington Beach died in ·tt\e cralih. Three fellow crew members were hurt. Still on the critical list I.Oday at OCMC were : Capt. Robert Walls Jr., 28, or TusUn, and S/Sgt. Kenneth C. Davis, 31 , of Senta Ana. Maj. Walter CytkewJcz, 41 , of Mission Viejo, ta recovering rapidly from less serious injuries. Ca r on Freeway· Kills Doc tor, 28 .\n Orange County Medical Ctn~r phyiscl.an who got out or hi!! cir to question 1notbtr motorist after 1 mlrlor trafrlc at'cideot Wll tltuck llnd tilled by another vebk:lt on the Garden Grove Freeway in Orange early lod•Y- O!flcers old Dr. Victor Mangel, 28, of Garden Grove, was Involved In , an lncldenl of minor nature and pulled his car over to the tide of the freew11. lie w11 struck as he walk'ed areund the vehlcle. The drtver or lbe car the doctor was not held. whlcb 1lnicll • Shore Control Nears? • ·Senate Vote Delayed by Badham Mov e llJ 'l'K<IMlS l'ORTUNE .... ...,,..,,eff SACRAMENTO -A bllt putting 1,100 miles of Call£Gl'Qia coastline under state planning and zoning authorily was at>" proved 42-30 Tuesday by the Assembly, But the bill was not sent to the Senate because \be leader of the opposition, Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R - Newport Beach), gave notice he will seek a vote on reconsideraUon later this week. A first vote on the bill resulled in a 31·31 deadJock nine days ago. But opponents -an aUiaoct of con.- servationists who said the measure didn't do enough and conservativ~ who called it an invulon of property rights - failed lo duplicate last week's strength. 'I'be erosion from the "anti" block was comprised of conservalionists who decided the bill by Assemblyman Pete Wiboo (J\.San Diego) wu the beat they could get th1.& year. Three ot.ber bills even more strongly regulative of the coasUine have been either killed or pigeonholed. The city governments of Huntington Beach, Newport Beach, Laguna Beich and San Clemente have supported the Wilson bill as being the best of lbe lot from their standpoint. It provides· for ~he leut Imposition of stale authority into traditional city planning and zoning powers. The Wibon blli provides for more eily and munty eovemment represen- tation on regional boards governing coastlloe development than did :be other bllls and it limits the definition of the coastal zone to 1,000 yards inland instead.. of half a mile 11 did ooe bill and Coastline Bill To Standardize Developments th bill because the)' believe !t interferes • . b with property rig ts. . Badham says all private property. 1s 1 jeopardy along the coast and title c'!inpanies have questioned whether they can insure it. He says his constituency has tr1di· lionally opposed regional government ind there ill no assurance Orange County will be represented on a four-county bill regional board. In earlier debate. Badham Slid • ••tncrease:d beach acce!li -this is for people who dirty 1he beach. You should see the beaches of Southern Calififomia f\1onday morning after all the con· servationists of the inland come to -.. litter our beaches." l( the coastline preservation becomea law this is whal it will do : -Provide for development of statewide planning .standards for coastal de\'elop- menL -Create five regional boards that will have authority to enforce the statewide standards by holding veto power over coast.al development- -Any developer, public or private:. of properly for 1,000 yardJ inland and three miles out to se1 will have to have appr<1v1I of the regional board. Urban and commercial harbor areas will be exempted. -The regional board goVt'rning Orange County coastline will also Lake in the coast or Los Angeles, Ventura and Santa Barbara counties. P\n'pose: of the legislation ls to reduce re.stricUon ot access to public beachlands. interference with the line of si&ht to the ocean and unnecessary dredging and filling. one mile u did another. Orange Coast Assemblymen Badham and Robert Burke (R-Huntmiton Beach ) ~·ere among thole wbo voted against Burke said as he understands the bill upper Newport Back Bay ~ould be Ulled with silt by a flood and local agencies not be able to dredge it out without st.ate approval. He said "It might be interpreted so you can 't1 plant a tree that interferes with lhe line of sight between the highway and the ?Cea.n.," In arguing for his bill s pa~sage Tues· day, Wi!son said, "There 1s . ~ly . so much coastline. It is unique. It is hm1ted and when it is gone it is gone. Time and space are running out.'' . Assemblyman John Stull (R-.Lcuca.d~a) charged the measure v.·as "the 1mpoa1lion of a drastic new social system (ft1 real estate. It is not a conservation bill, but ralher a land immobilization bill.'' He said creation of the regional boards would mean the power o( local govern- ment would be "turned over to a new, idealistic-type group.'' T-railer Park Developers Seek 2nd Hearing Today Cambodians Get Help From U.S. In Napalm Drop Anothtr C1011tlnuance will be aouaht tonllht btfore San Clement's city coun- cilmen ln the appeal for a mobile borne park which would replace the Harbor Hills Golf Coorae. Reg Wood, representative of lhe Co11temporary Mobllehome Corporation of Newport Beacb, said today he would ask for the lfCODd delay tn the public hearlni becauoe of the selection of 1 1ew legal reprHtntaUve for the flnn. Rodger Honll, a partner in the legal firm ct Rutan and Tucker, will assume Consolidated Court Marshal Bill Gets Oka y Lf!gislation authored by Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-HuoU~gtoc Beach) to · convert Orange County to a consolidated court marshal operation, as in mosl large counties. has been signed into law by Gov. Reagan . A head marshal wit h •n assistant manihal and three inspector deputies will be hired when the consolidation goes into effect Dec. 1, according to Judge Richard Hamilton, chairman of the county Municipal Judges Association. r>.!arshals of the five county municipal court systems act as bailiffs, transfer pri&0nera, serve wa1Tants and serve subpoenas on witnesses among other duties. Presently there are five head marshals for the five municipal court systems in Costa fi.fesa, Laguna NI g u e I , Westminster, Santa Ana, and Anaheim· F'ullerllln. One or them will be promoted to chief marshal and make his office in Santa Ana, the counly seat. The other outlying offices will be retained . the posiUon as spokesman for the developer, be uld. The Contemporary firm loet IL! b i d to construct the large terraced park on the golf links laat month aft.er protests were filed by nearby homeowcers. Contemporary appealed the com- mlulon denial , ud the action had been scheduled for a city council meeting in mid-July . A contiAuance lo the hearing was granted with the event set to resume tonlgbt. While Contemporary drafts Jta new approach to the thwarted plans fdr the park on the land In the northeast portion or I the city' yet enother Ul-fated mobile home park proposal by another linn is undergoing the same reshurfling. Lincoln Savings and Loan, which had won planning commission co11sent for a park near the Shoreclilfs Golf Course, later lost the chance h1 a hearing before the city council. Aides of the savings rirm have pro- mised a new application for a modified plan. They have met with members of the council lo discuss the idea and also have flown some city officials to inspect a similar modular home devel op- ment in Sherman Oaks. Fro•n Pqe I AN IMALS ... to be banned fr om the beaches and parks. Goldberg showed a rliasslve file or lettera on doga. He suggested that they be banned from the beach certain h<J:.irs such as 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Councilman Edward Lorr said lhat licensing or dogs ia done because the.v cause certain problems, "not because dogs have rights." • PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (UPI) - Four U.S. Air Force jet fighter-bombers tOOay bombarded Communist troops with napalm fire bombs in a direct support missiCJ11 for Cambodian soldiers battling for control of a highway junction. UPI correspondent Kent Potter wit· nessed the ra id on the outskirts of Skoun, 35 miles norlheast of Phnom Penh, and overheard radio conversatioru; betwee11 an American pilot and s Cambodian lie.Id commander direcling the air al· lacks. The question of dlrecl Amuican air .support for Cambodian ground Jorce.:1 has become a maller of debate in Washington with some cCJ11gressmen claiming such missions are beyond the bounds of President Nixon '!! Indochina policies. U.S. he.adquartera in Saigon has declined to announce the raids officially. Potter said the raids this morning lasted 30 minutes and were flown in two flights by fQur U.S. Air Force Jo'HlO Supersabers, a relallvely slow jet which v.·as used extensively during the Korean war for support missions. Potter recorded a radio conversation be~·eet1 an American forward air control (FAC) pilot and a Cambodian officer on the ground with both men speaking in English. The Cambodian pinpointed· tbe location or Communist positions and the Supedsabers roared In to drop JO 254)..pound b o m b s and cani':sler!! of napalm and rake the area with 2tlmm cannon fire. The targets were about 500 yards from the Cambodian lines. "All right, you can proceed ir you wish now,'' tl1e FAC pilot radioed to the Cambodian commander. "We are goh1g to stay here for a few more minutes in case you need any help. There will be another rustic {code word for forward air control pilot) in 20 more minutes.'' ~ -- U4.40 &»~Md for Mother or Grand mo'· ~r From I to g GENUINE Birthstones 1r1c1fully set in 14 Kt. white or yellow aold ••• The speci1I ramembt11nc1 from avary membat of iht family ••• from u,.00 CONYENIENI TERMS J. C. fiumphri fl '.i J eweferj l4 YEARS SAME LOCATION IANKAMERICARD MASTER CHAR~E llll NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA PHONE $41.!40 I • ' . • • ' . • ' . • ' i j • I ' ' ' ' • • • • • ' • . . . . . • . . . ~ . .. . . • • . . . I . J ' ( . . • DAll'f PILOT ·- A11VUsl 1970 Coming: a new gasoline-non-leaded Shell of the Future . Another step in Shell's drive for clean~r air . You may have heard about some steps that Shell has previously taken to help clean up the air. In particular, Shell gasolines have long contained a detergent. If you have been driving on a Shell gasoline, this detergent has been holding down exhaust emissions remarkably well. There's also the TCP in Shell gasolines. This famous ' ingredient works to prevent sparkplug nrisfire-and misfiring can contribute to air pollution . As the next step in its drive for cleaner air, Shell will soon introduce a gasoline made without any lead at all. It will be called Shell ·ofthe Future because it is formulated for the cars of the future, starting with most of the 1971 models . Many cars now on the road will also be able to run on Shell of.the Future. Shell dealers will be a}?le to help you to determine if your car should be using; it': ,-. There are many ways to formulate gasoline without lead. ShellB blend is designed to give you good mileage, besides being good for cleaner air. . You may have notyred ·blue pumps being installed in Shell stations in_yo¢'heignborhood. Soon they will be . . . / pumping non-leaded Shell of the Future. . ~ . ,-· ~·' .. ,. •••• r. • ' . . .. ..,,__,, ·~--...:. J4 OAllY PILOT SC \Vfd~J. A~t 5. 1'170 Your Money's Worth OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List Bonds Doubly Attractive By SVL\1A PORTER The great fat'tor fa\'Oring your parchaMo ol rmm.lcip1I bonds is that interest on thtst 1.0 .U.'s is txm1pl from federal incotl\(> tax -and, U you art a resKlent ol the i:s:suing localit)', often exemp1 from state and k>cal ineomtt t.uu too. E\'t.n il you're only ln the 30 petn'Tll tal brack~. :t 'i percent t.ax.fttt" return ls equal lo • lllx.1blt rate or 10 pert'ent -and In thr 7tl perCE'r'Jl bracket, ifs thr e<jUivaletit of 1 23 34 percent r~LUrn! Thett's no doubt Iha! TK'Y,' municipal bonds y,•ill be pour- ing into thr mark~ 1n coming years for tht borroy,·1ng needs a~ enormous.. Thert's no doubt too that lhis will be.Ip place a floor under the rates you can eam and that you"ll have a widf' \•ariety of types ol bonds, of quality of bonds. of maturity dates from Yt'hich to choose. 11lis market is balloonmg. Q. WHAT ARE MUNICIPAL BONDS' A. Any obligallon Issued by a city, town or village and aloo by states. territories: U.S. possessions: and Jn addition, by housing authonlles, port autboriti6 and klcal govern- ment agenci~ providing and maintaining c o m m u n i I y SttVices ranging from schools to water'>'·orks. They are all tu-exempt and are aU called ''municipals.·· Q. WHAT SETS THE IN- TEREST RATES ON 1'tUNICJPALS? lo &\'otd risks of default. you won't (10 below their ratings of A. ( e\'tn though ob.ligations of some of oor grtalW cities are now rated BAA or BBB.) Q WHAT TYPES 0 F ~t UNJCIPAl.S ARE THERE? A. GfttttaJ obllgatfon bonds: StC\U'ed ~ tht: full (a.ith and crro1t and general unlimited taxing power or the municipal authority. Many l .O.U.'1 of big cit.its are in this category. Umiml lu er sptdaJ bax boads: backed by a limited portion of tht issuer's taxing power or payable only from Ult proceeds of a single tax Re\1enoe bond1: Stturt!d by tht> re"enue of a partiNlar municipal department or a special authorily created lu operate a self-supporting pro. Ject . The best knoy,•n ot lhcse are toll road or turnpike aurhorily bonds. llousing: authority bonds: - issued by local authorities to finance ronstruclion of low· rent housing projects and secured by the pledge of a~ nual contributioos by lbe federal governmenl Housing A s s ista~ Administration. This backing gives these bonds lop I AAA I rating. lnda.stri1I rt"Ve.nue bortd.1 : • issued by a municipality or authority but secured by the leas-.> payments made by the industrial corporation using the facilities financed by the revenue bond issue. Q. WHAT ARE THE VITAL CHARACTERISTICS OF ll-fU· NICfPALS? A. Most are ill' denomina· tions ol Sl ,000 and up although there Is some ten- dency toward $5,000 ntin1- NASO l ltsing1 for Tue1dey, August 4, 1970 ._ .. IW •l'N-.... _., ..... M ....,..._,..... t a,"" '-"LUO. Al>tew' 191 n1ums. Prkti ..... ....,... NIAii •MM.-. M¥'1 ....... _....., AOlnL.0. 1.10 ~fast art bearer bonds . Ir '""* ,.... :f~":..:·'f you hold tht bond. the •"' ""'" till •w w• ~ =· •1 1~ njl..ft • • •"'" "4 ,,,Hilt 111 presumt"""'' lS you own II. NEW VOit.iC , ..... , •II 1~ )'l ~ Plllt~ ol ~ .. ~..... , ..... $1• tt.. 10 .._.,, I.Cl , -T~ lolli,wo ' llld F111llO T ,.,, 1-'o Plll1 SWCI ,.. ~ .. lf1w Cl 1 U 4lllfl.lrtl and usually yoo II chp a '"" .... _, .. F1rr1flll 1>.o l P~•on , 1 n. llbK /. ... '"' ... ...,..u, 1.-0 • '°"' l-'(.,i l>Y "'11. Mr JI .. 1' P Pll II• t"J uOClll .... • A1111!rrt Co eoupon C\'t'ry SlX mQnlhs 1:1rw11111 "'"""'" AslO(I· ffld v 111• 12·~ Pnllf!I' so l11' /Ibo • l ... All"" I...; II · i ttlon ol SK"'lhtt fflClflll I" ... PW!• HI( 11 1'"1 lmP• 16.J 1.. Air PJ<>d .10CI ('() et'! 1nlf'rtl'sl. fronl If pa)' ng ~]...,.. Inc , ttl FJ! IDll )t -10 Pro 01111 j'6 llii T•-9 f\o'I Al< Re<! ,llO,. b k "Ill •cl ... I ''•-· Fl!G .,. I • ''• P•Oll "... J~ llHIS lt 1'\'I AJ ln(llU•lnet agency o.-your own an . ,_ our 1•e '"'"" ,, wF•11 t'-,... P,...,. Ml11 t"> 1 t1vl9!" w llO •t Al• G•\ "' r~••tlwt 1111« F llrtfl!I 11~ I '> libS f!IH ?• ?II.., eitdtt } ,.... Alf)ll;e nte .. ~iOBI a~ serial bonds. A,.. ... ..-k ftJ .. OI -FP :i... J-15 Pv~ NM , ... lt \, TV Corn .... I" Alt.f1o( ..H . . "''"""lrnf .. I~ J "°"' CM 11•-. II PUC! i NC '"' 101~ T..,....n, 17\0 I \lo All!Hnno .>t terta1n number will mature o.191 .. " ..,.ld'I ,,,,.,. ,.. ... ,,.,>11 >'• ~ PWlvor • ..., T..-111Yn .... 11• Ak1nA111 1.JO each year. will bt paid off .,.¥, tNe<> 1111•· Foi.>m 1•. •>.:. P ~",,.' p 11 '"'-''" " 2t~ l , " """''" ·ro!_ ~fllft to..tlo FO'I! G•nl JOI> JH~ Purtiw ,l, .Mio n11 A~ I l A~illnd .H and retired. Tllt range or~'" iiJ:~G.:. ~~::i" 'l f~ 1r' PB'._'.,v l~ : ... 1} /k~ ~: l"" 1ffl ~1 ~ 1.~ maturltlel may be from six ~::. :::= ":..."':: 1J 1~ ~ 1..,.1 'C111 ~1 ~ ::c." cCO:. J.. ,,.. ~ ~~ '·':d --~ .. .. ,.., I .... 0.¥ Priu. F-• to t,,',• ,""•'•• ·~.·" s·~ ··~ trnoool Cl 1111. II"' "II C:ti l.:MI ....... ,..la Yt!atS or more •• "' llOI lnc;h'°' IU '""' 0• '" 9'~ """" 0 t ~ A I 11! .• .• ~·-" d "d •t••!I ..,.rt.Ill), tdnkl II . 11 1 ... H ( S'• ~Tr~ H 4'4 J\.o A ldM I! .7Sb ""IJIU I mtilnJ )'OI.. Can C!'CI e ....,.,,~ or <-it• 5Y( 11 I~ RIMI! El 1 ... tJ rl<o .... 11 J2 AJ\e Pct ,61 "---. "'~•""' it,!rtl'I J JI'> •ttll g IO 15 rio.lr ~ ..., All tc!Pcl Pl J tu•:: dale yoo wanl your capital W El'lt •'lo t w:1 .. 11c 1 .. 1... ~"" u u Troolu :lt4'lo JU\\ All sir 1.ci b k nd •1.-.J.~-'"l c:-o ... , • LIM..,. J . ''• RK.Cq (I IN ,,.,. .,_ "" 10 .... l l'lo "I I"' sr pt .. • ac a Wl"Cll UA.Ar.l'I; a •f f'r-$ 1S1., 111~ ltL £11 ,,, ....... c ... Jl"'l ll 11!1,e , ... :Mrlo A Id.sup .• maturity that fits. (However ' ~~u t~ to ,:;,; rn~~I !: : !~ ~~: f~ If"" ~r~ u~ !:~. ~"'I n~ :i~ crlo"" mos! general obligation boods ~~·~I :"· ~~ r:i'!!' VI ~ ... n:~ :::ri" ~ ~l ~i"' J~ i~~ 1~~ ,~' .. ~~~~~.:Oto -• bl ] I .t.1t s1o • r 1e11 R.-i ' l ROHIOll ,..., • i s_, ,, ll.,.. Alm-• Es I 7G are ·~eema e on Y a .,1, ,,,.,.,, ,,, 11~ c.c ... ,,,. Ro• c~.. :Yi 1 5 Tr•L , 0 11 Atn H.,. ,1Jr tu "ty M -I h . ' Alrtorn F ,. 10\oo l~ I' • .. .... s1.... 2$ 71 0 Ptl\P lDVt 21•. At!\ Hl')I .11'" man . o ... au (l rl Y•1t1ttH 1 :,1.1 -c t•·~•h•n Ha 11·,J11•, 1•111tc1 .~,,_.,.,,.,,Hcrnso "·-• ] l I 1.1ri.n, J• •'}Gr•"" Cn I'• 7 .. lM11l1r l -'1. ''• U!ll Incl 2l 14''°' A.Alrl'Lllr .. IO uunus a SO ma ure a one •lto!1e ~ ,.. ••lllo k ni.. •J<... c~"'" £ , .... 1. v11 1.0 • ,.,.. Atn A1t11n to I .• but 1he be -d Allco l"" u• ,.,., GIA MID :r.i•, l7 Sc"°4t In '" ' Vonu· s... l•''ll Ullo Am BM.er Im ' Y Can '" eefn· .l,llq Bev ,,; l G"•n Ml 1S .. 1~'• ~(I (Dlf It, 1'~ Vlllron S'o '"° Am&at• 170 ed by call at a S'""'lfied .t.•h• EQ ~.. ••• n!I RE I&'•,,., Sci I"" , .... Wllcl• Rlt "'-If~ Am C•n 27G ,.~-'loo Gto , .. • rove Pr l'• 3 .. Scor s-11 !IV., W.O•W P I• JS.,.. A(1n ot I.JS earlier dale ) •mfllr J )I. Grwtn In I '"' Serl-i.t 11 111\ 1111 lld I~ lJ .... Am Ctm .llO .1,.., Bv•n ' n. wr11 C11 •'• •\:. Srr•D•• A 1\-t I w Re-:n.. • A Cl•lln 1.60 Q "'HAT BOUT T E lo Et L b J ~ ult lnl •'• 1• .. ~ .. rlt DI 1• ,,., W•"'P!w llfo JYt ACry-'uv 1.«I · " A H ""' e.!,. ,, '. 111:. vroan I n., Se•• C:mo S..., 6'1 WI.ti NC 13'~ U ArnC~•n 1.1$ TAX ExrM~ION' •m JO ~ I it..n., S 1' 21 nslrn ,,, IO\~ •i~ ltll:. 1'9 ~ Am Olallll 1 • c. ,-I • • A G,::," 45>,. '6 ~ a~f nln t._ 1i.. Svc G•D ''-~,., e1 11 Ill> lo.< AOIJ1T1I X'r A You Ca g t • tnnn' ,._,., Intel U 11"> >len•.-:1 F ti h Se~ UD 45 • W•bli Re I'• t -.m Out1Ve11 • n e cy -s ~,.."1ng ,. Mid/co 11>·, 11 H1.i1 CP ~~ ~~ i~"il'r"M 1,~ t ~![f~"M 1!:,Z 1Jr.: :~11p!t.~ rates of return -tax free !s~'i;~ ~~ r: =:m:o;,nlnl s•, • r.o1~s1 s 1 ... )'~ 11(11 p 1:i.. ·~,.,,.,~Ill(· l• - on low~ualily municipal ~~~19 !!!". lJ'• ==: ... 'P ~ ... ~v. ~E ~!\ ~~ ~Jh ~:~ ~~0 ;~ s1 :m~t'.2 .!i'"t. bond '"""' I , .. ru -ll )II~ Un G1 JH• 21~ l'n Pllb 7'• A 1111 Mt S. 1.r("s 1..:i ..._ I ewrd GI I 1V. w G•Co t':. 1Rlo "" Wll Alio f~ A llln r'-• B I i th" · J' -'""" .t.rdel'I 111 "'-'"" OW"' '" l<' • ·1 w £•Svc Ui.; IS'.., nOeo " l~ AmHoh .111 U n Ill sent'S, m •1\1\ ,,,,,... "' ,. n Huct. Ml , , s o.c•rv • .., •\o N ,, Pl. If'~ """ " HOM'I! 1.40 going to suggest anything se-~~0:0~ ~~~ ~·. ~:::: g:, fl ... n:; U:"t;. .. 1:~::.:; ~~' ~ 11~~ ,re : ... "'W'o:p111.,? cond class -particularl11 '•vl<t•, , .. 1'• Hurst P 1 • ' Ste" HP" '"~ tl'it rdnv E flrl 4!'11 Amrnve11 .50 1 ._,CC "' 71..., 1''• Hvllf C:o ,, ... H~ ._N.etCbt 1 . .0 sine~ .You can buy lop-rated ~~!~., s~1 ~ ~!.; ~~~;' ~~~ j., ~a= ~W .. ~~°'/10 rnuruc1pals at close to 7 p-er-91~e< 11·. U'~ 1,.,•a• s, "· •'• Am P-.11 . . 11~1 P~lnt ''• ,.,_ Incl G•• ?5" 16 ARe$0• Ue ct'nl. 11us ts whal 7 percent &•rwc:k •·· ,,_ • ..,, N..,.1 76 , n , """»•II"' 1 I . . . 81,," p l µ.,,,.«CO O l '• 6 MUTUAL Am SlllD 60 lax-ree means in vanous 1n-111urnr1 21 .. , ••• rn1•1•0 '" , • " s.m.n 110 k ~ev1 ... ~ ll , 1Jl;, '"' C11111 •'? ollo.. AmSoAfr .lG come brae els (federal, state llttdlm ''" 77,,., '"'r"" 1n ,1, J"' Am sro 1 and local income taxes in-~:~ ::: 1{"' 1%1• :~~ ~~.m 1J~~ .l~ ~~s~r .. riu:!i •ludedl · 8•1'1< H!I 11 00 1n1 Sv1 If 211i,;, UND ASv• afA16S ( , lie!• Lab JI :191~ l"I Sv of I• '" • F s A 5"""' 1.6ci 8111 P\ W 1-. ·11 tnte•t 6'• ''• AT&T wlwl In Tix A Ta.xablt a·..i" Son 31•, ,, ''°""' ~1'} ~:.. """T&T 1 . .o Bracktt Tax -Frtt Eqauls :kc"t"' HI J:; ;..:. ~u·~ 1 ,.. ~~:.' :tf of Rate of Ra!e f:i""11~' f.,; Ji:. 1:: w;, ... t;, ,•,'~ ~~t, 'i"_~ 20'' 7% 8.1'"'~ loe!Jie C . ''• Ill. J•mH F '"'' · A Zinc: " " tMZ AH 1'1• nt, Jfm1av '"' I'• Aw1w1I 0 !HlGM I.fl f.SC A~!el< -0,. 30'' ,,.. ~·· .... " 60'. 70' t 1"· 7'". 7'; 1'( 10.oo r, 11,",•-·'···,. ,,'-,,. ,!1 .• •,·.·~.oFg•, • •'~ NE W YORK IAPI \"" CoA 10 ... 11.61 •AA.JO •ni 9(1 ,_ ,.. " ,. I&•, 11 -T"" follawll'l!I -nv Cv•O 1.15 J·" Am!ac to l J .67f r IOcl 5c• . Ult, 1'.11, ICti"-' 51 SJ Sol r.•lon•, .111P1>1~ b• /lly lno:Uc J.:19 .1t AMP Inc JI lrwR Ar .. ~ I Kt .. SI ol " 1! I~ N•t!o ... r A$50Ci--lnw,,· •• ~ •• !:.." •• ~. Am-· ""' 14 00'/c lnnh It U~ 141'• 1fv1r "'Iii Ullt •tlOll o1 Stcyrlllf"> •• -· .... -l11<lrn '"" 1\~ l(tle i;.,. l'o l'1 Dl•lerj Inc ,,1 101 ""! l." ).'4 Am1tfd t . .i 17.flO', ''"""11 5 1...., llf.;, •v•m l'• 3 ... !/>f" or(M •t "wnich Mut 1s1 fts Aml91 » Ct( L••• . •11 s ... Ke .. r ' 1 , '""'e -~r·•I~ PtO<I l.11 1:l1 A.we-I 90 2334'0 f".tl WSv ?• 1•'~ eltttl ?'• l'•cou1ct l>f~e bee.I Stoel 1•.'11t.22Anch ~I (•mca 171., 13, KetlWCI I•'• 111~ l411l (bkl) or IKl<Klht Stlecl In '·ll Ancor•HSw I CannM 8 61 6) KfYf l'•O 10·, !l'-1111 At.II lnY RMh "O• 6.'2 PK P .... E. Of cour~ the general lel'el of interest rates. And after that. the credit ratinR of the issuing community - detennined by the l w o servic:e:s, Moody's and Stan· dard & Poor's. If you wish Investors & businessmen: From $5,000 to •50 ,000 to loan for any purpooe Lucky Strike Tries Peace Symbol Pack r~no., f"' 6• 61 Keufl E I'• I !l•kMI T""'"''~ V1r Py I.lo l .7G A,~ 'W 1·~ C.t""" 1"' 1'. K~•• '"' f •'•'> An.rdn 1"' I .ti' 11111 u n 1611 Aot;oO ! l .J11 C.to MICH! 1~'1 16 K•v" PC 41> 71• Om!<~lly Funds Iv¥ 191 5.'7 APL Corp (ep !.ow I 1''> ICJna In! 1 > l Crwth • 91 5.d J Hncock 6.JS 6.90 APL DI Cl.O. C•o '"'' J•~ ""' II;"'°' El • •I.. lncorn 3 d 3 It Joh'1$tn 16 t2 16.'2 ARA $Vt .. CaoTtn 1'• 1'~ Kirk C:D l • '"~'" 6 n 6 ll APOiio 1.Sl l .:M Arr111M .Hie c;,,, Ofv 9 91> K,..o Vol 11>4 1"'4 DYllf~ • Jl • U Cw1 B1 1' n lf,J.o Ald'I Dan 1 f trre llt ?'. 1 IC"1'••ff 21> l _ Alfill•1" 611 672 (.,.Bl 11.01 11.MAtbPSvc l.OI r 111r Go 11'. 19''> I.MC: 0.t ,... I'"' lv!r~ s so ' JI ~"' a. '·" IJO Ari. ... OS .21) ra.c NG ''• ""L•nce In 2• JAO 11 ,.,,., F '.I.I .3f .,. K1 1.11 1~ Aflncosr I.to C••ll "'" , ... l'I;, Le~ •n l\>t I AllU•le 171 9.)1 .... KJ 60! • Armco oH 10 (enfll• 73i,;, J• Lant Wei tlol. 7' ... Ati;M Fcl I I• i'6 Cuo Sl Un 11'. Armi~' ~ Ce~ VPS II•~ II Ur.on 7 1''> mcip • 71 5 tl fw I' I it 'oll Arm I< Pll 75 Clllrnt~ t >; l'' L&rwn M 1•'o 1~'• Am B"' JIS J09 uo l ~96 i'9 Arm ub 1.60 :"•" O I'• l.eaov lei 1111 lt\lt Am O..tn u,..y.11 .,. • J.'.11 1"10 Aro Corp .90 on California real estate of any kind, whether paid tor or not. Bankers look at your p&I or yoor age. Mv lendtlfs look only at your equity. let's discuss your needs. Norm Kahn, h- censed broker. 539-2122, NEW YORK fUPl) -Lucky Strike Filler cigarettes were advertised in New York-area newspapers Thursday with a peace symbol on the package, bul a company spokesman said ii was neither a nf'w package design nor a politi<.'al stateme11t. ··we are trying 80mf!thing I 0 Don't settle for less. Oonl settle tor anything less than the best interest rate on 90-day Thrift certificates. Invest a minimum of $3.000.00 in our 9Q..day Thrift certificates, and you 'll earn a solid 7% per annum. And Avco Thrift pays 1t. When you necc1 a Iv.in come to Avc H Thnll lirsl Tho one lhrnq we do best is help people obt<11n lhe tt11ngs lhey need thrOtt1.Jl1 w1 ~.c borrow1nq Wlla!cver you need n10111~·1 !01 co1n t! !;ilk to us We 11 Lio our best to l1•)1 p Executive ottices: 520 s. El c.mm Reel. San Mateo, CAiif. Avoo's Thrtfl Div111on t'IM .,._ ktt .......... ""°"' 1121, Md ha MWf 1-iMd 1o Pl"Y Nndl Ofl demlnd. l#oo Ttwtft .. I dl¥Won of Avco C«poratk>n-a ...S. In ..-i1. ftetdl In Mktl-- Hon 1o flnlnelll .mo..:-~ ltt •' tint, MlftPOWW D•w 1lopiow1t. Sci9no9, Ml<Adne and 1...-........ Avoo .. mot'9 lhln 55,000 P"OCJ6t 1111110 .. .._,.. IO &M.ilcl • Mtt4lf kMIOn'ow-klr JOU. AVCO. NEWPORT BEACH 2101 San Joaquin Hills Rd. ( 714) 833-3440 IHERI ARI 11 AV[[I 111;,11 OlflCES IN CAllfORNIA \loll OR CAll YOUR NEAREST OFFICE I Cnm l~ I 1•. lef> C:Ol'I 7 11 .. _...""°' E•s>tr.i· Pcl~r 790 j 11 Ar vin Ind l UI ' h ' h ":lVI I~ J~ J~ lt!Mlr G l•~I U"' C•Pll l.•i 7.01 knldib 511 :o Ai.hlclOU 1.20 O o see. w a appens, :""' u111 11"1 u , 1,....,;, &F n 1l 1"'..,. 1 •• t g 1Cn1c1i GI 1 sr , 11 ""'" ll•tw sa"d R"cha d St" t•~ · ·11; Sta.I SO"r U ~ Linc Mio 1'-I'• Invest 1 U 1· t• Grtll '16 7.M Auel OG 1.7G I I r Jnne K, aS!llS-:llrl.i s JIM 11" Loll!•w •.• ·~ SMd 6 I) . Lt. II.ell 11.33 11.f: Auel SPt 1 71) tan! to the chairman of the ~.~~.pf '~ 9; t:• ti~ 1~ 1r'"' .. ~'°'i"o,v ~~ !!! t\~'1/,. !.!i !~ :~1~~"1,!» American Tobacco Co :i111 M1<1 11•. 11" v11ch c 11•, 11•. "'"' c.rrn 5QI. sn 11t 1nv s.•• 1.1' At1cr1F.:1 1.1• . ~II" u .... 2111 ?l M~d GF! ll•• I<;) Am ·~" '0 • "' line M~r 1.0. 1.11 .. 11(£1 l'IS.11 "'No. U ., • l "1111 U B '7\IJ jl I RHv \>o Slli Am M11t 1.35 i.J Llno:i 716 JO) All Rldlll!I 1 l S IS no 8 fleW ~lty 1n Ml 1l'o i'o IA~ll~r! 6''' 11.<°1 AmN Giii 2.H J ... L0<>ml1 S•vln, AllRth PIJ.15 . k d · N .11rk M! 10•, JI omt "' I'" 144 Am Pie un.1v6ll Ct ... ct J2.f,l117 Al!Rlc11 111 J pac age es1gn. o, we are :1.~rO!' 1" 1... 1n.n M l" 1\w l.nchGr G•ouo· C:•DI• 1.i,o !·$11 AtlRth 1>1"1.111 01 k• 1·1· ] tal ~nn1 ~· I •" ""' r ' 1' • C:&plt 1 •J 1 OS Mw• 11.IO • .IO -.1110 C/\e<T> 1 n ma 111g a J>0 I IC3 S e-~h"I"" O )'o 5\o MM Mlq Io ••~ C.rwlh 161 t.!4 lut" llro 1000 10.93 All1i (°"' merit '' he sa1d The W"~d ~low (Q Jtl, IS•, t•m Gr I '• l'o tnc:-611) 1.•5 M•o111 IA 791) t .,J ATO Inc 08• • "' 1'0tll' 0 6'• 1>. B"""" 7l•• 7S>,, Fct Inv 17J 7t7 M.enl>ln •1S • . .Sol ._ur0<• Ptoa .... " ed lh d ~" '{ .. 51 ~ ... 1 LP 10•.11 Vtnl 16 ~0.00"''" FO •11 , ... Alllonu" ""' ace ap""ar m e a ~,._ , •• ,.. •••• 0 ,,, ,,, • ,,_ ¥ , , ,. ~ "'"" •• • "' AllOllo Fct 1.8i 7.,.. "-" In .olO 0 7' A.vat CP .to. belo" I•, ••ckag" a/Uno t •1 ~ cOw 7J 1• A1lOCI• 1.111 '·'f Mtu ~ Jiff Ii ... Avco pfl.Jo 11 I""' '-· .olon Str 1JV, 7• ... le >I •14 • AdRlf! !11 •.I tel /· l.tM Aver)' Pel .tO Th . boJ • ] Comet! tl'l I ~ Mf!<I Ml<1 '6 11 A•e ~OVll'11on Mftlf-.•1 . $ f.'5 Avllf'l In~ .00 (' sym , a C I r C f' Com Cir 3S1.o ~'• Mocll•n 7"• YI'' Funct ,._ '11 '·" tdd Fcl 11 4112 41 AYnei 011.50 b. led b ,. I . Corn G•• 11 .. U'• 'o\e•ld In 11'· ll F;11'd B 6ll '" lclA Mw •S. 4.tl AvOllPd l 10 1sec Ya ver1ca hnecom lal 71>.,1711 "'1c11d c1 •'• t.lil. Stock s~ s.1sMaoc1vc11103lt 11.:MA11~0.1 .llt rl • d b I d. ] 1. Com Hltll • •\• i<llP• ''• ]ll id Ca 3 tO 4 J( oody•1 11.2212.:¥ an e Y wo 1agona 1ncs, corn P•v ,., ,.._ ,.,w c.T 11 •• BllO.IOn 7 d 1• M•F Fct '·" 1.n h .. "--n d pl d b Comp .. l' • •'• Mot-> G•• 1'>.$ JJ'" Bee<on 10 1110.a1 tF G"""· •.tt 6.5' ll1tx• w ..)Cl ~ a 0 e Y peace (mD C:m S"-1'-Jn V•G "'• 10.. 8ero:i l(nl 1 "31 1 JI MuU~ G~ 10, 1( 10 311 lliftkrOllT 6S gro ps Cmp ltUI lo l •MO R>eh l Po B~r~ Gin .. I :S1' U 8mC •.JS •Sl 811! GE l f1 U • (mp lee J'• Yo AA.ad 5':• l'• ••· fll!llr Fd 500 S90 Mv min ~.Jt t ."ll•lG o!B•» "<:'-"-·' ] ] . Comr~ 1'• 31, ohw~ R 1•1 1 1s•~ !Ot\d•I~ S!O S)T'o\111Sl!n 11.t 51tHf11llG olC• .x.omeuuuy CS(' lO d me I( (Qn Roe~ 71'' 76"• Mont (~I 6' 1 I llonan SI • !7 7 11 Mttl Trot I 11 1.1' BtnQPnl 15D was a crow's foot." Sti11nelle ~:.il~~':. :.: ~~ =~ P; 1i., 1f' ::ia!"n ;·: ;,! H;/',~i' l.IJ ::n B:~~.f'~• .. ,. "'Th" · l ~"°""'' L I•'• I)'"_, i 1111 17'~ 8rNd S1 11·11 n ·Jl Mal lnv1t J .. ,,SI f11 n1t 111 MY 1 ....., · 1S IS no a new sym-'r.Of'P S ~ • 1111..-l•A llh 17'1 Bulloc~ (tlvon-N'I .i«vr Ser: ll1nii Tr 2.&<I bol. It has been around ~ince ~cl Yr :~~· u~ ~~~~~ ';;.1 .~'t" 1' ~~:::~ l: ~Ii~ i:.:: ~'.~ 1~:1 ::::~I~ 1:fr1 bibical limes",'-,,,,"•'•' •,··, •,•,_•.•c,,',',u11 10">11..., 01 • ., 1"1! iu 01.111 J '9 l.t1 fla~lc inc .to ·• ~ I 11• HllW S 915 10,QO G•w>• 1 "1 ,.11 B.ih Incl k h C•o•• Co 71 11 Miii~! E1 1'1 )'1o NV Ynl ll'l!tlJOl Pl St~ '1! 11 flUl>ln p!?.lQ As ed w al was the reason-crvtcn R .~. si... M••• LF' 1~·· 19•• Bu•M "" 6.1• • 1S •~om • n • n ll111"1>Lb .lo I beh. d th d ] CvD<M ( • I'll. NC( Incl l'• •I"' G fll ''• 7 l:J $toch 6.12 1.l• B~•lrl-b lO ng 1n ea\lertsement.oan•Lb• 1 1•11 N~rr•<1r 11 1' '""'"' 61tf'3N'!'IG•111 1.111eo111vutC!i! 50 he replied , "We have 'lot &:~~~a!! ::: :~ H~~,~~'1 r· ,~:· ~:~\l ~~~ 1:1 t·H ~:~ ~e.i 1!~1!:~ l~L~.~~ ~ theon;oed about it."' The 8:::,n<>tpi '~ •• !~•· =;;nin~.~ ,i·· .~"' c.~~n~~ F~~lOSl H::,~1" \~~~~·~: r~~~· ii: r lh d " · Oev1~ Fil •'• !" t1 Gt,O II' 1 i. 8Mdn t .111 10 It Nici> Str'I 111 t .11 B•lco Ptl .SC purpose o e a , ut1nnctte o.v Ml• '•" IS'll. H~• l b ,., 1 '~', corn \r 1 IO 1 J3 "lo~•a•t U.9' ll ff 1•10tn 1 to d I •• I -·' I OKo• '" •'• I'• N.i1 M"'IJ It If" Grw1n • 11 o.JT nolllo S.IJ 5.ll 111 H"'* ~ sa t . was o crea e prvuuc Oe••n All 11', 76'" NA1 P"I '"' 11. '"'om , 60 111 om.a~ s 10 1.n •II lnierc1111 int.crest." g:1,~:. •,o,t kl.!. ~A·'• !."'· • ... S~cl I •D I SJ 100 Fct 11JI11.66 fl""'i1 Co I .,.. v ~ ..., ,. ~"" )•, l Cl>~•e G• 6DS 101 Fd I.Oii 1.11'1 Benct/1 I 60 , 0-1 C:~nT 11\!. !•'• M•I Sllv• • 1•, c~oll Sll ~61 One Wmi 11,8'11.lt 8•Adl• pt l "Thats our business To0e1 Ill• u 11•1 En Gf l••I'' l'wna 6907S•O'N•I! 111•H.lABtnet!C:o1 60 sell cigarettes." he said. 8:~e:'f {"' ,:: ~~o:h~~'~ ir· ~~ ~~~~ ~il·~.~ 0~"f,M ~f. t·\~ g;;.::: :i!·~ . Diem c, n•, u ••I• "" l • n Saer1 '•I 1 JO lC ii< '·u '96 llt~tru"' Asked 11 lhe packaae would D•..c 111<. •' '~ N••t• e ,. JI ""'""' 1• "° u .7• •<e Fnd •SI 1.1t Bentvet 4n . " Div•• CM 1 o l'• I, Rnr 1', I'• (olonl•!· P1ul """' 6.IS •.12 g..-key Pho be redesigned If the S:l leS flf Oocul•I l'1 • Nr•, Hr. I~ I~', £.qyl<t J 67 Jl6 P~nn ~O 6,tl 6tJ ..-.-.: Coro Dow Jon lll:. >t••, Eur Oo! ) .. 1'°' F""" tn~ ''' • Mv! 1.JS J.l! llJlh S!I 181) [,UCkV rULt•rs lnCreasrd In lhf' Oo~lo DB If', 11 ~,p._ G'> II•, II'• Grwrh •IO \If PMI~ 11.l'l ll.'8 Blelhffo ~ " . D•-N'-1 t l NW N~IG l'o I'' tncom 9 CM 9 11 Plladm 1 11 1.11 ll!•ck Ok 10 New York ar!'a, S!1nnellc !la11\, ov....,,n o w lb•, NW p.,~v ,,,, l.-~ V•n• l6l J'N •1101 ~19 ... BlalrJonn •! Oudr0<1 1•'• 'I'• "luct lh< •'-JI. Col Gr1n t/6 9.76 Pine, 921 •.111 Blfu L1Vg 1 '·\Ve OOYl'r speculate .1bout El Pa!"' 10"' • 1, ~·a ,.,t •·~ '"' ornmt 1 OJ 111 Pion nl S.JJ s t:i llDck HR 16 r k -.. . . •• EIHllC ... 11• n. 1'•11 "WM t1 •..,)J oms 8ct •D• il' •on nd •SltO.•I lue!!,ell !JO uturc mer el1ng uec1s1ons £••• ~h ''• 1 nDr !>.:~~ 14•.., ti w1111 AB 1 17 111 Pian Inv 1 St t.Jt llOllbl• Brhs F•an l an to 11 O•monl ,., ,.,, Cwll~ CO I JI 1 "6 rite Fund1 llMlno ca .,g lie sa icl no pea{'f' aroups Ect~ Sv• 1•. 1. n11er rp !• • 11•1 omp "-' 1 •i 1" Grwin 11.19 11.1t llGl•C•• 15b " El P~•fl ll'• 11" O~e• MA lo •'Ii Com~t l•t 60? N Fr• Ill IJJ R1111<1 tnd 61 protc!'itl'd the advcrt1sernent. E11><1 s.,, 1·. "· O•.-C~• 1i>. 11..., com11 ect ;-,, tJ.1 N Ho• 11111•" BooO-Min ,11 Eidt• 61 I • "~' PEC h•I !1 .... 11"' (Omo Fd fll I~ Pro F11nd ] 'll 7.'7 Borde~ 1 20 El Nile 1~ l\.1P•n1t Bt •l '3~ o''"'~ f 61 J 9~ Provdnl j 77 ~.GI R0<tWlr 175 •',',,",,•, •,;,' •,,, '•'.,', •,•,•9 1~. S\io onco•ct t.u 9.11 "ur!l•n .U t.32 l!nrm1n1 10 f 1t 311 oll)ol !n t ;J 9 6) Put'lllm Funct• flo. Eo11 :i 1• F1tron1 1 , 9 Pe~cft Co 11• J • an•u on 1 '1(1 l 11 Eqvlt 6 Q7 6 61 llOl.rrn• lf>C El C ~., 1'• l'-r P~ncol I' • l'• COllll Mr 6 1• A 1• c,..,.11 11 •l \191 llrtnU.t.;, so El 1).110 ~4 · ~ Pe•~r D• ~ • ~'• 1111t G1~ 619 6 96 Grr11 I lCI '01 8rl11<1St 7 '°"' E:1 MD<lvl )I, ' p.,~ .. >I I •'• OtD ld llSlll.U 1'1<Dm 611 1 .. llrl1!Mv 0\)0 l'moS Ool 11•111'. PeultY P I S'o rn1v (•P 96710'5 '""'" 515 019 flrl! Pt! ~ En••ov c 19'n 70 , l'avtll~ M' 11 (rn WD•v •.tl ! l'I v•.i• 6 •I 1 n I' Pet 'r •• Fn••11 N:t 1 JI' PH" Ml '11 10 (•n Wbloi l.IJ 1.U vo,10 S.!J •.tl ·-W't' Cl 40 Ennl\ II • I' 1 "terlt• T 7) l• '•Vo" M !\II 51.11 R~o Teti! l 1l l 5 • ll•!YnUG 1.1) fntw111 6 ''-Pa Ena1n j'• 7'1 Otlnw•'" G•Q<>o· !"•" I It 9 11 fl""'S"~•o l'O Eon CO•D 1'4 111.o I"• 0.1.W I '" 10 [)e(a! '7110.M C> nlr~I 1?.9! 1111 flwnSno. 1.SO f •u111 D•I J•1 I Pe"n Ptf I•• 2 llfotwr 10!111 '9 RO•enlh S 10 S!1 fltun'lwlt IO Discount Stores Hike F""t lt< 6 I'' P•n•I Wt I'• I'• l)elt~ ~.It •.71 S1l•m Fct U • 4 SI BvcvEr I JQ R • fB Ce<o 1. i•.Pe!tollt 11•1)9 Dre•r! 11•411.•• Ch11>t1 11!l11tllW<klcD 10 ecr Lt,,lellt O•tvl Fcl ttJ 10 16 Sc<>111:11• F~""I.: 1!"1111 F oi &(I (I, Orttf Lv 10· q I 1,tt Int 1,... I~ 61 11 fJ BWff! tn '64 •-How8;., Sorl 11.00,1.00 llwHl'ore 1'10 l)iscount ehalns hn\'c in· tensified their recruiti ni; t'f- forls at two-year colleges and smaller four-year campuses, the trade paper Discount Slorr News reported. The rxtra young talent is needed IG han- dle the industry's rupid store cxpan!iion. K Mar1. Korvetl('s, t'.ook United nnd King's ""l're hsled as m:iJnr chains w h 11 s t recruiters ha\'e bet'n srit•ndlng more time on collrgc earn· puses. These chain!'i Rl'nt:'rn ll.v are not wooing t>ludf'nls 011 lhc lorgcr, more 11rest1g101.1~ campuses becnuse, :is one recruiter conc<'ded, "\\1(1 i;1rnp· ly can'! match the str1r1Ln~ st1larles or benefits nf pri \•atr industry for collegr gradu11t('s. "Dul I would say ObJeclLvcly lhol we offer far inure op- portunlty for lhe young (>l'rson "''ho can stick It out rive or 10 yenrs and make ii lo ti~ txecutlve level." K ~1m1. with over 300 storrs throughout the country. puls college grOOuates thrnugh a IS.wet.It training progra1n at IU liister Kresgr vnrlcty stores. Those th~! shnw 1nlcnt gradunll)I are rno\·ed throui;ih lhe ranks \11 11 1•aric1y store assislllnl 1na1111~rr , 1 h r n managrr. sind finally manager nl a K ~I An !)t(lrc g~!!1i. f ~ 1: 1~ ~~~ .. s1 1}·~: 1J i! ,au~• w 0 60 •nrom s l! I 71 5t<uinv l'u<>c11 · ~nit Rftmo ~~ti ~18 IS? EQutv 2./1 ),1• llunltC> Pl!.50 s•ocl 11 JJ r JI 1nvM• ' 1 1.n, Bu11 Ind 1.•0 F~rt! 10 ,, 11.62 Ullr1 S.:Jl S.1' BurlNar I 'Of E~r!'I 10" \ 11 10 !tltc .1.m I Ii IM BurlNar Pf SJ Enua ~ ' ' i "° el Saecs 12. J u l1 llllf"l'dv .Ill CDM Ene•ov 10111011 ientl Gt~ 6 1 1H 111.,•h• .., Fntn•l.f" j 17 Sn8m Fd 111 I JI llus~Unv IOI £ouny I IJ I J.1 "''" """ It •S ti . • l'<iut G1P1 161 134 h Olin !1.JS 11.JS ,. Finan<·c Aid Nolv in ut~ 11lt17.1' Hte 1.01 t ,/I ,"4)ol Co /0 o\ssl'I Drvcloprricnt Corpora· ~"f~.~n '~:~ 1 J!~ 1f:;'t11 F""'i'~ JU' 2:11.~~"8.Un• hnn, (I new financial services~:;~... :-~~ l:l:f t~:~r ::1! 1::?? l!~::DL i'i': •1n1p•n• has '-Ann formed F~ Grm 10~ 11.w ml!ti s 1.11 1.11 rctBr..,. ,IO<I •• ~· uo.· fld Cap t6'1Dff wn tn! 7)• 7 JCctn Pit JM ''.,lh (·o•poral• offll'CS in Flct Fvl'd 11 91 '' n wtnv t '·'' I 17 '•n•lltct 1 ID ' Fkl ''"" llt07G" er '"v 11t21JGSraP C Ille" Corona De.I ~1 ·1r Fl!)•nc:l•I Prpq S,.,.ctrl SOJ l.OI (errvun I SO ' ' PY""' l.•1. l .lJ tJ'rm GI OXI .a.30 r1rUt1~ M Tl · ] " id lnt1111<1 Jn J St rott 51 lot JO J1-'0 t•ra Ct.Oii le private y-i1e cornpany Inc""' ,,,6 5.0 1tt<tman F'Ufldar t•"'•tr I·~ "JI be If . " "el f Vr"! l ID •.N ~,,., Ind • 01 I.ta (1rpl cn .60 \YI 0 er1ng 8 v .. n y 0 F•IF V& 1"90 '·" Fldl)(; J}J S.15 (frrl ... C:D to l'.n•l<l'"l"I •• ,,,.,,, including FM1n J?I• • •1 I 01 iclen 1_.6• , ... C••rGn Lta. "" . ...:: · F•• ln:{,in •~ I.It litlri RIMI rel•: rorterW .«M lllUtua\ funds, lire insurance.~;: tu1'~1 ~·ll i.H r:~ °" IS!~ 1112 s:f!W~-1:1' real estalt synd1cnlion!, oil ir:f jf;;, ,: .., J:i: ,.... ~~' 1 :U 1r·ff ~~\ c~°'ti1.1s und ga!I f:(pl()r:tt!ons nnd other 11re1 con s JS . wotnSl0 ,>.n I',,' C1eo c,,..P ·'° • ' Fie! F,.. • n .. ,, vnc• I -~ r111nne<o t 1nvc~tnicnts 11rincip11lly to the F1~ G111 •.W ',. M1t Ao f· '!·§ c111n 1.'""·JO F"" GI~ l 6S 1·,. ••<lln • Cenco na .» n1iddle lncorne markcl. Fau...t,. 1 •' .s1 r,"•,~1 ,·~a j· c111 H•ld 1. .. Fovrr.o .OJ .n tc no ·' cen lill.I 1 u J0•&~~11n G~e· ,1tma Gt n. tJ.!I i'M!l•Ps 1 1• ONT( 61 .. ~.. OWr Mjl •.I ' C:tnl L• El' l r·•Wlll • 00 i4 l••n "'" • 11 ,.81 ,,., .......... I IA Ulll 111 • 1' Tr1v (Q 7.11.< .,II ftt1! SW I I'll r~com 1 1' I' 1 T-!'ct 11 ... lj 1 r l!l'• l~v. ~o Frffdm ,,, ,,, t wn( Ct tu ·'' l'.Ml•IU ·-Nl'W 1 n Po~t Fct !•M~• /·" e Jf TwnC Inc 156 I 'II) r t,.0 1 60t> "'""" Am IO t ll nil Mu• ~·to ,)! r.~rt.I~ M To1n Aui;tt'n or s a n c;~1e-111 ,,71 \Jn I~ I" , 1•, .~. r ... "~" .itob 5•" S•• .'7 l•I n C:•o" · ., cr1111 IO• Cl~mcntt has won ap-n1bra11' lU 10. Accm s.11 4·' ,..~•dbtn In• po1n1mtnt lo the nr.w post 'f:. 5r· 1 ~ t•• ~"f:.,,., 'i-ff ',:ft ~~:~:!NJ·~ I I II•! I'd .n .4 •NI! • r~1.-Mn 1 IO o produc11on m;magi?r or '""" s1 11.0t 1 111 UFo c1n lffllv•ll ,..,..,.t•r M"' tlf>Fcl A Jn 'it lhlt Line II\!: v• Reevr's Rubber Compnny. ·r111 1nc1 \l"\l· .. v11 Lin .fl Sll '""'""• 1• IYPl'n .l2 ... 111(1111'1 •.01 .a.)f r~1 ... lh Austen, lhe father or seven ....,r.,n ia . .M 20" 101 111 ) ... •.H ~~~"'" U! I I I •m•11on· N:eS Jal s jj •.05 ,,. WY ,,,_ rhildn•n, l'.'l I step 1110 I 1c 11,. · l !: l·" V~l'drtit ·, 11 l" r11., v. 1 to . r I Cln .. .u •nao ~' " r11n Ol\lo 6 new posll1nn a tcr serv ng <IS •'1>of , is 131 n• ll'lllP 91 6 l? c tiG<tbr-1 1nano£·cr of ('Ost e!itln111tin&_ ~"wt.,.~ ij" v1:Ji1Jo 4 1~-tt ~~~f1~p~1 The Prom"'lon left twn tdb Got '°' • "'"\fl " 1 t t.20 c:111M11 SP f1f VI. ""'°' If) '· W~ltllllllft GIO\IJI ('~IPfWyl , other posi!Lons o.,..n for 11r!-Htr11vt 111 1' l!•Dlf 1 fill] c:11•1"" uNw •-I" M~nn 1j IO 1U J lvnt '/ Cl!Ocf'vll 15'" \ an1.•cs M the San Clemente. r,uti.l'H~ !t j •' ~·o ,.a.,. c11•111C11 )'H _ CM r 1n1 , ,.. " 1 ~11v .... c11·1~ s>tr, ("!!fin\ -('OS\ eSllmAtOr to bc11u ?~~ "":~:ll w'mln ,:n 1l·H C11r~rn11 ~ rlllrd by Hon DRhlqul!I nnU lmN~I F .~ ··1 wr,.i. ··n ·,:: t~~:,. D60J I h I '"'o C•o 1 M •ii "' 11111 '·,, ·u Clnn ~·" 1 .e lorem11n o t e llSJ)("t:l1on 1 1 ... n Gt: ilJ t.21 11~11 , 11..;11_,. ci..nt'".i iifl dt>p1'rtmPnl to bt assumed by :::;,!.:i •• ~ f·~ ~J, i" 'n" cfftGti,,.,~~'•' • I"" luld 10 )I lf_i IH F I• • (lnn Henry (atllu. ,,,.,11,. l .. > 11 orr11 11 1 '''"In 1 to .... .. tM1.J Mllrfl Ltw C: ... 0.. J JI'' ll" JH~i" l 7)~. 11•. :D'1I ,,,, !IJA l1'· »>• J7 1'• l'l I» S>,, •h. '• jJ 19\~ " " -'• 1:! J~: ,f;: .r• + :~ 11 11'• ll'it ii·· -:, '!l'• 13'• Ill~-·· 71 •1'• •ll• ,," + •• I l2'o J21l l2h --. JI 0 •1 ll +1•, 1 II'• 16 14 , • • lS rt•, 1t• 1 lf'\ .. 1 "'~ 16'o lt>\-1, l 2'1'> ,, •• ,,,,, + '• 11 Uh 12'• ljll -1 t l! ,::: J;~ ,.~ ... ,, S1 J.11• :M\1 1-l'<l + \o 11'•11•1'- 9J Ul• 16'• 17 'f "' ... ~ i"" l•\11 i '• n 1: :t~ 1: .. 11. 1li Jig }~: if~=:: 111 "'• n"" g •• + '• ' 1l;o '"' , .. + '• ',', 31 ''> JO'• :n -·~ »'• l2'• 32'•. $1-. SI'> S~• + '• l• JS>o 1S'~ 2SI'. •• 101 21 77\o D\~ -'• ,,, 11'> ~. &I'll .... ,., 1 11 ~. 71'/o tl\t + " 1116 76 2'-'> 11 f 'o ~. ''--\o t 76 7' :M +I '.l "" !•~'> Jol:U. -'• l6\o lt~o ~· 1 · • •110\ltlllf 111911 ' 2• '°'. )9~ i '' I •S1o •!'\ 'o -• s d''> .£5') '• -'• 11 13>,, 13 IJ\~ .. '. S7 l:Pl 13'• 11"'• -'• 01 70>o lt~ I~-,., Jll J1''o 20\4 11 .... 1. I f\\ 9'1o "-+ 'o Ill 16 U\.t 1!\.t -'~ u ,, 21,, ,, + '• 11 11'• 11 11\!o + '• 117 1'h 19~ 1f\1 + '. t7 Jl•o JI\• 3711 + ~, ~1 341, Jl'\ ,.. 180 ,, Jj 26 + ,, 111 10'• 10 lG\\ + '• 216 ,, .. 11'• 11Vo + '• •O ''• t;, f~ t '> l ''• "" ''$ '• 1 1~" "" 19'... ,. 16 13'< 11•. 11\• t •• I IS 15 IS t i Jl 31 lollt ,,., J J)'• J11• 3';!\o ~ ·~ 1) ,... 1•1· ,..~ Jt ''• 6'> "lOi -'• 111' ll'•lJ'"I-'• J6 "'" •?'• a •:. l )'I'• :!91o 19• o .. 1 13'• 77'1 22•• -'" 161 ll~· ,.~ ... ut•:. -., "° "°"' 39" 1'\•-'• •• 5i'• SSh 5''1o t< ·~ II» 17o,;, 71\1 :ti°"' lo-t, 6 12v., 17'~ 121. ..... '• li 11 10~ II .• 11 71 ''t ?l•o i1'-'-"o IS 11 l~llo 10'• -1, 11 11"' 11\ri 11\ri-'" l'>t olG'o Jt•o Jtt• -~ Ill 1''" JA :i.i. + 1'• ' 6>,, ,,~ '"" <01 Je ll'• JI + ~. I If 77'~ 16\I 11\lo -"• 1n•'f n 111'1-''• 196 6111, " 17 -· ~j 1 .. ~ ~f.l\'f ~~~' \;: ' J :u.<o 26 16h +1•1 n 10>· 11 11111 11 -1 1 1l"• n•. n·~ -111 ll .... 11"• 16"• -•• • ,~ •• 11'• 16'• • '· 17 11'., l'O'I ~~ -1'~ Jl 14'• 1••· 11V. -·· f XI') Xl1\ JO''t + >o \I "'' " "'' .... 1 l•'> "'• 1••• -'• H 11'11 1'>o Jl\o ., 7?1~ 27'1 "" -'• 111 "'\" ,. ... 111!, -" -J·K- " 1 " 6', I •\'o s~. ,,. J"• ,,, ,,, 11 .. -., • 171~ 12·~ 1t1.-. 17 10\o 10'~ 10\;, -'' 11 111'1 ,.. .. ... II 211, ?t.l• '6'1 -'\ ' 11 u ,. -'• t11ft Sl 511'1 50''> -1 I "''> •I'• '"" i° ,., 711 "" 11'• 77''> -" 16 ,,, ' 11 J~·~ .fl"• 2 ,,,, 81't "'~ •. '" .... 1''> !~" ' ?? l"• 11·. ~ + •• 11• ,. . "', n>• -'• ' , .. , , .. , 7J.\.i + '• I '"• '"• "'• • l"'• !ft" lft'\ .. ,, Ill~ '1 •~>I c.1 .., "'f ' .,., •• '~. "o!O'~ + • 4 ,..., ' 7""1 111 '• -" •1 ....,,. , ••• .,,, • -'~ 1• r,;i r,~ ~~~l:: '1 .,,1 S• SI \I 1''o "'• 1 ... j. .. 11 ?"'• ""~ ")II'," 1<11 ,. ... If' • ll 11 '"• 1! -., l 10; in•, 1'1'0 I J'lo 11 1 '!lo 4 •, ~ '. ~·· 11, -" t;: 1~~ t~.. ~;:~ ...! '' 6 ,. .•.•.• lf"" .,,, I' 11 l' 1 ... '• ll u '°'•+I ·~·. • fl'• •••• 11\oo +' '• ,, 7""' 1<'. ,~ .. -· ·1 o<I '3't ~~·• tflo .+ ·~ ,. ., .. •''• ., _, 115 'l" 1''• 11,1;, -I 10 ,,,, l"• ,, ....... '~ ~ ~J ll l l + •1 1 6! H .. 1'1 • ~··· ,,.~ 1J'I, •• ll 11 11;1 : ... _ '~ St »'• \'"" ll'"' -, II '!'> 'S'\ l'S\o r·• Jl i•'• )A'o 'l.l'1 I I ,,., 11>,, 11\o • I "" 11•~ ~ '-l'' ~ it: :;: ~J ~ •'l ' ,,., l''• l1'11 , 'i'• 3,-, 32' .:..:··· • lo 11 1'> lf\to -I• 70 ,. JJ•~ '' • 11 s•• s.. :i'' -•• ~: ~~ ;f.; ~ +'~ ) "'• 111, 1-l'i .... SI ll JO'~ lr0\6 , .. -l- /ffarf~et • • ......... -----------------------------------------------··-------- • • • • • ' • , . .. • ' .. ' " '• ' ., • . , .. . , .. " " " '• " .. " '• ., " " " '• " " '. " " " .. ,, ,, '• .. .. '• .. " " " ". ' " " '• I'~ .. , " •• '• " .. •• ,, •• " ' ;; "' .. .. •• " ., . " '• " ••• ' " ,, .. '• " " .. '! " ' " '. ' • " • '· '" •• '~t " , .. .. '• .. , -... '" ... .... .... .... ... -... -... ~ ... :::: .... ·~ '" ti•· ""' ·~ '"~ .. «• • ••• SC DAILV '1LOT IL Wednesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List ..... .. .. IW..JM .. LllltC...QI. ~-"" ..... .. ... Crr.n.J Hi.-U. Cllle Ciiio 00W JCl"IS AYllA•ll .... , Nl(lll ~-C.... ('t. ............ (.1.lfJilllltwol 0.-J ....... ...,._ : ~~ ~': ::_It I':: ~""~"'Ill!:= TUI<•• t. ... '~ ~ ~~~ .. ~ ·~,, t~~ '!:! + 'Q • M k t' IJ,l • . ~ !1~ ~ "'·'' 'M:i!-~:Iv ~·' d *' a" !r" ~ 1 ;i. s~ ;~ ~ met ar e .. 1 111 · !ls;~ i: 1 1 . 1511 111:1i-:: . ~im. ... ~ ri:: .::: 1::: =-~ i ~ 4 1n:S t -\ii ' ,r:f/"'._lvw•"""'-" 1 If'• JtoVt ~ : ~: ru: ' ~ ir... a-,. .... ······· ... ·· ·· -W·~y.z._ ~~f ":!::: tt J-i::: ifa_., Drop s Slightly 1:iw·:~·11 71 t.lt'I •1'~ "1"' • 1, •l""'J. ·~ 1 11 1 lt + '• .,.,.,. - 1 11 ~• H e~ 11 '!t -II lftCIV CW1I •,~ '•ij > • +I ~Cit IJC; 11 ~· ,,., ~ ~ ~ W¥0 I l, I 10 I -• 1 ~'• 4\<o t\t S!;'* llAi I '+ lftd .rt ' '•th ,,_Wf'-1 I It -• l 14'4 1' 14\lt +-''• 1· ,l)I r: rt ::. u t(t •• '1 .\ J 1 °t \.t W"l.Mll · I ~ • '' U 1N i S'"1 UI~+ Ill CJ !\ , .. 4 +;,. C1~.1 JI ,,_ rr't +to ll'J11• '--• l, ,l.,'g 20,,·~ ,!•,'•,~ -t iu"" NE\V YORK (UPI) -Prices on lhe Ne\V York !='~" •1m l •6l •lo t .. =,"' ~~'r;n I ·1 ~ 1,t: ~ +-,,. ::.~, • ,J n f = :: .. • + Stock Excbanae closed narrowly mixed today In ~"~ ,.,. !hr 1· 1J"" -""u11 S* 1.n H iv, 11~ 1,., w.~r;~ Wf ' ·•·111 f,. ~ ~ ~-£: the at>sence 3t stimulating news. Turnover was ii:f,;g ~ jfl' 1 '" 1r.~•:: ~ u~" el ~p:,:: 1~ ~"~.:,OT, ~l--~ w~~!:'! 1f ,, .. :r n~ f ~ J ll:t Im lifit"_ t quiet. :..·~·-rn,'.ff,... i +"" lJ •ii., ~-ti~ tir"'11111 ' J ' • 14 • '"" lJ\1 ... The Dow Jones Industrial Average of 30 select-l~ V 'Jf ' " -a IC -~ ! ~ ,.,. .,,. -... w;oo 111' u ivt I it-.! 1 .~ 51 ,, w.1o ~ +"" •T A :'.:: n ~-l " !~ ».; :.1:: ~J '.d! , r."" I >~· + .. :i: l~ ~~ :r• t ~: ed blue chips was do\vn I.09 at 724 .81. 1"~1"'' .• 'tt ~ It.._. ""':.;.'lo .. 8~~1 Jf § 1~ ~ ~.:. ~ w11" "" ~ n . ' j' ~' -·• U .\ii ... .... t~ IG• OS 1 .. 4' -t.li .......... '111 0 Ji M\\ .. ~ Wlli.t1j \".~ It-~' n•-•• JI 1 , •.• ,.._ Of the 1506 issues crossin" the larw!, 607 advanc-T.-ld .&W 1 1 ~ 1 ,~ ... M = .a u 1. l£: u ~··· •.·~. r,' ~'! • •,..,• -• • •' '' '' 0 ' ' ,_ ''' "'' 1.t" " •·•·· Sol .. ~ +~ •• I... ·q r:: n -• .,. M -.. , 31,: •1~ :itV::.... .~ ed and 596 declined. r.-1.W.':ljtio" !Os~~ \f\O l•h -,n 'ir~ • I ~ _ •:. wnu!IMifl 1 • , ""' -"' T •• '' •• 1•1 I' •• ,1 __ .,. .,. __ ,,w1u11Mi I l .. l-..... -•,• '~ TI~ ~: ... n =1 ~ ffll.h°n :.. 1)4 20\, It ~ nlt .~.;; lJ ~ '" ii; -w ... u~ .,,.. ~ t ' •111 ·~ -• s 111' lJ•• u11i _ ,, Volume of around 7.S milJion shares was down t= •. ~~ •• 1'111:.•,• • ,~ J + "' ...tt i.. c.· ~ ~ !" fu +" ::~ 11.~ , ri.,., ~ •• !l~ ~ .: 31 20"° u~. "'~+It from Tuesday's 8,310,000 shares. '""" l h rr· H" +·u: ~ r=·~ ' l;: '11~ I '4 -"'wt'tff'ftt~. I : l'f"/o u.. -• '9 61 601'1 '°"° ThomJ~ 1 2 tll.< 1)1.t -1,4 ltM .0 I llio \lo 04 ... "' WIYhl ... 1'1 IOJ:io. Miit l6 61'~ 61 61\IJ ~·\ TllrUr,-Sr '.to st I II ltlli +llio llNI. _. 1' ~ IH\-W~l~l'!TtSI ~ i-. 1011 X\'t -• 1 "" 79"' "'• -" The general assumption among analysts \Yas Tl cou• 1.70 11 1ri\ '1141 1211io +1~ " NAlr " " Pt .:.:~ =~II !l'I 1 1 1 '4 n"' !I";:}'....; iJf ~t Il~ g~; ~! that until some stimulating international or econo. l5~li :l: ~ 8~ ~~ ~~ .. l""ir;r-,T.! -Jlt ~,r. fi :·~ 5fi~~~ , ll~ !S lfilU • :~ : ,~ '!~ 1°"" .... ::.._ mic news appeared. the market woul d continue ?1::1~~. '·".-1e "'" ~ ~ +-.. '"'toe 7~ Ir. ~ .... "w1i1~ ,, '§ ,,.. , ~ .;: ... • . t th t Th led th l . . .. llllv -" ,,.,,.. lfl• I -.. ~ ,. , .. 1 ~ " 111 .. ' 11~G~2!.""+1' qwe over enea r erm. ey no a many in·?~~",~',·:!: 1 "" "' '+"" .,..,.., .• 1 • w. .. !1 1 , ..., JiA.0 -~ ~ff:~ im;t~ r:s~~!ita~~v~~~~~!~~~~ have taken to the sidelines i~~i0~4 10; fll~ ~ tt~£:~8 ~'if]-U1 ;ii: tf'm 1~1";~!~;,:: ·~ r I~ t-t~:~: Uf ~--Ji• ,!\lo -114 '1;:::u~li~ :r ~\~ tt~. 1:~+:;,.;U '"&1''•~ Ii) . "': .. winnDbl. u Jt'c 30\i ~~ 71 , 11~ s•. Among the big-block transactions were McDon· ,,...,,...., .s5 21 1 u•. n., 1JO.'> -"' ~ ... f:il ~· • f: I"' -1a :i:J~C I.ti f, at rl~ "" + 1• J ,,.., 11' 1"• aids co~ .. off 2 al 32 on a 343.~share block. Na· 1'1"'*'0fl '0 • ... "• •111 •~ utti i s .,,.. · wi1a1 c11 :II l 11't 1 17'•..,. '• I lilt 11'-11'9 • y VV\r Tr•nKU lnw " '\'" S S •· .,. ttf otl. 1 21\lr -t-,_ wot; WW ' ,., 1\~ I .11, 41\.\ 41 ~. t ' I c h R . I ff 1 I 34 100 ~ h , .... 11...... 10 • • t ••• ~Ml I ~ lM -"'Womtf(• ..(I ld '"' 'I , ....... 1 •• 1 "' t i\ •l\ -l o 10fl8 85 eji!;LS er, 0 3 On a ,VV\rS are ••1191••1 .IC l!J ~ tt, '9V. •· .. ~ l'W r r• • ~t -Woodl C• 4 10.._ I ... 1... '• s 141~ ''"' 14 -" block ·. and Sperry Rand. off l,'2 at 21 5/8 on a 185.· 1·•~1•" "' 2 12 «1 . ...,.. • ... ,, ..... ,rv c,.,, • 1 1 1 -1"' Woo1.-111 1:,. lj,,. , i.. 11"" ~ '• 10~'.m lO"•+'< Tr1Conll.l4t 21\'S\,'j'•jU<li-R 11111!.lM 1111 ll -~woolw1>"JO 4 ... ~41 ,.. .. 1 )1•· ll':l! 31'• + v. 500-share bloek Tr!•r>Qlncl .1111 2 l,'• l ~. ~+VJ ~JIMll .411 II It\ 1\" 1 ' World AIM )..., po, ,,, -'• _ _ t ,,. .... j 70 'j 1t ..•.• IJ C1>I.¥• U ~14 ,.,, • •••)(t<o•(1> .llJ 1 "' '\E' 11 '-'• :Nill', .!·,~·00 ~N~ •"·,'f,':~'J••lll• ................... !"' .................... 1',':.W':'.~o~l".,, J.11 3Cl '1 lO »'--\\ l.l''! .)0 ti l\'I 11\t 1 1 t wi;r111 1 .,. ,.10 I t.U t• t11o -'• io H 1 •., lj't -"" U ll'!.H t 22 l1 -U. lllltA t..c: I ffit I 11•• '• " . jl\ \lo + TYi.r Coro It 1" '• l•t -.._ 1!1111 P~l.9' l:I jl '!o 21~ 21 ele of A1i \lo U:-0 n"-• '• Tw.n '""' !:M I'• 1·~ 't ., U" -60 tS 4l>.i .Ulo • ~ « ~i. 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It'• prob•l1ly J:.e. 1•:1u1e herr '11 " rh11nc·c 10 rirr le, rllp uul. 11ost, rere1ul lhr ilf'nl~ li ,.trd in a paper. And •he arlver1i11l11", :t!I w('JI a, 1he re11 o( the ,,apl'r. ctn he read •I 011r.1 convt:nient'e- "h e netrt or wherever there'• tln1r • Hewspipers TV 17: 25 " 30% 72 Peopl• "look forward· to 1ctvartlain1 in n1wsp1per1 get it while it's fresh in the .•• DAILY PILOT Jf ~· PILDf ' I 'l'HE: REAL ESTATERS .. 71s,. dkrtr fun• rit"t to*- nJaJrlri"t rotten>1iftl tht trarisactiooi Mf°"' ht «ts .• , " P.AJ\'DAlL R. MC CARDLE """'idC!ll flll TIM RMI Esllltn: • ..itl9t rMI •Alt' ftfrvl;IOf' -IK- tww; ._,_. lif tlw ~ -RM1 El• ,. .. Tr•iflirlll 111 CAlllcwl'liji eo11e9eo-1 • • ... 1 bhll ~llt lor JI-. Dlll'f' PllDf: 1t11e direcw of CAlllET 1 Nd president of -N__, H~· -.cc.ta Mne ... nl 9' llNllDn. WE NEED SALESMEN LURPf MOii Prot~ioM~Pll'10Mt!Hid Ttllnlflll URN MOlf Gtt'llUlll.tl $plil-111P to ~ SERVE 1mEl MOfl Help, lKl C...lu:tlen FOi INTtR'fllW Coll RANDY McCARDLE 546-2316 30 MORE· REAS.ONS WHY • • • THE REAL ESTATERS ARE NUMBER 1 People! People! People! . \ ;_The R.eal Estaters are an Association of well qualified professionals to serve you beHer ••• Ask anyone who has done business with them. -These problem-solvers work for you: They make it happen. -Give a call-You'll always be glad you did. YES! WE GIVE PERSONALIZED REALTOR SERVICE YOU WILL APPRECIATE OWNH MUST SELL! On beautiful Lido !sir. 4 Bfdroom homt v.·ilh an extra large family room, IJ@pllrate dlninl lltta and lushly landscaped garden •• , all on a 45 fool. streel-to-strf?<'t lot. Shown an~ · time. S&l,500 full prief'. 5Cf' Today! Phont• 646-TI71 A IUNCH OF IEDROOMS FOR THE l ·l·Ci FAMILY a bedrooms. 3 baths. family room and ~ <':harming secluded patio -ONE BLOCK T(1 OCEAN. Only $48.500. Call quick 673-8550 CHEAPER THAN RENT ~1ovP in this 3 Bedroom, Family Room hom•· for S15a/month. includes taxes, principal, in· lf'rrst and Insurance. Fenced in \vlth fruit 1 t-et"S &: all the privacy of Califprnia livino;: Phone 546-2313. NEWLYWED NEST OR RETIREMENT conACiE Charming 2 BR home In Ney.·porl Helghtg 11.rea. 'Valking distanl'E' tp_ all shopping. Nr"' loan commitment of Sl2,800. Paymmts nf ap· f'rox. $125.00 per month ind. taxes I: ins. 646-TITI VIEW OF MOUNTAINS I. WATER From Harbor Vi~ Hills. A near new 4 Bed- rooms 21iii BATH LUSK HOME. Fireplaces In family room and living room, tinted glass, y.•aJ- nut cabinets and red brick patio. Only $57 ,500. can 673-8550 Sales Toppers In .July \ I I . ,, ! NED McCllAIY Herttcir • AM• Office YllGINIA CUlllNS 17tti 51. & ....,.,. ...... DOltHA OTUl ~ ...... , Alw1y1 1incer1 i11 his d1t1rmin1- t lo11 to do the be1t po11ibl• job for hit cli1nh -Ned'1 t ucc111 i1 will d111r.,ed. His pho111 """'' btr ;, 546-2] I J, Alw1y1 111dy to t1rve, elw1y1 willing to do 111ore th111 required ind 1lw1y1 1bl1 to 1ol'te I dil· ficult probl1m. H1r pho111 - 646-7171. Hon11t •mf forthriqht i11 111 h1r tr1M•ction1, Oortl.1'1 1ucc11t i1 • well 11rn1d r1w1rcl. 111 Corot11 del Mir h1r phon1 numb1r i1 671-1550. COLLECiE PARK AREA SHARPIE . Jo"re:1h new paint and top grade \\'&II to wall i·arpel insidr, concr-cte drive and well kept landscape outside. An outstanding 3 bC'droom family room home vacarlt and tt'&dy for your fAmll y today. Just reduced to $27,900. Call 673-8550 MESA DEL MAl :J bc-droom, 2 be.th, large brick fireplact', Gall built-inii;:, Shingle roof. Double car garagr. \Valk to all schools and large park. FHA or VA terms. call 546-2313. '2'7,SOO. TRl·LEYEL IEAUTY Up nn the hill in beautiful MESA VERDE. Soml' view of Otean I: Huntington Beach. 4 Bedrooms, 3 Baths, Separate family Room, Formal Dining Room &: Breakfast Area off Kltchf'n. Court yard extra. Home in excellent condition. call for Showing -546-2313 NEWPORT LEASE OPTION this luxurious 3 bedroom, 3 bath, double fi rr-pla~ home In Newport Beach. 2000 squa~ t-eet. All built-in Kitchen, newly painted easy maintenance on yard ?i.lust see to apprccillte $.37,9"0. :>jS.2313 STORYIOOK HOME PLUS INCOME· Rustle chenn would be tfifo u9'1entat'tt»l'9t of 11)e *ar for .this extraonilnary one-of-a-kind 'l. ~droom 2 bath homt" plus a handy dandy incomt' unit out back. Loverly fo r only $49,500. CaH 673-8550 EASTSIDE FAMILY HOME .1 Bedroomi., 2 baths, dandy den, kitchen with built-ins Incl. dlshwash!!r -Plus a big 2 car garage and i;eparate workshop. $25,500 - Phone 646-7171 A TOUCH OF SPAIN A Spanish navored villa on beautiful Cliff Dr. :l Bedroom~ family room. large living room ,~·ith fi~place. A sparkling new look through- out -$49.900-cau 646-7171 NEAR COLLECiE PARK .1 Bedroom. 2 Bath, 2 Car Garage, Built-in Ap- pliances, Block walled ye.rd. FHA/VA TERMS! It's Sharp! Call Now. 546-2313 • INVESTMENTS • 2-2 bedroom duplexl!fl. Kitchens and built· in ~aragea and fenced yards-$29,950 each 646-7171 4-PLEX Exct'llent units 5 yrs. old. New cerJ)t't - 8 /1 electric appliances, 3 bedrooms - 2 bdnn~ -out ot to\vn owner will trade - $59,500 -Phone 646-7171 CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX Both unitl! arC' specious 3 bC'drooms "'Ith 2ti baths LOCATED on one of Corona dcl i\1ar'll nicegt tree lined street!!. Phone 673-8550 MANY, MANY '-IORE THE REAL ESTATERS-Re-alE-stat ....... e - NEWPORT BEACH I 700 N•wpo.t Blvd. W>-7171 COSTA MESA 2790 H .. bor Blvd. 544-231). CORONA DEL MAR 312 M•r~rite 67).1550 INVESTMENTS 27M Horbor Blvd., Svito 20 I c.... M-544-2316 EXPERIENCE ELIMINATES EXPERIMENT I Investments SALESMAN NEEDED * Our Rt•I E1t•t• ln .. t1tm111i 01pt, "'"' on1 in't11tm1nt 11le1m111 wi#i 1i,,cerity I ''"Y· * F-Of' int1rvi11w c•ll R.19'y Mc- C1rcll•. 546-2116. 2790 H•M:.M 11¥41., Svite 201. PJLOT·AOVERTISElt I tJ ' I . • I • Dana Harbor on Move Con struction, A liead of Sc hedule at Marine Complex The Initial Dana »arbor contractor, who has spent years building the major gtruclures or the harbor' has packed his men and equipment and gone liome, Down tlae Mission Trail Community Chest Chairman Named MISSION VIEJO -Chairman of the Saddleback division of the 197().'1\ Com· munily Chest campaign wllt be William T. Wells , manager of lhe Miss ion Viejo office of United California Bank. \Velis. who has been with lhe Mjssion Viejo bank for five years, is a member of Kiwanis and a member of the board of the Saddleback Chamber of Com· merce. e lln11dltapped llelped CAPISTRANO BEACH -Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District ha\'C approved a joint program \\'ith the San J oaquin School District for visually handicapped students. The fully reimbursable program will enable students with visual handicaps to attend th<!ir neighborhood schools, rather than be transported to a special school in a northern part of the county. An itinerant teacher will travel from class to class, preparing materials and helping these stu dents with their classroom work. The program will be administered by the Capistrano district with San Joaquin sharing any costs. e C:o1111cll'• Nem \llem SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -It was a new sensation to be silting on a raised platform in full view of the au· dience. But it's one the City Council and staff will soon get used to in the new City Hall. Conducting their firs1 meeting in the new facility Monday, the City Council, serving as board of directors for Waterworks No. 4 approved the employ. ment of an additional laborer. ~ They also approved the purchase of a used billing machine which may be ):hared by the city if needed . e Hospital Readied ~11SSION VJF,JO -Construction is beginning on a ne\\' 120-bed hospital in A1ission Viejo, near Saddleback College. Tl,.~ privat e hospi!a l will be <'.'ailed Mission Community Hospital and is being built by Mission Viejo Medical Co. Completion for the first phase is scheduled for the spring of 1!171. The 15 acre site of[ Crown Valley Parkway will eventually include a 2;,Q bed hospital and a convalcs~nl hospital with a manor house and business offices. A uniqu e feature for emergency treat· ment will be a helicopter landing pad e ,tf'S Spo11sors Flhns f\11SSION VIF..JO -The ~1ission Viejo lligh School chapter of the American Field Service international Scholarship ls presentlng a series or Disney ad· venture fihns on Thursday afternoons. Films will be shown at the La Paz Tnlennediate School on Thursdays from l to 3 p.m. The donation is 35 cents. flarbor District spokes1nen iald today. The new workmen '•rt! well ahead of schedl:J.le on the nest phase of the huge marine complc~. And whlle .the new workers dig trcn· cbes and string electrical wire through miles Qf underground conduit. some unexpected bonuses to the water-lovlng public have arlltm. Bathers and surfers who ha\'e used Doheny Stale Park Beach have been saving the $1.50-a-day admission to the sands, thank! to the harbor. 'The hundreds of freeloaders -who apparently cause little concern among state park rangers -use the expanses of the harbor as a parking lot, then scramble down ,the bast of a Jelly for the free trip to the good surf of Doheny beach. Another bargain -this nne to the yachlstnan -has been available for months . The harbor is I.he only county boat launching facility (public or private) where a boater can drop h\9 craft into a marina and park his car and trailer for nothing. And resident harbor engineer Jack R1ins said the practice Involves an estimated 300 to 400 boatowners a day vn weekends. The yachtsmen are braving their share of handicaps, hnwever . Mounds of dirt created by the utility work change by the day and cause some dust. "But they don 't mind," Ra ins observed. O em ente Police Eye Olympics A half-dozen police officers from San Clemente-all holding state fourth-place a\\'ards from last y e a r ' s com- petltions-have begun practice for their entry in the Annual Police Olympics in Long Beach at month's end. The San Clemente team, whose membe rs will compete in judo and shooting events. will attend all three days of the competitions set for Aug. 111, 29 and 30 at the Edgewater Hotel in Long Beach. Winners in the state competitions in- volving 1.500 police ofricers will com pete in the National Police Olympics in Phoenix next October. San Clemente Detective Earnest ~tul\er will compete in judo competitions. A1embers of skeet and trap teams will be Lt. Robert Mason. Detective Ron Dalrymple, Patrol LL Mel Portner, Ilete<'.'tive Will Stockdale and Patrolman Andrew Gyurscik . All scored fourth in slate competitions al Lake Tahoe last year. Jn the water, however, dnttns of boo\Owners new to Lhe harbor haven 't teamed the location or some underwater rocka In the navigation channel!. "We llear of a lot of scraped boat bottomt' and hangups on the · rocks ,'' Rains said. But no serious ml!hap11 have Occurred yet, and the rocka wW be removed In coming weeks under a contract award- ed by the Army Corps of Engineers. Rains said that other than "installing a few light bulbs," Peter Kiewit and Sons -the firm which built the superstructure of the new harbor - is finished under its contract with the county. And after the utility and grading por· lions are completed this summer and fall , the major work at the harbor will come from contractors hired by lessees who will build the commer<'.'ial facilities. With all schematic drawings but one approved by a special county screening committee, few design hurdles remain befort! the individual projects begin. Harbor District spokesmen said the on ly facility which wlll remain unbuilt in the next year or so will be a boat re9air and hauling yard. Il was the only parcel wh.ich had no bidders by potential lessees who sub- mitted expensive offers for their leases. "\Ve 've been so busy processing the rest of the pla ns for the facilities, we ha\'en't thought of readverlisi ng for the boat yard." a district aide said. The plans and specifications for the Individual marine businesse1 are being scanned by a special committee whi<'.'h includes heads of several county agen-- cies. The chainnan is Kenneth Sampson, tlirector of harbors, beaches and parks. Probably the longest-awaited business to be built al the harbor is the marina itself, which ultimately will have dock space for thousands of small craft. And because of rapid completion of the utility phase of the harbor work. the marina installation will probably start sooner tha n expected , Rains said. Workmen are expecled to start dOC'k installation in the eastern wharf of the twln·basln marina before the end of lhe year. "Because they don't have an y dredging to do. the dock and float work should progress preUy fast ," Rains said. It is projected that the first boats being tied to permanent berths cou ld arrive at the harbor weeks before the May. 1971. deadline. "By summer, you won't even recognize this place ." Rains said. Even the resident engineer will have left by then. Rains -who has been the resident engineer through four solid years of construction at the harbor -will be out of an assigrunent. "It doesn't bother me a bit, though," he said Tuesday. "After four years or this hard work, I need a re st. "And I think I'll take one," he said. Boat Race, Fashion Show Mark 'D.ana Day' at Point Celebrating the birthday or namesake Following the swim. more than JOO ruchard Henry Dana, residents of Dana llobie Cats le[t Dana Point Harbor with Point. held a festive "Dana Day," a strong breeze, and headed out to Saturday, that ranged from youthful , swimming contests to 0 Id .t im er open sea. ~ov;ev~r, results ~f the race remini~nces. 7 we.r..e..._ not immediately available from First event in the morning was ~ the Olma Point Yacht Club, which swimming contest in the new Dana Point sponsored the contest. Harbor. Sally Norton and Hobin Deacon Throughout the day, motorcycles, a lied for first place in the .100 ye.I. swim . dune buggy and a catamaran "'ere on nanny Holtz came in second and David display in the Dana Point Plaza . Groos. third . A fashion show was held in the af· In the 333 yd. swhn for youngste.rs tcmoon for the female Dana Day goers, 14 and under Laura Conroy took the featuring 54 lively new outfits from five winner 's spot. Dayona Lobmark was sec· sportswear shops in the Dana Poinl cond and Karyn Lund captured third area. pl;i~. llounding out the day was a bil of Duncan Wilson swam to first place history from ten of the old timers in in the 333 yd. swim for those 14 and the small seaside community, who older. Peggy Tosdal was second and reminisced about area history and the Malcolm Wilson, third. "good old days." Bluffs to Get Bolstering Floocl Relief Funds to Aid Soil Moving Project By JOJIN VALTE RZA 01 !ft• 0•111' J'llll S!•lf One oC San Clemente's most unstable and perilous bluffs will soon becorne more solid under a city plan to use flood disaster relief runds for a major soil moving project. City Councilmen Wednesday night will receive specificallons from the city enginee r on a project to recompact .about 10.000 cubic yards of fill along the blufls below Lhe Colony Cove development which has the most acute slumping in the Palisades. City Engineer Phil Peter said the prf)- ject would cost about $2.8,000 according to current projections. The actual east will be more certain when proper bids are received . The plans call for gouging away the \Instable Cspistrano shale fonnaUon to solid mater\al d~p in the bank, then begin restoring the bluff with more stable sol!. Seeping ground waler, which is !he trigger for the. BOmellmes large slkles, would be vent<'d th rough pipes in the new rtll m11terla l alle\tia tlng the un- Water used for yards and plahts began The slumping has bcc<lme so acule In several areas that front yards of expensive homes above are showing dips and fissures, the engineer said. The slumping of the soft palisad es earth became se rious soon after the tracts above were developed. Water used for yards and plantsbegga seeping underground , then through the exposed sides of the palisades. As the moisture fil\:I lhe cracks in the soil stone tons or material fall to Pacific Coast Highway below. The slides have <'aused the clo<sing of some lanes ol the roadway while state crews clean up the mess. The project is relalively small for the sir.e of the problem, Peter said, "but it's a start. It will be an intermediate measure to keep lhe bluffs from ~· lapsing, and we think It will work, ' he said. ' But despite the progressing plan! for the Colony Cove problem, the nagging dilemma of earth 1llde1 1n another sec- tion of the city has rem ained static for months 1lnce a slide there. A slump occurring early Otis year in the lUllcrest tract above steep canyon• Inland in San Clemente still dlrectlv lhreatens one home and could severelf damage several mqre. !fours of meetings bet we c n ho1neowner s -particularly the Eugene Seels family of 717 Avenida Colombo -have yielded little in the way of a solution. Thousands of dollars would be required to correct the danger of the gaping hole in the Seet.3 family 's back yard. Plans for an improvement district In the neighborhood were dl3cussed at length last spring, but were ruled impractical betause of extreme costs to homeowners involved. The official city position hall been that the slwnp is a private matter which could not be repaired at city expense. l'e.ter had recommended that the most efficient way to correct the 1aping hole on the cahyon wall would be a project simila r In application to that proposed In COiony Cove. But it would be on a larger scale -four-Umes-more dirt to be moved and about four-times the cost o( the Colony Cove proposal. .JL61 'S tnny ''tpsMl~M I ltlovitig Day in Capo • DAILY 1'L#r "' v DAILY J'll.Of lh'lf J'lliltf The old city hall of San Juan Capistrano Is emply now. City councilmen and olher officials have been moved to new facilities near the Consolidated Rock Products plant, pending the day a civic center can be aUorded. The council will bold its first session in the new building Au.s;::. 10. - 1/2 OFF MEN'S REGULAR $100 SUITS I .. .. SPORT COATS, ALL WOOL, DACRON /WOOL SLACKS, FAMOUS PER MA-PRESS REG . $9-$12 5.99 SWEATERS, FAMOUS WOOLS AND BLENDS REG.$18 $5 SPORT SHIRTS, SHORT SLEEVE PER MA-PRESS SWIMWEAR, FAMOUS MAKE-TRUNKS AND SETS DRESS SHIRTS, LONG SLEEVE, WHITE &COLORS DRESS SHIRTS, LONG SLEEVE, FAMOUS MAKE TIES, GREAT COLORS, GREAT SELECTION BELTS,BIGVARIETY,GIANTSAVINGS REG, $4 -7.50 1.99·2.99 ANAHEIM ONLY! THURSDAY 7 P.M, TO 10 P.M, ONLY! . • OAll.Y PllOT ..,_ er B 11 lalu W®ld I ._ __ Mct,butbe'r ___ ...... the brief: ..... lie loll la a. v-. . doctoral CJ •p' ot Ae u..i-stly oC ll& R -taie lldetcue "°"' Ulflml •• ,_.. 1!1 llrcb oD tmi· ......,, laa ..... l'ia to the autc tli!llf; lie -llli)r tloir tbe retum °"'9' ... W p • • • T1aq IO'I/ l&!!JJ!lf' .. doo ~ UllwQs "' pooplo, ""' 11111 " - 1-: What -· to Na --ia tlle Tyler, T.,, dtp park' ii ontr 9"Ve0r-old Mikt Dance tnside a plat1- f1J11Vftd structure. • The men who work at nine pl&lp and paptr miU,, in BriUs:h Columbia ore asking for fov.r month.I of maternity leave: a..r OM' of their contract ~ Although the Pulp and Paper Worke1'1 of Canada ha.J only a. handful of women among its 5,000 m.rnzbtrs, the union want.I maternity leave exteruUd to the men. Union official.J say that IDM'n a mnnbtr asked for timt uff a few years ago 10 /te coul4 mind the children 1ohile his wife 10tu: tn hospital having a baby. tM company refused. • Dorothy Ann Schurk went to p<r lice headquarters to claim her car. Instead. she got a ticket for negli- gent driving. Police said she was thrown clear when the c:ar hit a guanl railing-and then lunged over it. ~gyptGuns, ' Israel Jet,s In Combat IJ7 Vllled "'-- ~ 11111""" raln<d antllery llhelll 00 Israeli -In lhe - Cina! -today Md lora<U warplanel stnlck blclt In lhe 'l7lh 0011SOC11Uve day al oir raids In the .,.. -lhe Ualt<d Sl&ta Is lryln( to alablisb a ..-. Olher t..radi jels auacl:od Larpls In -in -t .... cklcribod u repriSa1 raids fer Arab suenllll allacb m Israeli farm QlllllllUllllie Graund lllrm1llllnl WU ropmUd alooc lsrMl'I bonier with Ltbanoa. 'lbe commtwu overWclowed by a deepeoio& rtll In lhe Arab -Id aver the U.S. plan far Middle East ~ Iraq Implied tbat Eal>t'• ~ to light led lt to accept the American call for a ceue-ftre and negotlatiou wid8 U.N. auspioes. Egypt convened a unity conference of Arab states in Libya today but Iraq boycotted iL A Cairo communique said Egypt1an artillerymen opened fire on llraell posi- tions in the northern sector of the Suez Canal. "One Israeli tank wa! destroyed and its occupants kiUed," it a:aid. 1be Cairo announcement said 2& Israeli fighter-bombers SWt:pl over lbe canal and 1ttacbd Egyption polltlom in the -and...-.-... "The Israeli planes were met with heavy llJ'>IDd fire," an EcYPtion spotemian said. "'Two of our 10ldlef1 ..... woonded In lhe oir attacU.'' In Tel Aviv, Israeli h<adquart.n Aid other fighter-bombers ltnJck Int o northern Jordan It 10 a.m. to hit "'ter· Rrlll targds" for ID bour In reprlsll Car guerrilla •mnc of a Id-about 11 miles IOUlh of lhe Sea al Gllilee. Israel said ID Arab guerriJ.1a Wll killed In clash with an Israeli Army J>ltrol this morning In the foolhills ol Mt. Hermon on the Lebaneat border. ho other guenillu _. ftlJOrlod killed in a clash between lbt Dead Sea and the Sea of Galilee. Baghdad radio broadcast a series or denunciations qa1nst Cairo this morning u the iraqi leadership joined AJgeria 1n boycott:if18 a meeting in Tripoli. Libya, ol the so.ailed Arrb "conCnmlation" states. The meeting or defense and foreign minisUn of Etypt. Jordan, Libya and the Sudan opened after a two-day de.lay • the Libyu premier, CoL Moammar AJ.Kl!adafi, .-·attempt to solve the lnlqi.F.Qptlan rtfl, llll -failed. l.amouream, 82. Di~ a.ERMONT~FERRAND, France (AP) -Lucien LamoureUI, 82, wbo was finance mlni!ter when France fell to the Germans in 1940 died today after a heart attack at his home in the village of Creuzler-le-Vieux. An Oregon CODtnc1or buildlDlr a new road bas found • 1ooCI wa:y to 1et motorist&' aUtntlon by birinJt Jennifer Hummel to wield slow and stop signs. Ma1e drivers don't seem to mind the inconvenience any more. Fewer Than 24 States to Allow 18-year-old Vote WASHINGTON (AP) -Leu than hall of lhe ti atates that do DOI allow 11 year oldl to wte have indicated tbey will -ply with the lower voting qe iii the new -.I Voting Righi& Act, Atty. a-n! John N. Mlld1ell Aid todoy. ReipC"-from the 50 state,, to • letter oent out by MlldleD last moaUt brought out that :IO stater Will allow 11 year olds to vote in all electiona alter Jan. 1, lfll. Two states -C-pa and Kentucky -now pmnJI II yur olds to vote. Jn addition, between three and 111 states with the literacy or goockharader poll tests may defy tbe new law's ban on such voting requirements, Mitchell said. That provision of the law went into effect JWJe 22, the dale President Ni1on IJgned the bill. Mitchell wrote governors of the 50 states July 16, seeking written assunnce:s by lut Monday they would comply with all . prov!sl-of the act. Mitchell lll<I ~ lepl -....id be twn aptoot -wbo llllllmltkd a ne1allft ._... ar failed to nopood. Of most lmmedlate tmportance II --of -..,, or pl character tests In the 14 st.ates which have that requirement. Eight of the states - California, Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, New Yort, Oregon and Washington -have agreed to suspend lhe literacy tests, Mitchell said. RFK Jr. Nabbed Shriver' s Son Also Held in Drug Raid HYANNIS PORT, Mua. (UPI) - Robert F. Kennedy, 16, IOD of the late New York aenator, and R. Sargent Shriver m , 17, son of the former am- bassador to Franct, were arrested Tues- day night in drug raids, it was disclosed IDday. 1be two boys were among 17 persons seized in raids by local police in th e Hyannis Port area, according t o authoritative sourres. The charges in· votved marijuana, the sources said. The raids were staged at several spots In this Cape Cod resort oommunity. Authorities said the youths who are not juvenile wouJd be arraigned today in district court. The juveniles art to appear Thursday io the juvenile seuion of lhe same e<1urt. Under state law, juvenile court pr~ ceedings are privileged. Musachuaetts law states that persons under II are considered to be juveniles. Young Kennedy is the second oldest son o[ Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (O..N.Y.), who was assassinated in June, 1968 while campaigning for the presidency. Shriver is the son of R. Sargent Shriver, who migned earlier thia year as U.S. ambasudor to France and ii campaigning around the oountry in sup- port of Democratic candidates aeek1n& election. Celia's Wake Leaves Rain Southwest Showers Follow Swrm; Sunny Elsewhere Coutal (J,S. AIMll-111 ·--" ... !1'e!ll• ll&k.,..llrld 111...,,trck '"" ... ,M Chlt.l'IO Clnclrll'llll Cleffi1ncl ~ ..... Otlroll IEurfl<• F'ort Worth F'•flne ··-Honolul11 " .. " . n " ... " n ... " .. .... " " .. ~ " .. " . " n " n ... ... " n ... m n It '' ... N " " M "'"' •ti-"""""""· LJllM ..,,,.. l1bl• wsrm 111111t Nill "*""""' llouf'9 119comlftt _,..... I .. 11 Ulh IOI 111..-'°*' tM ""'"9Ur. Hltl't lodll1' XI, Molt Of !flt N rlcor> 11941 '""""· plff" I M -tMr tollrl. Tl'lu1lde~rl Pfl'llutd ht IUtltl'M t r.It. TM rtfl'IMll!l f'f Hll"ltlnt Ctll• _..., 1kMly a¥tr norlllllrn N..., Mo· iCO lowtrll -"'"•1 Art1-. 5Nwlra lllf ""'"""!Offtu dltlttd "'"'"'" , ••• II Mel Nl'tt If IOll"""11 NfW Mtxko IM Ari-... HOUllOll l(Af!~t(lly I.ti Vffl' Lo. Atotflt' Ml1rr1! Bffcl'I Mll..,lulc., MlnnMPOlk New Df1Hlll N .. Yortl OMltncl a.. .. .. ..,. iltetolt>• Phll..i.1114'11• P'-"lx Pltt!Wrth iJ'ortl- iltld 811111 • • " u " .. ... .. .. " n ... \ eo.1111 ,_, ... ,.,.,.. f-., l'o 16, lnl...., ..,,..,f\jl'ft ~ fl'Wlt '-I i. llO. Wfiff *'-fl'lln ... S11n, Moo11, Title• WIPNISO-.Y S«o!llll ll~ , . IO!Jll '·"'· '·' ~ low •:4 "·""· 1.1 THUiltSW.Y l"lnt h1-! . •. ,., • 1l1M•.m. •.I '"'"'}Ow ....... •1lt•fl'I, •. , kOfld l'lftll ""' •• , 10;:11111 fl'I, (,f ~ Miii' •. • ...... l:2• 11.m. t.I ..... • .... •:07 •• ,,.. .... 1111 •·"'-... ..,.,;111.m. Httf1J111.m. ftrttlde!ll Ni.ti! T...-ldaY d9(1fm -•I IOVlll lntl twnr+.1 • m1lor dl .. lltr trH, lrH ln• federtl hlna. for rwlllf ITOl'fl lhl l\utr!(1M'I Cl<IYl$1•• !Ion. Ar IHal nlnoi Pt't'llP<'il .... .,. •llled incl mvr1 ll'ltn 1,000 lnh;r..O b1 I~• tlOl'll'I. lqtl..-ff llltWt'I Wtl9 -!ff '""" "'-M11!~1rn mllfWttt te I'°' tovlh-.,.,, Ind tllf ... ltellll(' CO.ti *llY, ton-.. r•lll •llO t.11 Ill !hi untrll ..... toU1lltnl ltldllt&. ·~ San•Ment.i s1. Lou11 $111 l.•~· (lly Sin Dl~ g.,. Fr•M!Mo 511111 8•rt:Mor1 5•••ti. -·~ Thet,,. •• WtllllntlM "' n " " ... .. ., ... H M " .. .. ,, n " SI II ~' ,, n n ... tit n . " .... Celia Now Rain Storlll Nine Killed in Texas When Hurricane Hit CORPUI ClllUITI, Ta. (UPI) -'Ille -"' -Celia, -It lb bolPt d<vdated ....... of - from tho Gull CO..t to lhe Mexican bonier, todoy clwllped'buvy raim and threatened OUh !1oodJnc In far wett Tuu, '190 mllu -tho - Ot111, pocklnc w1m11 "' 1'1 m11u .. _., -from tbe CUii "' - and cut llO -tbnll<lh Tau ...... d<y, tlllln( nine -· demollstllng -·••!)'town In Ml palll and ........ mllllool "' doDan lo dlmqe. 'Cella turned Into. nJa Monn, careyinC aa 1llUl;b mollturl u II did wl>m ll !Int lilt lull but -the burrlcane winds. •Vfrl bulldlnl lo tho di!' of 191,141 wu damapd. No e~t7. No water. Damlp e1Um11H 1t S100 mlllloo. One thousand lQjured. Aransaa P111 -Foor de1d. Major or minor demage to tvtry bulldlllf In town. Almo&t no drlnklnC Wiler. Balllln( prohibited by law. Mathb-Dae deod. 'Dall)lp ~t<d at IU million. More lllao :10 peroent ol the r..ldencel and llO -t of lhe -d....,..i. ' In -Uon to lhe nlno pe..-killed u dir..t r<IU!t of lhe b~ - olben died al hurt •Uackl ln Corpuo airtstl durtnr Mooday'1 alorm. • "Hunicane Cella may prove to be tile mo&t dlsutrous ..... to bit tbe T6U Gull COUt la mocknl ttma1 11 Gov. Smilh said In a telegram to ~I Nixon roqu"Ung the COISl be dc<lar'"1 a federal dlsasler area. "( don't .guess there'• a buslne.y, in town left/' said City Clerk Bittle Joe ~Tennill ot Odem. "Just about everytbtng WU demolisbod. II lrene Williams. • C.Orpus Christi tele)!l/ooe 011•>r1lor1 oald "our houso trallet ezploded wnen l firl!l hll Wo can't find 'anything. Not even the relrlgerator. We can't even find tho .refrigerator door -only a shelf." Robert Wage, his wlfe and hll JeVen childrtn moved to the eo1st recently from Denver. "We've always wanted to live on the water," Mrs. Wage said. "But this is 1 little too much water." Rainl of two lncbes ...,.. common throu&tlout ~ populated w• Tu· u and lhe El Puo Wealller Bonau -llub llood warnlnp I« lhe blr beod country "' TeDL 4 of Sextuplet,s Succumb SU'elml wml runalo( II llood ._ and llftral roMI were under water, but there were no injuries or utelllive c11maae. Along lhe coast and lo Corpuo Oirlo1I, b>wever, there wu IUCb ~ that Gov. -Smith called Celia "the mo&t dllamool otorm to bit the Tuaa Gull Cout In mod<ni Times.'' Virtllally ft'lfQ ._.,umty In the Polb "' lhe otorm """' it .... al ill peak WU fieznoM1bed The want bit cWel were: Corplll Cbrlatl -Four dead. Nearly ' ROME (UPI) -Four ol Ute sextuplet. born three montha prematurely to a previousl7 childless ltallu housewile died early today wllhln IJ houn of birth. Docton aald there was lltUe chance lhe two survl•ini lnfont. woold live. Mrs. AntonJo Petrone, $5, gave birth to three boys and three 1lrls, ltaly'a llrsl oatuplets, lo a -spll1 Tuesday nighl and wu ._;ed lo pl condllion. She hid been lr<aled wiUt a fertility dru1 after 11 chiJd1ea yeara of m.arrLage to a $40-a·week 1abortr. One boy and one girl djed thr~ hours after birth. The~eaths Of another boy and girl were annoonced at midmorning. The surviving babies were kept under constant watch in oiygen-nnea . in. cubators and were reported breathing laboriously, neither of them weigh.in& more u.,n two pounds. Petrone vi.sited his wife In her room th1a morning and held her hand a.. they chatted. Other women patlenta in the hospital gathered aorund ber bedside in a gesture of sympathy. 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 should I put my savings with Mutual Savings and Loan Association? A, We asked our own account holders for the answer to this one, They have confidence in the knowledge of our employees. They can depend 11}>on receiving accurate information, and are pleased with the efficient and courteous . service, 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 oljices in Pasadena (head office), Glendale, West Arcadia, Covina and Corona de! Mar. MUTUAL SAVINI& CO&O!IA OD. MA&• 2167 l!oM Colll His!twa1 - New .ABM System Started by Army ~ ~' · W ASHlNGTON (UPI) - The 1/trmy haa ttarted work .on a new , Lmproved an- tlbalU1tlc mllsile 1 y 1 t e m d~lJned to"'J"eplace Safeguard, ll1o 16 billion <o $10 billlon ABM syatm it. hu ju.It 11.attecl (0 build. i 1be new syltem, dubbed "Hardslte," would ClOlt the ,amc 11 or a Uttle more than Safeguan:I, the weapon which ha! provided a plaUorm for the mlliLlry spending deba\e lhrough much ol the 91>1 Con11res5. Elbtence of the ne1t' ABM system waa diJclosed in secret testimony by Anny research and development officials to the House Appropriations Com· -mlltee . Opponen<o ol the ABM aay the adminiatraUon should atop work on Safeguard now and devote Us resources to the new Hardlite system. But Anny offllcals say If they ketp doing ihat, they will never get anything built. Rwt Troops 1 Arrest 20 -. U'IT•I ..... SEN. FULBRIGHT SCORES rv COVERAGE CBS President St11nton Waits Turn to Reply In Ireland Two Network Chiefs BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPl) -British troops charg- ed Into crowds, bloodying , heads and arresting -~.ft ' persons, Tuesday night and I Def end TV Co ve ra ge WASHINGTON (AP) Television network chief! urg· ed Congress today to qu it thinking about getting into the newscasting , business a n d leave the job to the p~ fessionals . In test imony for the Senate Communications Committee, CBS president Frank Stanton and NBC president Julian Goodman opposed a bill by Sen. J. W. Fulbrl,ght (0-Ark.), to require broadcasters to give prime Ume to the Senate, Houu and judiciary. They said broadcast newsmen present a fair, balanced nevls report, and de.scribed Fulbright's proposal as "dangerously simplistic," unnecessary and possibly an infringement upon a free prcs1. Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (D· Maine ). however. backed Fulbright by saying television dlstorta complicated national Issues and that Congress should have a chance from time to time to address itself directly to the public as the president now does by custom. '"11le people have a right to be informed of the prevail· ing congressional attitude on lhe significant n a t i o n a I is.sues," l\tuskie said. Goodman replied: • ' W e believe that the goa1 of public understanding is best met by letllPg broadcasi.ers, rather than legislators or regulators. judge what kind and com- bination of programs wiU most fairly and fully cover a particular issue. · • Broadcast organizations have no poliUcal alms. Their newsmen -by training, background and approach - are concerned with reporting event.s and examining issues as professional journaijata, not 'vith winning votes or elec· 1 tions." Stanton said broadcast news is not perfect. "But it is most certainly rnore satisfactory · than It would be under any system in wllich n e w s . judgments are made b y government ofricials or die· lated by legislative o r regulatory formulas." Bomb Be~alled Thousands Tour Hiroshima today in a crackdown on Roman Catholic mobs that have attacked them Y.'ith stones and bottles for six con- secutive nights. Soldiers exp r es s ed In- creasing bitterness and frustration at lhe tactics of ·the ca~holics. An Army spokesman said several soldiers were injured by the latest stone and bottle barraee from the crowds in the catholic areas of Belfast. Twenty-fJve were injured Monday night.. There was a brief outburst Tuesday night in Londonderry. where mobs attacked army patrols and set fire to two buses and three can for use as barricades. Though the disturbances Tuesday night were mild com- pared v.ith the five previous nig hta, the soldiers 1wtt11g their clubs with abandon and used nausea gas to disperse crowds. More States Might Lose House Seats WASHINGTON <UPll - The 1970 cemus, when finally tabulated, might put Alabama and Oklahoma among those states expected to lose a con· gressional seat. a House sub- committee predicted Tuesday. HlROSHIMA, Japan (UPI) it at 200,000. The congressional delega- -Visitors from almost every "There ha9 been a sharp lions of the two states had comer of the world toured increase in the number of been expected lo remain Hlrolhlma today 00 the eve foreign visi tors in recent unchanged in a proje<::Uon of the 25th anniversary of its weeks," said Y o s h i m I t s u made by the House Census destruction by the first atom Kosakai, historian in the and Statistics Subcommittee bomb dropped In anger. Hlroshlma Peace ·Memorlal last year. Museum. "Visitors are coming But preliminary census Hotels and boarding houses from practically every country returns now indicate Alabama reported capacity bookings. in the world." and Oklahoma might join Many of the foreigners came The tourists went to Peace Iowa, North Dakota, Ohio and from the Expo '70 world (air Park to see the only buildin11 West Virginia In the tabulation at nearby Osaka. ... · h t I ( In lhe loss of -seat each preservll:U 1n t e s a e o ""~ • .tit 8 1.m. Thursday, the destrucUon left by the gen-when the nation's 435 con- extct hour when the U.S. 829 baku (atom bomb) that the gressional dlstr1cts are reap.- Enola Gay dropped the flrsl United States dropped on Aug. portioned on the basis of final Like Saleiu1rd, tho .ofew ABM -now lft the ,••concept formulation" ttaa:e , would. protect U.S. mllallc 1llot agalmt a pl'Hmptlff SOvtet 1trlke. The dlttertnct would be that "Hardslte" wouk9 con- liK of more, but Ml\IUer aftll cheaper, r•dart and • com- puttrs than lho9t btlnJ UMd by Safeguard. The radar-computer unlta, which guide Sprint interceptor misslle1, woukl be • o numerous that it would be unattractive lor the Soviets <o try II> knocl< lllem out. The Safeguard radara and computers are tara:e and d · pemive. Some tclentll!lil fear they woukt make .. etiisy, at- tractive targets ln a n y Russian attempt to overwhelm , the ABM and then paralyu the _..retaliatory miu:ilea In t.beir silos. The Anny offictalt, led by Aa3ist.tnl Secrelaey R. L. Johnson, said they ....,ruzed Otis as a po91ible deficl~ if the Soviets lncreaae the accuracy of their mlaeUe1 and the number of re-entry ,vehicles each missile can~s. atom bomb, tho~ands in 6 1945 1970 figures, the panel said. Hlroehlma 's Peace Park will, __ •--·-----------------! bow their heads to mourn the dead. The exact number o f persons killed by t h e Hlroshlma bomb never i,s been determined. The United States e8llmated the death toll at 80,000. The lapanese put * * tr Bomb Site Rally Slated LOS ALAMOS. N.111. (UPI) -Peace advocate! were gathering today for an anU war rally at the site whe~ 1clcmtilta gathered secreUy durlni World WIT n (0 build lb< [int 1toml< bomb. Loi AJiunot, a remote mounlllnowl r o m m u n I t ; 1iilfltly oldu than 111o •ll>lllk 1ge tt Ulherod In, lt'1he Wail of a twCMlay Hikllhiml dly demonstration. City olllcial> said <l1e com. munlty'a police forct ha• been alerttd and IS slate policemen have been st.atloned throughout the community or 16,11111 petllOlll. . " wunRN STAn UNIVIUITT COLLEGE OF LAW hi Orange Cllunty now •cceptln1 mtn and women whe.,.. olthor: ....... ,. "'"" ' ,... ., _.. ............ """"''CM!, w • ·~ ,, ..................... ,....,. i,.. ~ ... !'tJ' .... ·r .. -........ ............ I ••• , .... , ... 11.t • .,_ ............ ltt. -· ""-'!""' ........... ] •lwMll ,... -.lo J ...... ,., d - A pp ly Now for September 10th DAY OR IVINING CLAllU •!'fte ........ ,.,, ,.,.,, ..., .......... 1001.--.. AMhelm Phene 635-3454 fi.. -"4' 1\,1. • j,D, ..Ill ._ -'""'941 ·-,,.,_ •etltot ·-..... -,..... .... "" ,.. ""' .... "" t ... -1119 ...... °'"'"'"' ... tk .,_ ... c..11 .. ~i.. °""" -... e11,1w. .. .....~ ... c.11........ ..... .., ~ ..... 1...it.1. > OAAYl'IUT f 11 Pe.rish • Ill Blaze ': Building Destroyed in Minneapolis • • • MINNEAPOLIS. Minn. (AP) wa1 less severely damaced. a coiled-up rope at the wtn:-j -Eleven men, molt ot them A prtllmb\u'J Jo4a nttmate dow. elduly, cHed In 1 blai.e lhat wu put at $ll0,80D by Lee Ke IUcked out a wlndow: • JWepC, a three·ltory buJ1dJng J. Schotphoerater, Ji Ir* U'lrtw out the rope ind 11W.. tn downtown MlnneapolJt early Department aupervllor ot in-down lhe ro1.1gh brick flCinl: today. Four pertondl were ... vesLlcatlonl. ol UW buiJdlnJ, h1I Mndt hotpltallwl lo crlllcal con-, ·-· , ·-·•~ ~ ~ ~ with burns u ht ditlon ..... ,. -•-..rt, -· """ laniJld oti the atdwalk whtlf: Fir~ Offi,clall aald nine occupied 1 lhlrd·floor room. fl gtne allltd io tlll. others ttcaped, one by ~limb-wu ulttp .when die flrt .::ne~n I w ---~ Inc down 1 rope strunl' llOt broke oul 11MI bulfdtnc hOultd t.h:l'W-• from 1 window on the top '"I twoke ind s m • 11 t d bush1liMt Ofl tbl flr•t novr floor !lmoke." he. said. "So I ope~ and had J3 unltt el. rooms ~blaze apparently atarted the door aJld I could hardly ind apartmenll on the second Nixon Meets Congo Chief W ASlllNGTON (AP) tn a wooden outside: slatrway see the corridor Uaht, It was and third flo«_ Located lit' on the back. flremfn 11ld. ao black." the 200 block ol Eut Htnnepija'°':' cause was not immediate-He aafd ht knew he'd never Avtnue, tt wu not ftr fron) •• ly known. The Interior cl the mate it don the llain, ao tht MISllulppt IUY6. m a CoQIO Preskltnt J o • e P b second and lhlrd fJoon wtrt he kicked hit way into a Vlfl. section of mal( bullneSld Mobutu, In th~ country trying deatroye<I but <l1e 5rat fioot' cant room oext door and found and roomlna: hollles. • ' to tritereat A mer I c anl~ • • • • • • • • •...!._ • • • • • • • • • • • ~ • • • • • • • • • • .. ~ bull-in hi.! African,. UL YMPIC POOL "' homeland, bas 1 booeter in • • :. Pt i•-t Nb 1• Th• "MARATHOll SWIM" 11 In Ito 11th O.y. Tho Ki.la Hov• Swum "~" on. • 946,751 Yord1 UM Miios) MG'""'""""'' Hourt l a eo~:000 .. :C<,.:1\,,~~~e~~: HAVE YOU 8ACKID THD\ WITH YOUR :·· for Am<rlcan ent<rprlse, but • DONATION? we "' 11~. ,.,.,..._,,..,., let w -.. -,_ .,,. • ~.!ol~~:tl~a~e~:y s:!~!: ~';.·:ti''~-~-~.~~~~ .. ~~~: ....................... -------·------··-·-···-········-··---·-------·--·-: ' !or achlevin1 1 b1ianced • ADDAI~ l y·;,1 ·;;·i·A .... P·o·o-C ..... -.. ·-----··-.. ···1':Q.~ii;;feoo··-· .... -......... • budi<l and I favorable bal.. F OU ND AT I 0 N Costa -· C1Uf. 92627 • ance of trade. ·• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • w • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • r isa p. • Get the picture. fa ce up to the full-color Polaroid Land Camera at any one of United States National Bank's 58 con· venient offices. It's a snap. In just 60 seconds your pict ure will be ready for your ap. prova l. Then it's chemica lly laminated into your faceCa rd, the safest, most conven ient Master Charge,card yet. . • • . ·, -· . .,; ,• ' • • If you already have a Master Charge, replace ft with a new faceCard. It's absolutely free, of course. •• Should you lose you r FaceCard or have it stolen •.• it's still safe. Any attempt to break the seal destroys the usefulness of the card. No cred it card is safer. Or mare exclusively yours. It provides qu ick, positive identification wherever and when· ever you need it. Merchants glance at your faceCard . Then atyou.!\lldqulcldy know you have a face to be trusted. If all this isn't enough, we give you an added bonus. With .,,,.-~our faceCard, you get the option of our Bonus Balance Check Plan, which lets you write checks for more than you hive In your account. Apply for your FaceCard today. It's a snap. UNITED 68 convenient locations STA.'J'BS NATIONAL ____ ._.. .. , ...... _._ BAN'K Cetta Motl Olli,. 1145 Newport l(yd, SoUfh ,_ PlllD 3333 lrlmt S'""' ... I • -- - D"¥*Y PJLPJ EJ)ITOll,IAL PAGE . ' ~ . . . . ' A New City M;anag~J? . Lacaa e.dl CllamMr of Commerce directors are tnlemled 'Ill f°'1f\bll • committee to advise city or. ficiall Oii cllarac:lelistics they Y(OUld like to see in the next c:ll)''lbaooCOl\ . Jomes D, vri.ton, clly manager hir tho pest eight years, tl 1-,. Ws .mon!I> tct be<a!l>t> rnty manager of Ool'Olla. , • · · Chamber directors h8"" lllikecl qf formation of a blae .rt• committee to determine tho wishes of the peotlle Md .Svt.e the scruning' bMnl about city man· ager iO!eeliQI\. Other civic grou~ will probably be Interested in t'Ofttributih.("'~ews on selection ot a new city m~nager. Certainly it 1J a very important st<p for the city. L>- guna has many problmis yet to sol+o. And Iha art col.Oil)' always· has a broad speclnlm of opinK>n on ap- proaches to these problems. • The council may very well find it· helpful to have ci.lizen •U&if•UClll' on methods alljf otilB(la: !or 'ChOos.. Ing a city manecar. But !be direct, final responsibility for selection must. "'1>f course, rest '901ely ud squarely OD the COWll'il, , On& Criterion on which all should be able to egree ts that Lal(•~-needs lo P!'Y what Is necessary to Ob-' taiil a lop <ll!MIY< city manager. \Yi th S9 much at sWte here in tf\e iiexf lew years, anythiili less would be a had,,!llliu.sUflable gamble. Crea' g a Teen Cepter • County supervisors have approved a $60,000 budget item at the urging of Mission Viejo-Aegean Hills resi· dents to create a teen center. • l ~ Supervisors at !Int luid ""!.'" 4oubls aljQul t•I nc the money to lbls use -.......-...,.•t '"' al \II• outset bow many persa6t •lllito! tbil a4d!Uooal ~ce. The pro-teen ~ flftO lllrn,d l6 •Ith 'I ~ and tn short brdr.r ~ 904 snnatum of area llomeowner&. 'upportlnR the llltD centeJ. · , .,:. ~ · Pait ol the•f00 ,000 llli'or'a pr•fabrlcaled sttucture. a nolH'l!eurting item. Annual cost !1 •i<P<Cled 11fler that to run m.ooo to $30,000. The )'Outh center force' ai;t to be congratulated on •their deltnnirlation abd bustle. Next comes the Import· a.nt tasll of developing wholesome proirams of real , m.. ... terest to the y00ng and this will r<quire .somo teenage input. Marjo1·ie Williamson Laguna'~ Pageant of th• Masters lllerally-owes its Chinned Jile to volunteers who donate hundreds of hours to tb,e task of creating Us dattlirfg '1.ivfng p;c-- tures." · Last week the Pa~eant lost the gifted hands ol one of its most 'dedicated backslage helpers, Marjorie Wil· liamson. The only member of this year's production crew who ba'd worked on the very first Pageant, 35 ~years . ago, Mrs. Williamson. at 85, loved her work and was. in tum. beloved by her <»-workers. 1 Her duties as a seamstress in the wardrobe depart- ment began months before opening night ~ continued throuith the run of the show as she cheerily h81ped the models with their costumes. Jn her 35 years with the Pageant. Mrs. Williamson saw her son Don become its producer, her grand- daughter become an artist exhibitor on the Festival ~rounds and, this year, her great grandson make bis bow as a model. -------... + • - ' .. Tbe request was somewhat unique in that the resi· dents of the area asked the county to utilize Special Service District funds that they pay for services above the normal county service level. -The Pageant will miss her loving touch. s ~MAN, SOME l'tOfLE TAKE Ro<K . Decries Ilse of Jtlovie Stflt's as Pawns Moral Values Must Tak~ .. 1_ Top P!'~~ii;._-~ Dear Glpom~­ Gus: 'Politicians Insult California Voters' c • • A minisi.t..jn SL Paul bu asked me to commen~t be calla 0 tbt rasct.m or the terr he -reartiic tJa 11&IY head !<Jc!ay la Gar country. He feels that the "predurel, ~­ and bigotries of the left• are bedunJn& • mlmlr-image of !aacim! "" the rtshl There ii DO doubt U! llJ1 mlod that lhia ia happming. It ii -laevlflble. E.-er linoe the bull: ~ wlill ii ~ u "the left" embrlait Mlniam- 1..etinism a haH-<en1Ur7 -the teo· deocy ha• aiw.,,. been tlwp. THE SEEDS OF aboolulllm art det!ply planted in the Man:- ist..Lenlnist soiL If Lenin h..:l lived, I am convinced be "'·ould have pursued • policy little less diabolic than Stlilin did ; if Trotsky had ¥.'On out. despile his cosmopolU.anis:m, he y,wJd have been as • ruthless and d<N> trinaire as the Georgian puunl who took power. The only hope for the "New ~fl," l1t my opinion. is a total btetk ;.lb the formulations of the Oki Left. While Marx' critique of ooc:lal ID~:and · inequities has much to recommerid. it -in the line of the Old Testament prophets -his progrMU and policies are not only economically irttJevant to- day, but his social and polit~~A.pJ~ are more tillilg than curina. ~ THE YOUNG PEOPLE I m05t admirt: today are those who have brokea away ' ,... ~tors for one of 1.aguna•a Mt .. recently :-arrived rellgtoua YCta sboulcf rullu that they're posblng their luci a bit far wt1en they keep pestering people to buy incense :end make a donation.In return for printed 111&1ttiaL ' -Mra""'-o. --~~-).';.- -...._ riftlcll ,.,..... ...... , ~ _..., ............ ,,.w; ~ ,... ........... ,....., ..... °"" ...... • To the i;dilDr: What an insult that the politicians in California think the voters are so stupid that all they have to do is brag about how many big name stars arc on their bandwagon. • It seems that most of the people worrying about the 18 year olds getting tbe vote, are the same one.s that don't a:lve • thought as to the capabilities of the candidates, but merely follow ·'Whichever: one can boa.st the biggest and most of Hollywood 's phonies. . .. ' ;t, ••ta young voter, under 25, regard from all oblolete ideologi_et, who we ti: ~ of Ronald Reagan, and Jess the "human peraod" .W.oot "the state" tnrub, u an insult to my intelliaence, er, "ll&lary• u 1111 l*a .. of IO<i<f1. / ~ will DOI vote until Ibis disparity 11ley .,. ,.;_, ... ill the (lest atd · if roctlfled. / hiCbest ...... .of !he -: inowlng that it profib man nothln1 to gain cootrq_l ... ';,1 FOR ONE consider my right to or the .state if be loses his own soul .. ~ a vecy real ruponsibllity, and ii. the process. altboogh 1 have long enjoyed the efforts 1be "r~kalism .. of Marxism-Leninism o( those In Hollywood to produce en- ls not really "radical" at all. It wan!s tertainment, I become alanned when to transfer power, not to le.s3etl or the people over-identify w i t h en- redistrJbute it; it imagines that a tertainer.s, and allow them to have such restructuring of society will somel'l\fN a strong hand in deciding the outcome lead to a restructuring of personal reia-of elections. I'm well aware of the lions -but using ugly and hatt..-ful faci that entertainers have the right means to achieve good ends can result to vote just as I do, but I don't think only in a perversio11 of those end.a. !hat they should be used as p1wn.s in WITHOUT A DEEP infusion of the religlous spirit fin its most universal, arid Jtast setlarjan, sense), )eftism can be as perilous and pernicious as rightism. Unless some absol.ute moral values take priority over lactlcs and expediency and the aeilm"e of power, then revolutio11 must tnevibbly degeMerate I n to re""ssion and reactioo. Everything must be placed at ttie service or man; man must not be subordinated to some ideology that pushes him into the German gas-chamber or the Russian concentralioR<amp or the . American ghetto. Wicked acts cor- rupt the mo.st noble of intentioo.s, and out or the crucible of hare, no Jove can come. the batlle to win. the minds 1and votes of the n)A!SleS. 1 just can't understand bow ~e people of the .state of California can atand by and see this happen. But It seems that the people are ready for this type or popularity contest, or the candldales wouldn't attempt this type of massive snow job. GARY L. SILLETI The Disease or War To the Editor: Schmitz.and Leadership No one able to read the English lapguage can fail to applaud the column (July fl) by Sydney Harris, "Stamping Out the Disease of War.'' Perhaps it is his best piece of writing yet and certainly one of the top few to appear in the major press of this area. It is much too important to be merely glanced al over a cup of coffee and tossed in the waste bin . • Rep. John Schl)llll b so 0opj)oled ID 1overmnent it must be aomewhit em· barras1ing for him to represent 1!'1e 3sth Congressional District in the U.S. House of Representatives. But he was eleded more thlio a mon~ ago by the ultra-eonaervattve ~ stituency o! Orange and rural San Diego counties to go to Washlnlton and yote "no." It is customary ror U.S. 1enator9 and npre1e:ntaUves to 1nnounce rfederaJ proj. eds •nd graots that go tb &0me agency or group in their states or district!. Thill is a praclict designed to bave some political fallout beneftclal ID the poliddan maldni the announcement. MA. SCRMJTZ DECUNED to make the official 11!11lOUl1«<11"11 o! a 12-3 miJlloo !edetal I' an"" the SOlk INlitule al IA Jolla !or popo1Akio,...;iiol oWdles. He ,clldn'l agree with fl>t plllloooplly behind ·!he 1119nt. "Government should stay out of tie contr~ptive buslneu," Sdunill said. Pop,tlalion control Js a legitimate con- cern ot government i[ the prosptd of too many ·people i.s going to . have an adverse effect on re.90Ul"Ces and add to Ihe misery o! all. Mr. Sduiili.z speak' about the Im· morality of govemme.nt's concern in this field. Jt seems to ua proroundly more immoral for government to do nothing and for luders like Mr. SChmiU: to evade their ruponslbllity to Jud. Dally CalUonll• El C•JOD ,-------------:-•• 6eo,.,e------------· I abt thinb 1 •m. Frankly, Georio. J think 1hts wonun has designs on me. HANK T. Dear Han\: '.f.: Gld, ll'I almoot rrtptentng to come up agalnlt 1 .mind with the depths of lnslpt and ptrcepUon )'OU havt! , • o;• Unfortunately, l have either lost ' Ille J«Ol1d p.,• pf your letter er don't undenitlnd your problem. I CAN CLEARLY remember bl.ck a quarter of a century when, sittin1 a few yards off the beach during the inv1'tlon of two Jima and watching the methodical slaughter of good young men , I vaguely conceived some of the thoughts Harris' article .so classically articulates, here briefly paraphrased : Governments are all against war - unless they can get their way by no other means • . . Until nations are willing to give up some of their power, a.s cities and states defer to their national Quotes Glenn Strahl, Uvtrmore -"Now is the time for each citizen to do all h~ can to reverse the trend toward anarchy so apparent recently." Harry Preatoo, Hollywood -''We've been ao afraid of psychological damage to our childreR from discipline that we've ended up wilb a sick yoUflg society." Becky Fruler. Montclair , junior hi&li odH>ol lludelll -, "Saluting the flag 1:1 a privilege for me ; 11 symbolizes life, liberty, happiness and rtliglous lreedom ." l\fn. Arnokl W. Jone1 Jr., SF aoc:tallle, model, clvtc worker -''The IM!!t precious thine Is using Ume well. Too many people confuse that with 1avlng lime.'' Utters jrom f'eadns are welcome. NormaU11 wriUrt 1hould c.'Ontiq their messages in 300 toOnb OT ltu. The right to condense letkrs to fit spaca or eliminate libel is f'eterved. All le~ ters must include signatuf't and mail- ing addren, but namea may be toith- lttld on request if sufficjnit rea&on is apparent. Poet~ will not bt pub- li1htd. . ' governments, then there la no way to avWd for« and vloleia .moog nations . • • But governments are so filed in their rule they will not willingly reJinquish it • . • Jt ill therefore left to the people living under governments to inaugurate a trans-national organiza- tion for the protection of all peoples. AT THE ENO or WWII, with the st.rk hom>rs still fre!h in mind, the nations set up the U.N. to establisf'I international law and order. Now, unhap- pily, the shortness of hwnan memory aod the perversity of national leaders have pushed the U.N. onto the sideline. Every little nation is free to tool up for nuclear war. And the superpowers, v1hich have virtually targeted in an ICBM on everybody's chimneytop, fumble for an explanation as to how they can spend the largest share of the national wealth to protect their citizens, but can guarantee thal, in a hostile exchange of weapons, only a quarter or a third will "survive ." NATIONALISl\1, at which doorstep a large part or the blame for \\'WIJ is placed , floori6hes apace. We can only marvel at the infinitely diminutive mlnds which can conceive the harshest kind of domestic law and order while s i mu It an e ou s 1 y merchandising chauvinistic claptrap which promotes in· tematlonal anarchy. Going beyond Harr~· column, where do we see the gene.sis ot an international movement? Where are the youths with the guts and "'lsdom to mount it? How . can they hope to reach the citlien' of the totalitarian natklns when they get shot down in the streela of a free nation? We can imaa:ine that the Ja9t ~.s or those ..... ho perished in the firestorms of Bremen and Hamburg and Tokyo may have been something like, '"Where did we go wrong?" We can be sure that law and order among the nations "'ill prevail. The only question is wbetheT it wlll come about berore, or after, WWII!. CURTIS FAERMIN ll nderpald Postn1ea To the Editor : As 1 ltUer carrier's wife I want to add my two ctnts to all the ruckus about postal operations. I have come to one aeneral conclusion after four yean, The reason the Posl Ofrict i9 so outdated Is that they cain't hold any young men be.cause who ao raise 1 flmily oo what they payt Wlult young man will stay with an out!ll that refu.Jt3 to grow wtth the ttmes, the rtaaon for this being thal almost all of your letter carrien •nd clerkl are old retlred folks who have a pensioft coming ln and other assets they have built up over the years through other jot... LOOK AT YOUR local m•il1n1n. l bH he's at least over '°• more llkt'1 . . 50 or so. II they would pay enough to get and bold young men I bet you will start to see some changes made. Why don't they change it from an old folks home to a paying institution! By the way, if anyone has noticed, the rest of the pay raise that Wa! promised .hasn't come through yet. If it does it will be a pleas1.nt surprise to me. These people want your life'' blood and expect it f~r nothing. Would you believe they even want to govern your personal life when you are off tbe job? I aay phooey on them. SHARON JONES • Th.,.k• From V etera,.. To the F.d.ltor: In behalf of the veteraos ai the V .A. Hospital, Long Buch, and t b e sen1cemen at the Navy Hospital, Camp PendletoD, I wish to publicly thank the Laguna Bead! Festival of Arts board ror its generosity in providing 100 tickets to the Pageant of Masters. Th.e.se men, many Of wbom are recovering from battle wounds, will long remember the pageant, the beautiful city and the friendliness ol its people. I asked for a show of hands as to the war in which they participated and round they were about evenly divided between Vietnam and World War 11. THERE WERE A few from the Korean conflict but no patients from WWI . l al.lo want to thank the hard-working and gracious ladies of the American Legion and V.F.W. Auxiliaries for serving such a fine dinner, Lagunans do We about our disabled veteraiu and servicemen as .shown by their conUnued interest in their welfare. Thanks ror your coverage of the event. O. W. PRrCE Service Officer American Legion Post m '6ood Lurk, Laguna!' To, the Editor: I wish to address this letter to the people of Laguna Beach: People of Laguna Beach! Yw elected Councilman Lorr, and now you have him . I'm .so glad I live in San Clemente. We have our own freaks, but they don 't write the'. Bircher Manifesto to the loca l paper. Jsn't it just amatlDg what 110me. people do out o{ fur of what they can't un- derstana:i lb ioiflt C:ds it even happens en masse. •• Good luck, Llgun1 ! Mr. Lorr woukl do well to review .Alexander Hamilton's writings on the .-sense of commUJ'lhy needed to overaet those Who ~ge public affairs. "Wt most oppose, ' said Hamiltoo. "un. qualified complaisance to every sudden breeze ol passion or transient impulse which the people may receive from the arts of men . who flatter their prejudices and betray their interests." . MR. LORR ARTFULLY attempts to Inflame our passions by lwnping all his pet hates into a neat package, stam· ping it Communist conspiracy. Unfortunately, his line ol re~ would result in pr~Jy tbe loss of freedcm be fears moot. With Councilman Lorr passinf judg· ment upon the actions of the police, the need for a review board is all the more urgent!. ROBERT A. PA \'NE Lorr'• 011tburst To the Editor: This is to take exception to Councilman Lorr's somewhat hysterical outburst, in your July 29 issue, in defense ol the Laguna Beac:h police in their Utile fora7 in Woodland Drive. Mr. Lorr not 011ly champio11s our local ??I~ .. but gives a blanket endorsement of ....-:Yl'!1ce action everywhere, ignoring such facts, for example, as that it bu recenUy become necessary to c.ll • federal grand jury in Los Angeles to investigate the killing or unarmed Mex- icans. THEN THERE IS the matter of cor- ruptio11 b1 police forces, which is all too common. Right now Seattle is the scene of a major scandal. The chief was forced to ·resign and the force has been discovered to be corrupt. prac.- tically from top to bottom. lf there is one thing that obviou.al,Y is needed in this country. it ls a citizens' police revtew board In every community, ~IR. LORR0S PROBLEM seem:! ID be two-fold : One, he really seems to believe like the founder of the John Birch ~ ciety, that there's a Communist under every bed -Mr. Wekh at one time in- cludi ng even Pre.sident Eisenhower in the · con.!pit•cy. Two , he has either never read the American Bill or Rights or if so, he was not abl.e to understand it. 1i•s a great pity either way, as it is the bedrock ot1 wIDch our nation was founded. • &ND ·BE OBVIOUSLY knows IOthiq of the ~ and wori of ~ American Civ:IJ Liberties Union, which has come K. THROOP to the defense ot citizens rrom. the far Polir. Revlet11 804rd ; t. left to the far right, whenever their civil rilhts under our Constitution wert To tbe Editor : , As a conservative .bulinessml.n and lire-long Oning< Co\Jn!y Republican. [ decry Laguna &acb City CouhCUman FA Len'• attact upon the ertabllsbment of a' citizen's police revicW board. Mr. Lorr fret.a about citizens clrcwnventlng the "line of command by polict chiefs" and lhul reducing their efftctlveness. But be aeems to disrqard the con- stitutional chain-of-command beginning and ending with "1''e, the people." A review board would make lhe polite mort; effective in protecting our .Jives •nil property Ind at the """' um. 1ervln1 our rithta and r re e d o m 1 guaranteed under !he Bill of RtflbU. THESE RIGll'J'S and fr<ecfo1111 lrt au lhe more irn.portant 1n times ol po;>ular ~'>' •nd paaslon 1lmply beause IUCh times demand jp'!.altt at· l<ntion ID the rights of the lndlvfdual aJld -· medculom kpl prG<tllWo. in jeopardy. · MARGARET NOLEN ------ Wednesday, Augu•t S, 1970 Th• edftoriol page •I Ute Dolfu Pflot 1eeks to in/°""' arid ttim- 11tl4U f'tadtrl 'JJ11)f"tlltllino thir t1110CPQper'1 opt11'°"' and com- ·""""'1l on topfa Gf fltkml """ •ti<:an«, bt """"'""" • fonmt fCJf th4 ...,..Nlotl o/ our nodtra' °""*"'· and br prtlt"l1dno thf dfffr.tt cielo- poiftll ,II} • l•/Oml<d ol>r..,,... •"" opo«...,,. on topica It/ Ute doJI. Robert N. Weed, PubU.htt -"!...------. ..,. . ., •........ -::.~ .=-.:..=.=======;;-_:o_:;;.;-:;,;;,.;;:, ~"'·'"· ·=== _ ....... · __ cc---:cc-:=--c-::-==------.. -~ -----.--- --·""9v•t!,1'11l DAILY PILOT • "largest Stotk ol leri's © in Orange County'' "VAGABOND" by Coleman REG. $99.95 1 O' x 8' ••• Sleeps 41 s73aa 12'x9' REG. $119.95 SAVE $21 .07 SAVE •ea•• $31.07 ''K ennln9ton'" BODY SHIRTS $10 TO $14 ''KENNINGTON'' TANK TOP T·SHIRTS 1'1leH ,,.,1.r llllrtt ire ..... ._ enfttd and lh1l1n•d In C..11· fernlL C:.Omplllh color iMHflo ind site rtntL O.Ose •ltfte short or h"I 11"""-•• TANK TOP SKlllS Me11·1 c.tilorful MW t•Nt hpl h1 .U MleJ. TENT ••• All PRICES SLASHED NEW 1970 COLEMAN TENTS We haYe sl1shed prices on EVERY Coleman tent Jn stock. UnbtlleYable discounts mun . "gianr• nvlngs for you. Every tent ls top qu11ity ind has 111 the famous Colem1n fe1ture1 . Don't miss this once-In·•· Ufetlme opportunity! 1970 "FAMILY" TENTS by COLEMAN New white top ltouncH off heat, lets in mort llght, big plctun window, twf>.wty Dutch door prnlffl plenty of ttntllttion. Storm flipped ind nyton 1crt1ned. 10'.a· s5gaa Rog. $79.95 S1ve $21.07 Jumbo hmlly Si11I 3 BURNIR STOVE REG. UST $29.95 YOU IAVI $7.07 "OASIS" by Coleman Complete stlettlon of all of tht popul1r "Otsls" tent models by Cof1m1n. ChKlc th• ft1tvre1 •• , and Gr1nr1 low prlc11, tool 12' x 9' Sleeps 5 Reg. $119.95 1 O'x8' REG, $99.95. , , , , •• $8811 ., •.. FAMOUS BRANDS AT BIG SAVINGS! PORTABLE DELUXE AIR G.I. TYPE CAMP EGI fOLDING TOILU · MAnRESS CANTEEN TOASTER CARRIER SHOVEL fAS JNS1f.E ll•e,I~ 1111 JUST THl THING fir the Ctmpl1te With ftal'Jltl,1 hr tomp1t1co111 1rt. hlktn -colnJ(m wtt• Toa.ti 4 1llett-:..t -. "''"' • d u t l conttlner Reg. $1.98 .. ,,, 1ncf 6 cf!1po11bl1 H••¥Y cfuty rv•btrb•lll Ct"' 1nd ~If. .... ........... ,. =r' 111• rom t.r•til:· M11. Ull•ll. 1 ... UAt . •2.11 53.88 '1.88 ,. OPEN 9 .9 SAT. 9 -6 SUN. 9 .5 OVER 30,000 PAIR LEVI'S® at GRANT'S! NUVO FLARES by Levi's (j) s9so Tho BEU BOTIOM Levi'~ look in 1 rugged homespun we1v1 thlt never needs ironing. Great selection of groovy colorL Sius 26 to 38. WE ALSO CARRY l.EVl'S" IOR GALS LEVI'S ® DENIM FLARES ~~:e~".:~~o;s_ •• $7 50 New Stock of Levi's® CORDS $650 SIZES 26-38 *EVERY SIZE *EVERY STYLE * fVfRY COLOR CAREFREE Corduroy that always Sooks gr11t because it's levi'si!I. Pick your favorite color of Gold, Beige, Chocolate Brown, Olive, Pale or Royal Blue, Midnight Brown and Novy Blue. BLUE JEANS -SUPER· TOUGH Jeau , • • Wedd'• 101.111Mat denim, reli J; tweed wilh COPPff rh•I• an 't i ttlt,Md fl 1t17. A new ,.. !.. 1"t II they rip. Men'• D Dutm-Sit11 27·, t USE YOUR CREDl1 at GIAH1'S AND SAVE, 100! $650 . ..,.. Levi .,.,. ~ .. ,... ...r IOY'S XX, 51111 0.12 .• JS.50 ' I Dtlo:e Wldt V1ntil1tor 2 MANTLE LANTERN REG. UST $18.95 YOU IAVI $6.07 Thi• most t..-us IMrt tf in k •Goldt11 fNt' In • 1"11ry •f nl- ,,. all4 Ct-11tt't ...... '" '"" 1lz1 1ncf 1tyh. HANG-TIN SWIM TRUNKS All 1be1 froft\ 21 ft 38 58-59-510 ' ~· • ..... ' ~'1:' ,,.: ~ " :.~· ':"d; !1lS. '·''-'"' .. •''- ' "·'!." •. .:tX ir,"r.~ n•? :;) ..... , .-:m•r -"'ti'.'·:. .~ ... 1,Ji:r- 'l'O]f'.f"I <ItJ ;!' l.T':l" ,,, ... USE • ... !'tf t' YOUR ,.,,.. CREDIT ""'1 at w.;., GUNT'S~: * B1nUmorlconl ~ * Mester Cht111 l ( I WtdnosdU, August· 5, 1'711 CHECKING· •UP• B~gest Asp~distra Just 34 Inches Tall By L. M. BOYD TWO OVT OF Tlll\EE • nmaway teeoagtrs turn up again In a couple of weeks •• , MAKE A NOTE, all crabs ! have IO legs. • • ON THE .l 'lERAGE nationwide, i t . costs $10.90 more per month : to fetd a teenage ~ than It eosts to feed bis dild. . . PENGll)NS SWIM as fast as a lot of blnla fly. • . IN ORDD.. THOSE three states wherein you'll find the piost fairs every year are Iowa. lodlana and Wisconsin. LOVE AND WAR. -A young m8ni.ed · couple in their twenties can get away with a five··mirn1te quarrel, but they should d<lay'1mtil their thirties any !G-minute quarrel. Such was the contention of Harlan Miller. Our Love and We.r man can't agree. By ·the time they're in their thirties, he aays, · they shoUld be pro- fesslooal enough in matrimony to w\nd up every quarrel in three minutes. In their forties · the·two-minute quarrel is suf· fident. In their fifties, the ~e q~el will do. YOU'VE HEARD that song about the bligest aspidistra in the world. But do you know how big the biggest aspidistra in the workl really is? Only 34 inches WI, thal's all •.. MOST POPIJLAR PERFUME for. dogs at last report was a scent called Kennel No. 9. Look, this Is true. It's sold in the same stores that sell false eyelashes far dogs at $3.95 a pair. OPEN QUESTION -Which Is correct: unChristian, Unchristian or unchristian? BASIC BELIEFS -I. Scotch drinkers on the whole take offense more easily than bourbon drtnkera. 2. 'nlat passenger leasl apt to be tense on a jet flight is any elderly lady. 3 .• A dlspropoi:tiot\Bt. number of tow-truck -drivers are tough dangerous fighter'!. 4. A grown man. can <:filch cold solely from too ~~ worry. 5. A fellow who .prefers to water his lawn with a hand nozzle. rarely makes a good salesman. 6. Girls less tban 5-feel·2-ioches tall are the most demanding in romance. CUSTOMER SERVICE - Q. "What's the medlaii family income in this country now?" A. $9,750. MAYBE YOU'VE beard of the town of Spear!lsh, S.D. At 7:30 in the morning on Jan. 22, 1943, the tempCrature there was minus 4 degrees F. Two minutes later the temperature was plus · 45 degrees F. Now how do you account for that sudden rise of 49 degte!S? ANY WOMAN WHO defrosts her refrigarator might con· sider this. The water that drips oU the freeUng 'com- partment ls pure. Works dan- dily in steam irons to keep them from clogging. SAY YOU BUY cornflakes in a IJ.ounce package. The cost runs 54 cents a pound. But maybe you prefer the · little individual S"...rving packages. That way t1'e cost runs $1.31 a pound. ' . Your quesuons and coni- ments are welcomed ana will be used in. CHECKING VP whef'tvtr possible. Ad- dress letters to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, NetDpOTt Beach., Calif., 92660. Ecology Training Available at OCC Orange Coast College will train ecology-minded students this fall under a $252,000 resources, accordng to school olficiah. The grant, financed under the Manpower Deve.Iopment Training Act, was awarded to OCC to train technicians in environmental e<>ntrol. The program will be directed by Dr. Lewis'Follan.sbee, former head of the marine science program at the college. The project, which will get under way Sept. 14, will in- clude courses for students with ecology majors in ad· d.ition to classes for en- vironmental specialists. Sh!dents will go to school five days a week, eight hours a day. The program will crowd two years of college into 1,440 hours, according to Follansbee. Students in t h e en· vironmental quality control program, for example, will 1tudy subjects which are speeiflcally related to the field in which they will work. These will include orie ntation to en· vironmental problems, air en· vironment, fresh water en- vironment.. m a r in e en- v 1 r o nment, environmental monitoring and waste treal· ment. When they finish, students will be qualified to work for agencies such as the Ora11ge County Air Pollution District or the Los Angeles Air Pollu· lion Control District They will also be qualified as monitors or aides In industries which are working on pollution pro- blems. Follansbee said the program will drew· the bulk of its studenll t hr o u g h referrals (f'om the Human Resources D<partmenl. Such ' may receive fedeal stipends if they qualify. Follansbee said •that persons interested in learning more about the p~am should con- tact him atj83+584ti. . Boy .Scalds Dog, Gets Jail Term WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Raymond Anderson , 19, a carpenter, was sentenced to 270 days in jail for deliber· alely pouring scalding water on a neighbor's dog. Judge Edward A. Beard of the Court of General Se:ssiO(ls set the sentence after a jury found Anderson guilty. The Washington Humane Society, which brought the c a s e against him, said it was the most severe penalty ln the seven cruelty to animals cases it has won this year. Two neighborhood b o y s testified during Anderson's trial that they saw him pour a coffee pot of hot water <>n Sheba, a year-old mutt, June 7 while she was playing in his back yard. The dog belonged to Nora Chambers, 12. who lives nearby. "I saw smoke coming from the dog when the water hit him,'' said <>ne of the boys, Sylvester Garvin, 14. "Sheba hollered a while and then went fnsfd< her dOgbouse. The dog was brought Into the coortroom once to show what the prosecutor said were scars and bald spots resulting from the boiling water. .. -. ' .. " ' .. ' ' '. I'' • . • •• .t '· ' ' Briefs and bikinis in comfortable fabrics that need a minimum of care. In. ltn~ and plain weaves with band and elastic leg styling. Iii great colo11 ... some very fancy trimming. Forsizes .. 16. Pr1C111-. thru SlllUnfay. ... Girl's plaid acrylic skirts to atart oUt her lall wardrobBina~.ind · aavel s~ 7:.14. ' . . •• 3 .. 44 ' . ... . . I ,. .. '. ' ... ' . .. • . ' ) r •' I. ' ... ·- ... . .. . . . . . . " . . . . ... . . . ..... ... .. Girt's·longa>llnd shirlB with long aleeves·alld 2 POCkell. In white, blue, bfol!m. Sizies 7· 14. Start , with.....,.. now ... at. eavlngs prices. 1.88 ' ' t . ,.,, .enne••1 thCt "°"·pip ... I ... • ' '•'I 0 .. .. . Acrl'-'t• acrylic plaJd with shlny$· ' buttons. Assorted 5 • . Colors. a-sx. • i Or!Qn• acrylic with acetate crepe blouse. Assorted colors, $ 5 4-6X. • : .. CHARGE 1HESf3, VALUES AT Y.OUR:J..OCAL..P.ENNeY STOREI ) . ' . '·· ;. -. -· .. ' .• J .. I . , l1 1i&se-oll1er.·~-· ;:::. ) . • . _. .. .. ..• .l : pick otlt-all . . I , " pers. Orton• 1e1ylic · cheerle_ader jumper in two-tone combjnafrons, sizes 7·14. $7. Acrilane acrylic plaid 'n plain Jumper, 'lots of $ 6 color, 7·14. · ;, . Acryl_ic knit jumper with striped flriit \op,,, assqrted colora. 3-6l<. $ 6 • • • • ' ' ,.: .: .. . .. Girl's tights tor mixing and matching, Value priced lo spice up. wardrobe with assorted colOIS. Sizes $-M-1.. (8-14~ 21or$1. • ,. ... . . . . . ,. "' ··-·- ,. ... ' • '! ----- I, • ,_ . . . . ' ... t '· ' . T•ter Sate!· 498slacks,now ~ ' I tv.10-fer 8.50 . ' •" l : ' ( ,; Prtcee effeCtlve lhru SllUntay. r ·~ ...... i .· . . I I :j ' .. .. . I ) 1 Plaids, •fripes, solid colO<S, pla\n weaves, cords. All are never-iron Pen~Preste polyester/cotton blends. Regulars 1nd 111m1, sizes 6-18. regularly 4.98 a pair ... NOW 2 for 8.50 Huskies 1nd some preps, regularly 5.49 a pair ... NOW 2 lorH. Preps' 5.98 alacks, sizes 14· 18, NOW 2 lor f10. Tho sport shirt every boy wants ... and Mom loves! Never-iron Penn-Prest• pclyester/cotton ivy style with short sleeves. Assorted plaids and solids. Sizes 8-18. 3 lor $5 ' Our ladies' bikinis IMpe uplneasycareny!on 2 $1 with all the trimmings. for • Colors, too. S-M-L C~GE THESS.VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE I · • . ) I .. ~ .. . . • " • .>- - DAILY PILOT e '-. 3,000 In Class • 45 Ai·ea Students -Get UCSB Degi·ees : ' . • Forty.ftve. Orange Co a s t relldenll were among almost ,,000 students who at com- mfocement exercises held at UC Santa Barbara. ' TbeUI namea.. addressea and dqree1 are: Balboo IJIJod' -Sally, C. Swill. B.A.; G.«ge W. Wat-son, Ph.D. Corea dd Mar -WUIJam 11. Ball, In, M16 Poinsettia Ave., B.A.; Gary W. Broering, S3& Evening Canyon Road, B.A.; Stephanie A. Kroeger, Ill Orchid Ave., 8 .A.: Karen P.f. Love, Sta Rockford Road, M.A.; Shirley P. McCuistion, 302 Morning Caanyon Road, B.A.; CIUf R. Scholle, 1851 Sabrina Terrace, B.S. Costa Me•• -Ronald L. Femaodez, 494 Costa Mesa St., B.A.; Julie R. Hoff, 2810 Serang Plact, B.A.; Barbara J . Pollak:, 3027 Madeiria Ave., B.A.; Julalne· Sturdevant, 2037 Swan Drive, B.A. Fountain Valley -Richard C. Caggiano, 179'Z5 Los Prados St.. B.A.; Catherine A • McCall, 9341 Peacock Circle, B.A.; Nancy A. Mllbrandt, 10176 Swallow Ave., B.A. HunUn&toe Beaclll -James D. Benner, 6941 Los Amigos Circle, B.A.; Patricia A. Broering, %1772 Starfire Lane, B.A.; Nancy J. Carley, 16505 Harbour Lane, B.A.; Charles B. Cruz.at. 17352 Avalon Lane, B.A.; Muriel J. Hoover, 8262 M\lniter Drive, B.A.; Jeffrey W. Kreck, 169Q Bolero Lane, B.S.; David L. Retz, 701 Dela\\'are St., l.f.S. Irvine -Janice M. Fillip, 4401 Lancewood Way, B.A.: Phillip S. Wimberly, 4685 Coral Tree Lane, B.A. Lacuna Beacla -Carol J. Laws, 1225 Emerald Bay, B.A.; John D. Harrop, fi20 Lombardy Lane, P h . D . : Robert B. Prlgo, 1134 P.,-k Ave., B.A.: Dan K. SmiU1, 128 Crescent Bay Drive, M.A.: Frances M. Wallace, 163 En)irald Biiy, B.A. l\tl•ilon VltJo -John A. Okulick 2594.t Portafino Drive, B.A. Newport Beach -Kathleen Boyd, « Beacon Bay, B.A.; Frederick R. Carlin, Jr .. 2921 Carob St., B.A.; Hollace A. Mid-decade · Censuses Prop,osed WASHINGTON (UPI) - Another census in the works? Wtll, no, not right now . But maYbe In 1975 . Wlth all the returns still nor in from the regular decen- nlal 1970 ~ilsus -and of those that are, some still in dispute -the census bureau would like Congress' permisslon to get ready for another nose count in five years. Chances are Congress will give It.! assent, though no ac- tion ls In prospect at the mo. ment. 'The problem 11 that when the Constitution provided for a head count every 10 years the populace was not forever swi!chlng jobs and barreling over the coo.1try, let alone reUdng to Southern California. These days folks art on tbe move, and the vital J>OPUlation counts become obsolete fast. 'Ibe House approved a mid- decade census l.n the lut &ngrtss, but the blll died in lbe Senate. Now the House Census Subcommittee is reported ready to propose it 1galn, but figures the bill would get lost in the ad- jour11ment rush of other more prtulng matters. ?ttaybt next year, though. Special Announcement The NaVor\Jl Mtl.·Smok4la: Council wUI conduct intro- ductory 1epk>n1 wlth ltle amu.in& new audJo-visUal vortex and help )'OU stop smoking tn jwt .seven day•. 111e1e lltUIOn• will be hek! berlnnln& each hour trqm 9 A?tl to 11 Mit and fr6m 1 P?t1 to 5 Pht Monda¥ throu&h 1'rlday at 18582 Beach Boulevard. Suite 208, HunUna:toh Btach and at 1T10 Oi'anre Avenue, Suite D. ColtA M~ Tbtte l& no COit or obUption for the In· troductory lletldon.. COme In noW Off ,C'.&11 (.n4) 962·1828 or ('7111 "2-41ltl tor a per· IOMI• •P1'!!intmenL 1111~ pro- .,.ain otrm a aomr•'•" money back ruarantee: I YoU dpfft 1top 1mokln1 tn 1evtn diy1 . . Heflin, %561 Ctestvlew Drive, B.A.; John , K. Lee, !715 -- Slarllghl Circle, B.A.: Phy Ills L. Messenger, 1100 Granville Drtve, B.A.; Ralph F. Paige. 10\5 W. Bay Ave,. B.A.; Susan R. PtnUI, 4150 Patrice Av!., B.A.; Laura M. RJch, 1812 Sandago Drive, B.A.; Deborah M. TaJmage, 1708 Starlight Crclo, B.A.; Stephen -G. ,Tbompsoo, 2003 Barranca. B.A.; Bruce D. Trotter, 800 Kings Road, B.A. Sout.h Lap•a -ZoUte A. Scott. 31172 Ceanotlws Drive, B.A. Su Clemente -David ~f. Kapp, :sis Camino S a n Clemente, Ph.D.; Carol S. McPball, 26t.D Lobetro, B .. ~.; Mark S. Meade , 113 AvenidG Presidio, B.A. No Vacancy Signs Out At Parks The California Department of Parks and Recreation has announced thJ,t slate park at- endance has ri.$en 20.5 w- cent in the last year -raising some problems fGr potential campera. 'lbt department al.so iuued a list of state parks that are closed for the remainder of lhe summer and the first two weeks in September. The parkJ include San Elijo and South Carlsbad State beaches in San Diego County: Doheny h1 Los Angeles Coun- ty; San Clemente In Orange County; Carpinteria and El Capitan state beaches, ln San· ta Barbara County an d Seacliff state beacb ln Santa Cruz Coimty. ln addlti6n, the followin~ parks art booked solid through the Labor· Day weekend: · ldyllwlld campground at·Mt. Sin Jacinto Wilderness Stale Park in Riverside County: Leo Carrillo State Beach In Los Angeles County; Point Mugu State Recreation Area in Ven- tura County; Morro Bay State Park and the Oceano ..camptround at Plsmo State Beach· ID San Lools Obispo; Nwe Brighton State Beach ln Santa Cruz County; Russia.n Gulch State Park Jn Men- docino Coo.1ty, and D. L. Blis& State Park in El Dorado Coun- ty. The Parks Department said that the Jeast crowded spots for the rtmalnder of the1.11i:n- mer season are along t h8 north coast. the redwood region, and the Central Valley and Sierra areas . Swimathon May Sink- FundsatEbb Tht swimathon ii begira1ing to take on water, and if some money isn't pumped into it soon, it may sink.. So far, its sponsor, the Olympic Pool foundation has collected $6,251.1 toward lha construction of a 50 meter pool behind Newport Harb9r High School. The foundatlon's goal is '87 ,500, one fourth o[ the cost of the pool. The re- maining coot will be paid by U1e Newport Mesa Scbool District and lhe city of Newport Beach. Tht %4-hour -a-day swimathon being held at the Newport Buch Swim Club has drawn attention to foup· daUoo's cauae, but not very much money. The voluntetr swimmers have stroked ovir 600,000 yards toward their aoat of one m!Uloo yards. Ta 11: ~eductlble donatiol)s may be sent to the Olympic Pool Foundation, PO Box 800, Costa Mesa. IN THE CAPiRI MOTEL ARCADE 1 HANK a' HAii (/ormerl1J &foi.tan Henri) WeMtft't H1 i"'1rt11f119 Stl•" id· i•••11t lo Mo111' C11tti119 1114 StyU119 She,. lt1110111 .. lt rate-. o,.,. • d1y1 • Wttlt. S11MJ1.,!i '"' • .,.11i1191 .. , .,,.111+11\1111 tllly. 14Zt.IJ S. C... ""'"'' --494-5054 I I I I Jf lWLY PILOT WtdnHdlQ', A1111111t 5. 1970 Nixon-Reagan Split? QUEENIE . .. ~ ... ......... ly Phil lnterlandl Reform GoaJs 'Parallel' 'J • Reagan Denies Lobby Ties Governor Questions U.S. Fiscal Policy SACRAMENTO (UP!) - Gov. Ronald Reagan says that lobbyist support ror hill Jta.lled tax program parallels bis own appeals for the voters to en· oourage their legislators to ap- prove it. byma and J didn't tlt tt to controvont.1 omnlbul rodog any' vote for anything el.st." bill carried and abandoned by the Republican Governor told As.9emblyman Bob MoretU (0. a news conference Tuesday. Van Nuy1). Reagan said he So\CllAMENTO (AP) - Gov. Reagan haa taken uotbe.r atep 1ep1rating hlmaell publicly Crom the Nix- on 1dn\hm1.tatlon -Uiis time queallonln& the Prmldenl's IJJoat polictea. Rea1an opened his weekly MWI conlertoce TUesday with an announcement he was ''relleratlng this ad- m1n1straltob'1 l'Of\Ctm" over "strong indications" federal highway money would be wtlhheJd ln vlotatk>n o f agrtements with the states. Reagan said the cutback af- ledlng $200 million worth ol California projects originally wu ordered to fight inflation, ''but that particular phase of cooUna: the economy was call- ed of! a few months ago." Reagan said the extra highway money would create about 15,ooO coaatructlon jobs in California. Reagan announced the con- tents cl a letter he said he sent earlier in lbe day to Nixon. He said he did not discus,, the issue with Nixon when the two Republicans met in San Clemente last week. Reagan hall also crltlclzed Nixon admlni.slraUon welfare * * * * * * Chavez Union Election Call Puzzles Governor SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Gov. Ronald Reagan said Tuesday that he was puu.led over Cesar Chavez' call for union represe.nLallonal elec· lions for farm workers in the Salinas Valley. Reagan said Oiavez ignored Firm Starts • Unit Pricing In Markets LOS ANGELES (AP) -A perennial housewifely grum- ble is lhat in the supermarket profusion of "cents o ff ,' • "super giant economy size" and otller pack.aging gim- micks, there'• no easy way to find out what things COB! per ounce, quart or whatever. A Los Angeles area market chain w1JI begin providing the answers thJs week. Ralphs Grocery Co .. which operates 62: stores, announctd Tuesday that ti. shelf Uckets wUI carry the price per mea- sure as well u the cost. or ee.m item: 24 ounces of cook- ing oil for 53 cents, 70.7 cents a quart; 38 ounces for 80 cents, 67.4 cents a quart. RalpM says it's the fin.t chain on the We11t Coast to try unit pricing on a large scale. B o a rd Chairman Richard Ralphs sa.id 1,179 items will carry unit price initially, and that the idea will be continued or dropped depending on what shoppers think of it. the will of the farm workers in the Jong grape dispute in the San Joaquin Valley. But.. the governor said at his weekly news conference, the director of the United Farm Workers Organizing Committee now wants elec- tions in Salin.as Valley because the Teamsteri Union was seeking to become t h e bargaining agent there. Reagan said be was "a little puzzled by b.iJ (Chavez') sud- den converaion to a be.ller in balloting." · A Reagan press aide said Olavei had not been in con- tact with the governor's ornce over representational elec- Uons. The governor said he did not reel it was right to have such elections in ooe area and not in another. Oil Lobbies Hjt By Councilman LOS ANGELES (AP) -Oil lobbyists were influential in ktlltng an amendn>ent to the proposed city charter that would have banned drilling along the city's coast.lint, says Councilman Marvin Braude. Braude, author of the amendment that would have prohibited drilling for oil and gas in an area one.quarter mile inland from the mean Ude mart and in city waters. set off a ~r council debate Tue9day only to have hlJ measure fail on a ~9 vote. CELEBRATE on1 rules in recent weeks. 'lllat t'ritlcls1n, coupled with com- menll by Oregon Sal. Mark Hatfield, opened speculation. Reagan might be a Republican presidential candldate in 1972 lI Ni.Ion loses favor with con· liervatlves. "Congress never intended that this money be held up or diverted," Reagan said of the highway fund. He said he reared the Nixon administration might be doing the same thing Lhe Johnson administration did a few years ago -"a klnd of budget w i t h h olding ... making • budget apear to be held down The Governor also disavow· ed any COMectlon between a bill to grant the horse race industry an $11 million f)evenue break and race track licJp In prying the deedlocl<ed tu proposal loose. "I didn'l talk to any lob- "And, I don't know what told industry represe.ntaUves else has gone on in that regard he would look "£avorably" on and I have not bargained aod a bill lbat proposed rtvt.!We I don't make deals." be Sa.Id. only. "Maybe il I did we'd ha"' Bagley alao ,.pirted bio bad a tu program." enlisted the help of a dozen Tile Ropubllcan clJ!ef .,_ olber tobbyma In the com- ecutlve, in mp<>Me to que. ' pa.lgn to 1et the bill appcoNd tlonl a a I d A.wmblyman by the Senato where II 1'u Will~m T. Bagley CR.Sao dangled only two vote&o, shOrt Rafael) would have to "speak of .. pauagt., t .: for himself" about agreeing I haven t uked anyon.-.:_ot to carry legislation sought by that kind to get the 'blll 'Volunteers' the racing Industry in .,_ °"•ugh," Reagan aald. change for its support of the He was asked about tile tax program. "gen~aJ p~position" of Claim Blasts The governor gjd there is enlistuig lobbyist support for 0 no connection witti. lax · re-~ pro~am. . form whatsoever'' and the ls thLS very muc~ different by just not spending mooeys •'! don't· know anything about ro.oton, but I think in a given year. •·we don 't favor this at the ____ th_e_ho_ree~po_w_er_hu_"K<>_tten __ 111_11_Ua_h_'_' ___ _ I B kel . b'tl 8 1 .• i._ • than my own public apJ161! Jl er ey ~cmg I " ag ey l.!5 1.IJC" prl?· to people to impress On the c1pal author of the go\'emor s 1 · 1 th •••· I t b ·1r t hilt I lslatio egJS a tors at they wlll)t r.wa BERKELEY (AP) A 1 ion ax 8 eg n. th bill ?" he answer~; P. "r ported " Berkeley He agreed !alt week k> liJ5e 1"Wh > t bb ·~- state level and we certainly don't favor it at the federal level," he said. On other tGpics Reagan said be; -Wouldn't "run the risk of doing the same thing" as Nix· on by commenting oa the Pr~dent's comment Charles Manson "is guilty, directly or indirectly or eight murders" in the Sharon Tate murder trial. -Would not rule out going on statewide television to push through his billion-doUar-a- year tax reform plan. and al!!O would not rule out personally c.a m p a i g n I n g against senators who oppose it. ' Englishman Starts Race In Valley DEATH VALLEY (AP) - If you see an Engtilhman car· rying an umbrella and walking across the brolllng sand of Death Valley it may very like- ly be Kenneth Crutchlow. Further signs for iden- tification: He'll probably be wearing a bowlu hat and tailored shoru. Crutchlow, 26, of London. started hl.s trek Tuesday in the hope ot winning a $600 bet by croulng l!J miles of America's hottest, lowest desert in seven days or less. His opponent is Bruce Max- well, 22, a Volunteer In Service to t\merlca (VISTA) worker. Maxwell will depart Thursday from Crutchlow 's stepplng-<1ff place, the mall town of Shoshone. The winner Is the one with the futest lime. Temperatures range f a r above 100 derrees in Death Valley at this Ume of year. The men have agreed to march only between 7 a.m. and 9 p.m. • a technical bill heh carrytng en_ you sa,. o y ..... YOll LA School Split Bill Now Facing Assembly Volunteers" claimed Tuesday as the vehicle to give the are talking a~t peopl~ that to have blown up two police tracks, the state and horse repres~~t var1o~s groups of cars in Berkeley. breeders and owners a great.er our citizenry, mcludlng the Police said they knew or portion of revenue f r 0 m schoo~s and the .~hurcbes and only one such case -that n.:i .. lmutuel wagering. organized labor. of Patrolman Robert,..- Maloney's car which burned Bagley said he did so as Sunday after an explosion a favor to racing lobbyists beneath it. Maloney escaped for their help in trying to wihurt. break the senate tax deadlock. ·' CHD.DREN SACRAMENTO (AP) -A controve~ bill to break up the raciaJly-tmbalanced, near- ly bankrupt Laa Angeles city school system into a dozen semi • autonomous districts reached the Assembly today, with the author predicting pas-- sage If it survives commltlee hearings. Sen. Johfl Harmer, (R-Glen- dale) said after the bill passed ttie Senate 21-7 Tue.9day it might get as many as 60 votes In the 50-membel' Assembty, despite liberal fears it may slow Integration. But the black legislator car· rying the bill In the Assembly, Assemblyman Bill Greene, conceded "the educa- tional community will never embrace UW: bill ." Greene, however, predicted that the 34 Los Angeles County assemblymen would be near total agreement on the bill when it reaches final fonn. Right now, however, he con- ceded: "1 wuold be afraid Consumer Panel Reshuffle OK'd SACRAMENTO (UPI) - The Assembly voted 51·13 Tuesday to place the state's consumer protection agency under the department which regulates special professions. The lower house approved and sent to the Senate a Reagan administration-backed bill creating a departmenl ol. consumer affoirs within the department o( professional and vocational standards to replace the present consumer counsel. • to guess bow the Los Angeles County usembly delegation woo.Id line up on Utis at this lime." ID the Senate the 12-man Lo5 Angeles County delegation BP.lit, six for and four opposed. Willh one recorded as not voUng. The tweUUl man. Sen. Tom Carrel! (D-San Fernan- do) was ill and absent. The vice chairman of the A.!isembly F.ducation Com- rgt' tee, Assemblyman woy Fl teene, said he was keep-ia an open mind but said tJte bill bucb a trend toward greater centrallz.aUon o f school dllllrids. LIKE ·:·~') '~ .... , UNCLEL:El¥ "We blew up two Berkeley Ile reported that both the in· police cars this week ," said dustry and tti!l administration a typed note received at the agned. monUis ago on the San Francisco Chronicle, "to need for the addition a I strike back against the vicklw rnenue bill hassling of so-ealled runa.l;~~The~~re~v~en~u~e~p~r~o~v~t s~l~o~n~~~~~~~~~"~'~ ways. You can not prevent originally was included in a · Berkeley from being a city of youth. We will not tolerate -" · further police harassment. Berkeley Volunteers." The signature is similar to that of the self-styled "Volunteers of A me r i ca ·' which has taken credit for al least one bomb attack earlier this year. The reference in the note to the "vicious hassling of so -called runaways," ap- parently referred lo some 350 juveniles who have been rounded up by Berkeley police in the past three weeks and either sent home or escorted to the city limits. .. ,. I See by Today's:: Want Ads · · ,. . . (, ~ ____,..;;;: ,,. • Want to pt away from.,,11 the crowds ! Try a '68 VW camper bus with n1p:t9P1 in xlnt cond. and ao cat;t- Ing thia aummer. ~ .. .... In addition a number or "crash pads" in vacant houses where suchh itch ·hiking SACRAMENTO (AP) _ A You n g st er s often stay overnight have been closed. proposal to allow Callfmni.ans The roundup began July 8 to decide in November if the after a series of reporttd age of legal adulthood should rapes and drug incidenl.!l and 'Adulthood' Vote Bill Faces Senate • Ha.Jr hunters: Shampoe girl, full or part time Det4- ed. • House Ha.unfuwT You ha.Ve more than a cm.t Q( ·• chance il )'OU ch@ck~ tp. di.,)"! clu&itied adal : .. drop from 21 to 11 reached an influx o{ drifting youths who often resorted to the Senate Ooor today after panhandling. , 11 pustng ii. final legillallve'1..!'.'.'.'.'.'.::'.:'.'.'.'.C~----~==================~ committee. And Assemblyman John V. Briggs, the bUI author whose district o~ the measure by a 2 to 1 margin predicts he will win Senate pusage to put t h e controveh!al measure on the fall general election ballot. N11 organized oppoliilon wu voir-ed before the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday when the Brigs measure wu approved. New! Wide and Wonderful The newest new ideas IN MAGNIFICENT DIAMONDS FOR ALL YOUR TOMORROWS! A. The graceful lines of th.is spark.ling solitaire embrace the matching bold wedding ring. Florentine finish of 14K gold. Both mng," 16511 '' ..... . \ -tn-B. 6 diamonds adorn thls u~ citing duet of smart 14K gold textured llnls~.195 ,, Both Rings Get your head out of that oven! Things ·don't have to be so black. For less than a dime, elec- tricity will clean your oven and your broiler-automatically. And that meam An eloctric range also means a cooler kitchen. Electric heat goes into the food--flot up the sides of pots and pans. And when you choose an elec- tric range with a self<leaning oven, you don't make an oven out of your kitchen! C. Aond dtalgn dUlll 90I wl1h a large center diamond; 3 other fief)' diamonds ove~ lap the beauty of the wide wtddlng ring In f lorenUne finish 14K gold. Eoth Rings 240'' totaUy clean. ADd when your range is electric, you cau cut way down on cleaning your kitchen, too. A llmnolcss .dectric range creates no by-products of combustion to dirty kitchen walls, windawi and curtains. See your dealer now. Then throw away your scouring brush 1µ1d live the good clean lifo-electrically. CE s Southern California Edison ELECTRIC OVENS FOR TOTAL SELF·CLEAN Charge these values at these Penpey stores: CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD DOWNEY FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH LAKEWOOD MQNTCLAJR NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE CITY" VENTURA Buv It on Penney·, time paymentplan. s ' 1t {[). be ,yes on ... ' IJOd .... e:i .... lort • t of bill the 0 f for -ent !al! the this VOii :hat of the and f f II ,• < •' • 4-.. .. \ ----·-. ' n ' ' DAILY PILOT J.I The Rossian_s Are Co111ing •• • .11· " '· RUSSIAN SPY SHIP, U.S. DESTROYER ON COL IJSION COURSE Calcaterra Rtvt tMJ Engines, But_ Amarlcanr Win Race to Debris, ~way· .. \• ., • ~u~ ~hey Lose Race ' " ·xo u.s. :.· Jt was a drama .at aea - ~n ' encqiinW tie twee n ; ,:American and Russll!n. forces. wasn't wttlliout good humor, · Dut both sides too~ ~ the1nli$1on wlou~y. : 1be Amert,can sUbmartne • 1 James Madbon successfully fired a Poseidon missile 30 miles east of Cape Kennedy. leaving behind debri$ from lhe launch device . • ' UPI Te.........._ GOOD HUMOR NOT LACKING IN LATEST RUSSI AN~.S. RACE Soviet Crewmen Wi ve to Ameri~n Missile Support Ship S1llor1 , ~ U.S. des!Joye Gak:ater· ra, • •mg With the uss ~~~~~~~~~ otleervation J.¥<11 m<wed in • to recover the matttial. Nutrition _ Report Blas~~d AJongside was the Russian spy ship Laptev. It also moved ~in. , '-An three ships were on col- liskm course. The Calcaterra and the Observation Island reYerse engines. Bul they didn't give up the recovery Nation's Cereal lndustr )· Snaps, Crackles and Pops mission. combination," declared Or .··L. industry contended, no one H e n d .e r so n mil.de • American seaman went ov er M. Hend erson, head of the ever has said that cereal Js particular point of what he the side in a launch, racing ·~·•-';;~ Uni\•ersity of Minnesota's suffici ent without adding milk, said the danger of over·fortJfy. the Russians to the site where department or biochemistry, juice, toast or something else. lhe debris was left. They won testifyin& for General Mil.I.Ii, -That overly fortifying ing foods and noted that the lhe race. Inc. cereals with vitamin could be Food and Drug Administration Aboard t4e La p 1 e v , "'4-.,,,.,~ WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Weal industry snapped back 'nlesday at assertions that its products I a ck nutritional value, telling a Senate .sub- commiUee a breakfast built ';llOWld dry cereal ii as good rs ~ or better than, bacon and _ eggs. The massive ind u s tr Y dangerous. announced last week il ls COO· crewmen waved and &miled . • '• •"' ...,,,._ response before ibe Senate ''The Pl'Olein of milk iUJ>" sidering guidelines that ~t Then -wilh the debris in ... .i.: ~! £~ :: ~ .. consumer subcommittee was plements the protein of result in the removal from u:s. hands -the Russian ship With fi ve specialist wit- nesses and lengthy statements ~ frtml the major compmites, ' the industry describe& earlier testimony by Robert Choate as incomplete, misleading , confusing, meaningless am! proinpt.ed by an appearance cereals and the result i.s com--the market o1 tome bifhly turned la.ii aod headed oul TO THE VICTORS GO THE SPOILS by Choate last week ill which bined protein of high JWtri· • ..'f".'.ortili'.:'.'.:. 1~,d~cer~,~u~b'.:.. ___ ..._.,...:•:f_:tbe::;.:_:•"::•:;:· ____________ _:U::.S::·.:C~r•::w:....:.P..:l•::k::•_U:.P::....:L::"""=::ch=...:T..:ube:.:..cC:.clo'-'t'-'u-re.:....:Dc.•..:b_d_• _____ _ he said most dry breakfast tionaJ value," said Start.1 1 cereals contain empty calories St.are vigorously defended ' t ' da'.ngerous. ' "Quite frankl y," declared the Kellogg Co. spokesman, "we fear that his testimony has dealt a staggering blow to the improvemeflt of nutr:i- ttonal literacy." ''Breakfast cerea~ w i t h milk contribute irit~rtantly to the nutritional quality of the total breakfast," SJ!id Dr. Frederick J. Stare, Hafvard nutrition profeSJOr, newspaPtir columnist and rovetnment consultant. Cereals, said Stare, tfSti.. {yh1g for Kellogg's and the National Biscuit Co .• "provide appro2:imately the s a me amount of protein and calories as a bacon-and -egg breakfast." He said cereals provide substantially more calcium, 'riboflavin, niacin, thiamin, and iron and substantially lus saturated fat. "These are health pluses,•• he said. with about as much nutritional Shredded Wheat which O>oate value as a shot ol whisky. ranked at the bottom, saying Choat displayed a chart of it is made from vitamin-rich 60 cereal brands, ranking the whole wheat grain. bottom 40 all but worthless "No one I know of ad- bectuse, he said, they contain vertises cereal with milk as only a few of nine major the co m p I e t e breakfast," nutritional requirements. Stare said. Choate, a 45-year-old former Although Moss did not make civil engineer who stood in a-ny comment at this point, back of the packed hearing no-otbe.r witnesses challenged' room, was as much of an a later .ftatemenl or his In issue during TueSday's session which he said that he knew as the value ol Wheaties. of rio cereal whlcfi Was ad:-: • Cheerios, Shredded Wheat ~d vertiaed with the f."Vlce that ' • ·other popUi¥ brands to which other things be eaten with he gave pock marks. It. .: "Mr. O>olte emerges from .--~...,=•"•°'Tl~H""M"•".,o----1 this aessioo today rellitivey Do This If . unscathed,• declared the .ub-FAL!. TEETH. comnlittee chairman, Sen. Frank Moss, D-Ulab. The indllstry built Jts rebut· Feel oose, la11tcvre ,_, dth ' •nt Doo'llM•.n..1'&U$f'OUl'n.119 wu aroon ree main poi s: te.ua .w 001U• 1001e gf c1rop Ju-t ai -That Choate had rated ui. ::fc um.. Pw mort Mei.1rtty h ud ort., li!rhlkle PABTDTB• dry cereals aJone wit out con. 1>e11t\lR Adbeli'' Powder on 1our sidering their nutritional value ~-PA8TUTH holU !Sutures lnnv kltLPI'-Mat• •UA& ~-. when comb.Med with milk. PAl!TllTH Iii cot &eld. No rummy, -That Choate evaluted rooeJ", .,..,, iasi.. Dn!.tun1 tbs' ii.t ..... ~tit.I to be&Jt.b. See Joar cereal as a whole breakfast 4mltrirmuw1,. oet euJ•to.UM in itself when in fact. the PAS •&all drul COUDt.ln. , - .. . r Custom-covered furniture sale. . You have two weeks to save 20% and a month to think it over! " l • Sofa1 •Chairs • LOve1eat1 • Sectioaal1 • s1 • .,.. ... ChK~ thete typkvt ""i1t911 REG. $299 $0fA NOW $240 ••• SAVI $5tl REG. $159 CH.A.Ill NOW $12·7 ••• SAYE $a21 REG. S229 LOVESEAT "Any hog feeder knows skim llfilfili'ipip;iiijpijiiiiipiijpiiiji.j;;fiij;iiijiipjiiiiiiii mflk and com provide a good NOW $183.:.SAYE $461 PUT WH Ill YOUR POCKET ~11 unwanted items v.·ith & DAil.Y PU.OT au:sified Ad. l'HONI 6.42-5678 " YOU f;A~'T SPE!ll/ f?IQH ™tNs25 ~------------~~-Y • ' j • • f ' " .1 • • ' . • .. ' . ,. ~ .;:. . '• P~-W~lt you'to be aure • ...., you Hlact yo1ir lurnllu1111ra. and -'flllf!' up lo,QO d.,. to 9'"". up rour mfnd, Wo'M glvo you thot ..,.h tline to ""-rour HIHl!oft, onc1 otm tao odvon1-of tile 20% on1nga. . r I· . 1 r Y You pick tM tebric. C~•Plaida, tweeds.and stripes in new olelins, tweeds in rayon or acetates. 1 r•yon,vervets cru.t»ed, cut or plain. Yo,u'fl find these and many, many mofe beautiful fabrica In 1 ! our cus1om uphqtsteiy1ctepertment. t • YO.. pick tile ..,i.. Pick· ff9!0 'Early American', 'Contemporary', 'Traditional' or 'Spanish' slyle lu(nltur• lhllt we'U.doVer JO your ,taate, See how exciting aolas, k>ve ua11, ·Ch1lr1, and other llltnll\lre will look,·~ It ii°"'""'~ COVIN<!. • Chorgo It ot o•y,ol th11e Pooneys •tarot< CANO?A P.ARK · CARLSB ... D DOWNEY FULLERTON , HUNTINGTON lfACH LAKEWOOD MONTCLAI R . NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE CITY" VENTURA Shop Suoday, too. 12 toS PJU " JI Do\11.Y I'll.OT Jail Ter1n. For Mesan . • In Death Wtdnrndlr, A119115t 5, 1970 SANTA ANA -A Costa ,... _ ..... charg- ed wlUI -driving '!ail ' _ Cbdltaia E'fe after bil car 1 alJolodl1 -and ltUled • 1._...id HuntinP>• Beach Pl bu -... 1eocec1 to u -ill Orange County Jall. S.poriar Oourt Jud&• James P'. Juolp abo ordered three ,_.. pn>batlon (or Harold Delll Alen, 21. fl m Rullen Driw. ADm had pleaded DOlo cootendi. (11ellher auDty ...- lnnoc<ntl to r<duced charges of vehicular manslaughter. A0m WU held resplll!ib)e for the death fl Diaoe Cien- fmp d MG All Circle, and .,-.... lllort1y alter the girl wu lb1Jd;; and killed at the lllma.tkm ol Bolu and Jacban in Westminlter. -Wei the gut and ... ........... -· ......,,ing -fnlm II shopping trip wbm Allen'• car plond Into them at the lntenedlon. Alllll lw been sued for St•.• in damages in a &lpOrior Oourt action filed by rt:latlftll of tbt victim. For The Record Jfleetings Death Not6"e• COlllULIS Sylvl• "· Cor••lft, :i., o1 2M F11..,.,1v Pia«, Colt1 Mn•. ~•vlvl'CI bv 1:1\lldrM. 4 _, J-, 0111)st, 0.Vld Ind Cef· .,,,...i 2 1111111111..,.1: 0oro1t1 ... •nd Darvuir per1r1ll, MT. totld Mrl, FrtM .. Rici. H..ntlrMllOn '"4:11. knlcft, 11 AM Tfluro· diY, AU9Ull '· 111'11 llro.Ow.,. Morlulrv CMH!. t11Mrmtfl!, H1rtloot RH! M-ltl f11rt:. 11111 lro.dWIY MorlUIN, Cotll t.1 ..... dlrlldor1. ARBUCl<LE I< SON Wesldlff Morta1ry U7 E. 17111 81 •• Cella M ... -• BALTZ MORnJARIES Corona del Mar OR S-MM CGota Mesa Ml MCl • BELL BROADWAY MORnJARY 111 BJ'Mdw111 Corti Mtu LI I-UP • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1715 Lipa• Clnyon Rd . tll-1411 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMOIUAL PARl C<mdery e Morlaary 1Mt Pad':c'~1ew Drtv• Newpon lloae'-Calllonda -• PEEi FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7N1 8ol11 An. Wt11.a.1ttt an.= • SHl!NER MOR'ruARV Lasna llado 411-IAS Su 0.-le 41WI• • bllTllJ' MOllTUAllY tn llltfo 111. -.--- JOINING UCI PhytiNrist Tobi1 Physiatrist Joins UCI Medical Unit IRVINE-Nationally known physiatrilt, n-. Jerome S. Tobi" baa joined tbe Colle(e o( Medicine at UC Irvine u profesaor and chairman of the department or p b y I i c a I medicine and rehabllltat.ion. 'Jbe aPPointme.nt WU 81- DOUllC<d by w.,,.. L. Boltick, M.D., dean ot the college. "We are very fortuute to have a physician of Dr. Tobi.I' stature to head this important oegmenl <lour curricuL1t plan and clinical program;" aid Dr. Bostick. Dr. Tobia WD formerly a profeuor at AJberi EWtein ~ of Medicine i• New York City. At UCI, Dr. Tobi.I will con- tinue to pursue his research in cardiac rehabilitation, ex- erd,. ' pbyaiolol)'. geriatrics, atpbuia, ttroke;,and crrebral ·P'll!>'' "Our plarw for the PM&R progrll!Jl al UCI illclude .l'Plh an 1ct.ive re1earch Jll'Oll'&m as Well as partlclpaUon ln tfie medical school's new cur- rlcular plan," he said. "We alao hope to develop a nliden- cy program and • pottgraduate proeram f or physicians ud rehabilitation therapists." Dilda y Firm Gets Funeral Contract HUNTINGTON BEACH Dilday Brothers MOl'lllary of Huntlngton Beach hu won the contract for all m 11 i t a r y funerals in Orange County fot the current fiscal year. Burr Dilday, co-owner of the funeral home, said today It is the first time a HunUngt.on Beach mortuary hu been awarded the military contract. Dilday Brothers will now handle all funeral ar- ~rangements for servicemen and ..,dents of serricemen bued or passing throuah Orange County, u n I es s otherwise requested by lhe family. "We can handle funeral• 1nywhere within a 20()..mlle radius of our HunUDgton Beach chapel." Dllday said. The military contract, award- ed by the finance department -0( the Navy, Is worth about $20,000 annually, Oi1day said. The military pay.s f o r runera\1 ol its servicemen and aids in the payment of services for dependents. 1be conltact does not c o v e r servicemen who die In Viet- nam, Or other parts outside Orange County . SA Approves Vtility Tax First Revie·w SANTA ANA -Thl' rlrsl reading of a utility UJers tax ordinance was approved by Santa Ana councilmen Mon- day. The Jaw wouJd tack a rive percent tl11 on uLilities and would create $1.S million revenue annua.Uy. The measure faces 1 second reading in two week!. If it passes, the tax will be levied atartlaa Nov. J for au 111, water, electrlcll'J and telephone customers. The utilities ta1 will paJ for part of the capltll im- provement nol Included in the original Jt?0-71 bud&d.. Clt)' Manager Carl Thornton estimates the total eo&t or these improYemC!lts will be fl,1189,000. Federal run<11 (!600.000) and aueaaed valuation lncra11e1 (from ll37 million lo llt4 mllllon) will allO be u.ed for this purpose, accordina to Thornton. • Tax Collector Mozley Retiring SANTA ANA -The retJr&. meot of lloa S. llolley, 'J2. yellNlld dlld d tu - for lhe COWJty of. Or:ange, was .........-! Tu<oday arterooon. Morley ii the •enior empll,e d the county goven>- ment with cs year1 al service. A1 1 ttle loagest-eening: employt he bolds the "Golden <>nnce" award. MOiioy recalls when he join- ed the coonty Sheriff'• llej>art- rnellt In 1f2S be WM .a "pretty hot mot typiaL" He rose to the job In which he lw been reoponolble r.,. the collecllon to be tlocted In NoY<mber, d more than fl billion in tat;ea ovtt. the olllco then and the taxes. ' 'Jbe early day lherlfrs bllls were hand written. ~ tu co~ will be s1eaolfapber vllllllernia to Today !her< are lltl on the retoPlJed in aci f 1 r e w e 11 the tu colleetcr'1 o«1ce in staff and the tu bills an W""90l' by the county Boan1 l~ when ft,5 million WU computerlud. ol SUpervborl ,llGt week. collected Pfl' year. Today the "It's been great workin& tor Superv!llara -Tueoday to f"""' Is about '330,000 million the counfy all these yean," ~ his n~l, el· amiually, Mozley said. "But from what fodlve """"'I. Mozley wu el<cUid bead tax I undentand r<Urement lo " ~~:~ ~ -wilt will CGlledor' 30 years qo, in lMJ. kind of nice too. It's about Ja-..~~-~·later Ibis 'll1ere ,..,,, 20 einptono in Ulll4! I gave k a try." "l""!fi'~ .. 16 ~·· ' • • A!fl'lantTuCollector ·,,.. • BEST ~ P4*'el\ ~U J fill hlS '-"TM DAILY Pt\Ot .fftf1 ~ •f th• Hat fHtvrM, .,., •ctw•I ~ =: tax =: .'-,vn,.., " reM•n. •Y•il•bl• ht •11'1 ••wtP•'9f' ltt th. 11atie11. • \ CALLS IT QUITS DonS. Mozley . Rooni rates reduced for two weeks! Reserve a suite now. ·sale! $228 A.WitleA•I plece1 ••allallles De•ltle «IN•Mr ............. $IM NOW $tt St•tl••t ~ ••• • ••• ••••• .... $74 NOW .. S Twin.,. .. 11.rse leg. •257 Girls' white provincial 4 pc. bedroom suite •••II er twiR canopy Mel• 4 drawer chest• 3 drawerdret1•r • ,,. ... 111lrrar • All pieces have matching plastic tops. Drawers ore FrencJ..dov9toilecl, dustproofed with center guides. Hardware wilh antique white finish. Savings on additional piece$-Buy one or a raamfull •pl•tlle .... , , ••••••••••• le9. ts• NOW $41 hchaler che1t , ••••••••• •••• $54 NOW ... Hutclt • , ••• , • , •• , • ••••••• I ... $54 NOW $Ila C.r'M'f t•llle ••••••• • •. • ..... $54 NOW ... Ni1ht 1teH ................. $44 NOW "89 Chair.•••••., 'f. ••., ••• •.I ... $29 NOW $24 --------... ............. ,.,._. ..... A""iloble at any al these Penney st0f9s: CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD DOWNEY MPNTCl.AIR NEWPORT BfACH ORANGE "THE CITY" ' Sale$379 .... $rl49 Speniah style.,.._., suite. All pieces hefte hand10me pecaR veneen,with molded overlays, glazed and distrftMd finiahes. Dn:ntten are do .. lallod, duttproofed and ce-~11• .. lcW.l..I. Solid b.aM hanh•an. , • Sot includn tripled-, •inw, 5 d-cMot.-1 headboard with bod Ira ... . Kini hMtl .... nl .' .1 ... $16 NOW tn Nl1ht otan• ••• , , .... $65 NOW .. S FULLERTON VENTURA HUNTINGTON BEACH LAKIWOOI> ShopSundoy, Too.12to5P.M.1 , -- , -----------------------------------~------------~------------~----:-~- " OAILY PILOT AugllSt 1970 :· -------==----"-C..:. . • • • ~.-: . , " ,, ' • '· " \ • ' • Coming: a new gasoline-non-leaded Shell of the Future. Another step in 1Shell's drive for cleaner air. You may have heard about some steps that Shell has previously taken to help clean uJ)the ai:r: In particular, Shell gasolines have long contained a ·detergent. If you have been driving on a Shell gasoline, this detergent has been holding down exhaust emissions remarkably well. ' ThereB also the TCP in Shell gasolines. This famous • • ingredient works to prevent sparkplug misfire-and misfiring can contribute to air pollution. As the next step in its drive for cleaner air, Shell will soon introduce a gasoline made without any lead at all. It will be called Shell ·ofthe Future because it is • formulated for the cars of the future, starting with mo~t of the 1971 mooels. Many cars now on the road will also be able to run on Shell of the Future. Shell dealers will be able to help you to 'deternrine if your car should be using.it. There are many ways to fom1ulate gasoline without lead. Shell's blend is desigried to give you good mileage, besides being good for cleaner air. You may ~ave noticed blue p~ps being installed in Shell stations in your neighborhood. Soon they will b~ • • · pumping non-leaded Shell of the Future. \ ---------~ .~-~-------------------- •• • • \ I . • • ' • " -·. - ) .DAILY PILOT S Wtdntsd.iy, .&11911\t 5, 1970 YoUI" 1'1cney's \Vorth OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stoel{ List Bonds Doubly Attractive HfW 'i'OlllUA,1 • TueMN'l'I tOn'IOklt 1,,,. ................... ~ ................................ 1Htw Yet\ $1odl !llCll.tn9t ~kM. j• , .... ' l>ilf (lltt.l MltM U. ( .... (llf, Its nu 1 !! D l' -11• ~TI•• 10 ," ,•,n1 '•'• l! !y rn? ~ ttj' ,", ll I ...... (, Tift pf ~ '° !t ., NASO l ltslngJ for Tuesday, August 4, 1970 By SYLVIA PORTER Thr: great factor !a\·onng Yl¥lt purchase or municipal btrlds is Utal lnterest oo lht:se I 0 .U. 'a is e11;empt from federal illCO.Lne lax -and, tr you are a resident of the issuin& local1ty, often exempt from stale and local income ta.Jes loo. Even if you're only 1n the 30 percent tu bracket, a 7 percent tax-fret return is equal to a taxable rate of 10 perl.'ent -and tn th! 70 percent bracket, 11 s the equivalent of a 23.34 ptf'C(!nt return' There's no doubt that new municipal bonds v.•111 tit-pour- ing into the market in co1n1ng years for the borrowing needs a~ enormous There's no doubt too that thlB. will help place a floor under the rates you can earn and that you'll have a v.·1de variety of types of bonds, of quality or bonds, of matunty dates from "'hich to choose. This market is ballooning. Q WHAT ARE MUNICIPAL BONDS? A. Any obligalion lssued by a city, tov.•n or village and also by st.ates. territories. U.S possessions ; and in addition. by housing authorities. port authorities and local gover11- 1nent agencies prov1d1ng and ma1nta1n1ng c o m m u n 1 t }i servi~ ranging rrom schools to ~·alen1·orks. They af'f all tax-exempt and are all called '·mun1c1pals .. Q WHAT SETS THE IN· TEREST RATES ON ~1UNICJPALS~ to avoJd riski; of default , you I'.' On 't go below their ratings of A, (even lhough obligalioos of some. of our greatesl cities 1trc now rated BAA or BBB.) Q. WHAT TYPES 0 F F\1UNJCLPALS Al\£ TllERE? A General obllg11tioo bonds: secured by the full faith and credit and general unllm1ted taxJng power of the municipal aut.honty. Many I O.U.'s or biR otieii are in this cat!gory, Umlted tu or tpeci•I bax bonds· backed by a limited portion of the issuer's l4Xlng power or payable only rrom the proceeds of a single tax Revenue bonds: Secured by the revenue of a particular 1nun1cipal department or a special authority ~ated to operate a sell-supporting pro- ject The best kno"''n or these are 1011 road or turnpike authority bonds Housina: authority bonds: - issued by local aulhonties to finance coostruction of low- rent housing projects and secured by the pledge of an- nual contr1but1ons by the federal government Housing Assistance Administration This backmg gives these bonds top f AAA f ratinl! lDdustrial uve11ut' bonds : - issued by a mun1c1paJ1ty or authority but secured by the lease payments made by the 1ndustr1al oorporation using the fac1lJties fLnSJ1ced by tr.e revenue bond issue Q WHAT ARE THE VITAL CHARACTERISTICS OF' ML'· NICIPALS? A Most are u1 dcno1nina- t1ons of Sl,000 and up although there is some ten- dency tov.•ard $5,000 m1n1- •1~ •('er n h + ""' >CCI 1 " " ''~ nt.i:: 1J\~ . -A-ho" 111 .JI , .,.lttr ·11 l ll• I ,. 1"1 -I\ ._ .. , .... ,., ...... _.,_ • ...__,.,., ...... .._ "11110. ~ "' I jj. ffi '!:: ... i,... 'I'* .. • m ... iii' -• ifi]""'' I nw ~. •·~ + '· 'nUHIS ............ '"" ...... ,., ... ., """"' ..... --..... ... __ ._.....___ • ~·w,., •• . -..• 13 ~ ... 1• , .., "'· .... • "" . u l<0\'11 •• &110,. _ •• -'.i: nd °iA )I ',lo f j1l', ';: (: lat '' ",·.·· ~ •"• 19~~ lio ' 11'AI JO~,. ,,_....-+ " ~105! are bearer bonds. If "'* ..,.., Ac :k.., · 1 • ut. S\lo . . ~ 1111 t.ft p, ;li: jff~: l ~ :~:~ f.1:: • to ~ .... •· -11> YOU hold !hr bond, the ... AM..... •141 ~ ~ ~~~ •• ~'1,!.: 11 11" ', :~ ffi~ ",,. rvrpf!~.. f'!: t•\. fiti t ~ ~= 1::. ~ ri~ ~., :;.= ;; '• •t A.i Mil,.·~ OU ., 1 1'1-.,. IP ':li H t'•' 1 • , 1111rjl>C .0. 16 10'• 10\l 1•u.' presu1npuoo e. you own 1 . N!w 'l'ORK l"'f') ""•II Tel< I"" ' Plllld;i °' s1 1t "'1111!' ou 1 ot.11c1r .. 1.• fi ~ 1 lo +1"" ~ ~1.,1t ~l' l"!" y·~ ll1., :__ ~ 111it1u "i" •• ,,.., 1.:i.i. 1~-" II II I -Tiit toll<" ' blcl FAott+o l lot 1\oo Pt>lt Sutt 1•' • l"lt trlll' 'I .t4mfrj"1 r.-1 · '• 1 Not. !';? ,. ~ _ :i, ldOYw '°JI fl I• 110 -lo and usua y you' c 1p a ind l>kM """'•· 1rrl1111 ff,,. J PIWl~'I I l ,...,. utlK 1. ~ \t A-Lll l 4111, ...... -... MI I •• ~ -\' Glll..tt• '·'° lt •H• 111.o •'· . h _., !~<». ~1190 1>1 FHN Mr "":II k Pd llo I... 11 \.'i 4oulrr• I 1 ... I f ~ •"G ,\ " '> Glf'l'lbsl ., \ :U 11'• fl'-. 1'10..-\.\. coupon every six n1ot1t s a11u th• "''''-1 Al~;. ~jricll•v ~ 111'1 P.n11r111 so 51"' ubo ,,, l 1~. "''J''-inc: :n ~ ~ ,... "' 1 :;, 1 • t• 11-., 11 11v..: "'° 0 llOI I"< ,, ti'-1t:i.. 'ru' CO!Jeel IJlteteSt frOfll d paying ~r.,.'.' l~IH'I~~; F1'i°l'::.1 ,11 ' .J"' ~~Ir~~ U!<i, l~".;: \{= 1'l l~\lt :~ p·= :: 1!°l :fV. I ~ ffi? ~ s::~. •t.:e 10 ::It'• l1 ... )11,i, -'Iii ~len Aloe" 31 J • J • ~· ')iiutt "'"""-F11G 11.,. •·~ '" P"OI 4~ u .. ,. ... .rt If lf'r'r 4J lr>dutlrl" 1 ,... 1 !"" \\Coit P11 I.XI 21 11i.. 3n. JI\., -l~ le!\Ald p13 I JI'• ~ll.4 1' -·\o agency or your own bank. 1to•1t r ,.,.. ,.,. 11 WFl<I 1lo l'-Prl'd M•" ~ J '•rktr w .,. ,, A~ c .. , 110 1s·~ If 1 1., + i.. ColllN 4111 1 1..i 21111 n ,. -"-1 .. 1 M•rl11 '' ll•o 101, ,,,. +1 rtt..,111 W 111!•• l<!)<.krMI I • l \'I llbS Hl4 '' 24.... •lltdal S Wt 4=lnltft 2 11 I 1 \... + l'J Co1Wn51t -* ll lift ll\1 11 .. -t lo =obilln IO J lQI) ltllo •'• -h Most are serial bond&. A J"1., 11r1e~. 11 o1 "•"' •0•,, ~. JIN 11..w ~ 11>.o .,.,... Tv com ,,~ '""' .111 fl nv. 1i,. 'I co1ornt11 1.60 ,, l• .. '°"" 11~ +1 kh 1.12 nJ JJ~. u 1'1'.ti . l lOll'OX!m11,1~ 3 001 17V. II PullS NC lQ'O l~ 1• ....... 11! 11·~ 1"'"' ''"" 1» 10 • 1,_ .... co11 Ind I u lJ\o 13\lo I~+,, ~y·•r I S 161 111 UV. 1.Hii tertain nu.miler Wl!J matllre :;',.ti~~ wl!ICll ~ ~:r\!,"' ~~ ltt; p= ti.. W° ~-·:r~n It~· lflt ~~"f.~ .i: 110 nr: lj!; ij~; ~ li ~=t :..1° 4! l~\o ~ll: lr• + \, ~til~ I.~ 1! il•11 ;~l• ~~..+ ~ each year. will be paid off~::.. t;r:~ .. I ou;; ~~:ril."" r .. ;~ nr'lfv"il n ll ,; • i:J ,!!~ ~ :t: .i:" ~9 ~~ l! 1;t:...:. ,, S!~ ~ r, ~ ~· ~o -·~ C$~0, ~50 ~ ~~ u~ Jit.~.:_ ·~ ao(I re!lred. The range ofl:~llt llllcl). ~;k~t; :~?etw E m l'lilo Dull.,: •\:o ' '"" 11 , 1· it! A ~~ 1-!f) , fi li \il" n :; 't ~~ 'i';, ~ ?3~ !:' ~(t :: t: g~:~ri~ :~I 1~1 1t~!. 1f1' 'trr .. ~ ~~ ~~~u= ;;·:e::: !~0~0~~ ;?,...~~¥~= Fit] i:~ r .. ~~d s~n l~I J ~t~1* 1F 1!.~ ~II~ 11:t 1? ml J~ ;m :t \~ ~~~'21 1ri MS m: ~~ 1 ~ §::~~1~1,: ,!, ,n.~ ..• ~.~ ,r.:i,9" t ~: h I d d •e••ll ,.,.rk1111. arlnl<I llV• 17 •"-1r'c "' ~ f'IMoO 'l, 4\0 !\Z At14Mlll 1Sl> 1 ll t24o 71 +lh C:mwE ptJ 11 11 7Ho 711. 114-o + \. ~r A&" I JO '.I' IC l rneans you can ec1 e m••kODw~ .... com. os s;i; " 'flit Rt111b F.l ff"' lJ r ni Pd 31 :12 A.lliftl Pd 6' 1 lll'J tJ'.o TJl/o -""comw ou '° 110 16, 16,, l•~~ _ '• 11o1~Nek i ~ 11 11 , Je~ JI'\~ + •· ,_ ,,, ' ., ,,,,, ,, , .. ,,, iii' •'' "I~'" ' -~ •.• _., .. , ,, I ·-,.·. ,,, ••• -,, .... ,,,, ' '' '' ,, ' •• thedateyou wantyourcapital "'"'..,.fftt !~ 1 1<1M11c ltil '• ·~ .. c• 1s ~ ••11ctklp ii; ~;,, ~·4i .... 1·+~l=.::s.c ~i ,.,~ 31\0 :11•, GrNN~lA.40 111 11 11 +,, b k -· JI..-~~~-A l,A,I ~ ''I • Y l<vt , .... Rt<:OI E, !Nii 1114 ,d 1116 Atlb C1111"' n I~ IS l~\,, -"Con Miiii I 1 IJlo U', !S\o + •• Gr w ... Fl~• 11 11'• lib 11'• ac anu ncn ,.,IUV,,.. a '"A'' s 1 i,..;, 11v. 111 f" I~ .... lttt 0'"111 !'"' n n -c J I" 41Pw"C :io.-' 14• 1,,~ "'°+Ill con~'' .xi. H• 11•, 71 i,•,~ --'•• ~w'~~•""•"•• "•• ", ',',',•, •,•,··. •,~ -, •,z 1natur1ty that hts. IHowever,:~~ ~"; to 11'~ '1(l1~ !~: !:::lf:!t~: 1J<li1v. ~.ll~"G11 ~\oi'~.,.~~~llllllO ': :;~ ;!1• ;r•-11•cl)llr.teC11 IO,,,•,',"•,',',,"'_,, rw"aiMn !o 17 81, 1 , "'14 ' .''.'' '' 'l •• -1 '' ,,, I •M••i <A -COii E~I. 1 tu .,. -' •• ' ,,, '' I J bl 1' bond A~lt 1r .,, • -~ ... DILNll '" I'· ~ ,5 ti.. H t c F.dl I i } !I 11'-o 51 + '1 ·~~··n l 1~ • '•-•1 mos genera o 1ga ion s '<r"'ti E 'l• ~'~ iutn :, ~. ' 1. "ob n M " " F.n~.i ,~ 1• A.me• , 1 l'O so 11...., 1, • ""' _ •• c:::::! :it.•~ t!t 16"' 56,,. So<', + '• g•MttSll 1 20 , 2'.I , tJ•• "'" _ , , are rede~mabte only a t :r; 1rdus t~ '~~ ~I'< '"' k =:et.. I\~ ~ ! \u;'t'"L 3~ ~ ... ~i:t•.:r3 ~ n~ n~ JI... F~ ~ '• l':onl'-I 10 ,. 32\• n•. :1'2lo + '• c~li" .. ou"4 ' 1~~ ~I~ ~?·: ~l~ -•• matu•tl" Most 3 U J J> o • 1· ( y A,lttirn f' ''• 111"9 •ood I.SC '> I llW S10~ j! 26 Uo P1nP 70l~ 21'4 AA.lrFhlr Ill 4 .~ 1"°' 1 ' + lh ConFd PU SO 3 It I!!~ 11 -1• ~nimml'ICP t 21 1,1, 1J 1 1<1'~ _'I ·-~ • "*H 31.Jloi WY !"'~ll:y~<tHO 1'•ll'l l,n.•115Lcl •hll.i.Al)'IAldlftlO 6!ll>oli'1'1'>•2'·. Cl)ll1<,.1,n11 ""''11 2~-~llllHldU'-1 91?J•,n·~nl~-'\ >-.. 1Kfs also m•lu•e at one"1i..,,, ~ ••;, ''~f!' '• ''"' ~111, >'• 1"-v1;11r1G u 2""""'"••••• s lQh l~ {t~+••r:con~L,~•!nt1, ""• •V. ,,._+,,. llM01t11e~ 4 !.I ~5'• n11t -: uv ' U<:olte ~ •\I , • ..,, -. 17-111. 1114 (•nln E j\lo •1 Vtl LD 6 61.'i 48r.,1c11 J.10 xlOf J"'' " •u I.I " 24'• 24"1 1"' • II OJI I 50 111 ?!"o '!'o JJ«lt -t 10 !1me bUl they Clln be redeem• 4toco Lnd 14'• u>, !A MM"• '°"°' :J2 l'lotl In ~, 4 •VI~ :ii 11\Jt U1• Amlhkl I.JO 60 :ii7; W. S7\• + \~ -Po.,, 2 11' ~ JO'.o ~.,. -, ,'• ult llt.,t•• " I" l'o ... -•1 ' lllQ B•• 2•0 J ,..., 1$ .. 11• cl Corr I'•• 1"4 Vl11'0tl S'• I"' Am C•n 2'111 ?1'• ll'o .,...., onllw Pl•» 1IJG ~ $1•~ " • !flh1 Pl! JG 1 16\o 1.,, r.sq _ ~0 ed by call al a specified ''Ued Hci 611 '~ •nll "•' '!"' Hl· Sci 1t!CI l~ •. W•t~ 11111 11~ 1 14 ,..c '' 40'~ 39t. m. -+. ContA.rr 1!p 1\ f'll '"' 11. 1tu11S1aur " n• 21.14 ?1 •) t~ earlier date 1 ~~~ f l1. ~t ,••,' •"' ~ ~""5~ lf lJ1Z :z:~; .... : 1;"' /~~ :"'~~ff. 1 1 : ,J 1~ 1 :' 1: ,:~ · l:l l:; 11~ :~ ~~: 6t:~ 'ti; t ;~ i~i~1 "!11 i8 '21 .!:"' U H"' :t :: ....... Bl.'5'1 ' ''• u&•d •I.I <!ti ''"to ... 41') s w lle•<lt 3\i' • AC c.-, '1\.o "'• ~ • 1. COii! c .. l 101 1' 1l l1"i -\, CulfW PIJ" I 37~ ,,., ,. .... ";' lo Q WHAT 'BOUT THt." 111, El LID 3 '• l'• uU 1n1 6W 7'~ •Ill Pl 1• Ul~ ~"h"' 1~ JV. A ,.y_ 1 • .0 3 111~ l7h llh +'• r°"'' (111 l \ti 11~ '''• ?>•• 7t', -'• t';uifW pfS 15 • 5,, ~" $4'li _ '• f\ .(;,Am F•n• 6'. 6''• GY•odn 7 A. •I• Cmo ,~. ,., Wr•h to1r. 11V, 14 Agit;r;,•, ' .. " 1'1 lll'• JO•. 30 \.o+ '1 ront Ttt I(' I} lt'• II'~ 19'• f\o Gullon Incl '° ,.: ·~ ••. t "' TAX-~,XEMPTION' 111.m Fur" ~" 6\o 1111~~• S It 11 u11.tf" •·~ !O'o Wtill llE'. •-1 I~""' OUllV~" II 2.114 ''t; 2~ -I', ~o~rrol O•I~ ?•1 '• • '1" J• tl \ . • y" .. g I t :m G•,~;d :~ ... ~.; ~:~~ec:'1~ ,.,1 :~ 1,!", ;tRncruD .t ~ .;,·~ w:t.ri Tli:R "~ ' A°""I pl... ? .r~ 1,.... ,:~ .:... '· ~=L:.:· ¥ 2~ r. ~"' ,:•,. \~ -,, H•ckWal ' >o -,H·,,1:-. '' '' -,. " OU can e eye-s opping A M..rl•~ 1, 11 Ht•lt CP ... ~ ''• • •'dlrn '~ 11.l ""'E'r>w 1 " •tss f' 1•i,., '4\.o. , 1o COOC>l'rln 1.ill • "'" 11 , , "'•ur,n 1 '°• 1 IJ , •«teS Of feJu•·n _ ta< J•ee °'ST Gob 1'• l 'o .. re1.,.,_ In! 1'• l~) •111• M ,,., 7 tlll'lll M I.Ai 15\~ Am Enki I• fl 17"1 11 21C,'J, roo-r 111 I 11 1'" I! 1<1• ...-lo Mtllbu•I l fj !JI 1>'.-.. ,,:•, " .. ~ _ 11• '" • AS!r-01 •>!'1>Hlllh¥n S1> ~nl o ~•S !\•f'•WllC$IP l:tlt JtO"'mE•Plrd "9·~ , ..... C:oapTPl11S 1,,",,.,",,,,•.•,, .. fi•mW•1H! 11 I ,.~rs,,_, _ _ 00 low~u•tily n>Un>c>pal .,m ltl~ 1z~ 1J•. H~!~_EP :in •~ sc~1 W•1 1 &o 1n1 un ~"' l \li 4G0..,1n1 so 10• 17h ,,,,, lf'• t l-'O r,,.,. •nd 1 '11 -, ll•mm P 1 -. .. ,,,.. .... I! ~''.J '' "'"""' '~• 11-1 ~~11 Tei 3"h i' 1tn IQ sn I ~-~!' •. f11 111 11 1l\o 1111 ml + \.o CofllArie .10b lU l1 7t''t 3l'--'-l'o Himmncr1P10 10l ",;•. ",:,• ",i~ --:,• c-ods ""'•n '" 1'11 N ..,. 31 11~ 11 G1 ttlit 1~ lft 11 ,.,.. ,....., ..... 119 it 101,1 O\'J lt\li . eoowrsu 1 •o • '°' 1\\o 1 -. ~ 1,11 u .~1 " uu · ' ,,,... Ire!" ~ J Ho-d Cl , II'> W Gi.(t 14•,. 1"11 ""Wll 5* .\ AM-.Ml 2'1 H."' ~ UV.-4tt Co•lrl•lll! he \G k•o 14.1., Hl1 -i., .-.i .... mn II n 11 • l'O 1~'.0.1', B I 'n th" J' t, dt M 6\-o 6'4 -m '" 1•·, ' w El$\lc l•lh UV. OH 16 1R 1..m,_,~,-1,, '·'o W 2f ~ • 2t -.... "orGW f.JO• 'i 1r,-4 tl~ 1,1.1•.;, -1'> =••"••"<'•' !l l 11'0 U•o 1.Mo + •, u I IS senes, m no 11.~oe~ Hf ~ 11 I-luck Mt ,., s ')llc•rv .,,i 1'4 "'•~ PL 1~ "'.. 14 ~ 1:i. 1"9 + 1~ caronelln :n 11 '" 1t• lt\• "" 16 !l'o ll•• Ut 1 go'ng lo I y\h n; MoP ,,, I] "'I'd PP f1 'Ill'" St1nctvn ll>i ltr.O:t rcllw r 1j'~~ ~~AM,-" .. '',,,•,~ 20 l"" M~i >w. + ~ rowl~• COii• "j ~ J>! ,,~ . ~:~,":uMrt •,~ ,", '"",,· •,•,:• "LI'~ _7 •,:. sugges an mg se-:,,_ H 11.~ 'Ill'~ Huo c,1 1'-tlv. s10 11 ... l 10\4 ?"'~ ril!ht w 1 , • " ,,···,~,, , ,, 1•• 6'• 6 • -' • co. Bdar .311 i. u• 1, ... Co''d Class -partlcula•ly it,rvlCll ~ 1h i'<ll!'SI p •• ' 511" HP 11 1'1 2!'1, rdny E ,.,, " '" IS l$4'i JS\'o 35'• -\• ("C lnU l.lo !l .., •• n" l'I'• + • ., ~·"·Int \ lJ ., .. •O\o IO'l>ii'-11 • A-~rc &ttl 2"·~ 71'1'; 14Y•" Co 1•~· is.. • "'" Pl\olO u :n • ~ '~ -.... er ... I tOll l "" tt "'· -'• H•'f,~M CP 1 J 11 16 II -'• ' lllCe YOU C3n buy Jo~ra•-.O 'u1o 5c1 "' l"I .. y•O l!'t 5 ~ fl.-tft: AJlHD\o IS. J)I ~. 4ll~ .2(, ~ ... l'.:rom11Kn '1 11\o 7'~ J\lo -'• Htr '' IO 1 1''• !9•o lf\lo'-'o t' U:::V •·•"Cl .II.I , J"li .. l'Cll Al~ ]'"' J\• .... !f Am:i•ft!lllQ 1 J11 )Po 151, l"' ,, CfOOllriill'ICI f 2J 111 :n + 1~ .JrY Al 110 ! lO>o l~H I~ ,, 1nun1c1pals at close :o 7 p!!r-~~Me• 11•.u•• 11n1~ sv .1. •"• ~'"s~/f,·i.o __ , •• '.· •,•, •,•,., ,•,,.-_','.c',•r~c,:0~1..z11 ~ •>• ''"' e•1+11 M"•11 1:1 1J1 n" n "=~~ Th. . 1141 P~•nl ,., ol Ind Gtt '''' M •v v~ .....,~ JS 13,. 11"' 11\0 -~ HM•Hl!ln• I• l>t I l'" '> cent is IS v.·hat 7 percent B•rw<.k '" 1· !fld Muri 76'• 11« AmSc>AI• 10 l' ,,,, •• ,, + .,,r.r-"Ck o11 1 ,-•• ''"" ,,., .o.,... -.i:11Mn ur Jt ,,,, 11 J6''> l''• f 8a•ln p l J'hl lne•<.ct 0 s,,~ I A.m $!0 l 5 3'1. l~ lH~ Crwnl•ll tM .,. n.. 29\, 2t44t H.1 .. , H. t2 :r.6 1''' 31 J.1''1 .. tax-ree 1neans in various 1n-B.Jum" n, 14" 1n111•cl 21, • MUTUAL 4mStd ou 11 t 9l'• '7'• t2~\ -·~ CTS corp .oo J• IJ'o il'" 1M1 -•1 HRltn., Curr 15 1•, 1 ~ t' b k ',.,_, ,, , U>• Int Cont •'' ••• Al'lJ SltrU •t II 11 n•. !1l. -•,ii Cud1hv 1'11 10 10 tt. 10 t "1 H•ll••· Inf loll ~! 16•~ !~\<' 1 ,_ 10' come rac els (federal, stale B~l.M ,11, '2>> lntrm In •l~ s·~ A 5u91r 1111 n 11 '"" ''~ + ~11 Cudhv 1111 '' l 11i. l&~ u •, ~ l\ Helltr Pl< 01 1 10 "' 7 ..'.. " ' -· '' ''"'I" hot 8Wsh )'~ s:ri. 1'~9 ~A;,,15 l -0 40 «I +l'>C1tll~ 21 11 11'~ 10V. 111/o +h .. tlmePda 1 ?l 10, ll\i l<"'·, '• and local in<.vme taxes in· ,,-,m• ,'.,' ,· , ... 1n1 M .. 111t 1 ~t '~" ....,,sug Pl " ~ t'4 t\i. ''" f..mml• '°" "' 111, JO'" jl"" + •-. M1tmrnP :ia 11 1i·. '" ,,,.•'I '~ 4T&T wt•• ' • n , .• + D • '''' ,,,. ,,,. -"' H•m''" ,,, ·-"' .... ...-1• eluded)' ;~ t:1:1 = #"'1 1nl ~~·Pl \~ 1'~ """ T& T l '° ltt ,s:J u {: o ~ Vo c::":'/~1.'~,, 1 H 111~ 11.,; 11\; + Vo H.,mun.: ,.,_ i ;,, !,1 ~Mt,.± :; T R 11111>" w ,_ ,,,., lnlli! 6'rt 711, FUNDS ~WWSpl ?S ua IT• 1 11''> 11i.; _ '" C..r Wr 4 ' l ?i 14 2• -'' H.,, Inc 1!1! l1• l6 1 151, ~ In ax A Tai:able Bl•d Son l1''1 JI l1;1<1lr.. l?h u ::::: tr~ 1 IS ISO 14>/o 141/o 1~·· ...... rur••• H l ?0 12 17'o 111. 11{o + ~ Mtr~nFd 1 lG It '"· ,....., '~ ~ .. Bracke1 Tex -free •··aul• Alfl~n• 3. • " SoU:tll J7 211:o NMroii .to tJ • ol•: ' Cyclopi 1 tO s, ',,•,_ fr!• i1v. + ~ Heub~lft .IO 11 l"· .lA\O :nu, -'• """I Blacl .. 1 ;a,., 2'•· •col'll f ~l '. ~ A !ell • 15!1 ti 1.st'o -1' C\'or111M IM .,.. ... "''"" P~ct ?t 1~ 1''o "" ~ _ 'o Of Ratt. Of Rate 11.........,. El 1.1..:t l\'o J11ulnW ' ·~ .,.... 4:~ In('°\, l~~ lnO., lf' !.,',~ -'4 -0-tJ,'•h Vol1•11 ?1 11, ''• 111\ oil le• • • 1 ~"' • .,,"', "' Amlic lkl "' • ~, .. + i.. D Ill 11 11 1,~ 7ti 1Vr -+ 11 .., 1•onH01~• 1 •• J? '''• ~1·~ _ '• 201i° 7": 8 75',, 11.eolM C "• I~ •mn F ,. AMP 1 lb1~ 1\ 3l'o t-it '" vr •It '' _, _, 71!< 14..t..fl 1 ~ I l1'i l"'o 1'•'t ·-AH ,.,, ,,,i l~msllv , .. 11 \ Aw ... 11 4 INTGN ••1 ?.SO Ir.<; se ! 41 '" .. •6'• "'·-~O..n.tCo 115 '' ~·.· .~· ~·.·-·.: H~rnU/11 tO 1' :to I"'•,..,_'· w,· 7•, 10.00'• "•• Cl~ >'-t"-Ill,., Flt!. 4 .. ,, •<W "O•fo IA"• "' ~M >o'•• Jl.j, Al'l)PIW Corp l<IO \!', ,..._ U _ '• Dllt 11111' 10b ..., H•• ''K' ~ .. -,.,_ '' . • 1-,, 'Y "'"" ,_. '' ,., "··· ,,, -, '' ~ .. ,,., 3611 t' r~ A "• \11 .... ~ ,, .' •-• '" •••• ... ,_ Jl\nsrt Pd "Y• _,,,. ••••ill 0~ I"' .. ,, • K l, ?t + '• ..... g' •• • "'''''"'" ,, • w 7•, '" " .,.. r. "' v Amrtl 32 01 g:11 "'IK"5i 3.S l ~--I~• 'o n 3lo ?"~ ?1•1 l'(:I" -"I ...., ' JI 67~0 a.,.. Sci lA'• l"'i k'•ll\' :ii 5,j 0 11110 .... •ul>PI eel y "" lnctlc 29 5 •• • 1 h IV. 1'h +i.. , •"' , • •Ho + '• "'"llySuo 1 :in 11 '"• 1,., .... _ ,, ••wR ~ 'lo'I. I iral1 I pl l~N•lloNI Aaod-Inv .. '°' 19 ""'acond I.ta ~ 14\'t 21'4 t< v<.oCp 1.14 ,... H '" -•• 50(, 7 '1 14.00"'-f"''" .. 1<¥1 l~lfo I~•• ,.,. Ull> 1 Of murnlts 1wvvvv11an Grou Andi "'ltll 1 11 u 13\lo 24 +-.. D•vt11H....i 511 ~ 1S JS 15 -\. om.,,•• •& l?• ,,,, "41 11;1 1 •\ .,., ..... .., , M:. '"'• tit Grn '" 3"' "'' '"· •-.. ••• 105 fldl J JS lf"~Sv I ' Tl'i ll" i.1r, _ '• 01yt<1Pt 1 60 11 ll~• ,,,.. 11~1 "'c"'"""'' 1 JO Im 111•, ll ,..Ji 4 1·. 60' 7", J7 50'f S •• K !'" f;; '" O '"' ~ ' -> " OMr• Co 1 C r.•' 'lt>'o 7'"' Hoov Bl I '111 1 ]l )! >• _ '• .1 .... "••O 1.-. lit~ IYlm ,. ·~ '"" orlce11 ., wll!eh Mui I SI J ' .,, lO\li JO•t,, 30\lt -•• o.•-,,-''' . ' " ' ' '' '' Cc •· ''" >•'• ' > >o '' ~ ''' >• 00< O '' I'' ,. wn,. Ill 6 ... 16, l•t•t'' <K n 7n )11~,2•>, ... "-,-•o 70'• 7"o "'34Cf l ...,,.. "• •« llltM 11eurln 'Oii 11~ ll>j-1'•0t! ... ntet10 111 11'"'1'/ l\'fo.xl lf'Cl ll!I 11 •1, 0'" -"+'• I< ,w, r" r~1 w 511 ,. U "> l(fllell ,,, l'• COi/id "'"~ l>Hn loci<; 1' f'l ,. tt 411(0011 13}1 10 1»t 15 15' -"'-D ••"' ' " L H ..• ' ., .. Cameo 1''1'> 13'.J l'•l'...cl 16•• 1111 wid !bid) or boul!ht lee! J13 t)f APL Cart 10 !Hi n•~ 13• +':1 t •Ar SO 114 l""' u ... 16'• -'• c..., n 17~ 1 " ?I r1 _ •.; r M 64 '' ltVlf E ,',',• ,•,,_ C•~ktdl Tllf'ldlY, Var Pv 10 6.20 4RA 5~ '6 Ja ff 1ft "DllHIK Int 21 '°4 •V. ·~ -''o 'fr:vo M•ll Ill ~ 1"'1 11 )I -11 c~:.i"~ B 61 u K.-,e 1'"11> • -. •1• Mii In• lttth ,o4 •d 4rc•l•N .10.. , '• ' " -~ OennMft 60 lltl 16"• 15'4 16'• + O. M""'""F 110 J' ,,., 1"• ~..._, , E Of course the gentraJ level of interest rates. And after that. the credit rating or the issuing community - deternuned by the t w o services, Moody s and Stan· dard & Poor 's If you v.'ish Luck,, Strike Trie s (~"''" ?.?1'o RYICU1. l','A.berd" 1u1"l'r11 un1•21••dl01ftl 1 11 '•10""11""+~°"""Mlvlllf l •SU ti 1! _,,M.,.,.~pl>ol'I 1)!1Jl\llll'J.\l/IO'ilt .l-l"o M 15' 16 II I PC 61'1 H. Mmf••lly F~l'IOI ~y s P1 s '1 11.rlrPSvt I OJ 79 "' • 2Mo 29"' +'" OtnnYRll 04 ,, , .. , ,., ,~. -\~ "®•F "'' •n ,, •1 "'~ 11 ~ '• ~=~ .,;,i:.e 1 ' 7•,, Ki.': jnt 2Y1 J, Grw!r. t ,1 s ,1 HtKoc.k 6 JJ 6 to Arll/Ui 05 1ll 1] 11 ' lt 11 -l. Denl1PIY nl I ,' ',,'., " '! 14001~ pf?., ? 5• ,, ;o. + ~. Cao ln•A l<o 3.., Kl"'ll El • •• Inc.om J"5 37 Joh11$tn 169116'1A,.,.,co:;t160 6 7'• 6'1 11o -:;;,oen11Gr 1.10 l! 1 •~ 14"<n•LP 11'1 3~ "''· l"'• "'>lo -llo c~oTtn '' 7,,. Klrlc Co l • Insur • ll 6.ll A.llOllo 1.si 1 216 Armco pn 10 " 10<o '°'~ 'l'O'" DtSo101111: 00 l ui.. rs•~ l \lo -:i. "'nu•tNG• ""' < "\o '"• ,,,.. '•"°"" t 0 911o"'""ovot 111,\I'"' d"lr.• 4n•t2 cu18111n19l•4rmour1M1 2~~~ •• L"',., ?!:". o"••'"••'H',100 !.!I 11• .. 1na n~. M"'1G1r11so "» 4 " Investors & businessmen· From $5,000 to $60,000 to loan Peace Symbol Pack '>',',',', •'•' ,,',1,~1j,,'"cl11r.,.1 f~ f.., nllt!d ,.11 •.n Clll Bl 11011116Arnvp1175 1 53~. 1)._ :W.-•~Dt•ler .2• 1! JI., j]!: ]~:=~!.:':.!:';~~'' ·,: ',~:·, ',~~. ',', ~ LM'.,... !1tlT1 .M $..511 CUi Bl 11' JJO.-,rm$JC-10 157 211'> 2•\.'i '1 -V,011IF1n1n C4 J 911t 9 Nl\'iMDWm~I 111 '' '' '''" c!a'fi r~ r.i± r: t::::i' 11)::. 'j,,. 1 :"" AH.~,, It: ,:t; t:: ~l :,'111: :~~~. i ~ 11 M """ u + Ito Ol!Nn nl! I IO ll ]]11 "" ll'~ ..... "~"'" l.... ,, ..... ;: .. ,: ~q, + :: c'.tlllb 'l~I• I.AM. Wd ~,·,•,it I-Fd "t ... ~llS:il ur II S1Anfln ll'ld.1 I u:ii; ""' ll'.o -\,;g1•"1Sllarnl 11• 1•'• l~ "'' V.HU<IB•Y ,,,., 0 '"· "'• ,,,,._., Ct"VPS )V1ll Urson ,,,,;~mtlD lll S.12 vo$J J6tf4ot.lhld0ll!"" 110 lffilt1t -'lt tShl'IC1 115 25 1J 1dolw\Pw1"11 ,,.,,,1,,:r-.llo-•, Cl\ar~r~ 1~•)'.!tl.llrwnM '" , .. Am&us Wl09 U5 Sl fl 6'9ot.udO •~ 1121lo'!"11"'-"'011SPID110 6h'~l l'~H'~+'•ldt•t81> <II 7111 11 11 Cha•t 0 S\lo l.Pd• UI 11,•.;11,·~Am OVln unav1U C\15 So J.31 ,. •···e;"•,.., " f'• ll<t IV. DlttlPll<>n <t • 9•o 9'o 9',,-•,1~..,1 e P'''' 1 '' •' ~' for eny puopooe o~Catiforn1a real estate of any kind, whether paid for or not, Bankers look at your p&I or your age. My lenders look only at your equity. Let's d1scun your needs. Norm Kahn, h· tf:nsed broker. 539-2122. NEW YORK t UPI) -Lucky Strike Filter cigarettes. were adverUsed Ill Nev.· York area newspapers Thursday with a peace symbol on the j>acJ.:age, but a company spoxt!Sman said 1t was neither d nevi package design nor a 10litkal stalcment. "We art trying something 0 Don't settle for less. Don't settle for anything less than the best interest rate on 90-day Thrift cert1flcates Invest a minimum of $3,000 00 1n our 90-day Thrift certificates. and you'll earn a solid 7% pe r annum And Avco Thrift pays II Wl11:n yoi: 11ci:cl n loan c0me to Avco fluift !11::;1 Tht.: •Jn(; tt11ng W(; do best 1::. t1elp people obtain !I" !h1nq~ lhey need !11rough wise l.J<)rrow11u1 Wl1nlev~1 ycu need n1oney !or cnn1c: 1;1il-. to 11:. V~e 11 do c;uf bl:''>I lo help Executive offices: 520 S El Camino Rell, Sin Mateo. C.!11 A\tccf& Titrtft Diwt.6on h9I been ifl ~ ~ 1121, •nd hn ,....,. t•lled to Pl' funds on dff*ld. A'tCO Tbritl Ill • dfwtliclft ot AWIO Corporstion-• LNdet il'I M1i1t1 IWds in mddl· Hon toftMncielMl'nc-~. Brortdolrltlng. Manpoww 0.'tllDtl'Mftl, ~ Mlldietn. tnd 8..,:. A....m.. Avoio tf men .,.,. 51,000 ~ who If• t-'Plnf to tM.lid I betl• WM011ow-tor JOU. AVCO. NEWPORT BEACH 2101 San Joaquin Hills Rd . (714 ) 8JJ.J440 IHERE Ael /I AV CO IH Hlll llfllCfS I ~; Clllf(lllNIA llSll IJH CALL YIJUll ll!AR£ST OfllCE (llm L•~ • • •• Lill Co•t Iii E • "01~, i'° u ...... <V 1:1t 34•~ ]j 3" _, ~fbold •811 so 56•~ 5f'• S6 Ill Ce~t ',, ~< 1~·-'"~ u·~ t h ,,-r.nrnct l' ~u11r.G 1'¥olJ ... c:;i.~"'~'i! n1i;ltll II ·.,ASSCI 110 •11 ti 21 -4 IGLo,tlG60 ,',"·····.~M.·=!:1,•,,1r.:-1 .. ,•,'•,• ,_ .. ,, .. 1,•,·.,·.·.~=:~ out lo see w 1at appens, ?11t1 u111 , .; 1J , L"'1 BF 1' 10J" •ncm• ,:1• 1 nkk 01 '/' 1.u ~·.•,.,.Mo 11 '"" :1~1 6 _ \(, IHnt11ni .o ... ... ... _ ,, :said Richard St1nnet'~ assss-:hi '''' 50~1 5M LI"< M.1'1 ~-' • 1nwt11 7-11 1 l.,. Grlll • • 7 :k ... ,,,.,,, U 1~ 111, l6"o -!4 !lino Pl 4 J 1 :u 1s 15 -1'• '"'• ro "'"' '" '" ~., '" + , ""'• ~hrl•l S 1t6 109 Lol'l•w <'o 6l'o $..,cl 6 U ~• ~5<:11 12 ll U.4 " I 1 lt )I ?I'll.-, ?11.11 1n.\tt _ ''i Ol!lonCo Ub 15 11~ llV. 1''• -l, 'NA Cp I Oil l•• '"" 1, , ,..,.,, _ " tant lo the chalfman of the :11r1" ot n 9' Lott Cdv , ''' srock 1 i. 111 11>er1~ • n 5 " A11ce r PIS 11 1 "'~ 1,,, 16.,, + ~ o •nev JOb 1.s tos 1111 100, -'-1~• •n•~ ... , C•"11 ,, ., • •', ., •• .+ ·~ -11,del 1 I LoaEl•n 11 ,, •mEcitv J901'6L!ft:itk ••8•90 4UR\c~tld7 77'Sft,5111 sn._1 Ol115.e1tl?O l.U'o.U'i ,•10+~'"""um I<• ~ .,, 01 ....., American Tobacco c.o ~,1111 Miii lp/, ,,., ylltll c 16'1t 17"' Am G•lft SOl ! ~l oft In.. , .... J8 A.llAcll pll7S •lSO 7~ 14 Sl ... ~ 01"•,.lfld Ji !! ,.9,~ ..r,,• ..!~. :': ',· •• -~1~,",",',, ~ 1,• ····, ··, ·, ··~ + ·~ •'II' VA ?1~l ll ~"II f;EI 1~1 1''.\ Am l"V • n < 41 Linc NII 06 jJl ~1,•,,11:1c11 pl J l 11111 "'4 100 -l D VMlg t 121 ,. •• .., -•M• ,.. 11 1 I "N th j ~1 > U 8 221/'o Ml\ R.llv 5' S\ii Am Mut ?1$ 1.3 llll! 76 ,02,. ell Pf'1.IO !~ 471~ "4.1\'o 47'.J + ,~ Dr,.t1toer lO 31 ll"o 11'1i 11'• -t. l""P''"L 1 "I 11 '' !'>~f ~ -,,_ O, IS IS no a new l'Uyln Ml 13'i 4V. I llLrl 6•~-, '4V. mlol Gin 12! 1116 Lgqmlt S1y1... A.flt' Cnem ) 110 ;u,a ?3~ 11,~ iii DQn\•Mln Ill If 5114 S6l1 $6)• -1 Ind PL '" •1 I ~· I• II =1-.. k d · N 711rt. Ml '1>\tll omi A• ,,., 1'4 m Pie un1vall C1nsd nnnn .-11~sCort 1'! 14;, '' '''+-DemFnCI 91t I l 1'o 1{'• 711-'•'M•rl"lfl "ti < 1~., 1 .. , t~l~+•. pac age esign o, we are ~11yron '" ,,. ~ .. in M m 11. A~ Grl!YO C•nll 1 so 1.50 4TO '"' oa. 56 '"' ,~ ,,; .. ~: 8:.':ie~Tve:' l<l! is•1 lit. t•llt -""'"'"'A'"" 1 ., ·" '"• , • .., _ '• not making a po!i!icat state-~ll~l0~·0 ~,0 I~~ ..... ~Mfo !•, !~; t~ .. I" : ~t ~·~ 1.:f~ 8 ,c l~ ~ :b ~ :~r~.nPf~ ,~ 1:~ f-! ~:Z .:_ ~ 0o.wc,,,.~·. i~. J il. it10 J~1 --~~ ::.'i.~ ;;; 3~ !~ ;~:~ ~~:: ID:+ : men!'' he said The word -IDwCo 11,,,.11• ..... armGr 1•,i1• lncme jall1•5Mag ... ln '"'']A.vcoCo..,,,, "In·.'""• l~'·+··D•1t;'lnc11-111 lll)~~~l l~~~·Jj:~i~:~~ll)ll,.·,-•• •t ''1 ,",,,1 ,.,,_,, ' :otY• D 6'~ i\l. M Brnwr '"' '''• I'd In¥ 1' 792 M~"nrn •15 •S<I ""'o c"11J 11 '~'• '', , • ._ nreisr 0112n 2 • ll 1i1, 1• "peace" appeared 1n !he 9.0 rOQ1r Co .. 51 "I LP IO'z ll Ve"t 36~D.00Mlil Fd 911 t9,4vto,...Pd Jn 11 7• 77 !?"-'•"·•••• •• , 0 ,)'?'\ l'1 n'> , 'n•I'• O'<ll'I l I"'• io•, 1~1<-• l'·o11m E: 11'. l" ~ver 0 1711ll~AQc1Uofd 6.IJ 1.flMluGlh 1e•J..1 4v.,.1rnc •I ,, ~· • ..,._ 10 1\4 171> • -•l<1•PlrCoo l• 5~ •l'• •71.. .,,._,, belowthepackage ~0U1111F •·~•;,ti Ouv 7J u A.twci. 1011 11 11T• IJCll~c.w;,.,-d!!n n~ • '"'" "•+'•Drevtu1C 1 Jl61• 1...,H +•11n1 .. co1to '"''•1''•2''•· )<olon Srr tlV.2•'~"""''' M ''"' •l·A1lrOl'I )Tl O IJM~I" J(M l 4llec011 ,7JI 1 A'l.l ~· *"~+''Du!<t"w '"' 1111 221. 2'l\t -hl"h'lkl111: llO 4 ?l•, ?llt u:· Tl . boJ J l':omctr 11 '~ lt\lf " Miii M 11 • -, "'··-o•oo M•lfttnr t .15 t S o 11'" !?"' 11\li -'\ g .. ,P Dt6 IS I ll 17 II 1 ll!M •Ml 4e1 1••• '" I lC sym , a CI r C e {om Cir 3.!>. l6':~ MICl1•n ,..,, VI'> ""Furid"A 4 !I , ti trld Fd 11 41 n d -8-un rad 1 20 11 "'• Al'o "'• ~ 'o In• c~ N1t(I• n ;;,~ 391~ 39~% +:,,. bisected by a vertical line c~ ¥:1' ~::~ ~~ Mt"I~ ~~ 1ri: 1~l. ~1:: 8 ~u ltt ~y~~ l~~y 11~ ::mu~ ,6~ ~r H.": !f! 11 -•• ~~t:.~ t1s6. :r 1ll~; 1~·~ .J~ .. tl. :~1F~:~: I~ ,:: tt:-! !,r~ u;-: ~~. t\anked by IWO dJagonaJ hoes, ~ ~~1: t·~ t~ :::::~GT lr-11~~ •• 5if~Ca 31 :X : ~ ~~~~ 1J t 11 n ~:th GJB)·~ 11~ ?l4i '"• ;r.: = ~ ~~~J g:j ~ t l?'' ~~ :l~~ ±\; J~:H?~u:tllt 15} n:: 1~~ ffllo + ''. has been adopt d b Comp A )Ir. •\It ¥."It Cat ~ J)., B .. ·->O>• ••>> II' (;fh 4 4 !i "•111',.nl lOo >• 60•\ ~ 611'~ gllQ LI l .6.1 lS 21lt 21\~ 11' o -'• Int IM pf! 10 ! 11 '~ 21>• l'"· ···. e y peace Cmt Cm S~ ~ ll,\H VIG '4.fo l~ e ........ Kftl ? JI ?.JI M11U~ Gv 10, 14 10 llM f'f C•I 1 Jo '1 ,i.;o;. 211"' ~~, -V. \KILi lof ? IJXI 16'4 'Ml.I 16"• + '• Int M!n•r 6' 11 •, lD>~ 1[t + 'I g>Oups Cmt rnir l• f" II"'" , .... Dttli G!h ., S1• u 3mG •n 'I 'l1MMNV 1 1l , ... _ , .. , ..._ ·~ Dq ]l!plJJ) •100 ,. ll ,. +1 Int Mng l\le 10 11 · n • 11'~"+ • CmpTK J+. t CJO'l 5<1 l'• l'••11lr Fd S.O!.taMu "'In J1' 91S•4,.~Tr2•• 71 ,,<:? ''" '""-'·Ovmolnd '1t l f'o to f•-'olnrN,c~i11J 111 _,;: J9 1 AO< +1i: '·So ebod l I Id I ComreJ 14 '• Mah wk R II\• 15\• 8onth!lt s 10 s n Mut s.11,. 11.IS 11 I 'larb 0111 .. , 1 20.., g.;'• ~'.! -'I.. OV<1• A.m . .a 1' !'• 511 ~ ... t •o Int P~o i 50 t! l•h 1'\• ll'• _,, m Y e 8e 0 me I Con 110<.~ 2•'1 '61,\. Mo~I c~1 6' 1 71,_ 80i1Dn St 6 SI I !I Mor Tr~t 1,11 1 11 "1.tn! C:ll 7< 4 ,,. ,.,, "'· _ '• -E-~-1,",',, ',',',,',,' • lllO '5 U U ~·as a c:row·s foot :• St1nnt•lte c0":~0", ,1;: 17~ ~.PP~ 11 11 "' BO!l.I Fdn tl)O •••~EA. Mui ll! Ill •~•le !nr Ill 1 \'1; 11• 11 ,._ ,~E•ol•Pd'I 10 • 10,, 10 '° -'·Int\'''•• ,' .~:: ,•,,•,• ~~~ ... ECon LI!~ .......... ~,.' 8.oiron 10l11' ~•1nc1 1nJIOJll•l"5M•v ' ••• ''~ •:t<-·~~·~coColO 111 u.it•. 'II •Tl ..... _, said. "This is nol a new s}'m· ort rs... ,r,?·,•,,'. •M~~.t r~~ H~ J,:: =~~ 5t_,1~1~ 1211 ~~l E~:.i. 51~~ •-51 ::!r.::'.~ "' ;; '1'• i:1• ~~ii~~~::: ~'f )lft 11; ;r; ~:" u;: ~ ~; 11,"l1,•,'",,sf,5 ~ ~:; l~" im -.+~~ bol lthasbeenaround~ince "'":-o'r n.,.,,, .... ~~cb/i,' .~:·J• ~~~~ 1;nll.f: i:::r !l~101gi:;;~1;:.b 1 10 1t~ ~i, ?:"' ''1'-'~E111v1111oo , 11•, 11"• 11•·-"•nn&Toi~. 1:: .. n n +1 bb 11 ., ~MO! '"" ,.... Cl I) ICl'o 11"'1 l)I"'" l!J l •S Dlvld l '9 II •ee!Fds 1 ,,, ,-o.L '• -""a~K~Clak ,~ ',", •,,",', u•1:·. 'u':.· + •1 tnlTpfN l1S 4~ •a ~j., :~ .. = :·. I IC& 1mes. ~~::. Mii 1'\ ·~ -~ .... •ltru 7 71, lolo•W s ""' Oii ""wt" 1 4) I ll ,._...,.~-•• • ,. ~ .... -1~ l1llDnY1 I '° lnt Urll l .... ( c ,, 'k M\1111:! E ,,, ; • "IY Vn1 111li110J Pl Slit 51J 61t 111~in1c"k 0'1fl ;: , .. , , .. , ~··., .j. "~chUnMI !) ;;s,, ,', ,' ,•,•:.· ,','~.·: :,o ,'",t Utlt A«I ~ Jr• 5r· J~!o ..f ;·. Asked what was the rea:;on-,;~:~ 8 •:i.. • • Mv•r Li<' 1•~1 It , BusM Fd 6,16 6 15 ll'<:om ; 11 • 7l .,ft'l(~~r 1,., ,.. 1i.. 11 l••· -~. EckH'l;I J 'l'O .. n '! , , , I "•h d t"· d 1· C'.'Dflli C I NCC Ind )'° •"4 G Fd 71• llJ $loci< I" Ill ""'l'f'IPe• Ql "'~ 0"> t\o F~l·onDros I • )l il 11 Int ~~~ 90 1 l1 l\ ?I ng .....:: in 1tt: a Vtr lsement, O.nt L~ 1• ~ N•••~o c 11 1• •parnr , 11 1 6l "lfl Grr~ 11 11111 ~'d•ft , •n '' 1"1. 1••• 1" • + lo EG&O ID 21 111• 10'• 11 •,c _. '' inier515., 60 11 ,::! ,,:,• ,•,l~' + I rep!' d "W h ··• g:ntY M 1\4 R ol 8 rncl '"'° 1'> , ' '" ,,. Nt\IW C 1 ''I 19' 1 7~ 'g• 2J'1 EIMUtlt ~• U ••11 •'• ,. 1 , ~ .,. 14 1e e . e ave •hn. ,, ,_ ,,. !"• ,.,,,, , ~ •o t nv ..,, ~ 111,*"t>oH 60'> 1 I•" 1,,. ,,., _ ,, E1Mus '":Ote 1 '" •'• •'• .. ,•,.•,•·,•,,,1 l• i 16'• ""' "" .,.., ,. t )ftl , IP1I Shr Sl6 516 N,uw l'"d 1•0011«1 ""'I tf•• 10 •1 10•, ,,,, "' • ~ IG ,,., :n n • lheon 7ed about ll." The 0D0•/,',0G•: 111,. ','• ",',,m•, .. 7? ''• p , r·~! Sh• 9 &• 10 Jr "ltw Wld 10 10 1 •• .,,11 •nl•"r" , .,, ,':,.; ..'.. ~ ~1,·.~:~"'.~, ~.":," .i :'' ;;: 1 + ,,. IOY.1"'rl i 10 11 1"• 16~ 141, = ,; 1 f'.. \\ ti Channll'll! Fun.di loltwto" n Iii ll >fl "l~m•s ru 1 t 1, 1~~! ~ ,., 1 l ll•• !? , l?" low•PI.! 1 ~ J n 11 12 purpose Of !ht'.' ad, Stinnette g:~ 'M•~ 1~~ 1!~ ~:l ?~~o ~11., ~t, "'"1~n 9 u 10 ;J ~l<.ll S••• 117 1J ~ 0•nd'• i •o ~· 7,i. 1, ,.., , _ v. ElqlnN~• lrd <'9 s•, 5,, !', + '• low1PS¥ 1 :i.s 1 19 , 191, 191, _ ~. d t .. I od J Ds<,gr In ..t> ! Natt Med 1:,1t,! ~om!hSt lta J..,~;;:~tt l~~ Sil ·~""'y pl l I> l'I>;\ '" '"' O:'P110NC I 61 l&lt. IS'• 14 1,•,,o .. o~D JI 11 ll'• ll'o 'l'1 :S:J L, was O creat pr UC o.i.11:1Aci 1};16 ;N•t p.., 1a1 1,, i-:i'c':m 6i.o il/orneo• s«1 !Jl"""'"Co1•0 ",, ,, •• ,,·~ ,~111rr1cn 1111 • ,.,,, ,.,. ?O"•-'• '"'P 10 1' ll•• n "_,, interest'' D:t~t •nt 1 1 1 •!S•cl! I t:t... So•<I 1001'SJIOOFd 11161, ... _.1p1•<11 11'"'•1""•1'.,.,_. .... ,,,. ... ~~Elttl ll~l'•57•t J211o -lol1•-CorP '.»l''"21'•lS1•+'• Delu• (II <I(! 50 N•t ~~ow <• 1 Ch•~t Gr Bo. 101 Fd 109 1'9 "•""11 ""'n •'~ •M, '"'' '"'· ..tl• EmEI ol Bl'O 6 00 10 «I -J·K- "'fha\'S our busu1e~s To~/~B:1 ll"J::;N}'~5~"E ,!,,::: ~:~ i~}Jlgn~.;-;-'mSlJ!:\\·~::;;;,.:~1150 1~ 2;1, 1"11:•:-1 1 ~~~~~~1120" 1: ~~'I. ~1~' j!.':-l''J•c~1n.-u '' 11 •'1' 6\•-'' ••ll c•garettes."hesa>d oevAm 7•·•·•~JN~rc; 11,1S'• Frn! :,a 11•in ""•l0il9"~""''er1" , "• "• .. ,1 "m1101.1111 n ;1 16 >16'•"-•j~~AllfJ"° 's •• s=. .S>1 .,.. Dew•YE l l •N•thlnf 70\ 79 1 Shrlld 'tl'" AIM t11t51 9er~•vP~~ 'l 1 , •• ~" 1 ,~m,.-, • .f,,90 •• ll6''it26'1 2f1•-1•Jnl~r . II 1'1 6>, 6.14 -1 . Dl•"l Cr 13r. 1• Nltll A l• JS ·-·· • ''' TC s~ 'l.S •r. ..... m,. Co·~ ,, .. ~ ,. ...... ... J9 lllo 11'• l '1 -'• In'!" 60C! n 12 '"• It ... Asked I ti k I.. ~·T • •· • 11 • "'• E~nl•8111 31 1 u ll lj -'• J1p1nFd 06e ll 10'< !O''o 101-. +'• 1 iepacagewo11 ;1 g\~er1~~ j~ ;~;1o1t1111:,,, ~:~,l;,0 ~~~~c~, u.au1•t:~r;~~ 1n:,1:~!~..-i'!.1:~ l~~ ~~:; ,.,; !;·,;~·1 EcuiGt$l2n l 21,, 11 , 1 ,,.+'•J~oFd 1n06n , ,._ 9.,"" be redesigned Jf fhe S81eS f)f OocUttl 1~1 • NCl!r Hr. In IO''t HQ..,,., ]07 136 Prn11 So tl 6tj o .. ....-I'll! "' 11 '' :;;; ,, ES00•,,,•,nc.J..?O 11 11'o ITo 17'1 -'o JtlfnPllot to l! 2•'• 76>o 14>.• -•1 L k 11 d . Dow JM l1>., 711,i, Eur 011 2~ 2r.. F~ tO! tff 1 Mui 35 ll ••otrJ....,~ ,~ E .., lt I• I'> 1'4 -'• J•r•P~$A SO I ll'o ll'o II\' -'• UC y I ters increase In lhe Oovlt DI! 1"· u "'PA G'< 11'• I~'· G•wtr. 4 10 Sl• ~II• llJ9 ,, .. ~···· 1 ... , I ~ :::~ ;:·: ,.. Elltr+ln~ 7't 9 10•, 10 10 -"· JtrCPL "' j 110 JI•, Sl'1 51 \.'o +110 Dr!W loll l l l "IW "lelG 1'• 11 lntom tN 311r>llorlm 112 771 "'""'><Q ·~ ri ,.,, ,, ••• Er~vl Co I.I S6 191. 19 "'•-'• J•.,tlCr 1!0 '4' •1 O -I Ntw York area. St111neltc sa11t, Dll~H•n D 10 10·~ iow P •Sv 11 , 1~. vent 3 61 96 "!lo• \~' '40 ".,. Ptl' 1 ·~ 1 ,. E•~v1 p11 oo l 11•, 11•: JI', t •, J•m v1a11 • o 111 l''• '''• 11.;, + ·~ W I .__ lluroro" 11•1 lj'• "clRJ< 4>,Y•rolGMll '"1 76P111t51 Ut.2'~·~·'•"'! 1 ,,. ,;:•_5 E111otncl1S. 111 1Pll6'•-~•J'mWpl110 liJn.~7 11 -!•, " e never specu ate auuUI El P•I"' IOL. 1 '• Mo Ar1 f'• 6¥> ~-~ , •• ll P!l)ll Enl t J.l 5 n ·-•· ,,,. 111• Eu1oro fn,,s.. l 11 n 11 Jlml'f Pt! :tt1 1 '''~ 11 !'I•~ +1·~ ' •• ,, ' I' ,,. h'-"'&' '> " -"s""a< -••-'"' '• •O.A1 1 """ ... , ··~ l'v&111" '4b .cl ll'• II lS, -1, J<Vtn""•~ I 'G •1 JJ'o ll'o l31• future marketing decisions " El.1 s'r: 6;, i" "' s7~11 16'; 11 !:"fth ,_8 I?~ t 11 P1:;'~ 1nw 1 59 , n :;:,~;;,co 1,~ •·• ,. , •• , !:,. , e~ce110 ·, li 9 l~to 11•, "" _ •• J<Vtn J·~" /I Ill ._.. 1 Fco" L~b XI 11 Drmon1 '" i;;, ,,. 111 (0 1 3~ 1 '6 Ptlc1 Fund1 "~~ .. In<' •J 111'1 ':':~ '' •• ~ -, F•llt•g• -«l 10 n 1&14 16't -" ·~~r• Svt O I 15 • ;o; :~ = :: He said no peace group~ ~fucp~~~~ 1r~ 1~..:, ~':; ~~ 1;: 1!;: ~:.1"" ~ ~~ 1 t; 2''E'~. 'I;; ti~; :~~~7., 1 r.~ 1'( ~·:: ~~~ Z?'• = :· ~:f:~~~ s"~Gb :111 iJi: fl l~'· ~ ,;: {~~r~~n P1J 1 :~·; ::'' :::1• ;11•; protested lhe adverusemenl. ~::, sa~ ~~: ·1~ ~E't'"iir1 n:; a:~ ~~ ~~ I ~'1 ·, ~ "'~" ~~fld 1~~ ,~ ~ ::~"'::r~ ,';. ~; ~:· 1•·, !:'; -" ~:J~.:::, JSt Ji 1l" 1I:~ 1{:: _+;; ;~):( D~·; i:ii5 Jl;• ,JP~· J~· + •~ El Nl!e , .. , '• P .. b11 Br 4 •l'> omi!1t , 6 " PrOV<lnl l " • G) ""'"n• lflr 1 1··~ T •' 1" i,4 ·~ F1111r" !Op u "'I ~-, ~·I + .. l!1•~•"1" 1 lO la :iri. l''• ltt~ -r•, ',·•,,,",,", 1:;. '• t!c, '•'•'•o ·~~ µ; 011C.111d tAl t6T ~urll~n l !l 'J2 "'"~"&Ir •n •t .,, :;i ,.~ . F•.,..lrF•fl 1 10 11 ' U'i 1'''1 -'• ~otlon1 •n 1 lo~. :10'• 20l~ .. 11 ~ on1olln 9?!96?PU1"emFvr1!11 "•'110~•,.,.~ ,~., ,, ., >;. F1n1teellnt I ~\'I~·~ ''"'•''K~"Ml~l.00 11 ""•:1'>1 '>:i~~t1• F11r2ms f• f• :a1tc:.co i;• i•' """u In lo0 3 1J ~111111 •01~61.,,,.,,,¥;'1) )" , •• , , • ._ , f'1rWn!Fln o 1u~ 1u• 111,+».,:l:t•iJ..LI,~ , ~;: ~~i,! 7lo+•, """•" ,:• ~' 0•~, O I' 0,• onU Ml 6U 6 11 0•...,rO ljU•,,n, •rht•1v p•J 'l,'.'• 3n, J1>,.::.l.I F~r,.llMI .1111) I 10•, 41' • .--'K•!1AI pfll7 , S• >• ~,~I .. Er ""• • • arr ' • • c11• c; ~ 18' '"' rtn ~ ••/•Pt• .,.,, •• •, ,.. FAS 1"11 1'1 •• 9~0 o 'l• + \1 .,.i,r,, _ ,. ,,,.. -111 Modul l'• ""'•wt< ~ ••Coro Ld 11 !\ll H lntQm 611 1 •l "'"'' l"J?• , 0., FKldtrJ 40 IJ1 it "' 1~ •v ·• t''• !M~ >; FmDS 011 il'o 11'~ P~u1tl P l S'• tnrv (•<> '' 1"•5 ln1101or SIS 6 '8 ""~•vl-'•'t 1 1 "'• ,:'• ,~l• _,. ~..r~rot 1.•ft 9 ?I' in•: '" , ., KtlsC cl?.lO l l! 39 ll' -E~er111Clt''""''"~v~• 10•,1t CrnWOlv•915J9Vli!J 66S7?1•rk"'l'K!61< 116 '' '' "'KIMoql'fl 11)7,•71, ?''..t,v.1,rn11 11 1!1'•11"'!7'oli D isco1111 L l'ntro RI j ,,~ Ptt'' Mt 9•1 10 •n W.,.1 ~ 6l ,,u Vo1 ao 5 51 i .Ol H~/v .. ur-I ,, • ., ,,., , ••• -I ~edll1c F<-' "' •••• ••\ '. K•nC Pwl! 1 l1 l'!>t ]()'. '°" -, • IEMlt B ..... o, .. •O\T J'I 1'_ eva~MS!llS.1111•.,Ttcll j2ll5•R,...,.~ Cc ., • -•I<~~ ... ,~~ 2 lft '"'• ~ ~·· • "'nlWl)I i 61', Pl Enct1n l"t 7 o ll•l~Wfrt GrOl.IO. fl evtrt ,.t ''lt '"v•~'~'lrO '" 1! :1•, :'' ~ -·~ ~eJ'p":,;," ',' 1 U p•. 11•• -1 KC Sou Dt 1 ·~ 1''1 12'~ l ~ -~ Eon Corp l'· j''"" G•W "'•10 Decel •UIC6•111nlrct 'J"'j1311wo>"-•-0 ' 1 ll'~ '"' '''•-"'·~ f'l1 l 'Cl,?"l ln'. "''• \~-'• Fl'u11011 JI, Pt<1nP1r 1,1 o,rwr 1jll ll•9 11Mtn!~ 10 Jl~,,, •. -, ,,v '''~l,~,l '"•'•'• ~os ~~s 10 ,11• t"l l"•-1•K""PwL l11 ?l1'~7Ho'l"~' • • , .• 'w I ,, I '' • '" 1• ~ ,, ~ ~~rt·r•I• Inc )'• I', ... "•I• l~d ' ••• •• ; IE"t •K : ~as • 1 • Dl>ltA 69 ,,, •!11'1 0 '4 •urvH• 11~ JI~. U" 1"4 _,,~e<ID~ISlr I :16 ,,, t" l" '1' I{ ' \ Store.~ J-Jike Recruitrnent D1~count chains ha ve tn· tl.!ns1fied their recruiting ef- (011~ at two-year colleges and smaller lour.year campuses, the trade paper Discount Store Ne\\S reported . The extra young talent is needed lo han- dle the industry 's rapid store expansion K Mart. Korvctlts, C'..ook l'n11e1t and King 's '.l.'ere listed as maJOr chtuns w b o s e rec1·u1lcrs ha ve been speruhng n1ore ume. on college cam- puses. These chains generally are no4 wooing students on lhe largtr. more prestigious campuses because. as On<! recruiter C<Jnceded ... We s1m11- ly c11n't match the starling salar~s or benefits of private industry for college graduales. "Bui I "-'OUld say objectively that we offer far mort oir portunlly for the young person \lt'ho can slick it 001 five or JO year11 and make 11 lo the executive level." K f\tsr1. with over 300 stores throughout lhe country, pui s c:olle1e graduatts through a IS-week training program at its sister Kresge va riel y ~10res Tho&P that show talent ijrHduRlty arc nloved through lhe ronks 10 a vancly :-tore SSSISl<tnl nlHnilgcr l h ('II manager . a:n<l finally manager o! 1 K Ji.fart St.ore. F8 CKO 1 • l'• Pelroll! l7' JO Ort•tl 11 ••II._ c~ustr 11,1) 11U lllftl" rQ "' ,. u, 1"' 1,~ "•rf'fl C• ,0 19 1,,; .,,; ,.,; .:__, K~~:.~~d ~?00 •,•, 31'• J,•,,, "•llj"• +' '" 0•1yl' I'd '\l IQ76 cuOdfr l'urod• ... ..., ro _. ·->• 5, '' 0 .,0 • 0 >• ' ,. .., IT'• • t•·¥1 Lv 10 11?1 Int In" 116tnll ,,· •• ' "'"" """' -''"Y' ',, 1:.t '1 -1JKav1erAo i.o ! 1111 tf•• I , ' ' ' '' _ 1, "" V'..., J ,.. ~·~ I, Cl•ldrl~\ l .:0 J '~ 'I )< !( ... ~ •• I -' • .-, -·· -·i -'' .. ror&1<ow.rd "' "" """~"' '" •• , , , 0 '' , , _ ,.. ~· ,,. .,, Finance .~i<l S.I•,> llO t4? 8 I 1j71 1 j ov••• ' ' 6'1 A\ t"' "'' '?!I, ?II.I,, ''''• ->t KeliR• Ind J.11 1 lll'i l~• !Ol G .... 1'1 tli 1a1s co,n s1 1i JJ' "~oro 1D lG'• ..., J!I•, -• ~1n F"<I''"'" ,, 11 10·0 11 K•llD"><! I 'O 11 •1•, •l or~'.'· Inca.,, ~ns11ktulr!v l'undi :~~~•,','-,~ •• l• 1•, t• -' ~!••"~• 1•n 1•1 r •. "'• •l .1.•,Kellf\'l:lll 111'>11 ti -110 ~-e '"' J !l Eourv lS! 'jj ~"" "" S? I•· '" J•· -:o. "11 C~.i ,,., ~ "" '''• :T" .o.' "'••d"I 611 .s l'lli 171~ 77~1 ·, •l«k 11 Jl 11 JI lnvHt ill 1 "~n~ll p!I !O I '''~ '' 1•'> -"''< ~., 11'•~~ t •• " '''• '"• 111,-'-.. tl;1nn<?>tl "1 l 13'> Jl J3 _ ,, f.l r1t \Gt"' t' llllre 5 XI 5 1 Aurl Ind I «J 111 :'9 o W o 1' -\lo C~1>J( 1¥ 1 <~ Jl .,., 4>l0 6' ' + ·~ K•n~cn•1 J •~ 11! 111, 4~, •l -10 ~%:~ k 1~/1tal:l'~"'~ 1fr1111 :~;1·~·;;.,~ ~ '~:; 2::~ 'f,::.:~~;;~~':~ ,'~t lJJ!:O ,:' .~ _.,~~cC.~'is!.0 1H ~~:: n;! l~!!:.1•: No'~ in CDM EMrQv io 1/1~71 t<1ll~ltt 661 J.Js111urmh• 'O l'' ts .. •», •1 -H ~'•'lr~~ H• 1 "'· 1~·. !•'•-' KerrMc IJ.11 11 llo tl•~ 11!•+ • "ntnr.e }IJ ~,,,. .. F<I 711 jl7 Bull'IU"" IOI l1 ,,,, 11'• 11'1 ti>• :1•h••(d '• 11 11, 1'1 ll1 ~' ...... r,.r1'n 1 ~ l1< '''' 13'1 -'• EQu!lv 1.6! I J15htar A.~ 19419 76 C ~"-In~ '.o I'" 1n Jn .... Kd<hCo 110t •9 It II"• n +>, Cou1 Glh 111 ouir. °"'" lll.IUJl - -c11~•kn1• 1 "1"• , •.. '''' "''mlir" 110 ~1 J? ll'lo 31> . EHR> 11 lt 11 If Ide I Cl I I Cl!Kt! Cc 10 41 lfo o 36 3,·, t•• "+In! 11'• •" 11!~ ,,,1 ,,,, !"• -, klnQiOS1 .00 !I 1S 1S 1$' = 1! ' I D J e J C pora· Ev~1t In 10 10 11 to ••m.o Fund~ C11 f l111nl 1" '" 1•, ''• '. "llnt 01°• •1 l •• "', ]n, -•, K•nnewN• •1 JI l"• ll • 2•~o ~ '• 5SE' 2veop1n n or F-OC..P 1.l11t:1 c1on ,_.. 109c1111hn M!'IQ ,, 11:. 11•, 11 ....... ~1~ i: co~·' 1 " 1•·0 ,...,_,.K1nn1voll25 1 •I "' "'_,,, li on anewhnanci&l serv1cesF0•,'C!',, ',·f,''~l l"~!',' J!~lQO•l•"•~•"•'••,,1 6'I ''"° 1"• u +''l c11r.•l .!O 11•·· 1•·1 t"'•-'•·"'1r·~h ro 1 • l1 r l1 j2 •-'• F "' !• f•• -1 "' $1 1 ?~ 711<o Ir.lo 11" .0. '•"'I~ Pow I /JO /.II ••·, 1••1 It\,+•· ~LM A I lit •lD ll'~ XI 11, .. '• cuinpany has been forrnedF ·'ll~r1h ln561 so 111' 1\1 & rd11r-«• 1 .,, •• ''' 1•. -•,p~,,,111 10 ~· .... , ~,·~-" L~~ Ml \1• t >"'• 311•, J11•, • ld ID • If Ta ff -'"" J 4 ll r'dn P!!C l XI 11 5] I?•• ~, 4 '• c1, ~·o.e• 1 ... lQ'' 10'\ + ,, Knlqht N lit 2 m. ll>4 :12\I -•• wilh cortv'IO'ate olfiC'PS in"~ """•jtl1•11 win~ G1 47• 111r~nC8dc•1 1• ll'• '' .,., '· ""'"'c~ ,.,., "',,.,, 1•••,. K°'~''"" 110 • 1110 1,•, ',', -•• 1~ Fd nod 1 IO'l'OU "tr lnw 119'.?lJOJ r1rhn•n l!O IJ! :it l''> 31 I 1 "''"" n!81 '4"i 1H~ •l')-1 "'""""'' It.I! -" ll•, Corona Del Mar Fnandbl Pr~i ~l'!fe"• :!~5iot~,,11,~ 60 11 11•, 11~. 111,11·~·,,.1., •• '" •1 1·• , .. , t"·-•~Kaopersnli 111150•. so .50 _, D•~ J• }~li!l'rm G1 'Xi ~lOCftro Ci.Oii 5 J:'<IO ~•h u J; -1 :Mr c, •s ,,,. "'l t'•f 1'<• -'·"or•(ora 1nd ''l !~o p1 The privately-held compan" •,~,'!! ,,'J ,•!!_s.', 3' •• ~!.-~~·.~.,P~ 1,"' 11 ?J n•~ "''• .. , .. 11r ,,.111 •n •·• ·"~ "'\-"K•1llco 110 $1 :19•• 31., :i1n. • ·-"' -··-t:i..-'I". .. _,,, ' 11•. ll" 21 •. + • ~""~Ft•• fO U l• 1;•' 1,•·, _ ·~ v,•,~e•'•' ,.',' 11•, '° :191, o111 • ""Ii"" ol!en'ng a variety ol Vrnr jlO•Oll Am Ind •'!j6tll ~rrlt.C•.60 1"1 is 1•\lt Jf•;.1..Yi ""t Cl\ .H • "' ....,, 1••• t•'• l•c,_,, ,,., ""' F•l"V• 'IOtrl F~uc: 1 5.7$~,,,~11 11'J11.,n·~Jl\\f""I """'''~·~ 111\ol!lol!>.+•~Kr-•130 U30'·11"XI'•'''• llnancial 6t'-rvlces 1nclud1ng ~~:''ln81b )'IJ ~jf >t\~tnRo. F~ '" ~!~~' 1, '°• ff :;;: 11;j li~: + '" ;~~~1,.':",'!tl~ ,,. ~; .... !: ·~,, 1 1. n1utual funds. life insuranc~, ~ l;;l~ ~l J:D ,:~ o1:1 '1~ 'JC !'~i!:.W' 1 ~~ ,~1 Yi: )?.: ~ _,,. :;.;:~~K;o ~ ii ,;il• ~ ;; • ± :. real estate syndications 011 Fu Htr •M 1 s1oc• 106! .,,, I car~ n "• • 4 e..,r '""'1 " u l·~, l"i ,,,, t •• • Ff! $1tr• Jd60U "P lllGI St! tS Co PllJ.! ! 1<1~ 11•\ 1~'•-~•"'°'IWlt pt I J. 1.0, H'\ u i, and ga.s exploral!ons and other ~l:l f:: JN 4 11 u~~st, lll tl 1:r.~~,'? i 19, 1 '• 11•. ~;:~~1r311ll, ~~ ;-:::: r.:. ~:: = ,, 1nve~tments principally to Lhe l'l• t=th • u •" t°C:A At •·• ri·r. ti'" ~A• so 't ~' 1 j~; ~j, ~ ,, ""•~~~·~ul ,~ ,., I•'• 1''~ 1,.,, l<nd Glh 3 6! J" fHtttn l SS no Int JO JI 'M', 11 ~ ,, ' , , ~•utrtr., 1 7~ 171 1•io 2", 1•1• i o, 1n1ddle income market l'oufldrs '11 1 Sj TKhncl '3 3 II r,!11 FdY , 1 11: 1 ' FUCMJ• In l'OI u tt• •10 ti~ + " l'otlrlQ IOltlTIKhllDl t1ll!C11r1Hudl#/I 5'1'11101!'~ -G- Frtnl<.llnGrouq tmo G! nn2Jf'l('..,l"lt Ji• J l'I 11't J1•1-•o,.,1r Co'" DNTC •l'l•ff owrMll •lt•,SlitnHIP$111 1111 ~ 1'• II'• "t)o"'"Clito .i Gr .. m soo s.• T'a" C•t f U I" en! L~ El l I 21'1 'j' '"• "'II.I< .,,, ,. urn !/I i,16 riv Eo ... ff lllMPw 11• JI iv. I 1:0 0 , "~m Sko 1 ,. lncom •• nJ1'ud~FO'j .. 1 nrSWl'll 110 n •o 11•0 ,:1, I - Fd rr,,.111 I lt • r. WTI Inc: ~ $fi tnT•1U .. b n 17 16'• l•\I; + '• t:.rdDotr! I 30 Fund /lrri I 00 J. 1 "I' Miii 1 loll 1 60b U If I!'• fl'i -"' r.1r1oc:• IO SanY•llwy 1)1 lll Unfd Jn ,,,, .... to 25 U'o , ·~-·.r;~1..,.1v·IM New Po~I In Tom Austen ul Frteom 6 91 J" \wn er .. ,~ fl!! SQy1 to !I JI 20~ :iO•. -;;:::::_~ ",!l·ll .,.n Src I d I t1 U" C1alll 1 •7 lj ttl·red ti" S 1''• 1' 16\t -r.. r.c ti Cor't has won ap-r·lbr11rr J ll s,oo 4t<.m 'IJ 6,1 n•n•A llOb 1• ll'' 11•~ 11\'o -'• (;f"'l"1 C~p rouo sec jl!(Cl"l 11 lj "~ CFI 511 IOI 1 j" 'J'.: 'f" •I • , , , •• potntment lo lilt' new post "cw~ F In I 4' cltn J I f ft.IWll!•n ·1n<: ,_ -·n n¥ ... I 811 Fd 4J vano 1 ii CJl.lmci• 0 'l'O -1• n a m011 I.Ob Clemente or production manager or com s1 11 GJ 11 01 VFd c 11.,..,.11 f~'''"' , 31 '''• '"• "~ '• ,.,.,,r'" ·, 611 ll I' ''"" C rinFd A IR () \I t lj Fii . ho>•M• , ~ J Jf·• --~ »'l -'• r.ATrn '" 'l'I ~ves u"~r ompany •lh Ind, 11·:. ~\:1 L::' t1 sx i nt1Jee .l• Jtt'}1..,"'1 '11 :"'111,~~c:~~;c 1,u A t I•· C th I en ,.,.""~ 1 ~J 1 ,. fncom • 01 4 3' ~tm•"" 11> i tl•o JI•• ,.. ~. "'"" tin " us en, lit: a er o sev ... u••On 1>0.)t30)f sc1 su IU '11 mNY ''° ,,I Mt. srt. 1• -l'o "'"°"v•I 111 ··hild>en, vo'ill step 1nlo lhe ~~.·,••on MtS IOI • 4 • ...,.,...,. .2111! .t 1 l "r.1nOy"'"' 1 ' " l" j" tl'ldrtll 1· l " ,.. v. l ae I Ul1i tJ•· u·' ......... ll'IK J tO new position after serving "' ,,•,1t.. '° U •nod '' ·" ~~ Ol'tlo i !J o~ ~1 4)•, ~ •\ r.n F!rtit 411 .... J 15 1J v~r ll'lllP y 'B 'ell'i~fi•OUO I , ,,~ i'• 'f'' j 111 r.ttt ".!• , .o manager of ccsl esll1naling. Ml't'"tt. 1~ I 11 11 '!-Nri In ., 11 ll~ll"~1 p11 u .;; 1'• f~~ j :t ~-: r..~i' 111 The promollon left two Kltl,0 ,•• \ 01 1 OI 1.ri Mu 1 u ' ~ M Dt l 1111 r '• 1 '' .f "' r..,, ... ,,, 111 ) I Cir tl t 11 WtHl1111t" r•r, IPMV 7 ~ ~ Jf't tt•i -1, t;.n MU!, q ot h@r posit tons open for 8(. u"•'"•'•• u 117 E•o•• ' 'I H RI" ctlolW I ,, '!" ·i~ -•1 nenMo! 1111t 11 Jilli '"''' j ! 1 n Fun !Sr lo -'' r; """' 1.,, 1 vance:s Ill lhe San Clemente 'f'i•"-,,. " I Mort .1 "' hr 1c11 '!iii • s•, • !'o • ~ r; ,,.,, atJ ,1 I I ••1 f lKl!w tti Cllrl1 Dl"l!fl l"' '• ''• • lo r:,...1>('..,. l6 p anl -cos\ tslunalor o ~ • I G•r. .,,, .... o tr'"t •·1 C11r0ftl1U J.O 10 ''· u 11 • .;Pu~·· , ,~ fllled by Hon [Jahlriu1st anrl l~...':J F • ~a:~1 :Zrill:; '•of ·1· ~ ~1~n~:11 f.c1 °30q' ~'°': 11:; if.: • ~ ~~" "''t'~ 1orcm11n or 1he 1nspect1onl~: a;~a ~tt :i1~:Zh1:tn1.t• 1~1:,. ~~R't,!ff" , '1 i'' fiii '' ... = : 111' dcparlment 10 bt a.~m~ by~':ie:I ~1', t·..t. "~~;1/d 1~ !· ~'M:~1\~000 •1 :: 'O: ll'~--~!l't'id,'ft r' C I r<t1r...S1Gl•l l lC 1v,~~Fd r• ll~111jo~ '' Iii "'TtiEIDI''~ lCnry an I.I, r.c1>11, l" J 11 orrll J z Jtlttlvt i .20 kN .. o,1, zy, -t h~ftl pf81.>t ,., I••' 111 1 " '" • " IA'~ !l .. " ,. ' J"~ µ'\ ' ... )J~ .. n'• • "'• l•'• ' "' '" ' " lO•o " u·~ '"' tl I"'• u·· J;'• "" ' u•~ u •; .1 Ill\ ,,,, }~'\ 11·· '~ ,., " ~-· 1: .• ·~ " ,,., " "• ''• a ,, .. ,.. '" " 11'. ' n n • " -... 11•, " " .... i~·~ ' " • "' r•, •• 11'1 !••· l "' '" • ., .. ' " ~" • J" .. ~· " . t 1:'1 !"' '"' '" Syntbols l • • • .. .. • • • • . , '• .. •• " '• " " .. ;; ~: ' q .. '• '· " •• " •• • " ,, " : .. " ,, ' ' " ' '" ... . " .... :· .. " _,,, -'• : u. +'> " ~ '' _., ... . " -.. -'• . '• -" ' " ••• _, t'• +" :.: '• -'• t I'~ _, "' -1'· +I'~ -,, -.. -1'• + " + " -1'· I " '• :a :. -'• -·· ::.._ '• ~. :+-•• .:.::··~ ·~ 't -··· -" -" -.. -.. + J: _., + " -., _., + •• _,,., -'o t '• _,, _,. _, -'• ~,., ·-11 ,..,. I •1'11- 1 ,ol"' tr, t- jm1IN "tll>!,oo " ,,, '"" tc111'9' I I•~ .. .... ... ... ....... ..... M OM -" N~ :.--41¥1- ''""' J .... ,... _ ..... 1-Ht•f tttt• ... "' '"' ., 111rll ltet II ' .. ' 1'70 QUEENIE DAil Y I'll OT S.i.a NU (JI ... ) Mii'-L .. Cr-CM, lly Phll lnterlandi 4The p~ldtnl'1 &Mi•tant aa.ya don't cal l u1, we'll call you If we want any apell• cut on the market." ' • • I• DAILY PILOT Wtdnestt.J. August 5, ]q70 THE REAL ESTATERS ••'J1tL client 1uu 11 righl to kno111 ew:rytJ1jng COtrU.rtring tht trtiHSu<"/ioH before lie arts. , , " RANDALL R. MC CARDLE Presidenl ol Thi R.-1 El lelWJ; • otl119' rnl -le iftJlfVCIOf •1111 lee.. tru,...; tr.tltlor ol 1'lt bod. "R•I Ea- l•le Tr•inlrl9 ill Ollt'l>l'nl.w co1i.ves~, " Awl Est•!• tol-bt for I ... O.ltr Piiat; sl•tt Clk'KIO<" of CARET/ cio.1! PrHidenl al the Nitwpor! Hfr- iDo>r.COIM Meu llollrd of Rum>". WE NEEi> SALESMEN LU.IN MORI Prol8">0ntl•Pl•50nllllecl Tr•ln1119 ·IA.IN MOii G4ncrous $plil-10 ~ SEIYI UTill Mor• HllP. Leu COo!lwlon FOi INTUYlfW' .Call RANDY McCARDLE 546-2316 30 MORE REASONS WHY • • • THE REAL ESTATERS ARE NUMBER 1 People! People! People! ;..The Re-al Estaters are an Association of well qualified professionals to serve you better ••• Ask anyone who has done business with them. -These problem;solvers work for you~ They make it happen. -Give a eall-Y ~'II always be glad you did. YES! WE GIVE PERSONALIZED REALTOR SERVICE YOU WILL APPRECIATE OWNU MUST SELll On beautiful Lido Isle. 4 Bedroom home with an .extra large {amily room, Rp&rale dining area and lushly Jan<bcaped garden ••. all on a 45 foot. 11t1:eel-lo-streel loL Shown iln~ · time. $64,500 .fu11 price. See 'fodayt Phou<· 646-7171 A IUNCH OF IEDROOMS FOR THE l·l·CO FAMILY 5 .bedrooms. 3 balh", family tCl'lll and charming srcluded patio -ONE BLOCK Tt OCEAN. OnJy $48,500. Call qutek 673-8.)50 CHEAl'ER THAN RENT :t.!ove in this 3 Bedroom, Family Room hun1•· for $156/month, includes laXPli, pr1nc1pe.I, 111- teresl and insurancr. f<'nced 111 ""ith fruit trees It all thP p1ivacy ol California. lh•in•: Phone 546-2313. NEWLYWED NEST OR RETIUMENT COTIAGE Cbw·ming 2 BR home in Newport 1-lcighls area. Walking distance to all shopping. Ne•1' loan commitment of ~12.800. Payments of aJ•· prox. $125.00 per month incl. taxes & in~. 646-7171 VIEW Of MOUNTAINS I. WATER From Harbor View H'tlls. A near ne11i. 4 .Bed-rooms 2% BATH LUSK HOME. Fireplaces in family room and living room, t inted glas11, wal- nut cabinets and red brick patio. Only $57 .~. Call 673-8550 Sa'les Toppers In !uly N(D lllcCI U.IY H•ri>or & Ad•-Offiu YllCJINIA CUutlHS 17tll St. & N-p•rt 11•11. DOITHA OYUI C«••• ......... Alw•yl 1i11cer1 in his d1t1r111i11 1· tio11 to do th• b11t pouibl1 job fot ki1 cti111h -N ..... IUCC:tl• i1 will d1oer~1d. Hi• pl.0111 11wm· b1r i1 !i46'-1lll. Ah•1y1 r11dy lo 11r••, elw1y1 willin., to tlo lllor• ti.en reqw irtd 111~ 1lw1y1 1bl1 to 1ol•e • d il- fic:ull probltm. Her phon1 - 640-7171 . Ho1111I 1MI forthri')ht i~ ell k1r tre1111c:tio111, Oorth1'1 •WCC••• ;, 1 well 1er111d rew1rd. I~ Coron• del Mer lier phone 1111.,,b1r i1 671-l!iSO. COLLEIOE PARK AREA SHARPIE ~-rPsh new 1Jainl 8Jld top 'radf' wall lo wall <"Prpe l inside, 1..'0ncrt'le. drive and .,,,ell k<.'1)t landscape out~idc. All outstanding 3 bedroom fanrily room bomP vacant and ready for your frunily today. Just rL'Cluccd to S27.900. can 673-8550 MfSA DEL MAR ~ bedroom, 2 bath, large brick flrenlaC1'!, GM buill·lns, Shingle roof, Double car garage'. \11/aJk to all schools and large park. fliA or VA terms. Call 546-2313. $27,500. TRI-LEVEL IEAUTY Uµ on lhc hill in beautiful ?i fESA VEnDE. So1ne view of Ocean &: Huntington Beach. 4 Bedrooms, 3 Bathi>, Separate family Room. ~·ormal Dining Room I: Breakfast Area off l\itehr n. Court yard extra. Home in excellent condition. Call for Showing -546-2313 NEWPORT LEASE °'TION this luxuriow; 3 bedroom, 3 bath, double f1rr-place home in Newport Beach. 2000 square feet. All built-in Kitchen, newly painted easy maintenance on yard. Must lie<! to appreciate $37,950. 546-2313 STORYIOOK HOME l'LUS INCOME • Rustic charm would be the understatement of lhe year for this extraordinary one-of.a-kind :l bedroom 2 bath home plus a handy da ndy income unit out back. Loverly fo1· only $49,500. Call 673-8550 EASTSIDE fAMIL 1' HOME :1 Bedrooms, 2 ba.thi, dandy den, kitchen wilh huilt-ln15 incl. dlshwashPr -Plus a big 2 car ~arage and 11epa.rete Y.'Orkshop. i25,500 - 1'hont 646-7171 A TOUCH OF 5'AIN A Spanish nevored villa on beautiful Cliff Dr. :J Bedrooms family room, large living room \Vith fireplace. A sparkling new look through· out -$49,900 -Call 646-7171 NEAR COLLECOE PARK :l BPdroom. 2 Bath. 2 Car Garage, Built-in A11-plia.nc~, Block Y..'8.lled yard. f'HA/V A TERl\fS! !l's Sharp? Call Now. 546-2313 • INVESTMENTS • 2-2 bedroom duplexes. Kitchens ant'! built· in garages and fenCf!d yards---$29.950 each 646-7171 4-PLEX Excellent units 5 y1-s. old. NP\V carpf't - B/I electric a1Jpliances, 3 bedrooms -2 bdnns -out of town owner will trade - $59,500 -Phone 646-7171 CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX Both units are spacious J bedrooms with 2~~ baths LOCATED nn one of Corona del ~1ar's nicest tree lined streets, Phone 673-8550 MANY, .MANY o,\ORE THE REAL ESTATERS-Re-alE-stat--e • NEWPORT BEACH 1700 Newport Blvd. Mo-7171 COSTA MESA 2790 Herbor Blvd. 544-2313 . CORONA DEL MAk ll2 Marguerit• 673 -1550 INVESTMENTS 2784 Hori.or Blvd., Suite 201 Co1ta M•1• 5-44-21 16 EXPERIENCE ELIMINATES EXPERIMENT Investments SALESMAN NEEDED * Our R11I f1tel1 l••11lme11I Dept. "'''' 011e in•11tment 11 111"''" with 1i~ceritv I * For h1lerview cell Re11tly Mc- C1rdle, 546-2116. 2790 H1rb•r llvd., Svite 20 I . PILOT ·ADVERTISER J 5 ' ~ I ' ~7 I DAILY PILOT J f - Angels · Face Minnesota • Ill Sho.wdown Series • A Short Retirement Maxie Baughan, Los Angeles Rams linebacker, an- nounced his retirement from professional football during the off-season. Instead, be changed his mind' when the players strike wa6 settled and will play Lawyer's Evaluatlqn UPIT ....... with the Rams again this year. Baughan (55), wears an engineer's cap during training at Cal State (Ful- lerton) as Rams prep for charity game with the Cleveland Browns Saturday night in lhe Coliseum . •• • Poor Investments Led Fighter Excited Over Meeting Halos , Oakland Eight Gam es Back The Minnesota Twins can wrap up !be Am<rlcan Loque West title this week f<r all intent and purpose as they boo! Ille CaUJornla Anll'is In a pair of ,..,,., lieclnnlng tonight w,ben yoong Tom Bradley (1~2) faces veteran Jim Kaai (10 -7) In Meln>Polil•• Stadium In !Moomlngtoo. Following lbe -iw .. Pll" 1et with . the Angels, manager Bill RilPeY'• cbuges tangle With Ibo Oakland ·Atlllellcs In five aames this weekend~ 'lbe An1els and A's are tied for S«Ond ~. eiaht games beh1Dd tbe leaders. Oat1and moved Into the tie with a 4..s victory over California TUesday night and Manager Jolu> McNamara feels the wbt was one ot the blaest of the season to date for his club. "We would have lost a lol of spirit and confldeoce in addiUOo to the game if California bad woo,'' McNamara said. 'Ille Angels fell behind l-0 early In the ac:tJoft u Clyde Wrlgbt was flown in from Army reserve duty in Paso !\ob~ to make the start. The 17 -year-old leflbander hadn't lnoobed a ba.mll tJnce t<pOrting ID camp Wt Friday and lasted only four and ooe-Wn! Innings. John Odom,. making, bis first start since coming Off the dl!abled ,list for Oakland, was credited' with the victory. 1be three Angel runs came off relief ''"·I "" Allll. 1 A\111, l J.1111. ' l:U o.m. :15 p.m. J:f' 0·"'· 11:10 ··"'· H ;IO •.m, hurler Jim "Mud.cat" Grant who was rapped for five straight singles in the eighth inning when the Angels scored all .three runs. Tonight's gime will be tl!levised on Chanoel 5 beglnnlng at 6 o'clock. In Thursday's wrapup encounter, Andy . Messersmith ls penciled in to start. He threw on the .lidelines for 15 minutes Tuesday night but declined lo give an lncilcatioo of hill: condition. He has been bothered by an injury to his left side and was briefly 1mt down In HawaU during tile lall' -st.and. He will face Mlnnesota'I Bill Zepp. CALlflOllHIA O,t,IU,AHD •lot~11M .,.,.. Alo<Nr, 211 • I 2 0 MON11y, d • t 1 I II-, If ' I 1 0 D,Glwlt, It I I t l J.T11wn, 1111 1 O O O fl.AIW, rf 4 O 1 I F'9'fO:ll, it ' I 2 1 1--. a, ' I I I McMullen, ... 0 2 1 T,0.\1' ... If , I • Spene.,., Ill 3 t I I lt.Jadt$0rlo rl I 0 I JOh11tlonl. cf J 0 I 0 Alldl, I• 2 I I Cowin, II 1 O O O Ounct11, c • I I \ION, rl 2 0 0 O OoMldtoll, '' I 1 I 1111!1,pll IOOOOdom,, 10 I l!.l'ltMr, P 0 0 O 0 C.mPtl*bl,llfl 0 0 0 AlCIH, C • 0 0 0 H1111i.t', pr 0 1 I C.Wr19ht, p 2 a O O Gn1n1, p I O 0 K.Tt!utn, p 0 I 0 0 Ufldblltl, p 0 0 t lteynol01, rt 1 O 0 O LDcMr, " I " I 1toi.lld, .. I I I Tot1ll H>IJ T•ll :114 4 CIUtomle 000 OClll UO -I Ol)l.lend 011 1131 OOx-• I! -l'r9000l, Odorrl, UICI«<, 01" -Olt!t.MI 1 l.OI -Ctlllornllo l. O.•l•nd I, 18 -T, 0.11'11. S -1111111. •• • • .. 1e •SO C.Wrlollt {L,U·I, ._Ill l • • ' • K.T1!11.., 2-Ul 2 • • ' • E.Flll'llf' ' ' • • " ' OdOm fW,.s.J) • ' • • • • Grl!'lt J.lfJ ' ' ' • ' Ltndbtld l/J • • • • • ,_. ' ' • • • ' ...... l/J • • • • • --!lal1nd. Tim. -t:C. AIMnHl!c:• -.. o •• .ToAlworth' sH.etirement · TV. -~~unc~r-. · NEW YORK (AP)-lt will be e1citln1 TRAPPEDOFF BASE --Bo 'y "'ilonds of san Francisco Giants was trapped in ll-undown be- tween third base and borne plate Tuesday night by Dodgers' Maury Wills. Tile damage had already !WIT ....... been done, however, with the Giants scoring five runs in the first inning and coani!>g to ap 11-4 vic- tory. SAN DIEGO (AP) -1lghl money and poor investments, not an inability to catch a football, ca1t1sed LanCe Al· worth'& retfrement from the San Diego Chargers. That was the i!:valuation today of Alworth's lawyer, Don Augustine. Alworth, an American Football Iqgue all-star every. year since 1963, made no official ~nount>ement of his plans tG quit· the game. Augustine made the official announcement. "'lbere'1 a real strong possibility that he will declare personal bankruptcy IQ()n,'' Augustine said. "He made some poor investments and over extended himself. And you can't do that in this' tight money market.·• · Alwof41, a 6-foot fonner Arkansas receiver, had algned a long term contract with the Ctlargers in the mid 1960s and by-the end of last year had fashioned 1 brilliant career. It was then ' he began grumbling about hia contract. He was reported1y being paid fl0,000 yearly. Three weeka ago, he announced he LANCE ALWOR TH would be a holdwt. He said hla contract caUed for loafll for tum from the Charger managem,nt to pursue bu'8:ine3s ven- tures. He said be w~ted the contract renegotiated because i not all terrps of it had been fulfilled. , About ~ same tim he was asking for a new pact,· however, AJworth was filing bankruptcy in a number of business ventures including motell, restaurants and dry cleaning establi&bments. His retirement came because he was offered a more lucrative posltkln with International Sports ASloclltes o f Phoenix, Ariz., Augustine ~d. The finn also employs other former ~ stars. In Phoenix, ISA bead Aniliony J. Nicoli confirmed Alwocth's plana. The finn speciali1.es In handling afrairs of professional athletes, from personal busioess to contr~ negotiations. Alworth, known for his lightning quickness on the field, played eight seasons with the Olargen, catching an average of 57 passes per &eaJOn· for an average catch Qf 19.6 yards. He caught 77 for touchdowns. Before the announcement, Charger Coach Charlie Waller commented on his star pau receiver: "He is one of the moat remarkable end! in history. He'• very fast. He can run a pattern and just when you think he bu , stopped, he's off again in high gear." Wide receiver Gary Garrison of San Diego State ia now the veteran of the club with 1 number of rookies and • couple of newcomers hiving · a good Shot at filling the open slot. . one of those rookies Waller gives a ·good chance of making the club Is Billy Parka of Cal State (Long Bea~h)1 a &-foot-5 pasa catcher who hat tooled good In drills. Another Is Walker Gillelle, a &-foQ!-l Richmond outside re~lver. He caught 159 passes for mare t~ 2,500 yarda and 22 touchdowm In ~ ct\llegiate seasons. "But there just aren1~ any other Lance Al worths," Willer lamented. ''Ha is lr· replaceable." for George Foreman to ftOit champion Joe Frasier ln the ring. lt was excitin& for lhe YOW!li heavyweight just meetinl Don Dunphy; the television announcer. .After passing his toughest test as a. pro by stopping tough George Chuvalo in three rounds Tuesday night, Foreman said: "The thing that impressed me the most was talking to Mr. Dunphy on teJevlslon. l 'd seen htm talk to fighters in the ring ever since 1 was a kid and I wanted to ta1k to him." i:;' Chuvalo didn't think the 10.rqunder be.lore ll,526, paying '107,185, at Ma4ison Square Garden should have been stopped. But he didn't protest too strenuously. Th! 34-year-old Canadian veteran of 77 fights, who has never been down, didn't hit the floor , but be almost did. In the third round, Foreman caught Chuvalo with a left hook that dropped him agilinst the midd1e strand of the ropes. Foreman then drove him along one side of the ring, then along another side before referee Arthur Mercante stopped it. From the time Foreman landed with the first left hook until the fight was stopped, Chuvalo threw jwt two punches. II wa! the 22nd victory including 19 knockouts for the 21-year..old Foreman, who shows improvement with each start. The former Olympic heavyweight champion from Hayward, Calif., probably will now fight Jerry Quarry In the Garden Oct. 23. '1He's a very good fighter,'' said Chuvalo, who has a 5~16-2 record. "Frazier's a sharper puncher, he's more or a clubbing puncher." Foreman already is at the top when it comes to modesty and· he can also hold liis own In the humor department. "I was hoping I WBI hurting him," said Foreman. Then, he smiled, shrugged and said: "I was hoping he wouldn't show. t ·was hoping r would win by default." But there ls no kidding around by Foreman and his manager, Dick Saddler, when It comes lo dlscusiling Foreman's march loward a title fight with FruiPT. Laver Bree,:es Marichal Goal Graebner Not Suprised . Now Lowered About Stunning Victor y To 15 Wins LOS ANGELES (AP) -In the spring BROOKLINE, Mass . (AP) -Ac- cording to the draw sheets, Clark Graebner has pulled off one of the big- gest upsets in the history of the \J .S· Pro Tennis Clwnpionabips, but the 26- year..old New Yorker doesn't see it that way. "I felt just about tile same as I feel for most matches," Graebner said recalling the start of his 6-2, 6-4 conquest of top-seeded Wimbledoh Champion John Newcombe of Awtralla in the first round Tuesday nJght. "We've played each other quite a bit, so it's really nothing new," the American explained. "I'd say we're about even overall." Veteran observers believe th.i! was the first time In memory that a top-seed- ed player was ellmlnated in the first round of Ule tournament, but Graebner still refused to concede that it wu that much of a surprise. "It'• always nlce lo beat the No. I guy in the world, of course," he said, "but nowadaya when the pros get together some CUY• win1 and 11Gm.e guya lose. Somebody has to be leeded No. l, somebody hu tb be seeded No. 8, and some guya have to wlnd up not seeded.'1 Graebner said Newcombe deserved to be seeded first, and be had no ·complaints about being wueeded although "I guess I could have been seeded as well as not." Would it give him any added satisfac· lion to go on and win the tour:oey in view of not being seeded? "It's nice to win a tournament -any Ume," he said. ;•1 don't worry1 about things like that. I play as bard as I can regardless of where I'm seeded or if I'm not seeded ." Graebner dominated the £irst set, breaking Newcombe in the first game and again in the fifth en route to an easy triumph. f The second &et was more of a struggle, with each player breaking twice ln lhe first seven games, at which point Newcombe led 4-3. Graebner held hls service in a tense eighth game which went to deuce twice before be won it with an ace followed by another big serve and a wincing volley. "I served fairly well, and that helped me a great deal." Oraebner . said of b1! victory. "I hit a Jot1 of goOd shots tonight." But the big question 'now wu bow far he thought he might go. "Let's just say my chances are better than those of 16 guys who lost Jn this round and the same as 15 otber1 who won," he said. Juan Marlclla.!'1 goals were his seventh 20-win sea.son and a pennant ior the San Francisco Giants. Now, 106 gamea later, Marichal has lowered his goals. · He says he wants 15 victoriea, stUJ a sizeable reat if he makes it. As for the pennant, well, aootber second ~ finish would loot pretty good right noW. The perennial runnersup, the Giants have flnliJtied second five years in a row and are in fourth place, 22 gameJ off the lead. But the~ i.s eacourq:eplent, notably lrom Mancha! Who hurled his lhird straight complete game Tuesday night, an 11-i romper over 1411 An&eJes before 30,3.55 fans at Dodger Stadlwn. '.'He says !,le wantl 15 wins and I think he'll make It," says Gianta' lkipper Charlie Fox. ' P..1arichal, who 1ot off to 1evere alow start because of lllneu, b • oow 1-1 but has won three games in a row. "I'm a lot ttronger now and l'nt throwing the ball· barder,'l M:aricbal said after the win., his 32:nd ·career victory over the Dodgera agalnat only II - The loss wu the oecond slrallhl far the Dodge" u they dropped In II garnet behind CinclnnaU In the Nallonal Leaaue Wesl, Loa Angelts' blgge.st •dellcit all year. ~amath, Kapp Playing Hide and Seek Marty Riessen of Evanston, Ill., pulled Tuesday 's other major upset, defeatlng seventh-seeded Cliff Richey of Saa Angelo, Tex., 2-6, 6--4, S.3. Rod Laver of Corona de) Mfr, ~ed second although he's gunning for a fifth consecutive ct\ampionsbip, b re e z e d lhroujh his first round match against Torben Ulrich of Denmark, S-3, 1-2, while third·seeded Ken Rosewall o( Auttralla also won in atraia:ht aets, defeatlnl Rotier Taylor of England, &-3, M , Los Ahgel,. enterlalna Atlanta tonight and Thursday while San Franc.iaco returns home lo meet Clncl~t1. Alan Foster, &-9, facu Atlanla's George Stone, H, al Dodger Stadium tonlpl wblle Ol)'lonl Perry, H·IO, f-tile Redl' Jim • McGlolhlln, U-5, a! Caadlestlck rark . . SAH PllAHCISCO \.DI AHeJL•S •llrll~ 1111 r lllfM BJ THE ASSOCIATED PRW Happinesa, I.he song title says, ii J1.11t a lhln& called Joe -but a couple cf Joes are making life mllerabSe in the '""11 of~ of a iouple Of Notional Football Llague clubs. Jot Nam11ith or tile New York Jell and Joe Kapp of the Minnesota Vitlnp, two premier quarterbacU, are .•• weU, no one really knew where as of Tuesday lligbl. Kapp'• absence is undoubtedly of grea~r coocem to the Viklnas than Namath's ls to the Jets. Broadw11y Joe ha1 signed lo play thil year but hil Mlnnetota COlllMrpart, Hennep!> Joe, Is a tree agst and ii detnancttnt a major aatary lncreue\ ' Namath, who a!IO reporlod ·Ille iaJI year to the Jets\ trainlna camp al Hofstra University In Hempat.ead, N.Y., beauae ot a dispute with NFL Com- mllaloner Pete Roielle, bu been tttn or reported recenUy In New Yorj: City, Boston, Fort Latlderd1le, Fla., and Rome, Italy, alt w11hln lhe palt week or so. Kapp la believed to be aomtwhero In the western United States. The Vikln1s haven'\ heard from him or hiJ represen- tative ln 10 days, I-ta 11 i,portedly teeldna A• four-year, mJlllon"®llar contract and 1 $!5(),000 bonus. The Vikings have made him a counter-offer -they won't say how much -which Kapp has rejected . Jets' Coach Weeb Ewbarik appeared tmCOncerned about NamaU\'1 able.nee. After all, he pointed out, the players have been showina up at camp without be.lng ordered to do '° and no deadline has been set. • When will ..,. be bnpoaed1 "Not Wltll It bec.-omes a problem," Weeb replied, addm,, "I would have liked to have him play about one quarter Saturday night" In the Jets' exhibition opener against Buttalo in Birmingham, Ala. Minnesota also begins presesson play Saturday against New Orluns in Canton, Ohio. The No. l quarterback job In that game will probably go to Oary Cuozzo. Al Woodall and H a r r y 'l'heoflledea will probably allernale In Namath'• absence. Other tint round scores Tuel<la.)' wel'6 Mark Cox, England, over Bob Lutz, Lot Angele.a, 11-l, &-7, M : Fred Stolle, Australia, over Palrlclo Cornejo, Chile, 1-2, 7--i j Ray Ruffall, Au1tr1Ua, over Allan Stone, Australia, 7-t:, 8-t : and lsmae.I El Sh•fel, United Arab Republic, over Tom Okkcr, Netherlands, 1-i, M, 7.5, aan..,rl lltlWMI ... ltll f!illl'li.,211 Jl20S~ll,a tllt Min.Cf •llllMM.,ff tt11 McCtw~. 111 4 ) I t -.. .. .......,,,If t t t t HttldtnOll, If 4 t 2 t W.0t11i._ Cf I I t t ....-t,a 4111W.1"11t1r,111•tl t Oltt1, c • 2 I 4 Gr1blrk~~· 1 a LMllW, U 4 t I t tt&lltr, C: ( I t Mwkllll, p • o o • a1__,.. 111 a • • luMlll. rt 4 0 I t $iltlln.• , ••• Ntn'Nll, . • I • • • Gllll'lllMill, 1111 . o It ~.. . ... --. I'll l I 0 t T9ttLJ 111 11 12 t "t.i.11 • 4 11 • ~·r-IKt •1 • •-11 i:...... .. .. , .. 1-• I -Or1Mirt11wttt 1. Cr1wttr1, llllMlll, ~ ti.,, 01" -Ltt "*'-a, LOt -!¥ ,,_. J. l• Mtt* I, II -'#, ,_.,.. .... 31 -lltWM!L Hit -M~CIWf' (271, Dlltl nut. M..v. 1111, = IMrktWltt OU, aw.l1' flt), II' -fHltt.' "'°"., Hin. . Jf ...U.V I'll.OT -. W-1. -5, 1970 Spens la Brief Chargers' Graha.m , Traded w Bengal.s ~ Veteran safety K en n y ·• Graham, COlllidered too &low r by the San Diego Char1en:, ~ has been traded to the Cin- clnnaU Bengals for an un- ~ dbclQaed draft choice. ' The Charaers dea1t away • lbehanJ.hlWn&defeuaJve • back Tuud1y becaw;e, Cooch t Charlie Waller said, "wt're 1 lolnc for more speed and • Graham doesn't have what • 11<'.re Jooldni for." : General maoqer S l d ; GlDman $1.id defenders Bobby ; Howard, Speedy Duncan, Jim ·Newport, '.Mesa Vie <For Title , Tbe Costa 1'(osa Must.uias ; wood the right lo face • NtWport Harbl:r'• Tar 1 tooliht (7:11) in the finals of the Newport.Maa !•- .-qnJty bubtban tournament • at -High by dllpoell1g ~ ct Plctflca Tueldly, 6li'J', 1n ~ a: MmifloaJ tilt at the ame ; localloo. 1 The Joa .was the aecond ' for P1Clt.lca'.1 Marioera 1n the -i!llft1lnltloi1 tourney and dropped them out of Jbe pk> llnl<>r &ood. Pactllca hid Mlll<nd Ila IJnt tourney -)1111 a ~ qo qalnll the ...,. Costa Meoa qlllnta, drosiPJnl a 18-47 verdict to t h e llllllllaDil at that time. The tee:ret of Mela'I IUC- -tbJs time WU OOldin& the Marioen' Jerry Mlru to a poltj ..... polllta 00 a polr of lleld loW and three rr.. thnnn. Lui time Oii~ Paclllco 1!>11 but !bral pro-duold :II polllta. . The ooolllt wu tl&hl oil the way with the e.ceptloi1 of the third J!'liod, -wblcb Ille leaden !lid piled up a 49- ~1 ed&e before '.oold, JJ,polot final quarter. Doug Macl.w!, wbo ended up with u PoiDtO in -.. doinl aH(ood ioll ""' tbo bo.trdl, Jed tbt M e 1 a Ollllaught ID the 23-poillt third period with ,three IMl~lne lleld (oall. Pilymaker Chuclc Brid&., canned 17 -.. lead Meu wltb teammate Jon MarchlorlatU •ddinl ·13: John Schneider picked up the Pocillca 1COrini slack with II. TooighVs game for the championship marb the se- oood Ume in a week Mesa and Newpcri' hive locked borm. The falter dlapooed ol the Mustangs, 43-SS, Monday at Estancil. HW and Rand)' BeYvly pve the Cha'1'fl Sour ·--and very fut .dtfaldera. Beverly, a three.year veteran, cornea to the Char1et1 tbll ~ ill• lnde , with the New York Jeta. • Los An&elea Rama coach George Alls txpeots lo bave S3 vel<l'IJll on )land today at the Cal State !Fullerton) training camp as drllls con- tinue for Slturday'1 meeilng with the Cleveland Browns in Los An&elu. With five veteraoa n!pgrtlng Tuuday, the oely playf!'I missing from camp were defensive tackle Roger Brown, who was in Chlcqo on bualness, a n d cornerback Kermit AJeuoder,; who WU taking care·of peroonal a!laln in San Francisco. Both were upected to report .today. • AKRON, Ohio -Streaking Jack Nlctlau1 and r-.!holder Ray Floyd ruled u the favorites today on tbe eYt or the f160,ooo American Goll Cfanlc. And the return to this coun- try ol U.S. Open Ch111l!'lon Tony Jl<klln add6d 1plce 10 the selocl field of 101 lhlt bePi• competition 'lbursday on the awe90me 7,~yard, par 70 ru..tooe Country Club c:oune. Jocklla, the handoome .. yur-old who became !be IJnt EniJl•bn)@n In SO yeara to win the U.S. Open <llam· piombip, bas been out of the Un!led States •Ince be lum6d the trick Jn Oia•ka, Mlnn., more than ail: weekl ago. He'1 due Jor a late arrlvaI, u W'Ke Britllib Open champ NickJaul and defending UtJe. holder Floyd. Floyd's wtnuJng total of 281 In 1119, a COW'll record on one ol the most demanding layouts in the country, was 1'11111.ed by hil fellow pros .., one of the maJ<r llCXlOlllplJah. ....t. of the Y"'f· • MOJ'ITREAL -'Jbe Mon- treal 'Erpog said Toesday first bueman 11911 Fairly will be bt to lhe team for an in- definite perfod. Fairly suffered a fraclure al tbe ba!( of the little toe on the right foot as a result ol be10& struck by a pitch by Jim Nelson of Pitlsbw'gh Monday night. '!be f.oot has been placed ill a cast. J'alrly, acquired last sum- mer from l-<18 Angeles, was hitting .284 with 14 home runs and 56 runs batted in for Montreal this season. • KALAMAZOO, M I ch . - James Lucas of Durham, N.0., and Ricky Fagel of Miami Shona, Fla., ...,,..i maior upseta Tuesday in the National Junior and Boys 16 Tennis Championship. l.Alcas beat seventh.aeeded junior Jerr Miller of Scotch Plans, N.J., 7-5, M. and Fagel turprised ninth-ranked Jeff C.Owan of Bakersfield, 9-7, 6-0. Moonfi•lt Caugltt Ted P1Jueger of 525 Emerald Bay, Laguna Beacli. snagged a 41-pound, two-<>unce OPA (Moonfisb) near San Diego recently. Pflueger was after yellow tail to qwilify for the Sept. 18 yellowtail Derby Fisholf in Sen Diego. Open League Wilson Notches Wllsoo Ford moved back ;.. lo a tie with Nutrillte for the 1 .. gue lead""11p In the Costa Mesa open basketball leocue Monday night with an 8745 \tk:t«y over Soulbern Plaetk:I Moki in a contest •t Southern California College. )\'lllOJI and NWJllte &port ld4otlcal ll-1 reconlll with less than a ._. left In open loop play. Ia tbe .... nd half vi Mon· day's doullleheader, J::f.arbor M""'1a,ots drlfl6d put c:ella<· dwtllln8 Saddleback by ·a 7"6 mul!n. wibon enjoyed a 49.J.t edge at halftime and maintained its steady pace into the final two p e r j o d s in overcoming pesky Southern Plastics. Four men hit in twin figures for the co-leaders with Jim °"*1fu lal<in( hlsh bonon at 21. Southern Plastics' H a I Knee Surgery For Horlen CHICAGO -Veteran pitcher Joe Horten or the Chicago While Sox underwent swwecy Tueaday for removal ol a cartilage in hUI right knee and probably will return to action before the end of the basebalf season. Horlen, who ba:s a a-15 record, wa1 not aw11e of. when or ho..t hi.I knee became injured . Wtl.SOM PO•D 1171 " " ., .. ~~kllll ,~ l J if Ct..~ma11 I 1 : ' 17 ~nceba 1 0 2 • o'ldl 1 I ' IJ ehett 6 I ' ar""' ; f i I Tll•Jt _ _ .eo 1 12 t1 MHJTM•aM J'LAITICS (7JJ """''' Onktn 10 19 Htllllf., '' ' 3 JI Ptvne ' t ' 11 (~rfJU I ' l I ~fY 0 1 ,_ , I , . G. l rV0:1 I 0 1 J. l •lld<I 7 t IS ltms 1 1 l ' 'I 0·010 ottl1 16 11 11 7J H1Hrlm1: wri.on 11 1o11t11«11 Pt11tk1 Major League S tandings DIANLIWIS NATION.U. t'EAGUE 'r.a;( NftllOo • .•. L Pd. GB 58 li .546 PIUlbur&h New York Chicago Philadelphia st. Looia Mootrtal ClndllnaU =· 51 49 .538 J 55 -52 .514 49 58 .4'7 49 51 .Ill 17 ,11 .135 wett Dlvllloo 71 3S .uz !O " .Ml u 58 ·.at San FrancllCO 51 51 .ltl -17 61 .ti& San Dfep 4S " •• DEA I , .• I I\ ei.4 u 12\\ 21 \\ 2l\\ Ml\ 3011 Allf;RJCAN LEAGIJE J!441 bivllloa ·wLPct.GB r7 39 .632 Ba.ltimcre New York Detroit Bost<in Cleveland WIShJnilnn 57 43 .54S 57 19 .538 5S 51 .510 5t 51 .486 19 68 .451 Minn...U All&eh Oakland Milwaukee Kansas City Chicago Weit Dtvldon !O 37 !O 17 !O 17 IO 69 31 68 S9 71 Tu.Mtt"t lt11o11!1 ... 11,,.,... •• &olJOll t C!t..,.ltM ,, Htw Yllft 1 Wtlll'l~IM '· o.ll'Olt I OMlllMI '· MM)t I C~ktM 2, ICtr11t1 (tty I Mllll'IMofl S, MllM!Jt:;N I T .. 1r'1.._ .Sil .56l .581 .367 .36< .356 91\ 10 13 15\1 18\.i 8 8 29 29 30\\ OlkJ.eM (OMlla U·IO) II ICtllMI ClfY (OrltO .. ,,, 111tt'il Mttll fl rlfllY 141 11 Mklllllall CIC.H I 10-1), "''' Ml .... •l'llN 1•r1~r S.U) I I C~k-.O (...,,..... lllllOll .. ,), 1111111 W1llll"'lon llNlltl\Mdl; ~I ti Dtl,_11 fl .. kll t 01U, 111t111 ., ..... van lllotlllm'nl 10.tl •I CltWlllnd (Mc- Dow•ll 1 .. J). lllal!I los"" (llt&tl'! 11·0 11 ••Ill~ ll't lmtr I• 11. l!lttlt L·EWIS 1966 HARIOR ILVD., COSTA MESA 646·9303 Service, Part1, I Body Shep Now Open Until I p.m. Mandoy Nights I I Oranga Count)"• Lar1••t and Most Modern Toyota and Volvo Dealer AU6UIT SPICIAU SPIC I AL 1970 TOYOTA WAGON :!!'~ $1117 All Otll• Mildtlt 1• ltMl M•rt 11--Hlln ptcbp- ~ Ct-1'1 c., ... VOLVO 1411 Jt., t14!1, h11t•r, 4.,,.ff, IS.r, •41401 1'67 ~ TOYOTA CORONA 1111111. •1411e, ....... ,. ,f,y,.,,.,.,)c .,.,.., (\llY J!J) $1095 ~ Final Cage Statistics To L:ynch • Fountain Volley's talented lharplbooter Dive Lyn c h stands out a• the leader in the final tabulatloo of sooring for the two Orqe C:Oalt area teams in the Orange summer basketball leque. Lynch popped thrOlllh 114 point& In nine Jeque "'COUl>- ten for 1 lf.O norm, nearly lhree point& hll)Mr lhan tbe 13.S average posted by Calta M.,.'s Doug Macl.ean In nine oootesta. Lynch wu the only Fountain Volley performer who l!COl<d In double fi1ures In coach Dave Brown's well-balanced attack. Tbe Baro!ll, who went 11-3, uaed 15 d.lfferent players during the U.Came IChedule. Tom Sompsoo (10.1) and Scott Frialed (10.7) joined MacLean in double f!Jure SCOl'ing for M ... (1-5) with Sampson performiO& in four games and the latter in 10. All told, Mesa mentor EmU Neeme bad 19 of hi.I cbar1e1 in the acorlng column. &t:" .... w.m, t." " ...... .: i 12 l!J ll:J 'fi''t;:! : fl 11 .J 11:1 1 1 !HJ·' • n .s ;.,·r.11 ., ,, ..• j 'l"'·l • • •• I f ! 1 1.0 'j llS.o 1 2 ' •.O 111:·:: t I 3 l1 ... _ South F ~ot lia1l 1'e~ ~·¥ ~ -. Set to ;Ope ~ • • Br PlllL llOl8 1!eila' -"" !liln WI Of .... .., .. ~ .... 1I.tt. ,,, tcirlnc ... While the he1vDJ'{aVOttd He adds: "Everybody loolled North squad went lhrouch ill fine In !he ~wruny -· '""""4 day of drllla TueadoY mqes we had today but you al Rancl1o Al11nlt"8 tµp, tbe • can'I really tell much after underdog South .i....,. sat i day's dr1l!s with the bqt." back walling !Dr 111 ..mp to canard lhlnb hll iqui!d will open oo Tburaday at Foolhlll be puoinl a lot In the <!lbtest High In proparatloi1 l<>r the but noted "Both Gtl>rge llth annual Orange c-ty Fr..., (A~abelm) and Glen Nortb-Soutb football I • m e Gat.on (Troy) are exoellent Aug. lO at Orange c.ut runnen In addition lo their ~ Alamitoc J 0 h n top-rat<! -inl ability." CaUard, the North'• bead A!lhoogh many oblervers coach, put bJ.J cbaraea through rate hla team'• c ban c e 1 warnwpo, basic drllla, ol-almost nU for the Aug. lO feD11ive orientation and eome ahowdown, South bead man basic offensive plays. ~ Bain <Foothlll) bu other Calilrd opines, "The betle< ideu. divenificatioo we have, tbe He say1, "Detplte tbe fact Diablo Hoop Duo Leading Scorers fen (lO.I). Roberta appearfd in 13 games and KnJUen ill ll • Pril\§. fhlt w~'ll tbo decided 1111- derdop, we'll be IOinl Into tbe II? wllh the Idea ol wtnninf. ' "This ii lljt f1l'll Ume ~ South hurl't been flvorid ... Bain helped Gleo Hulings (Brea) and F.rv ](Im bl e (Savanno) In ploltinl the Vankee otratqy In a 4M North victory In 116' In an auiltant'1 role. But lhil will be tho fJrst time the Foolhlll menlor will be pullln( the be1d reiQa In an affair of auch stature. 'nle two moat prominent players in B1ln'1 Plans when the Soulh l!nally !lt•k" camp on Thursdaf are quarterbacks Eddie Bane (WOllmlnller) and Vic Pereboom f L01 Alamitos), wbo will be olwing slgoal-oallin/I cbettl In the oil· atar club tor the Rebell. Bain notel, ''The whole at- tack will mor' or lea revolve around thele two boya. "Bane is more of the r:ollout type and Pereboom LI a J;leUer dropback pauer, but we 'll utilize them any way we can to pJt points up on the !COl'e- board," he addt. ' Both 1ldes are· slated to practice for about two hours a day, every day· except Sun- day, untll the Aug. lO ldclloll. ' Good Start Piii Most FOii, CHEV., PLYIOUTH Pih Many CAIAIO, COUGAR, FAllLAIE 4PLY 1570 IYLOI COID rtl"." 1.as.14 Ll\.."' Flrullllt 1675 ~,.. ~ .. 11.u •• 11 i\_ll .. I l h Ill .... ILACKWALL BUICK, OLIS, CflRYSLER, POITIAC FIRESTilHE 2o•s BLACKWALL rr."" CHAMPION I."'.:' !J:l.M0<t . I0111t, CHEV., IERC., POITIAC fllllllH ~18 8 5 0U.IH ·~ 4 rt, .,,.. O.nl fit·. fM .. AUGllEIT 2 MOHIOMATIC PlUSOOIH 2••0CKa Aa{;am fOI AllllMCMI ... Co1t1 Me11 l'lr11lone Store I Huntln1ton le1ch Flre1tone Store ' Costa MIM -Jerry Hall 475 I . 17th St. -646.2444 16171 •••ch 11¥d.-147-6011 1762 Newport llvd. -646-5019 HOUIS; Ill••· • frl .. I •A N 7 ,. •. HOUll1 MH. • M ., I •. -. .. I , ••. HOUlS: I .... t• 1:)0 , ... -ht .• I •·•·NIP••· .................... _, ........ hllp.;a. -. -~----~~ --------------------------------------·--------------------. --.. -··- .· Start Your Engines! Alamitos Racing Entries Wtdfttid.11, Al.fllkSt 5, 1970 • C11.ecki1ig Out the Area Green.8 Santa Ana Tourney Begins Qualllyl111 round> wUI be played wltll Lee Casey and petition for playert ovcr IO. A tine-way Ile ruulted at DAil v l'llOT JO Boes Drop 88-66 Tilt To LBCC by Deke Houlgafe completed today fC< lbt an-Jcllli Gardner was teamed A ladln moot pen ...,,... 59 for t!11n! place. Teams In-Orange Coaat CCUece llnlll> pual Santa Ana Country Club with RJlph Finley at this poll· ment wu held ovtr Lbe eluded the following: Fred and td out its regular slate or Invitational bt9t boll-o I tloo. • wffl<end wlt!t-Gwt!n llolly and Lcu..&nllb wtlb WJllHd ~--gamee Tuetdoy-nlgbl-II tllo l'Oll TNVtttDAY. Av• .. .., partntr'l tournament with 1+4 A three-way tie for sixth Tam Willits wthnbC flight A MY'ftle Obarr ; Joe and BlUit Long Beach awnmer baQet.. ---------------------cL•A• " PAIT • .,,.:•••t fl'OIT '1" teams entering tht cham· resulted between Hal A-1aya witb 15 pars each. Sparaco with Ruth and ball le1gue by droppkta: • h NIOMTLY DOUILI ON 11t a 1Ma pk>nship compeUUoo that runs and Jim Summerville; Mel Margaret Egbert was the Ncrman Hanak : and Rick and ~ decilkm to tbe &Ott l.A:mc •·· Youealnunl'ght lnsay !hel sltenkce from RiverJide Raceway as a1tActA ~~c•:;... •Ac• through Sunday. Moore and Fred Downer: and B flight winner with 1!. Lot--Glenda Guy wtth Mike aJXl Beach City Cqllege Vlklnp. IH:'l:n .d e Q& rtCen wee s. J k: Berg nd 0 BUiie Wasco. The setbtdl: put the Pirltff The boss, former Ram football star Les JUcht~r. has , ':!.' ~."c11::";~ ~=-w~e an~o=r U~a~n;"~~ W~llams, alraa;i st. a 0 c ~~~ ti~~~ ru';f ~ In the basement 1n tbe f1Dal been flitting •round the oounlry. Gene.ra1 m~ager Roy Hord. ~:m=.,:"~s~r= 10 Santa Ana CC are defending Brander Castle and A. J . with 12 and Betty Blakemore C'o•ta /fie•• loop standings •t l-t. another ex-Ram player, has been In Georgia helping a new H•H Oukk IK.Mlll 111 dwnpiom and automatJcally finished th .th won the 0 crown with 11. 11....., Stoddard fired 1 Bob Schermerhorn, .standlnC track gel started. Publicist Jack Mathews has been in Dallu ~: .. ~w,~ .. c..:t"r1""1 :: qualify for the championship ~~1 two-way ll~for 7~ ..,.bi ... ,,.Jow Jl"D8& hono,: ~ ~ In for Plrate coach Herb w:lsUng another track 's management. ::;:::..•~,.~~':' :~ flight ol 32 teams. resulted between em Perkins Me1a l'ertle ~·• club tournament at Uvsey, said, "They beat 111 The office hdp was given 1 month's te1ve or abse~. rru. Gr11 <,.....,.ri 111 The compeUUon Is a best and Oluck Mashburn on one Costa Mesa Golf and Country with •n aggrea!ve man.to- and the phone rings only for the security chief. Jack Bi'idwtll. !"m..1!00..,~~:~'~1 l: bill affair of partner's using team and Herb Day and t-J •~I·~~ besenlt b1allt Mof,..fourscv.:'.!°e Club. m~ d~~~·~~A' ti ~ What hu bappened to one of the ~·orld's most famous auto 111 Pol'°" CHe•1_' _ 1'° full handicaps with com-Dabne on another, both with -.u•wun a;u Bill McFarland was low net '"""" •"IW\I _. was """ racing faclllUes? 1tcowo •Ac1. «111 ~··~1. ' ~ .. , nPtition by .,.,edal pl.11v. acores of 11 . Country Club, first pl~ went _1.-__ wllb 1 17 ~"-·ed by •but~·led"'"'out'Uskltoamp -·~ .t'lh ,.., ~I> "Orld lfl C1llt. Clelml.,., r~ ~" ~ to J aM nhuJl[s K llher .. iwn;r '""""' ... '& "~ The anawer was partially supplied tn Detroit lut ~-eek,'"'"" "'°°· ci.1'"1r>1 .... 1c. 11000. A t.otaJ of 1& fll....,ts with •'Ibe Hunti.......... Beach ean • •v a Jack Towle, Geor-Stembach and Du·-D!flle, a -Ir J th t A · u. I ARI ) °'"""" Too11<'1 !Ae1tlrl 111 6" "'6""' teamed with M:r. and Mrs. e~ ...,,., -~ •• e paren company, mencan 1uiceways, nc., I un-Ton ,,...,. tH•"l 111 eight teams in all but the course will remain open and H. Garnder al 88. J . Chai>-6-1 operaUves, r 0 r COJno' derwent a profound management shakeup and v.·ound up with ~~·1 .,,~ :~:;;::1 l~; championship round. Flights through September and J. Sauvegeau •t 51· man Ued with Dick Simonelli mend.able board play. Richter u president. Miu ''•"" "'' tP-> 11• are named for famous golfers possibly until the end ol the Second place went t 0 at 70 for the next sPot. 'I1le eucs tra.11_. 41 .. 24 •I h • . h" r . lfi -· ARI ltKkV IE......... \CerCICll•l UJ 1...... Mlc:bael aod Judy Ra-~ rue ter s appointment as c 1e execuuve o cer "' Go1c1 L1111111 11111111tt11 11s Including Ben HOKan , Sam YP.V' before •housing deve"'Y' _.,. • Vl Hoskins had 1 9COff: of the half and could not hnprove wu aood news to road radng fans In the Soulhwestem United ;:'1.~;!';L1'!:~~,1 ~;~ Snead, Byron Nelson and ment takes over. ::e:t ~~ Irene and James 30 to win A flight competition on their pace In the Jut ba1f States, who have been wondering If the California track could klnll1" twi~1 111 Arnold Palmer. in a best nine touma.mmt for In droppinc tbe 22 ·potnt survive it.a own internal strife, much lw mttt the competitioo Tw11to 11ac1.0 v1r.a. Mlkkn Culmination oC the com-Ra11ello SJ the women's club. ftoeemary verd.lct. of $25.~ million Ontario Speedway 1 few miles down lht ~.~:-·L,:.11111c,:;~:,..'1°00· 111 petition will be on Swlday with St.an Rado flttd a tow net H . ' Sldlltan was IJeCOnd at 30"'· Willi.ams wu hf&b. point road. ~· ~~ :~~I :: tw1) matches tbat day to scort of 18 to win a men 's unt1ngton 8 The B rught title went to man f<r the Iowa with 11 The immediate effect or this latest development will be sirod tLIP!'llmi 111 delermlne a winner. club tournament al Rancho .,.,.,~ .. Orton' at 25 wttb Nina while Paul Hollnel and Steve . f K1v'1 ~Pur iPtrMr) 111 Carll R •• ~ McLeodon .... t..-.1 in _ .. 1" the freeing of something like $17~.ooo in state unds -com· Fl-.! Wb'I (Wl110lll no D ti t B h San Joaquin Country Club on aces· Danielson ne:rt at 27. ................. """ ... pen.saUon owed bv the state for cutting across the raceway F•ncv t \11# L .. ~°"1 111 Ulf "I on eatt over the weekend with Ned Low net of the month ended each. with the Feather River aqueduct more than a year ago. l'ov1t•H 1t,t,cR. • v••ds. J ~N• Bill Bkklinn and St an Trehan cbl:ing with a 70 for Den Carlt.oo ol HunUngton in 1 thtte-way tie between Orange Cout tntm the 0101 C!1l1"11l119. l'urM JltDD. c11tm1n1 -·e first round of the • -. Beach RI Id P B Id U pr1«. MOOO Shibata clo3ed with a low net second pltte. Beach will be among an ex· Vi Hoskins, Hazel Webster and .....,.. 1'er• e ClfltRent e P 0tc.o: '•totf iaen11si 11' ,._ of 56 to win a partner's A r-·~way Ue resulted for ........,-" field of 100 riders GA~ wa•-. all with 211. summer 100 P tournament , Sllrr1 G11l111Ytrl (,t,d1l•I 11• ""'"" "¥ ..,... -................... "''' loOUll •a in31. ...,,,,,.,. inner P RI "de Ra ~-di h Id kot• Wit I.Mn tl'•ttlol 111 best ball tournament at Hun-third place betwee n Bob Thunda.y night at Trajan Jn a ... ...._.! beat ball _a ·~a...,....uon. w aymeat tt vere• eeway was re_..... Y e ap 91111 $1-v tC••oo:i•l 111 tt-'""'' Cerrltoe: Tuelday at I p.m. because of 1 clvtl war 1 moq two oppo•Ln1 poups ol itockklden, •""•'• P111o1 !LiPhu111 11• tington Beach Country r 1ub 11-tansfield, JI m Hitchman, Speedway In South Gate in the tournament, Sybil Foster and ''"'" •....i cP1111•1 116 the k nd B E btrt and Ji combined steepJ.echase and '"'-lie C!&-··'-'th otU.,..I CO.UT ,.,, a fl1bt In which fUchter found hlmtell ln the middle. 1tecke1'1 &Y• ey !WUWl'lf 11• over wee e · arney g m fiat trac\. motorcycle ra,.;,.., ..._, "1\;11"~~ woo W1 • .. ft ., "' One ftctlon, headed by Laureece H. LoPatta, the l'fttaUy ~1c~ 1 1l:::;: ~~ 07. Second ~ac;;dw~~ ~a~ ~~:~lo~· touma· card. .. ...._ :-artinBetf~l~v~ i': ~..-. J 'j } l~ depo1ed prelident of ARI, held 41 percent of Riverside's tloct l to1t'1 01•• iW•tionl nv aney a a u.-qi. 1 ~= 1 a , and tried to gain contnil cf the Callfornla plant. The other, ,1,..,." IACI'. "° .,.1,111• 1 .,. .. , followed by a thtte-way ti~ ment will get under way at Racing be!P..ns at 7:30 to~ with Ellite Stipes and Gerri ~tt'I'.,. l : I J . rl I d bbed RI b • r I b _.... • ·P II olds Ind ..... Cl1lml111. PutM woo. at ~ for t.hfrd place. Ken Rancho thLs Saturday. Second ped by • M-lap main event Wat3on in • tie with Trudy • p vate y u c ter 1 an c u op....,... .. LN a n to •uc-c 111m1,,. prk• t-OXI. I h h f 2SOcc I J base Orton Camell K nned I cei•fUlly 1.bai evea 8 federil court lawiult against them was Mklw•Y ,..,11111 (Hirll Ht Page teamed w l J o n round matches will be played or c ass steep ec and e y 11, t7l 1 0on11 111 Gooa (Crosovi 11• Pai·sa-. Evan W 1111 a ... s A•oa, 15 to concl""" the com-rldera. for third at 17. H11tt1me1 '91!1 IMdl •· 0r.,... withdrawn. 1'1unc11r IK•n111 11t ---·---------"-'--~------~--------------------------------~-'-'°--~"~· __ . __ _ The state of Callfomla, meanwhlle, ut ea the sldellares ~:;" L:::i• 1~:!!~11 ~\~ and beld up Us ..,..,meat unUI H wa1 ctearlv e1tabllalled E11111v Mis• (W•110lll H• •· JIA.I •L r-# 1• # Truckll11 ~n t5mllhl l lf w-coatro .... uie nee traca. Starv·• for ••--fuods •nd -l off from any ......... el 11xrH llACE. vo v•rd•. s Y••• nil .....,K .,.. ._,..... oloa end 1111. • Cli lmkl9. PurM UOOO. flnuclal 111lst.ece from ARI, Rlverddt Raceway has barely c111m1111 P•k• 11000. T1>1 c11~1 1ubsl1ted 08 a race-to-race ba1l1 for the last 1% montlls , =;-r.:. cw•n•l '" One race wu cancelled, ud the pa)TOll was druUcally reduced. i'~1t101;:0m l~~::'~~•nfll ::~ TH vehuuary 1amm~r layoff cave the raceway the appearance J••'• s11n cwr1t1111 111 m .. r GI-tDr•Ytf) 111 that U ml11lt even be closed dowa. Go c1tc11 Go tM1t(1'11111 11s Of -·-· It wasn'• as la st week'• events demon1trated. Ce111 erown <LIPl'l•rnl 11• "vu«•"• OJ &Un<lV'i W1rrlor (8111k1) 111 Bow Did ARI Get Where It 111 l•VINTH ltACI. "° v1ro1. J .,. .. , 0101 Incl UI>. Cl1lm!ne. PUrH ,1900. Cl1!ml111 p•kt UlOO. G1rdfn (>rove \\'hat u.acUy is ART. aitd how did It get where It ts u111v ... 111v women'• ciw. ,_ . t •-1 I I Cl'lllow (WlllGll) ... today? American Raceways, Inc., came 1n o ui:: ng as a oca ur·1 Go r..m (Cr0111r> llll Detrott area $Ck PromoUon of LoPatin~ and bis auociatu, ~~~1 lt:=,:i~' ::: Leslie Shart ana George Kawamoto, to build the p mllUon IC...,.,.. (em.I (Y11110 Hl · l-"'" Hetlk (Fll'W::htfl 15 J.Uchlgan International Speedway. v.., G11u !Moll•• 111 When thdr fint race was a financial sue«ss in October, ~~~::;:: ~!~ 196a, LoPatin and hls group immediately · ~w the possib!Utlea: ,.,. aa, •w tH1r11 uo of e1panding their horizons -tumJng auto race promotion •••NTH 1t.t.c1~ .,.,,.__ 1 .,..., Into a mulU·mlllion dollar business. 01c11 i nd 119. c11$11tlid e11owenca. · I' Pvra• \UOO, l o1 Alamlloa (hlmbtr At the aame time RJchter was faced with a multi-mil 1on o1 '°"'""''•· dollar competitor, Ontario S~way, and he needed capital ~~:: ~ 1~~~1 l~ to upgrade Riveraide Raceway so it . couwlldhbel~f .. copeh wlbth ==·~A,.~,~~:,::~1 1: lbl cballeng&. He approached LoPabn t a .,...n w ere Y l'rluv l11l• 1im1m1 1\1 tt. MLchJaan ~ became part owner of Rlvtnide in :~~ l::!.!.::.:-~~•tl l?; e1eh1111e f<l' tl)e-needed tund1. GoM tl'•"1 tH ""'' 1~ Soon after, Mkhlgan lntematlona1 ~Y. Inc., cbanged ~':"tn t':c. ~~1 lu · Ill corporate name to American Raceways, Inc. It had also wiMTH .,.,,1.--;; vim. 1 ,...,, become Involved in ownership of Atlanla Speedway and was old• •I'd "" 11r1o1 111 c111t. c1a1rn1,... . . II S U T l'\lfM s1a. CLelmlr. Prk• 111i00. launching a new $8 m1lllon track near Co ege ta on, ex. n.. •II Wi!l 1wr111111 11' Et~nslon ~f ARI was made possible In part by the granting :".k1Mr:,: :f:,.k~j••ntrl ::~ or $1 million In loans guaranteed by ARI stock -through O.i•~ John IK1n111 lit a fiscal de vice, the convertible debenture -from a conclave ~.;'il..:!~ \i~~~1 :i; of mutual funds. Ge11ent v11or !Pit•i in Trh:i11 GlnPr 10r1v1rl IH ARI llttle1tn1ent Bit $25 -'11111 on At the belPt el fts pyramiding 1plral, ARI was a 1ub1tantlal atockltolder la RJvenlde llld Atlanlli. o'lrnf:d Mlcltl&u and Te1a1 Speedways and •ad pu r<:hased property 11 New Jeraey .,.. wblcll to build another super speedway. Investment was said to tetal fU milUoa. That was last Octobtr, wllen Rkhter resigned his e11:ecutt\'e potlHoR wi01 ARI aver Irreconcilable dlffuence1 with LoPatln aad Sbare about bow the company should be run. Retreadni to bis old job as p~sldtnt of Rlvenlde Raceway. Richter wa1 the tar1et of one of lbe most concerted ouster movu Imaginable. LoPatln made •o bont.1 ef the fact lie wanted RJcllter eut of lbere. He tried el·uythln1, lncludla1 tl&e la1t'1Uit. l\feanwblle, Richter not nnly defended hlmHU In lhe tradition ti • llneb1teker wb• 11 virtually Impossible lo knock off his feel, be Jaunclted ·the be.hind-the-scenes operatlnn that only l11t wttk wat 1uc:ces1ful in naUla1 .,,, opponent and placln1 lllm&elf bl the aat of power. Richter On. the Spot unth ARI \\'hat does Richter lace? He I~ now in charge of a string of race track s that has somehow swallowed up $10 nr Sl2 mlllim in the last two years but was unable to raise $89,000 last week to po8l for last Sunday's Atlanta SCIO purse. Those mutual fund creditors scra~ up the cash ht !he 11th hour so the race could be held. but only on condlUQn that LoPatln and Share relinquish their control d ARI. Richter is running a company that 11 in financial difficulty, and his bosses -a sy1tdicate of dispa11ionate money managers -believe that difficulty can be overcome by astute management. ARI has lost incredible amounlt of money, and the stock tias taken a nosedive. Rldlter is on the spot a1 he attempts to brtng ARI out of the red. 105,000 Tlckel• Seid at Ontarle Meunne1 b1ck ltomt In CalUonla. Of: trick RJc'ter &nee bttteved wuukl never be bullt -o.tario Speedway - haa Jun nporied tt U s sold more &haa 185,llt dckett '°" t•• i1augural CaW ... la SM SepL I and W laku In more U:iaa $1 million in advance ef the race. Diving Meet Scheduled Ccmpelitlon in the 12th an- nual Southern Ca Ii t o rn la lnt.etnaUooal JnvitaUonal div- In& champiOlllhlpe 1eta under wp this weekend at Loi c.ir.<11 .. Country Club. ™' m .. t will begin at t0 o31l •.m. 811turday in both m e n a1KI. women'• three-meter spr- lncbo<rd llld to.meter plat· fonn competition. The moet tb!J year will be a pre..natk>nal wannup t ti • t will auraa some of Ule worlds most outataodlna divers In· eluding NCAA divers from In- diana Unlvmlly, Ar l 10 n a, Fiortd1, and Princeton Unlver~cy. The gianlt of the boards. bolh naUooal 1 n d ln- temational, wtll be competing Wt year tn one of the lineal me<ll beld In Ibo Unltod States. Last year's double winners will be defending their t!Ues : Captain Micld Jlin& and Rick Early, both of PhUUpe II. Loi Coyoln la ... of the few clubl in Southern C.Ulornla that Is able to p<e>- vida tower fadllUts for such areal Otympk: gold, silver, and bronzt mtd1! winners as Gary Toblan. Pat McCormick. Dr. Sammy Ltt, Vicki Draves, llld Bobby Webster. ltOC:kll 111111<1 (H1rll lD Qwll MOM tWU$0n) 117 Alamitos Racing Results 'TlllM•r. "~"'' 4. 1t11 CIMr & f't•I f'lalT aACI'. JSI) v1rdl. M11Mf1 t YN r old•. Clllmlnt, ""'""' 11100. S..:oricl 4nffl {P1rn ... 1 t4.lll t .411 t .IO Tot111'1 Chltk (LIP"l m) t.to t,411 Tlttr 1111 IW1tto11I 2.111 Timi: .1 .. J/10. 5cr1tclll'd-S11r111 Mlrbt1, TOii •oct· 11 G1I, VIII\ 1t .... •rd1, •td lomb. llfCOND ltACI'. «II Vlr'dl. l r•1r •lei• end \11>, Cl1lmlM. 1'11r11 111tlCI. H&'I A •toual (Adtlr) 7.00 J,IO I.to ""'' G•IV E .. 11 IDrft'H I l .ICI t.M SI• 81111krl"' IWlllOnl J.MI ll!Tll: .»-1/10. Scrllchtcl -O.rr1bll, l et' Go 511"11, c~"llC•• W•t' Chlr. Cl1u• Toni. 12 NlOHTLY DOUILI', t ·IKMll A•-.1 & '· tM'I 4 •"ufll, •lhl 11U.ll. THl•D ltACI'. S50 v•rdl. Mtld111 t 'l'Nr old-. Clellr!CM. Jl>vrw l ll'OCI. Timi To Fl,. (All1lrl II.OD 1 ... I.Ml Lovtl'I' Nklhf fll1>html 4.0I t.20 Ww W°" fCroi.b1') I.Ill Time: .1 .. 1/10. krllCl'lld -51cldlt llf11k1l, l'ttr'I 1'1~ct111, Hiii Ol.o!d<. llO'f'lt lldVbut. P'OUltTN ltACI', llO v1H11. J 'l'llr o!d1. Cl11min!f, l'u~t 11700. Tl'lll """ 81r CPtrnerl t .IO '·"° l .All l.:.n.t-(Wt!hl l.-40 t.1'11 l'or.kef ltortlt IK111!sl I.Ml nm.: .1 .... 11•. krtld!td -Ar..,_,, Ftll E&Slllt.. Sodtfr MK, o.dc1 lttotl, 'IP'TN UC._ 1110 y1rdt. I rNr eldl ttld 11p, Clltm!n., '~''' 11100. l11t ltldll11 IH1 ... llltl •.• It .• f.11 Tl'IKkll ·-fW,1111 II.Ill 1,60 Gold Dltl fAdltr t.IO Time: .»-4110. SC•l tthflj -l llft!IV'I S11t. Gw J1tt1, Hv ll9CI UISI, l uckv ••r1 Jot, Dou-• Dtck. SIXTH llACI. 350 v1rds. S rN r old1. Cl1lm!11t. f'ul'M 11100, l>l•c A loti !ltr1uul •·• 1111.• 1.• FIY Otj11 IPt<Mr) lt.• t.2'11 Mia• Oitrl'\Ond I Ull (CrHWI I.• J lm4: ,1'4111. kf"lld!tdl -Wtrn' Int, Strtlch l'•tt.r. Al1mlot llr II, Ju11t1e lw. 11'\llNTH IUC•. m ••rfi. J ,._., ..... ltld ""'· Cltlrnll\t. ,\l<'M ttl!OI. Ocfll I'_... IL'-ml t.• UI J.10 ClllfDml• ...... CWetltl •.IO J.JI Cllrt•r,. 5-IA' (l'wMl'I J.60 Tlmti M-4/lO. ktttcfltd -'rlelt, lrt11 Mid••• Mtrt tt "-• .._ l10Hfff •ACI. U1 ver~ J .,.., otff trld up, CleHl/IH ,t,tllno•Mll, l'u"" ~ ' Count Cl1r•11 {1'1111 ,,,., •• l • Wltcll Clllt tw•IMlll .... t.tG lollll ltodtrl ICroeb'f'J J.• TllM: .11 1'111. kFetd'IM -"-!llMr, ~""' -NIMTH ll,l,CI, DI Ylnll. J 'f'Nf tlft tfld w. Cltlrftlrot. 1"11,... llliDO, l'1r1 l1rM fl!,htn'll II ... t.40 UO Llltit ltM Al'row Ulltr11trl 11,to 1.IO 0" V•ll IH•rdlt!tl I.• l lm4! .1 .. l(lt. luttd'ld -Golf Lll!lnt. Hiii Cl..,~, Mt. CUl>ld, ltrrM TllO. II IX.ACTA, , • 1'111 l1r/I & I · ~Ith! •M Arnw. ............ • 4 PLY POLYESTER CORD TIRE CLOSEOUT! CLOSID COO\INO $YSTIM 9.95 Helps Pf4Mll'd uw eegfn~s frona overheating. fLIX4.uTJ AIR CONDITIONING fAN 16.88 fiber glos1 fan keeps en· gin• fl90I down. Miieage Maker II Light truck tires Tvbe Type Tube TJ1M1 Tvbe1- 670.IS 19.88 700-1$22,88 670-1'22,88 2.-40 feel. kill 2.85 FM. tax 2.70 Ped. to• FOREMOST GP NOW$16 ,1 •• w. ............ ,. ........... , ..... ... ,. .. 650.'3 700-13 560-15 c1a.14 l•plOCft - 695-14 Ori9. ''·"' 21.45 21.45 21A5 Now•19 ,..,,,_ 1.71 1.H 1.75 2.17 ,, ............... 4tfr. lteckw•ll t11MINa s;,. 171-14 .,..,. ,,._,, Replac .. 73.J.I• 77.S.14 77.S.IS Now•21 '-'·'• 2.25 2..U .... , ..........• ,.4 .w tire ,._..,_u .... i.u Orig. 27.'5 ., ... Now•2s pl••t.41.ta.•llrll.W ..... ae.tkw911t.Mleu ,. .. K7S.14 na.14 H7S.l.5 ••,,&oc• 85.S.1• 88.S.14 ....,, °"•· .,_., 31..U ..... Wh"9wall1 o.ty " .... ., ... ,_ .... 3.01 2.80 900-15 Wh.,_11 ool1O.ig.34.45, P.T. 2.87 NOW $21 FOREMOST 'CALIFORNIA' AUTO AIR CONDITIONER p,...MJ I-• '°' qW<lt deilvefy ol cool ... -3 ,_ "'"'"""'"' ,_ .... 2 rowtd aide IOll'MJ -Sllmlne detign - £a51"to-reoc:h atide bor on clrfwr's .._ ~!!~!~ ennelfJ AUTO C•NftR Yo1, you can 1hop 12 lo 5 Sundayi, 100, at any of tho .. Penney Auto Center" BUENA PARK• CANOGA PAK CAll\SIAD CHUl.f. VIST4 DOWNEY FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTCl.f.IR NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE Cll'I"' VENlUIA. 0.1 .. l•I Cha'11• .. .!9,N-e1t I l .... *"'VllW(Q1911~ \ 1. ..... ll!lml--111111!1~----------------------~-~--~, -· ----. l JI DAll.Y I'll.OT DiMaggios to Be Reunited 'nle -0 I M 111 i o American League ,..,. a m"'ager), Stan -•I !tied bro&berl wUJ 'M reunllfld 1n thl!l the famed brolber trio with Geotit Sialtr ., 1rutest tbt 91)1 tuUltkt ror the all-could perform toee.lher. ThiJ first baseman) and 8 0 b 11.11' <Mttmer. Gamt at "·iJI bt their first Soul.Mm Feller (greatest rtlhtbanded Allllleim Slodillrn. Sunday, C.lllomia appear,_ since Jlltoher l. Aur;. H , the ~ M4-..._u--·1166, "'htn they pl4.yed ''"'--A.Alto Jn lht......A m t.L.lc...n -WrJcl<y Field ror Ille Son wru• oollield will be '" Joe DlMWio. YOltid lht Franc:llCO Seals in 1 n Yanktt star Gtne Woodlin& lf"ltltM ti'flnl player in 11 nldUmen 1ne •pinll tht and forme.r lndi&nl llu.u;t.r natioa~ poll 1 year 11n, Pldlit Coast ~ Angels. UitT)' Doby. lllill be Jn atnltr Reid for or the 11 sejedfd on the Joe: DIM•ulo, S t e n & e 1 . CllP;)' Sten,eJ11 A m·e r I c 1 n 1reatest livin& "•m lo lJP, Musial and Fell!r aU are Le1M llq!J&d. flanked by four will appear in ~ three-members of the Hall Of Fa.me. Vinet and Dom. innirfl lftliminaty o the Thf five Amuican Leaaue Alttoch Vinet played 111 Af\iels·Tigers g Im e ttl outfielders performed in 1 ol hil nir>t m-.)or Jequt Anaheim Slldium on AUJ. 16. total or 2' All.star Games, ee&IONI in the N 1 l i o n • I In addition to Joe DlMagg)n. led by Joe DiMap with IT. Leque. be wu ptaoed on the Uw!y are Stengel {lf'f::llest Dom OIM1uto and Doby each • TUBELESS BLACKWALL · 2.00 ~·~··"·~·"-' ~'-~'~"~·~·--! 8.5 4 7.7id4 30.95 23.54 2.Sl S.25.t: 1 ... --33-:iS--21-:-3-4--z-:6 7- ""'"ffiBELESS WHITEWALL 6.S0.13 21.95 2100.1"°'7--'%"".00 ' 6.95..:14 29.95 22 .94 2..12 7.35:.:14 31":95 JS.14-ffi- 7.7Ssl4--33.95 27.14 1.25•1' 36.95 J0.6' 1.551.14 39.95 33.94 ALLSTATEPa .. engcr Tire Gu1rantee c. ................ , All '"~ , ...... ,_ ..... _. i...e .. .i.r.. ....... n.i .. ~. 1«H_i..,;.,1..,.i., r,i.<'Jfa...,,..,.1111 '"°' .. h• ~-1'1N Do: I•.,.-,. 1ot ,;,.. ""· flll!ll-i(. dutso ..... , , ....... ,...,...._ d .......• u.!'ll,.... r1"' J-....i & ..... Tm'""'..,......_"""'..._ &qoit -t-•ooC ....... '-•••-4 '->1...i:T-'--l..,,lf.-C-1,,,.. ...... m_~ '91'• t... t'1ll ft.: I•~""' ..... _ . ..,._. ·~ .-,,.W ...,.. ,...,_. .u. .. ..., p. l.Mni 1-la t..cior1olJoe.1orcoJ1-r. M.mi..r_. • .._.... ..._ 11•.'1 I~ Whal'• So Good About t'iber Glas11 Constraetion? Grttl« s.1 ... ,. -Twi11 likr Ji-~ r.- inlC,rcr ck irNd.., . cl'tlle • .dded Mrier tb11 htl~ ttducr pllnc!Utti, iMpKC ~ Benirr Tr.clinn -You JI" IDOl'e ruhbft on '~ p1YtmtDt. You I'< pettrr D'IC'fion i11 111 kind1ol _.1hcr. Deep Sea Fish Report Coast Bonito Action Hot Bonito ac\ion 11 boomina 11on1 the Otqe Co.ut area wilh all thrtt area landln1a rtporting liml~ Jor mo11t passengers with rith ftl8hln1 in the 7-i pound ca.•ry. Arr• Londlll11 --• few fish up to 11 pounds wlth most In tbe 1-9 pound area. Art's also reportl a good ru'l on albacore: Ilona the 43-60 mile bank early In. tht week . This is a 70 to 80 mile trip by boal from Art's and Geor1e Newcombe reports the fish may be comln& in cloeer at any time. Davey'! Locker is catching 1 lot ol bonito on the half Sears day bolt.I ind Is running • dilly 1lbaoottd1peci1~ the Seo Horoe. 11.e 1lblcott boat leaves at 11 l!tch n!ght an!!_ _lht coat la m , Including • bunk .• ™ -w-1ter-temperature in the f\Jhlna atfll ls 64 degrees and Its clean, according lO reporu. Two ch11irter bolts brought In fl.sh Monday. The. Channel Clipper hid 1;· fLth aboard and the Patrician caught SI amon1 is p1uenaer1. San Clemente Sporlsfilhing Llndlng concentratea a n coa!lal area Oshin(I a n d reportl limitl for t v e r y . fi!htrman oo Mood'¥ ti bon. Uo. Two b.tutfln tuna Wl!rt alao cau1ht, the blgetl a n poundtr by R. J . Ktttenberg 9f P'ull<rton. Frltftll M1rt>ell1 or Corona had • IO'i,i-pounder. 'For Weekend.er Advertising Phone 6424321 25%! Tire and Auto Center ON DYNAGLASS WIDE ·GUARD Full 36 Month Guarantee Regular Trade-In Price '25.95 6.50.13 Tube( ... Bl•ckwall l'hul2 t.E.T. And0ld'l1re ' . Hu8ky, Strong, Nylon Plies Express Highway Hauler SIZE Price Jo".E.T. T UBE-TYPE 6 Ply-Rared Nylon 21~~ . ,.. .. ,_ n..1t.H -f.Lf. • 1>-ply rated n ylon cord corutrQCl:ion for 1trensth and lone mile11e 1·:~· ~ Ade About Sear• CMtv•"~"I Credle Plam •~'rap around !read enable. beii.r eom~ in1 and motto 1tability !\o Trade-In Require'd SAVE *1! 3:? • F111 mos1 can • Eiaier handlini. more ('Oftl(ortable ride •Oriainal,eqWpmentreplacement O.E.R.* Shocks • Nylon Slip-On Covers 399 Nylon scretlh fah ric, bond~d polyfoam hack. in.-. A11orted lolnr~. SAYE '30.95! Avoid Hot Smoggy Summer Driving Instead En joy a Dry Comfortable SAVE $30! Resular ••o.99 Sport Mini Bike Deluxe Auto Air Conditioner 7 _99 Ideal for home and bo11. UH .,.inst area.st, A* line. _p_ain[ and elrctri\:al fires. U.L and C.O.sr ard approved. ·, "· • RiJ. -k)'cll!' l!'nJ.ine drli\'tf'I up In JOO milet per 1aUon n(Jll I J\nobby rt"ar tire1chrom e0 1>111.rd ch1i n-au1rd: re- win d 1la.rter. Mi>del 8071 tUlNA PAllC TA 1·4400, 121-41l0 11. MONTI 01 J •lfl 1 R•~>or $!29.9j • l:·flature11: two 4--way acljulitable 1ouve.r1 • 3·•reed blower for f'O n\•cnicnt cooling • ... illi n1u gt .~1neric1n ca rs lONO alACH Ht 1·012t C4NOGA ,All( 140°0661 OllNOAU (H I· 1004, Cl 4-4• l T Ot.TM,IC & SOTO AN 1•1211 (OM'fON NI t •2St1, NI 2°1761 NOllTWOOO HO f.Jf41 OIAHOI 6J7·2100 I LUl1IOllUC&AHD CO, COVINA ftt·O•l t INOUWOOO 01 1·2S21 PAIAOINA tll•l211, JJ1•42\1 .,.., Nl9ht1 Men. rhru Sat. 9:.:lO A.M. to t sio ,,M., Sunday 12 N•on t• S ,,M. ''htl1fartlon Guor•rttH4' •r Your Mon•y l•ck" Regular '199.95 POMONA "A •OJrll 'ICO WI a04261 SANTA ANA ICI 7•ll71 JANfA ,. l'llNOI f44•101 I SANTI MONICA P 44711 88 Model 5 780 Expert lnAtallation Available SOUTM dfltr"-AIA 140•iJJI TOllAHCI 141· 1111 Ufl'U.NI fll•1t27 VAW'Y PO l 0 t461, fl4•11to VllMONf f\ f.lf1 I .. • ... -~--------~-~-----............ ------------------~---,·-·--~·~· -· --~~-~--~·--·~·-·--·--·--- • Heinzerling TrophY. Elms Ne ars Win ln Snip e Racing_ By ALMON 1..0CKABEY ........ .,..r Earl Elma ol San Diego 1ppeared to be well on hJs way to a fourth 111Uon1I Utle In the Snipe Ou1 Tueadly when he 1wept all three races In the HetnJel'llng Trophy Serles belna ulled on Lake Spdnifleld. Ill. _.,. On Monday he won me Crolby Ttophy and WU lop quallrler of the 25 aelected for the lldnzerlin; which is the champ1onahlp event Dive 1.nlm&n of Newport. Buch, who bu been .,,..,.... up to Elms ln previous na- tional regattas, finished 13th in the cro.by Q\lallfyinl aerlu Monday. He did not ahow up Tuesday's top finishers in lhe }letru.erllng Series. In the flnt race over the wind swept course Tuesday, Elms was trailed by Frank !Avlnaon of lndtanapolll; Bw: Levinson, Indianapolis, Jim Grubbs of Los Angeles and Geoffrey Andron or Chicago. Aguatin Diaz, Miami, Fla., the junior national champion finished st".enth, flflh and third ln Tuesday's raca. Roger Stewart of El Cajon, Calll., picked up a !Uth In the lh1rd rlt"e. Competition in the Heinzer~ ling series was scheduled to begin today at 10 a.m. Spring. field Ume. California entrant.I and their finllhe! far the nrrt three raCM were Elms 1-1·1: Roger Stewart. San Diego, t-U; Jerr Lenhart, san Diego, 11..,,.10: Jatne4 Grubba, Loe: Angeles. 4-lS.14, and Tom Nute, S&n Dle10, 24-7·11. Ruby Hornun1 ol San Fran-. Cisco and Frank PooUua of Glen Ellen, finllbed one.-two in the flnt beat of the firat race in the Wells Trophy series cornpeUtton f<r thoee boatl which lall<d lo quaUl)r • for the Betmerllng. HOfllll"i took lint In the second heat of the first rtct, while Bk!. Hook of Indianapolis, and Griffing CincJMoU, took POL YNES IAH STYLE -Members of the Newport Canoe Club di~ their th irds in the tlnal two heata. paddles deep into Lon~ Beach Harbor waters in a preview event to the Kall· Dave Ull man won the se-fomla OutMager Association state championships scheduled Saturday as cond heat of the Crosby aeries p~rt of the 5th annual California International Sea Festival at Lona Bea.ch. lut Sunday and was the 13th KOA members are experts in 400-pound, six·paddler canoe racing pette::med qlalUter. an.er ancient Polynesia's royal sport. Following are the quallflers _______ ::...., ___ ::....,_: ________________ _ in order of finish ; Elms, Roger Stewart, Jeff Lenhart. Harry Levirulon, Agustin Dlaz, Richard Bowen , Gary Boawel\, Frank Levinson, Geoffrey, Andron, Richard T i 11 m a n , Tom Nute. Dave Ullman, Bob Roland, Norman T o w I e , James Grubbs, Buu Levinson, G. S. Brown. Bob Bingham, Lawrence Johnson, Fr a n k Levlnlon;-Tmy Tlmm,-Goh· oar SUckle, Harry Schof ield, Ralph Swamon, and Keith zara. I San Nicolas Annual Race Set Au g . 28 'The Sth annual Pacific Cup Race around San Nicolas Island for achooners and ketches geta: under way Aua. 28 at Marina de! Rey. McLaughlin Leading Coronado-15 Racing Skier Stearns Seeking New Drag Speed Record The California Yacht Club- sponsored event is limited to schooners and ketches 40 feet and over. The race is 150 miles. Conceived by Carlton M. Rogers of CYC, in 1966. the Pacific Cup wa.s desicned tG be a real challenge to the larger and heavier t w o • stickers. MISSION BAY -Tom McLaughlin of the ho s t Mission Bay Yacht Club sailed ron.slstenlly in the first two races of the Coronado-15 na. Ilona! champion.ship regatta Tuesday to take the lead ~·Ith two second places. Misalon Bay sklppen domJ. nated the 25-0oat fleet with 13. The 49-boat t u r n o u t for the c_bampionships was divided by an elimination series sailed SUnday and Monday. Chuck Sterns of Bellflower. water skiing's all·tlme swiftest and most versaUle performer, will be hoping to end a series or frustrations and misfortunes Saturday when he attempts hll'°'1''1 f i r • t quarter-milt. drag course run of beyond 130 m.p.b. al Long Beach Marine Stadium. The 31..year-ol• world record holder wtll be the lealured perlcnner ln the C huck Stems W6rld Water S k I Drag Championships starting at 10 a.m. as one of the two major ski events this wee k e11.d in U. Callfonlla Inten}IUonal Sea ,FeaUval at Long Beach. Also schedutd are record apeed attempts by four top women stars, first-time-- ever barefoot drag runs and men's drag eliminations. 'l'he event, originally scheduled for last1January, had to be poslJ>Olled abrUptly when the Cal St.ate Long Beach engineering graduate v.·as seriously injured in a spectacular 90 m.p.h. spill dutlna: 1 race at Parker Dam, Ariz., Jan. 4. Stearns' tow boat rammed a submerged tree slump. Steams slammed into the same obstruction, and the results were a wrecked boat as well at seven broken ribs, a punctured lung and uaorted cuta: and brulse1. The Injury sidelined him lwG mGnlhl, and lingering after·ef· feels and a vlrua lnfecllon In his chest he rouldn't ~m to shake have slowed his 1970 training and compeUUon JUC· ce&1es. 1 Summer weather and the incentive of preparing to at.- ltmpl to 1Wi>Us his """ quarter-mile drag mark of 122.11 m.p.h. (1et at Marine Stadium Jan. 11, 1969) have put Steams back In fighting trim, and he confided earn.- this week., "I've never workelt .so hard, ale 10 much and felt ao good coming up to an event In my llfe." Despite hearty appeUle. the 5-foot·IO athlete hu been unable to sneak above JBO pounds. ''l wcrk out hard for 45 mlnutts each morning and 45 m\nuteJ each night, Ult welghta a couple. of limes a day. ride my bike and get in some long, easy ski rWls," Stearns laughed. "I gue1111 that h111 something lo do with It." Former women'• record holder Jane Mobley Welch of San Diego heads a quartet of gal alders who11 bid for a speed better than the pruent feminine atardard of YES, SHE CAN SKI - But Patty Breunig will not be on the slats next weekend when the World Water Ski Drag Championships at Long Beach Martne Stadium or the Grand National Catalina Ski Race. takes place at Long Btach .. 105.68 m,p.h. by Sally Younger of Hacienda Height.a last June. With tongue in cheek, Allen F. Donovan, chairman of CYC's Pacific Cup committee, quipped: "The race excludes lhoae rule· beating. and s o m e limes uncomfortable sloops and yawl.I -especially those In the larger plastic drinking cup class that do .so well In today's ocellil races." UnUI this year, the Pacific Cup race has been held in March and September, with the obJecUve ol producing dlf· ficull sallit1g conditions. The off.season dates have been OD· ly moderately auccessfui in produclng the d es i r e d weather. Because of this, Donovan's committee consider• th a t August wealher may try the double-sticker tailors just as well. Donovan, corrected lime winner of the race in 1966, point• out that achoonen and ketches require substantial crews. He expects the summer holidays will make them avallable for the August date. CYC anticipalH a large turnout from those aaUors whole intere1t In heavier, all· weather boats has led them lo choose 1chooners a n d ketches for thelr per.onal sea· 101n1 lives. The Paclnc Cup race will be preceded by a n().host cocktail party and dinner Thursday e:venlng, Aug. 27. A special trophy presentation ceremony and re I a t e d festivities wlll be held at eve early in the fall. Carl Eichenlaub of ?.IBYC W\'ln the first race Tuesday but dn>pped out of the top five as Don Clapp of Pomona Valley Sa i Ii n g Association came through with a victory In the second. Jack Bateman of MBYC ceptured the first race of the junior championshlp series Tuesday. Champk>ftlldp Serie• FIRST RACE -C a r I 'Burrleane Gulch' Outer Harbor Scene For Championships Los Ange:les Outer Harbor -known to Southland sailors as "hurricane gulch'' will be the scene of the 6lh annual Yacht Racing Union of Southern Calllornia 's 0 n e • Design Champlonshlpg Aug. 15-16. Cabrlllo Beach Yacht Club la the host. This year's event promises plenty of action with three races 9Cheduled for Saturday and two on Sunday. To cul down on the waiting Ume and further acetlerate the action, there wlll be lhree·mlntue In· tervals between starts. Another change In policy from previous years Is thal there wilt be no entry fee . An elaborate array o f troptlles h11:s been arranged for competlkrs in the Slsr, Soling, 5-0-5, Geary-18, Thistle, Cal-20, OK Dinghy, Tempest, Flying Dutchman, S n I p e , Corooado-1$, Finn, Lido-I~ lntemallonal-1 4 and Flyina Junlor classes. Members of yacht Clubs af. flllated with the YRU are ln. vlled to partlclpale. YRU clubl are Alamitos Bay, Long Beach, Newport Harbo r , Balboa, Lkio l1le, Bahia Corinthian, San Diego, Mission Bay, Del Rey, Los Angeles, King Harbor, Sant. Barbara and Cabrlllo Beach yacht club!. Members o £ reco&nlzed yacht clubs oulllde the Sou~ em Calllornl• area are alao invited to enter and match their tale:nta with the South. land yach tsmen. Coast Sabot Skippers Set For Regatta Mias Younger, 17-year-old blonde who claims with a gig· gle she wears "the fastest bikini in the world ," decided to fonigo a new record run to concentrate on Sunday's an· nual Grand National Catalina Ski Race starting and finishing between the Reef Restaurant Three alternate skippers the eltmlnatlon series held Scruggs, NHYC; burdlck Ray, landing and the new Quee:Jl's who wUl go to Mission Bay Monday and Tuesday, aod LIYC ; Mark Hlnlhaw, LlYC; Way Bridge in Long Beach are Dave Sle:gler, BYC: Milt Miss Nina NieJsen of Newport Cliff Wilson, NHYC : Mark Harbor. Her hope 11 not only Alllone , LIYC, and Tom Harbor Yacht Clu b w 111 Gaudio, NHYC; PhJI GauL!chJ, to lower her women's record, Wiiton, NHYC. but al.so to Onlab fint overall. The Newport·Balboa Sabot repruent the local fleet by BYC; CUrt Olson, Call!. YC; Al many aa 40 men ak.Jers, Fleet will send 16 skippers virtue of being the dtfending Tim O'Rielly, LIYC ; Dugal Including StUm1 and defen· to the National championship national champion. Johnson, BYC; Clark Puthoff, dine men's record holder Tim regatta at Mission Bay Au1. Qualifying tn the elimination LIYC; Laurie Small. BCYC; Guckes of Gardena and u 22-23. series were Kurt Wleie. BYC ; Klng Humann, BYC, and John many as 2 women will race1"ii;;F;;l;;ft.e;;;;;;n;;1;;kl;ip;i;pe;;n;i;;iq;;iuoi;ilU;;il;i;edi;;;;ln;;;;;;;;iDtOinn;;;iis;;i;Dur;iii1;;i1n,;;i;;;BC;;;;;;Y;;C;;:;;;;;P;;a;;I ;;;;;;M;;cCl;;;;;;u;;re;i;';;L;;lY;;Ci;i.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; non·liop acroa the channel 11 from Long Beach. to Avalon Harl>or Md back ltlrlin( 11 8 a.m. Both ski programs are sponsor<d by Lolli Beach Boal & Sl<i Club and sanciloned by W a l er Ski Assn. 'nmlnl equipment Saturday II U!e stadium will be opuated by the Natlonal Dreg Boal Aun., "'lh tow bootl arrani<d by Hondo Bolt& of Notlh Holly· wood. COMl'l.ITI TUNE·UP! ·-IMtift C."I 10•1,_ Skippers! Why Pay Retail Prices??? MARINE & BAmRY SHOPPE SELLS All M"--INi: EQUll'MENT fOR. POWEii I S"-ll "-T THI: LAll91ST DISCOUNTS kNOWN WI lUUl l lO H UNOllSO\D ALL MAJOR BRANDS !411 W•t CMlt H......, N..,_ ...... Calf._ H .t&t ,..., .... 17141 64l-f :l01 e lllC IL\ll •ICIAUST e COSTA MISll STORE ONLY ,,., " ............ ~ SAVE THIS ADI IT IS WO RTH $1.00 ON ANY $10.00 PU RCHASE OR MORE OP'i:N DAILY 9 AM t. 7 l'M-S11114•yt 10.-. PM IANKAMElllCAllD MASTlk CHAA&t 14t ... l ll M Mf.lltf I DAfl.V·- Exotic Racing S~t Canoes, Dingliys Hi ghlight Se a Festival 1 UNCCINDITIOHAUT --' . .,., ______ .. c:r r: ='""-........ -. -~~ ....... ~;:;-.. "'::. ' :r -···-. • •IW~ _IOI,. -"·m.:·~~ .-1o .... """"' -·~·-. ... . .... -· s.-u..• ..... tt.t . ,_., ..... - THE ONLY 50,000 MILE TIRE IN LOS ANGEW le ORANGE COUNTY ...... ~ TU ill.II us an u. -I.SI a11 U7 11.14 II.IC an u U1 3UZ ----...... _ . ----'19 •24· ONE OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST DEALfR$ AUTO TIRE & SERVICES, INC. COST A MESA "'" ""'"0 "' ''"" l'HONf t. 1, ? 11 I GLENDALE 244 N. Olenchdt Ave. 241.J14t . ll •. llYS · ' '1 VAJr4 P«l't'I M.VD. ·-. LOS lllEW -WllA MONltA IL '6f.nst 1111 •f21 ATIANTI . n1-uoo . TllZlll 1115'-llYD. JM.1151 "'1.JWOOI ffll WllA-1 ...,,..,. -I FULLERTON • 1001 s. HARBOR BLVD •• 871·71331 -. J I I j I I l _ I I . . . ~ . . . . ~ II DAILY PILOT Wtdntsday, A119ust S, 1970 f PILOT-AOVERTISER WtdntsdU, A1,1911sl .5, 1970 HAVE YOU VISITEO OUR 11EW STORE AT: HUNTAtN VAU.llY-l"'f ....... If. • T .... 5111 WAINER AT SPRINGDALE IN HUNTINGTON BEACH "OUNtAIN V&LL.«Y-t•lfl ._ ....... 11'4. 6 ........ •L TOtt0-11 T.-•I bcUtlllf lllMf MUNTtNOTI* llACM-41111 ._. ltwf. tt A'*" MMTA AN,._1 .. W, ....... -.,,.... No walTMlfttTP-tW W•Jl"UI• ............. COIJA MllA-Ull ~ llM, •WI-.. St. con• Mt.........m •· '111\ "· NUftTIN•TOft llAC:~l ,.._el t""'l'llll'tl Half Gallon Sale! JALTA VODKA ::.::·.:. :;:,;.!;7:; $644 pr;c. ., u.n. l1te "hlli"ll'• lfl,.,. ... .ii .... ...,. rtt. :., : Ulf •"''- 1.,.. ""' ot '"' ,...;..p. • IUJ o. .. Sot ho Froe! Reg. $19' & $249 Sale of Plastic Wastebaskets _ • $2.49 Flip.Top Style • $1.98 36-Qt, with Handles c • $1 .98 40-Gt. Decorated • $1.9140-Gt. Rectangular Y1111t bnt -tttbotliel b...,. 1,,,..p., •ler 1fyl" fat h-, effic•, 11111:19•. Col11,. fot ,....,,...,._ol '°"'nf1 M $1.01 t. $1.,2. $1 39 12x12·1nch = Golcl Veinecf ~ Mirror ~quares · . , ·bJ Marsel & ,'.\ ' ,jj ligh1w1!9~!. '"''to imtall,·, " t'o glut, ,.,_ or fKl il1 •nffded. Add brighln•u,, tp11clou1ne11 lo Qny -. Do ii yourttlf-111,.. o..,.. ~% In Thri!rf1 IPK .. . otftr. I $29'5 Value! Polaroid tit Color Pack II -Camera $J 1' 1st Quality Latex Gloves Reg. $J0'5 Quilted Bedspreads ~.. Full Length ' ' r '~· '.Door Mirrors ' $2487 c.rw ~ i• • .. ;.....,.., black & •lilt• ii• 19<•11d1. fledtlc .,.., "Mbletla-4 ""-'· 111. '7" Kall•ar Kall Copier ,_,,._~..,..-•$5ts ~ Gt.. uoct "1flh. $J•9 Valuol Stuffed 8 Animals ;r1 •tc ~ 'I Vinyl _,.., -.key1, lioJN, 4og1, -~y -Gr.at fw e111o9rophl"f. ..., -ro1 fot 9lfh "•t tt.k Thrlfl'f l.w diwownf,,Price. '1 75 Brown & Haley Almond Roca •$129 o.11ciff1 "'"'' ••ff•• c-•red witll ricli 1r1llk chocol11i. • fllltd witli toerted •liii11n4' pi ...... Fully LhM<I . '1"rut-Aid" 91-with •oft·.lip wrioc• fat hot wotM dMni.... M- l•1191r 1tt•l<li •riot, ' Clo.kt .t po1t•l 1•"~• pi11k Ill liui s.M-L 1111,..t.d ''"°"' HolloM. Regular '1 2' '1 4' Value Household Broom 97c O.llty4 J111Wwi1h pl111tl11h111uld•t, kffit' -111 tt.. • .,,.,., potl .. •1•• Valuol QualltJ . Sponge Fl11r Mop -~ Mllco -p wilh ~11 ''"'"' ll111d ,,. .. ,.,,. fvtftlf\f,. ll!'"''b.. Leisure Lounger Piiiows 99c H....Y •~•1 • .,..., I~ beld florol p1l.11t. '"'· ,_ 11'91llient. 17d3N 1i1•. ''"" h ......... ,,. .. 1. 99' Flashlight. with laHorles ,;,.. -111111'1 flcnllligh1 wilh bcitteri• IMlvded •I • 111. 25' .Plastlc lcttl Toa Tumlilors 6 i 59c BuY6 SAVE91c ld•ol ·fot tall cool ,.,_, rinb. Ch•I~ M e•lon. 41111-w ........ , .. I $749 FULL BID Siii All ,_. 111~ tt "'9 n-'P'"cb " "')'<)II oc...n. fcrff•ta In j._I.· ta •• 1111d, -... •• p.ocock tloot .,,. f11d• t •1 i11111 11t, D•ubl• ttitci...d .Olf•I f., cord. ff t ffKI. . $1211 Value! e G.E. Can Opener ~I St88 ::5='=::--~ ~ ~ ~ "Op.n• "'""' 1!1e ~· c11n1 i" aecortd1. ~I H11,.,dy c11rd •lo•· 011 • i11 ''"'·. Whit•, fCll •14" Value! lrollor or C11k1r-Fr11r Br ::•:r $1188 -~ .o ... ""it b11•.··· ~ ·b ... il1. toci•h. , .. n •• wcinn1 "'lh l coll11. Flour tie Llto Night Light $166 S'""tt eceefti. Chok• •f fl-•"' IMilb col11n. • 16d6"Wectdfro..,. • 12..U" tromo.-. , .. _ I Hon~ fllll l~I• ..,, 111lrro11 of tlitletl\o•fl'ff 'ittt- li11f9h ,1-. ,., botlt .. bt4· _.._.. $J 4' Fiberboard . Storage Chests Choico of Regular or Under Bod Storage Allroctl•• ••od· uroln •• "'"' """" cloth flni1h. Tiglit fitting lidi. Polypropyl•fl• fib.r. J111t h111• dow11 I• cl•o"-Colon.. 'I" Value! Men's Vinyl Shave Kits '""rt wftlt tip~, clotlll'e, 59.~. GLADE AIR FRESHENER BIG GRAND OPENING DISCOUNT SAVINGS ON SUMMERTIME NEEDS 2 51 29141~ 1ht. Speci11I flft1H11d ra.,.n _,,,;.t, "'fl• I« guldoM• •lld tow!~. 89' Valuol Watertlto U.S. Swlmcap1 Al_. cOtllplmly .,.,..,. 66c ,.,-.1, Chok4 •f 1r,411, col~"' • 1224 Loafer King leach lack Rest COt11fett plu1I H11rdWOIMI ~$193 ·fta.,. wilb ttrtptlll •o"" ¥111(0 .. f. $56". Rotary Power Mower s499s 77c Aloha Charcoal 959c ' ' , I ' ' • ·. . ·, •• '· . . . ;. . . . ' . . . . . • PILOT.ADVERTl$111 " .. -~------------------------__: _______________ . __ ·-------·- HAVE YOU VISITED OUR NEW STOltl AT1 NWTA• VALLln'-1"'4 ...... • °" T'lltln 5881 WARNER AT SPRINGDALE IN HUNTINGTON BEACH '°"II'""' v,.a.LaT---141 .......,. ....... .,., 9'. TOlt0.-..1 T-......... •trM fllfffTttleTOll •SAC»-tlltt ._.. IM. ., NIMf• t.t.wf,t. ..,.,._, .... lfllllW ... l"'"'6 M. 'lll'IJTMMllTI~ ..... L I•" ......... CO.TA MliA-lJk It.,_ IJIM. Ill W._ N, CotTA MIM-ut a. I,. N. HUltTU.OTOlll tlM:lf-fNI U -•I ,,_.,,_... •• "Value! Duo-Temp ~Plast.lc Ins.lated "gs & Tumblers Set of 4 YOUI CHOICI c •• $1 88 ea. Boys' Sport Shirts Giant Sale $399 Summer Shifts Skippy , Havollne Dog Food ·Motor 011 . 1.2·~:~1 • H1111d10•• .,,. 111d tu .. bl•" • .._. Mt drinks "9tt.r, itold cliillb t91.,.-mvcii IO!l9• er. 111 11-MDCI colon, pol· ter111. Oi1h-1her ...,r,1 !!.:;';;:!:·.:; 4 F $ 5 '6fllllor tol.,. tor Q ti.. ... ..._.-.... N•olly 1al111ed, R :::~::·.::::.·.:<~ $299 pt111I., 11tiftt, tltiftt ;.10,. ,,, "'".,... '""' hot .......... i• ....... 12 '""" ,,.... s 123 $) 99 Mylanta ....... . '3" Yall hoic. ., 11 P*P'l!lar c.olon '" 14~ -'-.ir& ,.,., .. "M ... with ..,:oll...t _,.. a bility. Nolvrol EOlor V.~ p11I • with hord-ro for ~Clng· i119. UM indoon or 1111t. fooy to hci119 ••• t1t cl11011. Men's & Wtm~n's Sunglasses '. ' You~I" , 1 Choice 49c lonsonol l'ghter Fuel ' l Beat tor any ..• 3·3~ pr11hrv11k. '·11. $1 00 & $200 Values on Jewelry New gl.a•l111 -1111 .,jftl~~· laces, ..... 1111, bN·' 911 ~letJ,. pln1;• ... 11, wf1tt·· --h!119 ""'' -i-1111&. Mak• wft .m I.Mo yo11,..lf,-: lorglfll, · Old World Map Novelty Desk Accessories ~·;7; Anroct\w• ••· liqo.ie f lobe, -Ill• potl &. pencil, cit .. NII• bo•,,...... cil wdd}', tletli: '"''"" Reg. 39' fine Pelnt Lindy Pens •27c ,WrilDI 011 .-1 .,,.ryihlng. Tip -• liriet -" If cop 11 Iott. l1U1111uit ....,.i ... -nl 1Up1 •r .. ,. ~ Mol.1 fotty tnw ,_ 111 S d.Uci· •"• f!o.,.n, In d11tl111 111ochl110, I ' poly ~ bof • , .... , .. "°""' 11 .. -..... .,....,,. Woven Italian Ponchos s499 , ........ :ot•- frfnaod -n JCl(C!llOrtl poft• d11i11-Hd.. li(IM Ofttl c:olw co.birtOtlOM,. OllO Jira fih alll A11 ttolian ...... Boy's Short Sets 99c loys' l11it fl>P 011d coonlinoting box or 1hort1. SI••• 1 ·3 °"" 1.7. $2495 Value Cobra 16-lnch Slde•alk Bike ~·:H:.:s17aa G.14 •otollic ..... Sharp ;'Charier'' Plaid Pants o..4 looki111 pol· torM lo popular (01· •••· Co11forloblo 11111114 of 60~. •<1yo11, 11" .,.,.,,. " 22" c.tto11.l-l6. Girl's No-Iron lnafore Dress 2: s300 Choico of oltfG(ti,,. 11)'11• lo pop11lor 111-C91ori • c .. 1, c..t..,.blo. Siu. 1-~ • .,..,~ , Boys' or Girls' Dragster Bike ~;~:~~ s35aa •tta" , •• , ... tfrlt' I M-ri1a lrl•~t11 .... ,.. $699 Value!· Popular 23-lnch Skate Board "Spiphonott.• Iii •111111 celor ,.1, -· 37 h9f)'loM M-,.. .12 chortl lttyt, !It. -Mot. 1411. s4a1 Sl111k horclwoodf,rflfllluol "'""•' ClfthlffH th9•is H (!. lhlfleecffu S..nt"'• II~ wlwtla. N• I-ltell \Mri11t1I New! Anti-Bacterial Sudsing Skin .,_,.., Cleanser 160uoc~l 83 $400 Crerne de Chanillly ~ s300 ' I •. .Veterans Return For New Season 'Lassie' Ii HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The '·l..a.~ie" television serif! s began 1t!> l'Tttl year of pro- d!K'tion for CW, EDl'l'OR'S NOTE-You con't ttU the TV plaYffS withoui a scorecard. He~'• OM /Of' th.t upcoming iea- BOft. The player ltneup, it seems is mo.stlJI c vtteran one. By JERRY BUCK HOLLYWOOD (AP) -If seniority Is an asset in television., then surely this coming seasoa must ro down as lhe Year of the Return of tbe Old Dependables. "GRANTS BRADFORD HOUSE" s p Your Femi1y Rest•urant SAT.-SUN.-MON.-WED. HITES ln the cuts ol the new seriu are at least 2 4 perfonnttts .t..o starred or --lk peered regular:ly in ~lhow1 to tho pa'1.. Altog<lher. they add up to 40 series, many ol whid\ were long-running successes and a few of which are still on the air. Among them are winners of 15 Emmys, with Don Knotts and Rod Serling accounting for five each. Mary Tyler Moort has two and Dennis Weaver, Damy 'Ibomas and Jack Klugman have one each. So many veteran performers are returning in the same year that lbe networks are striving harder than ever for the at- tention of yoong adults. A number of new personalities are being give.a DU;jor starring roles, however, and some familiar personalities will be seen in unfamil iar sur· roundings. ,,,,. .-.--... --;,--, I ,-,,-r,--,-,._.--.-.,-----; ,-.i-ir--;--.• -~ .-----; -, >" ,-, .,. • -•;.,.. • ·,. ....--.. ·...- Brother Act Dick (left) and Tom Smothers communicate com~ edy and music on "The Smothers Brothers Summer Sbow" tonight at 10 on ABC. Channel 7. t Fiv e Hard Tickets I Dozen Shows Available in NY By JACK CAVER dlcatlon ol going through the ··noom Service" and "Joy." t1ummer. Old 11tandbys include "The NEW YORK (UPI) -1'llis Recent arrlvall that have F'«11t13flck1!' now In Ua 10tb aummtr's visitors lo the city c&ught on are ''Awnke and )'ear; "You're a 'liood Marr,.. can C'Ollnt on at least a doi.en Sing," "P:,leUe," "The E!fcc l Charlle Drown!' "AduptaUon- Broedway shows b eing of Gamma Rays on Man-in-Next" "The Boys in the available, which is about the the-Moon Marigolds." "The sand," "Jacques Brei is Alive ·~recent ye.an. Last Sweet Daya of Isaac," and Well and Livi ng in Paris," 'nitre a re three or four "The Me Nobody Knows," and "Oh! Culcut ta ." others that may or may not ,_;,..;,..;,;.;...;..;.;.;;;;:;,..;;;;;;.;;;;.....;;~....;;... ______ ., remain 4nUI Labor Day, depending upon whether their bullne5$ slays al a le vel to permit survival. There are five shows, four from tbe season just ended, for which tickets are difficult to get. It i.s best to order tickets by meil in advance of arrival in the case of "Ap- plau9e." "Coco,'' "Company," "Hair" and "Last of the Red Hot Lovers.'' F---" SOUTH COAST a11m OX PLAZA THEATllE CMPOl!l!IOll Sin Q!:r FfW!YIY at Bristo l • 548·2711 CONTINUOUS DAILY AT J:lO P'.M. ... " '' ' . \l.\l \\I SI .IOllN Ill 'SIO~ R \(.)l I l \\ l I ( 11 \I) R \ HRI l KINRll)(,f E c I .4 L STEAK DINNER 2 ·~~· .. $300 Andy Griffith. fur instance,-------------~~-~~-­ will not be back in a com. "liair'' i:t the sel l -o ut holdover from a previous season. In its third year, it still plays to capacity every week, and the advaoce saJe remains heavy. l. La· \ S11"¥.4 with tot5ff 9•••11 •1t!1t4, tft•it• •f .,,.Hiflof, onio11 ri1191. f...,11c;h f'rie4 pot•tff•, itet roll• 11MI butt.•. SINGLE DINNER-$2.lS GRANTS HUNTINGTON BEACH BROOKHURST And ADAMS • ANNOUNCING • THE OPENING OF FEATURING COCKTAILS • BUFFET LUNCHES DINNERS -ITALIAN & AMERICAN DANCING NIGHTLY "EDNA" AT THE PIANO BAR! Please Come In and Meet Your Hosts: RICHARD & GEORGE RICHARD'S YlllA VIDA 719 W. 19th STREET COSTA MESA (lltut '9 lllttw Im, Mkl.I OPIN ll:OI A.M. TIU t:tt A.M. fort.able bucolic setting as he was for eight years, but in- stead will be running a private school in ''Headmaster." Hls former series, renamed ••Mayberry R.F.D .. " finished last season fourth in populari- ty. Lloyd Bridges, who checked in his swim fins from "Sea Hunl" a few years ago, is an airport manager in his fourth series, "Sen Francisco International," a part of the "Foor in One'' package. nm Conway's new Sunday n;ght variety boor will be his fifth time up, always as the s em e bumbling character. First, he was on the Steve Allen show. then "McHale's Navy," then "Rango, •• and finally. '"lbe Tim Conway Show.'' Another graduate or the Allen troupe, Don Knotts. headlines his own comedy bout. He won five Enunys '"' his portrayal of Deputy Barney Fife Cll "The Andy Griffith Show.'' De:ruUs Weaver. an Emmy winner as Chester o n "Gunsmoke," is pramoted to New Me1ico marshal in his new show, "McCloud,'' also a segment of "Four in One." After the Western, he tried "Kentucky Jo n es'' and ''Gentle Ben." Leslie Nielsen. finishing up In "'Ibe Prot«tqs" segment. of .. 1be Gokl Ones," becomes the heretofore unseen Bracken 1n "Bracken's Worid.." He also was 1n "The New Breed" and "Peyton Place." NOW PLAYING ONLY ON CABLEVISION NEWPORT ' MON. THRU FRl.-9 P.M. ALSO SAT.·SUN. 6 P.M. MISSION VIEJO, MON.· WED.· FRI. AT 9 P.M. NEVER BEFORE ON WEST COAST TV' THE ORIGINAL, UNCUT CLASSIC. STARTING MON. AUG. 10th "INTOLERANCE" DIRECTED BY D. W. GRIF FITH CABLEVISION CHANNEL 3 CALL 642·3260 GET "HOOKED" ON THE CABLE! YOUR FAMILY WILL ENJOY EVERY MINUTE OF IT. ' INSTALLATION ONLY $14.9S MONTHLY SERVICE $6.50 "THERE'S MORE TO SEE ON CABLE TV !" • Others that are not difficult to get into but w h I c h are virtually certain to r u n through the summer are: . •' ' ~ \,; ~.---.~~""·· NO ONl UNDll: 11 ADMlnl D SHOWN at' 1,30 . 3,20 • 5,10. 7,00 • a,50 · 10,40 'Royal Hunt of Su11 ' Final A uditions .Set "Butterflies Are Free, ' ' "01lld's Play," ''Fiddler on li..~-------------------.1 the Roof," "Hello, Dolly! (now with Ethel ~1erman). ''Man Final auditions for "The men and two women. of La Mandia," "Promises, Royal Hunt or the Sun," Readings are scheduled fo r Promises," '''Pur!ie" and the opening show for the 1970-7 p.m. in the school on Park "ln6." 71 season at the Laguna Avenue four blocks east af Others current at t his M Ito Pl h ·u be coast Highway. writing are "Borstal Boy," ou n ay ouse, wt "The Boy Friend," "Forty held Friday evening in the "The &lyal Hunt of the Carats" and "Plaza Suite ... Laguna Beach High School Sun," which opens Sept. %2 While the off-Broadway auditorium . ror four weekends, is a theater Is Jess predlctable, il Director Mat Reiu is seek-dramati z.alion of Pizarro's has a sizea ble lineup of sturdy ing actors and actresses with conquest of Peru. attractions that give every in- dance and/or mime experience lfiiiii~~-=:=~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.;i;;;;..i;.,~I for leading and su pporting w· roles. The cast calls for 30 ttrf TIHTQ 'Shot Dark' 2to~ ~:!:2~wy. EXCLUSIVE AREA SHOWING All Ag.1 Admitted Phone 673·6260 Tryouts Set At Irvine The opening show or the I new season for the Irvine Community Theater will be Marcel Achard 's comedy, ''A Shol in the Dark," Y:hich will be directed by Gc>rdon Yeaton. Audillons will be held from 1 to 5 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 8 and 9, hi the Island House al Fashion Jsland in Newport Beach. Roles are available for five men ages 30 ta 60 and two women in the 20 to <15 age bracket. A stage manager and lechnical personnel also are needed. ''A Shot in the Dark" will open Sept. ll at ·the Corona del J\lar fligh School l,ittle Theater and will be on stage Thursdays through Saturdays for three weeks. further ih- fonnation may be acquired by calling 8JJ--0793. THE LUXURIOUS NEW BAlBf>A ~~;o:T::_:H:.:E.ATR E HOllll Of llOCICINO CHAii lOGIS f 70! LAST 8Al80.\ Bt\ID. \ V,..BALIOA PENlMSUlA· 67J·41MI j/ NOW I NDS TUESDAY EXCLUSIVI HA ltlOlt A•lA SHOWING Michael Caine Cliff Robert1on Henry Fond• -J11dith Crid FROM PROOUCIR Of "T HI DlltTY DOHN"! ALSO -IN COLOR PEIER SEUO-. IN "I LOVE YOU, AllCf 8. TOKIAS" Coron• del Ma r 11MEHAWlllANS• PIUOMtlltl lllltOAOllMElltTI 111rt L•"'•ll•r e 0..11 Mtrlin "AlllPOllT" 101 C1'9r • PltlMlli!ltlE ENGAGEMENT! • ''WOOOITOClt" IRJ Color .. "'LAST SUMMl!ll" 011 CO!lr • llll<I« II Mltlt 11 Wllb P1r1.l1 • llXCLUSl\11! SHOWING! Mkh111 C.1111 • CUff Jl•M"- "'TWO LATl: TKE HEJIO" "THE LOSIEllS" !It) Coklr tinder ,, Mutt 81 Wllll ,, ... .,. Cl!11t .. ,,_. • s111r11, ,,.,.,L11111 "TWO MULES P'Oll SISTlllt SARA" (QP) Ctklr J I-51 .. 111 • OU11 Mt r11n "I AlltDlllLO"' Ctt.r PltlMlllltll •NGAOllMl!:NT! "tllTTllltO iTRAIOHT'' tltl C111H' "OOOOlYll COLUMIUS" 1111 Ctttr ....;;;=~ UM'tr 11 Mull It Wffll 1'1rt11! •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -~.) •XCLVSIY• 5HOWIN0t C~•rttell H•IDn "l l!HIATH TH• P'LAM•T 01'" TH .. A.-lil" (01 Ctlo• ''Tllli QAMIS" (0 1 C•lt-r •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• --··-"'1-'1Jf Alt~lltt S~w "SW•O•H HIAYIH ANO lolELL" on "HAK•D VHDlillt L•ATH•ll:" fltl UM ... ti WHI lit .. I • Atmlll• Will DI__,.. AH C.itr SM., "SLlli .. llrfO l•AOrY" COi Hlll•J Miiii "JM llAll.Cll Ofl TMI CASTAWAYS" (01 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• EXCLUSIVE ORANGE C1lUrlTY ENGAGEMEl'IT .MOJI. TMIV Jll,»IDl'.M. SAT. l 1J0.2140-J1.SO-S& 101'.M. SUM. 1-l:10.Jtft.71JO.t ... 1'.M.. IS.QUITE SIMPLY, .::· THE BEST AMERICAN FILM .t-l'VE SEEN THIS YEAR!" :-:'7~7 ~ -...---. ..... • IElll!J.fU u .... ~-?-?­\~-.... ---lllfll------mmL•ll.lll,mlll'f:•~ Ml811',_.11a.l111111:11MTlllll: •mi 1 1D011 WB.LIS .11 Ell ~11111Bf Pmllll'•raUYllMlll~ IETllY•..S W&-_,.._.._,,_lllllT-11--1- NQ RESERVED SEATS · FREE PARKING EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT t he ul timate trip ,-...-~· ..... ------------------- ' AUGUST I I • • u I• " C t. l" DAYTIME MOVIES 1:30. (t) "MMt ... """ lllt ...... (_ .. ) 'S!-hlty ••••• "" C.rholin, M1oM11114 CMlf, Udlt ..... 1:00."llffM v....-(drtrn1) '32-JJirltn• Dittrich. C.ry G11nt. t.IO G "Aa Y•1 Al Y11 Fwl" (drt· 1111) '12. -Montr woo11tr, *" -.. m "TtMI Ill ........ (dr1M1) '!59-Mlclty hDMJ, MIHllll Vin DDrtft, Mil TanN. l:Ge • .,...., ... "" C..." (4r•- MI) ,7 -MMI Dlht, Htrbt1 M1D111n. m • ...., .... <"""" 1' - W11, l. T. StMM. ~. (C') "TIN Iii s.w.• (oo~) 'Jf-Ju11ttt1 Grtc111, st111111t1 lorill . • "'CMtiC'" (tlflfl\1) '41-.ltllltl i1i'•11, ltrMr• hi G1dde' WDNf1 ., .. l<ll • IC! "I-«-1 ... -Jihti ,.,.., Mtul'Mlt O'Km. For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PILOT '.I CAN SEE IT' -Mark DeLuca .(right) shows young Jim Spiers !he road I<> hfe. rn ~e San. C1emente Comi:nuntty Theater production of "The Fantasticks," v.•h1ch gives final performances tonight throu&b Saturday. Theater Notes 'Impossible Years' Opens; 'Fantasticks' Closes Run ' TV Color Tapes Due On Market NEW YORK !UPI) 1bere'• 1n old llhow bu:llneu arkm that H • forr:Mt Is weeetdul, wait a while r.nd uy Jt again. Tltlt lt "Son ol Success." Now on doorstep b I.he newest developnent in home entertainment. It could bt called "Son of TV." Eleclrooic 1ntereata on three continents an engaged In a acienunc race lo produce the "way lo play" pre-recorded col« tapes fat home .lhow'ing. "This is Ole most 1i171ific1nl deve.lopment In home en- tertainment •ince the In· trodtx.tion of color TV two deca<iH ago," aays Tom McDermott, RCA vice pre!i· dent in charae ol prOlf•m· ming for lts Stlecta-Vision sys- tem. · · McDermott enviSOM half~ hour color tapes covering a broad rqe atli including l sports hlJhlights, educ1Uon, drama, con;iedy, science, history and many other in- terests. ,.. . ~ ' IUAl11z ~ -." By TOM TmJS Of tile D.il, "1191 11dt return ol former resident director James Brittain to the Long Btach Playhouse. Others in the cast are Marilyn Wellman, Bonnie Kate , John f.1ackay, Scott W 11111 ma , Grace Shaw, Jerry lovlnc. Ed Chri!tiansen, Fran Muns<>. Kim Tondreault, 0 a n i e I Echeyoyen and Sh a n n on Smithson . Stagner in the ""'.Ile o( Nancy . 1. DISNIT PICTUIU Ben Wrigley remains In the 1to11111 M0•111 • , ITIJ,HAIOI l'OWlll MCl.'lt actors and actT~ses in community theat.er hate to see that final curtain come down -especially when the show Is highly successful and 1 lot of fun lo boot . prlnc1p1J role of Fagin. '" "BOATNIK"' Performances are g i v en nightly, e1cept Monday, at the "THE 'RAscA.L'' playhouse under the joint c..tt.-Deity 1 r.M. sponsorship of the Lyric Operal~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~'.11 Few of lhem, however, are able to do much about it, apart from ~adlng for lhe same part! when the play is done by another theater groop. Performances will be given Fridays and Saturdays at the plush horseshoe theater al 5021 E. Anaheim St.. Long Beaeh. Reservations are being taken Ll (2JJ) 433-0536. ·* AS90Ciatlon. Tickets may be]• reserved by calling 494--0743. * Also In the musical vein Two of lhe more fortunate ones are Stanley Bell and Miriam Kaiser, who playtd the fruslraled parenl5 in "The Impossible Years" at the Hun- tington Beach Playhouse last season. This proved to be the local group's all-time box of. lice champ. is "The Fantasticks," which ck!Aes out its six-week run with ti n 1 I pcrformance!I: tonight through Saturday at tbe San Clemente Community Theater. John Haggard is directing with Dori!! Shields Now playing ils sixth week serving as musice1l advisor. at the Laguna Moulton Even a record 13 f!erformances didn't ~tiate lhis pair, ao last mcnth thev htadtd for the Long Beach Community Playhouse and snaged the same roles in that thealer's verdon o( "impossible Ye1rs," which opens 1 111-weekend run m Frid1y. Jim Speirs, Eve Evans and Playhouse is the ambitious Mark DeLuca head the cast musical "Oliver," which of the musical at the Cabrillo resumed Tuesday night on a Playhouse. 202 Av e n Id a six-night-a-week basis. Cris Cabrillo, San Cle mente. Call Timmons dire c ts and 492-0465 for reservations. ehoreographs the production , while Jack Coleman is musical * director. Encoring tonight at South The "second cast" for the . Coast Repertory 's Costa Mesa show swings inlo action this theater is "Spoon River week with Gregory OSborne Anthology,'' wh>ch will play playing the title role of Oliver . oo Wednesdays and Thursdays Dennis Wheeler as the Artful for the nest four weeks, run- Dodger and Diana Claire ning in repertory with SCR's 'Il\e: opening marks the Charlie Chan Credited For Winters' Success NEW YORK (UPI I -"Il Charlie Chan. and I assumed seems like all Charlie Ch11n thi1 made me look inscrutable. need!! to sprtng back to life "When l walked in and they Is a warm, glowing television really got a look at me ror tube very late. at night." the first time they were ap- Roland \li inters said as he palled , but for some reason drummed on the table waiting t was hired . Certain ad- for a glass of tomato juice. justmenls had to be made "But I never watch him." for the nose. I alwayS"'looktd Winters added. "I've had m1 straighl into the camera, and fill of him." when I was talking to someone Winters if a big man with at the side 1 just mo vtd my a big nMe, and ll's hard to eyes. I never say half the imagine him playing the part people I was supposed to be of Charlie Chan in a half talking to but at _least my dozen movies. He was the nose didn't give me away." third and last of the movie Those twilight Chan movies Charlie Chans, and he'll never were each shot In a week be allowed lo fotget the role or two. but Winters still feels despite hi" appearance in their effects. Each night when some 70 other movies, dozens he~ comes on stage al the of television shows and several Imperial Theatre in "Minnie 's plays. Boys" the crowd reaponds "They had never seen me with applause. "I know that when I wu invited lo go out I'd probably be In some other to Hollywood tor a screen line of work today," Winters test," Winters said. "J'd sent said, "if it hadn't been for them a picture, of course. tho!.e Chan movie!." but it didn 't bear the slightest - resemblance to me. I '>'·ore 1 hat a·nd a mustache in it and squinted my eyes because, yoo see. I knew they were looking for someone to play Make a Sharp Trade; Use AT THE ENTRANCE TO FABULOUS LIOO ISLE EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT current attraction, "Rosen- crantz and Guilderstern are Dead." The latter is on stage Fridays, Saturdays and Sun- days. Martin Benson directs ''Rosen cran tz and Gulldenstem," which features Michael DougllS!I and Don Tud'le In the title role!! of the Shalespearean nonentities. "Spoon Ri\·er'' is under the direction ol Ron Thronson. Both productions are being presented al SCR's Third Step Theater. 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reservations are being taken 11t the. box offict , 6'1·1363. * A pair o( con'k.Pof'ary one· act!, "The Am;;\~an Dream'' and ''Slots." is the rare a.I the new Nifty Theater in Hun- tington Bead'!. Both a r e directed by Ellk>t. Fried and will run Fridays and Saturdays through Aug. 22. Dan McCarthy, J u 11 e Hedget, Pally Brown. Larry Shlrtz and Susan Fried comp. rise the cast of "American Dream," while Miss Fried doubles as a Las Vegas call girl In "Slots." Performanct3 are b e I n I given 11 Lhe theater. 307 Main St., Hunlinrtoo Be a ch . Further i'1formation a n d reservations may be obtained by calling ~9151. LOOK TO EDWARDS LUXURIOUS CINEMAS FOR THE BEST SHOWS TONIGHT • • •RAC: .. • . "'T l:LLI • • • • ..... CO••T NWY ........ Ot•eo """"· •47·•eo• • HIU'lflHOTOH •LACH JACl LIMlllON e SANDT DINNIS .. ''Tlie Out Of Towner•~' ···MATINEES DAILY ••• RATED "GP" NOW AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS W"!bb r!•PlUSE AllAtMA<lllll,... '··~" Ohc .................. N! ~---­....,.:---....:.-= ..._ ..... -~· ...... --- --arl/!IMJi!.•·.:-al11$E.l·!-=::-; ... #i:'r.ic~:.::::_::._.,; ___ ~:~-ii ~ 3rd EXClUSIVE WEEK! RATED "GP" Call: 546-3102 A• 4-UflOtHlll , .... 111 OltcntlN ...... lft JlllT LIWIS IN "WHICH WAY •• ••AC~I .• l:LLI• •• TO THE FRONT" (G) ... l,ltrn'IN•TON a....CM. ••7-••o• HELD OVER· POSITIVELY ENDS TUES. StAllTS WED., AUG . 12 "'M•A•s•H ' is what the new freedom of th1 sc:re1n h tH about," STARS, Elliott Gould EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUN'TY . SH0\\1NGll Donald Sutherl•nd ALSO IYAN O'NIAL IN THE GAMES ' ' ' ' ·• • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' ·. • • . • • l • • I ' : I i I I . I ·- I I I Wfdnrsd.Q, A11911St 5, 1970 Wfdnttc11r, Aug1nt S, 1970 DAIL V PILOT , 't Becoming Syndicated Columnist Hard, ·Not lmpos~ible ! BJ JOYCI LA.IN wort ~self ls poesiblc, but that '°'11t col)q:e1 olftr <'«· )'OU tdJ wb.lch ones offer home Sluity," published by the Na-:rpeclall.n degree for \eachers. ye1rs ol study beyond the A.ssodation ot Stile CoReae;,. barely so. respondf:nce c«lrteJ that ca~ stucb' progl'IDU -V, O'C., Uonal VniveQ)j/::y n1kl.r1 Dots thia: take Jess than four hlehe.lor"s, and some prt> and UntveralUes, One DuPont Dear Joyot.: l am ~.1in-Newspapers syndicates are ry regular colltge cndits. Can Da.)'ton AlloclaUoo, is book you years -K. E.. Fulterton, grams a~ designed to prepare Circle, Suite 700, Wuhington,,, temted ID wrltln& a ,...,_., l~ted Ui .... ro1 boob. i.. Two ol Ille best ...,,.. .,. cam. Foe Instance, tbl.s would be l}'Ddicated newspaper felbn.. dlJdlna Editoc_and Publilber'i the U. ot Otlahoma Md want. Send :!O etnts to the Jt takes more than four one _avenue for the «:tired ~~ ~::.i~ stamped. her!: 1 Annua1 Syndicate Dlrtctory, S)'racute U (New Yort), but &.S&odatkin •t OM DuPont year& if he b rtferrln1 to prol~al perton wJ!o wants ~.~-.. you i!:!!,:~ m m.:: and Writer's Market. Var»us thtre are more than to other Cirdt, Suite *'· Washincton, the new teaching Jpeclallst to h~ach 1n a comm111lty col· Send your carter topic &uf• uu-.. writers' guides discuss the ac<ndited instltuUons offerin& ~;· c:!r 1i:_ new jl.Sije b degree which stand! between · Iese. gestlons to Joyce Lain at thlJ vvioUS syndicates! llow do mechanics. Your librarian can callegt credits throueh COi'· the master's and the doctor'"· A free list of instltut.ions newspaper. Sorry, but th• I .:o .Jboul 1ettirc DlY work1-~heilp~you~. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.J!"'~poodeoct~~~-~~~"~The~ille~ar~Jo~yce~: ~M~y~...,~~m~en-~~degr~,.~oo~~th~e~prol~esd~on~a~I ~of~f~.,-~ln~g~lbe~~·~·w~dq~ree~~isjvol~wn~e~of~m~a~ll~m~a~k~•~a syndicated! -t.m. S. R. Otar Joyce: 1 have heard Guide to ~ lioned aomethin1 about a new scale. It requires 1t least two avallable from the American per!Mal replies lmpOaible. Pittsburgh Because of the competition for newspaper il)ace. the e11;se or geu.ine your work syn- dk:aWd is comparable to loading the Astrodnme 00 I yak's blct and movin& it to BoQm. But doo 't let me disonurait: you. Syndicates tfinns w h I c b promote and sell featurea: are always scouting for iresb. cmUcs to newspapers) are always scooting for fresh , original material. Unless yoo have an umisually marketable tdea, however, ind a~ a sub- ject authority (if the topie requires expertise) or have a journalism background, your chances a.re slight. For es.- ample, McNaugbt. the syn- dicate which distributes my column, receives thousands or feature ideal! each year, from wh>cb perhaps ball...a-doieD are selected for syndication. U you think you've got a ja<it-pot , ....... pr.-! (by mail or in pe.rsoo) adequate samples l.o syndicates to mow how consistently you can pn>- vide mater i 1 l. Syndicates mW a sizable investment in their •·c:cotributors" and want to know that you'tt a pro, can meet deadlines and won't "10 dry." Syndicating your Cigarettes Same .4s Laxatit'e? By Pet.er J. StelJlcroba De:ar Dr. Steioc:rdm: Please settle an argument that is atways brought up in out of. fice of !'Al women: p)ea.,e try to set us straight on t be following : ls Ill oPeo window a menace: or an asset in a stu{fy, smoky oft.ice? Do drafts cause colds? When I cold J present will fresh air tnne11 it! H ooe hm rilritis will an open wln- DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE dow aggravate it? Can a person be aJlergic to cold? As you probably h a v e guessed. there is a running feud between those who want windoWs open and those who don't. Just how dangerous it is to feel a draft? 1'ban.l you-(One of Ille girls) C-Ommeol: U I ...,. a judge, whatever verdict I banded down in thia ccdroveny would bs appealed to a higher court by each person's own prejudices and beliels. Likewise, what I say as a docl« will be accepted or rejected. depending upon your OWD uperlences and coo victions. 'Tllere are people who sleep with closed windows because they th.ink "'night air is bad." (Y°" can't convince them otherwist.) There are people wbo will surely get. the sniffles when subjected to tbe slightest draft. (Imagination? Not so. I can walk out' into a snowstorm and I e e I un. comfortable. But when 1 s.it in a warm room and cold draft sneaks up my leg. I'm • cmdklate ror a cold. MEDICALE'ITF.s (Replies to Readers) Dear Dr. Steincrohn: For 1 man of S5, wtiidl 1 consider the ~ of life, what juices are good? Whal vegetable.a! ShoUld we omit meats? - Mr. c. COMMENT: There is no JPIC!Hc calendar age that marU the change of life. If 7c.1 .-e as well as you used to be, I eee no need to change ywr die~ Juloel, vegetables, zneatl, etc., m'f I l 111 ~· Dear Dr. ~: ls the 111Ml<il1( of dprel1tl any value u a luaUw:?-Mr. D. COMMENT: Soa>e patleota bave told mt thlt a dlmtte aft.er br!.akf•• ad.a tbat wq. Bot. "juol eallll(" -that lor""""'1ol<...,too. Even tt dgarel1tl act .. 1 lualJve, the price la too high. """'lderfng the lwmlul effect! of "'°'= o0 heart and lllTlp. All • stmple switch, it ml&)lt be helter to aubotituta pnoes or 1111 for dpr«ta. • I _ .. ~· -~{~· -~~ • KlEDIEX "llOltique" Friskies 'Buffet' Facial Tissue J Ds "Strawberry" ""' r... 'Dry Look' 'illtttt • "Maxim" nEUE DIJED JAii la.Jar Hair Sfl1' '• t ....... .- llSllll Cellee CAT FOOD 1 hllltc aO ..,. lll c ~iw188 - lltllolY At-4 n. Stn ..-... -All Fla.,. Paisl17 " o .. , TH• . . \/ !~IL 1-0c 19c ~ • C11 ~ "Dial'' SOAP F tr1tnf DI t1lcl Prlllclill! m1ste 1 c;harge ; Coca Cola -hlloSiD Grass Shears la.a: rife tmle free -hsJat· """'th. kf2lt1 .98 RMON "Eye Works" tUUM COMPACT 3 BnMGl:lslnrs;l:illrule '"'"" Calo llason. lfew SloU Bu ...0 3 eiPes. HYJ)Hl:ler- 1e!lic. A-ssl r.otcrs ill:lllMrr w 'Pl~ hlJ3a 75 Sfadtl"'' ,~..: "Beauty ' Essentials" ., ....... ""' lf'MW Sil'litgs Ol tbe sd C<1! fil- •Driles W!IMft fel1 .. k> lrrff lll:it com-- ,._ -· ""' ""' -s.Jo:t ""'*-""'-lo,..,..~ .. $11'1 CINCn•. Dl'J-SUI Cttmer l'f.l .!JI 2 00 IOC.5.51 3 50 IJ.tz.Sizl • 1Z-v.Sill • - "Pacqain's" Lotion For Eltra 1i1J Skl1 • • • BBC ErtlJ.Odl tit ~II and sattBI *J skill. W1llt FRt:E ~. Iii IL -~ -------- l, _-~!· L----:c--t I 60 Ft Garden Hose -JIHZIFllr ::."sit·~= 5 98 -11111 b i..ty ta:;s.,,. plinjS. • Count Vasya VODKA 2 69 II Prf. Fillll WIS l.11 Sm 5lllc • Samuel E. Webster lllNDID AMEii<.&• 3 49 WHISKEY II Prf. fiftll Wn l .D Sm 50c • MacKinnons llDIDID KOTCH 3 49 WHISKY h Ptf. Flrtt Was lJ1 Sift S'Ot • Davenport ~~Hll WH 111Sm51< 2 • 69 OhLStillwell ~' ~~~:,~!'sml0c3.99 Julio Gomez TEQUILA 3 79 ID Prf. Fifi.II Was C.ll Sm J•c • Gren~da Bay ~~l~AMllR 2 99 Ill Prf. Fiftll Wis 3.19 S1•c lie • DRUG STORES OPlll 9 A.M. TO 10 P .M. -7 DAYS A WEIK NIWPOn llACH HUNTIM•TON llACH .&DAMI AHD l•ooteHUlln HUNTIN•TON l lACH J~•INIDALI AHD IDINOI• . .... _ ..... . -S .... ll<f'«. tNe Red or SM. I ·111~9'1'11 Created Just For The Younger Girl Cologne •""""kl• Mist 1 69 •Iii• Ulr • '"" ..... ,, [1~• • . •Deodorant SPRAT C 1l. (1cll • Hand&Body LOTION I 1r. titll 99c 99c • Creme Rinse 1 · 15 SPRAY DH Eicll • • Bubble Bath 115 Cko1sc lr1113 lra1r11cts. (1tll • r:i-----------Shampoo ' .. N,,••11ns ... o.11n1sm.. i B"'o'"d'yh'po'o''w"d'·er. ',' 25c OFF~:= ~' ' Tew•r4 P9rth•s• of ••Y ••t . I of'"' "T••n1 'n ,,,,.. I llL 99c I n1n11 •••erti1ff ••••e. 1 £xii I Offer 11,im Upst 11. 1971 I ~ 24" Bar-8-Cue Chrome ~lalOOadiusl· able grill, 3 pos11Jcil ~pit '!Wf!h idjuslable 9 aa· lorks. Sturdy lqs. M!Jtor included. Rt&. II.ti • 121/2" Table BBQ • ' I r. ~ :· ' ~ " ') .- ~ • • .. .Still f;()f)fj C:ftf~ Former President Harry Trumao leaves the ballot booth alter voting in the Mt.sour! Primary Tuesday, tn Independence. Mike Westwood (left) a friend of Truman's holds the curtain aside. Berlin Wall· Now 9· Years ; I Wa y of · Life to Many Kids BERLIN (AP) 1 1bey are away . So we could go to Ea.st th< Wall Children ol Berlin. Berlin." 'Ibey grow up in the shadow Ouistina'9 family apart. of ~ Berlin Wall, climbing ment lookt over the Wall near it, bouncing balls of£ it. They a border crossing point where even walk on some sections. West Germans, but not West It has been there nine years Berliners. may go to East and ne:a:t Thursday ~ its an. Berlin. She said that the East nlveraa~~t Germany Gtrman border guards often befan rvct.ions Au1. 13, wave to her. What does 1he 1911\, ietffug up a barrier lo _do keeJi lb cittzem trom neelng "I stick out my tongue. . . to 1'est Berlin, u thousands 1They are embarraaed." had done. When a .st rang er 11.p- F.« many or the, WaU proached, Christina was ~en it has been .there t preparing a picnic along wi~ all their lives. But they are some playmates. They sat 1n "tir," as the Germans say, tall grass against an auto sm.,.i. kinda fho,have a fresh repair shop. Thomas, 10, said, vl~nt and~are unafraid. ''The police .¢iued )JS out ~uzberi' ti one ol t~ from the stand over lhere. diltticu that nm along the They said it c.ould fall over." wdt Berlin aide.qi the Wall . The stand was used by Oll.Jdren aboUad there , The) Pre!ddent Nlron •n he llve!ln hieh-file new and oMI visited Berlin. ~ ln what ts largely a "Yoo know. they ooce shot worUis' diatrict. But they people here trying to get over c.ould be children from the Wall ," said another boy. Neukoeln farther soutb along "Over thert. Where that CIWS tbe Walt, or from Wedding ls." up north. One of these West Berlin Or Irom Pankow, Berlin boys had liffn a big firework! Ctnttr or the district of Trtlp-show on East Berlin televl!ion. tow on the Eut Berlin side The East German Communist of the barrier Ulat is backed leader, Walter Ulbticht• was up by a "death strip," 14,000 there. East German a o Id I er s , "The DOR East Gtrmany Buniers, towers and guar;:d does not bother me ," another dop. said. "I have oolored books ~ chikiren play near the from there. And stamps. And tO-flK>t high c on c t e t e Ulbricht b oot 90 bad." structure Joqt over it. cJlmb "Stop that stuff about in and O'jt d.. atilpdoneil can lflbricht. When he comes on or ~Id l pkftlC in a v1cant TV .. , turn It off." Jot "But the people over there ~at does Orristina: who •are Germans too." ls It, .think abotrt the Will "No. they are not. They "l would say, K ml!st ao. are Berliners. l am 1 ' ' Be rlitJer." You could see the Easl Berlin televlaion tower shining in the su.n on the other side. At a nearby school workmen were repairing somelhing. East German border guarQ.s with submachine guns and an armored car lolled nearby making 1Ure the workers dfd not. make a dash to the Welt leroll the "death strip. u A dlurch ~I tolled. The 90Und came from East Berlin, but West Berliners who were ooce its parishioners could hear. The Wall Is jagged here. Rusted barbed wire, debris thrown on top. Beyond there is newly made barrier, round at the top. Where there are two walls, boys climb atop the okt one and walk along hanrtng on to "Y" frames once U1ed for barbed wire. What do the East Germans do ·"J'hey yell . But we ignore thdm." The bells ol the church peal again. Street cleaners clean what Is left of a street where it runs past \\'est Berlin hou8e! tha~ front the wall. On a viewlng at.and three boys sit and talk. A man walks up, looks across to East Berlin. Patien ts in a red brick hosp ital look back, Angelika, 9, said she would like to go lo £ast Berlin someUme. "The wall should come down," she declaffit finn\y. Beale, 6, sakf : "My aunt lives over there." Sbe cannot go "over there." She knows ii but she does not understand wtly. Fear Told ForFult1re ~hscenity Not Really Bad ~,45HfNGTON .(AP) -The that exposure to pornogra~y Preiident'a Commiuion on ope\'1t.es as a cauae of milcQn. Porit:>graphY ·hu reaclted t.he duct in either youlhl or t.entiuve conclusion that adults." obscftl't1 dots bot cau• iatit The commission's report is crt• or cor~pt younPW:rs' not to be released until late motelt. -I thia month, but most of I.be ntlng two oven1dln& first draft has been leaked fe effects of the current to 1 House: subcommittee that w1 . t f se1ual freedom Jn Is trying to wtdp up hearing.~ fi-~l:laobl and m1g11lna, to c.bfllenie tbe-find!np--nut the W draft f>l'epated by •otlt., the ... laalon •tall,.,,, 'r Olher major fiod1Jla1 in '"lllm b ~ evl<!Oft9e to mot> Jhao IOI Pll" ol the ?l:lhll~ of 'ropn obtalllid, by The . td ' • "" A119<fated Prw -au OQijjoct a nta act upon .-to revision or deletion from moral Character, 1tJU1.I orien-the 'flnll report:' taUOOlor atutu4Q." -WOfllen 11 wo)l ., men AtWY ' are "blahly attiultd" by ~ "llMtardl lndlcatt1 that films and erotic plctur~s. erottc l)lltertala do nol oon-T e 1 I • o!ltJI ohOwed dial trll1• -tq lht devefopm4ol of women lll!• 61 nol think they charlo\er dtilda, nor operate wel't' itOUlld actually ,,ere. •• 1 111nillca1i fac;tor )ti ••· -PoU!lUI CODMrvlU.u ore t1'oclal btblv\or or In ' crime. nol u •Ull)f -by por• ln 1wn, there ls no eVldtnct nogr1pbJ u llberal5. -Despite the arousal and ln 50me cuea Inc.reased •tJ· ua1 activity Jn the 24 hours after seeln& high.ly ervUc material. basic atlltudes and sexual patterns do not change . -ln general, 90 perot.'flt of couples aged 20 to 25 were aroused by erotic films in three studies, while between 3tr iM IO')>ercenf ol penona 40 to ~J.years ot •at were 1roosed by the ••me films. -·''lbere ar. no rec:orded lnltlnce1 qi auual qamstoo . -.Uanty,leobJlnilm,e•- hlblUonllm, or aexual abuse of childrtn 1t1tlbutable i. rffdln1 6r vlewtn1 erotic stimuli amooa the several hui>dred portlctponta In lht lftl•• .. per1men11 .... 1 ... ed." Tbe Ja.mainber preatdenllal colnmlulon of uperta ap- proved bJ Concna lwo years qo lo c:ooduct 1 la mllllon ' • WtclftffdQ', A119Hl 5, 1'70 DAILY Olltlf 17 LIGAL NO?ICI I.BOAL NO?ICE ' •I I I • l DAILY PILOT ... • ts • .,.p..1. 1970 i I c . 'r !f WE ~o.n cAiE · W!tE·R·E fOU;VE BEEN OR 'i.v tlA.T JQJ1 j E' i EEN .OFFIR,D' . re>d~E '~ ~ . \ )' • .. .. t. SURE TO GO IOR OUR OFFER! DON'T SIGN 4ttYOiDltflilH ANY DEAlf R DN A ~;'(" ;._ , . • • . NEW ~AR· UNTIL YOIJ .H~ VE BEEN QUOTED , ~.,,.,.ON F~~~ ,_,~Es: , · 1 ~~ ~ 4 ·•, --.---------..... ----..-.i.--llli'!"P ..... '!-'----... ----...,.------------... -----8 RAND .NEW 1970 CUSTOM RANCH .'.WAGON BRAND NEW 1910 .MUSTANG :.;.1 DOOR HAR!)TOP ., $2·499 plus tax & license ONLY ' S.3872 250 C.1.0. engine, fuel evaporated . · emission control system, whitewall ·tires. (OFOll135127) • ' . . Phone 546 -7076· . ' . SAVE HUNDREDS -. 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NFWJ4J. ·- $ .. 11· :g" ··3 ' ' . ' '65 MUSTANG CONY. •4 1p11d, pow1r tf11rin9 , radio, wll it.t walls. l ie. ZSJ 9.55. '68 FORD LTD V.t , tut<!. tr•111, f1ct. air, pow11 1l1•r, pwr (disc) brak11, r•dio, w/w tirt•, ¥iny1 roof, tint1d 91111, wh11I co¥.trs. Uc. VRG ft l. • USED TRUCKS· '68 DODGE v.AN Stick 1llift, r•dio, •• i1 1p1ci1I. #1151tl '63 FORD FlOO 6-c:yl., 1tick 1hift. l ie. tlOtD. '65 FORD F600 Stake l ie. No. l•Sl!if. '68 lnte.rnational Jeep l ie, XDC t94. . . '69 '66~DOD'GE DART ' . Statio11 Wagon •. 6 Cyl., auto. trans., r~dio, h1•t1r. Uc. SVU. lOO. ... •61 . ~~~.~·!~:.;, ~-~~~~... $1. 1·a· 6 ,;, ,..,.;,;.,;,,, , .... ""'''•· ... ; .. ,.... . . . . ' ''· w1w, whl. co ... , buck1t s11h. WOK246 .. ''8 ~~~°. .. X.~ •;" , .... ,,,.,;,,, $1:5' 94 , •• ., .;,do••, ,.d;o, '"'"••I•,;,.,, fi11t.td 9la11, wlo.111 coy•fl. l ie. VSY 6St. . '67 T·BIRD · Coupe v.a.. factory air, full lfOW•" radio, vinyl roof. l ie. TGY t9t. ,$2685 ' '65 ~.~,~~~~.~~t~moH< .,,,.;: $. ·119:5, ... •io11, f1cto'ry air conclrtlo11l119, P-•t tt•.,.. i119, t'•dlo, wllite w.tll. ti~t. ll:P~l 1 J '69 MUST ANG Mach'I V-1, 4 1p••d, powtt 1t1•r, pow1r ldi1cl br••••, radio, 1t1roo tapa, "''9'· l ie, ZO'f 14t. • WE BELIM OUR DOWN PAYMENT AND nRMS ARI TltE BEST AVAIL.tBLE. IF YOU CAN: DO .• ~; ... Sllf>W US! . ' . \ . . .. f t" r . . \ ' ' • •• ..... ., ,. .... ···--.... - W"""sday, •utust ~. 1970 II PJLOT-ADVOT!in • Trails . ··Eead to Outdoor Cooking · Amrian.· vacatlonel'I are «a the go. ln mobUe homes, bus· campers and camper unit. atop cars -and Jf an army traveb on its ltomach, 90 does ~sightseer. Travelers' appetites alway~il are hearty, and the trick ta to provlae1them appetizing mtal& with a mlnimlllD of effort. It'• a wmderful ldea to take. advanu,. of local produce available. at. roedltde stands. One simple lunch .-,,ao- companiment for a one dish supper' 1J approprla .. ly called Footlooae Salad. . , Romaine lettutt and field grown tomatoes are in plentiful supply now on most 'l'Oadstands. --You ean make · a quick stop at a market for a half-pound of bacon, combine the tllerils of the three foods .and -fOU will have 1 ht!lrty, delicioas concoction ~t ii perfect for-• Warrn-wea'ther eating. Nowhere is ingenuity put to a greater test than at the campfire, but with a little inventiveness campsite cookery can be as imaginative and interesting as any cuisine·prepared at home. The trick is to plan carefully, find effective recipes and use those witlt as few extraneous ingredlenta u possi- ble. Mo.st spices, with the e.1ception of salt, pepper, garijc salt and an herb or two, may be left at home when already seasoned condensed soups art used as the liquid in an all·ih<lne dish. Grand Canyon Goulash is a very good e.zamp1e of Imaginative camp cooldng. It combines meat, macaroni ·1 n d vegetables ID In a handj' skll~. Served wUh hard roU,, and salad, it Is aure to satisfy> even the hungriesl of. hungry campers. •. • Gaspe Ptninsula Chowder ls another all-in-one dish lhat will win plaudit.I for the campfire cook. lt hu the lang of onions, a winey v~getable-beef flavor and the goodness of Vienna saWJages. Choose recipes such as these which can be cooked and served In the same utensil. 'nlere are many others to bt fotJnd in various handbooks on camping. F0011.00SE SALAD I head of romaine lettuce 3 large ripe tom~toes 1h pound sliced· ~on Wash and dry the romaint leaves and keep them in a cool spot until ready to use. Peel the tomato:es lf you wish and cut into 1h inch slices. Cook the bacon until it is crisp and draln on absorbent paper ; keep warm. Arrange the lettuce leaves on a salad plate, make a circle of the sliced tomatoes in UH! cmler and arrange tht crisp slices ol bacon on the tomatoes. . Serve with French dreulng made with I labl-aalJ4 .,1, l lablefpoono vinegar (or t. lute), ~ teaspoon 1alt, , . GRAND CANYON GOULASH : ONE -DISH CAMP COOKERY \it teaspoon Tabasco pepper sauce, \.i teaspoon dried leaf tarragon or basil. Yield: 4 servings. GASPE PENINSULA CHOWDER 4 to 5 slices French bread 2 tablespoons softened butter Dash garlic powder 1 can (4 c>unci!S) Vienna sausages. drained t tablespoon butter or margarine l can (101n: ounces) condensed onion soup -1 can (I~ ounces) condensed vegetable and beef stockpot soup J. 'i{ soup cans water • ' . -. Spread both sides of brea d with sof- tened butter; sprinkle with garlic powder. In skillet. toast bread on both sides; r'elnove. Cut sausages in 1-lnch slices: brown in butter. Add soups and water. Heat: stir now and then. l o serve: place I slice toast M each bowl ; pour soup over toast. Makes 4 to 5 servings. GRAND CANYON GOULASH I pound ground bee{ V. cup sliced onion •1~ cup slivered green pepper. opbonal 1 can {l!Af. ounces) condensed tomato soup I can (15 ounces) macaroni & cbeese l can (8 ounces ) whole kernel cont. drained IJ4 teaspoon salt Generous dash pepper Generous Oash garUc powder Brown beef and cook: onion and green pepper until tender ; stir to aeparaW meat . Pour off fat. Stir in remaining ingredients. Heat. SUr often. Makes 4 servings. These are just three ol the many simple but delicious recipes that will make vacatiOn elting ~ enjoyabk. ' . Home News ana Views Sense Stressed ' By DOR<Y111Y WENCK ~ C.ntY w-a ilhhel' 'The' Amtrlcan fMlople would Oe healthier If thex_, went back to eating patterns of the early 1900s. Ttlis is the contmUon of Dr. Martin Shickman, preildent-elect of the Los Angeles Co\lnty Heart Associa· tion, who spoke recently at an Orange COlfntf meeUng of dieti· ti\_DS and ~ economists. People 'of the early 19003 ate far leas meat apd &'Qt only about 30 pe.rCent of their calories from fati (compatta to 4{I to so percent today). The,ir diets were higher in cereals and starchy foods than oUr diets today. But people stayed releonabfy lain because their ac· Uvity output balanced their calorie intake. These Ire"' factOh whlch the Heart Auociatioo li!ieves. will help prevent tfeatl attacks: (1) staying lean by. el~ing'1Jl0re and eating less: (2) changlfi@; sources or calories -~ onty 30 percent or less bun fats ; , (3) reducing cholesterol intake; (4) getting fewer salUIJtell 1fats and more polyunsaturated fat.a . Say1 Dr. Shiekman, "Reducing .• the amount or cholesterol in the dJe t'.pn 1w•lt c hing to polyuiistlturtied rats only works v.IJthin the 1frl!D'eVfork of·· totitl limited calories. Polyunsaturated fats plus ov,realog t.ron'l kip." Why does the Heart As&ociaUon have this concern for calories and lhe kind and """""l ol f~l in · if ll ·-iJ,;;j T~OI tiased-~'4dcrob~~ resejr, rch .,:~ce, , a hip 'c:a rie. gh 111tu:lai.d fa diet ca ' ooiiil-. ol ..terol j ln ' lrleilts illd that tllb cioginjj oi I • (HJ!ed ot11e<01Cl.,...is) urp.ruel. most heart attac!J:s. 1 Cholesterdl is a r:ilty sdf;st:ance foond In anllllol 100dl~ Jlllttilular- .. • l'f i .. ~ ,. ly liver, egg yolk and Slellfish. Foods from plants do ooi corUin cholesterol. Besides g e l t I n g cholesterol from our f()()(!J, we also manufacture cholesterol Jn our own bodies and the kind of fat In our Wet seems ito affecl this. Diet! high in saturated fats tend lo raise blood choleslerol levels. Diets high in polyunsaturated. fats and low in saturated fats tend to reduce cholesterol levels. Another factor in heart disease is a high level of triglycerides -other fatty substances -in the blood. Like cholesterol, the triglycerides come from two sources -foods or manufacture · in our liver. One study with human voJuotetr1 showed that the level of blood triglycerides increased markedly when the volunteers were overfed as compared to having a main- tenance diet. Some beart-attact prone persona have high blood cholesterol lev~la; some have high bk>od triglyceride , levels. Some have both. Laboratory tests ca n determine both eondiUooa and it ls now considered necessary to complete both types of tests to accurately idenUly individuals who are prone to heart disease. Some people are b!>rn with genetic defects which re1ult in high. choiesterol or triglycutde levels. For example, an inherited disease may result in the 'lack of essential enzymes needed to break down fat in-the1>ody. · liccofding lo Dr. Sbicbiian, heart diJll,ase ~ the caUte !' 5J perctlll of the deaths ol persons uflder 60 ii ithe U.S. aDd ,11 the molt common cause ot death Of men· tn Ule ~ age Jl'OOP· Becalllt of thi4, heart disea" cannot be though\ of as a dbease .cf ' the agin(. II may begin lmmedlatlly • after blrlh. So changes In our eating patterns to help prevent heart disease should begin -not in middle age -but In early childhood. QUESTIONS WE ARE ASKED Q. My neighbor just bought every expensive juice extractor which she claims makes juice f r o m vegetables such as carrots that 11 much healthier than eating the carrot. She says the bulk from 11aw vegetables is not good for you. ls this true~ A. There are some people with certain gastro-inWtinal problems who cannot tolerate the celluJOM fibers in raw vegetable1 and who :ould benefit from drinking ex- tracted vegetable juice. Thill 11 a condition which should be dia1- nosed by a phyak:ian. Most people have no trouble with the cellulose in vegetablea and, In fact, need tt for ita "scrub brush" effect in teeth and digestive tract. The juice prqsed from rtw vegetabJe-. contains a dilute solu- tion of tbe water-soluble vitamins (such 11 vitamin C), minerals and simple carbohydrates. 1be re- maining portion which is discarded oonlalns not only tile .cellulose bJt also certain minerals and vitamins (such as vitamin A). Q. Is It safe to can fruU wjthout sugar? My husband is diabetic. A. Yes, you can safely can fruit wU.hout sugar. U.e water or ft:Ult Juice Willi Ill< fnrit, -'!"'Mr you· like, add artlfJcfaJ sweetener. You may prefer to add , the sweetener when the fruit I.I eaten beclu&e sweetenera containing l&C· m.tn tend 1o become bitter when heated. Follow the same d.irect.1001 for preparing, packing and pr.. cesstng recon n:nended for fruits canned with qar. ' TOP-OF·THE-STOVE BAKI NG REDUC ES COOKING !IME Custard's Home on the Range When a hearty meal callJ for a Oght des&ert, serve Jiffy Custard. Unlike baked custard, v..ilfch normally tai:e111p ... to-u mll'lllW!:1f to CMt--rn tMe oven, thl1 wholesome recipe takes only 12 to 1$ ,minutes to cook -on \op of the ranee. And fra e.sy to prepare. All the in· gredllnla cao be combined and blended In a larat· 11e11uring cup •uted for ~ milk. w,ter for •teaming is brougl}t to a boil'qulckly over a full Dame. When the water bu rtacbed the steaming' point, ~ 11Jmply turn oll the bUmer and the a.tra heat 11. gone. There ii no need to remove the pan from the burner. There will be no hang- over:~beat to .overcook the cu.siard.-Thil Is lhe key lo making custard that Is smoolh and creamy. JlFfY CUSTARD 2 e-R:r ... 3 tablespoons :i;ugar v, teaspoon salt I teaspoon vanilla I •,z cups milk Cinnamon or nutmeg. Add eggs, sugar. salt and v11nilla lo · milk. Blend thoroughly . Pour the custard mlxlure into five-ounce cheese glasses · or small custard cups. Sprinkle with cinnamon or nu tmeg. Place I.he ,glasses on • folderl paper toy;el In a pan wtth a tight-fitting lid. Make sure the glasses or cups don1t touch each other. P().lr cold wattt into the pan t.o approximately ... one-half lht heig}it of the gJa1se.. a Covtr the pan. Bring the water to a vlgol'OtlS· boil (steam •S<aIIillg ar9!!!Jd il>e , Ud).y;__g !~II hea.!._ Turn of( the burner. Alia. the CUBtard , t? ateam in the covered pan ·from • lJ fO' 15 minutes. T"o determine if the ctistard is ready, imert a table ktlife into ooe of the glasses. The knife will come out de• when the custard is done. Remove Uia custard from the "-ater Immediately. Serve warm or cold. ~rves 4. As an optional feature of Jiffy Custard, "SJ>CCial surprises'' may be added. Simp. ly JA!t pieces of semisweet thocolate. raisins, manna1ade or &namon candies at lh• bottom of ·~ CUP before pourlna the custard mix. r h OAll.Y PILOT Proper Education Course Reiects Ill -conceived lelea • • • • DEAR ANN LANDF.RS: 'A while ago )'OU printed a letter saying • girl could &et pregnanl with her clothes on but only U she unz.ipped, unbuttoned, etc. You also made the poinl ctear Vi'.heo you added, "Thal same girl could gtt pregnan1 in a coat or armor provided the guy has a can opener " ANN LANDERS ·We were having a discussion about tblt very subject lhe Olher evening and I quoted you. A well educated person mlde the Collowing si•t.emenl which -..nded sretty far-out, but she spoke most convincingly. She said a doctor toad her a girl can get pregnant with ~er clothes on if she indulges in heavy petting but no sexual intercourse. but there ls reliable medical documcn- llllUon of such cases. The explanation was as follows ; the sperm of a heallhy male can live for 48 hours and can travel about three inches every 24 hours. This means the sperm can stay alive long enough to travel six Inches and unlt.e with the ovum. Her statement has some of us worried sick. Please comment. -VULNERABLE AT 15 letter1 1uch ·~ yours from 15-year~lds, It tt.lnforce1 my conviction that le• edGcltion In public scbool1 • 1bould be mindatory. Your "Informed IOW'ce" has wron1 Information. The 1penn cannot live for 48 houri unle11 It Is in a warm , mol•t. place, de1lgned by nature for~ porpon -such as tht. mucous melf\brue. Moreoever the sperm can.not lravtl oa the 1kln. U the petting Is ., heated tha t sperm ~ produced front the male, a child could result. She u.id this is unusual DEA.R VULNERABLE: Wbea I aet Aad now • word for · you ctrl• wlae FIESTA CHORDS SOUND -Anticipating lhe Poor t Clare Guild's fourth annual fiesta beginning Friday. I Au&. 14, are (left lo right) Jim Lola and Joe Cesario, Westminster, and Sister Rosemary, Poor Clare missionary sister just back after a year's \Vork in Africa. Additional volunteers are needed to help with the three-day affair. ' l • -• l ' MYRA OQUIST • Brid .. lect • • • • ~ Fall Rites ' ' ! Announced : ~ The engagement of Myra ' Oquist to Ross E a r I MacLachlan. both or SRnllll Barbar• h&s bttn announced ht' her mother , Mn. Josephine ()lulst o1 Co6tA M"'8. A fall wedding has been ~ planned for Miss Oquisl and ~the sdn ol Mrs. Rh e a ~ MacLachlan of Cleveland, ;: Ohio. -: • 11ie bride-elect is a graduate. ~ r F.Uocla HlJh .SChoo1 and ; attended .NewpOrl H a r b o r ' High School . She is currently ~ lludyln(! bollet •• : jier Hance attended ~ Qeveland acboolt and OIUo -;. SI.ate Unlveralll • . • • ' l Chapter Meets i 'Mn. Robert l'Arlo '!'ill opon her Costa Mesa 1*De: •l 7:45 p.m. Tuesday. Au&. tl, for • meeUna of !be Colta Mesa Olapter ci La Ltdw .Leaaue... FAIR Annual Fiesta Scheduled Convent Plans Grow Highlights of the fourt.h an· nua\ fiesta sponsored by the Poor Clare Guild-will include a queen contest, carnival rides. game and food booth! and many priz.es. Weddin~ Plans Classmates Betrothed Volunteers are needed to assist with the three-day fiesta which will begin Friday, Aug . 14 . on the grounds or St. Barbara 's Catholic Church, Santa Aria. according to Lou Bacca, chairman. Assisting as co-chainnan is Steve Wright, and co-chairmen of the queen 's contest are Mrs. Paul Kachadorian and Mrs. Don Kaufman. Kaufman is guild president. The betrothal of Cassandra Hines to James C. Skorupski of Westminster has been an- nounced by h(!r father. John E. I-lines Jr. of Newport Beach . The future bridegroom is the SOii oC ~ir. and M~. Alex· ander C. Skorupski of Lynd· hurst, N.J . The bride~tect, a graduate of Newport Harbor High Sdlool, is attending California Stale College at Long Beach where she will receive a BS degree in microbiology in June of 1971. A wedding is being plann('d in Newport Beach following her graduation. Her fiancc, v.·ho is v.·orkinR 1oward a masters degree in business adm inistraLion al CSCLB, alteflded Ne\\-· J ersey CASSANDRA HINES Futur• Bride All proceeds will be used toward a new convent for the Poor Clare nuns who operate a day-care nursery and te1ch at St. Barbara's School . Anyone wishing to volunteer or seeking add i tional In· fonnation may contact Bacca, 540-7391, -0r Wright, 893--0615. New Powder A new bath powder In a. featherlight squeeze bottle is a perfect traveler. It's unbreakable, splllproo( an1t packable . A gentle .<iqu cezc and the -sifter top releHscs lhe powder . sctlools and receivt'd BS and t:niversi1y WhC'rC he .,.,.II~ MS degrees in elcdrical ell'clerl 1o PC'rstarc Et Make a Sharp Trade; Use Dime·A-lines engineering from NC'W 'l'ork,;=~Pr~a~o;;:st;,:"~'=-::,_h~o-'~"'~"~'~Y-"':.:· :::'::''::_''~·~::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::=: Grandmas Bid ~ To Luncheon PlaM for a luncht'OD (ID Monday , Aug 24. were flnaliz.. ed when the Huntington Beach Grandmothers' Clu b met 10- day in Lake Park clubhouse. HAYE YOU TRIED . Swing 'N Hair C-lll -11•1 •l •lry ..,...\ l'ff'll M 11w I'll •Oll tt 1_ ~ IJOITDOOU(TOllY o.-.-Elt ~ SI VALUI FREE "'" '" ' """'0 "' JU T $6 WITH IHAM~OO & SIT .. Young grandmothers. great. grandmother! an d all w1ndmothers-in·bCl"'een are invited to alt tend the lun cheon j t.aklng place ID the Pttk • WITH THll •o an "worried llck." U you'd bchaft ht looked don h1I noee and uld, "Well, ready. l also bayi1 seen ~ frlendl. Now a UttJe better you wouldn't worry H he wu, won't ~1" here's the queatloa I waal: to-ad. Would ell So pte ... thJnk twice bofcre you 111g-It be O.K. µ I cul oul lbe col)IDUll lhlt mu . gMt lhll I ~ take Illa crlUclam would help my frleodl ...i;-lhem DEAR ,ANN l-ANDERS; Your naivete to tbe head min. Too often lndUfe:rence:, DEAR NO: J Ute it ~ • .: ..---· out? -NO l.D. ==· shocks me. Why are :you appalled that sloppy .,:n&nliement and callousness at sreat pabUe rtlaUou~:• U• yeu a hospital awlt.chboard operator would the lower ecbeklna are 1 reOecUon of to )eopardiu )'<Mir I lPI • my tell a mother, ''No point in trying to I.be maq al the top. -R.1 ., OTfAWA •cC04l11t A penoe w bl.cit out reach the fioor nurse -the boy died DEA.1\ R.T.: RJaht.-you are, but what'• urisoUclled advice 1000 becomes •• this morning." Don't you know most tM al&enlldve'l Tell me and I'll pu1 popo.llU' a1 a 1kunk at a la"ll party. people are thoughtless, lf not stupid Ute wttd. . Don't do It, honey. -unfeeling, lf not cruel'? I had a , J similar experience: l'Ql long ago. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 14 yean When romantic glances tum to' warm When l learned my father had been old and started tG read your column embraces ls It love or <flei:n1alry? Send 1trlcken wtth a heart attack, I rushed a lew mootbl ago. Am I ever glad for the booklet "L4ve or ~ Ind How over to the hospital and asked the firtt J found you! You have already solved to Tell the Dllference." ~ 3S cents nurSie I saw, "Where ia he?" She replied, many problems for me -some even in coin and a long, telf-addrelJed, nonchalanUy, "t. the Ice box." When before they happened! J have seen my. alamped envelope with )'our request ii 1 complained to the hospital director itll in your colwnn dozens of times al-care of the DAILY PILOT. Your Horoscope Tomorrow Cancer: Don't _Play Games THURSDAY AUGUST 6 By SYDNEY OMARR I like both call •nd dog1. However, who ll come1 lo 1ue11ln1 1odl•e11l l1p1, I am more accurate with cala. The la1t dog I called a Leo turned out to be a Capricorn. 1be last cat I called .i GemlnJ was certaJnly of I.bat 1lp, In spades -coestantly u1ln1 paws, even lnfilcUn1 a e,,tayful scratch on me. ~ (Mtrdl 21-April 19): Hold back on !Witt cbange.s. Promise made to mate or partner shoukl ~ k e p t . Otherwise, be ready to pay To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white .a:Iossy photo-- graphs to lhe DAILY PILOT Women's De- partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received following the wedding will not be usett. · • For engagement announcements it is imperative that the S'tory, also accompartied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub-• mitted si x weeks or more before the wedding date. lf ~dline is not met. only a story will be used. To help fill requirements on both wed- ding and engagement stories, forms are available in all o1 the DAJLY PTLOT offices. Further questions will be answered by Women's Section staff members at 642-43'll or 4~9466. Princess Discusses Russia consequence.a. Be aware of peraonaJ image, public rela· uoni: TAURUS (April 20 May 20): Health rules should not be dl8carded. Remember resolu- tions to othens -and to your1eU. Avoid excess in eating, drinking. Keep faith with one who trusts you. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Vita!Ky surges. Member of ap- posite sex pays meaningful compliment Strive to expresa feelings. The more creative you are now, the better. ¥t accordingly. Advocate cbanle and variety. ' 1 · CANCER (June 21.July 22i: Accent on home, oompleUan of impart.ant project. Buie values are Involved. Don't play games with security. Flirtation may not be u hannless as It appears on surface. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22); Ac· cent on relatives, neighbors, ideas which can be developed into definite trend s. Be alert. non 't permit opportunlty to be talked away. Transform thoughts into direct action . VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Financial situation is boosted if you act in independent, original maMer. Be a self. starter. Don't wait to be told what lo do. Adhere to your own 9tyle. Be an innovator. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): Obtain hint from V i r go message. Have faith in your abilities. You can put acros! -special program. Ac c e pl assignment which ts challeng· ing. Your hunc;:h proves ac· curate. Follow through on it. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Much ct what appears factual could, in actuallty, be an ii· lusion. Not wise to commit yourself. Walt for addltlonal information. Time is on your side. .., SAG11TARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Emphasia.i• on how to bring about desfres. Friend- ly advice prov~ worthwhile.. Put pride asld!. By making minor concession, major pin is possible. Re 11 pond /(· cordlngly. CAPRICORN (°"'., 22-Jan. 19): ,Some of yoo:I ambtUons mererr-await -=tion. Time for a dec:lsi.on. Delay can cause confldeoce of superion to wane. There 111 room at top for you. Communl~te desires. 1 AQuARrus (Jln. 2G-Feb. 18): Dilemma is N!solved it yoo write, call, hnprove com· municalions. Family member on journey needs to hear !rom you. Listen to your heart. PISCES (Feb. IS.March 20): Get financial affairs settled. Bring forth facts and act on them. You can gain cooper•· tion of close associates. But it is you who must set ex- .ample. Take first step. IF TODAY IS YOUR BfRTIIDAV you are creative, possess musical or dramatic abilities. By October, avenue is operm for great.er Mlf.u· pression, happiness. Reading Adventures Just One Dial Away Wedding Pledges Exchanged Author Maria Metlova, a Going to the Huntington the carton in which it came. Russian princess of French Beach Public Library is no1v Recent arrivals, which ma1 de9cent, will address members just as easy as lifting the be -Obtained by calling the of the Women's Division of phone, thanks to a new dia!-library at 536--9327. include the Saddleback Va 1 I e Y an.order program. "The Garlic Tree" by Ellen Exchanging vows before the Rev. William Eller in the Lutheran Cllurch of t h e Master, Corona de! Mar were D. Alan Mcinnis of Newport Beach and Irene Yanagihara of Anaheim. Chamber of Commerce on Patrons may call the library Bromfield Geld, "Search" bf Tuesday, Aug. II. and request a book, which Diane Kennedy Pike and "The The luncheon meeting will the library will mail postage Cun That Made the Twentiet begin at 12 :30 p.m. in the paid, if available. Roar" by William J. Helmer. Parent.! of the newlyweds are Councilman and Mrs. Donald Mcinnis of Newport Beach and ~fr. and Mrs. Kcisuke Ya n a g i ha r a of Carpinteria. Golden Bull restaurant, El The book comes in a special Others are "Fragments" by Toro. carton and the patron simply Ayi Kwei Armah, "The Big Miss MeUova came to the has to enclose 25 cents in Fix" by Edward Jarvis and United States at the age of the manila envelope provided "Piece of Resistance" by 2 to esca~ the revolution . and mail the book back in Clive Eglet-0n. During the l 930s she returned jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii The bride a.sk-ed her sister, Jane Yan'iihara to serve as maid of honor. Bridesmaids were the Misses Marilyn Mcinnis, Georgia Akune and Olerie Cholak. David llarris was best man. Se<1.ling the gtiesls were Mike Matthews, Harry Yanagihara. the bride's brother and Allen Haag. Lisa Shlmomura was flower girl. The bride Is a graduate of UCLA. Her husband wlll al· lend Ventura College in the fall . Following a Jamaican honeymoon. the couple will make its first home in Ven· turs. to Russia , and it was during this period she gathered material for her book "Black Bread and Caviar," also sub- ject of her talk. Women residing or working the Saddleback area may can Mrs. A. L. Horton, 831).3450, for reservations NB Auxiliary The Ladies' Auxiliary or Newpcirt Beach Fire Depart- ment gathers the t h i r d Wednesdays at 8 p.m. In Vll!'ious locations. Information regarding location may be ob- tained by calling r.1rs, T. C. Dailey, 548-9835. VIR611\'IA'S SNIP 'N' STITCH SHOPPE 3314 E•st Co•lt Hwy. • Corona d•I Mar Phon• 673.8050 WE'RE READY -ARE YOU! Loh of p11i " ind 11wn p1rti11 1h11d in Au9u1I. Choo11 I "olyn11 l1~ p~lle tn end 111it.1nti(. H•w1ii1n 1crylic pr!nt1 1nlli be th1 biol dr111.d 911 ti 111 efftio . Goin9 lo collt91t Owr woolen 11l1ction i1 the 9r1.tl11I . 10111 end bolh of pl•icl1, tw1111i1 or 1olid color1d 11,nn1l1, Knih •ff ft]or1 •nt11! S.w11l1r.kni1t.. •uvlic k11;1,, .. wool •,.;h, printed I 1oli11h ind poly11t1r •nih . Meny of th111 ••• w11h· •bl1 loo! lick lo 1ch11ol clotl<t11 fo r th1 111'11ll·ffy . Nofhi119 lik1 w11h I ""''' •1Hl1clo tt.. Al10 cordoroy ribl111 l wide w1!1. S11 Yot Soon! VlltGIMtA P.S. Te•i~t • l•ll ••ttti on, ,.,,., y111r 11/1clion p1ly11l1• •nih tnd new b111lon1 • nowelty *••••I trti tiri9ht prh1h •All w11h I ""''' •IHI "'''"' p1ck1bl1., DTERT 225 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 548-2778 SUMMER SALE! FINAL REDUCTIONS on: WOMENS and CHILDRENS SHOES SO<ro off! SPECIAL PURCHASE ! CHILDRENS $A.Nl>4J.S VALUES TO $12.'5 NOW $3.88 BIG SAVINGS ON HANDBAGS TOO I The BOOTERY 225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa F11t, 1,;,, f1ct111I. Th~u• ilif•• w1rd1 111m .,, f1cf•rt In eJll1r1tlon ee th• DAILT rlL01 1iiltorl1I ,.,,, •••"f lley. r.amlly Colonial Te rr a c el 1726 NrWPOIT ILYD.-CAll 645·1JOO ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Jwll l<tt<tll ~ 111~ lt-C. .. !1 MIU Room, Wesunms~r. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 11 ...................................... 11111, ) ---------------- ) I r I . ' . -...---~ ~·~~--- Lockwood-Michael Rites Couple Recites Vows MRS. LOCKWOOD CM Hom• Barbara Jean Michael and Dennis Wayne Lockwood were married in an afternoon ceremot1.y in the F1rst Baptist Chureb of Costa Mesa. 'Ibe Rev. Dr. P. G. Newnann of· ficiated. The bride, given in marriage by Glenn Donovan, is the daughter of Mn . Marlha Michael of Costa Mesa. Her attendants were Mbs Kathy Rooney, maid. or honor, :lDd Mrs. DoMa Watsoo, matron of bonor. Bridesmaids were Miss Rllsemary WIJsus, M'tss Mary O'Shea and Mrs. Pat Shipley. The bridegroom, son of )..1r. and Mrs. Arlie Lockwood of Redding, was attended by Jim Solie as best man. Seating guests were Arlie Lockwood Jr.. Doug Lockwood, his broth.er, Jim Lucatorta, a cousin, and John Brooks. Miss Pally Walker and Miss . Lashes Eyed •Pam Wade were A new dimension in eye lashery has finely tapered clusters ot long, long lashes radiating at spaced intervals on an invisible band. Each lash is made of Euro- pean hair, hand knotted onto a curved transparent band . The lashes are designed to . be worn without liner. au or 11~ 11 OIE LOI Pl~I candlelighters. The new Mrs. Lockwood is a ~aduale of Estancia High School and attended Orange Coast College. Her husband was graduated from Shasta High School in Redding and attended Shasta Junior College and California Statf': College at Long Beach. The Lockwoods will reside in C-Osta Mesa. sc1.~ ~~ .. , .. 14.tl " ... COIORS MANY MORE SIMILAR VALUES· COME EARLY NO MONEY DOWN FINANCING AVAILA!LE Jtffnl¥ ...... MRS. DIETTERLE Says Vows ' Afternoon Nuptials Performed The Rev. Donald E. Roberts conducted a late· afternoon wedding service for Diane Elizabeth Mw1yon and Roger James Dielterle. The double ring riles were performed in Christ Presbyterian Church oI Huntington Beach. The bride, daughter or '-tr. and Mrs. Marvin Earl Munyon of Fountain Valley, selected her sister "'1iss Cynlhia l\1 un- yon as maid of honor. Thomas Winesell served as best man for the bridegroorp •. son or Mr. and Mrs. Adolph 0. Dietlerle of McLaughlin. S. D. Ushers were li-1ichael to.1un- yon, the bride's brother and John Ganahl. The bride was graduatr:d from Orange Coast College's nursing program . The bridegroom attended the Uni- versity of South Dakota. Following a wedding trip, the newlyweds will reside in Santa Ana. Home Repa irs -DAil V l'!LOT jJJ Southland Traffic Welcomed Freeway Hazards Never Lik~ This By JACKIE COMBS Qt ""' oa11r 1"1"'4 ,._" My iteVtn-ytar-dd driver's liC'eflSe has granted me ex. perlence on Ole wrong side of England's adorways, on the eerie autobahn of the Berlin C<rrldor, and on the steep highways of the Swiss Alps. But, sit!ing behind tlte wheel "-a drivlng simulator, the · wide screen fluhed such hazards before me that could roly be duplicated during a coliseum race in ancient Rome or on Insurgent.es in Mexico City following a Sunday af- ternoon bullfight. In the 30 minutes spent behind the whttl of a Link simulator, I survived a blow out, numerous near collisions, my car caught on fire and the ignltioo died while I was crossing. railroad tracks. I unde rwent more changes in tr:mperature and visibility Family Unity In Spotlight Across Nation Importance of the family's role in na tional strength and unity will be underscored next Sunday, Aug. 9, during -the third annual observance nf Family Reunion Day. Mrs. Louis L. Curtis, presl· dent of the Orange County \Vomen's Chapter of the Freedoms Foundation a t Valley Forr-. has urged fami· ly and individual participation in the event. Sponsoring the n a t I o n a I observance is the Kiwan is I nternational and the Freedoms Foundation, with Col. Edwin E. {Bu;o:z) Aldrin serving as the national chairman. Among suggested activlties are those which empbasiz.e the relationship of the stable fami- ly unit to national life, such as church attendance, visits lo places ol hi s tor ica l than 1n astronaut -fog, soow, rain and hall. 1 was a mailman compressing b I s trials into an O'Henry short story. People were before me and alt. Mlnisklrted glrls o n scooters darted by while d\ildren chased balls Into the street and old ladiei; jumped gingerly out of cars and into my rlgbt-ol-way. The wide aogle screen put me into tf1e driver's seat and the dasttboat'd lights blinked on and off like a fl'ustrated computer inslsllog that l read. A failure to use turning signals, brake or turn Properly OC" to speed was all registered on the panel. Worse, the er-rors were tabulated by a com- pUte.r . on a console to be reviewed by the lnstructoc. My .brow w a s perspiring. my hands clammy -em- barTassed, I pushed when I should have turned. When the fitm.. ended, I had amassed LITTLE GUYS 'N DOLLS enoo,lb near".iraglc errors to It com b Ines programmed cau3e my 1 lnlllfante man learning slide series on drivlng heart-failure. I was indeed, information with four hours "a neurotJc lady driver." of road experience through the Harry HopkJns, dl~tor of simulator and behind-the- the Llnk Driving Center In wheel training with ao ln- Orange, assured me it was structor. only a temporary reactioo. "We couldn 't begin to have According to Hopklos, Link all these hazards In a normal has adopted the proposition sltuatk>n," explained Hopkins, that nervous ladies can be "The Link makes a persoo the best drlvers because they -- are more cautious. "The Link system iJ dedicated lo the nenious lady driver as It takes away nervousness·by building confidence before she ever gets behind the wheel," he explained . The Link system realizes What can our Bridal Consultant that husbands make the worst . do for a driving tt;acl)Us as they are impaUent and lack expertise. "We exclude husbands Crom the program. All lessons are private," Hopkins quipped. The program Is based on the fact that an alive driver is an alert and aw~ one. bride·to·be? l ot1 of tllin91 . lond ell of 11.tm ••• 11.lplwl. HOW DO I REGISTER? an aware, deleustve driver In a safe environment." He noted Ulat such exposure to traffic C<lnditions might lake five to shi: monlhl in a normal drivin& s.ituaUon. He may be rl&ht. Alter my half hour on the rack with the Link, the Newpolt Frecwoy looked like cltlld'1 play . · .CHILDREN'S HAIR STYLING Ju1! COml in end t1lk to OU/ 1dwiJtr. Well r•tiJf1r your n1m•. 1ddr111, tnd whit your m1t<itd n1fl'lt will b1 !ft 011r l1id1's R1gi1t1r. Thin w1 'll thow you ou• trulr imp1•tti~• coll•clion of fin• chint, 1ilwt r ind 9l111w111. Ev1" m1~1 UI" 11v1r1I t1blt1 t1Hin91 lo .how you 01<1ctlv how t11ffor1nt p1tt.rn1 will mi1< ind m1tcli. OIU' f M I -C'"4d MlllCllJI 130 E. 17th St. 1"011 Al"l"Ol"TMl!NT 14J.]61' Costa Mesi SHAPE UP NOWll.--- with E·Z TRIM ••• ·---.. ldolrt...w.ld. ~ lllf•• ~. '""' ... _ ··-· .............. , ... "'" -1 ......... ,... ............... ~ ... -"_ ....,. Yhl!_ ...... ..., " ... _ ... .,...... •. HOW DOES IT WORK? Wlitn your f1milv tnd fri111d1 como i11 lo choo11 vour w.d· ding prt1111h, wo'U b. 1blo to 1how ih1m tlio p1tt11111 vou'w• cllo11n i11 tlio 8rid1'1 R19i1t1r. And •"•" how m1111 of 01ch li1v1 b11n ord1r1d ~o fir. · WHEN SHOULD I REGISTER? A1 •0011 11 vour •""•91mont lt 11111011111e.d. Altd if you c111't CO"'• in, but •11ow whi t p1tlor11 you went, ju1t t iv1 Vt • ri119. Lit WI htlp 1111ko youtJ • b11 utiful woddi119. loti1t1r toon. Ch.,.gt loccou11h l11v itoll Amoric111 E1<pro11 l•nkAm11;,,,c1 e11d Me,tor Ch1r90. 101. SLA.VICK'S Jew1lor1 5in,o 1'11 18 Fashion l•l•nd Newport B.eac.h .-644-1380 OPEN: lltOllDAf111t0414;11 IOAl ·SATUIOAT t !Jll•S:.10 t A.llll.I t'f.L Ill A· new canister.otype vacuum signific~e, or participation cleaner is constructed ol seven[jiiiiinoipa;t:d:ou=·c=pro=gr=am='·===========~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii:iiii:iiiiii;;;.ii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Open Montlay anti Friday untll t:31 replaceable units. Should any part become defective, it can be replaced ·by' the housewi!e right in her home. or by one of ltle manufacturers without the usual repair shop delays. -F=u=L~u=R=To~N~~~~~---. LARGE AND HALF-SIZE DRESSES SIZES l~~•-1_4_V_2_-_2_4_1_V2_•~~' 1/J to 1/2 II •• REGULAR $10 to $45 Hurry in for the biggest fashion bargains of the year FINAL MARK DOWNS -ODDS and ENDS - ' ~--Reduced To Clear ---• -l __ sP_o_RT_SWE_A_R _•_R_o_BE_s _, fElla Nor'sHALF -SJZE 1805 NEWPORT BLVD. SHOP I E __,__I --I COSTA MISA t V1 ltk. N. 1 lrti Sr.) 84 HUNnNGTON CENTER HUN'TINGfON llACH IN111:t ~ a-ti;er lfti. F1ndtvr1I ( ~\ • BROKEN SIZES n._"*'J • ALL SALES FINAL La Cresta 1687 ORANGE AYE.--COSTA MESA ~ NlXT TO THt: POST OfflCE-ACROSS fltOM SAFEWAY CLEANERS PH ONE M6·'4&t Mon.·frL 7 a.ni. to t """ lat. 7 a& ho 6 ,.. «lran.I. C;pening The Harbor Area's Most Modern Dry Cleaning Facility • • • • INTRODUCES • GUA AN DBY CLEANING!·: • Your ABSOLUTE Satisfaction is Our Only Consideration . . . IF WE LOSE IT or ABUSE IT WE WILL PAY FOR IT-IN CASH! $100. FREE DRY CLEANING IF YOUR NAME APPEARS ON ANY 'LA CRESTA AD MRS. RAY NIELSEN of Newport Beech Bring In This Ad For Your FREE DRY CLEANING ! (*wh<!n lCCl'ptM for prottS.~lngl WITH THIS AD • 3 DAYS ONLY!· ANY GARMENT NO LIMIT (except lcatht.r-Formal W~111r • Furs\ • c La Cresta CLEANERS .1687 ORANG,1oE-cCOSTA MISA Nert To 'ne Pest Office-Opposite Softwey ' ) \ j I WldMsday, August S, 1970 Afternoon Rites Gay Marie ..Halloran Says Bridal Pledges Glnkin G~YI Communll~ ONrcb WU the 1tttln& IOI' a late &fternotin weddb1g ctNJmony, .when Gay ,M1rie Hallor.&• ol Balboa Jal.i>d became the bride or Dr. William Morris Plvarof1 ol Lido ls\e. . Pi renu or I.ht couple are Mr. and Mrs. TimoU'ly, B, Halloran of Orange ind Mr. and Mrs. MOM"i1 Pivaroff of Wh itlier. Tue·brlde was gi ven in mar- riage by her fat.tier and at· tended by her sist.er, Mrs. J anies Quasl, as ma1.ton of """'"· Bridesmaids included Miu Kay Pivaroff, si!ter o( .. the bridegroom, and lht bride's cousin, MiM Kathleen Ro1ers. Others we re the Misses Annie Eckert, Ann Holderness and Ruth Simpson, Dr. L. Jettery Brown served as best man and ushering were Dr. Richard G·arwOod, Richard Holderness a n d Joseph Genovese , togelher with the benedicl 's cousins; Mark Rush and Ron Corazza . MRS. W. M. PIVAROFF L ldo I 1le Home The bride is a graduate ot Orange lHgh School and San Di~go Slate College, where she was a member or Sigma Ka~ pa. The bridegroom was graduated from California High School in Whittier and from the University of Soulhern California and the USC Dental School. lie ;.if. filla ted with Phi Sigma Kappa. Senior Citizens Communit y Recreation Cenltr at Orange County Fairirounds is the scene of 1etivlty Vr'htn Colt.a Mesa Senior Citilens meet al J 1 a.m. every Tuesday. The Pivaroffs will live on Lido Isle. e11y-c1r1 active Wttl" for · rntn incl boy• boy's l1vi cord b•ll bottoms tv•il•bl• in regular a nd slim •P,'" S~11d•v1 ••• fer flie Su111mer 11 fe I \,R\•"'.ric.•rlll e m•1l1r chirt• 7 f1d1 iM·i1l•lt<ll, fleWp•rt lt11ch j4+10.70 Final SPICIAL GROUP COUTURE FASHIONS 1/2 off Sale Price •·«·«·«·«·J·«· «· . ' DESIGNER FASHIONS Dresses .. • .. Coats .. • .. Pantsuits $10. $15. $30. $50 . ~,•·«·~·«-{<···~· f'AMOUS NAME SUITS Silks • Wools • Cottons Values to $250. NOW $25 e $50 e $70 ··~·~·«-«·••·•· Accessories e Scarfs e Jewelry e Bags _,,__!ti. $10 ... •·••·•·····~·~· tltplOlte · i11 'J11slti1111 •·•·•·»·•·•· ...• .... JISlllOll ISWID Mwl'<Nff IUCM ..... 2U2 J ·----..---...--r -.--· • ., • • • • ---~·-· ----...... -·---·---··----···· Santd Ana Residence Chosen by Godfreys Newlyweds Harb.orites Tell News Residing At Family Barbecue MRS. SCOFIELD Recites Vows St. James Setting For Rites Rtdllnj: nuptial vowt Mr°" the Rtv, Ervin Bautr In St. Bari>.ara't C.LhoUc Olurch of Santa Ana were P&tt1cla 'Carmen McGIM aod D!vld JJrian Godfrey. . The bride, daughter ~ Mrs. r-taUvidad A(U.ado MeG1nn ol • Garden Grove was 11ven tn m1rriage by her rllh6;r, JMn Thomas McG1nn Jr. of Downey I« the double ring rites. Parentl o( the bridefroom are Mr. and Ml'I. Hlrlan \Y. Godh'ey ol Cotta Mesa. Attendln& the bride , dwinl the afternoon ceremony was her sister, Mb:.t Francine Emily McGann as maid of honor and Miu P t 1 c y Ouisiany and Miu Mary Joan Muystln, bride.maid•. Carolyn Godfrey, litter of the bridegroom, ,..., nower glrl and Jeftrey Vela ri111 bearer. Al Clark JUYed u belt man and Joel Otb&n seated 1ue.tU. A gr1duate cl Santia10 Hl1h School, Ult bride · will be ll· llndlnc Orona! C<llil CoU!c• llS. DAVID GOl!il>DJOFIOIR!;iE;Y' Form•I Wedding In the fall . Her husband will attend C11Uoml a State College 1t Uing Beach, wtltre ht is majorina In electronics. The new Mr. and MMI. Gnd- frey will re1Jde ln Santa Ana. In Laguna The Carden ol the~ Robert F. Akm' Cott.a Me.ta home provkted the tettlnc for the • marr1'ee of their d1upter, Carol Sue Aken ind Georce Van de Kerckhove. Conductln& the ceremony In . . a Oower-decked corner beside the JXIOI was the Rev. Eu1~ne Pearaon of Garden Gro¥e · CommunJty Church, The bride:rroom'1 mother, ~1me. Cornelle Van de Ker c khove, new from Brussels to be present ror the wedding. Accompanyin& htr was Mlle. Dominique Van VICKIE SHULDA de Kerckhove, the bridt--____ a._1_ .. _1_hod ___ _ groom's alater, who served 1s maid of honor. Standing as best man for the bridegroom was Maurice Walth. The nt'!w Mr. and Mrs. Van de Kerclc:ho ve are at home In Laguna Beach. Fruit Flavors Sea led Tightly -A fam ily barbecue wu.. i),e. seUlnj when Mr. ind Mrs. Phil jJ:..,. ol c..to M"• •IUIOlll\Cld ~ fortha>mln1 mam.c-I Of f~ fl l f flep- d•Ulhter ond hulfiter, Vickie Shukla to Chpt GroikreutJ of Newport B<ath. • Attendl~ tht •vent were the bene(tiet-eled'a parents, Mr. and Mr1.\ Mii ·Groskttulz o1 eo.i. 'M'!'"• Mn. Miehe Bouchmf,S li\S '1rondmother, and Mn. :flelle Loeser, Miss Shulda'• ,rind.mother. A graduate or Newport Harbor High' School a 'ti d Oranae Coi91 College where st\L wa1 cl1u pre.sident, Miu Shulda will conUnue b tr pursuit of a teaching creden- tial at UCL She also i11 lhe daughter of the late Victor V. Shulda. . Her fianct. is a graduate of Estancia Hi1h School and is a marketing lnajor at OCC. The wedding !a planned for February, 1971. ROlll St. James Episcopal ChurCh, Newport Beach waa the stt- ling for the double ring wed-- ding .ceremony linking Gina Maria Gardner and Craig David Scofield. Pantsuits Take Flight A new stationery line tur111] the ordinary task or &eaUng an en velope into a tasty ex- perience. Eadi envelope ill sealed with one of three flavors -banana, cherry or coconut. ,fl• f.'..o -The Rev. John A 1 h y performed the nuptials for the daughter of Mr. and Mn. E. JI. Gardner ol Balboa and the son or Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Scofield ol Hunllng ton Beach. Hostesses Ground Maxis 1 'J"""" WAKE UP ...., __ _.~o111ol11 Wit1' A N•lvr•I Looi.; of IRAS FLATTER LASHES 27>7 I. c-t Hwy. Given In marriage by her father , the brkle asked Mrs. Denlsia Krock to be her malron of honor and the Mis.sea Jan Scofield a n d Kathleen Hawkin s , her bridesm1ids. Gerald Brown ttood as best man, whlle ushen we r e Christopher J. Weir and Den- nis Shayne. Following a ~ay A re a honeymoon , the newlyweds will reside jn Newport Beach. The bride attended Oran1e Coast College and Callfornla State College 1l Long Beach, while her husband attended occ. NEW YORK (AP) -Airline stewardH&d, ca~ lo by aome of the nal.ion'1 top deslanerr. are lurnlnr thumbt down on the midi look, i:rom· islng at least Ofte more year of co!fff, te1 a.nd dl11etmlhle knee . Unlike moet women, lhey had a choice. Trans Workl Alrllnta, In a poll of 331 Jtewardhsea. found the midi 90 unpopular that TWA officials ••Y thty will be "runrllng in the face of de1igner1" when their new faehlon 11.ne la revealed in mid- August. A ~anent addition to the line ls expected to be panlA eotemblea, med on -trial Family Films Projected For August Viewing WooJd you like an enjoyable family vlewinl ol films on a J"riday eveoing under the stars? Each Friday at 8:30 p.m. tht New port Beach Public Library will contin~ Io feature I.he film-o-rama of "Movies Under the Stars,'' showing varied progr1tms at Fad:ilon, lsland, Newport Enamel Care The enameled seclons of a stove may crack if it is wuh- ed when loo hol. ll<ach. The motion pfctlrn are made •v1ilable tbrouth the e.fi«U ol the s.ntiaeo Ubrary SyMn of Oral'llt County and the cooperation of Newport. Center. The following film IChedule will be 9hown by the library aud~visua l department: "Donut~ from Hcirner Price" and "Tol<yo Olympiod" on Aug. 7; "Peter and the Wolf' .and ''Sunken Treasure" Jacques Cousteau ) on Aug. 14; ··Turned 0n·· and "Voyage of Brigantine Yankee" on Aug. 2t ; "Why Man Creates•• and "The Kit Story" M Aug. 29. :Just Once in 'tour llif e ... - F~Xe-IT! With a ,le1k o•w DUTCH BOY 1tyle, "A" lint syn- thetic wig. Normtlly • c:ool birttin at $)0. N•w during our ...•. SUMMER SALE ONLY 522 Tnit fobulou1 fok• proC'fically cor•• for itNlf,. l11t el THE DEMONSTRAT ION you don't ju1t plop one en ytur head and weor it out. Our c:reotlve tlyll1tt h,lp yeu 1elect ju1t tne ri;ht color, tMn mok• ctrtoin It fllt properly, feels comfortoble ond lookt g,..ot. Al'ld w• teocn you how to 1tyle ond car• for It. too. ChOGM from doze n• of saucy 1nodet, ot 1ni1 lowt1t price tver sumrr•r synthetic 1e le, end • , , FAKE ITI T•tt )'OIK llnt ,,,._ '°"""' ,_,,,,.,, 1 ..... M •• ''Whtrw YIU IMm fl I* ,.,.,.... r rlu l.4Ktfh lffkth• ntt.flrl Alt, It' 'AIHIOH Ill.AND. M•w,..-t llMtlrl -•••·260 batl1 bu TWA and popular '" that hostess unlforma will C•r•"•'~-~Le ... ~~-~!l·1 ''° " " h141 ....... ty .. ,,. .. ll'tll.a. ---· with both 1t.ewardesaes and be , lengthened in tht im-Ir C.r.i ' • M•tw Chrp cu.ttomerl, a tpokesman aaid. mediate future. t714J 67J..f7DJ u Y.-hi s... Leceri .. Un;ttd Alrliom, in what.~;;;;;;.;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ largely amounted to 1 Cl~ II ol. trial and error. introduced below-the-knee joo.pers in fLs fllhion lint latt May aod within a month officially rais- ed the hems to riaht above tht klltle. Beginnln&, ntit 0 c l o be r , UnKed 's t,000 1lewardesses will weir their jwnpen at two to three inches above lhe knee -euctly the length ol their current uniforms. Pan Arnuk:an Airways Is oUerlng hoflles&e! a choice or lengths ranging from one Inch above lht kriee to Ill inch beklw in <.'Oliwnes de!irned by Evan-Piccone. Saylnc tbe airline is en- cooraalng ill giir11 "to be ui> to-elite," a Pan American spokeaman added, ' ' W e ' r e sure they'll shorten the skirts. There ia res istaoet to the midi now ." Dell.II Air Linell say• ita new oulfltl, lnduding double-knit pleated 1kirt9 and tunics, will kHp htmllfMlt about two in- cftl abo\ie the knee. AllO runnlna counter to ground-level trends is Emilio Pucci, at work on a series of dnigns for Braniff Inlerna- lionel. Ht has said It la unlike- HB Auxiliary Twice a rnonltl the Ladie8' Auiiliary lo HuntJn,ion Beach Veterans of Forei111 Wara, Post 7368 meets IL I p.m. The first F'rid1y of eadl month they gather In Odd Fellows Hall for a bu.sine• meeting ind the third Friday they !IOCialiie in various k>c1- ti on11. Fur I her infonnation may be 1e:cured by call ing Mn. LeRoy Hermftll'I at 536- 3580. HUMAN HAIR WIGS s191s ALL SHADES P•l·ITYLaD ............ -.• 111.H THE N • E -W LG>QK For A NEW ' I YOUf SYNTHETIC WIGS s199s ALL SHADIS CUT & STYL IO .............. H4Jt 100 PRE-STYLED WIGS ... In All Shtde1 and Style1. In Human Hair, K1nt~alon1 Modacrylic or Synthettc ••• READY FOR YOU TO TRY ON ! 10 WIG and HAIR STYLISTS ... Profe1sion11I stylists to assist you in the proper selection •• incl fit of your wig, or to style your own heir in the latest ffishion YIYIAMI WOODAii COIMnlCI JUST RIGHT FOR YOU ! ! matAe~ WIG & BEAUTY SALON 250 E. 17th STREET DAILY TILL 5:30 COSTA MESA THURS. & FRI. TILL 1:00 548-3446 DRESSES e COATS BLOUSES e PANTS e PANTSUITS e e SKIRTS JACKETS REDUCED 25%, 50910 AND MORE! SPECIAL PRICE ON ALL DON SOPHISTICATES-REDUCED MORE THAN 50% e H.l.S. e LADYBUG • PART\.ur e SIRJ! \ e AND OTHUS WE HAVE ALSO <=J 0 REDUCED SOME ...._,! H\..e,. HANDIAGS. SCARVES BIDTIQUE JEWELRY ANO • SUNGLASSES , AT BIDWELL'S ~~7 VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH -673-4510 O'IN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 P.M. ---------------- L '1 ' : I . -··---~· PILOT-AOVERTISER I) S ... - PEA CHES LARGE SWEET FAY ELBERTA G()Od Ortlr ., ST Ana llOS. (;arxf lh1u AUG. 11 11,...r I (OIJ!'()N -r• r IM•lf c KRAFT CHEESE ~ICIDNATWAl VAllfTTPAClt 1.01 63' SfAIVAltfY lfO LAl(L >.oz 39' ..... s 1 49 CHJOME I'S • CLAIROL CRlME HAIR FORMULA LB. W~nt1dolf, August ~. 1170 U.1 0,A,CHOK:IOISYAfUI llOS. OltflfllOIHJ 59' ROUND BONI ROAST ___ ,. u. U.J.O.A. CHOl(t Ol SfAf ll llOS. ClltfWllO If" aftc ROLLED ROAST =~~············"· 7 u..s..O.A.CHOI001St.t.T11tnos.anw11011ff $I 09 STEAKS ~~O:~~r .................................... l•. U.S.D.A. OfOICf OI STATfl IROS. ClltTIJlfO lllf 89' RIB STIAKS ___ ............. : .. _ ...... u. U.J.0.A:OIOICIOISTATHl llOS.C11TWllOIHf · s137 T.SONE STEAKS . . ............ u u.s.o . .t..CHOICIOISTAfflltOS,CllllflfOlfff s, .. PORTIRHOUSl STIAK _ ... u . U.SO . .A.CMOIClotlSfATUltoS.CflTIUIO l flf $167 TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ·········-···"· fltlSH 1•n.t. llAN R.AVOlfUI. GROUND ROUND ........... . l.ASTYN GtAIH-RD TlNOB T .ASTT PORK STEAK ......... .. ......... 89' ......... 69' DAILY PILOT 33 RIPPON GOOD -ALL VARIETIES 4 •EG.s I COOKIES PKGS. OCRANGE JUICE~~iF77' ANGEEXL FOOD :~i.. 49~. STOKR Y CREAM STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEL GOLD CORN TREETOP APPLE JUICE· STOKRY 46-0Z, CANS FRUIT COCKTAIL 303~NS L(J@-Lo@ '?~ '?od /D'tia1.,f · TR£E.SWHT 11-0l.CANS .•• l9c • 5 s 1 ORANGE JUICE ..... ...... ~·0~s MORTON'S All EXCEPT IOYSENIERaY 3 2 FRUIT PIES ......... 22.oz ' Oll-IOA 29' TATER TOTS ............................. 16-oz. GRE EN GIANT WUH BUI flR 4~ flOSAFUTA Al SO 8£[1 TACOS 4nc CAULIFLOWER . .10 oz :1 MEXICAN DINNERS . "ot :1 GR! EN GIANT 31)( AOSARIT" 43c MEXICO RN io oz 11 COCKTAIL TACOS .... .s .. oz. GRlEN GIANT 31)( ~OSARI TA A£D OR GRE[N 41)c CREAMED SPINACH 10.0, 11 CHILI BURRITOS . ,..oz L ltOSAtrT A IEEFOa CHlfSE 3 ftc ENCHILADAS ....... . .av •. oz. ..,, . OH -IOY HEAT AND Sfl't'( 3 7' GARLIC BREAD ................. I-OZ. MOltTON'S .USO.TtD 5 5 CREME PIES~IT1~ ......................... 1.1N. ' 8~vsENBE0RR'Y PIE 3Jt c1"NN4'M'o'N ROLLS ,, oz. 5:JC OH eov 37c OVllH Al([ 4"71: BAKED POTATOES .. ,,.oz. BLUEBERRIES "o' I . .APPlf PEA r.H.APFltC:OI SlRAWBERR'(lflH UBARB.llMON 71)c JOHNSTON 9-INCH FRUIT PIES . ..... ...... . ................... "'" 11 CHEESE slRliD99'. .. -Filii0 ETOUCH ....... ~!t:5 1 STATER BROS. BLEACH .... ""''" 27' KINGSFORD BRIOUETS .10 '" 79' MARY ELLEN PLUM JAM 20 Ol 51 ' ABC SUGAR COOKIES .. "' 36' GULFLITE ~r::~1~"1 -··-.. ·-·-ou•'H 3gc · PEANUT BUTTER """" ......... 18 Ol 89' RELISH ""'""' 35' l-10T DOG DA SW££! , , ......... 12-0Z ~t1'1.'L~·~~--······· PKG Of 4 66' DEL MONTE CATSUP ........ ,.o, 22' TOMATO SAUCE Oil MONI[ ........ 3 'Ol 33' HONEY GRAHAMS su.s"'NC.. .... "01 39' MAXWELL HOUSE ~':ii'.i:' 10 oz sl.49 PURINA CAT FOOD "" ... 2, oz 37' ~ KLEENEX TOWELS I?'J~8\:~" ..... .. 33' MUG ROOT BEEF . 6 ,, 01 69' NESTEA INSTANT TEA ·" 01.s1.19 SOFT -WEVE ROLL TISSUE . "" 28' COTTAGE CHIESi O<AUINGf 33c 63' PINTS QTS . VALUABLE COUPON 65', OFF WITH THIS COUPON ON TIDE · DETERGENT FAMlll SIZE 'ltfGlkAtHIClil.7• GoodOnlr1r STATH llOS. GHdt,,1u AUG.11 !IMll 1 COV'OM l'f'• ,AMl\Y BUFFERIN SCORE HAIR TABLETS DRESSING, )4)0 W11t linc1l11 A•111~•. A111~:i111 256~ W. l ro1dw1y, A111~1i111 ·PRICES EFFEC. 7-FULL DAYS THURS.·WED. AUG. 6-12 t.lt.2 Edi11t•• A•••1i., M1111tittt11 11.:clri 101 W1it Ni111l1111tlri ~•11!, C1tl1 M111 1100 l11t Conl111 A•1n111', Ot•"9• 60'• 79' 4.s.oz.84' 2110 N1 .. p1rl 11•4 .. Co"t M111 I I JI l1k1r Str11t, C11!1 M111 I (J 12 M!1110 1'•111111, WlliOit• 1111 Ch t ¥JM•ll A ... 11u1, G1rd111 ~''"' ~601 W11l S1•111l1111lh St ... t. 5,,..,, An• • 161 0 Edt11,1r A•1•11M1, 511111 A111 1111 W11tn1i111!1r 11 .. d., W11l"'i111!1r 14171 lttlf H!U A•t11w1, Ty1tl11 ,, I I • • --··--·-·-·----·-·-·-·-·-... ... 3 OAtl V PILO T Wtdntsd'ay, August '· iq10 N PILOT -ADVERTIS E;) 5 00/ily COUPON SAVER BOOK FRO.-THRIFTlfKART!!! WIN. FBEEZEBS full of food, MB CANADA Mo1itreal 1'treatlo1i Thri · nwrt WlllCLY SAVER •ooic -_, For ¥01.t!! WINOHE Of . 20 G, I, FRIEURS fULl Of fllQllM Rl005 "·IVi11 a FREE .AIR CNWIA VACATION WIN A: • NO FROST FREEZER FULL OF FOOD! 20 TO a1 GIYIM AWAY NOTHl!IQ 10 •u1. 'll'llffllJlt Will •[ HOTlflCO, 8'1i•ler /\'"'4' .i MIUl.1$ ONl'f'. A•1 Tlari/•l..,.,, OIAWNI WILL II: AlA to. Krf. I, ta'f. 21 NID OCT. 1 WIN AM Ala CANADA@ VACATION FOR ·•"""- TWO PIRIOMI In MONTREAL Th• .. ,...,,, of llorllt ""'•rlc•• 1 AD\/EHTUllOLIS DA~ D.CITIHG NIGHTI JIT THUi Otl AIR CANADA ~ l"IJIJCH,11Sf H£CES8AAY llCGllTlll TODo\f! QI-.: OI' ti.; -.in 1• lAJIGUI ...-s stay at a luxurioUs hotel GIT COllllP'Lll'l 0£TAllS AT MIT TllM"TIMAllT Witch Jtll' llilltJ fer ttis 'llllMe CMfll NM. If ltl 4efhoere4 Ml fer JtW Mel 11 MJ Tltrtftilllrt FIRST WIEIC COUPONS FREE ONE LARGE HEAD LETIUCE AND $2.00 MINIMUM PURCHASE 15• OFF WITH COUPON ON l' YOUR FAYOR1TE TOOTH PASTE ANY IR.AND -ANY SIZE PRE-PRICED 7~c 12.oz. PKG . 49c 3 '°' $100 SMUCICE RS ICE CREAM ~~~~TOPPINGS 'J~~; D1ti'Nii'S.0:.'59~ . MARGARINE -INCL.~' OFF son PARKAY 1.LI. 35e CTN. LIPTON 'S INSTANT TEA 2.oz. JAR 69c • ' • • • • ' ' • LANGENDORF COOKIES ,., 25' VARIETIES ta ' GORDON'S -WHITE or WHV.T ' ' ' SLICED BREAD • ' ' • '·"· 25e LOAF 28-0Z. BOTTLES $,()Off \1ZE NATIONAL llSCUIT 29c SHRIDDID WHEAT .. . .... '.:·:;: GO•OOH'S kAMIU~6(R OR ll 49c HOT DOG BUNS ... . . ...... ,;;: AL L VARIETIES -FROZEN CONCENTRATED MED IUM KUBRO ,..oz. 39c GRADE ooz.35c SOUPS •••••• ~'G• "AA'' EGGS •• ~'"• CAMPBELL'S-101/,-0Z. TIN 1 OC TOMATO SOUP ............ · 75 '0FF WITH COUPON ON 1' "TENDER LEE" SELF IA.STING TURKEY FREE WITH COUPON ANO 12.00 MINttwlUt.4 PURCHASE ONE ,._Oz. TIN SUNSHINE STATE FROZEN ORANGE JUICE BREAKFAST SPECIALS t'RESB SEA.FOOD FRESH CAUGHT BROADBILL SWORDFISH STEAKS 98~ FRESH FILLETS OF MONTIRIY ROCK COD 79fb. WITH THIS COUPON On All P1ireh.ases* DOUBLE BLUE CHIP STAMPS •EXCEPT ON FLUID DAIRY PRODUCTS, ALCOHOLIC IEVERAGES I TOIACCO COUPON GOOO THURS .• SUN., AUGUST 6, 7, I, 9 . ........ $1 ~.9 FRESH 57' LEAN • • • • • • • • • Jt. V .S.D.A. ''Choice'' Beef Roasts BONELESS CHUCK 99c ROAST. • • lb LARGE END RIB ROAST RIB ROAST s~~~L BONELlSS CLOD •o''"95c ROAST : !"~ lb c BON ELESS LB. STEW 89'1b IEEF $1 ~~ SHORT RIIS .............. ,:• 39C • • • • • • • CROSS RIIS .............. ,:'.' SIC ~T::~Ri~E" soNnEss 89fb ~ V.S.D.A. l1ispe<~t1~d 44 ... ~ BEEF ROUNDS . . . . . . . ,. ., GUARANTEED FRESH •·110ZE,'\' ttlEA.'f l)t:l>'I'. Sl'ECIA.LS C1'RNATIO.N PERCH cir 1-1b. 73C COD flLLllS .................... ". · pk9. CARNATION 12-01. 49C FISH CAKES ,,,,, ....• ,,,,,,, ..•...• pkg. CARNA.TION l·lb. $105 SOLl FILLETS ....•. , .. , . . • . . . . . . . . pkg. FRYERS CA.RNA.TION 2.1b. $109 FISH Stl.A•S •. , .....• •. • • • · • · • • • · • p~g. RUPERT I 2·•u. 694 FISH 'N CHl'ESI' STICkS ... , ... , .... , . p~g. A.LL WHITE MEAT CU T UP PAN READY BREASTS CHICKENS 591b. 351b. STREA.M FRESH 12-01. 894 TROUT , ..... , ..... , , ••••... , ....... pkg. FOUR FI SHERM EN l -01. 454 FISH STIC•S , , , ........•..• , .•...... pkg. FOUR FISHERMEN 14·ol. 734 FISH STIC«S ..... , ••• , •. • .••..•..... P•t· FRYER THIGHS ....... . .49~ BEST OF PRYER ........... 55~ FOUR FISHERMEN 24·ot. 984 FISH STICKS • , ................ , ..... pkg. DRUMSTICKS . . ........... 55~ FRYER WINGS ............ 35~ ~ August S1111,dwicl1 S11•~cials 44~• ----Finest F1· eshcst Ga1·de11 Foods-- THOMPSON SEEDLESS OL' VIRGINIA 5-0Z. PKG S. : OLD VIENNA ' COLD MEATS ! 6 :!:9 e -~ -'~ • '.'\ •• ' ,,,;.-... ;~, 't,~ COMB IN ATION LOAF - O(JTCH LO A F -OUYE & PIM IENTO LOAF -PICKLE & PIMIENTO LOAF-SAND- WICH lO"F -SPICED LUNCH~ON -IAR·l ·OUE LOA!= JANr,.NOIRS • IMl'ORTID HAM ..................................... ·.~~ ,I aors-i.oz. JARS K~AFkPHILAOELPHIA c DRESSINGS CREAM CHEESE IOOO IS LAND 3 f •100 ITAUAN or Fl EN CH ROQUIFOllT .............. t: 53C IUU CHUA ............... ~:;· 43C 8-0Z. PKG. 39c LUCKY LAGER DRAn 6 '1·0Z. $114 CANS BURGERMEISTER DRAn 6 "·OL $139 CANS MILLER HIGH LIFE BEER 1211.oz.$229 CANS lll,Uf, ' BLUE ' !'HIP ~ \JA MPI l Cllll'' ·· · . SIAM Pi' LARGE YELLOW MEAT NECTARINES 15lli. LB. SWEET YELLOW MEAT FREESTONE 19¢ TOP OF THE MELONS -CRANSHAW ¢ PEACHES .. ....................... lb MELONS .. . . ..... . .. . 49 .. YOUR CHOICE "' • 8 8 e GRAPEFRUIT or ORANGES ....................... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~~ 9 U.S. No. I 3 -lb. 25C I fREESWEEf qt. 494 I TH!SllE-wlPiOolll '"""'' 12·••· 6""' llOWN ONIONS . . .. .. • b19 : OIANCil JUICl ......... boill1 ~ MIJID PIUIT ............. ,.f. ~ SALAD SIZE RED ' 111: LB. 33c RIPE TOMATOES ..... 0.. 2 BAG Pr icu Effective Thurodey thru Sundoy, Aug. 6, 7, 8, 9 2701 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA e 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE e 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA 23811 EL TORO, EL TORO 5858 WARNER, HUNTINGTON BEACH • ' ~------------.. J 0 l'ILl!T0 ID\IERTISI1! N Elegant Wrap 721 5 '. For evening elegance, wrap ' a fabulous shawl 'round you. Latest fashion news! Make . a rom a ntic . fashionably fringed shawl ri ch wilh bril- : Ji ant embroidery. Pattern 7215 ~ tran6fer 14" x 26", directions : for shawl, macrame fringe. · : FIFl'Y CENTS for each pat- ~ tern -add 25 cents for each \ pat.tern for Air Mail and Special Handling ; otherwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Alice Brooks, the Daily Pilot , 105 Needlecraft Dept, Box 16!. Oki Oielsea Station, ; New York, N. Y. 10011. Print : Name, Address, Zip, Pattern • Number. BIG lt'11 Ne edl ec r aft • Cata.leg -40 pages, 200 designs, 3 free patterns! Knit, crochet fashions. Quilt, em- . brokler, weave. 'l'oys, gifts! Send fJO cents. NEW! Complete A f g b a n , Book -marvelous afghans , ' fashiOll!, pillows. baby gifts, • more! $1. "50 b.stant Gifts'' Book. SO cents. "16 J/Uy Rugs" to knit, crochet, weave, sew , hook. 50 cents. Book of t! .Priu Afghans. 50 cents. Bargain! Quilt Book I has 16 beautiful patterns. 50 cents. • Mu1ewn QuUt Book i 'T • patterns fOr 12 superb quilts. 50 cents. Book J, "QuUts for Today's U ving". 15 patterns. 50 cents. Hostess Offers Ingenuity A Massachusetts hostess dreamed up this excellent vegetable dish. SPINACH STROGANOFF 4 packages (each 10 ounces) frozen chopped spinach 1 can (1011' ounces ) con- den se d c r ea m o f mushroom soup I container (I pint ) com- mercial sour crea1n 2 tablespoons minced parsley 1 cup chopped scallions {green onions), wiUl green part included I tea!JX>Oll Worcestershire sauce :l tablespoons buUtt l cup sliced mu.shrooms ( 1/4 pound will make a generous cupful) I tablespoon lemon juice 1,1i teaspoon black pepper 14 teaspoon garlic powder Cook spinach according t.o package direcllons ·omitting salt: drain well. Mix together Uie undiluted mu.slroom IOUp, sour cream, parsley, scallions and Worcestershire sauce. Sau le mushrooms in butter; season with lemon juice, pep- per and garlic powder ; stir into 90ur-cream mixlure along wMh spinach. Turn into a 2 or 21f.a-quarl shallow ba~ dish. Bake ln a preheated "fOO..degree oven until thoroughly hot -aboul 20 minutes . Makes 8 to 12 aervings. Note: T!,lis dish can be 1>f'epared" well in advance of serving and held In the refrl~rator. ff so, bake at 400 degrees for about 40 minutes. Bac on Added Grilled cheese s1ndwlchu are delicious. but lhcy 're even more tempting when the fill· Ing ls made from cheese and bacon, 1-Jowever. the bacon , \vii i need to be cooked berore 11 ls used In 1he ruling. . "·r··~~--~~--~~----------·-._.........,,,,.,... I . . ---....... ~··•-»11•••KW4 •-••W ........... ~ --· ........ -------... -. -~-·--·---· ---··-·-------·· Wtdnesaiy, A09int 5, 1~70 WtdntSday, August 5, 1970 DAil Y PILOT 5 IVORY LIQUID ~;IR3G~N9T C 32·0Z. -tlMIT BTL. ONE wnH tlll COUPON DOUBLE BLUE CHIP STAMPS WITH ANY fOOD PURCHASI PRICES EfFICTIVI THURS. thru SUN., AUG, 6 , 7, I, 9 , 1970 LAMB ROAST SHOULDER 4g fresh Fro l en C New Zeoland u.s.D.A. '"'P""d lb. BLACK PEPPER DURKEE'S 39c 4·0Z. CAN CEDAR FARM BONELESS CANNED PICNIC PORK SHOULDER ~$289 FOOD GIANT SLICED ALL MEAT BOLOGNA ''" 69c Poul'!d Pltg. HEAL TH & BEAUTY AIDS AQUA NET .. HAIRSPRAY m-~ • REGULAR • UN SC ENTED • HARO-TO·HOLD 2 l ·OZ. '1 CANS FRESH LIAN DOU&LE RICH BLENDED CREAM OF KENTUCKY WHllKIY ;~;~UPP LYI '899 96< REG. HALF $9.95 GALLON· BRIGADOON IMPORTED SCOTCH ~~~~:~ '3 !,,~ REGE NCY PREMIUM PILSNER BEER 6 12.oz. 7ftc :::~:: CAllS 7 . $2Pe WITH CHICORY LUZI ANN E COFFEE 1-Lb. g5c flNISH DISHWASHER DETERGENT (INCL 12c OFF), 33-cL .......................... 57c WAGNER FRUIT DRINKS, ORANGE OR GRAPEFRUIT. quart ................. 3for $1.00 DR. ROSS DOG FOOD, Beef V!9etoble. Chicken, liver or Meat, no. 1 c.an 2 for 33c BORDEN DANISH MARGARINE( INCL Jc Off) l ·lb ................ , ................... 37< PlANTE R'S COCKTAIL PEANUTS,61/.-cL ............................................... 4 le Can EASTIRN CORN flD PORK CHOPS LOIN IND CUTS FAMILY STEAK LIAN SHOULDER '1 09 U.S.D.A . CHOICE Bllf lb. Bartlett PEARS RIPE 5L'1 MELLOW : GARDEN FRESH All GaEEN BROCCOLI 19.~. U.S.D.A.. CHOICI Bllf SWISS STEAK 0.BONI 79:. l:HUCKSTEA BLADECUT 5gc U.S.D.A, CHOICE •••• . lb. STRAWBERRIES KERN'S 2 SC •1001 FROZEN WIP IO.OZ. PKG. TOPPING .... <59 <Q't c BROWN ONIONS U.S. NO. 1 ALL PURPOSE 5~. LARGE BROWN STEAK 39c MUSHROOMS v.ib. LA RQSA · JOHNSON'S Wt>:I., JUBILEE LIQUID, 14-az ............................... .75c Egg Noodles Fettua:ini (I 0 oz.) Rigotoni (l ·lb,) 2 5.~. JOHNSON'S WM. PASTE 16-cz .............. , ............. : .............. 75c GAIN lAUNDRY DETERGENT,49-<>L ........................... , .. , ....... 83< IVORY ·SOAP, Medium Bar ................................... : .••. 2 for 25c IVORY SOAP. Lar11e Bar ........................................... 2 far 39c 2300 Barbor Blv d. at Wilson St.. ~bor Shopping Ce n ter, C os ta Mesa I \ --~~...-.~--..... --~~ ............. ~~~~~~~~~~~-----~-·~--------------~-·~------..---.--•• ' T ' ' • -• • t • -----------~·-------.. ---·------- DA.1.L.Y PllOT WtdMida~. August S, 1970 s PILOT ·ADVERTISER I -~..,_Actress ~ever Measures 1-ngr-e~er-lts Cole Slaw Specially Delicious TE.NDER LOVING CAR'E Dell• RHSe Summer's Cool Treat: Icy Cold Watermelon Served refreshingly cold, watermelon is a treat any time. Watermelons are usually available from early May through September with the peak supplies in June, July. and August. Judging tbe quality of a watermeloo, however, is very difficult unless ii ls cul in half or quart.!red. To make sure to get a good quality 1o1•atermeloo foUow these tips from the United S 1 ates Department of Agriculture's Conslimer and Marketing Service: In cot mek)ns, loot for firm, juicy flesh wittJ good red col- or, free from ~ite streak.s. The seeds .sbQuJd_ be dark brawn or black. Avoid melons with .p111le col- ored flesh , and white streak! or whitish seeds, whihll in· dicate immatw:ity. D:y, mealy flesh or watery, stclngy Oesh are signs d. oven:naturity or aging after harvest. Whole melons should have a relatively smoolh surface. The rind should !lave a slight dullness. The ends of the melon should be filled out and rounded . And the underside. or "belly" shoo.Id have a creamy color. Of course, ask for a "plug'' ii you can. LIMITED OFFER •YOO WOULO t"UfCJ TO PAY $12 '' 'OI THIS VAUJf • SATIW".U;now OUAIANTffO • 10 TO lJ flNl:ifffO ,~a7" PJOOFS •toM WHICH TO CHOOil • fNo\Jl,'t' CHILD«I~ Ci11CWP$ "'"""' • PlCtftlfONAl l'MOTOGIAPl'lfli ,.OM JINYMITE l'OlTRAITS ONLT 6 DAY·S NO APPOINTMINT NICl lSAIY PMOTOOIAPHl•I SPICIAL HOU ll,.·11 AM t• 6 PM 9901 ADAMS AVE. HU NTI NGTON BEACH By JOHNA BLINN BOU.YWOOD -"I don~ .... by .... cup milk. oii&lullf cup eggs. I JIA't get there: J tmvw it all in a pot. And I )ewe tl aod I Nb it Ind I cl"!' It Willi affediQp. Thert'1 a kit ti t.l.c. (tender loving care, Uwt Is) in there. And it alway.1 come ·out very well." The very loquacious Della Reese (that's a sligbley dif. fere11t spelling of ht#' ml first name : De.lloreese) is a gal \\'ho thinks In pounds: to prepare her favurlte dessert, strawbeJT)' 9lhort cake made with homemade pound cake. The songstre!S-CO\lk supreme U9e:S a pound of Oour, ' pound oC bultel' and a pound or a.igar. Thai may be 'Nhy Jately she has been thinking in terms of shedding powl· dage. Standing in the s u n n y kitchen or her Cliffside Hollywood Hills home. she wa.s jn the throet of preparing some ol her favorite salads. toss.ing greens in an ancient wooden saliid bowl with a crack in one side, but a treasured possession prized tor the task at hand. ';Lisi.en, I just Jost 21 pounds, booey, because I like my cootillg. J eal all the while I'm cooking. Since I don 't go by one cup this and ooe: spoon that, I steadily taste it to see ir it's coming out all rig'bt. "When ft's dope I sit down and eat more than anybody else. It doesn't really matter t.o me that anybody else doesn't like the cooking 'cause it 's cooked to suit me and I eat like a mad dog in beat~" "1 haven't cooked like I like lo cook e.1cept for Dumpsey tDellareese Jr., the singer's 9-yev'(lld daughte.r , a nickname, she gave herself to avoid confu&ion with her famed parent)" Della said \\'agging her head. "l make a roast that last. us 3 week, which we used to devour in a day or so. wt\at J fit now is only eoougb to eat where I used to fix enougb rood to have rood." The Detroit-born perfonne.r, the youngest of seven children born to Ricilard and Nelly Early, first attracted attention when at age six, she sang at the weekly radiocasls from the family Sunday night cburdl servicet:. their food tastes. ••A person In Junior hlch IChool, 0.113 who only JIU. celery, let1uce swnm<rid lourin& wilh -1' and things Iha! oren'l too slnaer Mahalia Jacboo °''"' .>fll<Y, b usually milcknan-~ meals and cool<i.ig"" n~. People wilh hoity the road: ·•we used to eat tasliS are usually a hUle: oul of cans logetbtr," Della ~r .. whe.r!as, Utoae who recaUed. "U you got. a lllUe h~e spicy ~!ngi> are often ef(iciency kltcbea, you could kind of sexy. fix whatever )'OU wanled. DELLA RE~E'S There are an awful lot or JAMBOREE SALAD things you can fix without cooking." ~Ila's fOod ta.st.es bave changed little through feast and famine. .. J atill love Swedl.M meatballs. l prepare. them for my daughter who ealS like a hor&e:! J make things out or that for he:.r, like I will take it and set it on a Oat surfact and put t.binp aromd it like baked beans so it looks like a tower of Pisa t.o con her into eating it. ''Or 1 roll up a letluct Leaf stuffed wllh IOlttelhing she doesn't llke, for example: egg paste. But she's lair and if she gets the baked beans what she calls 'hamburger' 1mea'- bails1, she'll go along with the rest." Della claims she can tell a lot about a person from 1 head western iceberg let· tUl'e l cup cooked d,iced mixed vegetables (or one 8~~ ounce can ml.J.ed salad vegetables) I cup cooked whole small white onions (or one 8· ounce can whole small onions) 4. cherry lomatoes ~ cup dairy sour crel'm 2 teaspoons fresh lemon jWce 1 teaspoo11 soy sauce * teaspoon seasoned sail Few dashes coarsely grated black pepper Caraway setds Small cucumber, several cherry tomatoes for gar· nish Core, rinse and thon..ughly drain lettuce; chill in plastic i~·'t" ' ' • crlaper {or dlsposable plastic bag). Drain vegetablu and onions 't\o·e.IJ. Cul onion and tomatoes inlo w.tdi~ Blend soor ceam with lemon juice, 80Y sa~ and sea,,oned salt; toss lightly with mixed vegetables. onion and tomatoes. Line salad bowl with outer surface leaves: halve re- maining lettuce lengthwise, then finely shred enough t9 measure 2 cups. Mound in center of bowl : spoon veget- able mix: lure in . ring around moonded lettuce:. Lightly sprinkle pe~ and Cfltaway seeds over alt. Garnish with sliced cucumber and cherry tomatoes. Makes 4 servings (II calories each). Afterthoughts; 0 e 11 a ' s favorite salad is a r)ch..tasting salad and is satisfying as a klw-calorie lunch. Calories become even less if yogurt 162 calories) is substituted for the sour cream but lemon juice should be reduced to Olll! teaspoon. Strips or cheese, or lean meat (rare roast beef, toogue, leg or lamb or ham) or poultry (turkey or chicken) can be added for protein. in- creasing calorie c.o n t t n t somewhat. ' ,. An espt'Clally delicious cab- bage salad. PHYLl.'S RED CABBAGE SLAW i...~ cup mayonnaise \14 cup apple juice I tablespoon m.1gar 1,1: teaspoon salt White pepper to lasle 1 tablespoon red w 1 n e vinegar I quart (packed down) fine knife-shredded red cab- bage \4 cup thin strips swe:el I Bermuda-cc Spanish- lype onioo) 11 cup golden raisins, rinsed in hot water In a medium mixing bowl, with a fork, beat together ttie mayonnaise, apple j u i c e , sugar, salt, pepper a n d vinegar. . Add cabbage, onion and raisins: mix well. Cover tight- ly and refrigerate tor four hours or looger. Makes 6 to 8 servings. " l -.. -. ' 1 a NO.. YOll CAN COMPARE THE I .. ' I P~ICE I ANOTHER RALPHS FIRST ... MOW ... PRICE PER MEASURE MAKES EVERY OUNCE COUNT NOW YOU CAN EASILY COMPARE tho PRICE PER MEASURE of 'LIKE ' ITEMS, blcause Rolphs is introducing I rnolutio...-, Pficing·idH . It's 10 addition to UNIPR1 CE ind • another w1y to show you that 'only Ralphs hn it 111.' Price Per Measure is dosiqned to help y .. be 1 betler shopper •. just a1 th•v htv• done by giving yoa yoar choice of sumps or a 1 Yz% discount, and 'one itern .•. ont low price.' HERE'S HOW IT WORKS- You Will find these red tlgs on more than 1,000 itenr1 in your store. A comparison of the price figures on the shelf.togs wit h the lit• under ot- her sizn 1nd bronds of the Sime 'kind' of product will let you choose the best bly 111 "'""- They r.tizo th1t pr ice is only Ont of the St1nd1rds you use to select you r f1mily '1 food1,. but now they· .. m1de thlt comparison easy. Only 1t Rllphs un you 1111 just how much -y OUnct IHlly COUftfL PrM:e Per M11 .. r1 is another way R1lph1 IHdership "" S1Ve you time ind money. I helltily encourap you to flko 1dv1n1191 of this rnolution1ry co..,m• benefit. FARM FRESH PRODUCE f .. UN1PR1CE FRESH· PACT REGULAR PEAS FFIOZE:N., TO-OZ.. OMOf. A UN1PR1CE ORANGE JUICE OLO SOUTH. FLOfUOA, FROZEN, f.OZ. CAN ,. ' HUNT'S KETCHUP 20.()Z. BTL . .. aUDGIT 1.llYUS BLACK PEPPER 4·0Z.CAN 39' SPAM LUNC~~~.MEAT 59' BREAD .-~ 29' PAPER NAPKINS SCOJ.~'.~~1'!10 33' PRUNA CAT· FOOD a.~5z0!!~0 10' ' _, ' BUTTERMILK, RANCH HOUSE 01\CRACKEDWHEAT, l~LB-- cuTGREEN"'eEANS 23c CHERRYPRESERYES _,_,,,,,,,39¢ KINGSFORD, 10·LB. BAG (20·LB. BAG $1.29) CHARCOAL 69C BRIQUETS ~· SOFT DRINKS ,~~;~:· age WHITE VINEGAR 0~~f:· 55e G UM WfllGlf'l"'S, ;SSOflT'l:D, l't:Q, Of 20 IK ,KGS , "EQ, Sl.00 VALUE 79e BED PILLOWS FLEA COLLAR ·~~:~r 99' BAND-AID PLASTICS~ 17 9 ( BOX of'5Q" ¥ ) Afrjfl l'f"'""alff. 59• fJ:~t=s.r, ~ RIGHT GUARD BRIGHT SIDE SHAMPOO 491 UN1PR1CE IN THE DELI BOLOGNA <{$ SLICED, 10 OZ. PKG. All MEAT IALL BEEF ...... 65c) UN1PR1CE IN PRODUCE lllALOUPES -.;·r.·-.... ~ LARGE SIZE EXTRA. LARGE SIZE SWEET AND FLAY ORF UL VINE RIPENED LB. BELL PEPPERS MANGos ~~l~35: ·;~.::~M 10.! CEL~RY :~~. 15.! 7 -DAY ADVERTISED BLUE CHIP SPECIALS STAMPS • c c c c c c • I • c c c c c -~~~·~·~·~·,-~, ---~-P•-••~---:-,.,., .... ~..,,,...,.., -·-·~· --·-··---•-•-,f,,-1 i•··-,,-.•~·~·.-,-·--"!' . .,,,......,..,.,, ______ ~.., ~'""\*OP ••+yw ++•• $+• W ,,.--,.. ~,., .... ~. ... ~ ~-r .,.. ... 7 PIOLT.ADVERTISER 5 Wtdntsday, Augurt 5, lll70 Plentiful Supply -An,ytlme' s Salmon Time S=inertimt -wlnlerllme' -lll)'tllM'a tho Ume lo h!Joy ta!mOn. As predlcied by l<lien- tiSll ot 'he Bureau of Com- mercial Flshefies, salmon are plentiful thil year a n d lisbermen all alona the coasf.ll ..._ d. Alaska and the Pacllic . Northwest are wctking double ohlfto hauling th<m In. Brillo! Bay,' Al.,ka, ls l<ernlng wllh salmon filltlng boat.s and retrigerated thlps. ' Cargo plaoes ""' hurT1Jnl Ille catch to the mainland for your enjoyment. Share the enjoyment with your family and add ex· cltemenl to NOW' menu with Bristol Bay ~lmon Bake. This recipe was named in honor ol that va.'lt body of water where mudl of the salmon catch ts brought into port. Covered with butt er y crumbs and baked wrtll flaky, this succulent salmon entree will deligflt the eye, please the taste, and satisfy the a~ petite. 'two of:J:f.be most popular l>odl o cooi.lng fish are In recipe. Pan-Cry- ing J>f<li?ahly the most fre-qlieP y osed as well aa abused GREEN method of I la h cookery. Browning the aallllon 11- by pan-frying, approxbnately S to 3 minutes for each aide, is all that the recipe requires. Baiting, a form of dry be.at cookery, is an ideal way to linlldl <OOklng the aalmon steak!. In bating, the tem- perature is kept moderate and tile sauce and buUt!'<rUlllb topping keeps the .... ka juicy and flavorful. Do a o t overcook! Why not learn ilow' to coot fish properly? "Let's Cook Fish," a full-color booklet, Is a complete guide to fllh cookery with Ups on buylng, storing and market forms, as well as food values of fish. For your copy, 1e11d 60 cellll to the Superintendent p f Documents, U.S. Government PrinUng Office, Washington, O.C. 20402 and ask for "Let's Cook Fbh." BRISTOL BAY SAIMON BAKE 2 pounds salmon steak!, \'"" .,. lroun !~salt I '{4 leaspoon pepper V... cUp flour F•l for frying IWcupo peeled, ...dee!, dic- od tomatoes I cup 11ked mushroom> \~ cup dry vermouth ~ loaapoo!I crushed garllc I> cup IOlt bn!ad crumbs S tablespoons butter or margarine, melted Thaw troien .teats. Sprinkle boc.b !Idea ol fl* wttb salt and pepper. Roll In flour. Place ft!b in a single layer in bot fat, in a 12·inch fry pen. Fry al a high heat fur 2 to J minutes or until brown . Tum carefully. Fry I to 3 millutes longer or until brown. Place fish Jn a single layer In a well-greased baking dish, u by a by 2 Inch ... Combine lomatoe!, mushrooms, vermouth and garlic in a 1711 quart saueepan. Bring to a boll, stirring constantly. Pour hot sauce over fish. Combine bread crumbs and butter. Sprinkle crumbs over top of fish. Bake in a moderate oven, 350 degree F ., for 20 to 25 minutes or until crumbs are brawn and fish fiak<o easUy when teoted With a fork, Makes I aervlngs. c• ICECREll 0UJ ,,,__, SM',,. CMTm ____.59c I• 1n 01 P•I I-OZ.CANS 01 IOY, STWfii wml CHUS<, Oft IOUR CREAM• cKrVES. rKG. Of 2 FllSl~An CRAD£ Iii. 1 O-OZ. PKG. PIRES ~ ntURS.. wm. AUG. 1 · 1Z 39' 19' 33' 17' ....... ·--····· --..... VODKAo•GIN ~~~~31 ' \ •MnM..-.noz.e.r.. 99c -'"1111.-1-TAl.~nM.DMOUlll. 99~ EIELIEISS IEEI "'""'-CAMMED COCKTAILS :::r.::.l'l'.':. ..... BONEI ESS ROUND i~ 95~. • LB. J WELL TRIMMm 49>MEAT MAST£JI llRF BONELESS EAS'f 'tO CARVE 89~ $11! 55~ ED PORK CHOPS FRESH, SKINLESS SUCEO. TASTY 's fLA yo1 I fl'f, w:u 01 IAlf I · tJO,? ::=. •11! OWlfCUIE I • FLATCUTS 98~ YUL YUL PARMAGIANA STJAKS r=98~ 1=89: AA POOD ALICllOWi FUROF ,.., ROCK FISH HUT'IUT FISHSTICKS 89! 45! COOL FILLING HIDES SURPRISE Apple, Lemon FI av or Berry Pie 'Frosting' APPLE FROST STRAWBE RRY PIE I cn\'e\ope unf l avored gelatin v~ cup frozen lemonade co~ centrate, thawed t"Cups canned apple sauce Light, lemony fluffs ot apple-Oavored c o o ri n e s s . whirled over a layer of luscious red California strawberries and nestled in a flaky , tender pa3try shrlt. n111kes U1ls ternpllng summer delight. This is lhe kind of recipt• 11: le<L'!poon araled lemon tha1's easy to "lake from Ll1t. rl'tld top." Either use a boxed ----t:. teaapoon salt paatry mix or pastry stick!! '' 1 teaspoon vanilla extract to 1nake the pie shells, or 2 egg wh.ites you may purch~se lhe frozen, 1 pint fresh C a I I f o r n I a ready-lo-buke ktnd. strawberrle., sliced Unflavored gelatin is sor-t baked fl.Inch pastry stielt tened right Jn the lemonnde concentrate (the froien klnd that hu been allowed to thaw) wnd Oien heated. This i! com- bined with tangy canned apple sauce. navortng and tgg v.'hites, then whipped In an electric mixer tUI t111ht and flurty. Jo'lr1t K(lel a layer of sliced strawberries In lhe ' pastry shell, then tl"9 mlxfure, mounded high, concealing the sweet secret of the strawberry slltes. <lnmlsh with n rcw of the preltlcsl whole b4!rrle11 -a hint of !he ltidden berry .llurprtae -and S<'t to chill In the rcrrii;iern tor. De re.idy for r nt ordt'r~. · \\'hole Strawtierries for garnish Sprinkle gelalln over lemonade concentrale in amaU saucepan. Let 1tand to soak. lleat and stir to dissolve gelatin. Remove from heat. Place In l1r1e bowl of electric mixer. Add apple auct, 'emow rind, snit. vanlDi e1t'ract and egg whlte11. Whip al high apeed . unttl llghl and uurry. • . . Layer elk:e:d atr11wberte11 In pie shell. S'P()orl in 1pple 1ttuce 1nixtu.re. Chlll in n1fri11e.rator (ebout t hourt). Garnl!!h )"llhi \fhoJe strawberries, Mn)(ei; t• 10 8 servln !I. -__ ....,._""""" ___ ~-----.......... ---.._ ......... _.,.,,__ ______ ... . . . •• -------,.__ ------------ . H 0"111.Y PILOT . .f.--:. • : : ,S-.·• ~ BONELESS STEAKS U.S.D • .A. CHOICE OR MA YF.AIR BLUE RIBBON STEER BEEF CENTER CUT CHUCK FAMILY OR SWISS S!!!l!!.~J!~.~~-...................................... 79~ -CALIF. GROWN FROM FOSTER FARMS--... FRYU wHOU 5"' ::~~~: 69< PARTI· WiS ...... WHOLE •• llEAKFAST SPECIALS POIK UNI SAUSAGE HOffMAN S<ONlf 5S ............................ •<><. P<G. 33' WILSOI SLICED BACOfll c'"""' .................................................. LI. 69 PORTERHOUSE ORT-BONE STEAKS · U.S.D.A. CHOICl OR MAYFAIR IWERlllON sma BUf ·TAILSOFFWELl TRIMMED . ·SMOKED PICNICS ~J_FyMto':iuo 4 9c SLICED. TIED ... '"LI. lb. CUBED STEAKS U.,.,D.A.OKMClOI s 139 MAYFAIO kUUlllON lb. ALLUANMIAT NOW.A.SR SPARE 'RIBS\ A IARBEC\IE FAVORITE EXTRA LEAN WELL TRIMMEQ FINEST JN EASTERN PORIC \ ( BONELESS ROASTS ··, U.SD.A. CHOICE OR MAYFAIR BLUE ~IBION CENTfRCUT 98 ( CHUCIC OR : SH'LDER CLOD . lb. HAWAIIAN DAYS AT MAYFAIR, HAVE A LUAU WITH THESE l I j I • ' .J. SLICED PINEAPPLE DOLE NO. I % CAN -···--·-·· .. --.. ···-·· .. ··· MINUTE RICE 2,1-0l. OEM. l'ltG ••. ,_.,,_ ... ,, •. ,, .•••. ,., •........•• ,.. •••••• _,,_ ................ -• $ for '#.lL,~c_E __ 7 ~ -· CHUNKINCiLUAUFOODS MAYFRESH CHICKEN CHOW MEIN '';?t. MUSHROOM CHOW MEIN ..... ~';?i; BEEF CHOW MEIN . .~~;?,~ PORK CHOW MEIN ... ~';?i; YOUR CHOICE I CHOW MEIN NOODLES . NO." CAN 29' SOY SAUCE ...... ............ ,a,'°"" 19' CHUNK TUNA LIGHT . 27( NO. 1/1 CAN HAWAIIAN PUNCH -----m~fair frui~ & Vtgt"'" BANANAS GOLDEN RIPE CHIQUlf A ~ lb . _, ·'"" 19' ·, r PINEAPPLE JUICE ~~~-4.9e 6-PAK · CANS KLEENEX TISSUE BOUTIQUE 4 $1 FACIAL 125-CT. for PKG. • BIRDS E VEGETABLE 01s ais PUl l'OTITO W tflMUllCf.PUI I ClfaM li~e£ •" 1-0lPMl"'lll tllflf.lt.llW,PU•lHIOMIAMO :• CAllOTIW,110 l~illl llllf It.OZ. PM&.·---6--· .. AC DAMIA TS . ~~~~llAN 3nc S-01,S.11. .,- ... - • ' '• • • ---·----·-,. - ' ' 1 LEG 0 PORK ~ROMEASTERNPO ERS 59c WHOUOR SHANK Alf · leuTT PORTION 65 8. lb. ', TOP IR[OIN !!~~'!01 AYFAIO s1 7 9 '• ILUE 111"'.'H-ION ESS lb . • .z:,~food--- ;JB CAKES ~ . ;' • • • ~<t • . • _,.._ -. l NEW] .. SELF-BASTING TURKEYS MA YFRESH US.D.A. GRADE A GUARANTEED TO COOK MOIST & TENDER · ml!Yfair Dttha~ssen LUNCHEON MEATS MA YFIESH 6-0Z. ,.,, AU MIA T IOLOGNA ...au LOAF, T AST'f LOAF OI OUYE LOAF YOUI OtotCE ·······-·-·~-- CANNED HAMS S-LB. RATH HICKORY SMOKED CAN ~ ~~,~~-~~PHIA CREAM CHEESE • llo·s s · ... ___ .................... 35• LICED MEATS .. ·· .................. . "'~S.0-,llDJ Ol,,.,,..O..... 37 '"" ,. . ... c TURKEY OR CHICKEN BREAST ................................................ _ U05Si!Cl0l-Ol l'll:G 47 SLICED AMIRICAll-CHU --· ......... -................. . ' IOlot,..·~ l -1•. 10 ... f ... -· . SE s2n IATH LUllCHEOll MEATS'-·--................ _··-···-···· <U$l'O. 11·0L IUffl I PA,(~. -· -.. ····----·-·-98 C -·-- ADVERTISED PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS THURSDAY, AUG. 6 THRU WEDNESDAY, AUG. 12 NESCAFE \~5~~~-c-~~~ ................ '1 1 ' WESSON OIL z4 o~ ............... 49c APPLE JUICE re:•G:~ .............. 65c --···-~------- W-. A"J'l'l 5, 1970 ' SAVE 11 c WITH THIS COUPON Wmt THIS COUPON SAVE 20c WITH THIS COUPON COLLIER'S BRIQUETS 10-LB. BAG SA Vf 1 '1 c WITH THIS COUPON' BREAKFAST DRINK ORCHARD, ORANGE DRINK, 64-0l. . WITH fHIS COUPON llMll I COlJPON PER ADUlT CUSTOMfR ' GOOO AUG.0.AlJG,1'2 WITH THIS COU'OH • j llMIT 1 COOK.IN PflADUlTCUSTOMfl ~ VAWABLI COUPON YOU SAVE 80c WHEN YOU BUY 2 PANTYHOSE Wmt THtS COU'ON e ~ ' • • .................. 11111 ..................... 11111 ....................................................... ~--~ .... ~~ ...................... ~~~~~~~ .. ~,-~· ...... ----. - I, ----~----• 10 DAJl.Y PILOT WedOHdoy, A ..... 5, 1970 MOLASSES GLAZE PUTS EXTRA IN OROINARY BARBECUE MoJasses Smoke-Flavors Meat Now that the barbecue seaaoo is here, yoo probably aie Jooljng fOf' some fresh ways to, .flavor barbecu ed meats, poultry 1Dd fish. With barbecuing now a national pastime, you may. find that a simple new way to baste and sauce the food is just wba l you need to prevent bartleeue OOredom rrom set.. Ung in. Wben preparing a barbecue sauce, you'll want one that is as simple aa pos!'liblc, but tha( still bu the fresh , unusual flavor of s~lal se1tDning1 Mt available in prepared sauces. ·Si x to Sew j \ I . I ' ' TREAT YOURSELF Lo an entJ,l:elY new, fresh, euy..ge w w~! Be11n wltb cl!ual skimmer, theD flare dresa, bra, panla; top, lhortt (not 1 h ow n) • o-oo-tion blends. ' Printed Paltem 11442• NEW M1-' Sizes I, 10, 12, 14, 11, II, St.. iJ (l>u!! 34). SBBNTV.ftVl!l CENTS ror _..., ,... -add 2S emu i0r·1~ ror Air Mall ond Uand ll ng: ~IJll dcllvery wlJJ ..,._ •ttka or more. Jo Jla'lan Mortin. Tiie DAILY PILOT, 4U Pattern Dept., Z!2 Wd llth SI,, 'liew Yori<, N, Y. 1111111. l/rlnl NAME, ADDRESS wltll ZIP, .1.11.R aM BT'YLE NlJMBElt You 'll also .want sauces that enhance the navor o( the meat or filh -without overpower· ing it -and that will com- p\lmellt the dllferentt flavors or beef, lamb, chicll.en and fish. Horne economl!ta have been con1 i dering these re-- quirementi and have come up with some interesting barbe. cuing trJcka. By brwihing light molasses, straight from the bottle, onto meats and poultry. you can add lulclous flavor and &D appealing glaze which helps seal in the delicious meat juices. 'Ibis erttttnely 1 j m p I e barbeclle trick is convenient to know, since it can come in handy when you are under pressure. Most of you pro.. bably have a bdllle ol light molasses on hand for use in baked goods, milk shakes and other mola5se3 treats. Just make . sure there's always enough Jen for cfuick barbe- cui ng . Brushing light molasse!'I on meats to be oven roasted or broiled will enable you to car· ry the Oavor of outdoor cookery Inside. The unusual savor or light molasses glaze add!'! a "charcoal cooked'' flavor. Dish Features Base Of lceburg Lettuce Some of the most Interesting cooked dilhes In Chinese cuisine use Iceberg lettuct. Sometimes lhe whole lettuce leaves are used as crisp "wrappen" for cooked corn· blnations of meat a n d vegetables in a small amount or savory s;iuce or for fried rice. The lettuce leaves are brougtit to the table and eaters pile the cooked ingredients in- to the )eaves and wrap the lettuce around the filllnj:. As each portion U wrapped, It is eaten . The coarsely shredded let- tuce may be added lo cooked Ingredients: someUmet the In· gredienta are served on a bed of shredded lettuce. And sometimes both additions are ,used tn one dish. Today we're offering you just such a Chinese dish featuring Iceberg lettuce. For the dish shrimp, pineapple. green pepper, mll!hrooms and shredded Jett.uct go into a slightly sweet-and-90Ur sauce; then the whole thing is served on a bed of the crisp le«ucc. A pleasant comblnaUon. M a preface to the Pineap- ple Shrimp you might aerve Won·ton soup. As ID IC· comPJnlment to lbe dllh It.self, Cried rice. And u dealert, almond cookies. PINEAPPLE SHRIMP I h<ad Iceberg l<ttuce in of a large Ifft" pepper, cut in small SQtJare!I J c11n (1S'4 ounc.) ptneap. ple chunka In heavy l)'Np Lemon Butter 1 can (2 ounces) button mushrooms 111 teablespoons cornstarch 2 tablespoons salad (not olive) oil 2 t.ableapoons catchup 2 teaspoons cider vinegar 11t teaspoon salt I tablespoon Japanese·lYPf soy sauce ~4 cup cold water Y.t pound medium -size shrimp (cooked, shelled and deveimd l Core, rinse and thoroughly drain lettuce. Cut off I cup small pieces of th I c k - veined lettuce near core area; set aside. Cut remaining lettuce head In half lengthwise; with a Jong sharp knlfe, finely shred enough lettuce across heart to make 3 cups. Spread shredded lettuce over the bot· tom of a small serving platter. Drain pineapple and mushrooms , mixing and sav- ing liquids. In a 11,i.quart saucepan stir together until smooth the corn· atan::h, salad oil. catc hup, vinegar. sal t and soy sauce; gradtJally stir In saved pineap- ple-mushroom liquid a n d water. Cook over medium beat, stirring constantly, until clear, thlckened and bolling. Add thkk·velned lettuce, green pepper, pineapple c h u n k 1 , mu.!hrooms and shrimp. Heat lhrougfl, otlrrlng gently. Spoon over shredded lettuce on plat- tet. Serve •t once. Makes 2 to 3 aervings. Nole : lnsltod of the cooked Dairy Council of California plain shrimp, you may use home economlN 1 u 81 e 1 t an 8-0unce pnck11g.e of lmzen lemon butter balls to serve bre-adcd shrlmp, thawed. Cook wllh fish. Simply add ~ the shrunp as the package tablttpoon each o( lemo.i julce ~ dlrecl..'i for panfrylng and keep nnd chopped pnrsley to t1''0 w11rm untll yt111 art'! ready to tablespoons bulter. lilend well n11x 1t lnlo the sau;e nlong ,ond !OJI ~.!IL _ "-~ w\Ul tile ollicr lngred1cn1L For variety you can add many different seasonings to the molasses, depend.Ing on your mood and menu. ldea1 for summer cooking, the molasses glazes require no tedious pre-cooking or preparaUon. These glazes are ve11 easy to apply with brush or spoon: the Ught molasses base makes them cling to the meat during cooking. Wbether uaed indoors or outdoors, molasses glazes will contribute an appealing flavor sure to please everyone. Molasses 'n' beans Is a a:rut accompan!menl to barbecued meals -and the beans can be cooked in a pot on the grill, or prepared on the stove. A few spoonsful of light molasses over canned beans -canned pork and beans are excellent, but try others as Y•ell -will give them a hearty flavor and color. For sweet com on the cob, the home economists recom- mend a special spread that makes sweet curn t a s I e sweeter. The following recipes make enough glaze for 4 to 6 aerv. ings. LEMON MOLASSES BARBECUE SAUCE v .. cup light mola1se!'I 2 tablespoons melted butter IA cup lemon juict Combine and brush on food . Golden brown glaze, especially good on chicken. Seasoo food with salt and pepper after cooklng. ONION MOLASSES BARBECUE SAUCE \~ cup ll&ht molassell 2 teaspoons Ango.stura bit,. ters I teaspoon onion powder Combine and brush on foods for an lntere.!llng treat with langy aftertaste. Season food! with salt .!_fter cooking. SPICY MOLAMES BARBECUE SAUCE y, rup light molasse.s \~ cup cat.su p l tt1blespoon instant minced onions % tea spoon Taba.s~ aauce Combine and apply. Hearty and spicy. Season foods wllh !ltlt af1er cooking. JAPANESE BARBECUE SAUCE \~ cup lighl molasae1 2 lablespoonl!I Chun King Jap;incsc-style soy aauce \I, teaspoon garlic PoWder Combine and apply, T•DIY aauce with rich brown caklr. S..""1 foods wUh flO!'I'"' aller cooldnf, MOLA&!ES SWEET CORN l4 cup Ugh! molasea ~' cup huller or margarlnt C)jmbine ingredJent1 1 n smlll $ltuet"pan. Heat, stirring constantly, until butter ls ,!ltU <!Jnlx~11t J~ I \ \ ' ALPHA BE sov 51 .~ '\ J •• I , • I , f· I Gel a FBEE Decorator She/vi f Guide FOUOW THE SHELVING GUIDE FOR DECORATING ANY ROOM'. YOUR HOME COMPARE THE SAVINGS LIMITED OFFER Au g-6 thru Oct. 14 Sm with these llSJ to use Accessories: ITEM SOME ALPHA BETA STORES DISCOUNT "'''"'' PRICE Ji" wwwt Sl!lllAAD jl$ $ .85 tlClllWI IJICWDIDI r wwm amm ,,W5" $ .66 10" WAI.NUT llR-'Cm j...90-$ .66 ( I FURNITURE QUALITY WALN T FINISH FERFECTLY CUT AND HAND FIN HED FOR WALL SHELVING ~STAUATION. DJUSTABLE SHELF.QRACKETS AND WALLS DAROS.. DURABLE FINISH ~Y: TO CLEA 1 • lllY A SPACE·SAVlt>G SH YING SYSTEM tN , PLAYROOM. KID& CATCH QUICK WHEN T For y~ur ~i/ayro Hl'IW HANDY IT IS fOR ST 1110 Tli[]R fAVORI YOU'LL APPRECIATE HOW WELL THESE LONG TI NG SHElVfS STAND Uf' 10 THE WEAR A.ND Tr.AR OF OOAfS ACTIV[ CHILDREH. For your Jiving ~om CUSTOM DCCORATE Tl![ MOST IMPORTANT II IN YOUR HOME WITH THIS HIGH·STYLE WALNUT FINISH. NOSED SPACE BECOMES A PRACTIC.l.l INTER£ST CENT~£.ATURINO AN EUG.l.NT OISf'lAY.Of YOU~ fAVORrlE BOOKS 0 DEC(). RATOll ITEMS. GREAT rDI! DAD'S STEREO AND SYST[M, TOO! For your kitcb111 CUSTOMIZE YOUR KITCHEN WITH A DECORATOR SHnvrrm SYSTEM. TillS AnRACTIYE AID Pt.ACES Ol"T[K.IJS[O ITEMS AT YOUR FINGEJITIP$ FOR OOIQI MID E>Sl' COHVfHIENCt GRCAT FOR (VERYTHING FROM COOKBOOKS'rO COOlllE MRS. THESE WIPE-CLEAN SttUVES ~A£ IDEAL FDRQWJ. APPUNfCB. SOM! ALPHA. SrfA ITEM STORES OISCOUN'T CHARGE PRICE 8''x24'' ~ $1.89 SH£Lf 8"1t36" ~ 't84 """ a··.~a" ~ s3,79 Sh.If ' I0"1t36" ~ S3.32 """ RLPHR BETA ~ .... ,ti.. ., . l I I vt~1, ... -' .. "'· ~=--=--- ,, ·-- ' ' l " .. ~ " ,. ~:; \' ~ I I ' ' ' , ~~ " ii.: . [: ~ ,, " ' / c c c c c •· ., c " --------~·~------------------·~ ·-------~- Alpha Beta's Man in Blue says: HOWARD DUGGER STORE MANAGER OILOAl.E '' . . ' Fnsi Frrit .. , V•t•lla .e.D/SCDUNT PRICES! . . CANl~J.OUPll P.£Alt OF THE SWOll •• p · VINE RIPENED , 'O' ~ i:e •·. SWiii MELONS LUSCIOOS •.i:::-1•c ·-· • CAIAll• U. BAlllllS""""""""" WA TERllELOIS _. &;. URGE CELQY -I .. RED OllOls..--10~ SAUDorCOLESUW:= Ill' YAWCIA OllllGES I 0 ~ l'I• LEIOIS or-LIMES ,..,. ""' I• FRESH PIWPl'LE ~ ""' ... TROPICAL lllGOES um "'" 2 .. HIWlllll PAPAYAS 3 ,.. 111 GRAYEISTlll APPW Zm.ZI" IO!l'11 Ul~lQL'"I ,, EVE l!Y Of.' URGE IRTICHOW FRESH CARROTS ,.., "" unucE :::..l~~i,w... .... Ill' BlllCll Vept11tlu::.lll.i !":is u.111' CUCUllERS""' "" ""' 111' URGE llLL PEPPERS ""' Ill' SOUD CAllAGE...,. :~1" 1;. LOCAL GRUI BEllS lk EXOTIC llWl·FRUIT "" Ill' fttmlP QUM.nY f\OWOS AT Olseouft ..crJ flQM cur• OllRT fltOM HAW Arr ANTHURIUM --· __ ... ------- . STOQ HOUU MOM. -·nL It I.Md fM SAT ... RIM. 10AM .. 7 PM ' !Ola WllA IEIA-llURID ll>o ....... 11111 _ -y- BUTCHEl:S fl!DB MEATS FRESH • DEPEN1lAlllE QUAUlY GROUND BEEF 611EAT·Ofl THE GRllL MIAIS-U PICIUD 'l'O savl • DI~ "'9CfO • Ol.atJTT I unSf1iOfm CMUITIID • U. WftlllDt ~ UIR llRNll MR GOOD ~1.::::. BACON Fl!ESH • LECS MO 11111:11$ FRYER PARTS GREAT ON THE GRfU.. I All'HA muncurt r11111 am 1T LOW 11Sco1111T PllC!S I ~-STEAK BOICE Ill 19:.. USDA GRIDE A• FAM[ Y FAVORITT • WllrA.E BOOY NEW • DD.ICIOOS BONEUSS CLOD STEAK 1 r ['l'l'll"]•AMILY STUK CHUCK STUK llADE cor CHUCK ROAST llADE cur 91~ 59:., 57:., tu. P'IQXE • fltESll FWOlll ClltTIPUIH FISH PIUIU 65c tllUCl'I • u.cuia: frl\CjfMjf: • ..aztR IUI ID IDP STIAKJ . 53' 'ftlnl -.V :f'HCfl uncrm: TQIDMf ,.,_. WUllllDAY, AUfiUll' •tt FRESH FRYERS CAPl1 • ~YOAF\ft. VAqlM ITALIAN SAUSAGE WllSOM • IOIC'B.m • fU\.LY COOllID FESTIYA~ HAMS ' ' 1 l I' I Ii 1< I (I L''i 1 '., I Vt Ii• [JAi lt1iA1 PllCOU NI) t Vllll OA I ""' """"'' Sl'ORB DllCOlnlf • CIWtGE NIC:( Save c•1'tJNA • ft<XlllCE Jll 37' UPLE IUTTIA J1c 1)1 II' QUALITY BAKERY AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES on the double A Dl!COllHf ON ror °' A OISCOUNr -THAM A DOUlll OISCOl/Nf 1 ! ~. l '\( ('111'1; I w ! r • f, ~ • ~~~ fB PILUIURY SPICE 441 ~FOOD STICKS .581( IA'l'H sm:-1A11: • AQtL\ • GOLD WHITE Oft PINI': DllL B•R SOAP ~la ... ..2at' 2.1' I I: 111\, ,,!11j : \ l •I ~I l A I 'ICOl.fJfr • .AJJ. Y.um::nD • f1IODJf POPSICLES OW "184 lllTITIH FUDISICLES J11 .o· .I Dh.ald!". A 14141111 40 1 I ·1! ?fil xnamr CIWIM • MCJUllT PAPER IAPKllS J2e' 10' PMAN • 11-CIUNC!Jll ... COfFU CllWIEI JMVfl• ~ CONTADINA• 1<-'l!'f.hN ~STEWED TOlllTO!S J.11-· ~ADINA • l·OUllCI: llUFFEt Cfl'... ·-TIIMITO SAUCE ,_ ~ HtJsoP1' • 54.oz. CONTAINDt In ~FAl!IC sonENH 1.41 . ~lcttN or TH? SEA • Sl/rC& CAW 34' C"UNK LICHT TUNA JI' STAlllK!ST • lil/!:-OYN:Cf CAR •• , CHUNK LIC"T TUNA .)kM CHOCOLATE FUllll ,.. •• , HOWlffE MIX ,,... ..., )'!.OUNCE JAlll HOllAH CHIU SAUCE HOMAD! • IO-OUNC! TAR SWlET • SOUR SAUCE !_~-OUNCE BOTJ'1.E '"'HIWNB SALAD SUPRlllE @ 111•111m • a.oz. 101U .,.. PRUM£ IUIC[ ... VALUE ..... .o-OUNCZ tornz s. v.wm 111 I 6th .Moll IY• ••' .... •~-"'. --· - ----~- • • ~ .... '!"'.., ...... """""'""'""" ... 11!\'""""!!""!"""""' .... """""' ............... .,,.. ........................... ~~ ..................... _. .... -:o~~ ........... ,....,.'"7.~~~~~~-------·---· r ...., • , ' -. .. l j --·- 0 llAll.V l'llOT Wfdnt5d1Y, A119us t S. 1~70 Wedl'll!sdl)', .&u.,urt 5, }q70 N Q PILOT -ADVERTISEt ... Eonsumer Given Tips on Te sting Melons for Ripe_nes s 1 ~,~y;~~~l~:~ 1 wJth l teaspoon of wann w--. ~ ara cant.alaupt t.o Cet1uIt 0 gives" 11't'n arom11s ln the. marttt. t.wtd. net design. This mtans wheJI the 1t1elon Oesh b.chl.lled Ice cream. and crispy ready-blte-tlud wedges ot can-w•ter. J..et stand 10 mU1ule1 roairc bM .. n 1 t It II' I la a d\le U you wt the only 'Therclcitt, tod•y 's homemaker growing C'004itions were. but not cold. lo-eat cereal. and as an ac-o taloupe with slices ol dried !or flavor to develop. -· nta a. tbt W J--·'-ooe to do ihf.' JftS$in1; but needs a better "n'.Hc o( f4vora blt for developing a. Cantaloope ls very high in con1paniment to fried chicken, beef or thinly sliced broiled In ~mall s11ucepan, combine ._....... if se'wal penons use this: thumb" to select a good can-aweet flavortul fleth. Vitaminl A and C. The calorie J1amburgers, or cold cuts. llices ol bacon and as a a:oow-m·i~Lard with ~~ cup of salad V-":y cl Cllfcnla.. test. the lnelon flna.J l,y gives taloupe and lhls is done Ir the melon feels firm to count is 62 for a quarter or serve peeled cant a Io u p e (!ap desaert prePJed tbt day °"""' J..'t cup of cider vinegar, thebantldacara&aofllmt-up and cots &Oft even if jt primarUy by lookt.na· Ute touch, put It in a plastic a medium-si ze melon. ftdges on a platter for before by cutting two tan. J ttupoon each ot onion salt. mer melcw lf'tdDiU1 IMYI la bard. Look for the ct.nllloupe that bag, tie up tilJhUy, ind hold Seven Ideas f<>r using mtiJon seasoning with salt and pep-talpc.1pes in halt Scoop out gar! c ~lt and ~le.ry sail, 'Qp the ValleJ.bj lqwrottMa& Smellina for the an:rna on has a IDlOOth green In-at 1room temperature for a at any Ume include a wedge per, ' aeeds and drain. Chop up a 1~ lel~ ol poult ry season- tl'91\ area to Itel. itar1tftl a hot dlf~resh air ro.1lcl rie.nlation at the stem end. d~ ..ar two. lf ripe and you of cantaloupe topped wllh ~ are servlng tuna. cup of.. cantaloupe flesh and ing and y, teaspoon oC ground bdow' Batersfie~ and flDd1n& alto cfve cl~. but today No sip of the Rem means ure not ready IO cal it. cn.irnbled!bae.on bits; poached chicke11. 'seafood, or corned add to half 'int of vanilla black pepper. Mm' Sacramenlo, come lite the melons are refrigerated tile melon was mature when rerrtgerate in a tightl,y sealed egg on toasted English m\J.fOn beef sallCI mixtures served Jee cream ~ of'ao&e sherlM!t. Bring just to boll. Cool Seplember. By thal Lime, well aod the s is air con-piclced. It should have a beige bag away form da iry pr()-<-entered in a circle of ean· in a hall or circle of me.Ion Spoon into c§· &bells before using on beef, lamb. °"" 15,• eat1ota will have cliUoned, your srnse of background covered by a blab. dudl, lettu~ broccoli. and ta loupe : In a parfait gJass, on a bed of iceberg IeiW.t~ and freeze W'I~ · ~afoot! or vegetables. ~ btml sent to the market smell ls bombarded v.ilb ump-evenly dilfr:lllCJled, corQ ttx4 othet grttnS. Flavor is best layer dlced cantaloupe, vanilla as a yummy .a~"'" with mint letytt, ''}._ a~t ~' cup. •'•' plo<es. ,...==..::..::::::::.::.::..:..:::..=.:..___:'--~-'---'-~~-=-~~~~~.:._~~-=-~~~-'-....:..-..:.:...;..;_;.;,,,;o;::.~-...:-...:~~u.:!~~-...:.:._~-i:~ lllllions ol cantaloupes will ~ .. displO)', but -Mn. Bcmem1ker know' bow to selfd one? Reoefttly, I small camumer survoey ns taken in -. ill' atinc Cllltomen """ tlley -• CD-laJoope. ~ • -' ill- -aid by loel, Ill per- -.., -. 5 J>Ol'«llt by color ..... tile -5 por<eOl just by "'blecb. .. ,,_ -tests .... rt back to when famJlits Wl!!llt out ID the melon patch and pidod their own. Ooe could UIUIDe that hundreds of pencm wouldn't be pokinc the mtkft in a priva te patdl, but tblnk bow many cu.stomers stop 14 the meloo disp)llJ' in I IUpermlrket. Testlq the llan end of the Easy Delight • t :Delmonte -~· I c ~ 1 ' !Delmonte Tomato Catsup ; ~14-oL c :Delmonte ' ~ 1 1 ~ ~ t I ~ I Pineapple~ ~ Juice I Ne\'ef Too Tart, Never Too Sweet hom HawaiL ·lf/1rl6:.L "Iii( bit. ~ ',•. ~T'W'Z ·u=w=w; ·-I I-.. , .. ~ • 15V.-tz.,.,. \ llft ~\ is.u. 2Jc ... ~ • t9 Fruit Drink ~,~:,~ft ~::: 54c •Pineapple ·~ J~,e •Prune Juice ~:~:1 ::,~~ 49c •Tomatoes ~;::;~·. •Pudding Cups !::: S9c •Oranges ti:~~~;~~ 11 ...... , I ... . .. 9406 SIZES~ '..., 11f..;. .... 11f ...r'- Look and feel fresh , pretty rrorn your morning cup of coffee 'til you say goodnight Just 4 main parts -whip up ~veral skimmers in prints, '°lids. Printed Patlern 9406 : NEW Wmicn's Sil.es 34, 36, 38, 40, 41, 44 . 46. Size 36 (bust 40) takes 2 1 ~ yards t$.lnch. SEVENTY.nVE CENTS for each pattern -add 25 cents for t:ach pattern for Air Mall and Special Handling; othe?Wise t.hlrd-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send t() Marian Martin, The DAlLV PILOT, 442 Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St, New York , N. Y. 10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. BIG , NEW SPRING-SUM· MER PA'ITERN CATALOG. Ill Sty!~. free pattern coupon. 50 cents. INSTANT SEWING BOOK sew today, wear tomorrow $1. INST ANT r ASH ION BOOK -What-to-wear answers, ac· Ct:S90ry, fii!Jre tips! Only SI. Entree, Prunes Teamed Serve lertovtr p r u n e s , marlnaled In tawny port, with rout poultry or meal ll'INE PRUNES · 1 package (I pound) l1rge pitted prunes (•bout 50) 1 cinnamon stick 1 blade mace Strip! of orange rind (y,llow part only) rrom i; medium orange 2 cups tawny port IDto a wide &1111 or ct.ramie -..Jner (one that may be """""! Io tho t.blt) turn 11\ &he~; poke down pnmji ., !My ... cover<d wifla pt . C o var 1J1htl1 an d rt~ t to 7 d1y1. 5trve u ID -ponlmenl to tAJ and bacon. fttfrll'!'•le left. overs -stor11e onl~ In.. creases n1vor. I Family Size $ Swett l 1111tl1s Great With Ice Cream For a Refreshing For Dessert. Quick & asy. SAFEWAY IS SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA'S LEADI NG FOOD MERCHANT .. : ·Potatoes U,S, No. t 10· Ru1set1 c Ta Fry, Bake, or Pound 1o Ma sh. hi Elb t P h Lffp Swut '""'"" 25 er a eac es ['jeyTh<mNow ... lh.Smons ,. C But On ~It at Safeway • Large Nectarines D1llclou1 I: Colo1ful Sweet Eating. U!RB Stze. Lusclo~s with Fla~r Yint·Rl~t"t• Stltcf The Ptr !et1 S11e For Fredi EahriR or Slicing Tomatoes Corn-on-the-Cob ri11• rrt•)I Perf!el Ouahl / Swtet Lahn& Apples rresh GrMnslein I~ 25' Juice Oranges ,;;;;.~, T ~rt And T •sty Blueberries Norttrwesttm ,, .... 49 ' Crisp Carrots rr~ih ,_ ~1k1. 01d1 ... 29c ""' 39' ,.,ski, 8 ·~~ 981 3 ;':; 291 Seedf G lh.,,psoo 33' ess rapes ..... ~ ... Cucumbers HothouSt Gro .. rn ; .. 191 S!CClt'S Pineapples '""' lo lit .... 49' Yellow Onions ut,,~ 1 3 ;~~ 291 Htwailtn Bartlett Pears Se1tct ,. 25 • Sunflower Seeds ,.,., 391 OU.I ii!)' .~.. . Honeydew Melons .... 49' Mum Plants 811uiilul '1" 6" Pots ... • SA VE MONEY at SAFEWAY DISCOUNT! Grade AA Butt' er c~~.~~t.~,a~,:,. fresh Dairy Cream Edwards Coffee Vacuum Pack Rich & Robust fla· : vor, In All Grinds l·lb, 79c ctn, '< l·lb, .~ c can .... !·~ Bel-air Premium Quality All V1ril!ties Except Bluebtrry-So Quick & So £-Z lo Serve Hot Pie! Fruit Pies Liquid Bleach Detergent ~-1: 33c ; U .. 4·.I' p WhH1 Magic Works Uke M-A-G.J.G ! All Purpose tetmdry Ust f:~, 35c , Whitt Magic Heav y Duty Br!e:htens f.olors-Wlutens Whites. Puts A New freshness !n Your WlSh! 5-t,~: ' 49·0Z. pkg. \11 ,.~, Ice Cream Toothpaste Snow Siar-Assorted Flav ors lops for Pies, Ca~es Or Fresh fruits. g1f, • DISCOUNT LIQUOR BUYS! Brown Derby Beer '"" 35¢ "' Old Calhoun B~~·;,7:11 '"'' s499 Stanton's Gin w. 88:i:il1~ , .. rt s399 Kavlana Vodka w. ~;r'ii'.111 , .. rt s399 Cold Brook P11~lar Bron! 0111 MM"s ell. ~2~ s31 s Cigarettes ,,::c:r.. ,":'., • • I It's So Good and Thrifty Tool " ..~ Ult ra Brffe Be Off Label far Whiter Teeth And Sweeter Breath. Tastes Great Too! &%-oz.73c lubt DISCOUNT DAIRY BUYS! '"""' Assorted fruit Drinks Cottage' Cheese 1.:,~ Margarine Coldbrook Creamy-Smooth If, ... ~ 29' ••• 1 •.. 33'· ''"' I ..... 191 OIL 81.SCUl"fs ,,,,b,,.,-e..,1ry ..... a' Style or Rei!Jlilr ••• iJ Corn Tortillas lJJi:.~'l:h 'i:: ~u~ DISCOUNT FLOUR & OIL White Flour H""~;:J""' 6·111. ... Gold Medal Flour 10 ·I•. ... Crisco Oil Poll·Un!.al.urlted ''·•t. Coo ·nr Or S.llds ... Salad Oil fttr .Mldt-tookirl&. ••·•r. Sifads Ck' Bikini "' ~ WATCH FOR OUR SUPER SAYERS LOOK FOR THIS. MARK I ' • • .. ,ILOT-ADVERTISER 7 N WtdMsday, A.119ust '· 1970 Wtd-. ._, 5, 1970 • I DAILY r!LDT 4i S0me Washers More Automatic Than Others .. rd like to buy 1 washer.'' uld the "-'· "What do you have ln snlnd?" asked the salesman. "Well, a washer's a wuher, l~n't It? And. they all wuh clothes, don't they?'' replied Ill• ohopper. Well ... the shopper's parUy rlgi)t All automatic washert do wash. clothes and nearly all do an acceptable job. But, there's much more to buying an automatic wither than juat plunking down the casti or •i&nlng on the dotted line . . . lf you want the one thal'1 beit for you. The slloppet llhould !lave lint de"rmined her needs and set her budget, then found oul u much as possible about tile models and brands of autornaUc wuhel"I available by .,.,.,_lscio shopping. But, IO JDUcb for that lbop- per. llow would you 1hop for a washer? Take a few minutes now to a.nswer the,! queet.lona and you 'll be better prepared Lo 1hop for ooe when \he Ume ....... What do you U3Ually wash! Like moet pc!rllOns, you pro- bably wash .. a variety or clothes and household Items • •. all made ol a variety of fabrics and oolled to dlllorent !Delntonte !DelJllonte degrees. requires 1peclal laundering In the past, washables wttt care to retain the permanent a:cncraUy made of coUon, llO press cbaracteristlca. So Sook you needed ooly oot cycle. Jew a wuher wJth a but with today's wide variety permanent prm cycle that of washable fabriCI (and tex-dott the moll elfect.J~·e job. tlle expert.a predJct more new How can you tell II It will ones, too), you need a choice do a good job? The crillcaJ ol ll!pecial cycles to wash factor ls \he way Ule washer everything properly. coo la the clothes Lo avoid Pennanent press, w h I ch wrinkllng during i.he spin. St consUtules an Increasingly aure to ask the sak!sman tor larger portion or your laundry, manufacturers• literature or !DelJllonte ,Tomato Juice Peas· Corn Tomato ~ Beans • Peas & Carrots Ganlen Fresh Veceta~es. Pick Your Favorite. '9l17•0L Jij[ Cll . .... , I Sauce Ricll And Velvely Adds Zest To Many Dishes. Cl j < tor an etplanalioo of how the cl~ then look tor a waaiber pwn_anent pres• c y c l e . wlt.b a he111vy cMy cycle or operateL 'lbai wtJI help you '°'"' tttting. mllke a declslon, but the fln&I Hotr much do· you wllh? ctiolct ii enUrely up to you. Small or larlf: to.di? Once-a- Ungerte aod m a n • ma d e ~1· or onte-a·Wetk? fiben are beUer off wlth U you have a lart:e family special care, too. Look for or one that dirties a lot of a gentle cycle or IOf1le olhtt clothes, you might conaider means for washing dellcales. purchasing one ol the utra lf you wuh heavily aolled capacity wuhera now on the e»thes Uke work p a n l 1 , market. But first, ask yourself diapers or chUd.rcn'1 play if you really need it. .. because Lucerne Ice Milk 7 Delicious flaVOfs c To Choo::e. So Good And Refreshini •• Yi ")''•cat Peaches Yellow Clin&> 2~:" 30c e Fruit Drink PineaPiM•· 4f•IL 33c •Fruit ·Cocktail l ll•IL 17' H1lves or Slices Grapefruit ••• ... R J ~\ -,, -,, Spinach Rich In Iron & Other Minerals Dill Halves :=:, DISCOUNT NON-FOODS acin Tablets 'l)~.J''' oithpaste Close-Up..-lfelpi Whiten Teeth! rrid Deodorant [~~· '"· '101 If IOI ...... 73-IM~I 12• •ft 99-•·•t. ace Guard Ruor Bl1des-for ''" 74¢ . FeW!r Raror Knick& 11 4 pion Sugar ~:.""~~~ ost Sugar Crisp .. , .. ... ll•tlo ••• , ..... ,,,, . hr.edded Wheat 'r~~~~· ll•t L ••• 'c • tc • Id Detergent H•"Y IMy isk Liquid ~~:'~~~!; scade Detergent For Auto- matic DishWHher1 a2- ·':~ 11-&a- I: . eanser I', .• Wtiita M1gic-Cleans & Scoor5-All Pur~st 13-IC·tt. ... TOWN HOUSE ORANGE JUICE ll, . 1 Rich In Vilamin C And 45.,., 39' '' Other Mineral; It's I Natural (Unsweetened) ... I' r~ I • DISCOUNT FROZEN FOODS Dl'nners Sw~lc~en. T1<·il"" key, Sirloin, Mtxlcln. Jlrr. ange Juice c:~~~... ~::· I-air Waffles pa::~ •·•t. ,.,. esh Bre'ad -nee Cake Fruit Tlr1>-fust Heit And Se~• .. . ound Cake {~,:i,=:cf~• .... 33- mb~rger Buns i'...~r:l ::~ 33- '/ 2!;:" 31c 9 V.egetables :'~i~~~ 22•1L 48c Jar 9 Buffets USDA Choice Blade Cut USDA CHO ICE • Cut ~~eeJ1 Beans • Early iden Peas • Cream Style Corn full Cut Bone-In USDA CHOICE ll·OL 23c ... • Catsup Mad• w:1h o_i•tilled Pineapple Vinegar l •llo ... lb. 17c •Tomato Sauce Manor House Top Quality 20·1L 30c "'· 15•1L 19' ... (Round Bone Beel Ro1sl , , , lb. 691) (aoaeleu Rovnd Sl11k •• , lb. 89') (Z0.01. llll1h1111 W•lpt) Ground Beef Lamb Chops Sliced Bacon Canned Bet! Cross Ribs i!!'. ~~ .. 69' Swiss Sl11ks ,:,:=i.,. .. 71' 7 ·B0te Bet! Siu ks c..°::1• •. Ir Boaelm Ch1ek Slt1ks c:t. .. Br Pork Teld11lol1 Steaks 1:.~~ .. '1 " Bacon • btll • Roytl lluff1I 7 ... • ·-"I" ""'' .. •• lkclr l•rer "i:.sl'r:! l'.~ "" Br Bo1eleu H1•s ::."'.:;:. .. '1" Lier Wieners ~.!:'r :;_: :-::: B8' Slerlinc Fr11h .::''•~. :i:: U' Llnchlon Meals ~::,.:. ·~::., : .. ~ 31' • BokiP'I• • Oli' rnhloll1d • 11 Pl'llt~to • Si:Jiml luftch • Olll'I lollf • Fm hlr Uroun• Always AaV11rtul (Groan• Ohuok lb. Tio ) USDA Ch1 l11 lido And 7-Sooe Cut (ft lb Cho po lb, Sf .29 ) • low1 Farml • Miu Iowa • Sl1r11"'' Hlokorr Smtko4 • Wiison's Corn Kin& 1b.59c lb. 99c lb.69' Boneless Cooked 5 1•.s4•• Clft Fiiiet of Sole .. ~:,. .. Br Hlll4eck Fiiiets ~ .. Br Fin 'II CWps '=°.:' :l':: 711 Slirl., hffs ~ "':'3,, , ... ,... W Oscar l1rer Wieners ~"::. :.':; 781 Pork Roast Picnic Style Fresh Pork Shoulder DISCOUNT PRICE , , , Pork Steaks c lb. lean Butt Cut Jrl1ta lffMtfte tli1rt. ffrtl 'ff .... A1pd I ttn A1p1t fl. -------------------~--~---~·--~·---...._ ... • -_. _. • -• • -• • e • • • w e; -n =ea e • s a e • e ·« 1 o--e :e • -• = •• 1 Iara• capodty w-II not a 111bllltute for IOrllal clothes. In 11<1, by dolos a carelul job al ....unr -10< wuhln1, JOU ...,. !Ind tllst , .. don't ...n, -lllot .. ,,. capodty at all ,_ may cOlt utra). If you wuh one of a tew ILemJ at a Ume, look.Jot,...a variable water level ll!tUnc or some other meUJoc:t tor WaSllni small loldl. With thll, JOU can Wub M titt5e as one dreu at a time in your automatic irtltead of hlv· Ing to .... tho belhn>am lint. Do JOU have Sob• al time Lo wuh'? You pn>tUly think lhal's a facetioul question. But there are way. to aave ti.me even with an auicmatic wuher. Ftatutt. 11 k e automatic bleach and labclc .,,....,. diapensen add these laundry aids al jll3l the right moment in the cycle. . .no need to stand by llie ,.,.,,., waiting for that time to arrive. An effectivt! Unt rut.er can save time by eliminating brwlllng or picking lint olf clothe9 alter the · wuh. Ask the salesman to explain haw each ll'J>" al lint filter -ates. Some lint nttert. 10< example, clean thermelves automaUcally and wort 1l all water level leUiop, while some do not. Where will you locate the laundry equipment? Ezisting facllilies, such u plumbing and electricity already in t.b5o basement, may determine this for you. But it tbis ls not the case, you may want kt consider 1 more convenltnt location ... such u a hallway closet, utility room, bathroom or the kitdten. ' Might you be beUer off with one ol the n e w coo-- vertlble/portable models? If you live in an apartment, Tent a home or move often, then investlpie · the many models available today that. do not require pennanent in· stallaUon. ' Some or these roll up lo your sink and connect right to the fauceL They can be stored in a closet or othtt out-of-the·way place and 90me can even be converted lo pennanent installation lat.er, If you like. But 3l'°P wisely. considering your needs. For <WJ\ple, don't pw'dlase too small a model u a Jeun&· married, became y o u r wa.sbing needs my outgrow it SOOl1tt than ezpeoled. Should you ""1cipa" any opedaf problems? Before you purchase a washer, ask younelf if there are any eondltiom peculiar lo your home wblch might ('ause washing ~lems. For example, If your home has low water pressare, be !lD"e the wuher you select has a pressurH!U system ao it will fill properly before washing and rinsing. By anUcipatlng thla problem, you' can eliminate future dissaUsfac· lion. Or, lf you do not have facilities for eonnectin& a washer, it's a good idea to ask (or an installation estimate be!ore you purchase new equipment; It may cost more than you think. What kind of service can y® expect. from your new washer? Here are aome indlcat«s to look for : The reputation of brands and dealers: ask your friends if they were satisfied and check with the Better Business Bureau. The warranty: manufac· turers may expreu the tenns of their warn.nt.y dUfereotly ; but be aure you understand what Is and what' is not covered. Quality : a o m e manufac. turera have built-in service saving features. Ask the salesman to polnt them out. For more WonnaUon about buying, using O< caring for any of your appliances, write Lesli• Psla .. Whlrtpcol Corp., Benton Har1>o<' Mich. lllDZI. Lemon, Orange Flavo r Punch Essy to .... m111e.punc11: LEMON-ORANGE PUNCH I cans (.,ch 16 nwd ounces) lemon pink Hawall•n punch, chllled Z cans ( eadt I ounces) Jroten orance juioe con- centrate, thawed l botUe (about l qutrt' ginger ale, chilled Lemoo and lime .UC.. Just before eervlng -tho Hawsllan pundl and Ille orange juice concentnte loll> 1 punch bowl: mix well . Add an Ice rln& and tile ginger sle. Glll1lllh wltll !..n- on and lime .u.... Mat.. about 14 ,......._ eervlncs· ' 1 4f DAI\. Y PILOT w-....... 5, 1971) ·Barbecue Captured Home on the Range • Wberl tht ""'Nthtr keeps you !run the ...-. pill. or _,, )'OU Willi IO eat indoors, there are .ne grand w~s to~·-Ground beef. oll dres1od up -.ith bartlecue SllK'!eS.. briq lo mind cboroool ll1llinl •.• even wht-n the CJpell window is the only """"" al fresh air and the •·grilling" occurs home on the ranee. 'lbe barbecue sauce. o[ cwne, is all imporumt. Given -pounds al gmmd heel, half the sauct o:imbines wiUl the beef ileell, the remainin& hall etua tht k>af f« a peaminc surfare and bubecue fl.Ivor. 1bert'• more. too • • • a wonderful Creok. Saaoe dotted with onion, tom.ltOeS and green pepper. to add flair to the meolloaf. 1'be loof ~ ...,,.. 12 • • • bo1f ,... the 1omUy meo1 ... man • big bl to br. eat.en fc:r dimer and followed the -day by deliciooJ c:old meoiloal sond- wiclJeg. Or you can serve the meaUoml as ttie main course 1or .. ..-tuibullet-. 'Ibt sauce b: based on West lndiea molaats. an invaluaMe ingttldimt fer b a r b e c u e ~ indDon or outdoors. ~ Became it contains no sulphur and none of the 9.11ar has been removed, 1lllSoljinlrod -bu the most mellow' possl"ble flavor • . . and no bite.. It's a pure, natural product because it's a JWimm'Y sweetener • • • not a mow.es ~ as a b)'· prodl>:t al '"' ... -making. F« leodiog m e a l J o a { twutleme flavor, tty West. lodies moilaues co m b i n e d with 'rioqar, tomato sauce, muslald, aoim, and berb<J. A similar mUture provides the bell meatballs you ever ... -... 1be barbealt -· -ri8'll -the Mini n' Midi 9274 7-15 , t., 11f ,..;-11fMf ... Mmi, midi! Why choo9e when you can han: the beat of ooth! Wear mini skimmer one day, take a long view I.he next and buttoo on the midi akirt. Printed Pattem 9274: NEW Jr, Miss Sizes 7, 9, 11, 13, 15. Size JI (bust 33~) mini dress %~~ yards JS-inch fabric. SEVENTY ·YIVE CENTS for each pattern -add 2S cents for eadl pettem for Air M.a il and Special Handlin&; otherwiae third-class deUvery will take three weeb or more. Seod to :rt.!arlan Mart.in, the Dally Pilot, 112, Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th st .. New York, N.Y. 10011. Print NA.\fE, AD- DRESS and ZlP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. BIG, NEW SPRING-SUM· MER PA1TERN CATALOG. Ill styles, free pattern coupon. 50 centl. INST ANT SEWING BOOK sew today, wear tomorrow. $1 .. Breakfast Skippers .,,,.,nd be<f ol!d wM• the meatbalb ere. simmering_ in a Hillel, they art glazing beoutllUily -., the rnol--v.....,.. eopeclolly lo-. me.at.balls and \his glazed verDon will mate a big hit. Glued M"&tbltls come kl the party, too, roUed into small balls and served from chafmg dbh or wanner. Nm time 1·ou ha~ a kitche!I c: o o t · i n , wonderful bed di--borbecue navor mah • feast or the meal. BARBEWED MEA'IUlA>' 11~ cup West Indies Molasses 14 cup l*eptn:d mustard '• cup vinel:ar I can (I ounces) tomalo sauce 2 eggs l cu~ soil bread crumb.s I mediwn mion, finely t!~ ped • ~··~finely c: 11 op pc d I 1 tablespoon salt ; 141 teaspoon dried leaf thyme 3 poonds ground bed Blend together molasses. mustard and vinegar. Add ~-: 1 mp ol the mixture to tomato sauce and eggs m large m.iJ:. ing bowl : beat unCil blended. Mix in bre.ad a'Ul'llbs, onion, parsley, salt and thyme. Add ground beef; mix well. Form into loaf in shallow baking P""· Brush with part ol. the rt- malning mol8.SSl!S miJ:ture . Bake in 350 degree OVe'l'I. 1 \!! hours. brushing OC'C&9ionally with remaining molasses mix· ture. Serve with ~ Sauce. Yield: 11 servings. CREOLE SAUCE I can (1 pound) stewed tomatoe!I (with onion and green pepper} I small onion. sliced 1 • cup chopped green pepper '• teaspoon each dried leaf basil and Wrqon 1116 teaspoc:m cayenne pep. "'' I teaspoon Worcestershire """" % tablespoons cormtarch 113 cup cold water Heat tomatoes, onion, green pepper and staW'!ings in saucepan. Blmd together corn- starch and water. Stir into tomato miDure. . Coot, stiJTing constantly. MOLASSES FLAVORS A KITCHEN COOK-IN untilmUturekthlckenedandifj~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~.,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ c:/ear. Serve with Barbecued Meatload. Yieli:!: A~ proximately 2 cups. GLAZED MEATBAU.'! I pound .... md bed I t e. a & poo n moooeodium glutamate ~4 lea.spoon salt 1 tablespoon "dlowed~"-' onion I~ cup soft brNd crumbs I~ CUp mllt I tab.._ llolD' ' tablespoons butter J'4 cup West Indies Molasses ~4 cup vinegar 14 cup catcbup ol chiLi sauce 1/16 tea.5J)OOn cayenne pep- per 14 teaspoon dried J ea f oregano Break up meat with fork in mWng bawl. SJ.rir*1e with msg, salt and onion. Mash toge<her bread crumbs and milk; add to meat mixture. TOSl'I lighUy IDil all in· g:redients are well mixedi form into I balls. Roll in flour ; brown in but- ter in skillet. C om b I n e molasses, vinegar, cat.sup, cayenne and oregano: blend until smooth. Add to meatballs in skillet. Simmer I to 10 mimtes, atirrinl occuionally, u n ti I sauce thickens arxl meatballs are glazed. Serve over hot buttered noodles. Yield: 4 l'lervings. NOTE: Meat mixture may be rolled into 11~-tnch balls and served from a chaCIJlg dilil as a hot h::Jrs d'oeuvre. Almonds Enhance • Carrots Almonds add good lel1u1"! contrast to carro~. ALlllOND CHEESE CARRO'l'S 2 tablespoms huller 2 tablespoons nour ''• tea!pOM salt Pepper to taste I cup milk 113 cup &r•ttd cheddar -y, cup roasted d I c e d almonds I large cam>U, cut lnlO diagonal ollces and cooked Mate a white 1auce of the butter, floor, salt, ~ and milk; ltir in cheese until melted ; stir in almonds. Serve We lhought it would help if we pul tho international signal of distress on all of the disadvantaged kids in Orange County so you could recognize them. And see for yourself that there's nothing so damed unique about them; that they're re~lly not much different from your own kids. Except that, with or without a distress sig nal. lhey really do need help. And their distress is your distress. These kids need a chance to get started on lhe right path to a useful and productive future. ow him? Right now all they need are summer jobs, so they'll be able to go back to school in the fall. Sounds simple. Bu't here's where they differ; where their distress ls ''special." Wanting a summer job is one thing. Finding one is another~specia lly If you don't know how, or where to look. If you have no rich uncles or connectl.->ns that can make a spot for you. Or don't have the right skin color. If, even before you start out, you know you're dead ••• because you've been that route before. You've butted your head on enough closed doors to know there's no use trying to be something better. ''After all, the old man didn't make it either." About all our disadvantaged kids have going for them are their eyes, ears, arms, legs and str ong backs ••• and their youthful energy and eager minds. Like your own kids. Maybe, as an Orange CoJ,Jnty employer, you'd make a move if you knew how to find the kids with the "special" needs. If they were an to wear the international sign of distress so you could pick them out of the c rowd, would you do something then? Would you help? Would you offer a job? That's all we're talking about Call 632-JOBS National Alliance of Businessmen ,10111 Orange County Metro 11 93 No1th Miller Street •Anaheim, Califorrt1.i 92803 ' WITH SALLIE CONTINUED FRO"I LAST WEEK Re111ember the F rt n spreads from Denmark , . shades of delicious jarnf( flivored with brandy, ~ and Scotch whiskey • • Finally discovered I ii •1 perfect thing to spreai them on ... TOOato Harvell Sesame Cook.Jes Somehow they called f(lr. something more s p e c I a lo than plain toast or sodat crackers. 'Ibe.se c r i s p 1 almost crackery cookiejlj hail from Japan. Greates~ habit forming nibbler we've. tasted yet. Once you st.art,, you can't stop. Same goes for the barbe- que spare ribs in the_: delicatessen or the barbe.• qued chickens • . . once you've nibbled, \Vhy should: you bother ... You know yours won't taste half a9 • good .• The rea!Onr YOtl don 't cook tbem yourself.:'! You really are an excellent~ cook., but you need a rest. once in a while •.• 'Sol1 olf lo the happy deli • • • dinner tonight will be like·~ eating in a fine restaurant 1'I only you can enjoy it outt in your own patio in your •' bare feet ... I AH DELICIOUS FOOD ... i Round juicy Lende1' game~ hens in. a delicious' mushroom sauce or tender Veal Pannigiano • • . to! go along side perhaps a 1 few French peas 0 rv cauliflower au gratin or browned potatoes • .. whol• ~ glorious dinners can be Yours as you saunter befor•J th~ you~n't.flave-to-cook-it! bounty of the dt.Ii's savory~ steam tables of ready \! prepared foods . • • Perhaps the time is lunch. . • \Vant some soup • • . Every day a different IOUJ.t, . . good old fashioned cream oi com soup, split pea, pep.. per pot and always on Fri· day clam chowder . . 1be ! deli alternates . • between i creamy Boston •• aOO ~ w oodrous everything-in-it Manhattan • • . Foods for a crown . . . Tamale pie. 1 chicken chow meln, beef Stroganolf .•• only a few of the line-up of ~role delights to order ahead in large quantities . . . ! GOO D DIFFERENT DISHES Brunswick stew, ham and f Ii mas, sauteed c h i c i e. n t livers, macaroni and cheese .. made lovely with wine . .. Chicken takes on all sorts of fancy t a s t e s ~ Chicken legs and thighs ta-- riyaki . . . how luscious with Otlnese Rice, buttered I whole carrots • . .Chicken -l Maryland if you like a ~ creamy gravy and a dash ~ or pimient.o • ' .patio chicken oc Chicken Valen-, riano, c:ven fried chicken thighs ... .. The deli's 1'111!.al loaf t makes the most delicious ~ sandwiches • . • Whal fun ~1 to be able to pick up a whole little savory loaf • . no mixing, no chopping 1~ of onions, or squastiing or lt crackers. It's all yours, •i ready and y.·aiting .• Pots L of chlli beans, salmon loaf, f. Swedish meat balls, beef ' or cheese enchiladas ... Why t should you waste yoor good r.; summerUme rolllni and • rry;,,g. 11 ALWAYS SURPRISES . • . Delicious pans of ready baked Brown Betty .. perhaps tapioca pudding. all creamy good ••• And the t.antalizing array or i salads . . Summer salad • of sliced cucum bers, 1· tomatoes and red onion ~ rings .. another called Ex.4 ~ otica with artkbX.e hearta • and mushrooms • • • And barrel dill pickles. the good bulk killd . • wbero yoo can buy just one if )'Git wish .... and the plckleil beeU; and pickled pigs feet • Richard's the P eo p I 1 Store, where yoo can buy your roast beef by the slice, the half or t.he whole roast In the Dell. A llUfVI!)' has ohown that thre&lourthl al .U American famillM do not eal brttklasl lOplhrr. On .. thlnl al all '*-Iv• llld • quart« ol aD ht-ell o]one. lloiry Oouncll ol Ollilunt• nutrl- u.llf.I t1t1e houtewives to bave loodl avollablt for eaaily ~~~edone·per1on over Ult hot cooked carrot.s.J~::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==:::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:~j ,i..1111••••••-Make1 Ji1 servings. I • I I t ' ~ • . I· ' ' I i I, • ------------~~---·~----·-----·-----~------------ PllDDUEB PHONE 673-6360 FOR HOME DELIVERY IN OUR DELIVERY AREA PRICES EFFECTIVE AUG. 6, 7, I USE THEM IN YOUR FAVORITE PEACH RECIPE! FANCY. TREE RIPENED, SWEET, JUICY NECTARINES · 4 LBS. HAVE YOU TRIED CELERY VICTOR? CRISP. FRESH, LARGE STALKS. UTAH TYPE CELERY EACH THESE MAKE GRACEFUL "CUPS" FOR CRAB SALAD. GARDEN FRESH. TENDER, BOSTON Butter Lettuce A TREAT FOR BREAKFAST. SALAD OR DESSERT VINE RIPENED. SWEET MELONS HONEY DEW LB. HEIT Org1n Serenade For Your Ple1sure by S.rnico F_1y RICHARD'S BEEF IS TOP OF THE GRADE u.s.o.A. CHOICE CAREFULLY AGED FOR THE FINEST FLAVOR! THIS IS ONE OF OUR FAVORITES FOR BARBECUE! Boneless RUMP ROAST 10191. .. Top. ROUND STEAK ~~:~n.cl~··.~d borbecuo 1429 .. a. SWISS STEAK BroiH with wino ind YOl•l•blff 98¢LB. MARINATE IN Oil, WINE, ,VINEGAR AND HERBS FOR SHISH KEBAB BEEF STEW Tender cubes of choice btief U.S.O.A. AMERICAN SPRING LAMB. THIS IS THE LAMB PRIME RIB • , • RACKS OF LAMB GENUINE NOVA SCOTIA SMOKED COO FINNAN HADDIE Se1son with r0Mm1ry ind blrMcue ~ TO BAKE, BARBECUE OR SAUCE, NORTHERN HALIBUT STEAKS CINTER CUTS 1.49LB. STUFFED ROUND STEAKS 1.29 LL A s•vory bre1d stuffing with p1r1ley •nd slivered 1lmond1. CHICKEN A LA KIEV IACH 1.39 Tend tr bonel111 br111t of chie~en stufftd with butter end chiv11 . MARINATED DUCKLINGS 1.09 LL RICHARD'S MEAT LOAF 79c ... A 11vory mixture of b11f end porli: dtli.c1t1ly 1111on.d, even reedy. WE HAVE AGED U.S.O.A. PRIME BEEF STEAKS ANO ROASTS, TOO. LIDO MARKET CENTER NEWPORT BLVO. AT THE ENTRANCE TO LIDO ISLE DBLIEITEllEI HOFFMAN All BEEF VEGAS ,14 PER LB.I Frankl urters 1 LB. 85¢ BAR·M FRESH Liver Sausage OAK DANISH COOKED Sliced HAM RED RIND HORNS, KRAFT CHEDDAR CHEESE Midget Longhorn LB. 98¢ PICKLED GREEN TOMATOES FOR SNACKS, MARTINIS ATKINS TOMOLIVES , or. 59¢ RICHARD'S OELIGHTFULL Y SEASONED, WHOLE B,B.Q, Chickens EACH 1.49 PLDWERIHBP NOTHING SAYS SUMMER SO BEAUTIFULLY AS A BOUQUET OF RED ROSES • , , 25 RED ROSES 1,98 BUNCH Richard's Flower Shop hu tho freshest, first quelity flowers, they last longer and look protlier. Don't wait for • speci~I occasion. BRING HOME A BUNCH TODAY! DAILY PILCJI' 45 &ltBElltY I LL as- J LI. 1.69 .... 2.47 Nabisco Dao Dads Snacks 1 oz. 3 ... '1 SEA ROCK OUNElENESS CRAB MEAT Arden AA BUTIER I LI. 83c GERBERS STRAINED BABY FOOD ... or. 12 ,..'1 All FLAVORS LAWRY'S SALAD DRESSINGS I OZ. 3 ,_$1 THIRST QUENCHER GATORADE IJ OZ. CANS • 6 PC. 79c MISSOURI HICKORY 17 OZ. Barbecue Sauce SCHILLING Chicken Fiesta Dinner SCHILLING TOSTADO DINNER WILSHIRE 39¢ 111/1 oz. 59c 59c SWEET PICKLES 22 OL 49¢ NESTLES QUIK Chocolate Drink Mix .... 79c All COLORS, DELSEY BATHROOM TISSUE .... 4 ... 11 JO GAL. HEFTY Trash Can Liners 6 CT. 39c PlDIBH PBBDI ISLAND INN DAIQUIRI MIX ~. s POR $1 ISLAND INN MARG AR IT A MIX EGGO WAFFLES HOLLOWAY HOUSE Stuffed Green Peppers HOLLOWAY HOUSE STUFFED CABBAGE ROLLS HOLLOWAY HOUSE SALISBURY STEAK I CT. .. oz. .. oz. 14 oz. HOLLOWAY HOUSE Stuffed Potatoes WlrtlC ..... 11 ... OLE SOUTH APPLE, PEACH o• ILACKIERRY i tlll\l.IJlll Fruit 39c Ste 59c 59c Cobblers 2 L•. 89¢ I I ! I I ii I I , .i ,I ,I ·_,,, .:.i l• '(~i;~.: ·-·-·· .. -··-·''-·. BIROS EYE QUICK THAW MIXED FRUIT •• oz. 3 .... 11 BIROS EYE FRENCH OR CUT GREEN BEANS 'or. 5 ,..•1 BIROS EYE MIXED VEG ET ABLES 11 0%. 5 ... •1 BllCEltY MADE WITH POTATO FLOUR, LIGHT AND MOIST Potato Rolls 6 FOR 31- NUTTY FLAVOR, MOIST ANO IRRESISTAILE Oatmeal Bread 41- LIGHTLY SWEET WITH NUTS Danish Tea Cake 89¢ FOR THE CH9(;0LATE FANS IN YOUR FAMILY FUDGE LOAF _'/L •a El ,,. FF&US77£J ••t lls .HUS:J.d! 122102/ls?JU/JZ•ct? .•122111 FF&Wil??FQ /ICV&&WsZJ?ElUZZUJli':Z F/l&•s11asrz11as!lzs ~K.£.6...J.'..s.-. MARKET HOME & GIFT SHOP LIDO YACHT SHOP ANTHONY'S·Sl::!QE REPAIR FLOWER SHOP CLEANERS OPEN DAILY 9-7, SUN. 9·6 OPEN DAILY 9.6 OPEN DAILY. 9·6. SUN . I o.J DAILY 9·5:30, SAT. 9.1 OPEN DAILY 9·6 DAILY l :l0.6, SAT. l:J0-5 I ' ! I IWl.V Ni.OT Biscuit-topped Tuna Pie's a Dish Fit for Any o·ay and Age ' DEAR. NA.N: 1 enlOY 10Ul' \s 1beclost ft did use di(· oo \\·oodcn ikewers. s.&l and Brown in hol ful O"«r mtdlun1 • lllUc less. ll d\ouldn't In-fullov;i the regular way of t lly ch1ckell bas bccon~ very eohunn becaua ft is 10 prac-. fet'tnttnHts -prM.lbly veal, pepper. then press lht rolfs heat. then tower the Mat Md undll:e I.Ile meal. Oki timers skewering and bro1vning the citirtcd indetd. ticJl et'CI btlptul. 1 feel thll pork and bed. That makes lightly v;ilh your hanOs to cook tlll ttnder, about 35 used bac<1ll rat In nia.kintJhei.r ine.ats but uses 1 baking aaucl! Another long-ago f~vorlte l.s for creat D•vor. nrm the'nl more Seit and~ minutes. Jauct for this one, adding still or 3 ounces dry sherry, I which 1nakes a lu.scious sauce m'1i1 bot ll hes an: UICI Udd· 'Rte s1mplest w_, is to cul per. Or YOU can transfer the Olort nav9r. Bake, covered. uwices Burgundy, i;; teaspoon for cake or topping ror Ice It to Nan \'t'iley 1n care of thJ~ ~wspaper. Nan \Yilcy reg1·ot.s U1at she cannot provide p e r s o n a I a11s1vers to your cook.Jug que9· lions, but questions of gener~I interest will be IHUL1vered U1 her column. Address yaur 4uestions to Nan \Ylley it1 care or tlw DAILY PILOT. ptN)ve when you m1J.9l 1 pork al)d beef (and veal ii Dip these in beaten egg with fitst~ne<I meat rolls to a lor an hour or so at 300. each or grated ltmon and cret1m is Planlatiou Rumpot. a can ol this soup and a you like} \nto about l 'Ii: inch perhaps a litllt "'ater added roaster, leaving a little spnce OC courst, It was loevUable orange rinds, ~. cup chopped You may ha\'e this recipe by can of that (IM, so I would squares t"' lnch thick-), having Uaboot I tablespoon waler to betweeft each: one. Pour sbolit that , more I JjQ{>histlcated parsley and 8 sniall can of !>ending 5 cents and " like to share with you my trimmed away all f .1 t . r esg ) then into very fine 2 cups of medium crtt1n1 versions of this simple di sn sliced niushrooms p 0 u r c ct s t a m p e d . se lf-addressed motl'tr'-in-la"•'s tuna. hot dlsh Altetmle the types or meat dry cracker or bread crum.bs. sauce around the rolls, maybe 1vould pop up. One or these around tile browned rolls. 50 envcloj)(' with your requei,;t for 'Whim q "SO ell)', ta.My, in-·\-~~~~-'.:.....~~~~~~~~~~~~'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~.:.....~~~~~~~.:__:.:__:_:::.:__:_:::_::::....:.:.::::....:.:....:..:......:...:::....:.~_:__~--'~~~~~~~~~~~~ ex,penslve Md liltritious. Mike a uuce or 1 table- !poons (each 1 cl bacon fat. flour and chopped onion, plus 1 cups of Jiquid (lhe juict draihecl from the peas plus milk). Add to the sauoe 2 cups raw diced poUtoes, :.: OJps raw diced carrota. J. pound can ol .JICU (drained) .1 amaD can ~ tuna, sail and Pf'PPC!' to taste. H .. t all Ingredient> through and tm1!. iota a gtt:ased LETS ASK THE COOK by Nu Wily casserole. Bake, cavered. for I to l ',J: hours until vegetables are done. (m-J.50 oven.) Al the ·end af bating time you may remove the cover, place baking Pl>"\'der biscuits on top, tum up thf: oven to about 425 until they are niCf:ly bral\•ned. .... Of<1400 4« ....... ., .,. ....... )'Ho , .. .a.a If ttll .•. FiJAX •i ·DmRGENT •. INtt. 10c Off •1 '"·•·· -GllllT PIG. • -''·· """" 13' WILIE li;'ii~i.-L • ..,;,;,.~ .. =.°'".-.~ ........ -.-. PLUMS Cucumbers "':"'.-..-10" Tomatoes -:::= 19• Bell Peppers :.:. 1 o~ Watermelon .:.~. s• RED GRAPES PEARS Salad lettuce ::::.: I 0" Green Beans -::::: 19• Red Onions Avocados TOUHG. T~ .kJICT Vons Table King f tollli ·~" "JOC"t ,.~ "' \ . . nWs is an easy recipe la commit ta memory 1 s e,·erything u "t"·o or' acept peas aod tuna. I .suspect this di!il ~·as a child or the ~sion when simple things ~·ere· combillf:d for good taste 11nd nutrition. 1itRS. ROGER JIOPPE, Minneapolis • !'"" ___ ,,,_............ • .................. , .. ,_ .. ! --, i ·SPARE 59' WHOLE 59' CRABS • • Tbtte hn't a thin& wrong wltll tbat did for uy old day and •1e. As oae of my ruckn said about t ll r auerkrlut cake rttipt I K111. ~r. "lt ta&Af:if out fine! I peu t dldll't lmow -.Ow easy it I• ltOt '° ut a mJL H DEAR NAN' lnstud of u.>- ing a piece of black coal in the water. as suggested by a certain TV cook, try adding 1 tablespoon oC white vinegar to the water in which potatoes are cooked. The vinegar wiD leave no taste, but the potatoes will stay snowy even >A1len mashed later. If you are doing quite a large amount or potatoea, add a Jittle more Vbt<J!ar. .MRS. S A V A R D , Irma. Alberta, Canada. DEAR NAN: Some Ume a&o eae of your reade.n nue1tff tut-a etlledioa of yov rtelpe baokkta would make • &reuarH 1lft for a •• brick. Caultl )'OU teU me bow to secure C9pit1? D9 )'Oil have a complete U1tlll1 •I tiUe1~ Wllat 11 tff approdmate cost for • complete celledlon? It aeems le me anyene ~-ou.ld be pleased wltil 1P.tdl a &ifl Incident.ally, last se~ter my pupils brainstorme.C the problem ''What can be done .. ;th an tar of c6m?" 1bere ""ere many ideas. but no one came up with the idea or malting your com cab jelly. They were delighted when they had the opportunity of t.uUng it MARGARET A. STAUFFER, Lancaster, Pa. What a great idea! I do have a listing of titles, but ifs hard to give approximate cost because t keep adding lo the list t.o lake care or demand. We try to hold cosl as 1ow as posslble. Anyone may have the list by sending a self-addressed, s t a m p e d envelope to Na n Wiley in care o/ llie DAILY PILOT. DEAR NAN: Wbe1 I w•s • dilld, my mother ased lt malce "dty chlckea" co. sl1tln1 of t>A·o or lllree tiadl ef meal cul iato bl•W p1eee1, alterna~d .. wooden akewers ud balced. We loved Utt:m beeauM Uau w-e 4lchl 't Uve uy aatlll& of meat lo • et tH bible and there wu " fat beeaase motber llifl trknmed I.be pieces well. Do you have a rec!pt for this and can you tell me if the skewered meat was bread- ed apd maybe. fried belore bakincf MRS. R 0 B E R T KRAMER, BurnJVille, Minn. When it comes lo hunting up some loog-gone dish, I a~ mit io bekl& an absolute pu>ho~. ~ many "' ! l ·1 SCHICK 1 i . 'LUS ,LATIHUM ! ! BLADES I i :::L::..--~~:..;,,,.~..;.~~-: Sl~ mt : ......... ~":." .. ,.::... ... :u .... ' ''" •. L ..... --............ "' .................... on .... " .................................. ""'· , l WESSON -OIL~ 9' ft'r "8., Trvl1 Vg"', roly.tlntoluraf.J TOMATO JUICE "'"""""" vrtAMIN-llCH I COOKIES SUNSHINE STATE. 6-0Z. CAN 12.0Z. CAN ••• 2/tlk MORTON RIBS ::::. • Center Cat Chuck = 59" Family Steaks =:,. 11:. Fresh Turkeys -::! :;;:: 49• Corned Beef Rounds= 98' r.9!~t~~!>P.569: . "~~E~.~~~~S5TS9··· : LOii END ••• 79~ . OIOICE :~;;~ •-.... ~ CRAB MEAT 69'f°SLICED BACON-( SHRiM;:;;..~; ··1-,, ~ l6A4 I ~ .. ~'~~· 79' ~ ~m = I ctNru c111 I ,_. '°""' ,.11111 •••n • •• 98' ""' 'I" UN~ I OI. I 1•-..1 -... . .1..1 __ rf-..1 CMOl'S • CHOP$ ,. SAUSME t..-. --'--.. .:.:"''Ill.._ PfUM Mlll' I 'lllll ll0""61ll ' 1.u., "•-I OC£AN ., .. 89~ SWOIDASH 11 ti ~. Osm1 fkyer l1cH :: •• ~;;,";ii ,. It' ! PrllCH uu STU.KS .,,,.... u '~£••. -·~ ··-· ----..---l. HICKORY JERSEY MAID PERFECTION BBQ Sauce Ice Cream Fresh Bread 1.•-<,.cft.Q 29' ~~~·-)~"') 79c VI••::._ V<"'A • 25' ·• ' .. i,A, .><, -~ .··~",C,,.,_.r., ; 7 ·'::! "' '=·-"· c-... • ,_. L 'J~ f CUT GREEN BEANS i.c<~~t:~1·"· )9c COFFEE MATE co'ii1i'~~" 79c TOILET TISSUE ~~:~;~~. 2 :~~~ 27' PUREX BLEACH 1N~~o~;0im GAL. 49c FRUIT COCKTAIL ,.~~,vi:~MS 22c PU RE GRAPE JELL y ~~g~~ 20 ~.z;35c ~ HEINZ KRCHUP "~~~" 26 ~: 39c I FRESH BUnER cu6i~'~~·~TN Sic DELICATESSEN 7·DAY SPECIALS! r VONS SLICED , ... i i SWISS CHEESE ) ·~ ••·• 49c ·· ~ WiJconli11 • .. I I . """" .. oz. PKG:_ --•• J ASSORTED FLAVORS 8-01. CUf' llrt P.UMl• JOl'IN • ,O_ Lt.NO\lllCltlS a. $HACKS Braunschweiger ~ 29' C4Ll0 •/,QM OlO .... N f~(•!iCO • llAltt.N ~y Salome Chubs ~:, (;:. ",, 95 1 Complete yo ur plac1-sou1ngs or 39c certfree, goldtn C;is1ilia11 at a v1ry •rn.atl cost bv Ct1sh--I jnginonthisweek's .....,. off~ •• .,. 19< • .. . • ,::..,_ -........ ------........ ..1 3-Course Dinners .~~·::.. 65' Ole South Cobbler ::i:.:; 99' ,u, nG. Onion Rings a.~·:lia•:<;~ ... c;. 33' Reddi Whip Topping ·:::· 49' ,-JOHN'S Pizzas·: l~o f1,1u, No ~u. Jusl Pop in o~.n 79 c I r•.SAUSAGE t ,•CHEESE I 1.5.QL SIZE I ••I ----·-'--,. .......... ·-..,, __ --~ Vofues in 1ft. Meot O.pl. froun CoJtJ Mrs, FrlUy Gturmet $hrimp :'.7. ~·:s ...... lie Mrs. FrkllJ Shri1t1p Pltfft lf,Ol._ .. , •• : ........ Sic Gertn's Fkh a Chips 1u. ~ii 1s, 141. .• 111 ShrtM, Ctctfall OllCUN Of l"lril,\ 1-0l. -•• II"' ~1rullt1 fish Stk~s !:.::: ;;:-.................... •11 .,.rr, FrtH M1Q1tut •-fll. "'"'· ............. ttc Ye1I P1n111:J1n1 «•cu ., .............. 11 SI .ti 'UMIUM CM/"*""' $1 If DON MIGUll COLD DUCK ••• • • • .. l .. Lion cook.boob mention it, at ltd not under that title, ~t l llod It bt a number of cbur<:b dlOkboob, eo you aren't tile anly -wtlh fond m<morl ... 1-JC--~~~-~Nordoabldoabl<llY-dlioAn-Hintf~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ earned Ml Utle because e..P!MflDut--.................... ..JJ.11 lofWl'1 Dllfdl 0rl .. N4J. WI ....••. ., •••• 2/39t Nu 5ofl fobrk SofltMr .. .or."'· •1.ft-U.OU. 11, pnellmeJ only veal waa ustd, lltly o.cw cm AU --iror..,., .• : 6'<: and &ha. skewertid meal looks Gii.i Ma4lil ,._ _ .......................... 11.11 tiH dll'n!Mtlcb. Vt!a1 coot& w.act.\~......,.,-.u.it ............. 3.S( uP quite while. r-fowad.ays, it ..,."!-'.., .. ""·....,_-.................. s1.i:a ~·· Milk Sltob1 ~-(.4't ................ 7/39c ttttrwMt Oforlot "-'<• -.ot. Wt .. -... " ..... <19' Ttfldtt lMf lnstoni Teo lOL u.t .... .. ••• .. • S l.?9 Y11alNHoi1 TINlk•l.aL 1n. •..•• , ............. SJ.38 Stvff.d Maftmnffla Oli¥ft •ot OllYOI. J.(IJ ..., • A9' lorden's Doftld'I Mor90,W,. I~ .. C:IN ••• , , · • · · -• • · A 1 c Morit'lll!N Artlcllol.:t1 loPtolft!I C•\O "'"-. .SSC KfoJI Ht•b '~ Qo>rlic Or-!119 IOI-MU •• •,••·•'Ale SWIFT Baby Food c~ • ..i ... 5•-M f'ffl l"·Ol. JAt 29' ~.:~~ .. to"~~,~:', ':'n': 10111 'Adams Ave., at Brookhurst, Huntington Beach ::= ;:.":" ~oc1"": := 34081 llolleny Park Drive, Capistrano Beach S922 Edinger Ave., at Springoole, Huntington Beach Lot IT\. rowEllAN Ol ive Oil ~na M«ke...i Cat food cw c_.,.,~,'a. 2/37r '"''ino htf ..,.~Cot Fool '-'Gt. c.v. • 2/37c 29' Kl"nu Deli~• T-el, •at• ""1 ••••••• 3.5t Klfffltk toutique Tow1!1 •uc• "'-' " ,J1c 21082 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 17950 Magnolia, Fountain Valley I . • ' ' • • ·' • . ' .. . • . ' L ' •• \I • ch ey -~--·~---·------·---------------·----------~---------~~~--,,--....,.....,. " . -·.-:-Here's -a-super line-up of savings durinii ~ • ' Planning a big week-end of fun1 El Rancho has everything " ·to make your outing a delicious experience! So lean ••• and so tender • , • because it', ground fresh and sold fresh •• , all thru the day! PAmu, TOQI Ch d S• I .• St k (Oft GROUND SIRLOltU 89¢ op~e 1r 01n ea ............................................ lb As lean as it can possib!y be, and yet retain all the hearty juicy goodness you expect from El Rancho I Meat Loaf .......... O'/EN woY .......... 79~ Lo Cal Sirloin ....... r.aouNO ....... '1.091" Delicious blend, seasoned! Shape and bake! With an absolute minimlJlll o! fatl Ham Loaf ........... O'IEN READY .......... 89~ Made with El Rancho'• own fine ham! ·Country Sausage ..... a uNCHo ..... 59~ Our own blend of meats and 1eaaoning I Super Shopper Grocery Specm'ls! Heinz Ketchup ....... ~~.o};~,~~ ....... 33' Save lOc on this great big bottle of your favoril!I ketchup ... _and enjey auper-summer flavor, a& well I Pork ' I n Beans .... ~A~.c~~r.s.~o: ~~ •••. 23' Bir cans ... brimfal of plump tender beans, in a rich thick aaucel Belongs in aummer'a plallll Sliced Pineapple ... ~~·.1.~ .cf~~ ... 6 for $1 }""rom Ha wail ••• firm halt-slices inayrup ••• ao color!u1, 10 pretty, so delicious ••• ao economical! Smucker's Preserves -~~.0!~!~~. 49' Check the choice •• Seedless Blackbeny, Boysenberry, Orange Marmalade, Strawberry,, check 11vinp I Orange Juice ..................... 6 ior '1 Cal Fame ••• frozen •• , 6 ounce cans? Real Whip Puddings ........... 3 roe '1 Frozen ••• 17 oz. cartons ••• thaw and suve 1 ApP.le Juice .............................. 39' App e Time .. , big 46 ounce can, big value! Ice Cream ............................... 79• Royal Host • ., c.aterilla: quality I Ya 1aL Creamed Chipoed Beef .......... 89' Hi Ho Crackers ....................... 39• Stou!!er'a ... 11 oz. frozen ... heat and aerve! From the happy Sunahine bakera! ... 16 o:. Cucumber Chips ...................... 39' Del Monte ... crisp alicu In 22 oz. jar I Space Sticks ........................... 49' Pillabury's .. , quick energy, fun food! pk&'. Save 50c on the bir size I Wolfschmidt Vodka 11 GA~.99 Kingsford Briquets ... 1a IL BAG .... 79¢ Euy •tartlnr, !on1blll1Wlgl201\1-w ... 1.57 El Rancho Tequila .. rlfTH .. s4,89 Margaritas are ret:rcahin( I Qvort , • 5.19 Bacardi Rum ....... rim ...... ~4.99 } .. or super~summer aervini! Quart •• 6.19 Kleenex Towel~ ....................... 29' Jumbo rolls ... decotafed, or BouElq114J Lysol creaner ....................... ..A9! :Oiainf~ta and deodorize•, too! 15 oz. can. Blended Whiskey ... nFllf .. ~199 El-R111cho'rown ! SS proof 1-auart • .-4. ff Bartender Mixes ........ ,1i 79• Be an expert In •minute I Instant mixe• ! I MJB Coffee .................... 85~ Z LL CAN ., •••••• l.&9 3 Ll CAN ••• , •••• 2.43 'Bk. ... ~~-':'!'. ... 51£ • FllfSll! ••• me a1r ... ~.~~~ ..••• .... ~.II! ..... ~ .. II! ntSHI ••• from U.S. Grade "A" hlrda ••• choose yottr favorite part !'TURKIY WINGS ••• 2fc •• Bacon ....... ~~:,mt ....... s1·3!. · Sausage ... ~~~-~ ...... 99r. Lean ... uniqUegoodneaa! .. , l\ICID ;;~ 1.S9 lb-. We make i'!rom a continental recipe I Halibut Steak ....... crnu cur ....... 89~ Crab Meat ....... ~wu K!llC. ....... '2.98 ~ Perfect fQr brolllilr over hot coals! Swed mea t •••. for summer aalada or cocktail I Super-Fresh Produce Specials! Blueberries .... 3 9c _No ~Whaikel4 the~ ••• hu_t a full ~\!!1 Cl: oz.) oJ J!1ump ripe hello rlea ... for a pie or t&rta or jelly ... or what.Ver your heart (111d your •Po petite) desires! Another JIT<&t reason to shop El R111chol Seye~ ••mmer i4 the ti1M /IYI' 111per-aalad8. , • •upcr 1ala4 hev. th1ir beginning at El R<t11&Ao! . Romaine .................................. 10t Cucumbers ............................ :.10:. Green crilp leavea ... ao fnsh I Lonir and cool and solid! ... fresh., Red Radishes .................... 2 ioc 15' Green Onions .................... 2"' ts• Just auppy enOllih for flavor! • , • bunch Freshness maku the difference I ••• b1111ch Delicatessen Specials! American Slices ...................... 89t Bob~s Dressings .................. ~3 • '1 Clearfield , •• individually wrapped ... 16 or. pkir. Your choice of rer. 39c varietiee ... 8 or. jar. Oscar Mayer Bologna ............ 69' Yourchoice ... all bu! or &11 meat ... 12 oz. pk&'. Blue Cheese Dressing ............. W Bob' a ••• creamy, flavorful ••• 8 oz:. jar Shrimp Cocktail .................. 3 1o1 '1 Lassco... ready to aerve In 4 ounce glass! R09uefort Dressing ... 1 ~ ........... 4r Boba ... wlth Imported cheese ... 8 61. jar OpM d•il¥ 9 to 11 ... Su!lda¥ 8.30 fq •:10 I . P·ricuin •/fut Tllur. U.r011.ah Su11., Aug. 6, 1,8, 9.NoHlutodt4lera. , Askth11 manager about ourconvenTent Ch11g11Accoun1 ServTce -HUNTINGTON HARBOU_R:1Varn·erAve:-&-AlgonquinS • NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Newport Blvd. • 2555 Eastbluff ·Dr. (Ea'stbluff Village Cerrt6l'} Also conveniently located stores in Arcadia, Pasadena and South Pasadena l I I I . I I ------------------------·-------------------------------- r"'T_.,.. .. _...,. ___ ... _ ....... "'"''""~-·-$::; ... --... ,.,, .............. --.. ...... ~.--~·-·-·----~-~---~~------·-----------~·. ·-· .. I ff DAILY PllOT BAR M WEST!RN STYLE HICKORY SMOKED SHANKLESS SMOKED HAMS SHANK HALF U.S.D.A. GRADE "A" . ·FRYING .CHICKEN FINEST . IN QUALITY-N-TASTE LB. CUT ·UP-FRYERS ...................... 33~La. . ' . BAR M WESTERN STYLE 65~ BUTT PART HAM .................. LB. .BAR M WESTERN STYLE SLICED BOLOGNA BUY IT BULK STYLE U.S.D.A. GRADE "A" 3-LEGGED FRYERS R::~y OUR OWN CURED U.S.D.A. GRADE "A" FRYING CHICKEN BREASTS 69~ CEORNEDKEBEEF --------1~ "----. RATHS ALL MEAT WIENERS . 12 oz. 3'9'' .. . PKG .. IA. HUGGINS YOUNG MOCHA & JAVA :COFFEE 1 u. CAN 69' Witt. tl!i1 coupo11, 110 rni11imu"' p11rchti• r•qui,otef. Lirnil ,,,.. ctlt IN' co11po11 -011• coupo11 P'' culforn•t. Yoitl tft•r S11..tl1y, "119111t '· ONLY AT IA.KAIN IASI KING SIZI ........ $1 .0 GAIN DETERGENT 99' MAXIM FREED .DllllD COFFEE o z:-5ftc-.1GUl:Al" JAR ? "$1.09 39~ 89~ YOUNG-N-TENDER BEEF LIVER FRESH SLICED CORAL .QUEEN BREADED SHRIMP$1~. RATH'S B1ACONSMOKE~······ 79~ OSCAR MAYER -12 OZ. ALL MEAT or ALL BEEF 69!• BOLOGNA SLICED TOILET TISSUE PEPSI COLA PLUS TAX & DEPOSIT HUNT'S YELLOW CLING PEACHES HALVES OR SLICES ~-------~ HERSHEY KERNS INSTANT COCOA MIX TOMATO 2 LL CAN JUICE UG~69' He u ·or-4~$1 CAN R ROLLS F 0 . R Tl4'11ll LIOUIO DETERGENT 21 oz. SIZE OXYDOI.. ·DETERGENT GIAfrtT SIZE SAl..YO DETERGENT GIANT SID . • CMIEElt GIA.NT DETERGENT . . Sill GIANT IVORY SNOW ,, .. ORll'T DETERGENT GIANT SIZI LUX LIQUID DETERGENT BERNSTEINS \ DRESS INGS FRENCH · BlEUCHEESE 3~s1 . • • • • CANTALOUPE EXTRA FANCY NORTHERN 5 ~s1 TOMATOES 2 :29¢ FIRM RED RIPE PEACHES YELLOW MEATED ELBERTA 19~B. CUCUMBERS 4~29¢ BEANS ~~~~~y 19¢ KENTUCKY LB. LIQUOR DEPT. 12 OZ. CANS BUCKEYE PREMIUM BEER KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON KENTUCKY BEAN $379 WHISKEY Fifth ~~~ •• VINT AGE OF 1967 LIEBFRAUMILCH 99!l WINE ........................... . 1 PINT-7 FLUID OZ. BOTTLE . . . • • • SPltlN"FllLD ·LEMONADE 11.llNS STRAWBERRIES . CAMPIELL'S CLAM CHOWDER 29' 10 oz. CAN YAN CAMP FRIED HALIBUT '• ' WILSHlltl 11.0SHllt 39' GHERKINS lZ OZ. ,.. AJAX • 140L2:29c CLEANSER 63c ' LIFllOUT '""2:29' SOAP 75c . SIZE ~ ; 79c 69\ ACCENT ssc "W•n-11, ft..,.r 41/J oz . Not11re Pin 11 '"41" tlN j \• 83¢ ' "· 83c FOREMOST . • COTTAGE CHEESE !QUART 59 . . ' .. PRICES EffECTIVE THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY .' August 6, 7 I a and 9 PRICES SUBJICT TO STOCK ON HAND WE ACCEPT U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS WE GJY~ . BLUE CHIP STAMPS COSTA MESA PLACENTIA • WE GIVI -. BLUE CHll• STAMPS. 19th and Placenll*; 710 w. Chap11111 . ,.. ' ' .. ' ., -' : ' . ~' . ' 11 ..• ~lj> $. ~-­llD . ---. ----. -~-------------. ~ -----·-. -... ~ ----............. ~--- " Wedntsdl)', A~t S, 1970 DAILY PILOT 41 ~ul i.nary Artist Use~ Cl1inese Touch for Gourmet Entrees d.inese cooking Is no One or Kuo's favorite of-wor~ before your guest ar-4 ~blespoons nour \S cup light cream hot, drop In prickle. ash seeds, Heat celery soup, Ught and crisp. no'{ity, but Western dishes feri.ngs which ha's been a big rives. Pepper and salt to taste 3 tablespoons cooking sherry ginger and scallion. When cream and sherry In Lift out chicken and place-ma~e with a Chinese touch hit with his guests, is breast "Wlth everything In the 2 cups vegetable oil I large onion sliced se11lllon turns greenish-brown, saucepan. Pour over chicken. ln serving dish. Add about c really send you. of chicken with a champagoe oven, you can go and charm 6 pr1 Y, cup sliced almonds take all three Ingredient!; out Spread onion and s 11 c e d four tablespoooa of tbatn•• doinf jll!t t,hat for I.he aauce. your auesUI." ckle ash seeds Wash. chicken breasts, dry ot oil and set aside. almonds: over cblcte:i. pngne to celel'J aoup; Ur- 20 year-.:. Julian too, "This is one or my most 2 cups vegttable oil with paper towels and rub fry dtlcktn In oU till Cover lightly and bake for gently and seM OVff ' the ese-born oftlclal! ·o the .-tuecessful, and at the same CRlCKltN PRIMA DONNA J slices ginger with COIJ)AC. Dredge chicken brown, abollt Uiree to five" 4~ minyt~ at 350 dtgrees. chl~ken. ' Nations Secretariat. lime, most simple dishes," he '4Sb:e •o" l green scallion stalk Ulinly with rtoor, sta.soned with salt minutes on each side. Place Remove lid of casserole and Needless to m, Yui.z • ha been delighting New said. "The best UUng about 4 halves chicken breasts sliced an"° pepper: set aside. chicken in casserole and ' set bake another 10-15 minutes, the remainder ol the cham- Yo§kers ' lucky enough t.o be it ls that you do the hard 3-4 tablespoons cognac 1 can celery soup Heat oil In a skillet : wh~ a.dde. or until almonds are brown pagne with your dinner! inv';ed to sµp at his midtown,1----=--------~--=--------'--'-----------~-------------------'-=----=----- a~ment. K)Jo, a pe:rsooable. youthful- loo~g man who speaks EnlJish with hardly a trace of San accent, has the im- maJinative touch of the true gotl'mel. iji likes to take a traditional Arrllrican dish like beefsteak amt dress it up with a mixture (If punese ingredients. like pri~Y. ash seeds, (available in Chinese foodstores) soy sa~e and ginger. I his travels tl\rougl\out lhe Un Stales and Canada, KU often obtains the recipe of me dish that has caught his. ancy. en he tries it out in his kit n, adding a little oriental sealoning and a few in- grellients to transform it into sonkthing quite different_ from lhe\original. ' "tt's a great thing to be ab\4 to pick up an ordinary piefe of meat, add a pin<;h of ):his and a dash of thal an«\ tur.n out a succulent dish whi,f!h makes every gourmet gr~·with envy ," Kuo said . "Let other people struggle with their pain t brushes, ham- ml9~and chisels.'' he said . "I' keep my cui sine." . 'r years, Kuo created his cutry delights without giv- in much thought to posterity. en, five years ago, his Brri.ish secretary brought a ferdale friend over lo his place for\ dinner. They were so chlf!med with the mea l that the' friend asked for the re:;!pe '1 play by ear when I cook." sai1! Kuo. "In other words, I hpprovise. So I couldn't give her the recipe. I had to ask th.Jn to rome back anoth er evep.ing and watch me make tnJ dish." ~n the friend returned (~_other meaJs, she wrote down-the recipes al.so until finally she had compiled a fol{Uldable list. The result was a book called "~ese Cuisine -Only in A~rica". It has not yet been pu"ished. ·~the title indicates," Kuo saiij, "I c.an cook only in Anferican where most in· aients are standardized - re a piece of U.S. Choice po el'house is a lump of good m · t, whether you buy it in Of ago or Buffalo." .I ;F resh Pleats ) jl t. •• ' ty-going or vacaUon· pl Ing, you couldn'( do bet- ter than to choos" this lean shlwlth swinging pleats at ei tdd". Hurry, send nowl ed Pattern 9317 : ~ j H Sties 101h, 121h, 14in:1 • 16 ~Ill, 20\l. Siie 141> (bust 37) takes 1 }ii yds. 60-in. SEVENTY·FIVE CENTS fo ead?, ·pattern -add 2S ce:pts for ~ pattern for Air Mall and Special Han dl i.n g ~ otherwise third-<:lass d~livery will take three weeks or mare. Send to Marian Martin, The DAILY PILOT. 442 Pattern Deji., 2.12 West 18th St., New York, N. Y. 10011. Print N4N,E, ADDRESS with ZIP, Sltt and STYLE NUMBER. "IG, NEW SPRING-SUM· MEii PATTERN CATALOG, 111 Styles. fret paltern eoupoo. so cents. • DOUBU Blue Chip Stamps WtTM TIMS COUf'Oll •~ 1S PVICMASE , U<UIDI,_, TllUC<O..t UQlttta1t1 s-~ 111,1•s .. 11.11 FREE LARGE FULL BAGS GROCERIES RED LABEL HORMEL B.ACON SHANK PORTION CHOICE BLADE CUT FRESH GRADE 'A' Ev.ERV HALF HOUR 10 AM -8 PM AUGUST TENDER HAM CHUCK STEAK WHOLE FRYERS -----· ·~.;:;;.:,' In-Store Bakery Sliced HAMBURGER or HOT DOG BUNS 4:. LARGE -ASSORTED DANISH SWEET ROLLS 10199~ Cake Donuts a...i-............... -6' Turnovers ........................ 2/29 ' Dinner Rolls ................... .._39 < Bread ........ ._ ................ ~ 3/1 24/12 oz. 2 99 ; CANS • ONLY MOLE~S HIGH l.. 229 ;~~!~ BEER 12112oz.. ANCIENT AGE ~:~!7,oN 10. 9 8 NOW-SAVE 50¢ WOLF SCHMIDT VODKA ·~~~a 99 JUG • NOW-SAVE 20¢ BARCL\A.YS BOURBON COL~ATE -PALMOLIVE PUNCH DETERGENT GIANT La9una Beach-700 So. Coast Hwy. Corona def Mar -3049 Coast Hwy. LB. LB. ' family Steak c ..................... 98< Chuck Steak ·~:."'.'. .... : ....... • 98 < Pork Chapsc.. .. c..•• ............. 87< Pork Chops c..c.tlo0>., ........ .1•951 Pot Roast O:.... .... c .............. • 73< Pork Roast, ...................... ,,, 68~ B I R c,.,..c,~, 98< one ess oast ~• ............... .. Pot Roast °'""' .... """""""''• 45< Spareribs""""'.,.. ................ • 781 Veal'Ctitlets ..... ....., ......... • 791 Ground Chuck ..................... • 69 < Butt Portion Ham ................. 591 HEINZ NORTHERN TOWELS TOMi\TO kETCHUP GROUND BEEF FRE SH FAMILY 49 ~ PACK·3LBS. ANO OVER-LB. Ham Sli'8s c-........... · ..... •l.29 Fish Silcks ............ _..-..... 43• Turbot Fillets,__._. ....... • 56 . Armour Deliles =.= .... • 98• Canadia!I Bacon....;_"""'"·• 1.49 Fried Ciod·v·•-....... ;.::. ••L 6sf . ' •LlliE•ISON'S BUTTER .. SNACKSm~~;ES 311 TUNA~5~:~~~/2's ao~ BriquetS f~t~~E:AG.69~ RICE-A-RON1soz29~ DOG FOOD~~~t·0R14~ . Ice Cream =;;.. ........ 591 · Popsicles """""~• ....... 4/1 W ffl ,,..,_,, 391 Q 95Podi,1 Coun!,, ••• ,,,,,,, Boil in a Bag ... ,~,. .... 4/1 G. ' p· ·~.-····· 78' 1no s IIIG .,.. ,, ....... MORTON'S Pl ES CREME . ·-· -'!9"1' 1'19 HE ALTH & BE AUTY AID S STYLE HAIR SPRAY PRELL =.co,,,"" ....... 98' CREST :~..:. ... " ........... 68' Krispy Crackers LB.PKG ... : ..... 37•. D I ' ALaEltrSON'S 46 C e ergent All;(JRPOSf.GT ......... . ' U.8.D.I. FOOD STAMP COUPONS Gladly Accepted CAllfOllMIAS f\MlSt r1to1>UCl· ~-....&• _ .. l-·--.· • LB. • ·C" t I '~•;,. 6/1 an a oupe ,.,, ........ 'Sweet Corn ''""'~'" 12/1 Pineapple ''"'"' .. "'"·~ 391 111.1 1111 .1 1111 ro.\ ft DE IAlllT Slll·WlfH 19 9 TlflS COUPON UMIT 1-0fftl llPllfS 1/11 llDHllAlll OfU YA 1 AllllTSON'S PRICES GOOD AUGUST 5th THRU AUGUST 11th HuntlnCJfan Beac:h-15511 SO. Edwards Huntington Beach-8911 Adams . ' I' " • ' " I t I I I I I I . If DAJl.Y ~ILOT WtdntSdl)', Auvust '· 1'70 • • •• .. • ·M eat prices tOday ~re no · laughing matter. ~ .. ' . • • -With meat the basis of so many meals, having to pay the pri~e for it i~ no joKe. Even the le_ss exiJensive cuts add up ' ' . ' • ' . I not to mention what steaks, chops and roasts will cost you. The solution is not a diet of soup an d .vegetables. It's ~ visit to FAD Our meat. like everything else here, is discount priced. 5-0. you always pay less. And ren1en1ber, while we discount the price, we never di scount the quality. All our • • • meats are backed by a money-back guarantee. It pays to shop at the affordable store: FAD. Our prices get right down to the bone. And it isn't the funny bone either. .. .. .. " -. I"' .• ' .•• -.• ., • • . f -------- ' :.i: .. • ' . ~ . . ,~ '· ~. ' . . . ' . ~ . ... . . -. . " .. .... ~~. .. . . -(_~ ' ·~ ,, ... ,•,, M ~'!' • ,:; ··' .. . .. ' . . -~. \ . , SANTAANA , 2120 SO. BRISTOL AT WARNER · COSTAMESA 2200 HARBOR Bl VD. AT WILSON • • . .. • • . • ' . • . • • . . ;-. .. • 1 • . , (; . . . \ . . . • .. • •• . ' I• •' l• ~ ., •, ., . . , 3 • : . • • • • • . • • • ¢ . • l 1 • • ' •• ~ • • •• , . .. • • ~ • ' • I ' • r ' . c .. '. " . . . •' ' t • • • i. " OAIL ~ PILOT ~( • Wcdntr.day, Aug11st 5, iq10 CADJ:LLAC NINETEEN SEVENTY OUR NEW 1970 CADILLAC t ... SELECTION IS GREAT ALL MOpELS ·• EQUIPMENT & COLOR CHOICES READ Y FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. ! : ~ . . . ~ • ' ' I ., Wedntsda.1, August '· 1970 " OVER 80 QUA LITY CA DILLACS AND OTHER FINE CARS TO SELECT FROM LA RGEST SELECT IO N IN ORA NGE f OUNTY ! 1965 CADILLAC Fleetwood. Vinyl top, cloth I: let.ther interior., full power, factory air rondltioning, tilt·teleaeopic wheel, AM·FM radio. (9t8AQC> Fleetwood. Lea'.ther· Interior, full power, factory air cond, atereo AM-FM, tilt telescopic a~ng wheel, power door Jocks, cruise control, twilight aentlnel. ITEH741J SALi $2222 PRICE 1969 OLDSMOBILE Delta 88 2 Door hardtop. Vinyl top, vinyl lntcriO!', V8·, automatic, JX)\Ver llleerini, power brakes, radio, heater, factory alt• condJtiOnin1. white· walls etc. (ZBC138) SALl$2777 PRICE 1968 CADILLAC Coupe DeVilie. Vinyl top, cloth I: leather in~rior, Cull poWer, factory. air., atereo AM-FM multiplex, Wt telescopic wheel, power door locks. twilicht aen- tinel, power trunk opener. (VUT032) .. SALi s3--,-•77 PRICE 1969 CADILLAC Hardtop coupe. Full power, factory air, AM·F1f, leathtr·interior, rear "'indow defogger. Low mileage 1 owner automobile. lYVV285l 1970 CADILLAC 1967 RIVIERA run power equipment plu9 factory air conditioning, AM·FM radio, vinyl interior, white side wall lire$. (748) 1966 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille. Vinyl top. cloth I: leather Interior, full power, factory air conditioning, A~l·Fl\l radio, tilt-teleacopk;·.,.hetl, 1¥Jwer door locks, twilight sen- tinel, pow"° trunk'opener. (TGJ3081 SALi .. $2·.,33 ' PllCI \iiJ . . , 1967 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille. Vinyl top, cloth .\ leather lnteri™' full power. factory air, atereo Af.f-FM multiplex. tUt-telescoplc whet>!, power door locks. {VGR244) SALi $29· 99· . PRICE · · · I t...., j ' 1968 CAOILLAC ' Sedan DeVille. Vinyl top. cloth I; leather interior," fuJI power and factory air condltionil\i, power door locks. very low mileage. (Zvt>660) 1969 CADJtLAC Sedan DeVUle. Vinyl top, ~o,th •1.Wather Interior, full power, factocy,_alr corldlUonini', dual comfort seats, stereo muJuPJex, 1'J(>Wer door Jocks, tllt-tele- !ICOPIC whe'el, twilliht 1entinel, poWer trunk opener. {065AGC) • ~~ $47,77 1970 EL ·DOR'ADO >. Y()UR FACTORY • , .. . ·~· .;, • J. • • ,1 -t ...... ,, . ~.\. AUTHORIZED Se'dan DeVllJe. Early trade·in. Cloth 6: leather in· terlor, full povoer, factory air condltionina, stereo AM·Fh1 multlpJex, powP.r door locks, tilt.telescopic y,•betl, tY.:ilight aentinel , etc. Local. 1 owner car. (501AFV) DEMONSTRATOR Vinyl top, ll'!ather interior, full po"·er, fa ctory air, 9tereo AJ\1-FM multiplex, tllt-tele. "·heel, p<J11•cr trunk ore;ner 6: door locks, tw!llaht sentinel. (0920J. CADILLAC DEALER SALi $5777 PRICE Low m· "i'~ALI $6999 PRICE • 2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa · '540~9100 ( SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM Mou. thru Fri. • 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM Sat. and Sun. f S.rvlco Deportme~t Open Mon •• frl. 7:J0.-4:00 ALL CARS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE. ALL SALE PRICES EFFEcilVE.THROUGH TUESDAY, AUGUST 11 , 1970 -----.~ . ----.. --------- --------------~~----------- SUMMH LEASE SPECIALS 1970 EL ,DORADO STOCK ~HM ONLY, s 199 MO. 24'~ 0,.. W L-• 'ALJ.o•llllllllllATI lllLIYUY ON ANl CAR .IN STOCK &.MM tffir .. ~,..· u,.t 11, U7t OH ""''llo\_,ID °'£611.., ' ·' ' '' ' ,, : .A' .. .. , i. ' ,I I. • ' . . ; ' . • • • • • i :; ' .. :t t-o· '•,• • ! ~ ! .. ~ . . " l ·' ' l.U ' . •. ·(; ·. I I •. ,, ' ····' DA.IL Y PILOT DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS YOO l'RO!JA~LY DON'T RECOGNIZE ME! ... MUTT AND JEFF •. ......__ ... _..,. o _ ' ---' l'M HI LDEGARt7 HAMHOO<ER: WJWl-J OF MYSn:RY, FEMME FA1J\LE AND ALL-'ROUND VAMP! . 8·5 ly Chester Gould ' ly Tom K. Ryan SO MUCH FOR FORMALITIES, •. KISS ME, YOU FOOL! By Al Smith OH NO! YOU t;llJPID BALL, MOVE/~-1 ,, ...... ,, ... _.. .~ :;. :,. :..:: L'°"•-=-·_c_ •• _, ____ .. ______ ~ ••"·,.-•~- 1: ;: JUDGE PARKER .. •. I· • • ·~·· ii• ' .. . . .. '·. .. PLAIN JANE •you W\LL ""'E:ET A NEW !-\AN!' 'IT WILL BE ,JUST LIKE ROt-11.60 AND .JUL11iT_/' i·S ly Harold Le Dou7 By Frank Ba9inski •yollR PAREN'TS \¥ILL HA"TE i-tlr....!' ' • ' 4 ·' f f Ll'L AINER SALLY BANANAS GORDO 6·5 MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS ~OHBOV( ' -. PERKINS By John Mnes I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I ""'.::=;:~.~.=~,...,.. .. J.<'J= .... -= .. -:----, .-------, .-------, ACROSS 1 Lovr god 5 Sound of horse's hoof " --·· Flow :• • 14 Very good ··~... 15 Sharpen .. llio Man·· -< 2 won:ls 11 Explosives ·.i-. 18 Timepiece device ·> 20 N•rclSSllS' ny"1ph • :i 21 Mlnutr ZZ Things Iha! happen 23 Staggers Z5 Laundry "11Chlnr opera lion 27 Ancient prop1r In :.; Gaul 29 Mr. Cole JO Of lrur ,.._... lus Irr l4 To br ;111nouncrd· Abbe. ~Key . ,,.'.:.. meanln;s 1"' )8 Throb of '--emotion • ,r. )9 Amat eur · f sport: • ) wotds I 42 Matr opposing Slllfllfl!IS •1 Apportion : : : 44 Establ!Jhrd 45 ln1tr11Ment • .. • q • • • t ' 2 J • " " 10 ) ~ : .• ' .. " 411 Min's nlc-nilmt 47 Estes or J itSPtf 49 Erato, Clio, 'tc. 51 Sm1llts1 M!Ollnl 54 Form'r 58 Evil: P1tlix bO A.grnl: Suri hr bl Communi· cation dtvicr bl Piece of floor covering &4 M111's namt 1:15 Jot bb Codt ttttl'r for "I.I" fi,7 Equal s b8 Vigor lio'f Kind of reckoning 1 Vr1y in!rrqurntly: 5 words 8 Vrgrt1blr · 9 Mr. Allen 10 Atrl'Wt 11 Vtrlly 12 Gasp 13 lnsrcts 19 Nuisanc e 24 Ptrasrd DOWN r•p1rssion 21:1 or a facial 1 At a leaturr subsrqutnl 28 A1tlflcial tlfll! langLJag' 2 Cut fnlo JO Gist small JI Eastrrn p,irces Standard, J 'Homr lrs.s livf ---·--"· /lours : 3 "Ortis Z •ords 4 Rtp1ir 32 Kry lootwt1r J] Sensed 5 Milsticate 34 For111fr ~ Avtrage Las ruler Vrgn visitor 35 E1posecl ' 1 • • ,, " " . ., ' • " • .\\. w " " 815170 37 Les .•• Unis: The USA. J8 Part of a corolla 40 Failu1e 41 Wet food 4& Cislt111 48 Took H tiny 49 Indian limf periods 50 -···Ana 52 City on the Alabama Riv er 53 Tire feature 54 Garment 55 In good hral01 Sb Empty 57 Unrel lablt P'rson 59 JUl!IP b2 Possessivr word " ... " ··~ 'i it' ·f " " Ill I " " )6 -~ 1!' .. " • ~;, ' • • • • • \ " lilt ~ ~- " " " " . ~ • • • I • I • • • I M l • ..... ., ~ " ,. .. • . ~ I • r l 1.V10 c MISS PEACH By Mell ··-···~,-·· .. , UH, 61tV.T UTTLE ..... CAllll, TIE LSN,oN. ""''" II \ t • •, • '• t I ' '' '. ' ' ' .. , • STEVE ROPER By SC.unden and Over90rd jllJill••mU;;:NNEE<<ircwWeiEEEiKtFFi•iii1'1t'iYY.:-l rvot1D l/t.IDERSTAt.10 WHY l'M . . CARYL!-·Y'5Ef··1'fERE CAAlY ABol.JT HER. KID, IF WAS THIS NURSE, YDU EVER MET HER! j.io..-i' ···l(ASEY O'HARE ··· MA"f'BE SOME DAY WE CAN F'IX IT UP £-Oil Tl-if ·rwoOF\Oll TO-SORTA GET ACQUAINTED .' l'M AFRAtCi THAT\l HAVE TO ~IT TILL I HAVE SOt.1£ Flilff TIME .' l'VE GOT OATES eveRY WIGMT ·· .. FOR WEEKS AHEM/ By Charles M. Schub I'll SELLll ; ., It " Ii f! I' ,I TH! STIANGl WOI LD MR.MUM By Al Capp By Gus Arriola IXW'r EV.ER S WJ.i.LO'N 1//AT /i!OT, DO&, ABot.rr l.J5 00~ N IAi& ABLE 71> 10TE t OAOSMANY 1/M.ES CVR. Wl!/13//Tr • By Ferd Johnson -•• I*' O.J(., PETS'- 1 APOLD<;IZE. ,, DENNIS THE MENACE f'IU .... · 8-S' HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE1 1-~~~~~~~~~"'"""...o.;.'-"-""'---1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-r ·~~~~~~~-1 1000 General General 1000Generel 1000 General 1====;;;.;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 1000General 1000 Gene ral 1100 Costa Mesa 1100 HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE f New~~!_ ~•ch 1200 JJnJa Jj/e PRESTIGE WATER FRONT HOME Newly listed -perfect for the family who wants a spacious waterfront home. 4 Extra Jge. BR .• 4 Ba., pwdr. rm. Lge. !iv. rm. & den : 3 car garage. Beaut. patio/garden; deck & dock. For information on all lots & homes CALL, BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642--4620 * * * * * * TAYLOR RECOGNIZE VALUE ? * * * See this just reduced 4 bedroom, 3 bath \Ve st· cliff charmer. Located on best street. Near schools, sho ppillg. $49,950. EXCITING CONTEMPORARY Prime area of Corona de! Mar. Custom blt. 3 bdrm . home for present owner. 2 Years ne\v. Tttis is the unusual for the young al -heart! EXECUTIVE FAMILY HOME Perle<'t tor cntertainlng or l1:1mily living, 4 l«'e. bdnns., atrium, garden t'ntry, for. n1al dining rm., family eat. ing area. Custom p o o t SSS.000. Cali for our picture broch~ ol current hstings_ mu~.;; 833'0700 644-2430 Take Over 6~ % VA Loan \\'alk to th(' bt'ach from this upgraded 2 year old home. This truly great family hon1e Includes 'I bt'drn\li, lge lu1nily rn1 ., elevated dining area, frplc, bltins, & much more~ Lis!ed at $34.500. 9-11111·!11. QUIET CUL DE SAC COVEREO BOAT AREA 3 Br-2 bft-atll'ac corner. Below FHA apprulal. Owner Eves. S6-8776 Spacious 3 bedroom A over-sittd family room. OutBtand-1~1:-.t:ACULATE 2 yr old 4 · ,1 v ~-1 1 BR 2 ba, tam rm, nr So. 1ng eu e~ur ocal on. Coast Pla.ia. 15x38 patio 1-leavy shake roof: shag w/cov . 6~% loan earpl'ts, fireplace I.: built-assumable. By ow n e r. ins. Award winning floor ~1363 otter 6 PA-I, all pion. Full prict' now only day Wt't!kends Deluxe 4-l'lexes $30,500. For delalla call 540-USl 3 BR, 2 ba w/flt.m rm, new &e2.1nt Anytime r.===------, I cpllli, drp1 & bltns, Astiume I ~==::::::::1 ~ GI k>an 5%. %, $19,500 bal-11 BACK BAY I 1G ·;';";;';;";;1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1;;000;;;1 General 1000 ''O l5th y .. I• ·-·~ u r ear VACANT A BAYCREST WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO .. Realtors Thai we .. ,, a home 0, a EXCLUSIVE 1111 San Joaquin Hill1 Road GOL>" COURSE LOT ,0, Pict~ book beauty• w:th• 8 NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 only $22,500'!' Yes, it really I · "-··ho ' a sharp 3 Bedroom wilh IM?.1EDIATE POSSESSION. Peasant unpact t ... ""ti ut. * * * * * * * &AN IT REALLY BE? ~COATS ~ WAtLACE REALTORS 9552 Hfl milton Ave. Huntington Beech 962-4454 l::J ~·~!~!~ge ~':;ve~~; to acc. 218 New Tri·Plexes $57,500 "ijiijiiij; I (under constr-avall Aug, 301 R Large, beautiful "hon1es with an income" localed in the f.l~t Eastslde area 01 Costa Mesa. Featuring (I' 3 BR, 2 BA "owners unit" + (2) 2 BR rental units. See at 2035 Tustin Ave., ror \\l'ood. land PL or call Mr_ Fauria at 64.24905. $harp Trl-Plt!x f'HA DA. $42,000. a-15-2846 3 Unltx. income $395 mo, $35,500. OWner-Agent • 545--24ll6 * t f Beclrn1 & fan1ily home, on l( quiet cul . de • 38.C. l..A>\lt'ly r area. close to Boys Club, ( 01'·ner will eonsider ex. change. Asswnable 1st at \Vrou,.ht iron entry gn>•, 4 largt> fenced rear yard that Large 4 bdrm. horne with <> '-a.. Pt T Goll la...,(' bedrooms including ,•-==========~iiiiiiii ..................... i.I opens -::n.... ne ree enclosed patio heavy shake '"' 1 · Co E · · >"'A roof, family rin., all bit-ins t.lnzzling masll'r suite. St!p. General 1000 $)9,000 urse. iost1ni;: ·n may 11.rate formal dining rooin --be taken at 714 'i:. with 1olUJ & cozy frplc. Priced for r -• $154 · I and a family -,, w>.th payments o oruY inc immed. sale el $28,950 -....... VA Ca ... 'l't sto~ fireplace. Sparkli"" !axes. II now J't_, .,_ . Sub1nit FHA/VA te1•mi; or ·~ 51~% loan avail. Call kitchen and bI't'akfas:t area. 3 Bedroom home in Costa @ COATS 5"5-84.24. lkautilul manicured pool-Mesa located on nice trl.T-~~-yard. Offered at 4 BR I No Dn ~': ~~ tt;hn:~~~ ~Vui7~ . RWEAALLtTAOCRES NO FANCY SLOGANS Just honest valUe _ so dis- tinctive. so charming, so in'esistiblt', withou1 a dou bt one of our best offerings. 3 Bedroom, 2 bath ho1nc with an entrance that will make you !eel like you are going out of this world, at only $26,950 with EZ terms. PAUL-Wwl'E CARNAHAN ••Al.TY CO, 1093 Baker, C.l\1 . 54.6-544.0 C I h no down payment, and a 0 eswort Y M V d positive S20CO profit in 11 -546-4141-esa er e moot"'. tht. is the "'"I ;~ (Opon Evonln91) & Co. REALTOR Newport lkach OfJi~'i:: 1028 Bayside Drive GT:>-4930 Because of urgency, owner will pay the points for you to use your VA loan. This nic-e borne is located l block from school and library - &bopping cloS(' by. No down ----------1 payment financing is very ----------1 rare in t-.tcsa Verde. so TRIPLEX NO DOWN l Extra nlce 2 bedroom pri. vale units on large lot 50'X 170". Veterans can buy with no money down & build an estate_ Drive by 1948 l\1cyer please call right away!! Nichols Real Estate 546-9511 Pl. & $4 t SIOO inside.I========= Newport JOG vestment you'll e\'er make.1'i====::zc=~~ Prove it to yoUrSClf now! Ii ----- Call .• ........... CORONA DEL MAR i---.1 J l NICllOlS I ~ " Nichols Real Estate 546-9511 OUPLEX ln beautiful Sou !h side -3 bedrooms. 2 baths each 11partmrnt. Near exclUng shopping. Great rental area. Price $62.500. Owner anxious. Macnab· Irvine Really Company * TAYLOR l"!64...,2-'1~35=~·7S.'l""32"!"1D CAMEO HIGHLANDS URGENTLY NEEDED Charming stOl\E' entry & tra.t. "Lusk" View homt' in Corona fic-wa.y + impreMivc use ol dcl r-.1ar for qualified huyer. brick & wrough! iron, labels Please call immediately, lhis 4 bdrm. & din . rm. ''Our 25th Yea r home as "t:uslom built." ''lllcsa\ irbc ::Rcalir 546-5990 (Aho new income units for sale in Dana Poinll. One of a Kind Master bedroom + 3 bed. rooms. Bltin slOVt', aven, dish1''1lSher. Crptd & drpd. As.king $28,500. SANTA ANA CANYON 641.1n1 Anytime 5 ACRES & HORSES, Beaut. I !!!!!!!""'""'!""~!""~!!!!~ CWl!om ranctt, poo.t, furn. FHA or GI NO DOWN guest hOUSl'. lmmed. posses-W~t side Freedom Home, s.ion, Will consider exchunge just painted and panelled. MAIN REAL TY Vacant tor quick move-in. Realtors 5Cs.t977 Has large fenced yard. Own- DUPLEX e'I' will,pay points -Call now -Need! quick action. $11 ,500 Mesa Verde 1110 QUI ET CUL·OE.SAC 3 Bedrm Mesa Ve~ Honie, largt' fllffiily rm., dble lire- J!lacc, heavy shake roof & lovely shag Cr'Jltg. On nice. ly landi;caped lot with trail- er aceess. Only $30.500. Call Ray Gault, 540-llSl, Heri- tagt' Real Estate. BY OWNER Custom built, 4 bed.rm. tam. ily room, 2 big tireJ!.laces. This beautiful OOme over· looks tht' 17th fairway of Mesa Verde GoU Course. 6%. assumable loan. 3036 Java Rd. 540-4095. $62,900. BY owner, 3 Br. 1~ ba, tam. rm .. fpl., bllns, din. rm. $29,500. 546-6059. Newport BNch 1200 POOL En}Oy your free time around this IUEe heated pool. ~lain. tenance and yard care a.re rlone for you, Nearly llt'W 3 BR., 2 Ba., split level 6% '/,. lean Smith, Realtor 646-3255 BLUFFS Condo -4 Br. 3 Ba. Best area, Below n1rkt By owner. Alt 5 I.: wknds. -Dover Shores 1227 *OLD WORLO * Excluxi\"e Dover Shores bl.,y & mi. view home. Uniq~ & diUerent style. Built for beauty & convenience. 4.~ ha. 4 car gar, hi ~il'p & ' many e x t r a realufts. U69.000. 548-1249 Univers!!!...!~rk 1237 "MY BLUE HEAVEN" Can he youn in this spacious 3 bdrm., 2 bath townhouse, <I o n c C0~1PLETELY In shades o( blue, incl. carpet. ing-&. drapes. Priced at $32.500. • Red Hill RHlty Univ, Park CenlPr, Ir/inc Call Anytime 833-0820 BEAT HIGH INTEREST Rates, by assuming the 51h% insur. loan on this immac. executive home. Large fam- ily rm. plus !iv. rm., great tcrr en!er1aining. Fee land . $65,000. •• Fairview To the Ocean From lhis neat Ne\vport Shores Horne With 2 bedrooms & den High cathedral ceiling WESLEY N. $59,500. TAYLOR CO. l-2 Bdrm .. Ea.stsidt' A!sun1e 6%. 'lo loan, $34,950 FORTIN CO. 642.5000 Call 673-6568 evenings Ol' weekends. home plua 3 i;i:arages. Set' I ~=========~! this lovely individual own I : Call !or our pic ture brochure o ( current listings •ta~~ 833-0700 644-2430 LIDO WATERFRONT APTS.·320 LIDO NORD NOW REDUCED TO $150,000-Xlnt Terms 6 BeauW:uJ units. 6 car ga· rages & utility room. with SO ft. fronting on exceUent swimming beach. Units arc newly furnished. Bill Grundy, Realtor S33 Dover Dr., N.B. 6424620 FHA o' GI NO DOWN \\'est sid,. Freedom Home, just painted and paneled. Vacant for quick move-in. Has large fenced yard. Own- er will pay poinL<i -Call oow • needs quick action. S21 ,500 Call 673-6568 evenings or \\."Cekends. BEAUTIFUL! 4 BR., den, fam. rm, Less than l yr. old: fine Y,.'est- minsler area. Existing V.A_ loan! Askini; $55,000. fU'.ALTO" C.O..a11J·M"'""'f ===•1rw,~• ==:!'l OUPLEX Close 10 ocean. Large 3 Br. 2 baths; frplcs., dishwash· ers. $54.:icro. George Will iamson Realtor 673-4350 &CS-1564 eves. 646-8811 {anytime) BEACON BAY WATERFRONT Spectacular view: private beach & tennis; slip for 18 fl . boat. Chttrful 4. lxlrm,, 41,~ ha., high beams: 2 kit. chens. Could have 2 unitB, R.-~ lot. Call for our picture brochure ol current listings Small private p.1tio New carpets &. drapes Compare al $27,500 Reali on; ''Our 25th Year'' In the Harbor Area" 673°4400 Realtors NE\.\'PORT CENTER - Coste Mesa 1100 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road 4. BEDROOMS on quiet, 1ree 644-4910 l ined. lralf lc fre e m11.n· ·' 111:.\t'll lli'.\U'\' l\L ES: 1,iq I' ;n10 to'4'~Viifi~ru>Tli'iN 1.-iiiiiiii;oo;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii I cul--<le-sac. Cozy frplc.. til· LEASE WITH OPTION FHA LOAN ed entry, all built-ins, 2 4 BDRM DR & FAM baths & access to rear yard. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION~ l Bedim home, l% batl\S, Bes1 for tht> money at Li1111'" money needed. Stun-hrdwd firs, criits, drps, S26,9'"JO -r~HAIVA term11 nlng 4 huge bedrooms. Dou-frplc, forced air hl!at. or ~1\4 7,-. assumable loan hie flreplact>. Built-in d<'sk. S26,500. Assumable rnA avai.I. Call 545-8424. Sou1h FORA-1AL DINING. Family loan Sl8.:nl, <5%. % int.) COM! Reallars. room Gourmet kitchen with payable ns7. per mo_ incl I 7====~"'",--.,= buiH-im. A-fove in with option Prine, int, taxes, ins. ASSUME S'4 % GI IO&ll. 1900 10 buy money & reasonable Wells--McCardle, Rltrs. ~c:.r,:1• b~tn~~· !an~' ::!"!: ren! Call 645-0303 18JD Newport Blvd., C.M. FOREST E. OLSON 5'S.7'129 Ev". 6'4<l684 =: ,:i;:,,,•:;;"~J::: 4 MIN TO BCH-$29,000 3 BR, 2 ba, D.R., w /w cpts Drpg, trplc, !eeluded area Own/a. ll60 Gleneagles Terr. C.P.1, 642-6657 OPEN SUN JJ.S NEAT & NIFTY Only $22.950. 3 Bdrm. home, 2 car garage. $5,000 Down. Seller will carry bal. at 8'/o, $150 per month. Call : Patrick Wocxl. 54.5-2300 e Bill Haven, Rltr. 2111 E. Coast, Cd~f 673-32U iBR:""den, blfnfl, crpa, drps, R·2 lot, nr busines.' &: Schls. 1900 Ora~. 64~4 LEASE /OPTION LIDO ISLE Inc. RcaJtors Enclosed Patio General 1000General yunr own and live ca.1.-etree $33,500. CALL ·e · 64•·1414 Aw'4., ?':r.ALTY Nt'lr N1wporl P111 O frl~1 DOVER Shores -Owner 5 br, bay vu, imm . occ, rcu, gd !emu. 1712 Antigua Way. 548-2063 BALBOA · 4 Br. · tn.500 2 Lots! Frank Marshall Realt.y 675-4m> Ei.EGANT Home. 2650 sq ft. in prestige area, 3 hr, by owner. $77,000. &4.2+55113 · 1000 l..argl" 6 yr, old home nr. Hi\RBOR N. OF WILSON Spic & Span cust home, ju.~! ----------1 beach. 4 Bdrrris., 4 baths. I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•l liated. lovely for entertain.. iiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•I plus fam . rm. New pain! & FIXER.UPPER ing? 2 Bedrm, hntwd flrs. Lido .. .,.ew Listing drapes, Owner has bought FIVE 151 BEDROOMS frplc, nr new crpts, drps, S©\\~}l-.!£t.tfS" Lovely & !Wiily redecorated another home & a_:ixious lo Only $26,950 with big !i% % dble gar. WaJk to shops. 4 & lge tainR, room, open-move Call now. ~.000. Gl loan :J take over. Needs Lachenmyer Realtor Ing onro patlo. SUndeck. 3 Call us for our p1c.tu~c clean up, paint & yard "''ork, Call 646--3928 or. 54.5--3483 l\1inu1cs to beach & tennis brochure of current listings, but who knows_ "your" deaJ Open Eveni'*s courts. Kitchen • /'1('1v & ~~'i"":l!JP q migt-'. be lhe winner. DOVER SHORES modem. Call for appt , lffifijl!tiJl~!"::i Open Evenings 1430 Galaxy Drive {Open Evcnlflb'S) --------833--0700 ~2430 ~ 5•&·5'10 4 Bcdrms, 3 bathi;, :t car (-~~~~L. 529 ,950 f1*r eintn ~ gar. Travertine n1arble at-... ~, .... ._..., LLEGE REALTY 1·iun1. 14· high 11kylight. OLLEGEREALTY "th 6 3' O/ Loa ISlllMll!lsltMlrlllr,CM. panoram ic view. Experlly ·~~ .... ~.Cll WI 14 10 n '""""~"""""''""'""""'"I --· ·--------crptd, drpd, & drcoratc-d. Beautiful family home, entry $24,000 Sl06,000. Roy J . \Vard, Real- hall, huge family rm., cozy tor, 646-1550. Open dally. EXCLUSIVE den, massive natural brick 4 Bdrm.+ 2 baths BAYCREST fireplace, luxunous kitchen. Charming home. Prime an?a. Channing 4. bedroorn & 31h 6'4 annual % rate loan. En!l1" hall, large fif(!plact', ASSUME 6 % FHA bath Ivan Wells built home. 541)..1720. a!I .clcclrlc built-in kilchcn, \VESTSJOE ~ Bcdroorn ·I TARBELL 2955 Harbor d1n1ng rm., plus c11:!ra <'Bl· I 1~ Forn1AJ dining room, separ- ate family rm. Excellent Open till 9:00 Pl\1 valU(' at $58.000. J"'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PETE BARRITT RLTY Santa Ana Heights Owne' wut """ FflA-V A. 3 641-5200 7 BDRM. ESTATE Beau!i!ul custom home on 11.'t'. ,,.'OOded lot, Newport. Pyramid Exchangurs liT:>-8800 545--3652 E\"es. Bedrm, 2 ba. 20x20 liv. rm + lg din rm .• bll-ins, dble ga r. Nr. UCI cir tr11de for lgl' 4 bedroon1. $25.000. Lachenmyer Rea ltor Call 646-3928 or MS-3483 Open Evenings int. area. Heavy shake roof, arge rumpus roorn, _ • ranc.. !llylcd e x 1 t' r i 0 r . baths, 3 car garage. S2aoo '"-.10-1720 do1'-n . TARBELL 2955 Harbor Costa Mesa Investment 548-7711 Open Till 9:00 PM ESTATE Sale: Olrlcr culltom BUYER trom SealllP has 3 bedroom, hanhvood floors. S9000 need~ 3 o~ 4 bedroom fireplace. Fhak"' rf'l,f, Ex· 2 bath home in 30 days. cellenl ;rrea, Suhmit min Call KateUa Really 96S..3301 c:lo1'·n or f'.H.A. or V.A. BUSIEST marketplace In no down. $22.500 Karella town. The DAILY PIWf Really 968-3301 Clas&ilied section. The Pu:rle with the Buiff./n Chuclle O Rleorrong• letten of fb1 four xrambled words b. JO'# to form four lirnpl• words. I RIES -EO '. I' 1·· I I I t I CALLI I' . I I I I' .. 1 I NEECI ,, l I' I I j • Cid you heor obout the ae. ' countont who kept hearing .-.,.,---..,..-..,..---.strange -? · 17 ", u IL El v ,o , • I 0 Com~··· ... "'~'"' :,;;;d 8 PRINT NUMBERED I' LEnfRS IN SQUARES 8 UNSCRAM6l.E lffiERS I FO! ANSWER by f1llin111 In the m1•1tg word you d9Yelop from 511!19 No.. 3 btilow. 1111·1111 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 9000 E .. tbluff 1242 A REAL BUY Herc's the bome you've been looking: lor ii in no hurry for possession. Beaut. "C·Plan" Lu&k built: 3 + lamily rm. l'llany exll'as. Cov. patio. lr1n1ac. c:ond. Ask. S44.950. MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 675-6459 Corona del Mer 1250 SPECIAL! HARBOR VIEW HILLS Luxttrious 3 BR. l Ba., hi cathedral ceil., all elec. k1tch.: heated, filtered pool plus bar room. P.1a,y u.sume exist. low int, ra!e on loan. App'!. only, DUPLEX Onr of a kind; Z.sty.liv. rm., Swedish lrplc., 2 BR., 2 Ba. PLU3 1-Sty. 2 BR., 2 Ba., frpl. Bll·lns both units. App't. only. SEMPLE REAL ESTATE 2515 E. Coast Hwy. 675-2101 Sp•e;iou' home + Income Onr, 707 Poiruwnla, 673-9103 Lida Isle 1351 Opportunity 56' Lot with room for pool. Modern 3 bedrm, cha.rmlng family rm home. Well pric- ed at $69.950. A&suma.ble 1st at 51.1~- Jean Smith, Realtor 646-3255 e LARGE LIDO LOT e 58x88' 206 Via Ult'Ca, Terms. (Tif) S48-69U Cll" MS-3256 General 1000Gener•I 1000General 1000General 1000General IOOOGeneral 1000 Gent1r•I 1000 Gener•I 1000 General 1000 ·I Ji i'(/j I! :i ?J 'DJ =t #4 NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 646-7711 2043 Westcllff Dr. 1t Irvine . Open Evenlnt• "llG 5" D.,.,\n::ioms, that is! HUGE maslt'r suilf' with r't)nlantlc. seclud<'d balcony. 28' f11.m. Jly ~NTERTAINMENT CENTER. muslve beamed CATIIEDRAL celling. 3 deluxe br.th1 and famow GA.ROEN KITCHEN. Private club, 111.kes, and riding trails, and •.OtJ own the land. Vacant and reedy t.o enjoy at $42,500! "SPIRAL STAIRCASE'" \Vinds majeslically to lht> wrought Iron balcony overlooking mas11i\1P 2.-.i;tory l'ntry hflll. UNIQUE study or nunery opPns from the LARGE prlvsle f\-tsstrr Suitt!. Eleirant SHAG cari)('tini::. CUSTOM drapes, rich panrllnf:' and "'al\pn.per add to the luxurious decor. HUGE manicured y11;rd with concrete i::amr arM PLUS room for pool. Excellent ()'".'t annuaJ percentage rate FHA Joan payable $280/mn. TOTAL. Ju.st tisted and "j\Jst right" for you! CLIFFHAVEN-VACANT I. READY Sp111clous, EXPANDED br11ut7 \\'Ith 28' BEAAfED-CEUJNG fl!.m l!y mom, coverrd patio, dr\uiff' kltehen. HARO\VOOD FLOORS, 20' itASTER SUITE. 2 FIRE· PL.ACES. 2 bl!lths. VA or t1·1.A loan available! FAIUI OUS OCEAN VIEW Coron11. drl M&r 4.,400 Ml· ft. t'U!l tom homP ailth hre1;thtaklng view of the Blue Pacinc. full)' alr conditioned plw 60 ft. deck. C&lJ for details. NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY COSTA MESA OFFICE-545-949.1· 5.o465 27'0 HARIOR ILVD. Opeo Ew'"lot• 'IQ f P.M. $795.00 TOTAL DOWN -t bedroom brauty \\.•It h lj'.Orgrous fircplacr suITOunded by JfUGE f&mlly room with b(',11ml'd et>llinq and knotly pine. HUGE modl'rn kitchen, 2 lu xurlou11 b81hs. 1'Cxy carpels and drapes, dbl. garage with automatic door. G.I. and FHA Terms. CALL! $22,950 FULL PRICE 3 Q11t'f"n-Slzc BN!roomll, large gen ge, dt"ep lot wlth Jots of trec11. "MDm," It hA~ a HlJC~: kitchen CarpeU, drapt1 -'NO WORK NEEDED -JUST P..10VE IN. C.t and rHA Terms, Payments le6!1 than rent. CALL: "G.I. REPO" $1 ,200 TOTAL OOWN nn t.hi~ freshly palntP.d 3 bf"dro0m bf"11uty. P.10VE IN CON· DITION! Carpettt, dratJN, modern gas ran&e. HUGE KITCllEN. Lots of walnut paneling. No dlscrimlnaUon. CALL? "'6 BEDROOMS" f}n yr1u havt! a lsr~ f11mlly1 We havr a larr:e home for yau. Thl11 pla~ L' FAN· TASTIC. Single story huge; AeptLratc family l"()l)ITI., also with bt'amed ctilln,q. No more ('Mwdcd bt'drooms ~nf' ror t"actl. Submit No Down Grs or Low Down rHA. ~Iler Ur l't'ndy to talk., Priced •t ~:mo. CAU..! NOW IS THE TIME TO BUYH HUNTINGTON BEACH OFRCE 7'11 Edi .... Open Ev1nln91 Oii' NS i Ta HUHTIN•TOtll Calf1"a• CO.I. HSALE $141 P/M PAYS ALL 842-4455 540·5140 You l'Rn a.uum<" :o1ubject to 6% GI loan thlt tharp 3 bedroom home with custom avocado shag carpets, drapes, modern step.save.,,. kitchen on an O\'C'nlzc 68 x 100 lot. $23.000 Jo"U U.. PRICE. Hurry, It may alread,y be KO™'! GOLilEN WEST ESTATE Popular 4 bedroom 2 bath Monterey Model with custom carpels and drapr!I, puah button, kitchen, FORMAL dining room, SEPARATE tamlty room and SE- CLUDED nlaster suite. Assume subject to 6%% government loan, $37,900 FUU... PRlCE. TROPICAL POOL AND PATIO Surrounded by lush icreen tollagt. Suflt'r 11barp 3 b«lroom bungalow \lo1lh new ankle deep c1n·pf'U1, cwtom drapett, FORMAL dining room. VA or FHA ttrml! a v11.lh1ble or assumt' subject to 5% ~ &overnment loan and S137 pt'r month PIJI ILl.1-$26,950. LIMPID P00"-$125 PAYS All Will add to }'our daytime aun ind evenlnit fun. Hc1tOO and flll<'ted for oo..c::are cnJoytnrnL BARGAlN for $23,950. VA or fHA tenna evaH•ble or assume-"ubject to 5% annual peroentqe rate lo&n. ONLY $125 ~r month 1-.Y11 all. ~------·----------~-~----·-----------~------------------------------.---.-~---~ ·---........ ...__..~-.---..-----.--..--..-..---....---·-. • • " Wtdntsday, A119ust S, 1•70 DAILY PILOT HOUSE FO SALi! HOUSES FOR SALE • RENTALS I ;,;,;==;..;.-""'-'-'-'-'--I~'"---'-------li<KIMI .Furnlshocl llOI Lido Ith IUl L-had! 1705 fllil..,. ___ ...,_,fl Surnmot' Rentela 2910 ' ... J.i' ,, !~·. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST , : 2629 HARBOll .. -. ,._ BDIH.EYARD .. •• 546-8640 Open Evenings ,, tilll::IO . ·, LOOK! :J". EASTS I DE • 3 BED, 2 BATH $21,000 ~··t that unbeHevable! Jn eiutlide Co&ta Mesa. this home may be sold 'i'lreacly, it hu just been painted inside and out. It's clean as a I whistle, sharp a.s a tack and \\'ill ~ like hotcakes ao you'd .:.. hurry. A POOL IS A POOL IS A POOL Spocloutr Lido"-A LAGUNA 11~•cH Pnme 3 ar. 2 tia. -w•y OUT -...,.. 3 SWUty Pltlol. o. " CONDOMINIUM ..,... to ..,.., .,,.._ lot HOUSE Lovely Blue i.._t Villa. 2 A II. 1119,SOO. Thi. beat BR, 2 !IA complel<lJ film. Prime Lido Nord ... ,!'• the dclcrl.ptiOn ol .lahed. linens_ dlahN. ete S Br. 4Si be. nr. nrw water. Ullll IPf'tW!int contempor.. Wuhtt/~r. Avail Augl.$. front home. Beaut decor, aey home. Dbl. door entry Sept 5. 499-tw AM er Dock. P~ I: float. For a!>-w/6 ft. TERJtAZO TYPE 837.mtl &iiytimc'. p'l, C&ll~ ENTRY lw.J... SUNKEN Lido •-..r • p I Ill __ , R Ito LIV. RM. W/LOADS Or -,.ront-00 1 B 0.-vnuy • N r CLASS, UNIQUE t.tODEJtN. Kitchenettte 11.11te1 I: rooms 133 Dover Dr., -N..B. 6A2.4620 lSTIC FIREPLACE. from by day. week or rnot1tb. LARGE HOME ""°" to «i!lng, EJevotNl LIDO SHORES HOTEL 5 Be<lrm., 19.mlly nn., xlnt DJN1NC RM., with a SCEN. 617 Udo Park Dr NB 6'13-8llOO ~t to stroet 45 fl. IQt. IC VJE\Y OF TIIB OCEAN \VOOD'S COVE, La g u d a By app't, only. lz CATAJJNA ISi.AND. ik'D<'h. Pool. l~ bJock to $97,000 S~ 4 BDRJ\I. &. l''AJ\t. bench. 1 &: 2 BR apts from 0\#ner may trade down for 3 ru.t. FLOOR pla11, has \Y/ $150 wk. 7175 S. Coast Hwy. Bdrm. home In Terraces, \Y CARPETING It DRAPES 497-1630, 499-3929 Cdt.1, with ocean view. THRU-OUT. P.tstr. lxlnn. LIDO REAL TY INC. has PRIVATE DRESSING LIDO, LINDA Isle. Bayside .-Di·. 01'. Penln. waterfronts. Jl"r Via Lido 01.'1-1300 RM. &.: BATI~. \\'ilh marble Of!.water Lido homes. ••' 101-~0.~..... type pullmans & ul1ra mod • ..., -,,.,., Bill Grundy Rltr. 642-4620 $7500 doY.•n. 3 br, 1%. ba. em kitchen has bill • in 67~2643 Ol' 497-1265 RANGE It. OVEN. DISH· SO. LAGUNA. DLX furn. WSHR .• GI..A7..ED CERAM-Studkl Garder Cottage. 4 IC COUNTER TOPS. Slid. blks lrom b<'h. Pvt patio, Huntington Beach 1400 ing glass \l-indow! for pus $100 wkly w/ util ~ Hne.ns. WHY? Um.I service to patio bar, 1 ~·~!l!l-4~30~7~~~-~~ Won't 8n)'llne ha.Vt' this !09e. WITH A VIE\V OF 111E WEEKLY Rentalll. l-2 Br. Jy. spotless clean 3 bedrm OCEAN. I-Tom $100. Near Beach .t: 2 bath oomf'. l.arg<' livini:: This truly dramatic home 111 Bay! ll) li&l-8247, wkndti rm '>l'ilh fireplace, bJ1in VACANT. Belon&! lo OUT tir.J-8077. range 1.: oven, dishwaiber, OF STA.TE OWNER &: has e BM.BOA l 1. 2 Br, $80 priced at la.st ' years prire been rented for &cvt!ral -$150 wkly fOl' Sept. Also $24,800 • yoor temlll • seller years. NEEDS PAINTING $150 monthly rate. 6'1S-5810 is dcsprralr. Carpets, drap. & YARD WORK. Desperate es, fenced, 3 yrs ne1v, Im· owner Sll.Y9 sell it "AS JS", RENTAL) mediare occupancy. regard.lea cf IOti, for HouHs UnfurnlsMd $33,950 FULL PRICE I ' OFFER YOUR ON. PYMT. MISSION REAL TY ''%-4471 ( =J 54~-llOJ 98f1 So, Coast 1-lwy., LRguna Walk to the Beach Phone (7141 494-0731 Neat L clean 3 le Fam cor. L19un. Niguel 1707 ner home \vilh shake roof, 1-~--~---~ boal gate, outside shower, OPEN Space, 'fttah air, on etc., in lo~ly Nev.'J)Ort West the coast in the beaut Calif. General 3000 ------..C...'-' RENTALS H°""!.. U""'mlohM .... lklff 3242 ------40:1/?k E.ASTPAllK HOME "THI ILUFFS" Vac&nt. clean • waiurw choice comer location • pri. vate pe.tlO·-1tepc to bJa pool -walk to abopplng • CdM H_iah School • ~ 1fCe to.. day -oUered by: ~'f¥. 2-114 Vlsta Del Oro Ne\\'POrl Beach 6U.ll33 Corono do! Mor 3150 EXEC. Tri-level view home. Great loc .. 4 br, 3 ha. tam rm, 2 de<:k.s, beaut. 1 landscpd, pool prlv. Avail NOW. Chhim OK. Gardener l wtr pd. 6#-2928 8.13--3.1.l6 LSE Unfurn $225. 2 BR, spacious llv'g, din'g rm. beamed ceilings, walled patio & yard, 2 car gar. 67"":,,.-2569. YEARLY lac on,. Ca.rm!!.I charm 2 BR home, No. 1!do! of hwy, avail now. 536-2697 a.JI 4:30 CUTE 1 Bedrn1 t.'01.tage on Femlcar, w. of hwy, new drps, ~ts. paint. $165. Avail &.16. l\leycr 549-1366 LUXURIOUS, new, clole to beach. -4 br, 2 ba. avail. $415 mo . 675-f.662. 3 BR, den, 2 ba., near ocean. RENTALS RENTALS Aph. Fvml"*' Aph. Fvrnllhed Oakwood ... a new way to live in Newport Beach l l's fun. fl.Jle neighbors ..ad prfstige li\•ing, all in one.luxurious package.1'1tat's Oa l..·. lvood Garden Ap1rtments in New-port Beach, just minutes from Balboa's BS.y <ind beaches .. 1'here's a 1:~ million dollar Clubhou sP. ,,·ith party room; billiards room, indoor golf dri\"- ing ran~, men's and Women's health clubs, saunas, tennis courts. resident t~i1nis p ro ;ind pro shop, and Olympic t>ize .pool. .AU this, and much more, jusl steps !rom.J:our profession~11y decorated apartment .'~"' h, '1 ith pri\'ale balcony/palios. Air contliliui•· i11:;:1fireplaces optional. Oakwood G11den Apartment' 9Qt this OM ill indoors hOmes. Owner moving out 1\1ts. 3 BR. 2 BA, bit-Im, of area. Asking $32,500, C'rpts, drps, Jirepl. Carefree HOME FOR RENT Large new three bdrm. living Rm. Dining Rm. plus 20x29' fo.m I rm. with HrcplaCt>. Fully carpeted and draped, 8 /1 Electric Kit. Dbl. gar- age, ulility room, fenced in yard. $310 mo. M. P.f. La. Borde: 646-055.5. S400 per me. c.a.u 494-5430 Ua 16lh Stleet betwern Irvine a11d Oovt.r Or. (71 4) 642..t8170 ~ted &nd filtered!. The dt.c f · k J house is in show corxliUon Open Evenings I pg w s pr 1 n er s 0 thruout. Peaceful, quiet & witb 3 masler size ~ S4l·Sll I · "'""500 495-5895 bedrooms, his and her til-(llllfc!MnthlMlt) re axUJg . ..,.., · ea· be.th&. The la.ndscaplna: LL EGE REAL'fl D•n• Point 1740 ts out o( this 'A'Orld. all 1!41 Adlrfli It Harbor.-_ ----- t,"~~ sslona.11?_ ~· 11~~~~~~-:'l-~-1l-'/:-~~ NEW HOMES -$30,950 ·~.....,..,ng -,,.. uoc:st. 11RARE OPPORTUNITY 3 Bedrnl. 2 bath, 1520 11q. ft. Take over existing VA CLEAN 3 Bedrm, 2 BA Some ocean view, nr new &out. annual percentage y u.~ •-·" !o rate of 6%-$196.00. J\'lo. Dutch Haven POOL home, acht n&1uur . .,,.,....., • ts. 1ncludes everything. Let's take over 5%. loan &: $165 See at 34001 Aurelio Or. mo pays all. Or owner will BUn..oER 642-4905 io-swinunin'. Call rarrow help lina~ cau 847-3531 aL9o new triplex $66,500 Jtl!J, 4 BEDROOM . .FIXER-UPPER - :·· NO DOWN . . . REAL ESTATE MART Riverside County 1800 YUCCA Valley 3 br. 1%. ba., cpts. drps, frplc, air cond. GI NO DOWN S22.CXXl. Ownr 21J.M<l-:l879 . 2 Story. -4 BR. 2 ba, lg. fam. RENTALS rm .• elec kit. approx 2000 Hous•s Furnished aq. fl. 1',~A terms avail. ------- 847..S:-'1()7 Eves: 431 -3769 General 2000 m :''l.;'*'p ii~"'· Dupb, ""· . •l• {:_j .... , Eu:tside. Consider Jl!I. • t ' lfil.R Blue Beacon, Bia. 6-1a-Qlll 1 Br priv. home/tot OK $100 2 Br fenced for IOI.! •••• suo 3 Br, vacant, tot OK •••• $145 3 BR, din Ii play nru, enc patio, children ok. $350 lsc. Avail 8/15. 6~ Sp1ciout lhldiO, 1 a 2 lled.room.1uile1. Furnitlttd 11r 1111,fwraidaed. ·fl•S t•.IJll.. la:un1di1l1 Qc,..p•.11ty 3 Br, ev1:rythlng tot/ 1 ~--========o pe• OK ................ $160 Huntington Beach :WOO =========-========"- STAR*LET S47.oo63 G•ntral 4000 Costa Mesa •IOO SPACIOUS ~Sly, 3 or 4 LOVELY 110ME: 3 hr. 2 -------------- 8 F t ,_ ba, r.r. goll couf'SI'. Bllins J t F NE\VLY furn , 1 Br. lrg nna, r. am. rm .. <'Ill · cp...... 0-R, di&hwahser. Sh a' US or I . ~It~~· r;e~y ~led~~ r\'Y'L•. Drps. Ec11.ul. yard, ~. wll~llsJ.u;~ :~u!ll Ollo lleritage R.C. 5·10·11 51 ~ke.::.-:· ~:.8~e~;v~i ~~~h Single Adults 1 BR. turn, S™ incl ulll fopen eves I Lse. $275/mo. Grdnr & wtr & pool. Adu.Ill, no pet.s, S165-4 Br, J ·~ Ba, ga r, pd. Call 847-5140 South Bay Club Is a whole 642-238.1. lncd rl)f k!d'I & pc1s. new way ot life designed LGE 1 BR, dshwsr, b!tn Slut-Beacon, Bkr. 6-15-0lll AVAIL lat or Sept. J br. just for tiingle pecple. It's $130, Inquire 7-45 "B" James Townhse. Washer · dryer. fun living with warm, dy. s 64' oo S151>-lncl uU, cider 2 RT, ...,_e to sch's & shp. n,....I t. ......,.,11. 646-2'2'18. '-111 , . .,., n&1nic neighbors. It'll a KIOVe. Nice cond. Chil<l ok, fac. 962-4161 S750,000 Clubhouae w i t h l BR. Pool. Util pd. Blue Beacon, Bkr. 64:Hll11 NEW 3 BR HOUSE healUi club, saunas, swin1. Adults, no pets ll'"N I d 2 8 Du I Nr. shop'g. $140. S.JS.3348 ~ ew Y ec r. P ex. Sluq:: crpt11. drps, bllins, Lg. min1t poo1, party roon1, llil. BllM. gar, child ok. din'g area. $225/mo. Jia.rds, iodoor go11 dril'ing • NEW RENTING . I & Blue Be11.con, Bkr. 615-0111 83lJ..6296 rnnge, 1ennia cout1s, pro 2 BR's. ALA MOANA APTS Costa Mes• 3100 LARGE 2 B.R., den room, carpets I.: drn~s. pat)!), gardener. Neer beach. $195, 9Gi-7137 shop anil resident tennis pro 530 W. Wilson. C.M. Single, 1 & 2 Bedroom IUX· $90 & UP. ] & 2 BR tr!r. ury apartmentll with all the Adults only. no pe ts. modern col'lvt'niences avail-642--1265. 13..1 E. 16th, CM RE ALS •• • .. I ;t,L.!) ,YIL Unlvmlsllocl Apts. Unlvmlohocl Jrylne 523llrylne 5231 NOW LEASING' Park-like living for fomi- lies with ch ildren ond adults. I , 2 and 3 (,ed. rooms, fu rnished or unfurnished. Shog cor- pets, dropes, oir conditioned, with se!f. cleaning ovens. Complete $400.000 recrea- tion club in three O'Cre park. Pools, tennis, volleyboJI, health club, teen facili ties ond o pre -school! Ne x t to shopping and golf course, n ea r U.C.I. and Newport Beach. From $I SO per mo. At Son Diego Fwy. and Culver Drive in Irvine. Phone 833 .3733. Own•d and m1nag9d by Th• Ir vine Comp•ny Cost• Mes• 5100 Newport Beech 5200 ------------FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. PAHK NEWPORT -care free lh·,i: ovrlkg ll\t> \l'<lll'r. 1 pools, 7 tennis C!Ji, $750,000 Spa. Fr.i,-$175 to $450. Bach, l or 2 Br. Also 2 sly 2 & 3 BR's Townhouses. Elec. kit, pri Prlva1e patio, pool • lndiv. pat. or bat. Suhtrn prkg, laundry far:. opt maid Sl'r, cpts, di'ps. Near Orange Co. Airport &. J ust N. ol fushion Jsl al UCI. Adullll only. J amboree & San Joaquin 20122 Santa Ana Ave. Hills Rd. 6#-1900 for leas- Mgr. Alrl. Joachim, Apt 3-A ing info. HARBOR GREENS ;;;*;iioo;;;P;;;;EN;;;-;;;;DA;;;io;;Lv;;;-;;;1:S;;;*;;;, GARDl!:N & Sl'UDIO APTS 777 AMIG9S WAY Bach. I, 2, 3 BR's, from SUO. 2 BR. 2 bll. units, unturn. 7700 Peterson Wa:y, C.M. Outside living areas and 546-0370 double garages. $250 to $300. :t_ MERRIMAC .A.woo as New l-2 BR., 2 BA.. turn or unfum, 11.ir<and, self clean oven. beam ceiling, dshwr, priv a:ar, eleva tors, therapy + swim pools, BBQ's, saunas, clubhouse. Adults. From $140. Just East ot 2SOO Harbor nPa r Nabers Cadillac at 425 Merrimac Way. 545-6.300 BA Y MEAOO\Y APTS New cxciling l Bit, 140, 2 BR. $165. Beam ceilings. \Voot.i pan'lg, shag Cn>!g, priv. patio, Some w/frplcs Pool, sand volley ball crt rec bldg., pool table!'!, put'. ting green. Adullll, no pcls. 387 \\'. Bay. Open House 12-7 pn1 daily_ 6f6.-0073 . $170 3 Br., 11; Ba. patio, bit-Ins, crpt11, drps. Ask about cur discount plan. 880 Center * 644-1617 * ~ • 2 BR, 2 Ba (2 story) . Bl!ns, priv. patio & balcony, Hoa~ l{osp. al'ea. $185 mo. Appt. only. 4245 Hilaria. \Vay. N.B. 540--0093 *** VACANT *** The Bluffs. S32S. 3 BR, pool. Clevidence Realtor 675-60~4 -.~e-AL=BO~A BAY'-CL=ue=~. Bachelor ll"ITace apt. $200 mo. on lease. 557-7778 or 5-18-2211 ex:. 12<1 AT BEAO I. 3 BR. cpt/drp, bltns . 11: ba. No chldm/pets. $250 mo, first & last. SlOO dep. 67S-l330 2 BR. 2 BA. Upper $180. No pets. 1 small child. Nr. Hoag hosp. :>ta-3461 or 641H1147 rt•a vacant and ready to be deaned up a little, ~th aome paint and llCJ'llbb\ng • but at a prlCt" of •$25,500 you h av e 9l'le'f')'thlll&' you need. 4 b~ bedroom&, 2 baths, i:IOuble: garage, wall lo •ill carpeting throughout, ~t -in kitchen, forced air heat, and It's only 6 ,ears old. No down to Vtq, or mini.mum down .FHA. HWTYI Call Farrow !llJi. $2000 DOWN Rent•lt to Sh•r• 2005 to FHA .loan . WIU. shan-It.~. home 3 Bedrm home 1n cha.rnung w/reflned, n11:1tul'f" \\'Oman. neighborlJOOO. l...ge patio & Pvt rm, ba & dl'l"u'g m1. ram rm w/t"Xtras, Conven-Vle\l•. Beau!. environment. ient loc to schools, shoppg ~1034 CLEAN. Sh&I'Jl, lge:. 3 bdrm. &: 12X28 It. family r m. Shag "arpets, drapes & built-ins. Eastslde Co,;fa ~1esa.. Now vacant. $250 ~1onlh. Call ~l t:H llrrltage Real Esto.Ir. FOR LEASE -3 Bdrll). 2 Ba. $210 Mo, 4 Bdrm. 2 Ba . Sl95 Mo. 3 Bdrm. 2 ba. + bonus rm. S300 l\lo. Call: ~;)...3-12.f HUNTINGTON HARBOUR Newer 4 BR, dlx. Lae $400 Bier ~7-855.1 er 893-4152 3 BR, 2 BA, nr. beach I.: schools. $130 Pf'r m o • Available Sept. l . al&-8129 a.ble. tUn1ished and unfum. I lied, RENTS FROM $150 to $350 Newport Beach •200 I ~S_t_64~""340~=·~---­ X • LARGE 3 Br, 2 Ba, cpt/drp, 2 chil. ok. A\'ail 8/16. SlOO mo. S00 d<'p. 5.'17-9752 BACH., l & 2 BR lum &. unlum. Crpll, drps. patkl, pool, bltns. $137.50 to $160. SeacliU r..tanor Apts. 1525 Placentia. ~2682 a s k about our discount. LOVELY 2 BR, 2 ba $195. W. Qpen Sat &. Sun. Mgr. 4228 llilaria Way. Ph: 213: 981-703!1 * BAYFRONT * LUXURY APTS. Start- ing at $375. * 642-2202 BUY THIS HOUSE & erwy_ Only S26.400. ''w'°ANTE==o~,~Ref-=-;,-,..~,~.d7y-10 LEADERSHIP 842-4466 stir iGVe!y NB Blurr~ hm. EVES: 9624023 Pvt ba/aU privl. $811 mo TRY $2,/~ DN ~369 3 bedrm. Atrium model near1w--o-R_Kl_N_G_g_fr_l_lo_•_h_a1_•_lo_""_· hwy with spacious ~ilc~n. Jy apt, pvt hath, $120 mo, built·IM, separate family Laguna Beach.. Mon.J"ri 9-4 room, 2 baths. Nice yard 548-4714 and patio. Garagt> Y.1th boat ~~· ---.,.--,,..---, tloor. WlLL Share 111y lovely Mpl, COURTESY RE:ALTY tC.J\1.J "'/refi~ lad "i. ,(Or $23,500, you won·1 bf' !Jli2.7751 Rcf.s pl east-. Nr. OCC. rbiry because it's one or ~~----7'=--::l >1>8729 .. 'kind. Here's why. 3 1 BLK to ocean. 3 Br. 2 1 ~--·----~~ bedrooms, 2 be.thll, doub:e sty Condominium. Spac. f"E.\IALE or ~ale, 18-2.l. lo Clf*gt', beautiful yards, grounds ~urroundll\i bldgs. share ocean view 4 br h5e. ilb8dy covered pat io. 2 pools $21.300. By Owner. S85 mo. 494-7655 Located in Collta ~iesa Call for appt. 49-4-5586 eves WORKING Girl to share 2 .;,\th .. rtte Ra breeU'. &. wknds. Br apt. Costa ?i.1esa. $60 Doo't worry aboul down mo. ca.ll 1>4i-6964 ~-The.re ian'I ft1IY Fountain v.n.., 14101========= tt .fDU're a Vet. Come 11c.;:;;=;;;P.;.O..;O-'-'L-'-l '---INewport B•adl 2200 in ~and take a. look. CaJI F.arrow RJty. Best Ar••• DIEXPENSIVE -YES CHEAP -NO :tniat else can we say. N6 money do~'TI 10 Vets. l\tlO down F11A -OH! T( also ha., a double u.rage •nd a big lo!. Call .,.., befott it St'll5! 2 ou1standing 4 br horn« 1hat won't last. XtraJI thru· out, \\kc n<'w. Call & see. HAFFDAL REALTY 842-4405 WATERFRONT Pier & Float 3 Bedrm, 2 bath, formal din· ing rn1, fireplacr, 1v/w Santa Ana Hqts. 1630 crpts, and fumish !'d <.'Om· __ plete. Dblt' tar. Onr year 3 BR r am rm 1~~ BA. trplc, lease. t'JIJO per nm. rtcaltor BBQ. Tack rm. Corral. Lg, 642-43.',.1. Int. Comp. lcnct'd. EBl!y !!!!!!!!!' __ .,._.._.,,..~-"-"'"-""'"'" 1t'rm11. By Owrier 54~25 * LI NOA I SL E * Avail. for you &: your boat 11----------3 &inns. furn Avallablt" Laguna Beach 1705 Sept. 15th.· $850 Month on 9 11;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;.I mos. lca!lt'. Pier & ~lip up QUAINT to SO n . boat. 2 Bedroo111 -i· den shingled Boyd Realty 675-5930 home wllh cxcellen1 ocean -- South Coa.st Rr.altONI VEJtY CLMAN. J bedrms w/flreplaN:, hltins, cul-de· ~c i;:1rce1. hUJC<' b<'drms & bi.I:" t.'OV<'n'.'d patio. Familie s only. $2"';)() mo. A21 546-4141 2 HR. (;:ir. Pn1 io, crpls, rlrpi;:, :<ilOV(', rtfriJ,:". QuiC"I ll'Opical fo('tling for ad ull.!I only. 1 blk 10 shops. $169. 646-44.10 or ~152. 3 BR, 2 ba, new shag ctpl. drpi::. bltns, $225. 536-8874 or 536-34"8 Sant• An• 3610 -------- NEWPORT BEACH 880 Irvine Ave. J,,ine & 16th (7141 645-0550 " BR, fam rm, xlnt location, SOUTH BAY CLUB lmm•dio1' ""'""""· mo mo, ''"'"!. 1139-45'19 ""· APARTMENTS • • • Laguna Beach 3705 * $300 ~10NTH • :t BR. + 2 Baths. VlE\V PLACE REALTY 4!M·9704 Liv• wh•re th• fun is I 4100 Costa Mesa 3707 4 Bedrrm, fan1ily mi in ?llf$3. Laguna Niguel rtf'1 r.tar. tresWy painted. * SUNNY * I d. . $""-" Le~ $250, 3 BR, 2 BA, cpl!, mme 18.te possession. 40N. drps, VlE\V, BEA0-1 & * ACRES * mo. College Rlty 516-5880 POOL priv, 830-4l7t rooL. , eR. 2 .... '"Y'"''"· * Motel-Apts. * t ba " , I $300. 3 BR. 2 Ra .. \\'!hr., $ ud' • l B d we r, • .l'Jl c~. s.;p dryer. n!lrig, gardeor.r furn . t 10 ., • rooms out.side pool balh. 6-l~>-001lS Agt. 499-2'1.'lS 496-2604 LO\\' RATES 3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths. Day, Week or Mcnth Cpt/drp. fenced yard. Sn> 1---------e Color TV Air Concl. leaV>. ~on. Capistrano Beach 3730 • Pool & Phone Se.rv incl Newport B•ach 3200 -----e 1 YR old -'.l Br, 2 Ba fain rm, din rm, crpts, d1·11s, dbl gar, park & pool privll, kids & 1 pct ok. $400 mo/yrly. Jsr. Avail Sep!. 6-1-1-5856 3-BR, fnn1. rm, bltins, 2!; ha. Lg. liv'ng rm. & fenced yd, Nice area. $300 per/mo. Lease. 546-4421 4 BR.. 2\~ ha ,, hJl11s. S\l'ps lo OCf'&n. $350 • l..case. CaY'\·ood ReaHy 5(8.'1290 -• ?ifaid Service avail 4 BLOCKS from Ocean. New l Signal So, of O.C. 3 BR.. fam rn1, din rm, ·Fairgrounds crpls, drps, bltns. S273 II(' 2J76 Ne\\'porl Blvd. RE'fs. 772-5677. 774-7465. 5t8-9'FJ5 RENTALS ' NASSAU PALMS -1 & 2 Apts~_urnish9d J'l?. Apls. F'urn !.· Unf. Pool, _ pi1w.-pong. BBQ, ~ h ad y General 4000 :a1'.·n~. 111 r.. ?2nd si. -------!l-12-364:> REMARKABLY UNBELTEV ABLY EXTRAORDINARILY BEAtmFUL ---------S l 35 /mo, Olx mob. home. Campi. furn. hid I pool. Adu l\11, No pe_ts. 4 Seasons 1'-1ob, F.11. 2359 Nev.'port Bl. 548--63.1:1. : . HERE IT IS · ·3 BEDROOMS $22,950 & city view. Used brick Coron• del Mar 2250 --------- entry 1o1•a.lk. Jo~{replace. View --·------University Park 3237 decks. Ga~. Only $35,500, DARLING 2 br, i ba home Val D'iNr• Garden Apts Pul11rig green, waterfall Ir: 11:•1tam, Dowers e\'erywbe:ft!, 4.'i' pool, rec. room, billl:m:ls.. BBQ's. Sauna, furn.-unrurn, 1 " 2 Br, a.llo Sinetes trom S13S. Ste 11! ~ ParaonJ1 Rd., 60-8670. Between Har- bor A Newport. 2 Blk N. l9th EAST·sidt-Studio Apl: 2 br, 111 ba, C'rpts, drps, bltifll!, relr1g, pool. No pets. .. so. or hwy. Walk to beach Uobdin'ablt but true. .AO & shopping. Crptd, lrplt', or $2'J,950. you ael -la,·~ beamed celll~, p 1. t i o , uti.flll wall to wall e,4 IC,--di~h1o1•asher, dispogal. RraJy 2 Ddrms. l ·bath $280 3 BR. 2 Balhs $325 3 BR. 21i Bath."' $325 3 BR. 2 ba, ram. rm $375 5 Bit, 2V. bn. S340 641Hi610 ' l BR. Duplex $120. Lrg nns. Laundry. Pleasant garden 1urrotJndinga. No pet11 or children. 548-6920 BA YCLIFF MOTEL * LO\\" WEEKLY RATES * Kitchen, TV'a, maid service. Heated Pool. 646-326.':i b!::ACH FRS"f APT-YRLY :! Br/lurn. TVIF~t. \\"ash/dryer. Beaut. view, $.".OD mo. 5300 Seallhorc Dr, NB. G4~17;i6 2 BR UPPEJt.walk to bch, $250 incl util. Yrly avail 911 TI4-675-7CM5, 2 l 3 - 447-9-143 l BR. Fum Apa. Pool. No Children or pet!!. 240.l~i 16th St .. NB. 6-tG-46&1 e WINTER RENTAL.I\ e Rent NOW for Sept.! Abbey Real ty 6-12-3850 l BR, furn. Blk lO beach. Adulls. No peli! aft. 4:00 pm. 548-7840 SPACIOUS 3 Br. 2 Bath. E. 181h St. Adults. pvt. yrd. garagr. Crpcs, drps. $175. 546-3716 or 5-10-4-131 2 BR Ullf cpl/drp, stv, garage, yard, adult cple on· ly. $15:). 3J!l Roehester, 642-9Z47 *DELUXE 1 &. 2 BR Garden Apt.I. Bit-ins, priv. patio, heated pool, frplc. Adults. $145 mo. 546-5163 NEWLY dee. 2 BR \V/carport. $l15. \Vtr pd. 2.566 Orange Aw. Apt B. 636-U>l 1 BR. Duplex. SllO. Lrg rm!\. Laundry. Pleasanl gAn::len surrounc\lng~. No pets or children. 548-6920 2 BR, unf. newly dee. Crr1, drps. Encl palios, Spac. gmds. Adults cnly. $140 1110. 2283 Fountain Way E. {Harbor, tum W. on Wilson) NICl:: 2 Br, crpt~. drps. H i Be ch 4400 bllns, ne1v!y red<!COratcd. ~~gton a Adults $151. !"·'10-7562 , e BLK to BEACl·I -Quiet, ~~5227 !\nd-proo!! New l Br $150. ~10:\TICELLO To"·nhon~e 3 Prv patio, gar. Sngl adults, Br, 2 Ba, pools. $197.50. cpl. 202·A. 14!h. 53&-1319. Aft 5, !168-4'i'!l3 673-1784 1-~-=----~ $13->-2 BR upper, blln!\, STONEHENGE APTS $1&5 l'fl'IS, drps, no pets_ j(j8 Dt>lux w/pool & nor rm. ,V, \Vilson s:. C~t 5-lj...(1760 2 br, 2 ba. 2370 Florida, LARGE 2 hr, family rm, 536-.1107 carpels. drape.;, 1-uilt-ins. Furnished COJl.1PLETELY 64()..-04116 Cozy BR apr . Suitable for I--------- one. Blk from ocean. $135 * LRG 1 Br, crpts, drp5, mo ulil incl. :ilfr.2070 stove, refri2. Mulls. no pels. $100. ~\-16~!9 art 4. l BR, new shag carp<"ting, * LRG 2 & 3 BR. 2 Baths. swim pool, ""lllk to beach. Frplc, bltns, cpts, drps, encl Adults. no pets. gar., patio. Sf6.1034 Tradewind.s Really 847-85111 '°'==~=~o-c-.,--l.ARGE 1 BR. Crpts, drpg, Laguna Be•ch 4705 bltns, patio, garage. Adults, no pets. $135, 646-1762. OCEAN VIEW Upper 3 br, 2 bo. $250 mo. 548-2575 BR, frpl, new CID, ref/stv & pain!, Lsc. Adult \v/refs. $1'10. 646-9568 aft 5. IRVINE 5231 NOW LEASING! Ne\v, family and adult unill'i \v\th total recreation club and pre·school. l, 2 & 3 bdrms lrom $150. Nr. shop. ping, goU, school!'!. Just south of San Diego F'wy, en Cul'!•E'r Dr., Irvine. 833-37l3 . PARK WEST APARTMENTS 0..1·ncd :Uld 1'1anagf!'d by The Irvin!! C1mpa_ny EHi Bluff 5242 e NEW DELUXE e 3 BR, 2 BA Apl for lease. Incl spac. master suite, din r1n & dbl garage, auto door oprn<'r avail. Poul & Rec. a.l"('ll, e FROM S26J e 865 Amigos W11.y, NB J\tanaged by \VtLLIAi\l WALTERS CO. SPACIOUS l BR. Lr<.: patio. Entry ha.II. Crpts, drps, dsh\\•hr. Pool. Nr. Fashion Jsl & Mrkts. $180 mo. &l4-529ll 2 BR, Jrplc, crpt, drps, pool. 8~8 Amigos \Vay. S235. 499-235-1 or 644-0006 Coron• d~I Mar 5250 ~· dduxt •ha& carpeting REAL ESTATE 10 movf' Into. A\"Jil. lat<' lf1Jf!"""'""t. new ti I e d Aug. $285 mo. Incl all u!IJ. kilmen and bath. 3 1190 Cltnnc)'I'~ ~1. Lease 61a...3too e RED HILL REAL TY Univ. J>ark Center, Irvine Call Anytlme 833-0820 RENT FURNITURE $97-t Br. apt. Adults only, oo pets. 1st & IQlll mo·s rent + $15 clng. dep. ""1391 LGE l BR. 2 blks to heh. Ne\\·ly fum. $165 lncl ulll. y,•knd11/evett. 494·799'7. dy1 1!35-1220. 1 BR Apt. $150. 2 BR. $165. 241 W\l11011 Ave. Adlts, no p('ti'!. Ph: :,48.7,105, ~~r.:~ ........ -Jarp lot, lcvt>-494-9473 • ~19-0ll.6 =~·=-:=---;;;;; ,_ __ .. _ 11 .. .,.~~~~~~~·l 2 BR. 2 Ba. tum ....... ms r.. be.ck ,)'ard and patio. 2 8 " 2 bo 1 ·~ ~ down nu.. See lhl1 * OPEN HOUSE * r. uen. • u~ •... .,....J "'-now! ", .1 Po fl L: 7 BR. fan1. -1· llUIA.J rm, ~ 1~ Dru Y rf:n .na. :iguna 2~'i t,>aths, nr btach ••• .'s:ioo '.far r..::;. • ORANGE COUNTY'S ,. LARGEST 2629 HARBOR BOULEVARD llcnies & Butldmg Sltrs ~f.ri. !lopper, A~rnt Up Nye11 Pl. crl Coo11;t J{wy. 6n.-&>Jo 67:~1!14 Victoria Bcocb Arca PLACE REALTY . 4M-9'1'04 Lid• Isl• 2251 2009 So. Coast lh1~·ay _ ------* $3-3,500 * e 4 BR. 2 t.\ \\llNTEr:. Walk 10 beach. Xlnl tenn."' RENTAL $400 mo. Pl.ACT. REALTY $'704 615-<ll7G _2911.1;,.:.:;~So:.:.;..·~°"".:.....-'_m_wa-'-y-l·----~~- Lotvn• Beac_h __ 2_1_05 NOW'S THE TIME FOR t en.. Duplex sm 1nc1.ud1n1: utU. Permanent emply'd adult. 494-3\iO FOil Jte11t.11J9 In University Perk&. Turne Rock, call: BOB PETTIT, Realt~r "S1~ 19'16" """" ~3."\.-0100 Irvine 3231 TURTLE ROCK. nC"'xt to UCJ. 4 Br, 3 Ba. fam rm, cptg, OW, sh:lv, ;i sty, 3 car aar. SJ58 lncluc.J. pools. 1rn.nh1. Avail 8/15. IM. 83.1-:1929 * DIRECT TO TENANT 2'1-Hr. Iklivl'ry lOO 'f.1 Purch11.sc Op1ion Complete 1 BR Apt as Low as S22/mo. JO.Day 1ilinlmun) * \VIOE VARIETY CUSTOM FURNITURE RENTAL ~17 \\I, 19th St., CM, S-48-3481 Furn. 1 BR & BACHELOR 2110 Newport Blvd, CM 2 BR. Garden Apt. Lrjt priv. pa tio. No J'M'I•. $165 mo. n~k nbout our disrount. 7·11 \~·. 181h SI. 642-1158 ~1ERRlfilAC WOODS new "'From $38.50 Wk. '~~,,,'~~ !':;. ·= ;;! F'rorn $165/mo. Luxury S\n-t•ln~s 5100 gle Apls, CompJc~ n'IAld AVAIL-I fum BGC"'h k 1 SC"rvice, houaeY.'&J'ff. llnc.M, r 1 e pt ··• 111· um. r. a . un•Y· J all util, heated PoOI. lo Sl30. Set ~tgr. A.pt 6, VILLAGE INN 2135 Elden, CM . Laguna &nch 4s.t·9436 1 RR. Duplt\, Si:!O. Adult!!. j BR duplex, Incl util. $125. Pe rn1 a nc n I. Rrsponsi. ble adults. Ref11. 'l!M-8170 RENTALS Apts. Unfurnished G4tntr•I SOOO APARTM.ENT FOR RENT Ne"· One bdrm. apt. l..rf. livirlf< Rm . with fittpl11.ce. 8 /1 kit. lully carpeted Ii. drapro, Garage, u I 11 l I y room, !lt!'J)Antlt' f~ )'d. ntar ~ town and c.~f. Park. $169.50 month. ~t. : ! LA.Bord!' &W--0555 Large 2 br studio 11{. ba. 6.17-2943 NR. new 2 Br, 1~1 Ba, crpts, drps, s1ovt', dL"'h"'hr. gar. 766 \V. Wil aon. 642.-7958 E.,t;IDE 2 BR, <"pis, drps, bltns, d1hwwr, encl garagl', pvt patio, 642-6257 &SIDE older 1 BR. houtt $85. Pennanent older tenant onl)'. 548-ffllO LARGE 2 Br. unf. Crp!s, drp11, pool.. Child ok . 1998 Maplt Apt. 1. 54$--2803 1 BR, new carpets. washer &. drytr, Adults. $130 mo. - ON TEN ACRES 1 A 2 BR. Furn Ir UnJunt Flrepla~ I priv. pa!~ I Pools. TeMl• • Contnl'l Bkfst, llcX> Sea Lane, O:iM 6-44-2till tMacArthur nr. Co.it H~• 2 BR. 2 ha , & 2 br. I ba , Attrac. clean, 1 blk to bch. Adults! Wuber I; drytr avail JIOO/mo ONLY Arr. 4:00. 213: 431-111" or 67":>-7478 IMMAC. I hr, f'llC, re!Mi;:. rug!;. gu. 309-B re mica!. $160 67l-ll77 I " QUICK CASH ,s_v_m ... _r _R._nl•-'• _2,_10 TIME FOR 9UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT BALBOA INN Qu~t. 3112 Costa Ml'58 St. Balboa GT...&740 ~ or 646-~ NE\Y 1·2-3 BR's. All blln&, <:pt/dfl', gar. Nr. S. Coast Plaza. 540-UIT.J. 545-2321 :l Br. encl. pr, i;un dte:k, E. 18th. Adults S 15 O • ~1. ~6-3776. NEW 2 Br. 2 BA, S ct H"7. m111&, lrplc, patio, be•m eeu. cpt•. dps.. sm. 543-7981 3 BR. 2 ba. dishwasht'r, dlspoMI, rdl'ig, AIOVt, crpta. drp&. 67s..2698 •• 546-8648 0,..., Evonl"I!• 1111 l :JO THROUGH A 2 BR. Stach Apt. Awl! At1(1: 5-15 & monlh or S<p1. ""' ra1e1! 6r""'5810, bi:J...6&1tJ. WANT AD BAUlOA I•!. Al.,, : Br 'Pt. "l!Jdi -t. Aug !hru Labor Day, \Vinter-'70 ST~·. 6n.-1;i03 • .. WANT AD l""''="'==~-~­--HOUDAYPu.iA ./ BAOIELOR apt. F u r n. DELUXE Spac_kllu t Bdrm. Drpl. new wfw cpls, pool, t'urn apl. $135. Plwi ulll. pvt. bal. 557-Qm rlet1!ed pool . Ample park· e 1 BR, Cpl!!, Drp~ • log. Ne childrTn -no prt1. • $130 • 196.1 Pomona. c.M. . __ ,_n_n_·_·a_·_· ..,9'>_,~.,._A_,._ •. _ DO~"T JUST' \VJSll for furnishings for your home, lind greal buy!! In today'• Cl11,,s1rltd Ads . la you •d in !he cJ1._qifJed SECTION? Someone i a watchlna: ror I!. D ial 64i..m?I lodll.)'! IT'S WONDEIU1JL 1 he many buya In appll~s you find In the Clas1lfied Adtt. Check them now! c i I I 0 I ' I c I< , r I ' ' c c A M t f ,, ' d ,, ' c ,, ( " l ' I I ' ' 2 ' Gi $. I • 9 ,. E l v G' " " t Tl ti ~ 5< A1 • h e ' SC • rl 4 I A 71 "' rl • Rl A1 v "' ,, " •• = VI ~ .. M Fl DI T l • p, ru • n 5 c ii • ~ OF P• " .... fl - .,. w « co h "' in & Di U• • Of '" $( " " " "' 2[ "" "' 0 ... Of • All w pl "' G• ,\!l b• in , .. .. d• • '" "" '* SA~ "' '"' 1'1 •• A> ll •m ' "' "' GE llS a. ... "' *• Ge 116 ~ "'' "" TUI !bl' pie "' c 53 so "' "" ' F lli AB JIW ll Aftl -WI Be~ '"' '•P 408 l Mu h -FD DEi TR ... = Pia - 19 PILOT..AOVEl!TUU llEST llllI c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 SAYE ~ASH! WtdJ1tMl17, A11911sl 5, 1970 R T LS RE TALS Ap!I. Unrumlshod Apt.. Un!urnllhad THE HIGHUNDER ••ScotUah Treat" 1'1'1 Park•ldo Ln. Mgr. 142-lfft 5990 ~"11JOCNT despente1¥ needl pvt room in return tor ll&ht ma1nt or 5ma:.: reut. .......,. Rental ScN\ce: Fr•• to L11nd lord1 Blue Beacon, ~-CM Room s for Rent SffS * ""' * * * IUSINISS aftd * l'INANCIAL ---l 11rytttti111 !! lutlneu Lo1t 4401 EX.PEit Mottwr wlU 'blbWQ ~Ill" UIO SIAMESE cat <-. blue-v1<, ~ " 22nd, CJl'. *CANDY SUPPL y )IOlnt A M&I ,.U.t! male. I~-a lncd yord, ROUTI * Looi In "'" vie, ..., si-"' -'117. iMM5U {PART OR Ft.JU.. TIME) llDll 6 Co&re C. M . · VERY RICH INCOME it.ward~ DI.)' Sf.7·9507 eve Carpent1tln1~-::--,:".'::'~·I 'TREE BONUS ROUTE ~. DAWSOH .... "AND W PLAN" A.EWARD. Heavy aold chl(n BlJTLDERS Now available In Oranre brace-let w/eblldren'i plcl Room Addltlon1 .. Re~ County &00 aum>UDdh\t: Iott vie Hotel Lacul\I. Pk&:. int • ftep1in • A;t. areu • .v1 locaUona a.re lot. Contiact Mr. Holch. Malnttrmft .. Cemeat commercll.I or fae1ory fu.m. US24 ~u. Rlwnlde Worit. • San Ditl'O Frwy to Beach Slvd, • blks So. to Holt, \V, on Holt 1 blk. ROO~f. bath, priv. entrancl' on beach. Avail t hr 11 Al.llUSt. IU!fer. req, Call aft 6:00PM.~7 Whoddya Want? Whaddyo Got? !abed by us. Qua.lifted Pft'IOd VIC: i&ter A Ntwland, lofll' Ha.I wW become diltli.butot far halt poodlt, blk, 9Dme CJ'f'Y, MU1S1 <t SPECIAL CLASSl,.CATfON l'OR our cudy <Ne1t1e1, Plant. male. L.A. C. taa1 96388, CAiPI NfRY lA QUINTA HERMOSA BEAUT. home w/ pool has e1.:tra 8R for empl. lad)'. Privil. ~ mo. 546-6740 LGE rum room, pv:t home, kltcben priv., nr. 1hoppill( Ir: transportation. 549-1061 NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Speci•I R11te ert, Toot&le Rolll, Mille Reward. TI4/142~212'i HINOR REPAIRS. Ho , Duds, etc.). You muat have SM wht male poodle, vie Too em.JL Cllllntt ID ''Modern Spanish'' 16211 Parkalde Ln. 5 l lnoa -5 times -5 bucks aULl l -AD MUST INC'LUCI• 2 to 8 hn. per ,Wttk spare Balboa lal nr. Fen")' land'r . ._ 11 ot ••' · limo (d~ or ~s.>. o~:ner amious. Rew . 545-1115, u no afllWt!t \-Wlltr "" ....... "*'•· ,,..... .,.. .............. .SWO to $1950 rn...33911 DUii at .an. IL ,_'l'CIUll ~ ,,,.,_, Ulfl'ftl. .... llftM • ..._.. ....... .._..CITMllll• P'CIJI: U.La -TaAOll CINLTI CASH REQUIRED ~~ernale Siamese Sealpoin1 ~ Mgr. 147-5441 - FURNISHEO MODELS NOW OPEN Lush lan dscaping, cabana, covered court· y~rds, sunken swim'g pools, BBQ's & foun~ tams. ./ NICE room In pleuanl home, &;ood location, Kitch. To Pl1co You r Trader's P•redl11 Ad PHONE 642-5671 ~~~ ~~t~ Hunllnaton Be&CIL eox1CA '=RP""ENT°"~ra~, ~R-e_m_o_d"•"'l-1 "THE ULTIMATE IN APTS" I BR's-From $150 2 BR's-From $170.$175 All utll. Incl. Furn & Unfum. Bo I boa 2 BR upper w/sundeck, 1---------• crpta. drpa, ref, stove,. $150, lease. 613-3389 • ON BEACH! prlvil. $60 mo. !>-ts.-5998 \Vestwl""d Vl1la.1t adjoining \\'ilshlre-10 rm home. \Van t RM w/ba & pvt entrance. Newport duplex . triplex on NO cooking. Close to beh. water o.· near. $5.9,SOO free $t'i wk. 675-0771 le cJeu. 494-7260 PR.IVATE Room. bath, en-1 ~,_,.,o--'~-.0:---­Mob\Je Home Site, owner'1 trance. patio SGS mo. .,,. * 54S-2486 * ""' acre1, ltl.de~. uw·s, Eq, SSO.IXXI. Free & clear LRG. Beaut furn, 1lp'1 rm. tor Orange Co. incotne or Prv/ent & prv/ba. For l R·3 land. 968-2645 adulL 5"!Hi983 Balboo illand 5355 HAVE ~.000 ln good T.0 .'s *I~ PER Wttk -up payablt" $325 Monlh, Want : e 1 BR. FROM $200 w/kltctien. $3S per Week-up illC'Ome units, Orange Ol' e 2 BR 11,i BA FROM $210 J..pts. MOTEL. ~9755 LA. County. BAY VIEW 2 Br. 2 Ba Lov.-er • 2 BR 2 BA FROM $260 Davis Really Duplex. Yrly leue. e 3 BR 2 BA FRO" ·-Motels, Trailor 642-7000 1~ ..,..., Granada Hl11s 2 1ty view -_.;_•_C::all::...:67>5207;.:.;::;:_.:.* __ I Carpeti:-drapeedisbwuber Courts 5997 heated pool•una-tennls home, 2800 1q ft, like new, rec room-ocean views I WEEKLY Rates. SEA $57,750 \Ill.I, 4 Br, 3 Ba, paOos-arnple parkina:. LARK MOTEL. 23O1 lam rm. Fr:· sn1lr prop N.B. Stturlty guards. Ne..i1port Blvd, Colla M-"cl Ol' CdM. 011 nr. Ofc 644-4:i7l . Huntington Beach 5400 --------NOW RENTING BRAND NEW FURN. also Avail. TRADE home, Sl9,SOO val~. HUNTINGTON Misc. Rantal1 Stff "'" pool. in "'usa; 15.000 equi\y: For home, boe.t, 1 & 2 BEDROOt.15 FROM ONLY $155 Lure noor plans Spacious park like rrnds Complete rec facilities r.1odels open 10-7 daily PACIFIC GARAGE For renl-$2.l mo. ~trailer, e1c. Costa Met«, vie 19th Ii: San-Owner/Broker 67S.7225 7ll OCEAN AVE .. H.B. 1 A ... ·- (n4l 536-1487 :•:::"':::· =~===· === Antelope Vallty, 10-40 Acre Ofc. open 10 am~ pm Daily ~ 1 Je..-eJ to S36.500 eq. FOR bch VI LLA 'I/ARNER 6600 Warner (11.t Edward.I) Manqed by ~-com• ProDOrt"y'---_6000_ area home, units or other. WILLIAM \VALTERS CO. ----Alto San OlfiO cty. 1177 El DUPLEX ·BY.·, HE -SEA Camino, C.1'1. 546-5941 (TI4l 342-0009 Mna:e'd by \\'m \Valter11 Co. WALK 3 blkl to beach. Almost nt1v lg l BR apt. Obi gar, lrpl, w/w crptl., drp.s, mh .... ..tir. 2 ha. sm mo. No agls/pets, childn ok. 536-I7ll BLK to BEACH -Quiet, and· proof! New 1 Br $135. Prv. patio, gar. Sngl adults. cpl. 202-A 14th. 536-1319, 673-1784 NEAR Huntington Harbour F'URNISHED & UNFURNISHED e ~ block lo J 1hoppin& center!f • 5 min to Bc&ch! e 5 min to San Diego F'\\y. ALL THIS plulf _ .• LUXURIOUS ADULT APT LIVING 1-"RO~t $130 Fc1\' ft'Ct fl'0111 the water. Large 2 BR. new('r apts, kltclX'n bulll·ll.&. Alway& lull on yearlv Jcal;e. X\11t iocome pn'cnHal. Tax ahe lter. For salr by 01vncr. Mklng $44 .!IOC'. Principals only. Call 'lIJ :lAS·il.>6 da~·s. *NEW 6 UNIT* By Builder, Near ocean, H.B. Also, new 8 unit & -4 unit. * 847-39J7 8usln••• Rent•I 6060 New Triplexes. Quiet area. RETAIL Location, C.:\1. 2a44 Lrg I &: 3 BR.'1. Dishwasher CALIFORNIAN Apt• Newport 81\'d . t, r n t . $150 up. Pet ok. {213) 592-2623 19822 Brookhurs! 55x130', 2 bldgs. re tall tront or (714) 846-3559 962-2981 & garag" bldg. Open Sal OCEANFRONT, view aun-& Sun. for i n s p e c I i o n . 545-31!68 dc.rk. bch. Nel''t!r, 1pac dlx ----------==~~----~ 2 Br, bltns, crptll, drps. Santa An• 5620 Si\lALL Shop for 11.n1\1p1t' lndi-y, Nr shopi:; I: pier. $1751 ,;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ahop or business or R.E. yr round. Adul ts, baby ok. VILLA MARSEILLES olf1Cf' or 11o·hllt have you . ~2131 BRAND NEW Liv ing quarter& In rt'1r, on Npt Blvd. 54.11--213'1 BEACHBLUFF APTS SPACIOUS .-rc>RE-<lFFICE NC\\ 2 Br 2 Ba. p 0 0 I. 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. "'f:wport Be" 825 .. tt Gift and ('OUntry SIOl'I', Gttat location. Trade for Van, can1pcr or si:..oo equity, 646-5.183 3) ac. 5 yr old Riverside. Orange Grow: manage- ment frff. $5.6511 ac. S76.D1l equity. li'or: name, income, land. 494-2936 Outboard motor: 20 hp. Mere. long 11h11fl . Needs tunc·Up. Trade !or 7-10 hp. outboard in i;d. cond. Joe Quinn Dy11 870-1170 E\'e~. wkends 494-6370. Commercial incon1e pro~r­ ty, fl't"e & clear, nex1 to Sears. Vat. SGS.GOO. For units, hou~ or be11ch prop. O\\'NER 61!).6259 '67 ~fustang V-8, 11.1110, P/lf. $1600 value. Trnd~ for 17·23' all gl111s boat, n101or t trailer. Call 548-9647 or ~7-7902 Dsh"·hr, p~tios, 82.1 \ Ellis. Ad it LI I ,. " u v ng * Ervin 675-1601 • 842-3477 or 347-3951 furn. & Unfurn. 'l * * L.r. Lunrnark palnlinr: 1''or camper. Tnu:le ceilln1 b.lgh 1valnut headboard bed, :ZOO yra. W/$15,000 eq Improved t.1-1 prop tor ac. or home. 54.5-0139 Open HotUe 1 to 5 each day \Vest aw ViUa. NB. $26,400 !'Qty. TR tOT comm or dplx, 1riplx. 4-plx, l\fadge FOiler, Rltr. 548-1168 HA VE: Lea.sect lndullrial Building, L.A. $50,000. t.b.d. f~ I: clear. WANT: house, Newport Beach or ! ! Myers 67U7$ \Viii trade equ~ in 4 br ham~ in HunUnaton Beach tor travel trailer or truck I: camper. 962-9651 23." p 0 Box 1739 Co . trained. 9M-1963 pe.Uo work, c.me:nt · · • vtna, 4: palnttrc. No job Calif. 91722. Include pbone -Nnall Free eit 53&-JMf 1 ~. call cotl.eet CID) Personals 6405 QU~ woodcratt: ..: United States Posta9e Stamp Machine ATTEN! You can noW be i:•n'I constr . .I: c:arpentf7 protected ttgardll!ll o r Free oonsultation iii present or put med. hlltory Call Ken 66-00U, w/major med. 6' hel9p. In-CLEAN-UP job&. ha come ktaurance. No aa;e conc::reie work. llft limit. very kt COii. Be SmaU or bia'. 541-1901 • Route or 11 poatage stamp covered for .)'OUI' oond. Youl====,,_~~-~-ll machines all on location in could aave thousands. f'or CARPENTRY: Cab l ne t major super market chain morr info, Special Mtd. ltoom AddJUGns,, Pa ln Orana:e County. Route Serv. Dept, m..3127 or Any aizie job. Mike, NETS O\'!'r S170. monthly 6(~163. REPAIRS * ALTERATI aJKI over $2000 yearly, Books * nJLLY LICENSED * * CABINETS. Arly ala open, Requires 3 hn v.-eek-~no..i1ned Hindu Spiritualist 25 yrs exptt. 54M7ll. ~ Jy to service. Company will Advice on all matten. GEN. Repe.lr, add, wilt buyer 10 expand tM 1..oYe, Marriaae, Bu11nt!s1 Fonnlca panel.I.bl m route if desired. Full price Readlnca riven 7 days a An~• Dick ~ •• ~ $1500. Also have routt avail. wetk, 9 AM • 9 PM · · '' able in Riwralde County. 312 N. El Camino Real, For infotmaHon ind inter-San Clemente, Comont, Concrete ~ayfront Condo Apt. 2 Br, 2 view write Producti: Dist. 492·9136. 942-00'!6 Ba . Boat slip, SU,IXXI eq. Co .• PO .eox 1976, CO!lta WOMEN I I CONCRETE. All typea. Collllider part trade, car, Mesa. Cahr. 92626. eat. Sa'Ninc. hreakine, trust deed" !!?! mer. .:::::::..:=:..::=::___ Slim down, lose inchet. ill& &: aklpl*lna. -S..rVii<d 646-073:1 ATTENTION feel better with &Z Trim & qua1lty. 548-8668 Bob. INVENTORS I Home Exerclsor. Special, CEMENT WORK, no""''" 27' TS Chris, $4,000 value. FOR clean Moblle Home, near beach, whh reuon- able rrnt or new SC camp. rr. 492-7986. lN WllJTI'lER Have oHlce bulldinf, Wh it- 1\er Blvd. $65.000 equity. TRADE for Trull Deed1. * 673-4215 * 47' Twin Diesel Houseboat, clear, S36.IXXI valllt'. FOR house, units or ! No out or 1tate property, c.u (714) 6TS-3114. WILL TRADE Almo11l l"l('W 11' C.bover Camper for 1maller C'amper In equal condition. Alter 5: 00 pm • 847-Ul63 * 8 Unit1, Inglewood, pl u11 clear commer. Income, for lllnd, house or beach prop. crty. Equity SlOJ,000. OWNER 61~ Gl..ASSPAR Avalon boa1 & a:e&r • exchange for 17'- 21' self • contained lra\'el tr11.iler or equity. Cal I 492·fl029 eves or Sar. Your ldeas ca:i m&kt money! only $69.95, &Z credit Small, reuonable. ""' OUr bu1ine11 Is he:lplng In-ttrn\11 av~. For trre venton de..-elop their idta1 honte demon11tration call Eltim. H. Shdllck an..· convert tMm into cash. 537-GIS DECORATIVE CON Trust our world-wide ~ear-MEN ~ \Ve haven't I01l thl.t DRJVES.WA.LJ<S.PATID 1 ing house to aul.st yoo 1n lo.. pcnonal touch! We still CAU. DON, 64U514' eating .• pert. m.rkt. ~T-ee have 1 hat old-fashioned * CONCRETE Mrk: pa coun1el1ng & advice. Write pride that l'!Mllles ua to drvwaya, etc. Llcf!n 1•~ or phone. do abtolutely \\'hit I• need-PhWlpg Cemenc. 5U-Q80' 1 NEW PRODUCT tt1 for the ultimate In ,7,i;;';;""';::::::':;::...::=-c;::;:c~ DEVELOPMENT SERVICES ttt.lrcutlill&'. Remember! Sir ~:~:;:;~,rc: Suite 206 Walters 2052 Newport, CM. Lie., call Max at 644-0fil't'• 11752 Garden Grove BJ vd., WOULD You like to win ' Garden Grove 636-5800 a beautiful Kanew1t.lm wlg --------+1 Compl. LETrER Shop , C•U Luv Loeb by Leanna Contr•ct.n mlmqraph/etc. Start own to find out ·about our e'l-1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ij~ bus. wfm cash. Will lse citing bonul for hostl'!ISt'I. CONTRACTORS SDI mo incl tt.nt & ph. Wig 1howinp 11rP. fun! GENERAL CO. , + opL to buy. 64&-0333 Iv. ~256 .\dditlons·Remod-?.Hng :: mes. hes.idenlial-Comma 'CiaI • FOR SALE, Excl"''" Knll * Al 0 n 87 • 5""099 • : : : Fabr1c1 Shop, HtabUlbed • i'L~loe~me;;d'!!'!~~~;,=~ bus. In S.C. 492-2M3 or Yet It's your fault For re.I ! 492-4702 coM1ed me11sage that wUI * THE REMODELERS 1lf cban&e yoor life call. • Free etll -100% flna ' ~)(7.Qi67 Kitchens. Ji:!.rares -c , Buslneft W•ntad 6305 24 Jlr. Rcrordlng Complete Remodellna. :• sm: or Leaae 1ma11 *MASSAGE & SAUNA Quality Con1rac1ors 6C2· bustneu. Mole.I. mobllP MY WAY quality home park. retail fraochlse. GRANO OPENING. Lovely N!palr. \V~L'I. ceiHnK, Couple will Invest 10-00 l\1. a:lrl1. EXPERT MASSAGE, I N job A"' -.1 La v "c. o 100 am * * Box No. Pl071, Daily Piiot auvu our • egas 5t3-l4!H .. vacationl!. 10 AM to 2 AM,1.-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o-.--,;;-;:i:il ----1 7 DAYS. 2930 W. Cout Hwy, ADDITIONS. L. T. . Mon•v te Loan '321 Newport Beach. 548-3918 struction. .single or 2 itci, -BALBOA Bay Cl b Pl.ans, e1timates 1:: J&YCMJ!t 1st TD Loan bl?rlhlp for sall' u al m: 147-lSU ·:: S14 j • I BR. Pvt. 11r. & Ol~hwuher . color coordlnat-e RETAIL store 19' x 80'. patio. All dlx features. + ed applianc.w • plush aha& :::..o~fo17th St, Costa ~fella. REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE unit blda:. 962-3121 Cl r carpet • cto.o!ce of 2 color -~=;:,,~=-~-.,-I Gonerel General ---------------- 847-00!!7 lt'heme• • 2 blth.s • stall 600-1200 SQ. IT. office al!ID -'-'--------o--'--'------ 2 BR. 1~; BA, patio, pool. 1howl!rs • mlmmd ward· 600 sq. fl stol'I'!. S90' Sl50 . Office R1ntal 6070 Acr••I• 1ldereble u.vinas. P. o. Box Additions * Remodf:npt, sit. JNTEREST 1763 N.B. Fred H. Gerwick, lJO.: $165 mo. MORA KAJ Aptx. robs dooni • indirect 1Jaht. .c::·::M::. :::646-::::21::"'=====~ 1--· ~--·"'-°'----" Eut or Be""h Blvd. II blk ... ln kilchon -bn>aklAst -OFFICE SP'ACE oU Garfil'ld bar • h~ prlvatt fenced Office Rental 6070 In l BR. New. Frplc. Near patio • p!lllh ~-illu.M:aplfli: • -----· ·----HUNTINGTON P dul brick Bu·B·<l"• • ..,._beat· HILLGREN SQUARE HARBOUR OCt!an. atlo. A ~. ed pools 4 lanai. 1900 sq ft Deluxe Of11ce1 UNOBORG CO. 536-2579 3IOJ So. Brlitol St. Avail. tor immt:d, leaae in 3 sultes available in Hunt· *LOVELY NEW APTS (~Ml. N. of So. Coe_rt Plna) OM!' of cities busil'11t ahop. in&'ton Harbour, Boardwalk Near Ocean &. Park. l & 2 Santa Ana ping centers. \VIU divide. ttnler. 770 eq, ft., 500 sq, ft.. Br. 425 13Lh St. 847-3857 PHONE: SSr..elOO Air-cond ., mu11lc, panellng, 600 aq. It, Call Ron Bartlelt 1 BR cond. c p I/ d r p, crpl.!, drps, Max. park'r & 213/592-1361 • 7141846-1361, i\·shr/dr, retrig .. bltns. s1:;o $l50 • LRG 2 BR. Studio maint. 270 E. 17th St., C.M . Hunliflllon Harbour Corp, mo lease. 646--6762 Apt. (Triplex). Family size Mr Bram 213: 651-2700 collect 4241 Wamtt Ave., H.B. NOW 'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 64t5678 kitch. w/blfns, crpts, drp1, CORONA DEL MAR Deluxe l-Rm. office trplc.. encl a:&r. l or 2 Oloice. loc. Ample prk'g. Nr. On.na:e County Airport children ok. CNr sch.Isl No Ground nr. Priv. bath!!. I Irvine Indu1trla.I pell. 2230 S. Center SL, 400 to 1100 *I. ft. at Complex. Carpel, drape11, S.A. Nr Warner. 551-6002 30c fl . Also 5 rm Suitt', mu.sic, alr-conditionina: It S115-Lrr cheerful 1 Br. apt. 2 bAths. Owner 673-6757. janitorial 11ervlce. $125 ?i.1o. Crpls. d11>a. bltns, encl gar. DESK SPACE BOB •P~!1T0.1 R.ealtor 1 child ok. CNr. Khls). 2230 ~ s. Cenler Sl. S.A. nr 222 Forest Avenu~ 'Varnu. 557-6502. l B h oguna eec L .. ~.-~.;.•;o.•c"h'--'s_1_os --==,..,'""~9466=~=-* NORTH END * DESK SPACE One or those rare lovely 105 No. El Cami no Re•I 1 BR apti:, 1 b1ock 1hopping, San C lemente -· prlvat•. ,,,,_., 492-442ll patio. $1'5. PRIME airport are a - BJ0..4237 01' 494-«8& Newport Sch. Air cood &. * * WOOD'S COVE * * crptd oUices. S50 !IQ It, $175 Beach % block, new J Ii. 2 mo. incl. all uHI 546-3440 BR apts. Each have l ~'i BA. NEWPORT Beach deluxe of· PooL Sn! up. Leue. 2175 S. ticel. Air-oond. Hid . Priv. Cout Hwy. 497-1630, °499-3929 ha. 2400 W. Cout Hwy. $175 MO. -2 Bedroom• -rNEWPORT BElACJ.I $.215 lfO. -2 BR -view S80 mo, Ai~nd. lndu1trlal Property ~---~---~-1.10 acre commercial or in- dustria l, top locaUon, eaay on/oH San D\ego Fwy, tully lmprovtd, Sf0.000 acre cuh. 831-1400 or 499--4198. Comm1rcl1t 6085 MUl'FLER Shop • l/J mlle South of Edinger & Beach Blvd. C-4 75' x 150' -Make offer Nt'\\'POrl center. 5X GroGll. Tax llhelter .l 1pendable. 6200 5 AC. undeveloped. L&ke 1uutt1 apprec. Hunt, tlsh. Take over lo dn $:10 mo. 897-8478. GOVERNMENT land. S5 an aCl'f:. \Vrlte: Land Package, l185 Arrowhead Aw, San Bndo 92410 2nd TD Loa n Penn~rlch Bras -Sw1mwear e73-6:MJ * 54 Pc~ fiUinp by appt Carpet Cloanlng Tenn• bued on ~Uy. 5(9-0026 or S46-9029 ~2171 545-0611 ALCOHOLICS Anonymou.1 ~· ., Servinl: Harbor are• 2J yn. Ptw>ne M'-7217 or write to o.~ ~ ~· S.ttlor Mortgage Co. P.O. Box 1233 Costa MMI.. ~, ~ 336 E. J71h stttet CARPET :, _ _;:_::...:"-..'..::::.=:::.:...-Tutoring 649() STEAM CLEANEQ;, ~osort Property '205 ANNOVNCIM!NTS RE AD 1NGsp"1, 11, l REASONABLE RA.T. encl NOTICES ce rtified by the stall! ol Aho carpet inatalla~j ON FaJrway • Fallbrook Golf -Call!. avail for prl\•ate ""'5'71 ; Club-new 3 BR, 3 BA, Found (FrM Ada) 6400 tutoriJ1i. Diamond CaJ,iet Cle~, air-cond, cryt1. drp1 , • '548-14TI' • Aua. Spec. 400· $20 ·1• lnd9cpg. Owner. $39,500. GRAY It wht 1trlpprd male . . l-213-439-28S4 Cat. Yrlendly, hu It lump FRENCH leMOns ~Y 2 llepairlfLC 4: lnstaJJatipi• ----00 Jett 1t4e. Please call French 1tudeatll. ~inners Free est. 6U-l 11 Out_o_f_St1to Prop, 6201 for him. 548-.9702. 3 (16 ' adulla. 64)-3&42, IAM-STEAM jet carpel cleani11 Ramona Pl, Drtvlfli: our 12PM. By CtarKarc, nation. ' NEVADA -l acre In cat and 2 docs craiy, FEM. c.oi.ieve sludent wi1!~es service. 1',ret et1t, 64J..40ft Charlt>1ton Park Ranchos, GERMAN bpherd pup, to v.Tk w/brain damage or REMARC Services. 3 roofstC sub-division nr Mere. tett male, black w/brn. mark· handicapped chldrn. P\eue s:n.50. Full) suaranwtd\ 1ik . Fulure development1 Inga, 3.-4 mo. Vic: Santa ('I.ii Claudette 67:\-22S9 O'edlt cud• OK. IJ.47~ lncne value, Blrl' MUST Ana Ave. I: CoUetn Pl., SIRVICE DIRECTORY Carpet Shampoo-3 A oS=E=L=L·,,,.,..='='°'=· ==== I C.M. 64&-2656 -· Rooms $21.50. Ph. Mount•ln & Oiiort 6210 FbuNo cute white Dully ~ccoun~lng 6500 Dale's Maintenance' Se r.111nx kitten. Har bor STARTING new bt11? Bkkpg C _. L I & FOR Sall', two half-t.crn, view kilt Ir. 1ky karbor, Yucca Vslley. Chvner will Acri, 6.6% lotn. lo do1vn or trade for car 9&2--6350 Hip,1111nd1. Pink Cea C'9llar. Spedal-cemp. .wrvice at •~,...., I IY ~ . :tre"'n eye & l blue. 543-!338 prtcea ;a.i can afford. _;.::•:ipa;;:.:r:.... ___ ...:;;;;:;11- T u ii'QUOISE femtle ~Iv. met, I STILL haw the Beat a.J 1 pn1•akffl l blk and wht WANTf;D: Account.II In book· In town in Catpet-Linol~ n1all' rabbit In Mesa del ketpln&. AIR. A/P, payroll Tile. C.A. Pqe. Mz..a1i9: ... • Milt. S4S-1008 or F/C. 9-2018 CARPET LAYER H.A-S 6240 FOUND A toy poodle py, -CARPET! Fantutlc 5'.Vi male. recently clipped. Vic: l1by1tttlftl •sso lnp. Call 64Ml64 :. J R. E. Wanted St, Pelt:nbura:e Flor1da, nr Fairview .I: San Dif:IO Frwy · -i water, 3 aetta or under, area. 5f6-T709 PARENTS Electr1c81 • w/or wllhou.t d we 111n1 . KEYS Found on beach vk. BABYSITTING ----, 646-1503 Wand 6 Balboa. _.,. AGENCY ELECTRICIAN. Small Jo11oj PLACE REALTY 49'-9704 Ervin •6~1001 Realonomlca C.Orp. w A NTEO.Duplt:K, 11•i plcx. to an I' llont at tront ODW1ter, Daily (Callf. licented & bonded) malntemnce &: repal t)i Pilot, 211.1 Balboa, N.B. The be1t mature 1ilten, own 548--6303 . • ; H.S. Ring, class of '69. Wash cart, )Vho read storlet 1 CONTRACTOR-LIC'O • room next to Balboa Iii. playwJ!hyourcl)ildren.~. * 642-21'2 * "i 1' ... ..... m ocl . .,(1)14) Commercial Bkr. 675--6700 fourplt:K, cash e 5 STORES, Sll0,000. 686-a111U1UT1ble loan. 698 w. 19th St. Bethel 1-""-~-·-•_70 _____ _ Towen corner. 543--17611 a.gt. tndu1trlal Rontel --·-FOR LSE: 5300 1q ft prime v.·arehou.e space • all or par!. lrvlM Ind.. Mr. BuUud 54G--80S1 NEW btdr. 1308 10 ZXIO 11, Nr. Br.kcr l Fairvtew, 1 yr lcue. Sulli\'M 5'11-2178 Loll 6100 * $5,SOO * View • Level lo!• • EZ Term• PLACE REAL TY 494-97CM 2969 So Cout Hiv.•ay THREE ARCH B A Y : Beautltul ~ .. lot. Priv11.rr beach. $17,500. Good terrru. Ownl'r 213: 3Ti 3000 coll. HIJltop Lquna. view lrit Quick Cuh Sale S7850 494-9748 par. mt:al1 .I: trained 101' .. "' • BUSINESS 11nd Ferry. Claim with klentifi· erne:rseney (alcknesa, ace!. Floors I catk>n at ollke. dent. 1 Hrtt). In your home -------"'+\! FINANCIAL. ____ FOUND • Mature, friendly da)'I. evu.. by tM week, CARPET VINYL TII:.!!~ r lutlMlt ma.le Sprinre:r SP a n Io I . weekends or Yacatlo1111. UC CONTR. F!lEJC ._., Opportunitll s '300 Black ' brown. 347--3tlll 842-6537 * ~7262 * !71 FOUND boy'1 blkt Vic. VEJ\Y R I' bl the f :J;; COIN Lt\UNDRIES !:~ntim Ii: 1J!h.:.,!!.8, Call to 2 would ~I: ~ :::bysi~ ~ furniture R .. torlnt j! FRIGIDAIRE """' fy, _......... hr or day. Prefer rnr4'nt1. & Rlflnl1hlnt JET-ACMON 1'WNO wallet in l.aau.nA ~ -• Cotta P.fe111 choice Joc.$1000 Beach. Identify ' call BABYSl'M'fNG by day or roRNrrmu: Strlpplnc :-A pr. mo nel Minimum 837-ml ,...k, Pactnc Sllndl tnct retlnh.hl~. $10,000 do"'fl Pf.Yft'tnt. GREEN Parrot ori Harbor HB Fncd yard • Nnebtf1 * 642-~~ * Sulla Ann, Alpha 8tta mlJor' Jal&nd ~1™ . · s~plng Ct!'ftter. Bi. volume . 613-fitsi G1rdenl5,~--..:::::i J11.1 •. ndry $39 ooo Reuonable EXPER. Babylitter offers --term · ' · MALE Sil.mete cat call to .er\'k.9 fot 2 l 3 yr olds. E XPltRIENCED Ja~ 32 \v:ibers /ll ~ rood ldentifY. Fountain Valley &C-DJ4, Nwpt Rtt-atta. Gardener. Comple;ft Joc:iUon. SS,000 r IP ' Small 847-1506 WllJ. bab)ralt, mY borne, in Servloe. Free ML M6-4'1'M. down ~ ' Loot ,_1 vicinity ol Edwardl I GEN'L Otu Up. tne•oriiiiiil COlN-O-MAnc -Ed!nctt, H.B. -.s200 v.'ffd kill, ~tW. EQffJPMENT, INC. mtSH SEl'lER CHILD care my home, any rt'*1red. 646..sMI 525-71.U f'emalt. 4 rno. old, !amity qe.Nr.F•ir"YifJwlAdam1, JAPANESE Garde•l•C V ER y \Ve J \ known heartbroken. 4!J&..U)'I' C.M. M9-0752 Servlct>. Neat work.~ rtltaurut. 92 ee111. lMflr SlO REWARD! 1..1'1 Orani:e NEWPORT H,U area, tun yd. malnt. 969-2303. i. ' l wlM. " White aJltred malt cal1 yard w11andbox. Lunch + CLEAN UP SPECIAUlr; Ac_rNIO 6200 Sl2.:!00 646-6J&1 Vic Eutb.IUff. 644-0!m snackl. Xlnt c.re. SU.2'1'54. New fence Is ~-Qdlf S -HAMBURGER Stand. year L1tG AFGHAN MALE S..byalltlnc, &a" 3 l jobs. Rtu. 5Q.69l5l5 r 11 ACRE S-WEST C.M. around bwJnt .. , b·e a c ti Reward. Vk. 19th St. C.M. up. Nr ~ach A Ada.ma, KB Com Chmer 148-19!M · ltl'a. fTS..2910 eau *nu • -..i.706 • 11~1 ------'-------------;;;.,l;;;jl • • --- -------·-----~.....-_.....,.---....---- ' Wtdn11<!,Y, A"""I 5, 1970 PILOT·ADVERTl~U !O JOBS & EMPl.OYMINT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENl MERCH~ISE FOR l!\ERCHANDISI POlf • SALE AND T·Rl'DE SALE AND TRADI W"""'4l1, A.,..t 5, 1970 RY SERVICE DIRl<.1 u1<Y JO~ & ~PLOY!tfNr ~OBS & QlPlOYMENT . . 6'IO Paltltlnt, JGb1 Min, wOM. 7100 Jot.. Men, Wom. 7100 DAU.Y I'll.OT AL"S GAllDEJilllG Pap•m...tinl 6'51 BABYSl'T'l'ER My ham<, E4.ECTRONIC Jobi Mon, Wom. 7100 "°"" Mon,Wom. 7100 Jobe Men, W-1100 1.:::==.::=:.....:..;,;::.=;._..;;;=;. 1 ""'-;.;;.....;.;.,"""'-- 90 -.'.'.7 00 ______ ....-:! _______ ,.. ~ .... ,.. furniture ·IOOO 'um ture ___ ~~ ~ ~-ii;;;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili:-iiiiiiiii:iii;ii;;iiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiil 11t ~ • -"""I-PROFESSIONAL h...,._ -"" &ookhun<. , TEC:HNICIAN . .....,_col_,.. Nest work. F""' polni.. ~.M. I dudlrt.n lb .:bl, o.i1eo Mil ._,°'1 _. * POUCE OFFICER * We need . WE ARE THE SA1.£S otJTlo FOR THE WORLD'S ~ Ne llPOd. illM.. 0.. Rontot' bru.lh, a I r. I ... I 1 1ocldltt 6tlJ..'706 ..I MO!; .olid ... !!! c:illUiUl'. I~ -....... --• .....,. -8.\BYSITl'Ell, liw In. Cl•. ....,._. KlD<tico. Inc. -CITY OF-I f • NEWPORT BEACH Ca i ornia's LARGEST REHTAL CORPORATION· ;i tsldlft: Local rtf's. Low prioel.. ~)' Dar Harber track Own :Un Victeria St.,-C.M. ~ ~ GanlcD Clift, 8f7,,,US8, • ttatwp. Pb: S4S-599S at't 1 l. 8Jf.'lllQ 'r $111 lo $916 por mo. be • ' • High school graduate ten stl men • Age 21 thru 30 l,.,..lilkatlon. w-l HOUSES,-.. boW, .... PM Eiqgal _,..li)y•em ....... ,~••by -.......,,.. poles, an)'1hl"" • .-krmalds.Man•lck EXP~ai> Wire • 2 Spanish Sofas, antiquecgold1 1 g..-n Was $440 .................. NOW $lit N. , ....._ SU-1$3. C.U.. Bn>o. .......,.w, palnl<d. For -Jll8 N..._ 81"'1., C.M. -•jpili, 1'811 ~ APANESE Gardener. Mo. estlm.&~ Gf6.9TS2 Billlftl Ck. Park Circk. lrvirle. ~ • 20/30 uncorl't!Cted vision to help US 1 ~=:i•~~~~. se~t'. .antique .g~ld '. NOW $1t Jit&h:. Gen'J Clean.-Up.'£1.. UOUSE Need pa~nt! Quallt,f .Jnvoiciltg • bID.ing elJI .• call EXPERIENCED sewl n1 ~· .Rtu. Free e1t. in~. exterXJ\ tree 14nllnt,WHtcliUPer110nnel madtine (!llH'ator tor A.ii ~. eltimate. Rtl., reatoaable ~. 2Jt3 WestcUU Dr., loft. CaU 61S--1131 • s· 9"-150 pounds Written lest will be administered August sell pa rt of 14th, 7 p .m., August 17th, 9 a.m. and Au- 18' blue Spanish Sofa & Love St!\l Was $411 .................. NO\f'$Mf 1ot gust 19th, 1 p.m. California. W.'S IAn!f-. Tue 968-3236 N.B. 645.2170. FAT & UGLY777 l'l!'l'llK'Nal Yfl'd remodelin&:. PHONEJbe relt . then pho~ BUSBOYS . For further info. & a ppt. to take the test, l 9' grn Spanish sofa & 'love seat. ~ Was $445 .................. NOW l14$ Ht 1 Green velvet Sola. Was $300 •... NOW $79 1 Gm & gold loose pillow back sofa. I )Tn.th Nulin&. Jot deal'lU.p. Ole beat.: Jordan 4.: Son • • · U you are, ~ prob&bl)I cao'1 n..1 ... :KN ~QIOd bonded Applications now being use you, P 1 Of •-N t Before yo~ rush to a phone contact ersonne c.. ~ . ewpor to call us, there are son1e BUa.lr ipl'Tlkitn. fn..Ufl6 .--.-. ... -15. ' ' lake., for Fail & \Vln1er CALIF. -CASTING CO. ~.ARDEN~ NG : La SI d ' inm'ed. ~ .iclledules. Must be 18 ot ls continuillg hs sea.rch in Was $199 ...................... NOW $IJ 1 Green Spanish Sola & chair. Blvd., Newport Be a c b, Calif. 92660. quest.ions you thou.ld know ~,\LDlijlS. Spmkr 1111-rOllr Uvt'r, ApPJ.ya1tet-3 P.m. <>rarce Co. for a variety ot ~nt work. Ya 11 ee Y Pl111twin1;. Patch# The FJri Crowns t;ype.s, for work in mq_ mo- (714) 673-6633 about us. And some ques· Hons you should aak your-~ selt, lt'a not unuaual that Was $320 ...................... NOW $1t0 1 Red & black Sola & chair. R•P.11ir 6llO Rfft•urant delin&. 1V comrnl's. & bxl. 1>.·e should own a siieable Jobi-Men, Wom. 7100 Jobs Men, Wom. 7100 chunk of cautomia. W"'"" Was $229 .................. NOW $119 1ot 3801 E. Pacific Coast H"''Y· films. Great pay, [It, time. 6612. * PA'JOI PLASTER.ING Corona df:I Mu. No ph, calls We are client paid, no fee. --a Jand COl'J.>Or8 tion. Thf' NURSES Needed for prh,ate fa.~lest g?'OWUlg land COr· duty • evry type. RN'1 poration in the WesL What LVN's -Prac. ~ Akles. All is unusual 1£ that we give 1 pr. gold velvet hi-back chairs. p.n.r•f Services All ~~mates CASlflER-Food Checker . Not a achoo!. Wall Oeanina By Macb1ne Ful1 time, aJl rear around FR EE Was $159 ................... NOW $59 H. 1 pr. gold velvet hi-back chairs. Was $159 ................... NOW $59 ••· KEYPUNCH $4lll/l550 l-"ut low cost, drlpl~ posit.log. Xlnt salary . TV SCREEN TEST Tree Etl .Plumbing • 6890 Hostess e>i;perience dt"Sired. PH: Cn4J 835-8282 t Yr. exp, 026 & 056. lifust a.190 have gen'l ofc, exp. Da.ys. 1 pr. gold occasional chairs. ·"'"· C·" h a damn about how our land ""'""""· ""' any 0 u r · ii> sold. And ,.., h Leseoulie NW'!t's Registry "'.T w om. B' B QUlK KLEEN ----------c:a.u ~r at Sam's 10 AM to 6 PM * 962-s.M * PLUMBING REPAIR see.toad 592-1321 Was $S9 .................... NOW $39 u. Several overstuffed chairs from $10 ••/up • 642.-9955. * That's where you come in. OF 1'~ER J NG xlnt ac· We nH!d bright young KEYPUNCH SR. APT CLEANING • Palbting No job "'° ...all CAR WASH • R\IC Shampooiog A: Lite • 642-3128 • Full Ir P.trime Positions. Repairs, REMARC PLUMBlNG(l ice naedl: CJ'O'Wth Company. 3 J.bca. SERVICES. 841-6688 tepair, remodel, new con-tions Orange: Co. 2'J50 Har. FENCING. repain, paintin&, &"etteral mainL .... 1'09 Ed's Cleaning Seivice: Carpets • Upboli;tery -WJn. dows • Floor ca.re. 5.fS.-0481 structioo. Fret Ht. ~ bor BIYd., Costa Ml!Sa.. HOME REPAIRS CARPEN'J"lffiS & Ct>ment Plwn=ec:~;gi Hr, linilll)ers .~:5 Exp only. 2-4 HR PLUMBING &. REMODELUNG 1,H.:.•~u~li~""'-~~~~'...;.;130 .:::=====~='·""':;:::;======! CLASS "A" MO.LO MAKER t.N.T. Lawn Service. Garagf' dean-ups. hau.ling It light moving. 548-5863, S31...J729 Romodoli"9 I. _Repair 6940 * Minimum 5 yrs exPtr. • Top rates ROOM Additions, garaa;e11, remodel Lowest Price in 1-HAULINC., $10 A LDAD toYm, 4c. c 0 n t r a et 0 J' • IU2llJI up. Trff Serv. Gen. 6U--29M * Steady overtime * All ~tits Pruning 6f6.252S, SU-8043 G·EN--.L-,.---.. ~ing--&-m-ai~ol 'IARD I Gar. Cleanup. No job too s ma 11. Remove lfteS. ivy, trash. Lle'd/insured. 67S-8183. I era&, backhoe, 962-1145. APPl.Y PERSONNEL DEPT. L. M. Cox Mf!I. Co. 1505 E. Warner, S.A. It garage cleaJ:i..up. Sewing 6960 Mon. 1hnl Sun. $1{1 a load. 1.:.:.::.:::;,:_ __ ~-­ Frfoe: Estimate. 5e5031 QUALITY :vou've a I w & y s 546-2.551 Housecleentng 17ll BAY & Beach Janitorial Cupet.5, windows, floors, etc. Res & Commc1. ~1401 llURK'S Window Oeanin&: Service. For free estimatet1, call 64Wl92 FOR XL.NT HOUSE CLEANING. • c.an 836--0648 * Mesa Oeanlnc Setvi~ , windowtl, Jlool"'S, etc. Rts Ir C.Ommc'I. 548-4ID JOE'S CLEAN SERV. "'e do Everything-Rel le ~mm. Free. Est. 64,2-7.JSl. J11nitoriel Service lltw . .i COmrnc'I. 64Ull24 wanted. Dresam!lk:ing - alterations. Key Say, 1763 Orange Ave., C.M. 66-1292. 6974 e Discount Tile Center e 20'l3 So. Main, S.A. 546-1617 All typei; of tile • wall, floor. patio, eolr)' •ays, bath & shower. Expert installation or 1ree instructions for do JI youn;eUers. Complete line of a.coesaonei & tools for infftallation. * Vt"Mlt.. Thf' Tile Man * Cust. work. l1'11ita.ll &. repairs. No job too sml. Pluter patio. Leaking s bow tr repair. 847-19571846--0206 I Ironing •755 r ... Strvlc• •"-'=~---...;;..:;.; - Equal oppott:tmity employer COASTAL AGENCY A member of Snelling & Snelling Inc. The World's Ler9est Profe1sion•I Employment Service 2790 Harbor Bl, CM 540-6055 Harbor Blvd. at Ada.ms COCKTAlL waitre~s. apply in pe1'SOn. Dana Villa, 34311 So. Coast Hwy, Dana Point. COCKTArL Waitress, exper. 22·30. 5 days wk, intervw. 10:30AM·U:30 wkdays. Villa Nova, 3131 \V. Coast Hwy. NB COCO'S-REUBEN'S COMPLEX 4&17 MacArthuf Blvd, INTERVIEWING MON .. fRf. NING Done in my~. BOB'S TREE SURGERY 2:30 to 5 pm \:Jao allerations. &Costa 1s back attertng the -same 'DAY HELP ,Mesa. ~~ Fine Quality Trtt SerVice. Q\ler 17 years * !RONTNG * * 54().31!18 * e HOSTESSES l\fy Home, $1 Ht. TREES, Hedges, trim, cut. e BUSIOYS I ~ick Up &: Deliv. 5«>1&11 1tumP1 re.ir.oved, hau1£d. 30 • OISHWASHERS J )'1"5, exp, Fully ins. M2-m> COLLEGE girls & hi-schl •nltorlef '1'0 DON'S TREE SERVICE All grads, full, p/ti me. Avg. WoRKERS Available; Any types, Lise & Tns. Free S3 hr. No exper. nt.ce6s. -khld of work, anytime. Estimates. 64.2-5584. Fot appl. 546-5770, Vande Oewting, lawn \\'Ork. etc. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Beauty Coufl!lt.lor. EUlcient, reliable. $2.50 hr. , C OM p A N J ON I H ! kppr Ask JOt' Job.II or Nicholas Job Wenhd, Men 7000 w/car for elderly widow. ~. POO-TRepairman. "'•alified Dpndbl, ref's, live in, C.M. SPARlO..E Janitorial & Win· "'"" 546-6.'i99 slow deanina:· Serv. Win-in aU phases of trouble .;:::..:::.:;-==,,.---- cl sltOOting, plumbing, elee-* * * COOK -dows, reiid., oom · eonst. trical & mechanical. Al.&0 * FUJ..L TTMJ!; cleanup. Free est. 962--0672 experienced as pool con· • EXPERIENCED sultant. Con! act Mr. Apply I W.ndtcaping '8lO Gleason, 763 Hudson, CM. SURF & SIRLOIN IN.t.W LAWN'S, re-seeding, 54!Ml754 5930 w. Coast Hwy .. N.B. L,t"O«>-tilling,r enovating, (No phone c.a.lls pl~asel ~~p. 897-2Cl7 or JobWanted, 7020 ** COOKS, Experienced 1_.:3-0932;.::·====== 1_W;.;..:0 ... m_•c"-----wheel man ** DISHWASH· MAID SERVICE 6815 ACCOUNTS receivable, ER. Experienced, Apply. l Pa.yroU, Accountfi payable, BLUE DOLPHIN 1 C AND S Maid Servi~ Credit. Typing: 1Bh1 exec. i -..,,;=~;_V:,:l~a,:L=ld::o:;., "'N:'.B'; . .::; Rel:idential Ir aps.rtmenta. No job 100 small! ~224:! * COOK * Experienced, fill! •.il'h=i:':64>-9813;,,'-='=o=r=~=='==I LADY-will do housework. lime. Park Lido 'Con- -Ste1tdy. One day per week. vllie:seenl Hospital. 6424!044 Polntl"9, Peporii•"9int YOU Supply 1 Tbe Paint. :i Br. Uv Rm le Kitchen Painted, sso: Call 557-8638 }Wtlred Painter; 26 yn exper. iqeat t bo!ll'SI. Noo- drinker. Call ~1 I ' TRADE. PainUns:; by liceN· ed contractor IOI' truck, rum. or ! 642-4558 ~G Servi.ct' • reslden- tlftl Ir 001nmercl.aJ. Locll.l Ir experieneed. R. LeBlanc ~9 . .wl Memphis. H.B. * 642-5539 • COOK 4 Dinner J $30 Shift 10 =>ta.-r Jobs Men, Wort:'• 7100 BLUE BEET 673--9904 Accounting Ck. $500 COOK'S HELPER Payroll, ledatr, aocnls rec., Expcr, 642..5619 accnta pay. ca.11 Loralne, * COPY WRITER * Westclilf flfrwonnel· Agency, Min .. 'l yrs t-Xp. Ad oge.ncy or :»13 Wf'!llC!iff Dr., N.B. advertising depl of con1m'l 64().2770 co. 0egrne. Engli.11h or Jour. .:.::..::.:A:....,,R~E-Y-O~U--· I nalillm. Cali I-lelen, Service Center Emp. AK enc Y. BEAUTIFUL 77 · 64449ltl. 500 NcwJ>0•1 Conic" It's all 1n the eyt of the be-i _:D:;"~.,.;.S;;":;ile~200'2., ~N'"B;o·..,...,. ii-Older. o..ck 1he 1V oom. •DATA PROCESSING ml. you v.-atcb and If you MANAGER McAdams Palnting &rv. feel YoU're as p:n?tty as $961 to Sl.234 per mo, Mini. Jhttr. I Exier. Speclal ta~s sonie of those people, call us.. mun1 2 yn;. t'X.P. supervising Clt\ aptt. ~ CALIF. CASTING CO. top EDP PE"nio11rw•1 req'd. UETICULOUS PAINT f'il" application and resume f"' • is conlinuing it. search for "'UE OllP STAMPS INS b" Au•'. 7, ; p.m. F,.,.. forms '"" • · · everyday peopl~ who ha\'(I " "' "r -• iu•· •· 1n1 xt & ·•r.1au, cootar.t PeNOnnel crew ..-..... 11 ""'""'· -e • desil'e to Y.'011c Oil TV or "' ~ £R>. Docb. 675-58!2 modeling johs. m to iJ25 [)(_•pt.. ltoom ~],, No Wulirw per dn_y, No let' t~ you evet'. • CITY 01'~ CO!i,.A ?.1.ESA e 77 Fajr Dr. "* WALLPAPER * * FOH ON CA1'1ERA (i141 864.,\150 I Wben JOU caU "Mac" AUDITION tr GG-1444 646-4032: CALL (TI4J ~~ DENTAL ASSISTANT, I BOOSE Paintina. Expei~d 10 A~f to 6 PM part *tl$i~~~.-. '*on~. Beet rates. lnti:rior, ext.eMr ASS'T HELPER , • Fl"(lf.o EAlimlllttl. Ken n.Ie FU!. Unit• oi· pt-tlmt>. A~ 19-DENTAL Au't wlchalniide • -31 • Id · ,,., ex .. r. x ... r,y. l!tc. Call ' a..-...,14. , .., 1110 res nrn."Y n:q u, 545-3.19oi aft 6 pm. RE.AL &l•tli ftie.)uvena.l.ion $3.75 hr s111r1. Setvioe, paJnt_ ariy homt for C.a.11 Mr \Vill.S'~on ~1~1f0 DISHWA§JIER·Oin~ier House ·-••M Phone SXKJ' 2 l(Of')' $350, ~ * ASSlS'TANT-Female. over * 675-2051 * *EXPERT PAINTING U, Apply ""1"""'1 Fried Jo'ree £atlmsln. 646-4358 Chieken 297!} E. Cout lfw)'. DONUT gl.rli 11(&nled, moni-Corooo del hfar. irw & artn 'llif1, no f'Xper. * PAPERHANG.ING AUTO SAl.ESM"" ...,..,, "'· Don"', 135 E. I PAINTING. < !11111-UZI * NEW AGGRESSIVE J7th St., C.M. 8. a: L Pf,inllna lntenot'oe'X:• BMW AGE NC y IN DRUMMER needed for 2 • "'""" We ""' .. ...-. NEWPORT BEACH. nlahi..ovcr 21· ~. S4..o823 Dt!tll'CI 2 Sa.11!:1mf:n only ~"· Call 646-:m2 * PAPERHANGER * iiericn~ Ill toreip tuto-~E"'XEC=.~s=s.c;:· ~l::'y:.-Ro<;::::c.,,..,,~Stn ~ AuJ.hO'l'fb', Prb-mobiles Mlon~. BMW Mer· t'tlfllneerlng ollkto, ae<:UJ"Bte. lntlNc!tor. fH5.2449 1..~et o r Poncthe' exp. typiai, 110n1e SH&: bookttp'g INr. • ~hln11"1. '""'°' ,..,,.., lie'd, Jna.. free c<:IC. i..u CINck. -· pM•f'd, bul wlO talle all appt exper. $.'!'!00 mo. Resumr to Pltaee contact Mr. Rofiald b Pl~. Da.lly Piiot, 2211 D111let. 71.f: 6f2..0406, \V. BflbM Bh•d. N.8 . FIBERGLASS I a Y· up, sandi119 & de· taUing exper. Ap· ply in person, EDLER IN.PU$TRIES INC. 2101 Dove St., N.B. FIL.E CLERK-LEGAL to $<00 Bcau liful N.B. offiL~. VPry pleasant "vrking (.'Ond'i1. Top benefits. Cl!J l\!lsa !kt. ly, 557-612'1. Abigail Abbol Personnel Agency, 230 W. \Va'rner, Suite 211, Santa A!lil . FRY/rmk 1-.~c1.nted! Exp, All shifts! Apply in pers, 1400 W. Coasi Hwy, N.B. J.170/$630 Min. 3 YT! exp. 026 & 056 + gd gen'( olc. exp. Days. New: airport, J, R. Piet'a! As&ociates Agency, Inc. 1885 Newport, CM 642-6720 LADY over 40 relined w/personality. exp'd in Sales, some background In decorating. Knowledge ot Bookkpg & typing. No smoking. S!eady position w I one of the fine.st decorating studios in Nwpt Bch. Good salary & future. Give rcffi.: Write Deily Pilot Box M·l007 $3.95 . minds to function as our commodahons &: s m a~ I sales representatives. u salary to collegt Btudent in you·v~ had some sale$ ex· exchange for light household perience in a related tieJd duties. it'll help your chancet. Bui 6Ta-0310 or f>48.7197 beware. We're oot inter! . ested In peddlers. If YO!-j {'RlVATE Chrtstian school have a college background needs bta driver. Short so much the better. ' houn:, wW tr&Jn. Good driv- ing record required. Also The mont>y! Jt'g pretty generlll maintenance man good. With a little effort, you can make.rommi.s&ions for .deaning k yardwork. of $25 000 a year or more 1683.i Brookhunt, F . V . A big 'new car plan! Sure'. 962-3312 f'rlnge benefit$! All YQU PART TI~1E Clerk-e11es. can handle. Some retail exp pr...!tirred. lt you think you're one of Fountain Liquors, l 8 8 8 O Uu• men we're looking tor, 1 stereophonic hi~ fidelity radio/ . record player. Was '$179 .•...... NOW $69 Dinette tables with chairs . Was $S9 ..••.............•.. NOW $29 1.t 2 Recliner chairs. Was $179 .. NOW $79 uch Odd Dinette chairs-headboards- cocktail-end tables & lamps .... $4 ••/up 10' Admiral Refrigerator, Jeft dr. Was $189 ....................... NOW '8' l·G.E. portable TV. Was $159 .... NOW $59 5 pc. Bedroom sets, from .. $69 per set/up THE USED FURNITURE FACTORY 1815 HarbOr Boulevard, Cost• Mei• 548,.9457 OPH Weeltdey1 f·5:l0. Sctt11tdrp f·5. CleM h.-,. Brook11ursl, F.V. and you'd like to work for . a multi-million dollar landl '!!!!'~~"1!~!!l!l!'!'!~!IJ!!!!J!!!!!!!!! Part time 1emllle help, lte corporation, ask yourseul• · ~ --- office 1>.'otk, abt. 20 hl'll a something. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Furniture IOOO 1vk incl. Sat & Sun. 1526 I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,1 Large. expanding chain l'l{'eds Nc>v>'port Blvd C.l.1 G42-l75J b It jl!-"t .ll job you v.·ant! Jobs-Men# Wom. 7100 1, ft/p! help, temp & perm. · · Or a htet1me career. \Ve'll c:...;c..._.....o...:.... __ ....;.c..; Age ~30. 6 mo'i; re&dcy. p O CONT1lOL be "',king you the same SERVICE station saJcsman. OVER STOCKED MUST SELL req'd. R D. quest on. exp. Sa I a r y, comm, FULL 01' ::i~t: ttnie nn ;ii~e 956-2870 Mr. Van pog, req's energelic young For appointment call: uniforms. Older man fine. limit, men or women in LOT BOY man familiar w/prod. plan. JACK STANLEY Chevron. Adams & Twins $49.95, Fulla $59.95, Queen., $89.95, King1 $119.95, Twin Size Headboards $7 .95, Trundle Sets '89.95, Sleep. er Sofas S169.95 & Up, Studio Coucbes $89.95. Orange ~o. t'> ~la.I'! on ""·U ning, i;cheduHng & expedit. f7f4) 835~3233 Magnolia, H.B. ground floor. Opportunlli\':I r u 11mt-employment. New car tlcalcrship. Apply in in{; orders. Qual!llcations hi. SERVICE St.at.ion At1~ndant unlimited in sales. Kosk(;I J>CMIOn, schOol grad, 11 yr. college SALES M£N part time , experien~. Interplanetary. EI I e en THEODORE prel.J & some prod. control/ Anderson's Union Serv. 1645 WaJten. 714/~G-2219. ..,. · Ad c Ph u · 16 9 ROBINS expedi~~ exper. ri ll! tr~un J want two ntf>n with sales ams, .M. : ,,..->-l FULL or par! time, no age FORD to i;pec1t.ic ooinpany reQUU'e· background. You rnust be e SHAMPOO Glrl, full or limit, men or women ln 2060 •la.rbor Blvd, ments. willing tu learn our method part-tlnt•'. 1~1J W. Coa.s1 Orange Co. 10 start cin Costa hfesa ABILITIES & Work hard, In retuni \\'e Hwy, N.B. ground "tloor. Opporlunilics UNLIM ITED AGENCY \vill give ,YOIJ good co. bcne.''s"u~P=ER~V~Jso=R'".'""'•'"·,~u-1'"im-.. SIESTA SLEEP SHOP 1927 Harbor Blvd., CM 1145-2'!60 3~155 Csl. J-lwy, Dana Pl 4!1&4552 unlimited in sales. J<oskot LVN. relief week ends, 7 488 E. 17lh, Suite 224 C.M. tit~ & an opportuniry for un. nights, 11-7:30 or LVN. I nterplanetary, Eileen t.o 3:30 shlft. PARK LIDO 642-1470 limited income. Jo'or apfll. PARK LIDO CON· •S-PA-N-IS_H-.w,F-UR_N_IT_U_R~ Wa.liP.NJ, 714/540·2219, CONVALESCENT CENTER . ~ phone Mr. Bill Harold, John. VALESCENT CE NT ER \C *GENERAL OFFICE 642-8044. Prod. Control Clerk son & Son. ~O<XiJO. 1-"'-'-2-81>~14~·====-FACTORY Woman with General OUice MAIDS. Full time, 25 or $600 *SALES* TELEPHONE experlen(.>e, 40 hrs, v.·eekly over. Apply 1648 Newport H s. Grad, pref l yr college, ~fattlre woman, for sales of APPOINTMENT OPEN TO PUBLJC 12-nights). Perm. S300. a mo. Blvd., C.M. Phone 642-9873 I cl d II fine · 1 .. ,. h kl ·• SECRETARY * next 2 wee&ct 10 st.art. KIRK JEWELERS. exprr. w s II' u ng rcq, .Je'•l'C ry . ..., rs. v.·ee y * MAIDS • full or Pf lime. So1nc purrhi:<..o;lng helpful. <2 nights) Perm. S3(1Q, a mo. Part time, our office, Corona Wholesale/Below Huntington Center, Beach & Exper. not nee. Apply 1021 Newport to start. KIRK JEWELERS, de! Mar 4.g PM Erllnger. H.B. Bay•'d ~ NB H u· ,.._ ,,_ · Tables, S9 up;•Wall shelves "' e ...,, ·· · · Pe r5onnel Agency un ngfon ....,nter, ut:ach NEEDED~ Business wornan $;, up: Sofas $!9 up. GENERAL HELP** MAJOR Development Co. in 833 Dover Or., NB & Edinger, H.B. 1vho enjoys calling and char. S3.95 1-IR Costa Mesa area requires 642·3870 SALESMAN w I n u r i£' r y ting with strar1gers. PH: Galleria Furniture P/time, manied, t!Ppl'ndablr.,, F1JLL CHARGE I ':::=:::=:::::=:I garden center exper, !lend 833-3656 or 675-1D89, 2013 Plecentl• 6 mo·s residency rcq'd. Age BQOKJ{EEPER I• background resume to Ray Telephone Solicitors 642-7130 19-31. for all phases thru lrial •• Payroll $500 AmHna;, Amling's Nursery, Charity appeal. Paid wet::..y 1 ·~-.. -0:~-.. --=~-,;.-':i.-~-~-~-~-!!!':'-MR. CLARK 956-2870 balance. Const r u c 11 on Beach Area . 2 Yrs Exf.l('r. l~ E. Coast Hwy, N.B. Apply: 325 N. Broadway ,. GIRL FRIOAY:_e background he\1)ful, bul not UNKEL AGENCIES Rm. 410, S:inta Ana 17 PC. KING SIZE Del.ire rupon1ible, expert. necessary. For appaintment 1421 N. Broadway SA 542·UO'l SECRETARY ' BEDROOM e~ woma.n (age ?.5-45), eaU 540-9710 ext ». to ~LEPHONE OP~RA~R Large 9 drawer dresser, mlr. one girl office. Lite SH, typ. MAN To auist mw or local Piano Le15on1 VICE • PRESIDENT P~ 1 un ror, 2 bedside stands, Kine ing 60 wpm, atturately. appliance i;:tore. Neat a~ U.C.I, i;!udc.nt has .roorn ror PART·TTME, approx. 20 hrs. 228 1'orest, Laguna Beach size headboard, frame, quilt. Varied duties. Beau!iluJ new peara11C1?. 496-2383 Mr· several beg. or 1nrern1ed. 1>.-eekly, hours fiex!bie. Must TOP·NOTCH Ne11•port beau-cd mattress. &beets, blank-offi~. Newport Center. Call Wright 9-10 am only. $!udenti;. Le a r n Muliic take: shorlhand 100 \\'Pm, ty salon i;eeks hair stylist. et.I, etc. 6'1'1·1801. j,llff MGMT TRAINEE Theory, sight reading, etc. like variety and figures, Requisites: lntei,rrity, im· Cholee or Spanish c•:.:..:•::G:clc,RL~FR=l~D~A~Y~•-•-1 S450. Oppor, for H.S. grad to Call Bruce, 54fr.«78. lYJl<> 60 wpm or better. ~fany agimi.tion, en1husiasm, good or 1.1odern Style Good 1ypis1 for a great job. !rain for mg1n1 pos. Salary RECEPTJONISI' • Book· company benefitB i;uch as appearaoce, lols of energy. ALL FOR $249 Apply at-· ~ <'llT allow. Auto increa5(' keeper. medical of f ice, paid vacations, sick leave, Opportunity lo ,l'lrosper. No do1vn pmts. only $9 mn. MacGrei;::or )'aeht Corp. Isl 9 n10. Call 1-lelr.n, Service Lagu1111 aTE"a. State age, & paid medical and Jlfe Insur. Golden Hour Coiffures, days WELK'S WAREHOUSE 16.11 Pla.1-entia, C.i\l Center En1p. Agency, qualiticatlons . .Box M-1092, ance, credll union, etc. Send 646-1677; eves 675-2234 600 \V. 4th St., Santa Ana G_l_R_J,._l_hou-,,-,-,-,.-"-'""-"-.' 1 644-1981, 500 Newport Center Daily Piiot. 22'll W. Balboa, reaume c/o DAILY PJLOT, * TYPISTS * Dally 9-9 Sat 9-6 Sun ll-6 a Y.ttk to clean & 11•ash Dr .. Suite 200, N.B, NB Box# 1071, CosfA Mesa, I KING Size Ortho hotel • RE AL EST ATE Calif. 92626. Register for d 1 t bo bachr.lon apt . on Balboa Management Trn. cu.xe mat ress, x Islai1d. 6#-29'!1 Ex~IJent c.:o., good future, SAl.ES\VOMAN: . Real o~ SECRETARY &: Glrl Friday a temporary job sp1•ings, frame &: head· _G_O_O_D_N_U_R_S-IN_G__ call Ann. \\'cslclifl Jlen;on. portunrty. Spe<:.1ahzed Bea~h for growing home buildlng today hoard $85; I :King size nel Agency. 2043 \VestcliU rentals and Lido & Penin, firm n>loc:ating in Orani::t' lntervws. 9-l2 bedspread, $20; l antique CARE Dr., N.B. G4f..2TIO sales. Tap comm. break. County. Must he proficicnl Western Girl Inc. mahogany spinet desk. $85; requires good nut·s.·s. Ir in. Call Harry A n d er so n in secretarial skills + have 4607 MacArthuJ' Blvd. antique golden Otlk drop lea! 1erested in joining such a. :'11ANAGER, 1110n1an for .-x. 67!>-1M2 /eve& 645-0308 good telephone YOit"C & Newport Beech desk, $85: antique maple staff, call 64&-1624. (·lusive n1en'11 shop, lnqulre * RECEPT, tor beauty f.igure aptitude. 2 girl oUice, [11{).()325 book case, $20; 2 blond HEY GALS ! 151 S. Coast Hwy, (Hotel i;alon, ~fusl be exp'd in Starting salary Sj70 per mo. * WAITRESS -Experk!nool mahogany custom mad!!: Lagurui 1 Cosn1etology, Contessa Hair P I e a s a n t surrounding only for da,y shirt only. A~ book cai;ei;, $20 each, or Expanding l'O, nerd!I 12 gals * MASSEUSE * 1''ashio~ 675-3385 Starting sal&J')' ;570 per mo. ply in person only S35 both; One 14 111%e mat. age l9-30 ft /pt. Mu.i;t have Jminediate Exclusive SPA RELIABLE sitter lo come 213/445-5610 DELANEYS SEA SHANTY lnss, box srpings, frame 6 mo';; resdcy, $3.5.i hi· 1o Opening, Experienced. Send in for 2 chldrn El Toro 630 Lido Park Drive & headboerd, $35. 545--0906 start. resun1e to Box lot 1093 Daily are • day wk 837-0339 •• Sec'y·Exec $600 Newport Beach, Cal if. DOUBLE bed (an liq ue Mr. Lake 9;i(t.2!1?l J,ilot. 22JJ W. Balboa, New-aft.a;:~ · Beach area, reefs avg, skills. w A NT E D -Tw 0 n ig ht while) "'ilh springs and HOMEWORKERS \VANTED port BE'ach. Altraclive DISHWASHERS ov 1• mattres11 $45, dave:nporl :...:,=='"""'~~---1 lleaJ Elitate Land Salcsn1lln • • er . iEnvelore Addt'E'8 !1(' 1'1I). * MEOIANIC • Full time. I LS CORP OPENS UNKEL AGENCIES Apply 675-5477, 6 PM-8 Pti1, converts into double bed 1!i~hes~~ped~n~~l 1f~::: 21 yrs or older. UJRIN'S NEW OFFICE IN O.C. 1421N.Broadwa.ySA5'12,ll02 VILLAGE INN, Bal. Isl, $60, •• .'ri'..,:,~,.~~.~'r 1 i/725s,' ARCO, ltarbor at San Diego t WANTED t " ' '"'" n-...:7 ... LANGDO N \VO R L D FN'Y, C.M. 557_758) 4. Major projects up to 15',1> SECT'Y Wan: ed. no flXl'Jf'r rna ure woman lo \\'al nut dining table & 6 TRADERS, P.O. Box 1121· ............................ 1 commission. Call for appt, nee. Sharp lnoklng, moocrn ca.re for Infant, in my home. chairs S!l5. Mi-3029 A21 , Redondo Beach, Cali!. •. Medical $450 63.(}.'lSlJO d~ing, tyJ)'.11g. Pt-tini< S dys \\'k. Ref. ~8-5725 cF::URNITUR=:_.::::::_E=,...:......,=-~o-'Ul'n 90278 Beach Area . }'r(lnl Of('. flESTAURANT: 18 or over. possible full timf', Starting \\10MEN, J~He delivery worli. display studies. model homo HOUSKPR, ha h y s i 11 r. UNKEL AGENCIES female. 11·5 pm a.nd n1ale11, $2 hr. c&!I for appt, 548-2r.l Must havl! 01>.'?l car. Apply; es, decorator! cancellation. Teacher's 2 chlld1'1!n. Ages 1421 N. Broadway SA 542.1102 eves. Apply after 2 pm, SECRETARY legal exper. :125 N. Broadway. Rm 41D, Spanish & Mediterranean 6-8. ri,1.i;· llrs llcx. Nr OC TASTEE 2966 Bristol. C.l.-f. pttf'd. Mwst 'be xlnt typist; =""="="=A=""=·====== I R O FURNITURE •-::1:'.'rpoo::cM::.· .:•.:l"":,,1=16=2::.. ~---IMCYY'EL Desk Clei·ks all RESTAURANT: Allsistant some S/H. Schools-lnitructlon 7600 1844 Newport Bl., C.M. HOUSEKEEPER-Elderly y,·o. shifts ovailoble, with some Mgr .. eves, fast food. Call: 536-3030 n-tunt. Beach) _ every nile 'HJ 9 1nan live in. Own l'l'R & 1V. PXper. Ap11ly: Box M·l067 ~,.~..,..~~1_c•~11!c·.:!'!'."!"M':,· -.-,.--:-:-:l":~:::~~~~;:;'""I Discover a Gre11t New \Ved., Sat. 6 Sun. 'll1 8 No 0 childl'l"n. SLOO mo. 'rlM" Daily Pilot, N.B. RN Director nee<!P.d 1or SERVICE CENTER C•rHr With The WVEJ:Y Victorian tlvlng :5l:::'"'1>c::::::"c...~=~-~-I .NHd Ettre Money? small convalescent ho.11pltal. Employment Agency rin. pi., white Ir gold If 0 USE KE F: PE R 1'-or I'm looking for mu.n.11.gerial-* 646-1624 * AIRLINES llnilih, llOfa. etralrs, mbln bachelor M, \V. & 1" AM, type people to help me in 8 REPRESENTATIVES to sell *Dict•phone Opr $410 & swag lamp. French Prov. Ne1>.·port Hom~·. Own tl'ans new business. Full or part the "original" fantBstic Type 50-60, prev. exp. die-white & gold china cahlt1cl; & ref. Kl 7--0997 lime. 642-3849 ''SLir.f GYM" being adver. tattng t'Cf\llp. A natural for Young people stel't'O & spioet piano. J1SKPRS Empl.)T pays fee 1lsed on TV "SLIM CYM" *Rec.pt. $500 '"ho want f'XCltemen1 plus! 544-5.'J60 George AJle.n Byland Ag1'!n-NEWSBOYS lhe world's best home exe:r-F'rn1 o re pol~ & ability to Ticket agent?' Air freight! v"1"R°"T"UE"-n-1ne-11c-,.-b~1-,-w-/2 <:.Y 106-8 E. 16Ui.. S.A. for 1•i!i('. l..osc inches & gaiu handle V.t.P.'s Station agent! Reserva. leaves, walnut color + fi 547-0095. DAILY PILOT EARNINGS in your own *Clerk Typist $"0 lions!-Rarnp or travel beige cl.ll\ir• $35. 3-pltte Is 111oney your problem? FON...tUNTNAiNcy~e.:WL~1:, home. Call Luellle 400.3343. Xln't oppor. for beginner/ ftfent? \Ve'\I lraln you for seellonal ln aqua naugahyde HERE'S THE hl ·liChl grad/lype 50/leam these and n10l'1!, dlly or nitf'. m 2 maple end tables $8 ANSWER Ages 1B-l1 See 8elt¥ Bruce at ?.l'l'SC. We Include. pl aet>n1Pnt as-tor botti. All in very ICOOd 6424.1:21 *Bookk••-r "50 sist~. nil' .,.,,61. BC'COn~ an.AVON Rtprcsent. ti •· ~ ~"':..,:::.· -~"':;::~----1 ;1!lv{' -earn good money ~ m• Opera!e Burroughs l•IG.l or . kF"DECORATlNG-3 Lan.: Jn your spare tlrJlf: near • tJ.1 xec equiv11lent ~As.I. 21 Yf'!. Appnlvt'rl for '«hies. Italian Provinci~I. home. Call now -RN'S *Sec'y Le1•1 $500 Veterans. E1iglblt' institution (ruil\\'OOd fln·6h pi-ea. 42" 540.7041 ~5341 Ai;:cncy for Cll'ffr Clrlt Gfn'I practlec SH & typ rcq under the federally Insured 1~111ncl m!U't,lt 101> rofft'I' Full & Part Tim. 410 \Y, Cout Hwy., N.D. *Steno R~ept. $450 itudent loan progran1. lnbJt>, petleslwl base $60. I NTERESTINC Telephont 8 point 646-3939 C \ I /pl h f 61?-3.164 \\'Ork rrom homf'. Musi have for our new facility Y ap · d 8k 1' 1111 0 c. Alrllne School• P ac If Jc ~~"""-----..,--."°"'I privatl! liM a.nd at l!'ilst *Acct. Clerk $600 llO E lJlh S t An s· SOFA, never used, qullttd lour PoiJr1 <Wly Box M·I006 Salesmen Wanted Cd at r~. accur. typl&t. • 5's.6st:n • • floral, ACOtctwuan1ed $125; Daily ~Im Apply in person Experienced 0 n I y _ Xln't benefit.I. Carttr opp>r. , Matchl na: loveseat $T S, tmn.illi i trelght iell. A m•n MERCHANbtSE FOR :5'1-133:;..::::;:.'~~---~~I NEED 50mtoM In do lrun· HUNTINGTON BEACH that can itert •nd 500 Newport Ctnh!r Dr., NB SALE AND TRADE CAl>'IES Table, wota 9· llv'li "·.. CONVALESCENT Sul!•~ ByApp1 64-l·.t981 rm cholr relrt r Ing. my ....... ~ or yours. complete a de11f. Demo ......... · Furni~·r• 8000 ' ' •1 ~ -do,. In • ·k HOSPITAL ood •u wash/dcyt:r, beds. 64+.STBl. •• ON ,,..r , n. ut (' plan, Insurance, Sil ftRVICE n~p . ..Qi.11 on est -1506 Stf\t'nadO TfiT. NB. Forest ~re• uf 1'::I Toro. houri. Excellent p•y M\.lpertnkt mtlfl! ~rvlch1'-! 10' _ SWEDISH mMrm gofa R..17-4239 lSRll fo1orid11 SI'. pl•n. C•ll Rick Fritt1 thampooer.-&-flQllRhen Sl50. TUrquolte naug~l\yde 5 Pc. vinyl dtn. RI, W&lnt1t WQUOR cJet'k Wllnl<'d pert IS1ttt'lg l.tlnl'l 1 to 5, S.Co-4493 Mtchanlcally 1n c 11 n e d sofa br.d, S~. Bolh 1n gd . no-mar tbl top, 2 mo·• old. tlnte, Exf:ll!riencl! ntot't888ry. lfu11Ung111n Beach S<\lary-.bOnuJ, bw A. t'l•t, cond. &4~186 Cost SJ9.95. It'll $30 . Phonl! &tl--.1139 d&)'lj alter ·-~-~!!-~-=-.,,~-~-!!-~~-~--=~-.. --=~1rr·s Beach howll! tinll'. Bia· Natl co. Ll\'C! In Hunt. lJch SPAN ISH • gold . Cr\,ISh·J .;;55::;7:;:=3~;;;·:-==.,..,=::-: 5 Pfl\, 67~858.i -:: gest IK!leellon ever! See the or rountnln Valley. \Vrll.-wlvet "°'" a: lovP11eal. l ANTIQUE ro.ewood Vktor. 11tE SUN NEVF.R SETS on M 0 NEY IN \'OUR DAILY PILOT OaasUl9d Box Mtn.1"', Daily PUot. 2'lll Yr nt~. $fiS.. Cn.JJ •ft. 5 11.~n T' IOfa. am:n I .. ~~ OAJLY PILOT WANT ADS! POCK!.~! uiet10n m•I Newport Sh•d, N.O. pm. 837~.t atriped, Xlnt Condi 64,,...._.. 1 1 ~ I :a ., • 1 , 1 . . •• ' ' .. • i • ·- , I, '• • • , ' • •• ' 1 • • • 2J PILOT-ADVEmSER MERCHANDISI! FOR SALE AND TRADE WedntSdiiy, .A0911st 5, 1970 Wedond•Y, A-t 5, 1'110 DAILY PILOT /El MERCHANDISE FOlt MEliCHANDISI FDR FREE TO YOU PETS ind LIV ESTOC K TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRlNSPORTATION TRANSPORTif10li SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE Dot• U25 !!!f Strvlc.. 9037 Molorcyci.. t)OO C1n1pon ts~ lmpomd --fdtnlture IOCIO 2t PC. "'MADlllD'' 3 ROOM ORDUP FROM MODEL HO?.IES Incl_, QuU... -l r.hair, 2 end tables • col!ee table, 21amP9, ,rre.er, rnJr. ror.'beadooua; QUilted box rprin&S It mattttu, 5 pc dinlnl room: table A: f hi· back cba.ltt. OlMPARE AT $'7f9.95 $399 No do'wn PtnlJI. On!y $1G mo WELK'S WAREHOUSE fiXJ W. 4th St., Sil.nla Ana CONTEMP. oiled walnut din- ing lable. perf oond. ~ns 10 seat 12. Custom pads incl . Ori&;. $31Xl, St'll $125. 6-12-:ioDT -Pl•noo & °"lln• 11:111 Mlocoll-• 1--------SAVE NOW DURING SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE We bave tnd&lns, ftPQI. renl returns It Doar models of every modtl Hammond Organ, 1,Buy 00\lf • rtcrive extra di»count HAMMOND In CORONA DEL MAR 2854 E. Cout llW)I. ~ Open 1.lon A: Fri eves. \VALNtrr SPINET Pl.ANO Major mfll', $399 Inc bench, d~J ., &: 10 yr warranty, ' llAM?.fONO ORGAN 1 only, $199 inc bench, del., & v.•arranty, COULD MUSIC CO. Since 1911 2045 No. Pa-1ain, S.A. • 547-0681 .. CUSTOM *JEWELRY* t.lade tv your order, Old jewelry modttnlud. Custom caat'a: &: cut'r 1111ppJiH. Full line of Rockhound &: IJURRYJ Brkft OWllet ~';8~ ottc:r~~ ~w:-. ""'::"*" ~~i ~:....,. •• Cel<oat * SUZllXI * ENGUSH FOID ~· puppies. s wa.tcbdos, yet iowt k1ds., F"rft EattnWc.. se&-.1152 • -~ adon.hle 1em&Je '°""' 2 "'° Scrvl<w Ille llari>o< Area ":;'r,f,EW -LISH wka. Need ..... bomn. 1;.... .....,.. "'-1~ e .,£_,,__ . ""'..,,, . •1be:re'1 JQlt Too M'&llY!" -v toy .,........k! l!UPP'"-Bott Cherter 9039 ~ _, ... _ f'O NOW IN STOCK O'ies Owner. 6tW1Q sn M6-CIU 113 E. 17th St. CM -Patti • ltll\ln.nce DR.ASnCAU.Y ATrENTION rul cat '°""n! WEST--Wbt Tor-U-sKIPPER Dix. 3S F JAMES LTD OPEN ROAD REDVCED Have ldttu,_ Wl1Pirlt It rim, Whl Scotue1, champ. PEARSON /J.BE..RG, Au.c. Wanu1&c:turl!n ot America.'1 TO Cl.£\R e--•woolclrftbeliew. s.lrt, 0004.llerslc. AKC, Sail!'¥ .. s-ietop, 'FlJN. ,,,.o~ Old Ne-Bl>'"" fhont Llaury Recreaticm LARGE SEL.ECT10N ·-.., -1-shotl. 893-1378 or 891.J564 N-8\JN In n:al Yacbtlng ...,.,.. .. .....,.. ·u. V h'-'-TO CH~-~ ne.ut. orance It Wht. all ...... , ~·----II ... ""''• M... &IJ.0040 e -. ~ In.um """"· -.. """ -·· Af9h1n Pups-AKC Rev ;~·'" ;;;;;--,::;;;. ~;; '70 113wa...i.: 250 -·· 5t9-aSt5 8/6 Top blood.lint. Bred with the of beaut. Catalil'll., etc. O.V-~ Brand new \a camper sped.al ROBINS FORD 5 Adonble Cock...-Poo pup, sbow riQl'ln mind, 962-9989 LY i;ro DAY! tW/'l Da.y Ford· •iiit rims· VS· auto DlQ Uarbar mvd 8' wU • curly l lhort hlllred MIN. Poodles, AKC, black laUn. I 64&.2272 Like new! 9,000 miles left on with U' ""' Open Road Costa Me.ta &0.omn 4 female 1 male netd gd Fun-y, Joveabl". 3 mos. zr TilOJAN fly bridge warrantyJ Movinc, niust camper. Dlx. boot. bump.tr, l'l!~~~!!!'!~~~~~I ~ fried ;)'d. '174-1309, Champ blood, $40. M9-084t cruise,.. loaded-el pg 6 $8S day seU. Shur-Lift jacks, ~I; 839-695t. 8/6 OLD Englilh. lheepdos PQ.P9. $450. wk. 646-8000 $600 or Betit AWQL NEED Gd home fnod yd dwnpMJn sired, beaut., pet 114.21$ for ol .oort.ble Beagle mix • lhow qual. 4~n4.3 pUpS 7 wks, 3 male l TOY Poodles. male; AKC. female, .J,.53S.3814, 83$-4493. RegiJ:. "8111.ck Beauties" ·"°""--=---==,,';7:/6 $100-$125. 6.17-9106 Mobile Homn ----AUTHO RIZED $469S Total Pric:e OPEN ROAD 8lt 80. llAJUIO& BLVD.. SANTA ~A, CALIF. FERRARI DOVER Shor-ell Custom 8' lu>en f1oraJ sofa. Spanish \\'all lamps 46". Ca 11 I Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii" Lapidary ltij)pliN. FIVE M GEMS, 2TO E. 17th St. •IS. C.ttt. &15-1909. 2 German Shepherd puppies SCHNAUZERS, m i n . 1 bl.Ii: 1 multi colored 1 fem/male. g 'Wttka. AKC male 1 female need a &d Ca.II -M0-2164. REPRESENTATI VES FOR Cornell, Continental, Para- mount, Ge~ral. Star, Sher- aton Manor, Flamingo, Dool \\'ide. Barrington Ir Broad- Cl ~ .,, of Disneyland) (1lt) Ill....,. • ISt-4131 t;.1&--6400 -Ii. sofa, Early An1erican FloraJ desien S50 * 646--0636 alter 4pm * K.ING si~ ~ Complete, Pl 54$.320 FALL MOSE SOON ARRIVING All di9continued models or pianos I o~ mw being closec: out at di5COU.Dt prices you can't beHeYe. Shop~ & Stt! home 548-5391. Jl9 !'.Jonte OLD ENGLISH SHEEP Viata C.M. 818 DOG PUFS. AKC , Rare, Olnapeke Bay Re-828-J701 trieve:r 9 )Tl '*!, unfriendly --------- with -·· ><h>t, watch TRANSPORTATION """· Cho-Mobllo H°'"" 1200 ·N. Harbor, S-A. 531-!l!X> '67 vw Camper RAT • Office Fomltu ... IOIO \V ARD'S BALDWIN SI"UDIO 1819 N~. C.M, 642-8484 PIANOO & ORGANS Helin'd 34x60 v.'OOd desks, NEW &: USED DBL Drapes. be1ae, 12xl\S. traver1e rods .$25. axl' $15, C'hkll's red.wd slide It balnl set $25. flonll drps &: valance bo)( llx7' '2(1, dttk S20, cotfee tbl, Pd ban,gi.tw lamp, Dinkittfo ra lllng: <i·ll&hY Sl!iO. 2t'9 Oriftwo.ld Rd. Cdill ~c. SS CASH$$ doe for farm er bu&ihess, 10 ----· -----rood home, s.tO-~ Boats & Y•chts 9000 N~.!""''!t 1 &yr h~~ SCRAM-LETS gn.nikblldren 7 tiger kittens 123.11 BE'acb Blvd., G.C. $2931) Auto Service Fully Equipped. .!-Y•;-OT-IC_E ____ '$2488~1 g $69.50 e Relin'd wood arm e Yamaha Pianos Orpns rotary chairs, $29.50 • We e nximas Organs have the Ingest &eleclion e Kimball Pia.nos •~ 1 How• ~01 ~"'" & App lio~c ... 1 Ho ~•~l~I o• 1 P~ THE MEAOOWS au """ loving bomet. ANSWERS • SERVICE Sl8-5448 811 e PARTS TV. 8' cuslom couch (no Soiree _ Lilac _ Niece _ (Irvine) • BODY SHOP -to •port 1"' Harbour V .W. s.i .. o.,.n SUnd•y 962S Garden Grove mvtt. or used office furn in lhis e Kohler & Campbell area . 642 4558 c\WlloDS), lge tnlnk to lix VolumP; -INVOICES NO\V OPEN UNTIL g Ptit !BTIJ B,EAOI BL., SU-4435 537.7711 Cull Qllaect tlUNTINGTON BEACH • Mc Mahan O..k COAST MUSIC 1800 Newport Blvd. NEWPORT & HARBOR up. Yoo haul. 814 E. Ocearr. Did you hear about the ac-Reservations are now being MONDAY NIGHTS! MWMdlltl1g p RECORD pla.yer &: record1. rnint (comer ot "A'' St.) count.ant who kept he:arlna taken In Orange County's DEAN LEWIS APOLLO 0 - - - -• 64.2-M50 Costa Mesa * GQ.2851 Open lo.ti Fri 10.9 Sun J2.5 childttns book.it, ''»ome in Dalboa 811 sttang lNVOICES? finest & IT'I08t complete park ----TH -IN• - French", adult books "IOme 1 I ·1v LE Bia •. hl atl4851 JeH~ Road c··--,,,.....,1_,.._-~='"7.C6'6-~93tl.1--e .......:.: AB c,;; &: w te CR! "-, ->I~OR HO'tES In fine blndin&'.1". 25c-$2. fc1nale c:at & ! wee t SA }'JCE -2-4 It cabin rounded by On.ngt Groves) 2 Ansen 15"x.IO" map, u1 " ' "f~J" 2 DESKS, di.airs, fil"', ofllc:e PRIVATE PARTY machineti;, etc. Llke new, want! to buy piano priced lo &ell, 1508 for CM.sh 113: 461_1423 Movie cam"ra, wet suit, lo~haittd Calico spayed crul5"r 18 h.p. big Chrysler ln Irvine. Fot infonnatio1:1, y,•/trc.w Fittttooe s I le ki * AU Steel Structurr aquarium. mlsc. 542 El fem•le. Had shots. Marine. Just pa i nted caU 89J.5730, S3l-85n ur $100." U.S. M.,.14'' $100. * F\beMf'J<llL"'LIGExA1'NnorS· Cornwall, N.B. ]Q..4 pm, I --'-"-'='-"-"-=-'- 646-4331 Modena, N.B. 642-4452. 5"8--0313 8n thruout. Perfect sha~ au 5.11-!105. 4 14 .. Pirelli Cent. Radiall LADIES diamond d in ner AKC Basset Hound . R--' ~-' · .,'>'lrVI ,.._,, """' LR · T elevlsion · around. In y,·ater now.1 ,.,."'J:~~~!'!'!'l'"'""' •·"\ Be!1t.-een G.G. mvd. •17th SI ''fRlfDLAHD~ ....... u ... -=--pnce ~· ......_.. COSTA MESA 644-2381 13951 Harbor mvd. 9 8205 ~~ ~ 21~ ~· ~=~ = ~:. aft 7:30 p.m. 49l-3Bi. MODEL CLOSE.OUT 1--...;-;;V\;;v,.-,,...,=.--,:tra::c,.::--axl=.,= Garden Grove * 5.l1·28a2 tl~=c: ~ti Office Equipment 8011 •ADDRESSOGRAPH All mod@ls: Remndltioned w/guaranlee. Service &:: sup.. plies, Plate embos.iing ser- •WE BU 'l a: SELL -% karat on "acb side. ~eves 811 • l9&1 22' LYl\tA.N. 178 llP 9 new model mobile homes II bodypart.I. '69 Chevv 1/z-Ton NEW-USED-SERV. rxirtaj),;e Brilliant cut Sacrlflc:t~ Rep-V-8 Gray, SIS radio, baH are bein&: oUel'ftt at ttduc. e ~ • "r ----------_.... TV's, at gooci prit"el. ly to Bo:r: P360, Dally Pilot l ~S yr. old, whit" She~, tank. head, navy lop, full ed prices. All •re set up in \~Ith T· low mile~. - - -..----.. 3003 Filmore Wy, No. ![;, MUST WI. MinoJla SRTlDl female. Need blg ya . . covr-r. Top Cond. $24.50. beautiful Gre<!nlellf Park, l Tr•lltr. Tr•v•I MU .uto~' ~-er steer: .--:-::-c=--=-~~~-1 CM . 35 SLR Parlt Hal Loves Kids & aduUs. Big G1S-5882 f"\/l!S &: "''kends, mile from ocean. 1---------a.ir , Dr. WW . '69 Fiat 124 Ca. * .>l~H!1 * mm : t r e lovable swtety, 530-3389 wkdays 642-0010 Ta"-No-w F'·y o• H""· T F. NT-c A.\fPER: LJTE car In trade or tl.oance pn. Ex r- vice. 300 Win mag rl!l.e; New T !\C •• ,...... '" • ... \\T IGHT XlN'f t'OND vate party, Call 546-4052 ot otic red with black vin;)'J COLOR TV. needs picture dual 1229 1lereo turntable. FREEZER-Oki fashion c:heat 1 Boat, flbe:gla.~ over bor Blvd 90. to 19th, then S'.·.;. ' ' · 494-9773. bucket sea ta. Low nilles, has -===*=17='=·""'==*=== I tube. Would be good aet All perfect cond, make ol-st;yJe w/mmpartments ap-\\ood, 5<»tp Evinrodl". 22 ~~t to 1750 Whlttier Ave. .v had exce.Uent care. Sacrl· -wflltUe 'Mlrk:. $50. c..Il fr-r . 497_1812 aft 6 p.m. prox 18 cu ft needs work Gallon gu tank, control1, Colla 1.!eu. MZ.1350 * m-o931 * 8' FULL cab-over c:a.mper, flee! CXLY?l5J T&%e . older Go_rage_Sa.l.:.• __ ..cc8022 642-38« evM. ===-,.-~,_,..~,,.,...,. 541)-1652 8/7 trlr, bait tank & pump. $750. '68 NTh1ROD Delullt', sips la.ct, discontinued moc' I. ~ ADMIRAL Refrig. dbl dr, Call &40-1401 RIVER SPECIALS Co 1 ,~, 869 w t car in trade. \VUI ~i1~ 1'.tUsr S!ll houseful or NEW &-USED TVs 1-13 mo old Laboradore pup. Ne ,.,, ··•-ho ali •• ,.. 6, stv, icebox, dln lbl. $600. mp ete. ..,.,.... es prlvale pal1y. Call Pat dlr. $125, studio couch $38, Ken-Cd t 17' CABIN cruiser, • 11 w ..... Wlu-e mes g UJ 548-4156 18th St., Costa .Mesa. be au I i f u 11.lediterranean For sale/rent. more dehvce na dryer $100. PY. female, temperamen fiberalass, w / 2 35 HP da:mqed, Perfect rOr the~ -========= J ~a~lt~l~Oia~m~491-~'ll03~.~54Q.,U!ll;,;~· !urn; 8' velvet sofa It Dunlap's, l815 Newport, 01. mini bike $100, breakfasi for children 642-3165 aft 16 Evinrude el"C. start motors, lt-youndfer. Original sell~ T ii Utll"t 9450 ~ '68 Fiat 124 Sport Coupie 9,228 lovcseat. 2 King:-s.z bedrrn 548-1188 i;r:I, $40. Mt-0437. p.m. 8 5 sips 2, on Big Wheel tilt ina: price. $600(l.$70(l(I. Redue-ra ers. 1 Y Dune Bugglet 9525 Org. mi. Never reaia. $22l). sets, Hi-*k: ve l ve t riotusT fM!Jl, 2 aets or reg. AKC Bas.set Hound. Fem. trlr, $1095 or lrade. 642-1137 ei; for clean~ Uln'.l-$5000. i•11• TRAILER'" '69 CUSTOM made MPyl'n 613-GMS decorator chairs, Pme aets, I ·T-.-po--R-oc_o_rd_1_rs __ 82_2_0 sz box 111>ring hardly uaed, 4 yrs, tJi~lor. Lovn kld1t. 3(1' OWENS '&I T\VIN 225, BAY HARBOR 9' \\'OOden bed. JA" •nale Iron Manx. Dune Buggy, metal l:========:I pictures, lamps &: etc, AJI like lle\V, Cost S190 peT 1et. Needs tenct'd yard. 540-ai38 Ul 1425 Baker St., Costa M"sa. railing. Good ti.res. \VIU car. Dake blue. dirt &: 111.ud HONDA less than 3 mo. old. Pvt _... u-~ cl•·p-·• f'Vt!!I 8/7 HRS, L\1MAC. XTRAS , ... 1 South 01 u.~-.~ ••• 3 pry will sacrilic:t. Plea!e AKA i TAPE DECK m..,,.e o ~·; _,. ,_,_. . '-1UST SELL .'.ill-1778 Diego Frw)'.~ru; s'.;.Mitj ry motorcyeles or can be ttady, s i-reet legal. Lots of ----------1 call 523-02-ll. MODEL XJ00.12 M7-1537 OALMATION fttnale spayed. 021~.-,~.-. ~11~,oo=o~EN~h-ull-----s used lor uWlty hauling. guts? S.18..s286. 1773 Cttst· SAT & Sun, Aug. 8 & 9. AMO'l'led tapes inc. \VESTINGHSE walnut blk & All &hoU hsbrk, ' people work. Good for character '68 Golden Wes!, 20xS7 UJi;e 174-2155 mount Pl.. O.l G hi $75 Londo •SlOO • whl TV cormle S50. 1' ~ alter 5 P · ~h boat. 6~ new! 2 br, 2 ba, dishwasher. rt.AT Bed trailer v.·lth '64. V\V pan \V/front t>nd a!! re g:. • n •5-$-9141* Naug. 90(a $15. Strobe lite Porch. &kirts, awnln&t. Adlt d'IOC'kt fOl' Se.bot 600xl6 tin• Lrnkf's, iteeri""'· ......ials & lounges $1D ea, droplee.f ==~~,:...;=--,-I t trol SSO d '"" """' table $15, carpetl SIS ea. SON\' TC20J 4-lrack stereo w remo e con · KIT11ES-you11g s Paye S.llboats 9010 park, nr. pool. ph 968-3651 !\nly $50. 613-0lt5 cable1. Xlnt start !or Dune & misc Items. 3209 Montana tape recorder v.·/speakers =---"~4-238~~1--c-c female. Loving. trained in-2 BR. unlum 10x55 dbl., ex-B•iggy! ~ aft 6 & Ave., C.M. 54frl24.2 & mikes. $75. 6T~ DBL yellow head parrot, 1 doodulr J>e!:,.. T!....,k.ind matu81"; HOBIE CATS pando. $6950 • Sp No. 86, Trucks 9500 -"-"'-'~•..,nd~'=~==-cockatlel, parakttl1 Ir cage. a 11· ..............,, 21462 Coast Hwy, RB. Key -e DUNE BUGGY: 1 R~I lloratt 1 1 bl'°"""/ .... ~. 1 Sporting Goods U00 Moving. Ml1te l!emt, few SHEPHERD Mix, very ALL COLORS at Sp. 324 afL 3:00 pm. BRAND NEW Fiberolass •m. ""' ' • ' w u~•n. -'---=------• ntlqo... Shephftd/ooll~ omall, malo, rood wi•h FREE DEMOS Xl 1970 G.M C 31. TON VW 1600 ,,.,;: •• PLUS' 2 black chairs, 2 lamp•, EL Pai po knee ma.chine, 48", PUJ>I. 847-3801 children 5 31 _ J 0 8 5 or • • '66 SUZUKI X~. nt • , 74 • · .-.1""'"" • 2331 Rutcen Dr, C.M. yellow tint. Uke new . $40. ""7"=-==--.,., 5..1l-ml 816 CAP'N EDS cond. Clean & dependable, $2600 .•.. 962--0692 :"5-<917 tW&-001 SEALEY Qoeon "· b<d -$250. 536-1'£7 CAMPER TRUCK CORVAIR po•·•nxt d" ne ;==========::= comp.I. $20. PhUm rtfrig. SMALL Female Cockapoo ~ W. Cit. ltwy. NB SU.224ol =o========. b GE Refrig. SOO. sinol~ bed ··--'·-ti-•~ ~-1 ol v•-...... ~ ~ with M '2lS uggy, stret't legal. reg., nnnnn THINI · HONDA $11 "fRIEDLAHDBr 111'• MACM (MW't. •I 537-682• • 893-~ NEW-USED-SE RV. l'U'U'VVI ·~ l600 -........ • ... , -· cur;a • 3 _. ....... 5""" BIG bargain -22' sloop.~lng. otor Homes plale -"-hl -il Sl5, dbl bed S20. h!.cha\r Ml1cell•neous dra~-e:rs $5 • .amall coHee tbl chlldttn 5 31_30 8 5 or _ _. 11 3.5() VS. t lpeed, J>O\\'l"r a teer. s. 011-urne w s. • .. S8. hi • sv.ivel chair $8, ---------~· 531__ 816 ""' mut, niew u. s, cover. in<, CWttom mouldh• .... , "·•t· construction. $950. 646-193.J.. JAGUAR * AUCTION * S5. ,..__ -~• aoxU;.,y, all liko new. ~ 1'70 MOTOR Hom•, ,1,.ps ~· ·~ l---=sl~, RCA waaher f70, FRIDAY. 7:30 P.M. ~~~E~;:~:1 ~1~:! RED Iolrldlh ~!,tt te_~i~d;n2 ~r:,~~· sell tor $950. 6.S&lJOCan 642-3240 :;rtn~:Ddua1~l'll •;j~p ~~OLf~~F; ~~~sc:~~'. JAGUAR *ANTIQUES CA LORE: AUGUST 7th ~ .. .,j .... acket. Si 12, 7 mos yrs ' ..... ~ea ".,. • bumper. 150x16 •pit{ rim Completl', ready for dwic HEADQUARTERS ht.nlo: beds, furn & mlac. From ?\ledel Homes old. Orig price $1000. SeU N~s good home. ~6 STURDY 20' ivooden auic. tube type tlrts-•<64315 bue:gy. Ms-6519, 962-1782 17698 San Marino Cir, r·. SPANISH GLASS TOP for $450. 49'-0266 lllary sloop. Sleeps 2 • Mini Bikt1 9275 $249. 9 ' * CORVAIR po"'"J't'd sand. The only autbori:t:~ JAGUAR v1.~., 962-54li CAl\.IE TABLE&. 4 CHAIRS, =~==~----1FINE male Maltese ldttem Galley. head, new dacron -~------rnil. Nl'OOs lo be compl, dealf'r in the enu.r. Harbor CRA1'"TSMAN Power lawn will make beauliru.I & lovlnr saU... A8 Ui S1800. &IJ..3971 4 HP. POWELL Mini Bike (wtth purchue of Truck & $600 or 11 oHer. 646_0024 Atta. GARAGE SALE: Antique EL OORTEZ DIVAN, sweeper 30" brush. MW pets for ttme who adopt Fibefilus It Geleoat $125. K!l'lg ot Road c:•mpcr, Serial Complef4.> this, antique & antiquaria n SPANISH GLASS TOP Urea, A·l cond. Coat $125. them. 66-0131 sn * * Repairs* * • LI 8-3590 * •5315). DUNE Buggy SALES magazines. tJ;ac, J.WB Via Color T::f s!u~:; sfer. Sacrifice $50. 642-2841. 2 ONE )'Uf' old ,rey cats. Free Eltlnu.tu 548-1752 POWELL 5 hp Qallenpr. UNIVERSITY excellent condillon SERVICE Oporto. N.B. eo, ot~ 1V's .r. steT"E'Oll. FENDER Bau amp.1ltler part Sla.me!IC', need Jo\!e. 'll' Flbef'lla11 Fam.Uy boot. Perfect. $140 OLDSMO, BILE 49-1-8333 Laguna Bch. PARTS TUES-SAT. Lamps, di1hes, ...... deluxe Rkkenbacber baa MS-OUT 8/7 Slip. ~oo "6-358.5 9600 BAUER tbl 1 J • Bdrm sets, rommodes, .,..,.. .-.~ I rt·• C s, gasses, n c-nac 1, . eWtar F"~E ~ .. ••·• alt«-to S48-U&4 or 1!115-4TS5 2850 Harbor Blvd. mpo ~ •rt BUICK ping-pong lbl. Lot's MO!'e! fet1. dineHes. Spinet piano * 675-640C * n.i;:. .,.,..,<II.., ... Costa Mell 541).9640 , 546-4211 & Thomas organ. Maple kMnr borne, P~ Call Sabot • Ractnr Schock Motorcycles 9300 Salesmen Wanted ~ chairs &:. rockers, oflic:t DREXEJ. 8-pc mahopny 962-2359. 8/7 No. 4002: Xlnl co~ '63 FORD Econollne Van l .. ~ Appllanc11 1100 e MAYTAG Sef'Vicr M11n, has washers, dryert1 & mat. ching &ell. 8&1:. Guarantee. 531-8631. desks, nf'W carpeting, Re. din'& aet w/buffel, Duncan 7 German Shepherd mix pups Red \v/h"aller 673-l14j '69 NORTON 150 Commando owner, 36,000 actual mi'1, Experienced only • Stralghr COSTA MESA' frig's, iiidr-by-side &: :kloor, Phyfe. value $2000, 9eU $600. 4 males 3 rem&les need gd COWMBIA °"tender t29' 1 t"astback rooo mi. xlnt cond. I mm a cula1e throughout, If'~. A n~n Iha~ c~n r!!art 234 E. 11th Street ! •.... _ new, washeni, d..,,-en , 531-3956 ..__~ '-..... d ·~ ~., !/B new tach cable & hOrn . just SllOO. 613-82CM a comp t"le a t>a . mo 5-eTIGS = •J '""''""' u ....... Y · ~..... Sips 6, lnbrd, run racing tunrd, new point.I, plugs, ph1.n. insurance, eood houn,1.~,..,-==~~~~~ atoves, And much more! Misc. Wanted 1610 FUU.Y Fledaed ma I e par"-many xtru. 4!M-7715 eonrtenscr. $1200 or best '67 Chevy Van nit' or ""ceUent pay plan. Call Rlck '59 JAGUAR Maril IX. f\lll WINDY'S AUCTION poodle, 4 moa, color blac:k. ERICSON 26, I.Ip• 5, d10t'Ue, reuonable offer. Mus-t sell! c:~ft ~~1S,:~ 1-"ritll 8 to S, 541)..4493. power, auto, uuap tl"&)'I, COME BROWSE AROUND 2075~ Newport Blvd. \VANTED: 49'-5383 811 loaded ~·/xtns. clean, stlp 54.5-4160 Xlnt in!erlor. tools, Looks Used da.rk room equ ip. •nd 2 Et:•uliM black ~; Slarnellf! avail. $j.500. 54§..2688 '611 I\ AW A S A K·l 250 '62 Chev \ii Ton PU. }o'leel· AUSTIN HEALEY like ·57 Roil•. $1~. !ill...:!956 4x5 G15-0t25 d to ......M side bed, 1te ..... bum-r, ovc/ lO wk ol klt'.'!111 •"""' ----i<i:.'ewindcr Iott of chrome. ,,-,~ SOLID walnut desk 62'' x 28" contemp. desl1tn, 5 •lra.wers $1.50. 646-43!7 aft ·1 P~1 . Behind Tony's Bldg Mat'l11 Machinery. Etc. l700 Coa1a Meaa * 646-8686 hom• ,.._.." "' Power Crul11rs 9020 """'"' "'"""''"· J "'t •n" '395· 673·6915 AUSTIN AMERICA ~~EDES BENZ l Month old, Black &. Brown turned 1.000 miles $565, '6'1 FORD Econollne, rebuill USED appllance1 I TV1 All guaranteed, DunJnp's, 1815 Newprt. CM 548-7788 OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 Woodwor king Mach. ,,._~ 2-t 1'"1' CABIN Cruiser, I8S ~~" ~-~ e1"4:"lne, new lire!!, $900. Fem. cocker-mix. "' '""1 hp lrg . Chrysler MarJne, ',,,-,.....===,,.-=:-= 64~2239 or 646-5380 or 548-5313 811 1 '68 GREEVES 250 MX, Sale1, Stn1ee, Part.I Immediate Oellvny All Modelo 0 1 .111~e Couri!y'._ l .1 r9l'~I "il.!l•·tl 10n Nt•W 8. l , .. ,.,j Mr-rtt•cJr ... H1·111 {3) Rl':F'll!GERATORS All white. $2.'"~$45 646--7820 1 ~O" TILTING Arbor table 5efi It make oiler. 1618 Ohms ltaW, ] 12'' ban& like new, \Vay, C.t-.t. 6(5-0991. Just pa.in led t hr u o u I • '68 Ford Econolinc, Sacrifice FREE Tet gd. homf. Lo\'able Perfect shape all nround. Springer front end, never Lab Pupple1, 3 From litter Jn v.•ater now. SACRIF1CE raced, xlnt eond. 492.-2312 for honeymoon, $l j0 0 . var'ous blade~. S 2 9 5 • METAL Lathe, all equipped, of 6 Jett 833-1413 8/i PRICE $2'200. Call aft. 7:30 I ,,,•,.11 7 5,.,'00p,;,m_,,. ,--.-,,--=,,,-646-~9S. J2rtuport 31111p L11 ·1 ~' 962-7137 Xlnt cond. $1000 value sale Jim Siemon; Imp;. Rcfrl&:erator &. Stove w/up. rlght oven. Top cond. Call: 646--1503 • CRAFTSMAN 1able-sav.'. $600. &37-9542 FREE Puppies: Germen p.m. 49J...l996. '70 AMER. Ea1tle Comanche 195.5 CHEV ~ ton Pickup ~ ··• I u ·'d $295. Phone 642-6932 •rler Fence &: 'lUKl $39 Motor optlonaJ . 549-0!Lll FREE TO YOU Shepbena ..... 1 w .,. · 71' Ora~ . Craft. Exp. Cnll.. 125cc, Moto-Crou. $ 5 0 0. 6 ~:1617 811 er, m llP, Chrysler Heml., Llllt new, rarely ridden. pm. W.1rlH'• & t,\,,,n ',r c:~-·~ • . .. 011 -1 NEWPORT Beach TeMiS !----------SWEET And lovable pure Long range, fut. $3(0), 646-6134 white male kitt"n -Meu Trailer ava.H. 673-8945 I ·,~67~H~O~N~D~A~300~~S<-,-.-m~bler Verde M&-1833 8/fi '&.'! 28' Chris entrt, !win -Xtra. chroml', ru111 good. 3 cun: KJttens, bo" trained l!Cn'W. approx 130 m on to.take ollcr. Call alt 3, I short tall. 2 k>ng 1ail new cng. S5M> or bt'1t otter, 54~1000 A!k for Bruce StOO W. Cout Hwy., N.8. ' ' Jeep1 9510 6-12·~ 54().17&1 1958190 Sedan, 90" re~tcrtd. REfo'RlGERATOR: lb cu, !I. e XLNT COND e ,,,,_,,JIT Mtlques 1110 -- Wheeler Tr1ding Post Beads, vintqe clo!heti, col- let::lOrs ilem11. Special Indian tape•trie1. $4.95. •108 E Ba.lboa Blvd, BalboA Club ramlly or s I n g I e membentiip $450. 6731188 f'OR Rent • Cabin • Mam- moth Lakes, sips. 7, turn., trplc. 5 Niles $15. 531-3374 or 540--0617 eve5. KIRB'l VAcum.t CLEANER Comp!. w/111 attach. + floor polisher. Ilk~ new. Sacrifice SllO. 837-1238 all 3:30. DINING Set $311., SpocJe ~CTOI\IAN oak bu ll"' China, 1'.! place Ge~ha Pfll, val. $55(1. ai;k ing $325. So!OO: a\90 caf'Vf'd jade bulldog, $500 ... 613-0802 -'=9.1::.'::=:.:.:.-~----,,.. COMM'CL J::lect 1;gn, dbl 8 .. Rleel ('(!! 20' high, lna\de lighted te'.J.der panel 4Xl0' 54&-11177 Musical Instrument• 1125 FENDER BASS AJ,tPLIFIER SET ?t1ehnac di1he1 $10.: DELUXE R1CKENBA(l{ER N"w klrtg SlZP. bedspttld, DASS GUITAR royal blue $18 493-.'18'73, * 67J.-640( • FO'MWN elec. camera, eo1t1 TR u M p ET 0 Id I $300. Lcwyt tank vacuum Ambauador In ca&e $&. clf!anC'f' $25. 673-2128. I ===="'::~;.:"":::;:===-= ,, llOlJDA y l-lelllth Spa 1 · -membentdp: S380 or tW Pianos & Ora•n• 1130 ow-r payment•. &46-31fii ltAMMOND, Sltlnwl)', Yam. aha. New 4 uMd pt.l'IOll of meet makN, Be1t buyl In So Calif. Al Schmkh MUltc C.0. l!kn N, lalairl, Sanla I na SINGER Zlg-ZAg S60. Lit• weictit lZ ~&e acmnlla.n $90. SSJ..QMO. COPPER enameling kiln llboul I" In diam. $lS. Asmrted <qU!p. u. m.911.! e FOR We: Ort 11 nal 1899 UpriKhl Plano. reoond. ?tftckey Moult watd!! B&sf 11.('tion. A.Aklrt1 $125, 641-741.1 orr. 642-Cl01 - or 833-6301. With j\111 a call, )'OIJ can O'~R'°'G"A~N~&~Pl-ano-~lea_oo_1....,.by-1 MU ,, 11111 Place a Dally profraslonal te.cber. Fin Pilot Oaaltsf!d Ari. Ca.lJ method. 541-aO&: direct eCo687t TODAY! KIDS Bored? Takr 1 or mont of our orana:e or blonde mole klttens or female c:11licn funny (ace !hort haired pt Siamf'~? AJJO gd nWllher ii" h111red. &fol'!! 10 or altf'r -4. 5-15-1706 sn INTELLIGENT KJttle1 •nd at&. -4 wltl lo 1 yr. ~f&lu &: F~nWe1. shol1 haired and fluffy. white blue eyed, turquolR, ct.llco •nd l silver v.·lth blk. SMt-1119 1(7 54~196.'\ 8/6 or trade 1'.' 84&-2448. 1970 Honda CB 450 . 3 Bl•ck klltent, 'cvable l Di1e brla;. 2 wkt old. Sweet, box . tr• In ed, Spetd-S~I Bo1t1 9030 Sacrlftc:t at $915. 53fr2122 1193-2986 8/3 14· SKI " Speed boat Sl-15. 2 '69 TRIUMPH Bonnes • l.DVELY Ye altm!d cat tree Al.lo I' Hldro $4S. Both 650cc Xlnt cond, mu.&t acll. lo good home:. 646-7096 811 comp w/rt'gh;traUon Ph: $l025 each. 5.18--9037 PETS •ncf LIVESTOCK 96&-2828 • 1969 K.wasakJ :,(I) e 12' 1.fJNJ...sPORT: 40 hp 3XX.l ml. $700 Pets1 Gener•I llOO Evlnrude w/trnUer, elec. 6ffi.0021 2 Y•.llow o. ,\nA•?F.ETS 1tar1. $12l0. Aft. 5 :00 l!USKY '69-250 CROSS. " 968-6057 never raced. sm. -------Aulhorhed MG Dealer w/orlglnaJ Dalmltr • Benz '64 JEEP '66 AUSTIN llealey 30C(l gray palnr. new tirel, Mark 111, XLNT condition, ch.l'Om", valver:; lranamta.. slon &:. inlerlor wood trim. Nt'w top, new en&ine, new 4 lo mileage. MS-4297 •"°'"' U NTU "•) "··( drl I dl Ex I==========:/ ....,;;. or o er. I ""', \\',..,., ve un t, r. lr•1· 64&26l9 sharp! A rtal buy fOr the DATSUN -~~~=~~- right per.on, lOSD 147) WW ---------I '63 100 SEDAN 1ake car In trade or flna~ PRICED TO SELL. private party. ~4052 or 'rA-i 646-871& &fter 6 only ~'::::. .... i.;.i-METRO Recreat'n_ V..,lclH 9515 ''LeaderlnTMCe•r.bClu..r., __ M_E_T_R_O_V_A_N--·I GO-KART ZIMMERMAN '"" 11-T buUtln camper, 214s HARBOR llLVD Stow, •Ink, tee bo•, YNG B:ack & wh.le male cat. Needs lil'.enlle hOme. AllO i 1) white & ( 1) c•llco kitten & (1) fem. puppy. BeforP. -4pn1. M6-35&.'l sn 18' Mu1ldn pool •nd filter, W/t;qt, $l!!,M) all. * 644-5014 * * Ca!I ~IS-1386 * CENTURY 16' Gray flt&ri ne er •~ All 1teel -Dor 1--·.. 2 HODAKA deaert bll(ea. le: ' W/McCWJwah •na. l 11"11-• cnrpttl"8, panoU""-bed. 54CM410 Xlnt cood. F"'"~DLY lemale Macaw ...... "" • .. ~ •. ~· Xlnt oond Sa•· 1111tt1: mite. •llM tor all. Ca.U k Pd l80 Wlu <'R-' .:. ........ -no liner. call 1Jl 1 mon ey. . . .-..:, &'ll-0035 61&-0024 ror $20, Ms-2638 892-1ol39 111 fREE Kitten_., rure wh!tr part Si•mHe S wkl old ho'< 'trainM 646-5914 111 !?!I• 1125 SILKY TERRJER: AKC M .. awn. Sire. ISS-1149 lf no ann.·er 544-alO 6 P1.1ppie1: Part Huaky t.: part Lab, 6·wkl o Id . 54""'3 Ill BASBETt' Hound, AKC, 10 PURE While, lovely ldtten1 wb. Champ 11MI b)I De~-ey •io-iM.I "' l •1i-iiiirii"";;;·ffi.1!38-i1-;7230;;n;r VARIETY Of tumit\U'e tree! • lRJSH SEl'iER PUPS 64&-1843 All ARC. W/SHOTS 2 Rabbitt 1 Guinea Pia, )JU Cll!'Veland, C.M. 316 M6-4'm C0CKAP00 PUPPJES $15 ea FR.EE Titer kitten1, 8 wU 963-1495 old fl82..192.1 11/6 DOBERMAN Pups, not AKC, ARJSJ'OCATS for erlsfocratl •• I ~ ho Call CAii ln eve. m,.3351 A/T ~~ tn""i. mt. FREE WOOD· 64W231 11/8 AKC Rq Wack Labrador• THE QUICKER YOU SELL ... wuned. wormed. lint THE QUICI<>:lt YOU CALL. blt•>t!llM. 175: l!S-1435 15' GLASS ski bool, 00 hp SL-350 HONDA. LO ~flt.ES. Evlntude. Top cond. XL.NT CONDITION. XTRAS. $1600, 9f.A.5.'M9 ==,,*=-"'..,,..."'"",...." ,,,*....,,= ?.1ERCEDEs.Bent d I e I t1 I englhe model 6311 compleltly ~bullt all new p1.rll. $-IOO MT-!M·10 BJ-;NOIX 1~\/0lt, non-hunt. Aulo. plk:it, ~pl. ~. 67><1&45 t"ll llP W&SfBEND OUI· board, new tune--up 6 pump. $85. Call MG-&301 '69 IIONDA 450, with BuUtt louring falrln&. Xlnt t'OOd. uon. s.fl!l-.4133 BSA 6SO Call~ $550 250 Hond•, Clean Runs rood * 548-80'.ill Ducati '65 Scrambler l300. 548-<m 'fl' 00 cc. RABBIT $~ OwDtr: 6'4-0688 • '68 Mn SCRAMBLER Bott Sllp Mooring toU JIONDA. S.'\YJ or make oH~r NEW .Ups •YalJ tor l7' JI' A 70' Power or aaU. * 67MliOCI * to • 64.3-033.\ • Hondo llOJ.Good cont!. 1250. 644-44!11 .. l\fake Offrr Aft. 6:00 839-6i>73 DOT DATSUN * "''= • OPE~AILY ---, MG Camporo 9520 SUNDAYS New '70 Datsun 11835 n .. <h Blvd. 1600 OHC, Pickup with camp. liunt1nrtoa Beach 8'2-Tltlor~ er. Sat. pric\I $2099 dlr.IT.===,..,.===.: ,. 6TJ'M) WW take ctr ln '661600 ROADSTER tta.S., Will 111I1n<e pd .. ta JJert;y. Call 546-"°52 or SUVlr r'flnllh Wlbb.dt vtnyl ...,_977.l, -4 l»'td. Dir,, (!IU~ METRO VAN !Sll will take -or nn. 1953, IJi·T bullt1n camper. ance rc'fvtte part)t call Stovt, tink. b ti o ~, 54l.f052 or oc.tm. caroetlnJ, -· bod. 'I\! 0ATSUN SEDAN XLNT cood, Rodlo, he<tu, 4 '1'fl, -* SU.-1245 * tlrtt, exctlJt"nt ('Ol'ldlt\Oll. ~ ... ~" ''FRIEDLANDER" NEW MIDGET $1"5 1Jnl ••AC:H CMWY. Ml 193-7* • 5.11.mt NEW·USED-SIRV. ~ '69 Dodp Van OtP•Y $1700 or take over U60 MG TD pm, Camper vtry lo mi's. $3100. PIJ'tllt111.f. Ptrfcct col'ldlUOn. Sacriftoe, 493-3785. • S2T...o393 * ~f\lllt Sell. 49'-8748 VW CAMPElt '* 1.1188 DATSUN 2J)O * '67 MGB-G'J', o'J:lrh'V, wtre Wlth Sun°Dl"I Interior A .. P. whl.t, roll·har, A·l cond \\hit: 30 n101. old. Lo Ml. $1500. 492-SnB A lo, ml. Jm, 81S..7t10· J.lust ~Ii. $1.ff!IS. M()..M30 ' • ., ' • '•. .. ·-. ·l . . • ·-~ •' .• • " . •' .... ' . ... ', 1 "j I . .. . ' . • I _, "' .,. • •• " . . ..... • . ·- '· ",• , I!! .... ' . I Rt SE FE! .., I Ca ""' Ha -T.N Co " 5tl I • "' lro •• • I ldr Cle Ell .... ... ~ -clt - - .. I , . -~ -------~~~·---------------------------------------------~--------------- ·----- A OAJLY PllOT w .............. , 5, 1970 'r"RAMini"'SIOR""'"T"A"'T"IO"'N.---...T"'RA"'N<'lsl'O;;n;;R'°T'AATiTl°"O"'Nc--c==------TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ---·- ~ • .t.uvust 5, 1970 PllOT·ADVERTlSE R 22 Tl'ANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION '""••>~O IHATION • - ; . lll~m~ljlOl~rt!!od'!J-~!!..-9600~ Imported ---- PORSCHE . '66 Porsche . 912 PORSCHE ~por1!_d_ Autoo'-_9600_ lmpo~ulM 9600 _1mpor1_.__oc1 __ A_utos __ ,_600_ lmpor1od Autoo 9600 fmporttd Autos 9600 Autos Wa nttd --t7QO ---- VOLKSWAGEN TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN WE PAY TOP VOLKSWAGEN ' c ... " ·:. " :· ,I MG MGI ---1---3 TO CHOOSE fRO!\.f •68 MGC-GT ,.,.. MGB-GT, e .R c. P.icoc1 ''°'" $3499 • ·:;,~~~~: '68 TOYOTA CORONA '68 VW Sedan AM/FM, wire wbet"ls. im· WD7.-!121i eorine, new dutch, new Wire wbeell, radial tirtt, maculate. $2900 or best of-CHICK IVERSON tift1, new pa.int. AM/FM, St<dan, dlr, automatlc law '67 YW Square back 5..-f '68 V\V. v•heels, paint job. 1600 cc·1 must .!lee, ;nake o!fer or trade foc 2Van ,.,,_,,., CASH for l.lled e1.r1 6: trucka ~t c.all 111 for tree estimate. AM/FM Ndllo, 6 cyl, auto-rer. 5ot5-4354 after 7 pm, VW juit like new, can be setn mlletl, radio, heater. (WX'T· Sunroof$ · (Mf·l!OI) matic traru;misSion, low 11t J:189 JllU'bor Blvd.. or Cini Take oider car ror doY.'tl 1388 miln, Lie. XSS 19;, ---------54~ Exr. 66 or 67 pbooe 66-.1982, 9a.m to &pm wW fin pvt PtY. Call Phil AM/FU ndk\ tape decll:, aJr cood. 10,CMXI mllet. on new ,..,.,.,. ....... Lie. UEP'6< e '59 VW Baja Sedan New motor, sunroof, chr. rev. 11·hls., ~50. ~368-1 GROTH CHEYROlfT $2499 MORGAN 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 1970 Ponche ·rarga-Lt aft 10 am 540-3100, CHICK IYERSON • Mo 4 COSTA MESA yellow, II.PP· hl'OUP i" mags, ~======== Ask for Sales Manqu 182'll Beach Blvd. HlIDUUi!.on Beach 60 rgan Halo'. 14900 true '69 Por.ch< 912. AM-<••= """ lo m<. TRIUMPH VW Xlnt cond, t.t otf. OR 3--2376 Xln! cond., Jo mi. European Sbo\\Tl11 ooM. Pvt pty ---Harbour V.W. ~':;';',;., squ••• backs VOLVO ~3031 Ext. '6 or fi1 purchased without dealer. 67l--4TI4 '67 Triumph TR6 1970 HARBOR BLVD. OPR Save to you! &33-2441 '63 Cabriolel, s.ilver/blk lnl. 4 speed ·\\'/overdrive, wire 847--6087 KI 9-3.1!1 l87ll BEAOI BL., SU-4435 to choose from. HUNTINGTON BEAOJ CHICK IVERSON U"UY"l.M.r THINK OOSTA MESA 1966 OPEL l\.adetl-pcrlect • "66 Porsche 912. Chrome New engine, top, paint, \\'heels, AM/FJ,f dlr. low cond. 4-ol).lhe-Ooor. $6!l(I. 11·Ws, 11.lr, lo mi. Xlnt rims. A..\f/l"M. Xlnt cond. n11le1. Runs like a fi'le YW 'VOLVO' TOP DOLLAR '63 YW Bug MEDIANlC SPECIAL 549--3031 Ex1. 66 or f)7 .... net. Be11t ofier, Mu1t 21:J.-434-S353. 11·areh. IUOV846) \\1ill lakf' Ron Riggin 1193-6198 .. ~ Uc. OKC612 1910 HARBOR BLVD. •• for CLEAN USEO CARS Se-e Geo1-ge Ray THEODORE ROBINS FORD Sell! 494-9667 aJt S. FOR sale· '53 Porsche $1-l!XI, car io trade or finance pri. $299 COSfA MESA "FRIEDLANDER" PORSCHE • 1963 Porsche-AM/flt, Rebll '60 '1600' Super eng.: vatr party. ~ or new brakes/ clutch, haS 494-9773. cH1cKv:RsoN '69 VW Sedan 2 dr. Demo. * $27~ * J1rlupo1 r 31111µorts chron1e "~!!;..,?1800 papers, must sell. 496-41198 -"'-'-=------~ '69 SPITFIRE MARK Ill '67 Porsche 911. ~ r->.1 • '68 VW Camj){'r, flip--up Lo mi. lonnea.u cvr-, radio. \\rebet'!, Xlnt cond. * '68 Porsdle 912. AM/.~" ' top, Xlnt con1, 45,000 mi's, 11550 67l-70TI - _197_ .. _~.::Jtl:.:,t.::' .:::c.o.:\.::66=B::c~:..~_g __ -1 Radio. $·"1'•1m•U1''·9t YCY 961) COSTA P.!ESA IJ1M SU.Cit IHW'I', >ti 893-7566 • 537-6824 NEW-USE~SERV. 2060 Harbor Blvd. Costa fo.1esa 642-0010 * 833-1331 * chrome y.rhb, radlal ures:. $2700 968-49'1.7 . . -~-~'--"':.;__,--;---! >Xl~"~t~oo~o~d~-~M~7~--0~Jtl6"!_, _ _,-J:::::::::::::========::.I VOLKSWAGEN 3100 w. O:ut Hw;y. N.E. NO matter Whal It is. you ~ "2-M(ti :.fG-1764 can sell ii with a DAILY BUSIEST marketplace in RENAULT l ;;i·~·~-~~~MG:;,-~~=~P~JLOT~~w~-~~AD~!~..,...,.~~;i,.i:_A~ds.~Checl<~~""=m~~~w=!'iiiiii'l--;~3 '63 V\V Low mill.'ll on rebuilt engine, H new clutch, new brakes, arbour v w ~ VOLVO WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR 9'00\IH<I Cars 99QO * '63 RENAULT Immaculate in & OUI! $385. * Stl}.5,589 '67 VW Sedan "''~-"''""'' "'""'"""· Cao • • be 11een at n19 Harbor 18711 BEACH BL., 842-4435 ONLY AT CONNELL CHEVROLET '69 '69 GMC HANDI IUS 3 seat sport van. One Q\\'ner. new car tradP-in. Automatic, radio, VS, chrome wheels, like brand new. Remalnin& ractory warranty. n.ooo MILi! 'Ii TON Chevrolet van with a new campPr conversion. 7 passenger king size bed, sink, toe box, the "'hole bit. Nice. IZZX619t vs, povo•er steering. automatic, ra~i?, factory '68 EL CAMINO air. new color. Like new car cond1uon. <2~G) Coupe. Automatic P.S .• radio, factory air, '69 OLDS CUTLASS reaJ nice car. IXSR604) '64 '67 '68 '65 '67 '67 '65 '66 '67 '69 IUICK RIVIERA Air cond., R&:H, ronsole, P.S., elec. v.·indow1, You have to see to appreciate. So nice. (GUL469J OLDS 442 4 s~. P.S., R&.ll. car is likl!! new. IUgh in color.-rubber. Stout car. !VFV071) Pl. YMOUTH FURY Ill Convertible w/air., P.S .. P.B., auto., radio . Car is pov.•d<'r puff condition. (ZZD'7ll6) FORD IANCHERO Automatic, radio, heater, P.S., see this. tMR0642J PONTIAC GTO Aut.o .. R&.H, P.S., bucket seats, consol~. new pa.Int. (WCA940) FORD WAGON f PASS. Auto. R&H, P.S., P.B., air cond., the price Is right, CHEVROLET 2 DR. SED. Auto .• R&:li, one owner new car trade-in. CHEVROLET 2 DR. H.T. c~. Radio, h('a\er, aut.omatit. Nice. IRRY538J CHEVROLl!T IMPALA Coupe. Radio, heatl'r, P.S., automatic. Strong nice car. <TPli900l CHEVROLET IMPALA 2 Dr. H.T. H&Jf, vinyl roof, factory air, P.S., low, low miles. IYYJ65l) Z730 milet;; R&.li. auto., P.S., P-dil!C bl'llkcll, '70 MONTE CARLO air cond., new car gua.ranltt, showroorn fresh, ( 87"I7) $AVE ~1499 ~199 s1799 s999 s999 s1499 s3499 TRANSPORTATION TRUCKS-TRUCKS· TRUCKS '63 '18 $TUOE&AIClll ll&lt, ..,,,., CJ1111 Cltl!V, 4 Dr. H.T, ll&lt, ,,I~ •wt.. l,U,U21 '87 (HIY. MALl&U CM. •ut.~ Ult, '-'· IYOUJll 183 OlOS t Dr. lt.T. AllM., ll&H. '°·'~ ''""" u•. ll"l&IJtl 114· P°"TIAC OTO J Df". H.T ......... , ll&H, (OU:."*I $199 '66 'Ii TON CHEVY \ti, llltM, llront lrlltk, lU'IOMtl '6S 1;, TON CHEVY \ti, •1kk, ISJl)tlt $299 $1299 '6' ¥• TON CHE•'Y va. t>l<'kvP. •Ir, P.5., r.019. CUiiom <:Ill. US11Ml 'H 1/• TON CHEVY VI, "ldt· um""' .11.i1, ANr MW $499 '6' IL CAMINO '83 CO'lo'Alll ~~ Yi, ..... ro., rldlo, P.S., nfff ntw. ltll""'I ••k-, ...... .,....,._ ..... ------------OlllF•I -,.~14~~,~,~, ~,~,.~,,.~,~. ----$=7~99= __ ,_.s'.:..'_?._!2_,_~._D,_J_.A_. -~-~-'~--E-'~-~-"-"-"·' ll&lt ......... 180 .. ., '... .... $181 ......... •&M, '"· 141121 '64 FALCON YAN Alt., '111119. (HkVUJl CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1203 TOYOTA '69 TOYOTA COROLLA RED WAGON e New Tires • Luggage Rack • Xtras Must S.11 $1375 675-a917 aft 6 PM !TIOIYIOJT!A! DEMO '-'rAGON 6372 $1817 I OTHER DEMOS AT BIG SAVINGS DEAN LEWIS li-16-9Jll BILL MAXEY !TIOIY!§!TIA! 18181 BEACH BLVD. Hunt. 6eo1ch 147-8555 I mt N. of Cout Hwy. on Bdl 1969 TOYOTA Corona· 2-dr, vinyl LOp, 4 spd. Good c.-ond. SI 47J. 846-4288 Air cond. IUVT 287J $1348 Harbour V.W. 18711 BEACH BL., 842-«35 HUNTINGTON BEACH: NEW YW BUG $55.89 pr. month $147.71 down lncluda1 tax & Lie. VW LEASING AT CHICK IYERSON vw 1910 ~lARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '68 YW BUG Au101na1ic stick shifl, low miles, dlr. Runs real good. i "'FV8Tul \.\'ill take trade vr finanrc pri\'811'" party. Call 546-4():12 or 494-9773. 19"J9 V\V $400. 642-5172 '62 VW Conv. Reblt eng:, Bright Y"llow, $800. Call 833-0158 WANTED I'll pay top doUa-:or your VOLKSWAGEN today_ Call end a'.-W for Ron Pincbol. 54!J..3031 Ext 66-67. 673-0900. Blvd, or phone 645-1982, HUNTINGTON BEACH 911.m lo 6pm • "68 VW lltdan, chrome '66 VW 2 dr, new yellow rims, Michelin tir e s , paint, magii I.-headers. sunroof, uhaWlt system, ?.tusl !lell or 11·UJ lrdde :or chaJn1. Take over older VW + cash. :H5-6519 payments. See at 1825 W. or 962-1782 BaJboa Blvd. afteT S pm. * '60 VW-CUSI'OP.f INT. * '64 VW Demo. :!f8782 SAYE $466 1800 E Cpe. for delivery. 0\er-seas df'I S~ciallst. DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor. C.i\1. 6<6-9303 -Sport Cars 9610 Xlnt n1f'ch. L'Ond. LIKE RADIO, wh1te side walls:, NEW! $550 or bsl oir. hea!er, n1u.~f see to ap- 548--0875 preclate. S620. Harbor RACING "BOSS 429" e ·53 \-W SEDAN American 1969 Harl.lor Blvd. MUSTANG $425 6-16--0261 Slick shifl, l-0wne1· Jess: than _,... l.lc"968"'-''-v°'w~7-pa-.,-5-,-._-N-ew 4,000 n1iles. Very' poy,.'errul. · Bl book 239 Black w/black interior. Con-* '68 V\V bug, 1mmac corxl, 111-C!I. lie S 5, a al I-Bo COUl"Sf' cond. Ser. ii at 251 E. many extras, private party. ~le al UAAJ, nd Publish-962--03ti7 1ng Co. 1499 t.1onrovia. cBa::;:y.::S.::l::".::C::.M==. ="=""='=36==== Fantastic '61 VW bus 6'16-44:i5 AnHqueo, Classics 9615 Rebudt engine $750 '62 V\'l Ko1nhl·Comp reblt * 67f>.1298 * eng. flf'w clutch, lihocks, 3 1929 "'10DEL A, not com· La S I • fl<'v.' lirrs. Cunvrtd info I d Old · 4 pd rCJe 8 ecflOn C<lln""r. Lug rack. 642-3070 p etc " s t'llgll"lf', $ r~ hydro. $17~. 892-0032 Of YW Campers, '6..'> VW Bus, _.sunroof, new c,."'-"10 ~c~a~R~o-,'--"-"""-· -,1~.-1 -,~~,,.,, Vans Komb·s 1600 eng, 11 473· r.1u.s1 see 10 apprec. I I I * 537-1157 * • 540-3374 * Buses, New & Used '66 vw. Owner now in army Immediate D•livery $825. Will consider terms. Autos Wanted 9700 -· -___ c:___..c;.;:. CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. Costa ri1esa w .. 1200 ThtPOR'fS WANTED Orange Counties TOP S BUYER BILL MAXEY TOYOT..\ 18881 Beach BJvd. ff. Bench. Ph. 'W7·8555 \\.'anted PCOnon1y car in need of n1echanical v;ork. * 962-8068 * Used Cars 9900 SALE City of Costa Mesa CONOEJ\INED PROPERTY MUST MOV£ THESE CARS '!'i7 Chrysler Sl29 '62 Buick Stn Wgn $149 "62 Falcon Sl59 '60 Chevy Sl 79 '60 T-Bird ~ '64 Pontiac $4fl9 CHICK IYERSON eau, 833-""7 '6..'i GHIA· ~.000 n1iles. Good YW ronditlon. i\1AKE OF1''ER! WE PAY '63 Jn1er11atillnal \•an $499 TOP DOLLAR Lots n101·e to choolie ftQn:1 519-3031 EX"I. 66 or 67 673.--67•17 or 5'12-1161 1970 llARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '67 YW BUS- 7 Pass .• Just like brand new. '69 VW. 15,C:OO miles. Xlnt Uc. USL 699. ':"""· 162' + T.O.P. Call $2099 646-4383. '70 V\\1 Karrnann Ghia $2200. Xlnt rood, lo mi. Cost $28j() nrw Ev<'s: 71 ·1: 49-1-8988 CHICK IVERSON YW :;~~:n11 Ext 66 or 67 1970 I !ARBOR BL VD. !o'or Clean, u8'!d e&l"I up to · JOHNSON & SON '69 Cad Cpe de VillP S4~5 Blue Chip Auto Sales LINCOLN fl.'ERCURY 2145 Harbor Blvd .• C.M°, 2626 Harbor Blvd., C.M. '4%~9700 * S40-4392 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS WE BUY If your car ls extra clean, Seti us rirst. CARS ! BAUER BUICK Call Manager 234 E. 17th St. 645-0466 96001mJJOrt9d Autos 9600 • '66 VW S.,uareback SSOO or trade for !ruck. * 846-4600 * COSTA MESA Costa Mesa 54&-'1765 .!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!' ! '63 VW BUG U1ed Cars 9900 U1ed Cari '!!'! N~Nw COSTA MESA Jfl67 VOLKS Station wagon, 23,000 miles. Good condition. Call 642--0296 or 548--03.'i6 '66 VW : Sunroof 1\.\1/F~f radio. 5 New Hres, Xln! cond. SIOOO. ~!1672 Rrr1 l)l•auly, f!:xC(>Jlent condi. p~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ii;iiiiiii;;i;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij tion. New valve job, small riown v.·iU fin. Pvt. Ply, d.lr. Call Plul aft lJ} AP.I 5-10-3100 or 491-1029. Tommy Ayre~ HONDA s::1 '64 YW Convertible '63 1of1CRO BUS: Red & wht rww en!{ 8r clutch. lmmac. $1300 01· n1ake olr. 5.1&--0074 Qrango with braM new,,._;, '65 vw s d 40 MILES P!R GALLON e Front Dist Brakes • Full C1rpttlng e .75 MPH 4 SpHd Tr1n•. GREAT SELECTION FOR IMMEOIATE DELIVERY Jey top &: brand new engine. e an Llc, OYJ798. $1199 Sunroof. Hadio. {F'NC 445) CHICKri:ERSON $988 !'">'19-3031 Ex!. 66 or 67 1970 }IARBQR BLVD. COSTA P.1ESA Harbour V.W. ':-i S VW Bug-Good 187J1 BEACH BL., 842-4435 tr2tlllporlatlon. ~350 or best HUNTINGTON BF..ACH of!Pr. 962-1182 or ~l4;')--iS19 '57 VW-1·ehuilt engine ,:1'il) 6'16-3181 al!l'r 6:30 '67 YW S(j)UARE BACK '60 VW....COld ror Baja b g Llgh! hlur. black interior. s:..:;o or best oUPr. u A~1/FJ\I radio. sold new & 962-1782 01· J.1Uj19 li('t'\/lced by us. 100';~ guar- • 6fl VW Bug con-antre, p;1rts & labor. l'.l vr i11bl!'-yf'llOY.' & black. days 01" 4,00J miles. Lie. ANNOUNCES THI RE-OPENING Of THEIR USED CAR LOT WITH A SPECIAL SALE! '62 ll:AMILEll: WAGON Auton1atlc IPLE549J •64 IMPALA Loaded & air. IOTZ334! '70 CHEVY PICKUP 1.~ Ton Long Bed. Auto., V8 (5915.'Jf' I $395 • $79$. $2395· UNIVERSITY U>lll. "''-""" USP 219$1699 '61 VW oonvcr1iL1e-r!f'w t>ng, ""w ""''· ""'· 19tl-1100 CHICK IYERSON n arhor E~!R1e:; VW Many MOl-e To Choose From ;-.. OLDSMOBILE WE HAYE THE BEST SELECTION OF BMW's IN ORANGE COUNTY We have • financing plan to flt your budget. Com• in and talk with one of our experienced counselor1. '68 V\V, R&IJ, xlnt. cond. $1395. Call 830-otnG • 1600'• • 2002 • 2500 • 2100 • 2800 cs e ALL COLORS e ALL MODELS e IMMEDIATE OELIVERY '57 vw PIC~uP. I-lit NW -IM Wllfl a 100 .. g,,..,,"'" "" parot 11\d lab:ir lor •.OOll mllff or I monrr.1 ,t,109 wl>ffl1, wld• av•I•. P .. fi<;I tonllltlan! CHHI! "61. '64 vw 11...iio, 1>1t1tt, OOod '''"· .,. .. pain!, t~Ctlltn1 mech1nl<.1I '°"' Oltl1111. tFA.MnlJ. '65 vw (OllVt•llbll, //!.M FM, Pl1l!1r, 9'00ll !lret UIDllflOJ '67 FIAT Cs» 11.0lo, h .. 111, 9Cllll!I ll'fl· tfAV Dlil. $1495 , '70 vw CAMPER $AVE Ot!u~• &lllldl.tl. aimplt!t wit •tf>Vf, IPlll lff!\, 1#0141 !!~. A_, NU ·~~!hl .... l (tlUl.0~ Joe u .. rlolll'• T&M MOTORS 1011 GARDEN GROVE BLVD. SALIS ortN SUNOAY P.t.an, SIAVICI TUIS .. THUIS. TILL 1100 114·2214 I V> Ilk, I. ef ...... 1 lf2·1111 549-3031 E-.:t. 66 or fi7 l970 HARBOR BLVD. 946 So. Coost HiCJhwoy loCJuno Beach 494. 7744 COSTA MESA . lmoort•d Autos 96001mported Autos 96001mpor1od "utos It's our ''Kick off the 9uarter'' sale! $1595 1967 Trlumph TR4 Rod~l r. R .. ll.. 4 ~IM'Mi &r a hnrdlOI'· Clran. ~Tl?U400i $1595 1968 Triumph Spitrlrr Rodslr. I'/., Jr, .i sl)('('d. ~·ire wheels. Real 'harp. • \VX N4M t $1395 1967 Vol vo 122 Sed. 2 Dr. r: .. II , 4 Kl-.ef'd. All nriginal. {VFG380t $995 19A2 Vnl vn 122 Sed. '\I Tlr. R., H .. nir !'flnd .. 4 "Pf'Pd. Extra cl('an. 1 Tf'\V4f\7) $1095 1967 Toyola Coron11 SM. R .. II., auto. math·. Nict J> clean. IVEV3171 $1195 J967 l>Al.sun 1FKIO SM. v.•ilh 11111nm11- tlt.• lrftn'l. Extra clcl!.n ln11tde & 0111. ITSJ'/8781 $1395 196R na1sun 1600 Srd. lfR!i hr11trr & IL 4 llX'C'd, B.eRI nlct'. 1VF.:Y6:\0J $1095 19137 flAt 8:10 Cpe. R .. II .. 4 ![l('rd, bucket se111.s. A nlcP r11r. IV\VT464) $2795 1969 ~1GC GT6 Cpe. n., JI .• 4 SJ'lf'rd .. \1 iN' v.·hf'els. Prif'~ltl i;e\l. fyY A635.) $1495 1967 ~lG l\fidg<'I r..tark Ill. R .. It., ;4: !<Ueffi, "1rr v.·heels. Jleal Share. l\VIC3501 $2995 . •• • 1970 Toyota Mark [J SI. \V11.g . R., l(; automatic, farlory air cond., lugga~ rack. i 089ASJ) • • $1595 1969 Toyota Corona 11.T. Cpr. R., lt, 4 speed, krldau to11. This week's Sflf'· rt11.J. t XSS27 l 1 .• $1295 . 1969 T11ynla Corolla Cpr. R., JI ..• i;pt"l'd. A real ~11Rver. tVC~l269) • $995 • 1966 Toyol.a Corona SL>d. R .. H., 11U: tt>maUr. Heal nice lJil or 2nd caj\ 1$$~1529! ~· DEAN LEWIS IMPORTS ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST lo MOST MOOERN TOYOTA A VOLVO OEALER 1966 Harbor Blvd. 646-9303 Costa Meso ?2 IO ,, II IO y IS 29 -l!l .)9 79 99 99 99 !!I 0 --IO .. ., ,. -· • ·! •/ I< ' ' ·l ~ t ~ • • . • • . • r • --~ • • • . . • • • ·' r r , . • -, • , • , • • • • , . • • • • , , , ' ' ~ ----~------·---------------------·----,=--.,..--o-- Wtdntsdi1, August 5, 1910 ,,. ffl~~~~~=-~~~~TA~T~l~~~NSPORTATION ~SPORTATIO!!.,_ Tlt.ANSPORTATION wo1.....,, •"""' 5, 1970 TllANIPORTATION TRANSPORTJl.TIONii""-;;yra;,AN...Csi>po1iiR"'.T"Aml1o"'N .. ,..,.,;;ri.,.....,.rn;r.;,""""" Uood Con 99GO Uaod Cora 99GO UM!I C.n 99GO Uaod Co,. 99GO Uaod Cora -1...::;;:.:;...;;.;._~~~ ~--"---"-~~I Uud Cara 9900 Used C•r• "°' U..ct C1n "°° • I lllCK CHEYROLIT ,CHIVROLET FORD MERCURY ~USTANG '63 RIVIERA -$650 . ~646-1010 J.tter 6 PM_.~ '.''-''67 WILbCAT • sll!lj ' •. ' -- · CADILLAC ~~-·-$1895 '"8 -'hev Nov• I • '14 c.m.i C.llenli, VI. '66 """"-' CT3>l, 289 Cobra. 'I · ~ • '66 Squire W119on Mr. ,,,, " =· s-"""'· '""""· 11un1 1961 MALIBU 2 door, Ilka brand new, Uc. Fa.irl&ne with ood in 4M-6885 llnka&t, A~n traction ep., l27 Vll· raclio, heater, XEY 9.11. i 1 _.__ '.ni.. !_ .J"--~ --------1 bart. Mader._ p I 1 ton 1 , "•·-·"· I '"" $1099 ' ec~, ...,. -••, l'>•-1---------"·IM 11-, •-,~-- a -•=, "'"''' 1 "'·~· ,........_ u -· 81'"° MUST' ANG • ""' -;;;:.. -~ ~~ai., low \nJiu, CHICK IYERSON .......... lr&ao.• ITAY229l ,.. ::t:::' ..n....-all fom. DEAN LEWIS VW Will take trade '"' llnance '111 MUSTANG. Slgmlo .... ' prt,.ta. -· CIU -nd, aulo b'lnl, ill.DI mL '61 GTA !ulbadt Looded OLDSMOllLI ----'158 CuUus Wqon. Air-aond. E'lltraa! $polleN! 0 w n r $2.100. 6t2--0315, ..._'nll'T 1 '62 • 98 FUU.. '""" llir, naw tires. lmmac. To dose an estate, $560. ltS-G.!TS PONT1AC '59 BOHNEVtU.E. 3 dr, 15,000 mt, nu tires, air, Ph. p/b, $2100 or make oUu. 5'8-IJU RAMBLER '" RAMBLl:R !lllO SIL W11. v.a, auto. Sacrl!1ce~ $5'1' or bit .... - • '&l Cltallna .C dr auto,1 --------·I PIS. P/B. Vl'Ji' good cond. $ISi) • .,...... T·llRD ·-COUPE .. _ vn•-_,..;1 1966 HARBOR 9' LVD. 549-nll Ext. 66 « 67 or~ .,....... 11550 w/awtm whls, nu l'Ob'l:lu PONTIAC "+'' uc .._. ~ P"N 646-9303 19'TI) HARBOR BLVD. • -..--.r r"eE" pa. · tit'H, .Ut/f'M Tad to --·---'-l"'-..,..-1'&.I UM'ai. convertible. '13. CONY. New p & Ill t . , :&bape. Best oner OYe! $200. COSTA AtESA '66 fOID RAllCHERO ~M,...USTANG Fa' t back Wt..awayXJ ateer, wbl. 300 '48 GTO CONY~ Good cond. $:>50 or bett GorgeouJ:. $750. WU1 tab ~9 '67 M 6b W. -q . nt colld. PYt ply, Orl'oge & blk lop, PIS, PIB. oHt>r. ~ trade. Privr pty. 644-2$1 I-"-------n .. Ai.... Q ·~ .. u 4250!~.~d~':;=8cytAutomatic, (2dr2Q), ~·~~;~236..tbeib. aft S pmi 5'16-J91T Air. Excdlent cood. Muat 1969 C1'0 Convert, Auto. '57 T·BIRD, • '60 l'onl CADILLA. C ~' seats automa. ..... Dir., reblt 348 cu In, wide ova.lti WlU tab car~ in tr..s. er -* '65 MUSTANG Sell! Onb' 18.000 mJ. 49C-ST39 P/r, P/ dllc brb. Great Starilner $18CQ/both. Good ~r steering, aJr Ulbd. gauges, new th tu-0 u i finance pr I ya te put,y. 'Ci M~ Lo Miles Xlnt cond alt 5, cond. Low prlct. 548-CW Corw:f. ~251.i tr 546--W -Ii For Immediate ~ ownu (TP!_.~ will S4IJ-C846 Sf6.4CQ Of' 41M-9TT3. Good cond $900 962.m7i a:fttt S:l> during '61 Pontiac SW/PB/PS fd . S11le * ...._ trade or ......_ pri-'5T CHEVY 'ti9 TORINO SQUIRE atation * 5'8-9166 * v."et"k llir, auto trans, pvt. pty. Used C•n 990QUMd C11r9 tM 1?59 CADILLAC PARTS ::k~· Call~ oc 4 dr .. wqon. wagon. Full power, &ir1 '69 SheJby conyt, 12,tm '69 AIUSI'ANG Mach I, 428 37,800 mi. Xlnt coro. $1995. ------------'----~! • Air condllklncr SACRIFICE AM/FAf, 390 VII'· Luualfi mi's, ~. M&la! otf.f!r CID 4 spcl, posi-traction, 962-7992 TTan.smlsslon '62 Ll\1PALA, 4 dr trr, fact $175 or best offer aft 6:00. ~,ck.:.-.15,000 mi. $3200 * 54s..:m.1 * >i:lo1wtblk intt'r. 673-2687 :OC0680F"IR""'EB"IRD=-. U;;_-8,-_-.,,...-, Brakes alr, au1o, 327 eng nd1 tome ~ "" ....... .,. '65 2 + 2 Fastback • 4 a. • wide oval tittii, atereo, mi!lt Drums v.·~rk. $2;()/beat. 9fi2..l782 or •68 L'J'D..Xlnt eond. New spd, air, xlnt mnd. SUS0 n£E QUICKER YOU CALL, green t.!aXI or offer, 646-9161' --1 SPECIALS ....---1 :-1." Radiator 50-6519 CHRYSLER 40,(0) ml tires, ps/pb, Air, or ofter. 646-4913 THE QUICKER YOU SELL a.ft 7 P~I ~nl and Rear Bumpers '65 Impala HT ~V8, auto traJw., vinyl top, S!IO • .. Radkl automatic, r&h, p/1, or!&:. 1967 OiRVSLER, Newport. a1 In, 36,cm ml. $2200. New C•rt 9800 New C1rs ,.. :: 'l)ashboaid Equipment Ownt'r. $18.5. 96i-3'& 4 Dr. H.T( Air, elec. W!ldws 5.16-8231 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij --c ... 'U PAI.CON FUtura, very clean. Radio. bet.tu. (W!F.(123) * MAKE OPFER * '62 CHEV Station \Vagon. V-8 pwr. strg, pwr, brks. Xlnt '69-='"~"'m-~a..~u~t-gol~d,-w"'tw""h1 1212 South Ro&6 St. Stick shift • excell. condition concl. $1,695. 53()...1547 vinyl top. $275(1. In perfect Santa Ana -$450. &16-7045 after 6 pm con d . Mo v I n i to ~ ~3120 After 5 p.m. '56 CHEVY, xlnt cond. 6 ,. COMET Hawal ... rn'ust !Jell, 6'1'5-3190 • 1962 CADILLAC cyl stk stlllt. $1'15 or be5t --------1'61 TORINO Squire, 390-V-8. • • Convutible. Private offer. 54g...1901 'fiO MERC. Comet. 59,000 a.ir, 3rd seat, 34,IXXI mi. •,Party, $495. <l!n-3878 ''°65-cCl;;°"IEVE="1.1'°'.E'", -.,--,,,-,-.,,-.. mi's, 1 owner. Very gd. Xlnt. $2215. 645-21.82 afta' I !968 Cadillac. Lo ad e d wag. 327, 350 hp, 4 spd, pos. cood. SZ15. 673-<ISU 6 PM I wknds ~ w/extras! Xlnt conf.. Must itractlon. SllOO, 54S-OS81 '64 f"'ORD 2"" Dr, H.T. Pis, 'reU·make otter. 67J..1173 ':.9 OJEVY Stn Wm. 6. CONTINENTAL p/b, auto, clean, extra nice '68· SEDAN de Ville • lm· cyl stick, Good cond. --------1 $550. 10032 Kukui Dr., H.B. 'trtaculate! Pwr; SltttO, air, $2°'.JO • * 545-4266 '63 All extras! Custm elec 962-4618 I.owner. $26,IXXI ml. 673-3245 ,57 Oievy, 6 cyl stick IWU'OOf, 'AM /FM, leather l.195·'°·1~>'0'=RD~F~airi&ne~. -~1"XJ~2 Xlnt cond, $295 etc. Xlnt cond, pYt ply, blue dr HT, R.lH, stick •I * 646-3334 * aft 6pm book. 5J6.ai97, 536-1728 o"drlve, eng tom down. CAMARO '56 Mark u , A-1 rood. make ofter. $8-1341 1.,0-------'67 EL CAMINO: l27 eng, MAKE OFFER MOVING Must Sell; '69 Ford ·,1.:7 CAMARO Rally Sport • auto/trans, $1500. 642-2467 * ~ .,~ * ~ · call all 6:30 u•""'1DQ4 Cortina, 4 dt, like new Xlrit cond, stick, pl, r/h, =======::::I mdlaJ tires. $1350. 642-4452. SlfJJO. 644-0t37 COMPLETELY restored in DOH'T JUST WISH for 6' out, '55, 2 dr., Bel Aire, funti5hlngl for )'OUI' borne, V8. 492-0076, 492-9136 tlnd great buyzi in today'1 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! Clusi1!ed Ads. Dial 642--5618 W RESULTS Used Cars 9900 UMd C1rs 9900 PRIDE • INTEGRITY • SKILL ... . •'r. proucl of e11r 1t r-.ice ll'ltnagor 1111td witft 9ood r~e1011. Wo feel th•t l r11no i1 tl11 fin11t I.MW mechtnic in So11th1rn California. Ho 1tarl1d hi1 c•r1or ll yrs. •90 .i" Germany 1111d1H9tin9 a1!1n1iyo tr1lnin9 at IMW't mot! •ifo411rl'I work 11.ep} Orop i11 e11d tty h•ll• to l t11no, Holt ,,., ftf1ncll';' fellow 1nill 1 fl,,. m1ch1ni•• . . YW SPECIALS COMPLETE BRAKE JOB • $35 ENGINE .OVERHAUL $95 VALVE JOB $55 VALVE AND RINGS $7D ' (PlUI PARTI 01lf ALL PltClll . AUTHOIUZED SALES, SElVICt Joe Berlotti's T&M MOTORS 8081 G1rden Grove Blvd1 Soles O~ Se1ffy , .... ~ , ..... '"''"· tlll 1:00 (I/~ Ilk. I . ef ..-111 IJ4-2Jl4 192.1111 CORVAIR • ., "'"""· s.mnc. '" LINCOLN hone)'m00!)1 Qu_lclc SaJe! 1-------- $180. 63-'698. $895 '82Mooza,tspd,rull!l&lookJ 1962 LINCOLN good. Xlnt tra.i.portt,tion. Conllnental Sedan. Radio, $225. 49&-3046 beater, automatic tra1111mis- -· sion, full ~r. factory air, CORVETIE like new, mU£J oe. to ap. --------1 prec1ate. Uc. rye 230 $1895 DEAN LEWIS 1967 Corvette Stingrey 1966 HARBOR BLVD. ConY, Radio, heater, ftr en· 646-930! ~~· ts;peed. Priced to sell. WRITE '61 Llnooln • dr. DEA. N LEWIS ,...,., a11 "'"''" "" cond. good tires. Pn!ftiae car tat 1966 HARBOR BLVO. only $000. C&ll 5'8-1"4 646-93(13 '62 eo .... 11, """'' Cou... MERCURY Clean & org. red paint. 41-------- 1pd, 283 Hi-Pert Eng., Jar. 1966 t.'IERCURY Parldane din Headers, $1600. 6'1M945 H.T. P/s, P/b, p/wndWI e 'M Vet. New ma.srs, tire1, & ~ts. AIN.'ond. ~ top, lo ml. Xlnt cond. top. Sll95. 53frru6 • • 54&-3227 * * DODGE 1967 Dodge Monaco, 4 dr., p/a, p/b, xlnt. 40,COO mi. Best ol'ter 49J..3873. '66 Dodge Pola.ta O'.ll'Jvt, p51/pb, Below whlsl. Quick sale '6£'0. 55r-9.159 1963 Dodge Station Wagon New tlre1. $425. ~92-3878 FORD 1910 FORD Count?)' Squire Wagon. Xtra11 • No money dwn, take ovr/!eue, Day1 541..f;i639, Wkend1 A. eves ,.,_.,., '69 LTD Squire Station Wagon. Air, lug rack, 18,000 mi. $3400. !m-2159. BusiDeSI Opportunities In TOOay's Want Ada. ·~ t.1erc. w/a.ir. new paint. Sharp! $595. 548-291!1 JOHN CONNIU "NO GIVEAW1'YS NO GIMMICKS" • , , J111t 22 Yttfl of t-io11t•t Doell11., Stlli111 Cht11relth. 9900Uaod C1rs 9900U1td Cars HOW TO BEAT THE DEALER AT CLEAN-UP TIME. kNOW WHAT l'OU CAN An'ORD TO SPEND. That way you don't stand the risk of buying a car (or beiog sold a car) wbicli you can't aJ!otd. Chrysler Plymouth Clean-up Sale ... On Now CONNELL CHEVROLET'S CLEAN • SWEEP 'CLEARANCE SALE! '67 IUICll Gran Sport. Power steering and bra.kes, autom&Uc with console, radJo, beater. lUJF-m4) '1995 '67 l'l.TMOUTH '1495 Belvedere n 2 Dr. H. T. Powel" steering and brakes. automatic, radio, Mater. A steaJ! CUE\V-4131 '64 DODGE '995 2 Dr. H.T. Polara 500. Powtt 1t.eerlng, brakes, radio, heater, auto., air cond (OSY-408') ''5 OLDS 442 $1095 1:~veryrapld! -.1 '64 CHIVROLn Wagon. Power brakes, steering, automatic, radio, heAter, Extra I.harp! CZAV-94S J 'M POID Galuie 500 2 Dr. H.T. ~ steering, brakes. (VJV-1171 '65 'CHIVIOLIT Malibu eunvertible. Radio. het.ter. Showroom condition. (•7460 SKI '66 CHEYIOLn Fu.11 pov.•er lncl. air conditioning. (SAA-5141 '66 PORD Full powtt. Extra nice car. Air cond. (RSS-9S6) '65 vw Radio, heater, A-1 lhape. INOV-.373) '595 '950 s995 marcUd molo~ 2100 HARIOl ILYD., COSTA MIS.& OPIN 7 DAYS 645 0466 t A.M.·lt P.M. • - ALL NEW .1970 CHEVR Impalas -Camaros -Chevralet Wagons -El Caminas -Trvcks . De1110111trators and Executive Can. DISCOUNTS GALORE -SAVE -SAVE -SAVE -SAVE! ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST TRANSPORTATION CENTER All MAKES & MODELS 1957 • 1967 BRAND NEW " No Reasonable Offer Refused On Over 100 Cars WE CARRY OUR OWN -~ CONTRACTS NO PROILEM •~.,.,.~ Of ... ,. 1 Iin,it;yM C•111 ••r HE . E A C•r Al AllCMr Mt11n • 10\llN lfl YOU HAVI HO Cll'DIT • •·r 1uo••T Tl•MS • WEllCLY, SIMI WllltLY I MONTHLY WI DO NOT IEQUlll flAYMINTI A SPICl,IC DOWN PAYMINT • OIV'DICID -NO 11!0 TAf'I!' • YOUR CHOICE • 1st, 2nd & 3rd C1r1 From 1968 Down M Low, Low Prices . ,, c.,..1, ''4 Ply. Y•ll.-t .,, , .... ,_,... .,, ....... ' $fl"lt, c"• ... St111Do1 Wf9Gll. A11 .. , COll~.,111111 .... .n. .. r• v ... •1ctorw MIUIP!*. .... ,.,., (l'Xll: 1601. "~'iS fllllo .... _ .. dko •nd "-Mr. (Ho. tKDS0.1), tf, I YS •lU lMJ.S). $599 $199 $699 $149 '6J Off .. 16J Ol ...... IS. II ., ...... ,., • ,. '9nl f1c1ut1 ti• '""""*'" vt, 111-. tr-.i1.. •Ir Inf, 11110lnl1k. (llf. VI, illllo. l•lr15w l'.t .. '"°'°'· . ... ... nMl!kw\1"9. 111"9), "'" ,.I ,. lt .. H. IJJ Oft). 11M1tr. o•GT aon. $249 $299 $249 $399 '56 D~ lh0 TH .,. voi.1w~ '6J~ PICKUI'. I, ~ tPMll, 11...:lio, llH1tr, I ), '6J l11kk lkf'M IH..W.1. $599 "'41101Mlk , '" UW'Olll-""' "''1. ... -. $499 flOflllttl. CHOO 41Jl. 10.U ,.. . '60 v.n..w .... $299 $179 .,, c...,, 11.lllla, .......... !l'VW. V .. , 1111to. ff1n1 ,, llt· 1171. ·uc-m clto, llNlt•. IWYWl.UJ $399 '6J T·lfr4 =·• t.V. H. , "" $249 J.t,jlOmllk, t••lil. llH .. , llHlw. ILll· . ... ~ 111.YY utl. Wl. .,, , .......... l Or. H,T. I HJot~. $199 $399 fA111Mnllc: G.,,.,.,, $129 c11nper), '62 Ll1tth1 . '61 C...,.I« Save •59 ...... ., ltook-.it St111o11 w .. Sl1llor> WIOO'\, 1~ Conll<>tni.1, l'~lt ;i: ""· ""'°v 11111y oqul~ .,. CN'fy ·-....... r..:ii., 11Hl1r • or t llll •If'. IJ H I • .-.111.T UI, lh1lr1 d1111. llFT·IOI), $499 $79 Savo $99 ' SE HAIL.A lll'AMOl ALL C'.AAS rLUJ TAX I LICIHll ANCHOR MOTORS· .,... COST A MES~ I ~. ~"::.:~·:;.. 546-3050 I • Coup•, tint1d gl11s1 evep. 1mi1sion con• trol. AM-push button redio, citrus 9t11n with green vinyl ln- t1rior. Stock • 1054 15102021. I BRAND NEW 1970 NOVA 2 DOOR FOR RINT 26 ft. Horizon Motor Home Air Condltlonod And Fully Soll Contolntd. At Populer Prices. Phone Jmmedl1telr For R ... rvatlons. RDgff Miiier, 546-1200 " I BRAND NEW 1970 FULL SIZED CHEVROLET WAGON ~:::,~ 9 l::•;p'."'b:m~:.~::: $3298 pow•r 1teerin9, 250 Vt· •ngine, AM r•dlo, vinyl in-FULL '"'"· 19071 I 1t17161. PRICE CHEVY BLAZERS· 1971 VANS CARRY ALLS· 4 WHEEL DRIVES Now For Immediate Dtllv1ry At Connell Chevrolet. C1ll Ron Kr1n11 Truck O.portmont. • . R· SE FE .. "J dO .... -T,.> Go tt I -; R JO ~ ' "' 1 .. Pk ,., ~ '°' D .. ... 't :tJ f ~ -• "i1 ) -; Pl ' .I YO Bt !1 J ftl "' 3: > ,. .,, I ' Ill . "' , ... ,, ~Ill lz in ... L ~ • - ~ :z: "' VACATION DISCOUNTS MUST ANG SALE 20 te chooM from. '66 thru 70 models. Coupe1, hlrdtop1, co11• v.rt1We anll 2 + 2 Fastblick1. Some with 4 1peed'1, •Ito afr co"· dltionint1 and automatic model1. EXAMPLE' . 1967 MUSTANG HARDTOP VI, •••-·H~ po~~~~ ,.~ •• h~ iii' ~·· p,;., I 1150. lllNT 'A CAMPIR 0.1~1• 111f tont1inotl 11t1np1r1 tM 11'1•1.i' hoi!ltt for f11nily fun on 1 ft"'ily bud91l. ~111rw1 d1l11 l•4•'f• Al10 4tily fl• rMf•l1 11 It• I I $6. ,., dt'f 1nd 6.c p•f fflilt. • AMERICAN EXPRESS j Everybody's Doing It! WMnever you buy • new car during offfciel factory cleanup time, you're going to save • bundle. There's no denylnti It. So ell we uy is, lqok around. but, ~re you actually make the deel, consider Thtodore Robina' • • • 1. DISCOUNT~ Yov'ff .. ,... they're unbeat1bl1 wherever you thop, 2. ~EL~C~ION, Why l'.lc'ei:a',ntodef or color you don't' raany want when wt have one of the Southland's blnest 1970 model Inventories to choose from? ' J. BACKUP Since 1'21 Theodora Robins Ford hi11 op- erated under the ume ownership. Your lnv11tm1nt 11 backed br. almost SO years ·· of know how and int19r ty. WHY NOT ADD SATISFACTION TO I YOUR SAVINGS ••• WHEN IT'S FREE? A THEOOCIRI RO.INS f'XCLUSIYE • LOOK FOR THE DIAGNOSTIC CENTER SEAL ·ON i THE WlNDSHIElD! ' 100% PARTS AND LABOR WARRANTY 4000 MILES OR 90 DAYS C..-s ............ ,... ..................... i-.. *'" 11 ... ,... ~. P'LUI ._.... ......, _, ...._ .,.... Al ...,.., nrt ....................... , . • ALL. OFFE'S CONSIDERED TRADES ACCIPflD PAID •OR · OR NOT! '70 DODGE SPORTSMAN Window van. V8, auto., R1'll, l<lr' wheel ba.lie. (772ASl<:) 53295 OVER 2 ACRES ·GF FINE TIAQE, I~ '·-. TO CHOOSl FROM . .. ,. .. WAGON. SALE!. 10 to chooM from. '63 thru '6' modek. 6 &. 10 p111en9er .. Some fully eqy!PP:"d with full power •nd •ir conditioning. EXAMPLl'>1 f, ' -. " ' . • ' • • ~ ' • ' I 1966 COUNTIY. SQUIRE 10 PASSENGER Vt, •1i1t-•tic, pow•r 1f•trit9, pow•r wi,4ow1, r•iilio, h•1t9r, low 111ilt1. ITEY· !oZl I. OUR PRICE' 1961 DODGE ·lf TON w I 1970 ALASKAN CAMPER Pick11p •ci11ippocl witll V-1, •uto, · ll:IH. C1rnpor it fully oquippod •nd rot4y to t•• 16.541401 '67 '68 !.~~VI · . . ~~!~~~~~! .. ~~~~u *6:ft5 ITYWTl'4l • • . ' I~ '7 SHELBY , · . $ . , Co"••rtiDI •. low 111il••••· 4 'P••-'· r1d10, • 2199 ht•t•r. IYWTllZ l. , '68-?:11RDLANDA-=-u --;:--$2~·7-91 Zdr, Full po•1r. f•ctorv •ir, tilt wllo1t, tt•r•o *•P•· IWIA7tll I. 1111• lciok pric1 Sloss. ~,· s -scotSMAlf -CAMfER-$795· 52295 . !• ........ i .. 'p\ •• ''"'•r•'· ' f61Ci406ol , ' • '70 MAVERICK,,...--.. --$1-89~,- '67 SHIJ.IT 2 + J ~ a peed, radio, heatv', n~· • paint, excellent cond. tUtN514l Colony Park 9 ss. wagon. '67 PONTIAC GTO r FactOJ')' air, PA. P.B., auto., R&:H.. fSM020l $1795 ' t,~~':·.~:·.';;;,/;;~~··· ' . i 67 -~~.~~=~!.°..1 .... 5.•.1.. $,-,. 99 hle)'rk• ..... fW, n ...,., con lolll_. tt Prlof ._.., "inyl roof. ITAN•Ol I GOODYEAR TIRE CENTER ALL SIZES e SPECIAL TAKE 'OFF PRICES e BLEMS e POLYGLASS WIDE OVALS e TRUCK AND CAMPER TIRES. PRIPARI NOW FOR A SAFE VACATION! .. 20&·0 Harbor \ • CHEVRON PERSONALIZED RNANCING · Lii our lint nc1 •~p•rh h1I ~ v•u ;r;.,, th• cir y•w w•nl •~ the 1,r1r11 yo11 ""''!.' t1 p-y. We fin1nc1 fhrou9h link of Afft1ric1, f•rd M•tor Crulil Co., N1wp1rl N1t!on1I l1"k, S1curlty P1ciflc link. Unit14 C1lif0tni1 ltnk. 81/z acres of th• ·most modern ·Ford sales an service facilities on the West Coal '--~---~----_;_-'---'""'-----'-----~~----~-~-_ _:___. ___ :._ --......:..~:.. :_ __ . .._.._ __ ......__~----": -. . . -· . --,_ ~---. -- ·~ • ..